The Uses of the Law by C. H. Spurgeon
A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, April 19, 1857, By Pastor C. H. Spurgeon,
At The Music Hall, Royal Surrey Gardens.
What purpose then does the law serve? (Ga 3:19)
1. The apostle, by a highly ingenious and powerful argument, had proven that the
law was never intended by God for the justification and salvation of man. He
declares that God made a covenant of grace with Abraham long before the law was
given on Mount Sinai; that Abraham was not present at Mount Sinai, and that,
therefore, there could have been no alteration of the covenant made there by his
consent; that, moreover, Abraham’s consent was never asked as to any alteration
of the covenant, without which consent the covenant could not have been lawfully
changed; and, besides that, that the covenant stands fast and firm, seeing it
was made to Abraham’s seed, as well as to Abraham himself. “This I say, that the
covenant, that was confirmed before of God in Christ, the law, which was four
hundred and thirty years after, cannot disannul, that it should make the promise
of no effect. For if the inheritance is by the law, it is no more by promise:
but God gave it to Abraham by promise.” Therefore, no inheritance and no
salvation ever can be obtained by the law. Now, extremes are the error of
ignorance. Generally, when men believe one truth, they carry it so far as to
deny another; and, very frequently, the assertion of a cardinal truth leads men
to generalise on other particulars, and so to make falsehoods out of truth. The
objection supposed may be worded thus: “You say, oh Paul, that the law cannot
justify; surely then the law is good for nothing at all; ‘What purpose then does
the law serve?’ If it will not save a man, what is the good of it? If of itself
it will never take a man to heaven, why was it written? Is it not a useless
thing?” The apostle might have replied to his opponent with a sneer—he must have
said to him, “Oh, fool, and slow of heart to understand. Is it proven that a
thing is utterly useless because it is not intended for every purpose in the
world? Will you say that, because iron cannot be eaten, therefore, iron is not
useful? And because gold cannot be the food of man, will you, therefore, cast
gold away, and call it worthless dross? Yet on your foolish supposition you must
do so. For, because I have said the law cannot save, you have foolishly asked me
what is the use of it? and you foolishly suppose God’s law is good for nothing,
and can be of no value whatever.” This objection is, generally, brought forward
by two sorts of people. First, by mere cavillers who do not like the gospel, and
wish to pick all sorts of holes in it. They can tell us what they do not
believe; but they do not tell us what they do believe. They would fight with
everyone’s doctrines and sentiments; but they would be at a loss if they were
asked to sit down and write their own opinions. They do not seem to have gotten
much further than the genius of the monkey, which can pull everything to pieces,
but can put nothing together. Then, on the other hand, there is the Antinomian,
who says, “Yes, I know I am saved by grace alone;” and then breaks the law—says,
it is not binding on him, even as a rule of life; and asks, “What purpose then
does the law serve?” throwing it out of his door as an old piece of furniture
only fit for the fire, because, truly, it is not adapted to save his soul. Why,
a thing may have many uses, if not a particular one. It is true that the law
cannot save; and yet it is equally true that the law is one of the highest works
of God, and is deserving of all reverence, and extremely useful when applied by
God to the purposes for which it was intended.
2. Yet, pardon me my friends, if I just observe that this is a very natural
question, too. If you read the doctrine of the apostle Paul you find him
declaring that the law condemns all mankind. Now, just let us for one single
moment take a bird’s eye view of the works of the law in this world. Lo, I see,
the law given upon Mount Sinai. The very hill quakes with fear. Lightnings and
thunders are the attendants of those dreadful syllables which make the hearts of
Israel to melt. Sinai seems filled with smoke. The Lord came from Paran, and the
Holy One from Mount Sinai; “He came with ten thousand of his saints.” Out of his
mouth went a fiery law for them. It was a dreadful law even when it was given;
and since then from that Mount of Sinai an awful lava of vengeance has run down,
to deluge, to destroy, to burn, and to consume the whole human race, if it had
not been that Jesus Christ had stemmed its awful torrent, and bidden its waves
of fire to be still. If you could see the world without Christ in it, simply
under the law, you would see a world in ruins, a world with God’s black seal put
upon it, stamped and sealed for condemnation; you would see men, who, if they
knew their condition, would have their hands on their loins and be groaning all
their days—you would see men and women condemned, lost, and ruined; and in the
uttermost regions you would see the pit that is dug for the wicked, into which
the whole earth must have been cast if the law had its way, apart from the
gospel of Jesus Christ our Redeemer. Aye, beloved, the law is a great deluge
which would have drowned the world with worse than the water of Noah’s flood; it
is a great fire which would have burned the earth with a destruction worse than
that which fell on Sodom; it is a stern angel with a sword, athirst for blood,
and winged to slay; it is a great destroyer sweeping down the nations; it is the
great messenger of God’s vengeance sent into the world. Apart from the gospel of
Jesus Christ, the law is nothing but the condemning voice of God thundering
against mankind. “What purpose then does the law serve?” seems a very natural
question. Can the law be of any benefit to man? Can that Judge who puts on a
black cap and condemns us all, this Lord Chief Justice Law, can he help in
salvation? Yes, he can; and you shall see how he does it, if God shall help us
while we preach. “What purpose then does the law serve?”
