A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, October 23, 1870, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.
For your lovingkindness is before my eyes: and I have walked in your truth. (Psalms 26:3)
1. Throughout this Psalm David is labouring under the fear that he should be judged and condemned with the ungodly world. He feels in his own heart that he is not one with the enemies of God, and he shudders lest having hated their company on earth he should be confined in their company for ever. His agonizing prayer is, “Do not gather my soul with sinners, nor my life with bloody men.” In arguing reasons before the throne of grace why he should not he included in the same condemnation as the ungodly, he does not claim self-righteously, but truthfully and confidently, that there was a difference made by grace between himself and them. “I have not sat with vain people, neither will I go in with hypocrites. I have hated the congregation of evildoers; and will not sit with the wicked. . . . Lord, I have loved the habitation of your house, and the place where your honour resides.” There was a difference, he declares, between himself and the wicked, even in the current of his thoughts. While their thoughts ran upon the world, vanity, sin, rebellion, hypocrisy, and violence, his meditations were upon all the marvellous works of God, and especially upon his lovingkindness — “Your lovingkindness is before my eyes.” it is an encouraging fact, when we can honestly feel as before God that our thoughts are habitually exercised upon himself and upon divine truth. “As a man thinks in his heart, so he is.” We may form a better judgment of ourselves probably from the tenor of our thoughts than from any other evidence. If our thoughts all go downward, we ourselves are going downward; but if there are some breathings towards the heavenly, some aspirations of our spirit towards the pure and perfect Father of Lights, then we may have hope that we also are ascending towards the heavenly places, and shall dwell in them hereafter. David could claim besides the secret evidence of his devout thoughts, the public proof of his holy acts — “I have walked in your truth.” It would be vanity for a man to find evidence of a renewed heart in his private meditations, if those thoughts were not sufficiently deep to lead him to practical godliness. The thoughts become a valuable evidence because of their influence upon the life, but if they were so powerlessly superficial that our daily life was in no degree affected by them, they would be as salt that has lost its savour. If our actions are evil, it is vain to take comfort from our thoughts. If actions speak louder than words, they may well speak louder than thoughts. We must display outward holiness, or else our inward experience of grace exists only in pretence. Say what you wish, but if your whole conduct is according to the will of the flesh and not after the will of God, your thoughts are nothing, you have deceived yourself concerning their tenor, they cannot be as you say they are, truthful, holy, devout and divine thoughts. Put the two together, holy thoughts and holy living, and you have two sure evidences of a renewed nature; and if God has given you both of these, although you will probably confess that you do not have them in the measure in which you would desire to have them, yet bless the grace that has so worked upon you, and rejoice this morning, and go on in holy confidence to ask for a greater measure of the same divine working. Oh that our thoughts may become uniformly gracious, and our lives perfectly consistent with our thoughts, and with the divine word. I mean, this morning, to take the two parts of the text separately, and then to consider the link which unites them.
2. First, then, we shall have to consider the mind occupied with a fruitful subject; secondly, the life ordered by a righteous rule; and thirdly, the link which connects the two.
3. I. First then, may every Christian from experience know to a yet fuller degree what it is to have A MIND OCCUPIED WITH A FRUITFUL SUBJECT.
