Withholding Grain by Charles Spurgeon

A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, July 30, 1865, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.

He who withholds grain, the people shall curse him: but blessing shall be upon the head of him who sells it. (Proverbs 11:26)

1. If I dared, I would always preach upon the comforting promises and gracious doctrines of God’s Word. I find it most delightful and easy work to expatiate upon those themes of revelation which abound in sweetness and are full of savour and preciousness to the child of God. I said, “If I dared,” and you will ask me why I do not dare to? The answer is, because I have a solemn conviction on my mind, that if I wish to be clear of the blood of all men, I must strive to make my range of ministry as wide as the range of revelation, and I must not shun to declare the whole counsel of God. I feel bound to go, not where my wishes would lead me, but where Holy Scripture has made a path for my feet. There are certain texts in the Scriptures which are very seldom preached upon, because it is thought that there is little gospel in them, and that the people when they go home will say to one another, “Well, I was not fed this morning.” Those who aim at pleasing men, may well be shy of such subjects. But I hold that, since God in his wisdom has placed these passages in the Bible, he intended his servants, the preachers of the Word, to expound them. We are, it strikes me, not to preach from selections of Scripture only, but from all of the Sacred Volume, for “All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness: so that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished for all good works.” I freely confess that I do not know why I have selected this text this morning, except that it haunted and hunted me until I could not avoid preaching upon it. It seems to force itself upon me, and to bore its way into my soul like a rifle shot. I thought it over and over and could not make much of it, until I yielded up myself to it, saying within myself, “If the Lord has anything to say to the people out of my mouth, here it is—let him use it.” If there should be any people among our country friends, or our grain dealing townsmen, who this morning feel at all touched by the text, I cannot help it; there is my Master’s message to them, and I can only deliver it with the best of intentions, hoping that those to whom it comes home may be profited by it. It will, however, soon be clear to you that the verse before us has, besides its first meaning a weight of very important spiritual teaching in it, to which we shall all do well to take heed.

2. The text, as it stands, has to do, as you clearly see, with owners of grain and merchants of it. In Solomon’s days there were very frequent famines. Communication between one nation and another was so extremely difficult that the transportation of wheat in any large quantities was not attempted; and therefore, if a failure in the crops occurred in one district, the scarcity in that neighbourhood was not compensated by abundance in another, and terrible famines prevailed. Certain people in those days, not only stored up all the grain which grew on their own fields, but purchased as much as they could from others, in order to raise the market price above its natural level. This, under the circumstances was a very high affront put upon God, for instead of bearing their part in his judgments, these men enriched themselves by the poverty of their starving neighbours. There have been such people ever since Solomon’s day, and although the present system of free trade has nearly put an end to that kind of thing, there are doubtless some who would again withhold their grain, even at famine prices, if they could raise the price still higher. How does Scripture deal with this particular form of greed in trade?

3. I can only admire the wonderful reserve of Holy Scripture, for as Mr. Arnot well observes, “in this brief maxim no arbitrary rule is laid down to the possessor of grain, that he must sell at a certain period and at a certain price: and yet the hungry are not left without a protecting law. The protection of the weak is entrusted not to small police regulations, but to great self-acting providential arrangements. The double fact is recorded in terms of particular distinctness, that he who in times of scarcity hoards his grain in order to enrich himself is loathed by the people, and he who sells it freely is loved. This is all. There is no further legislation on the subject.” Our narrow wisdom might have wished for some definite law upon the subject, something like a sliding scale, but the great ruler of heaven and earth falls into no such error. Laws which interfere between buyer and seller, master and workman, by any form of law, are blunders and nuisances. Parliaments and princes have hung on to the antiquated absurdity of regulating prices, but the Holy Spirit does nothing of the kind. All the attempts of men to control the price of bread and wheat is sheer folly, as the history of France may well prove. The market goes best when it is left alone, and so in our text, there is no law enacted and no penalty threatened, except what the nature of things makes inevitable. God knows political economy, whether men do or not, and leaving the coarse machinery of police regulations, he puts the offender under a form of self administered regulation which is far more efficient. The text seems to say, “Well, if you have no love for your neighbour, and choose to keep your wheat, I make no law to break open your granary or pull down your bins of grain, but you will most certainly incur the hatred, contempt, and curse of the people among whom you dwell.”

4. You see, dear friends, that the man may do as he pleases about selling or not, but he cannot escape from the curse of the people if he chooses to lock up his grain; and on the other hand if he will sell at a proper price, or, as another translation reads it, break his bread, that is to say, give it to the starving if they cannot buy it, he will receive blessings not only from the people but from heaven itself.

5. Brethren, this is a matter of fact, that any man of any observation must have seen, that there is no transaction which ever brings such ill will upon a man, such general condemnation, especially from the poor, as withholding the grain. Common consent condemns the hoarder, and human nature revolts at his offence. Ask any one you choose to meet, unless he is himself deep in the same mire, and he will join you in crying out against it. Of course there are many ways of defending the deed, but there is no way of escaping the fact that the people curse the doer of it in their hearts. “Well,” one says, “it is my own grain, I may do as I like with it.” Just so, no one said you could not; no one disputed your rights only you are warned that in hoarding it you are sure to incur the people’s curse. You cannot alter that; it will follow and hang about your neck, and as far as the fact is known, it will make men curl the lip at you and sneer if they are your equals, while the working men deep in their hearts will abhor you. No matter how kind you may be to the poor in other matters, nor how you may have given your money in other ways, your withholding the grain will be a scorn among your enemies, and an offence to your best friends. It is not always a bad sign when the voice of the people is against a man, but in this case Scripture endorses it, and he who dares to run the risk is none too wise.