3. I. The first use of the law is to manifest to man his guilt. When God intends
to save a man, the first thing he does with him is to send the law to him, to
show him how guilty, how vile, how ruined he is, and in how dangerous a
position. You see that man lying there on the edge of the precipice; he is sound
asleep, and just on the perilous verge of the cliff. One single movement, and he
will roll over and be broken in pieces on the jagged rocks beneath, and nothing
more shall be heard of him. How is he to be saved? What shall be done for
him—what shall be done? It is our position; we, too, are lying on the brink of
ruin, but we are insensible to it. God, when he begins to save us from such an
imminent danger, sends his law, which, with a stout kick, rouses us up, makes us
open our eyes; we look down on our terrible danger, discover our miseries; and
then it is we are in a right position to cry out for salvation, and our
salvation comes to us. The law acts with man as the physician does when he takes
the film from the eye of the blind. Self-righteous men are blind men, though
they think that they are good and excellent. The law takes that film away, and
lets them discover how vile they are, and how utterly ruined and condemned if
they are to abide under the sentence of the law.
4. Instead, however, of treating this doctrinally, I shall treat it practically,
and come home to each of your consciences. My hearer, does not the law of God
convict you of sin this morning? Under the hand of God’s Spirit does it not make
you feel that you have been guilty, that you deserve to be lost, that you have
incurred the fierce anger of God? Look here; have you not broken these ten
commandments; even in the letter have you not broken them? Who is there among
you who has always honoured his father and mother? Who is there among us who has
always spoken the truth? Have we not sometimes borne false witness against our
neighbour? Is there one person here who has not made to himself another God, and
loved himself, or his business, or his friends, more than he has Jehovah, the
God of the whole earth? Which of you has not coveted your neighbour’s house, or
his man servant, or his ox, or his ass? We are all guilty with regard to every
letter of the law; we have all of us transgressed the commandments. And if we
really understood these commandments, and felt that they condemned us, they
would have this useful influence on us of showing us our danger, and so of
leading us to flee to Christ. But, my hearers, does not this law condemn you,
because even if you should say you have not broken the letter of it, yet you
have violated the spirit of it. What, though you have never killed, yet we are
told, he that is angry with his brother is a murderer. As a negro said once,
“Sir, I thought me no kill—me innocent there; but when I heard that he that
hates his brother is a murderer, then me cry guilty, for me have killed twenty
men before breakfast very often, for I have been angry with many of them very
often.” This law does not only mean what it says in words, but it has deep
things hidden in its heart. It says, “You shall not commit adultery,” but it
means, as Jesus has it, “He who looks on a woman to lust after her has committed
adultery with her already in his heart.” It says, “You shall not take the name
of the Lord your God in vain;” it means that we should reverence God in every
place, and have his fear before our eyes, and should always pay respect to his
ordinances, and evermore walk in his fear and love. Aye, my brethren, surely
there is not one here so fool-hardy in self-righteousness as to say, “I am
innocent.” The spirit of the law condemns us. And this is its useful property;
it humbles us, makes us know we are guilty, and so we are led to receive the
Saviour.
5. Mark this, moreover, my dear hearers, one breach of this law is enough to
condemn us forever. He who breaks the law in one point is guilty of the whole.