4. “Your lovingkindness is before my eyes.” It is exceedingly profitable for the Christian to always have some subject of thought upon his mind, for the mind that is vacant, frivolous, unoccupied, will be sure to result in a barren and unprofitable life. I fear to a very large extent in this age the minds even of good people are empty, and void, and waste. Years ago, when the influence of the Puritan age still lingered among us, the female members of Christian churches were generally women of very considerable education, whose range of reading was very different from that of their sisters in these days, and whose theological knowledge was profound; while the men who were members of our Nonconformist churches, were as a rule people of very clear doctrinal knowledge — perhaps rather too much given to controversy, and to pushing their own views without sufficient tolerance for the views of others — and on the whole, Nonconformist Christianity was highly intelligent, thoughtful, and meditative. Men and women then when they joined the church, knew what they believed, and believed what they knew; they were prepared to be considered odd for their belief, but were equally prepared to justify themselves for expressing so exclusive a position. They were students of the word of God and of such books as opened up to them the word of God; so that our armies of believers, if they were fewer than now, were nevertheless very strong, because the warriors handled their weapons well, were well drilled, and at home in the holy war. I fear a great many Christian people do not think much about their religion. They give their token offerings, they occupy their seat at the meeting house, they attend the prayer meetings, but they are little given to thinking out a system of doctrines, or to researching the meaning of Scripture. Contemplative pursuits are not so general among Christian professors as I could wish. Not that I desire to see an increase of a certain dilettante class of people who are always expounding prophecy, or preaching on typology, and leaving the poor to perish in ignorance, and the masses of our city to remain unevangelised. The sooner we bury the last of our prophetic pretenders the better; they expose truth to ridicule and rather hinder than promote the cause of religion. Louis Napoleon (a) was to be the Antichrist, and to conquer all Europe: I wonder how they will play their cards now! Recently they have grown so impudent as to foretell the future with all the brass of a Sidrophel, (b) a Lilly, (c) or a Dr. Dee. (d) I hope their failures will open the eyes of the public to their folly. I so reverence the inspired prophecies that I wish an army of students would succeed these charlatans. We need devoutly meditative people who will think about the precious things of God in a practical, gracious way, such as the Holy Spirit inspires; men who are not for ever occupying themselves with theories and speculations, but with the fundamentals and with the practical parts of theology. A band of such men, strong in the Lord and in the power of his might, would have a great influence for good; and if all professors were such, the church would be rich indeed.
5. Observe, that when the mind does not receive holy matters to feed upon, as a rule it preys upon itself; like certain of our bodily organs which, if not supplied with nutritive matter, will soon begin to devour their own tissues, and then all kinds of aches, pains, and ultimately diseases will set in. The mind, when it eats into itself, forms doubts, fears, suspicions, complaints, and nine out of ten of the doubts and fears of God’s people come from two things — walking at a distance from God, and lack of spiritual nutriment for the soul. If you, believer, do not meditate upon some scriptural subject, your minds will probably turn to vanity or to some evil within yourselves, and you will not think for long of the corruption within without becoming the subjects of a despondency which will turn you into Mistress Dispondencies or Mr. Feebleminds, whereas by musing on the promises of the Holy Spirit, you would grow into good soldiers and happy pilgrims. Of some who do not feed their souls constantly with spiritual nourishment Satan takes an advantage, and fills them with unholy thoughts. It is a very frequent complaint with people who desire to be in the fear of God all the day long, that they are molested with horrible insinuations, dreadful suggestions, and revolting ideas, and they flee to the pastor sometimes to know whether they can be the children of God at all, or if the children of God, what remedy they can use by which they shall be able to escape from this horrible torment. I suggested yesterday to a friend labouring under this serious complaint, that he should take care never to go out in the morning without placing under his tongue a text of Scripture like a wafer made with honey; and I exhorted him at all times to occupy his mind with heavenly subjects, so that there should be the less likelihood of the thoughts running after what is evil. The best way to prevent a bushel measure from being filled with chaff is to fill it first with wheat. If the channel of the soul is filled with a strong stream of devout thought, there cannot be much mud and filth lying in the bottom. A powerful stream of holy contemplation will scour the thoughts, and bear away the foul deposits of unholy thought. There is nothing like keeping the mind occupied, for Satan still finds some evil for idle brains to think about. It is true that weeds and nettles choke the good seed, but it is equally true that when the good seed grows above ground and becomes strong it will choke the weeds. Where Jesus is, the buyers and sellers are driven out of the temple. Dagon falls where the ark comes. When Israel comes in the Canaanite must go out. Fill the cage of your heart with the birds of Paradise, and the foul birds will not have it all to themselves. If our soul shall become so full of thoughts of God and divine things, that vain thoughts shall be banished, it will be a fine growing time for the plants of the Lord’s right hand planting. Learn from the text the usefulness of having some sacred topic before the mind’s eye.