The law demands that we should obey every command; and if one of them is broken,
the whole of them are violated. It is like a vase of surpassing workmanship; in
order to destroy it you need not shiver it to atoms; make but the smallest
fracture in it and you have destroyed its perfection. As it is a perfect law
which we are commanded to obey, and to obey perfectly, make only one breach in
it and though we are ever so innocent we can hope for nothing from the law
except the voice, “You are condemned, you are condemned, you are condemned.”
Under this aspect of the matter ought not the law to strip many of us of all our
boasting? Who is there that shall rise in his place and say, “Lord, I thank you,
I am not as other men are?” Surely there cannot be one among you who can go home
and say, “I have tithed mint and cummin; I have kept all the commandments from
my youth?” No, if this law is brought home to the conscience and the heart we
shall stand with the publican, saying, “Lord, be merciful to me a sinner.” The
only reason why a man thinks he is righteous is because he does not know the
law. You think you have never broken it because you do not understand it. There
are some of you most respectable people; you think you have been so good that
you can go to heaven by your own works. You would not exactly say so, but you
secretly think so; you have devoutly taken the sacrament, you have been mightily
pious in attending your church or chapel regularly, you are good to the poor,
generous and upright, and you say, “I shall be saved by my works.” No, sir; look
to the flame that Moses saw, and shrink, and tremble, and despair. The law can
do nothing for us except condemn us. The utmost it can do is to whip us out of
our boasted self-righteousness and drive us to Christ. It puts a burden on our
backs and makes us ask Christ to take it off. It is like a lancet, it probes the
wound. It is, to use a parable, as when some dark cellar has not been opened for
years and is full of all kinds of loathsome creatures; we may walk through it
not knowing they are there. But the law comes, takes the shutters down, lets
light in, and then we discover what a vile heart we have, and how unholy our
lives have been; and, then, instead of boasting, we are made to fall on our
faces and cry, “Lord, save me or I perish. Oh, save me for your mercy’s sake, or
else I shall be cast away.” Oh, you self-righteous ones now present, who think
yourselves so good that you can mount to heaven by your works—blind horses,
perpetually going around the mill and making not one inch of progress—do you
think to take the law upon your shoulders as Samson did the gates of Gaza? Do
you imagine that you can perfectly keep this law of God? Will you dare to say,
you have not broken it. No, surely, you will confess, though it is only in an
undertone, “I have revolted.” Then, know this: the law can do nothing for you in
the matter of forgiveness. All it can do is just this: It can make you feel you
are nothing at all; it can strip you; it can bruise you; it can kill you; but it
can neither quicken, nor clothe, nor cleanse—it was never meant to do that. Oh,
are you this morning, my hearer, sad, because of sin? Do you feel that you have
been guilty? Do you acknowledge your transgression? Do you confess your
wandering? Hear me, then, as God’s ambassador, God has mercy upon sinners. Jesus
Christ came into the world to save sinners. And though you have broken the law,
he has kept it. Take his righteousness to be yours. Cast yourself upon him. Come
to him now, stripped and naked and take his robe as your covering. Come to him,
black and filthy, and wash yourself in the fountain opened for sin and
uncleanness; and then you shall know “What purpose then does the law serve?”
That is the first point.