6. David in selecting the topic
of divine lovingkindness did well, for let us remark
upon that subject, that it is, first of all, a proper
subject of meditation. I mean, it is our bounden
duty to think much about it. Some things we may not
think about, certain other topics we are barely allowed
to think about, but other themes we must think
about. Now the lovingkindness of God is one of the
things which is not left to our choice; we are bound to
meditate much upon that. As Dr. Watts says: —
Oh, bless the Lord, my soul,
Nor let his mercies lie
Forgotten in unthankfulness,
And without praises die.
Shall God, day after day, send such store of mercy to such unworthy ones as we are, and shall we treat his continuous generosity as a matter of course, and not even think about it? Base ingratitude! Let us scorn such baseness. If we ought to think of our duty to God, and of our violation of that duty, yet much more of the lovingkindness which makes our duty pleasure, and which covers over with a mantle of love the transgressions of our lives. Infinite goodness is a proper subject for meditation, and it deserves a large share of our thoughts.
7. It is, besides, a good subject. It is good in itself, and it will do us good. By no possibility can any harm come to us from retaining the subject of the lovingkindness of God too long in our minds. A man who has only one idea will sometimes become an unbalanced, inharmonious man; often he will fall into obstinacy, bigotry, or rashness, through the excessive indulgence of that one thought, just as one feature exaggerated out of proportion with the rest will make an ugly countenance. But you cannot think too much upon the divine lovingkindness. You may make this, if you will, the one sole topic of your thought, and yet escape narrow mindedness or one sidedness. It has so many links of union with all other subjects, that when you consider this it will bring up, as it were, compendiously a whole range of thoughts for profitable meditation. Think of the divine lovingkindness, and it shall be good, only good, and that continually. As you muse upon it your thoughts will humble you. “Why such goodness towards me, for me who am less than the least of all your mercies?” The same theme will be equally sure to comfort you. “Is the Lord so good to me? Then amid every adversity my spirit shall rejoice in the Lord, and glory in the God of my salvation.” To think of this will stimulate you to be full of lovingkindness for others who may have acted unjustly or ungenerously towards you. Since God has loved you so bounteously you will be bound to pity and assist the poor and needy. This subject will benefit you in all respects, and harm you in none. Ring this silver bell again and again, it is good for the hearing.
8. Moreover, dear brethren, it is a wide subject. To set his lovingkindness before our eyes is not to select a narrow theme, which we can soon exhaust. It is a boundless topic. The lovingkindness of the Lord has no beginning; you may fly backward to the ages past in meditation deep and long — divine lovingkindness shall have no end; you may look into the ages yet to come with joyful musings. Lovingkindness is high as heaven, to which it shall lift you; it is as deep as hell, from which it has redeemed you. It is wide as the east is from the west, for so far has he removed all your transgressions from you. Here is a subject in which you may roam without limit or fear of repetition: if so far you have bathed in this stream up to the ankles, proceed in meditation deeper still, for you shall find it a river to swim in; a very broad river that cannot be passed over. The width of the subject is one thing which leads me to commend it to you as a theme for the most expanded intellect in time and in eternity.
9. And it is a pleasing subject. “Your lovingkindness is before my eyes.” No one needs to grow weary of this. It is like traversing a country in which every single inch of the road opens up a new prospect. Here you see the lovingkindness of God in the land in which you were born, in the times in which your life is cast, in the mercies with which your life is surrounded. You may see the lovingkindness of God in your temporal mercies, you cannot go to your house or bedroom without seeing it there. You see that lovingkindness even more clearly in spirituals. What a blessing to be interested in the covenant of grace! How many a holy hymn awakens memories of past tender mercies! How this very house, and the seat you sit on, refreshes your memories concerning what God has done for you in days gone by! “The lovingkindness of the Lord.” I never knew a man to grow heavy in spirit from meditating upon this, never knew a man to become weary of the cares and burdens of life through thinking of God’s lovingkindness; indeed, but he has grown stronger to bear his burden, or to fight his way through time’s conflict, when the lovingkindness of the great Preserver of men has come visibly before his mind.