6. II. Now, the second. The law serves to kill all hope of salvation of a
reformed life. Most men when they discover themselves to be guilty, avow that
they will reform. They say, “I have been guilty and have deserved God’s wrath,
but for the future I will seek to win a stock of merits which shall
counterbalance all my old sins.” In steps the law, puts its hand on the sinner’s
mouth, and says, “Stop, you cannot do that; it is impossible.” I will show you
how the law does this. It does it partly thus, by reminding the man that future
obedience can be no atonement for past guilt. To use a common metaphor, that the
poor may thoroughly understand me, you have run up a score at your shop. Well,
you cannot pay it. You go off to Mrs. Brown, your shopkeeper, and you say to
her, “Well, I am sorry, madam, that through my husband being out of work,” and
all that, “I know I shall never be able to pay you. It is a very great debt I
owe you, but, if you please madam, if you forgive me this debt I will never get
into your debt any more; I will always pay for all I have.” “Yes,” she would
say, “but that will not square our accounts. If you do pay for all you have, it
would be no more than you ought to do. But what about the old bills? How are
they to be paid? They will not be cancelled by all your fresh payments.” That is
just what men do towards God. “True,” they say, “I have gone far astray I know;
but then I will not do so any more.” Ah, it was time you threw away such
childish talk. You do only show your rampant folly by such a hope. Can you wipe
away your transgression by future obedience? Ah, no. The old debt must be paid
somehow. God’s justice is inflexible, and the law tells you all your future
obedience can make no atonement for the past. You must have an atonement through
Christ Jesus the Lord. “But,” says the man, “I will try and be better, and then
I think I shall have mercy given to me.” Then the law steps in and says, “You
are going to try and keep me, are you? Why, man, you cannot do it.” Perfect
obedience in the future is impossible. And the ten commandments are held up, and
if any awakened sinner will only look at them, he will turn away and say, “It is
impossible for me to keep them.” “Why, man, you say you will be obedient in the
future. You have not been obedient in the past, and there is no likelihood that
you will keep God’s commandments in time to come. You say you will avoid the
evils of the past. You cannot. "Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the
leopard his spots? then may you also do good that are accustomed to do evil."”
But you say “I will take greater heed to my ways.” “Sir, you will not; the
temptation that overcame you yesterday will overcome you tomorrow. But, mark
this, if you could, you could not win salvation by it.” The law tells you that
unless you perfectly obey you cannot be saved by your doings, it tells you that
one sin will make a flaw in it all, that one transgression will spoil your whole
obedience. It is a spotless garment that you must wear in heaven; it is only an
unbroken law which God can accept. So, then, the law answers this purpose, to
tell men that their attainments, their amendings, and their doings, are of no
use whatever in the matter of salvation. It is theirs to come to Christ, to get
a new heart and a right spirit; to get the evangelical repentance which does not
need to be repented of, that so they may put their trust in Jesus and receive
pardon through his blood. “What purpose then does the law serve?” It serves this
purpose, as Luther has it, the purpose of a hammer. Luther, you know, is very
strong on the subject of the law. He says, “For if anyone is not a murderer, an
adulterer, a thief, and outwardly refrain from sin, as the Pharisee did, which
is mentioned in the gospel, he would swear that he is righteous, and therefore
he conceives an opinion of righteousness, and depends on his good works and
merits. Such a one God cannot otherwise mollify and humble, that he may
acknowledge his misery and damnation, but by the law; for that is the hammer of
death, the thundering of hell, and the lightning of God’s wrath, that beats to
powder the obstinate and senseless hypocrites. For as long as the opinion of
righteousness abides in man, so long there abides also in him incomprehensible
pride, presumption, security, hatred of God, contempt for his grace and mercy,
ignorance of the promises and of Christ. The preaching of free remission of
sins, through Christ, cannot enter into the heart of such a one, neither can he
feel any taste or savour of it; for that mighty rock and adamant wall, that is,
the opinion of righteousness, by which the heart is surrounded, resists it.
Therefore the law is that hammer, that fire, that mighty strong wind, and that
terrible earthquake rending the mountains, and breaking the rocks, (1Ki
19:11-13) that is to say, the proud and obstinate hypocrites. Elijah, not being
able to abide these terrors of the law, which by these things are signified,
covered his face with his mantle. Notwithstanding, when the tempest ceased, of
which he was a beholder, there came a soft and a gracious wind, in the which the
Lord was; but it behoved that the tempest of fire, of wind, and the earthquake
should pass, before the Lord should reveal himself in that gracious wind.”
7. III. And now, a step further. You who know the grace of God can follow me in
this next step. The law is intended to show man the misery which will fall upon
him through his sin. I speak from experience, though I am young; and many of you
who hear me will hear this with ears of attention, because you have felt the
same. There was a time with me, when very young in years, I felt with much
sorrow the evil of sin. My bones waxed old with my roaring all day long. Day and
night God’s hand was heavy upon me. There was a time when he scared me with
visions, and frightened me by dreams; when by day I hungered for deliverance,
for my soul fasted within me: I feared lest the very skies should fall upon me,
and crush my guilty soul. God’s law had gotten hold upon me, and was showing me
my misery. If I slept at night I dreamed of the bottomless pit, and when I awoke
I seemed to feel the misery I had dreamed. Up to God’s house I went; my song was
only a groan. I retired to my bedroom, and there with tears and groans I offered
up my prayer, without a hope and without a refuge. I could then say with David,
“The owl is my partner and the bittern is my companion;” for God’s law was
flogging me with its ten-thonged whip, and then rubbing me with brine
afterwards, so that I shook and quiver with pain and anguish, and my soul chose
strangling rather than life, for I was exceedingly sorrowful. Some of you have
had the same experience. The law was sent on purpose to do that. But, you will
ask, “Why that misery?” I answer, that misery was sent for this reason: that I
might then be made to cry to Jesus. Our heavenly Father does not usually make us
seek Jesus until he has whipped us clean out of all our confidence; he cannot
make us in earnest after heaven until he has made us feel something of the
intolerable tortures of an aching conscience, which has foretaste of hell. Do
you not remember, my hearer, when you used to awake in the morning, and the
first thing you took up was Alleine’s Alarm, or Baxter’s Call to the
Unconverted? Oh, those books, those books; in my childhood I read and devoured
them when under a sense of guilt, but they were like sitting at the foot of
Sinai. When I turned to Baxter, I found him saying some such things as
these:—“Sinner, consider; within an hour you may be in hell. Consider; you may
soon be dying—death is even now gnawing at your cheek. What will you do when you
stand before the bar of God without a Saviour? Will you tell him you had no time
to spend on religion? Will not that empty excuse melt into thin air? Oh, sinner,
will you, then, dare to insult your Maker? Will you, then, dare to scoff at him?
Consider; the flames of hell are hot and the wrath of God is heavy. If your
bones were of steel, and your ribs of brass, you might quiver with fear. Oh, you
had the strength of a giant, you could not wrestle with the Most High. What will
you do when he shall tear you in pieces, and there shall be no one to deliver
you? What will you do when he shall fire off his ten great guns at you? The
first commandment shall say, ‘Crush him; he has broken me!’ The second shall
say, ‘Damn him; he has broken me!’ The third shall say, ‘A curse upon him; he
has broken me!’ And so shall they all let fly upon you; and you without a
shelter, without a place to flee to, and without a hope.” Ah! you have not
forgotten the days when no hymn seemed suitable to you but the one that began,
Stoop down my soul that used to rise,
Converse awhile with death;
Think how a gasping mortal lies,
And pants away his breath.
Or else,
That awful day shall surely come,
The ‘pointed hour makes haste,
When I must stand before my Judge,
And pass the solemn test.
Aye, that was why the law was sent—to convict us of sin, to make us shake and
shiver before God. Oh! you who are self-righteous, let me speak to you this
morning with just a word or two of terrible and burning earnestness. Remember,
sirs, the day is coming when a crowd more vast than this shall be assembled on
the plains of earth; when on a great white throne the Saviour, Judge of men,
shall sit. Now, he is come; the book is opened; the glory of heaven is
displayed, rich with triumphant love, and burning with unquenchable vengeance;
ten thousand angels are on either hand; and you are standing to be tried. Now,
self-righteous man, tell me now that you went to church three times a day! Come,
man, tell me now that you kept all the commandments! Tell me now that you are
not guilty! Come before him with a receipt of your mint, and your anise, and
your cummin! Come along with you! Where are you? Oh, you are fleeing. You are
crying, “Rocks hide us; mountains fall on us.” What are you after, man? Why, you
were so fair on earth that no one dared to speak to you; you were so good and so
comely; why do you run away? Come, man, pluck up courage; come before your
Maker; tell him that you were honest, sober, excellent, and that you deserve to
be saved! Why do you delay to repeat of your boastings? Out with it—come, say
it! No, you will not. I see you still fleeing, with shrieks, away from your
Maker’s presence. There will be no one found to stand before him, then, in their
own righteousness. But look! look! look! I see a man coming forward out of that
motley throng; he marches forward with a steady step, and with a smiling eye.