10. And you may add, it is a very plain and simple subject, and one that is suitable for us all. The lovingkindness of the Lord is a topic that can be reached by the babe in grace, and yet will not be superfluous to the most advanced. There are topics in Scripture so profound and surrounded with such metaphysical difficulties, and rendered so much more perplexing by the wisdom, or the foolishness, of divines, that one might almost say to the Christian thinker, “You may pass those by, for you will never get much out of them; the quartz is too hard; there is too little gold to pay for breaking it up.” But when you come to this subject, the unskilled convert may sit down and meditate on the lovingkindness of God, and be edified; while at the same time the most proficient scholar in the school of Christ shall find something fresh and new every time he meditates on it. You are little read, you say; you have little access to the thoughts of great men; your Bible is your only book. Ah, well! but the providence of God will make you a second, and the experience of your heart, touching Christ and divine things, will make you a third volume; and put the three together, the book of revelation, the book of providence, the book of your inward experience, and with these three you have a wondrous library, and in them all you may read the lovingkindness of the Lord towards your soul.
11. I will finish this part of
my subject by saying that this is always a suitable
and a seasonable topic. The young Christian, in the
early flush of his joy, may think on the lovingkindness
of God; it will help to keep him joyful and yet to make
him sober. The venerable Christian matron may, before
she departs, still dwell upon this topic, and tell to
her children and her grandchildren about what God has
done for her. In your health or in your sickness, in
your wealth or in your poverty, in your joy or in your
sorrow, this theme of the lovingkindness of God will
still be congenial and healthful. This you may study on
the top of Amana when you have passed by the leopards’
dens; this you may rehearse in the Valley of Humiliation
when you lie down with the shepherd boy among the
flocks, and sing —
He that is down need fear no fall,
He that is low, no pride.
This you may think about when you are fighting with
Apollyon, and the arrows fly thick as hail, yes, fiery
arrows that burn as well as wound; and you may think
about this in the Valley of the Shadow of Death, when
heart and flesh fail you; this may be your last song,
and as you enter into glory it may be your first.
Soon shall I pass the gloomy vale,
Soon all my mortal powers must fail;
Oh may my last expiring breath
His lovingkindness sing in death!
Then let me mount and soar away
To the bright world of endless day;
And sing with rapture and surprise,
His lovingkindness in the skies.
12. I have thus introduced to you the topic for mental contemplation; we will at once proceed to the second part of our subject.
13. II. The psalmist sets before us A LIFE ORDERED BY A RIGHTEOUS RULE.
14. “I have walked in your truth.” I wish each of us could say this as positively as he does; I am afraid we should have to alter it, and say, “I desire to have your lovingkindness before my eyes, and to walk in your truth.” I shall invite each of you to look over your diaries to see if you could make such a statement, and the following remarks I offer as reflections to help you.
15. He means, first, by the words, “your truth,” “I have tried to order my religion according to the truth concerning God and the way in which he would be worshipped. I have worshipped the true God in the true way. I have searched to see what and who God is, how he would be served, and in what way; and according to what I have learned from him I have walked in his truth.” Can you all say that? Why, even all Christians cannot say as much! They worship God — yes, but how? as their fathers did or their grandmothers? Why have they worshipped God as they do now? Because the word of God so teaches? No; but because their family has been brought up so. They never took the trouble to see whether it was right, and would not like to take the trouble now. Their family always did it, therefore they will always do it. Such people can say, “I have walked according to my ancestors”; but they cannot say, “I have walked in your truth.” If their fathers had worshipped the devil, they would have done the same. If their family had worshipped Juggernaut, (e) they would have worshipped him too. It makes no consequence to some people what it is, they go in for “follow the leader.” They are of one mind with the old Saxon king, who, when he was about to be baptised, stood with one leg in the water, and enquired of the bishop, “Where do you say my ancestors are gone? they knew nothing about your Christianity.” “All cast into hell,” said the bishop. “Well, then,” said this fine old conservative, “I will go with them; I should not like to be parted from my kith and kin.” Very much of this principle still rules our country. The majority of men do not walk in God’s truth, nor care to know what God’s truth is. I know they will say there are so many sects, and so on, as if after all there was such a difficulty about the word of God that a simple minded man could not find out what the truth is. The Bible is a plain enough book, and if a man wishes to understand it he can. Dear brethren, if you are Christians, do be able to say, “I have desired to know the truth about yourself, oh my God, and how you would be worshipped, and so far as I have learned I have walked in your truth.”