What! is there any man found who shall dare to approach the dread tribunal of
God? What! is there one who dares to stand before his Maker? Yes, there is one;
he comes forward, and he cries, “Who shall lay anything to the charge of God’s
elect?” Do you not shudder? Will not the mountains of wrath swallow him? Will
not God launch that dreadful thunderbolt against him? No; listen while he
confidently proceeds: “Who is he who condemns? It is Christ that died; yes,
rather, that has risen again.” And I see the right hand of God
outstretched—“Come, you blessed, enter the kingdom prepared for you.” Now is
fulfilled the verse which you once sweetly sang:—
Bold shall I stand in that great day,
For who aught to my charge shall lay?
While, through your blood, absolv’d I am
From sin’s tremendous curse and shame.
8. IV. And now, my dear friends, I am afraid of wearying you; therefore, let me
briefly hint at one other thought. “What purpose then does the law serve?” It
was sent into the world to show the value of a Saviour. Just as foils set off
jewels, and as dark spots make bright tints more bright, so does the law make
Christ appear the fairer and more heavenly. I hear the law of God curse, but how
harsh is its voice. Jesus says, “Come to me;” oh, what music! all the more
musical after the discord of the law. I see the law condemns; I behold Christ
obeying it. Oh! how ponderous that price—when I know how weighty was the demand!
I read the commandments, and I find them strict and awfully severe—oh! how holy
must Christ have been to obey all these for me! Nothing makes me value my
Saviour more than seeing the law condemn me. When I know this law stands in my
way, and like a flaming cherubim will not let me enter paradise, then I can tell
how sweetly precious must Jesus Christ’s righteousness be, which is a passport
to heaven, and gives me grace to enter there.
9. V. And, lastly, “What purpose then does the law serve?” It was sent into the
world to keep Christian men from self-righteousness. Christian men—do they ever
get self-righteous? Yes, that they do. The best Christian man in the world will
find it hard work to keep himself from boasting, and from being self-righteous.
John Knox on his deathbed was attacked with self-righteousness. The last night
of his life on earth, he slept some hours together, during which he uttered many
deep and heavy moans. Being asked why he moaned so deeply, he replied, “I have
during my life sustained many assaults of Satan; but at present he has assaulted
me most fearfully, and put forth all his strength to make an end of me at once.
The cunning Serpent has laboured to persuade me, that I have merited heaven and
eternal blessedness by the faithful discharge of my ministry. But blessed be
God, who has enabled me to quench this fiery dart, by suggesting to me such
passages as these: ‘What do you have that you have not received?’ and, "By the
grace of God I am what I am."” Yes, and each of us have felt the same. I have
often felt myself rather amused at some of my brethren, who have come to me, and
said, “I trust the Lord will keep you humble,” when they themselves were not
only as proud as they were high, but a few inches more. They have been most
sincere in prayer that I should be humble, unwittingly nursing their own pride
by their own imaginary reputation for humility. I have long since given up
entreating people to be humble, because it naturally tends to make them proud. A
man is apt to say, “Dear me, these people are afraid I shall be proud; I must
have something to be proud of.” Then we say to ourselves, “I will not let them
see it;” and we try to keep our pride down, but after all, are as proud as
Lucifer within. I find that the proudest and most self-righteous people are
those who do nothing at all, and have no shadow of pretence for any opinion of
their own goodness. The old truth in the book of Job is true now. You know in
the beginning of the book of Job it is said, “The oxen were ploughing, and the
asses were feeding beside them.” That is generally the way in this world. The
oxen are ploughing in the church—we have some who are labouring hard for
Christ—and the asses are feeding beside them, on the finest livings and the
fattest of the land. These are the people who have so much to say about
self-righteousness. What do they do? They do not do enough to earn a living, and
yet they think they are going to earn heaven. They sit down and fold their
hands, and yet they are so reverently righteous, because truly they sometimes
dole out a little in charity. They do nothing, and yet boast of
self-righteousness. And with Christian people it is the same. If God makes you
laborious, and keeps you constantly engaged in his service, you are less likely
to be proud of our self-righteousness than you are if you do nothing. But at all
times there is a natural tendency to it. Therefore, God has written the law,
that when we read it we may see our faults; that when we look into it, as into a
mirror, we may see the impurities in our flesh, and have reason to abhor
ourselves in sackcloth and ashes, and still cry to Jesus for mercy. Use the law
in this fashion, and in no other.