16. He means next that he had walked according to God’s law. He believed God’s law to be the essential right, the just rule of action, and he had tried to do right in all respects. There is a line of truth which you can clearly see, which need not be laid down in words; and it is a glorious thing when a man can say, “I may not have been always prosperous in business, I may not have succeeded as some have done, but what does that matter? I have kept a conscience void of offence; as a Christian man I have done the right and left the consequences with God.” This is true evidence of grace reigning in the heart, when we can confidently say before God, that, notwithstanding all our sins, transgressions, and infirmities, yet towards men we have walked in the truth as God would have us walk. This is to have the outward life ordered in truth.
17. And did he not mean this also, that as God had been truthful to him, so he had been enabled by grace to be truthful to God? “I have walked in your truth.” My God, you have never lied to me; I have always endeavoured to be true to you. I have found your promise to be always certain. I have laboured to make my vows, which I have presented to you, as certain as the fulfilment of your promises. Have you all done this? Years ago some of you put on Christ, and affirmed yourselves to be his followers; by your baptism you made a declaration of death to the world, and of life in Christ: has it been so? Have you walked in God’s truth? He has never failed in anything towards us. Alas! what is there in which we have not failed towards him? He has been true to us in the covenant of his grace; have we kept the pledge and bonds which bind us to his church and to his cause? Can we say, “As you have walked in your truth towards me so I have walked in truth towards you?” If we have failed here I should not wonder it is because we have failed in the first part of the text; our thoughts have not been enough with God, and therefore our lives have not been true to him. May we be helped in both parts of the text, so that while our hearts feed upon his truth our feet may walk in his truth, and we may be faithful Christians before the Lord our God.
18. III. But time flies, and I need time for the third point, which is, THE LINK WHICH BINDS THE TWO PARTS OF THE TEXT TOGETHER.
19. “Your lovingkindness is before my eyes; I have walked in your truth.” The one has been the consequence of the other. Because I thought much of your love, therefore I have walked in your truth. Our thoughts very greatly influence our actions. It is questionable whether a man could think for long on any subject, without the course of his life being changed by it. Like certain silkworms which yield silk coloured according to the food they have fed on, so our life gradually takes the tinge and hue of the thoughts to which we most accustom ourselves. Recently we have had in our police courts frequent examples of this. Boys have been studying literature of the Jack Sheppard (f) and Dick Turpin (g) order — and they have become thieves by necessity. Men who have been deeply read in French novels, Byronic poetry, and German metaphysics, have become dissolute and sceptical, and it is no wonder. You cannot send the mind up the chimney, and expect it to come down white. Whatever road the thoughts traverse, all the faculties of manhood will go after them. So you see, brethren, David had thought upon God’s lovingkindness, and very soon his whole spirit went after his thoughts, and he walked in God’s truth.
20. Let me show you a little of this. I will suppose, this morning, that you and I are meditating upon the subject suggested. Let us set God’s lovingkindness before our eyes, and one of its most striking points is its eternity. It is certain that God loved those whom he now loves before time began. Those who are the favoured sons of God have not recently come into the possession of his love, they were loved by him before the foundation stone of creation was laid. It is a glorious doctrine; there is room for the soul to revel and riot with holy delight in it. Everlasting love, love without beginning towards unworthy worms! Well, now, what comes of it? Why, naturally, the moment the heart gets into the enjoyment of it, it cries, “I will walk in God’s truth. This great doctrine leads me to receive other great doctrines. I am not afraid, now, of doctrinal knowledge; if it is so that God has loved me before the world began, and has blessed me with all spiritual blessings according as he chose me in Christ Jesus, then I am not afraid to consider the doctrine of the covenant of grace, the doctrine of his foreknowledge and of his predestination, and all the other doctrines that spring from it. The brightness of this one gem has attracted me to enter into the mines of divine thought, and after this I will seek to be acquainted with the deep things of God.” Many would be much more sound in doctrine if they meditated more upon the eternity of divine lovingkindness.
21. Now turn that lovingkindness around again, get another view of it. Let another ray of light flash from this diamond. Think of the freeness of it! God’s lovingkindness towards us was utterly undeserved. He loved us, not because there was anything lovable about us, but because he chose to do so. He is an absolute sovereign, and he does as he wishes with his own. It is because he will have mercy on whom he will have mercy, that he has had mercy upon us. Unworthy, did I say? I was more unworthy than any, least likely as it seemed of any of the sons of men to be a partaker of divine love. If he so freely loved me, what shall I say? I must freely love him in return. I can only reciprocate this love. If I cannot love him as he loves me in degree, yet at any rate I will love him as freely and willingly. Has he chosen me? I choose him. Has he ordained me so that I should be saved? My heart ordains that he shall be glorious; and if there is anything that I can do to serve him, let me know what it is, for it must be, it shall be done.
22. Turn that lovingkindness around again, look at another side of it, namely, its certainly. It is no fiction that God loves his people. If you are believers in Christ Jesus, trusting alone in his merits, God as surely loves you as he is God. There is no question about the matter; his divine love is as certainly yours as his power is displayed in creation. Well, then, let your obedience be real in return. If he really loves me, then I will really love him, and truly serve him; it shall not be talk, and resolution, and pretence. There shall be that gift given, even if I deny myself to give it; there shall be that deed done, whatever self-denial it may cost me. I will take up the cross; I will dare to endure the isolation of being a Christian; I will rejoice in the persecution it will bring: the love of God for me shall produce obedience in my heart in return.
23. Then, again, take another view of it. Set the lovingkindness of God before your eyes, and think of the faithfulness of it. God’s lovingkindness never pauses for a minute. It has been as constant as the flight of time; never a moment but there has been love for that moment; never an hour, but there has been the hour’s portion of lovingkindness. You have often forgotten the Lord, but he has never forgotten you; you have turned aside from your fidelity ten thousand times, but he never once did. If he had dealt with you justly, and not graciously, he would have long ago divorced you from his heart; but you are as dear to him now as ever, and you shall be dear to him when heaven and earth shall pass away. Well, what then? Why, then, seek to serve him just as constantly. Let every day have its duty, and let each day’s duty be your pleasure and privilege. Do not be receiving without also giving out, but as the sovereign goodness of God comes to you without a pause, and there are no miscarriages in divine grace, so let there never be any forgetfulness, negligence, or delay in your gratitude, and the obedience which springs from it.
24. I would like you to think of the minuteness of God’s lovingkindness, and how it goes into detail with us in little things. Much of our life’s happiness depends upon little things happening properly, and if God ordained only the great events, and left the little things to chance, we would be very unhappy; but the lovingkindness of God, while it gilds the whole landscape with the sunlight, also has a beam for the tiniest insect and a ray for the eye of the smallest bird. Let our love for God also go into the most minute details; let us be earnest to be right in essential matters; but let us not be indifferent to nonessential things, as men call them. God’s lovingkindness goes into detail, then also let my obedience do so. Let gratitude to God permeate my entire life; let it flood all of my faculties; let it saturate my manhood through and through. Great God, your love surrounds me, I breathe it, I live upon it, I shall die in it, I shall live for ever in it, it shall make my eternal bliss; so my soul in obedience would give up herself, her thoughts, her works, her desires, her judgment, her tastes, her everything to your sweet love, which has so wondrously embraced and encompassed me. You see there is a logical consistency between thinking about the love of God, getting to see its details and attributes, and the ordering of our life in the way of truth; the one is the natural cause from which the other is sure to spring.