10. And now, says one, “Sir, are there any here that you have been preaching
at?” Yes; I like to preach at people. I do not believe it is of any avail to
preach to people; preach right into them and right at them. I find in every
circle a class, who say, in plain English, “Well, I am as good a father as is to
be found in the parish; I am a good tradesman; I pay twenty shillings to the
pound; I am no Sir John Dean Paul;1 I go to church, or I go to chapel, and that
is more than everyone else does; I pay my subscriptions—I subscribe to the
infirmary; I say my prayers; therefore, I believe I stand as good a chance of
heaven as anyone else in the world.” I do believe that three out of four of the
people of London think something of that sort. Now, if that is the ground of
your trust, you have a rotten hope; you have a plank to stand upon that will not
bear your weight in the day of God’s account. As the Lord my God lives, before
whom I stand, “Unless your righteousness exceeds the righteousness of the
Scribes and Pharisees, you shall in no wise enter into the kingdom of heaven.”
And if you think the best performance of your hands can save you, know this,
that “Israel, which followed after the law of righteousness, has not attained to
the law of righteousness.” Those who did not seek after it have attained it.
Why? Because the one has sought it by faith, the other has sought it by the
deeds of the law, where justification never was to be found. Hear, now, the
gospel, men and women; down with that boasting form of your righteousness; away
with your hopes, with all your trusts that spring from this—
Could your tears for ever flow,
Could your zeal no respite know,
All for sin could not atone;
Christ must save, and save alone.
11. If you wish to know how we must be saved, hear this—you must come with
nothing of your own to Christ. Christ has kept the law. You are to have his
righteousness to be your righteousness. Christ has suffered in the place of all
who repent. His punishment is to stand instead of your being punished. And
through faith in the sanctification and atonement of Christ, you are to be
saved. Come, then, you weary and heavy laden, bruised and mangled by the Fall;
come then, you sinners; come, then, you moralists; come, then, all you who have
broken God’s law and feel it; leave your own trusts and come to Jesus, he will
take you in; give you a spotless robe of righteousness, and make you his for
ever. “But how can I come?” one says; “Must I go home and pray?” No, sir, no.
Where you are standing now, you may come to the cross. Oh, if you know yourself
to be a sinner, now—I beseech you, before your foot shall leave the floor on
which you stand—now, say this—
Myself into your arms I cast:
Lord, save my guilty soul at last.
Now, down with you, away with your self-righteousness. Look to me—look, now; do
not say, “Must I mount to heaven and bring Christ down?” “The word is near you,
on your mouth and in your heart; if you shall confess with your mouth the Lord
Jesus, and believe with your heart, you shall be saved.” Yes, you—you—you. Oh! I
bless God, we have heard of hundreds who have in this place believed on Christ.
Some of the blackest of the human race have come to me only recently, and told
me what God has done for them. Oh, that you, too, would now come to Jesus.
Remember, he who believes shall be saved, even though his sins ever so many; and
he who does not believe, must perish, even though his sins ever so few. Oh, that
the Holy Spirit would lead you to believe; so that you should escape the wrath
to come, and have a place in paradise among the redeemed!
Spurgeon Sermons
These sermons from Charles Spurgeon are a series that is for reference and not
necessarily a position of Answers in Genesis. Spurgeon did not entirely agree
with six days of creation and dives into subjects that are beyond the AiG focus
(e.g., Calvinism vs. Arminianism, modes of baptism, etc.)
Terms of Use
Modernized Edition of Spurgeon’s Sermons. Copyright © 2010, Larry and Marion
Pierce, Winterbourne, Ontario, Canada. Used by Answers in Genesis by permission
of the copyright owner. The modernized edition of the material published in
these sermons may not be reproduced or distributed by any electronic means
without express written permission of the copyright owner. A limited license is
hereby granted for the non-commercial printing and distribution of the material
in hard copy form, provided this is done without charge to the recipient and the
copyright information remains intact. Any charge or cost for distribution of the
material is expressly forbidden under the terms of this limited license and
automatically voids such permission. You may not prepare, manufacture, copy,
use, promote, distribute, or sell a derivative work of the copyrighted work
without the express written permission of the copyright owner.
Footnotes
1.Paul, Sir John Dean: second baronet (1802-1868), banker and fraudster.
http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2009/06/01/uses-of-law