25. Once more, let me say when we are thinking upon God’s lovingkindness, we must not forget what it is preparing for us. Within a short time you and I shall have faced the last article of death, or Christ himself shall have come, and we shall be for ever with the Lord. We have been washed in the blood of Jesus, our souls have been renewed by the Holy Spirit, and for us there is prepared and reserved a crown of life that does not fade away. Anticipate the triumphant hour when this head which often aches with weariness shall be encircled with the crown of glory, think of the time when the hands that are worn with toil shall grasp the palm branch, and the feet that are weary with this pilgrimage shall stand upon the sea of glass, when our constant occupation shall be to glorify him who has lifted us up from the miry clay and set our feet upon a rock, and established our goings for ever. All this lovingkindness is prepared for us, entailed upon us, ordained for us, and we are ordained to it by a decree which neither death nor hell can change. What then? Why then the trials of this life shall be treated as “light afflictions which are only for a moment”; and if duty at anytime involves these trials, we will not take them into consideration, but for the joy that is set before us will endure the cross, despising the shame. Men of God, God’s lovingkindness has prepared for you this inconceivable inheritance, which heart cannot imagine, and, therefore, tongue cannot express to you. Will you not, for the sake of this, be willing to be despised, and be ready, if need be, to be spit upon and rejected from the society of men? Why, I think it was this that glistened in the martyrs’ eye. There they stood at the stake, all calm and confident, although every bone was soon to be burned to cinder, and the whole frame of their bodies to become a mass of agony. The light that shone in the martyrs’ eye was not the flame of the torch which kindled the fagot, but the light of the everlasting glory. The joy that made their hearts glad was not that of obstinacy which holds stubbornly to its own way, but it was the firmness of a soul that is one with the immortal Christ, and anticipates being with God for ever and for ever. The lovingkindness of God before our eyes is what can make us walk in God’s truth although it is to prison and to death. May God grant us more of the holy contemplation, and we shall be quite certain to have more of holy, consistent walking in the truth.
26. I am finished after I have made two or three remarks. I have set these things before you as they ought to be, but things are not in this world as they should be. There are some men who have the first part of the text, at least they say they have, but they despise the second. They have set God’s lovingkindness before their eyes, but do not walk in God’s truth. They talk about being God’s elect, God’s beloved, God’s dear people. Alas! some of them are dear at any price, their lives being in many cases utterly inconsistent with their profession. What do we say about men who make the doctrines of grace an excuse for licentiousness? They have the doctrine of grace, but not the grace of doctrine. What do we say about them? Why, what Paul said — “Their damnation is just.” All their pretences to soundness, all their talk about orthodoxy, is so much wind, nothing more. “Without holiness no man shall see the Lord.” The man who can cheat in business, the man who can lie, the man who is an unkind husband, a bad father, an unholy man, he may believe what he likes, or not believe what he likes, but he will be swept away from the presence of God and the glory of his power, when he whose fan is in his hand shall purge his floor and gather the wheat into his garner, and burn up the chaff with unquenchable fire.
27. There are also men who say, “I have walked in God’s truth,” but God’s lovingkindness is never before their eyes. They boast about their admirable character, but they never think about the grace of God; they indulge the Pharisaic spirit. Permit us to say to such that they do not know what spirit they have. That life of theirs which they think to be so blameless, seems to be correct because they are blind. If the light shone in upon their actions they would discover their imperfections. Then they would find that they needed a Saviour, and finding that they needed a Saviour they might then be led to apply for one, and find one; but as long as they wrap themselves up in the notion that they are good, and that they keep the law and have done so from their youth up, we must remind them with all earnestness that they are shutting themselves out of heaven, they are denying to themselves all prospect of everlasting life, for, “by the works of the law there shall no flesh be justified”; we must be saved by grace and by grace alone.
28. My last thought is this.
Brethren, depend upon it that each of you shall find,
when you get dull and flagging in the practical part of
your religion, that the proper way to revive it is to
think more than you have done upon the lovingkindness of
God. I do not know whether you ever feel stupid, I do,
dreadfully; when one gets a bad cold the mind feels
terribly dead and dull. Some people are dull enough even
when they are well, but what they are when illness is
added it would be hard to say. “Well then” one says,
“How can I consider myself to be a child of God? Why, I
cannot pray. I kneel down and pour out what ought to be
my desires, but I am afraid I do not desire them. I read
the Bible, but it does not glow and glisten before my
eyes as it once did. I try to love God, but do not seem
to have any emotion left; I am like a dead log or
stone.” What is the best way to quicken one’s self when
you have become just a mere inanimate mass, and cannot
awaken yourself into life? Of course the Holy Spirit is
the quickener, but what means shall we use? “Why,” one
says, “look over your sins and begin to think of them.”
Well, I have known some become more dead than they were
before through that, and the little life they had seemed
to go out of them as they saw their transgressions. I
believe there is no reflection that has so much, under
God the Holy Spirit, of quickening power in it as a
remembrance of the lovingkindness of the Lord. I have
said to my soul, “You are dull and heavy today, my soul,
but Jesus did not love you because of your brightness
and liveliness. You have at any rate a desire not to be
so dull. Who gave you that? Was it not his own grace
that made you hate yourself for being so dull and
stupid? and he loves you just the same.” Why then or
before I am even aware my soul makes me like the
chariots of Amminadib; before I have hardly gotten
through a little meditation upon my Lord’s love my love
is kindled. Dr. Watts hit the mark when he said —
Come, Holy Spirit, heavenly Dove,
With all thy quickening powers,
Come, shed abroad a Saviour’s love,
And that shall kindle ours.
If you doubt Christ’s love for you, you will not love
him; but remember that he still loves you, believe it,
hold on to it, and your love will revive.
And when thine eye of faith is dim,
Still hold on Jesus, sink or swim,
Still at his footstool bow the knee,
And Israel’s God thy help shall be.
If I am a dead soul and a lost soul, and do not have
a grain of grace, and have everything that is bad about
me, still I will cling to the cross, and say, “I will
never depart from this place: if I perish, I will perish
here.” Light will come to you again, and the joy of the
Lord will return, and your heart will wonder to find its
own hardness depart, and your dumb tongue shall sing,
and you, though once so lame, shall leap as a hart. May
God the Holy Spirit cause these meditations to be the
means of quickening our spirits, for Christ’s sake.
Amen.
[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon — Psalms
139]
(a) Napoleon III: also known as
Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte (full name Charles Louis
Napoleon Bonaparte) (April 20, 1808-January 9, 1873) was
the first President of the French Republic and the only
emperor of the Second French Empire. He holds the
unusual distinction of being both the first titular
president and the last monarch of France. See
Explorer "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Napoleon_III"
(b) Sidrophel: Hudibras is
a mock heroic narrative poem from the seventeenth
century written by Samuel Butler (1612-1680) in which
Hudibras asks the astrologer Sidrophel if he should
marry a widow. See Explorer "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hudibras"
(c) Lilly, William: 1602-June 9,
1681, was a famed English astrologer and occultist
during his time. Lilly was particularly adept at
interpreting the astrological charts drawn up for horary
questions, as this was his speciality. Lilly caused much
controversy in 1666 for allegedly predicting the Great
Fire of London some 14 years before it happened. For
this reason many people believed that he might have
started the fire, but there is no evidence to support
these claims. He was tried for the offence in Parliament
but was found to be innocent. See Explorer "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Lilly"
(d) Dr. John Dee (July 13,
1527-1608 or 1609) was a noted English, astronomer,
astrologer, geographer, occultist, and consultant to
Queen Elizabeth I. He also devoted much of his life to
the study of alchemy, divination, and Hermetic
philosophy See Explorer "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dr._Dee"
(e) Juggernaut: Hindu Myth.
A title of Krishna, the eighth avatar of Vishnu; spec.,
the uncouth idol of this deity at Pura in Orissa,
annually dragged in procession on an enormous wagon,
under the wheels of which many devotees are said to have
formerly thrown themselves to be crushed. OED
(f) Jack Sheppard: (March 4, 1702
— November 16, 1724) was a notorious English robber,
burglar and thief of early eighteenth century London. He
was hanged at Tyburn, ending his brief criminal career
after less than two years. See Explorer "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Sheppard"
(g) Richard Turpin: (1705 — April
7, 1739) was an English highwayman whose exploits were
romanticised following his execution in York for horse
theft. See Explorer
"http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dick_Turpin"
http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2012/03/12/think-well-do-well