6. “Ah,” another says, “I do not see the wrong in withholding it. There are laws of supply and demand, and the preacher does not understand political economy.” The preacher, however, thinks he does understand it, and even if he does not, a child can comprehend the text before him, and with that we have to deal with just now. Solomon here tells you that if you like to carry out political economy in the withholding way, you will be cursed for it, and depend upon it YOU WILL. Facts are stubborn things, and this is one that withholding grain earns me the curse of the people, and that is what no Christian man would wish to bear.

7. “But what business is that of the preacher’s?” He answers that he thanks God that he has no share in it whatever, but he is in the position to rebuke what God rebukes, and he is doing no more than expounding God’s own word upon the matter. Whether you hear or forbear, there is the truth, and may the Lord bless it to you. “Well, we ought not to hear such things on Sundays.” What, not read our Bibles on Sundays—not explain the meaning of a text on Sundays? Some of you would not have heard me on a Monday, and therefore you have it today. Do not be angry with the text, but look at it and read it, and then afterwards choose as you will. “He who withholds grain,” God says, “the people shall curse him”; and if you wish to have ill will, and the poor reputation among thousands of poor cottagers and all others who have human sympathies, then withhold your grain. Thank God, the worst monopoliser cannot do much mischief nowadays, for by the gracious providence of God, which has burst the fetters of commerce, we are not likely to feel any very great scarcity of bread in this country. Should our own crops fail, the harvests of other lands supply the masses with their food. The crime is growing scarcer and scarcer; but, if any cases still survive, and men choose to follow so ruinous a course, they will be cursed for it in mutterings deep if silent, and in sneers as bitter as they are well deserved.

8. With your permission, I shall now take a step above my text, using it as a ladder to mount to a still higher truth. If it brings a curse upon a man to withhold the bread which perishes, what a weight of curse will light upon that man who withholds the bread of eternal life. If the people shall curse the man who keeps back the bread which merely sustains the body, what shall be the withering denunciations which shall overwhelm the soul of him who deals deceitfully with the bread of eternal life? That seems to me to be a fair deduction from the text, and at that truth we will aim this morning. First, I shall attempt to show the ways in which the bread of life may be withheld from the people, and the curse which will follow; secondly, I shall try to depict the blessedness of the man who “breaks it,” as another translation has it, to the people; and, then, thirdly, we shall conclude by opening our own granaries and breaking some of this bread among the assembled multitude.

Incurring the People's Curse

9. I. First, he who withholds the bread of life will surely incur the people’s curse upon him. HOW CAN THIS BE DONE?

Locking Up God's Word in an Unknown Language

10. 1. It may be readily accomplished by locking up the Word of God in an unknown language, or by delivering and preaching it in such a style that the people shall not comprehend it. The Roman Catholic Church for many years kept the sacred Scriptures in an unknown tongue, and resisted all attempts to translate the book of God into the common language of the people. What a curse Rome has had resting on her head. To those who know the enormity of this wickedness in holding back the word of life, it is scarcely possible to think of Rome without invoking judgment upon her. What myriads of souls went down to the pit perishing through lack of knowledge during what were called the Dark Ages! What fearful imprecations they must be uttering even now upon Popes and Cardinals, and Priests who had the key of the kingdom, but would neither enter themselves nor permit others to enter there! They had the light but they concealed it in a dark lantern, and the nations were compelled to sit in the darkness of profound ignorance and superstition because they would not give them the light. Surely the people shall curse such for ever. But are these the only offenders? Is not their crime prolonged by those ministers who preach in an oratorical style, with flowers of rhetoric far too fine to be reached by the common people? We have heard of some, and we fear we know some, who would rather round a phrase than win a soul, to whom it is the first and the last object to deliver refined thoughts in elegant and elaborate language, and, having done so, having soared aloft on the spread eagle’s wing far out of sight, they are content to have dazzled the many, and displayed themselves. Truly such men withhold the grain. What can the poor countrymen and servants, who are sitting in the aisles, make out of their eloquence? What can the working people, who come in to hear something that may do them good, make out of their outlandish big talk? The terms of theology, the phrases of art, the definitions of philosophy, the jargon of science, are an unknown tongue to the young godly ploughmen or praying shopkeepers. “Alas!” he says, “this does not help me—I cannot understand it.” Possibly, in their ignorance, some people think the high flyers to be very learned men, but in reality they are far from it; for plainness of speech is a better sign of learning than high sounding words and soaring sentences.

11. Oh, dear friends, when we preach the gospel plainly, I am sure we have our reward! When preaching in some village chapel, or from a wagon in a field, it is no small delight to watch the faces of the men in smock frocks1 and the women in their print gowns, as they catch or feel the force of an inspired truth; plain speech wins their blessing. But to stand and talk right over the people’s heads—what is it but having the grain and keeping it from those who need it? Simplicity is the authorised style of true gospel ministry. “Having this ministry,” says the apostle, “we use great plainness of speech.” The common people heard the Master gladly, which they would not have done if he had spoken in high flown language. Whitfield, the prince of preachers, was mainly so because of the market language which he used. Let all of us who have the bread of life try to be very plain. You who write tracts, or preach in the street, or you who teach children, break the large slices of truth into small pieces, and crack the shells of the hard nuts. Take away the crust for the babes, and pick out the pits from the fruit. Beware lest in seeking an excess of refinement you withhold the grain and incur the people’s curse.

Keeping Back the Vital Truths

12. 2. But, secondly, we may fall into this sin by keeping back the most important and vital truths of Revelation, and giving a prominence to other things, which are only secondary. My brethren, if I were to stand in this pulpit, and for the next few months address you upon moral precepts, the excellence of virtue or the faultiness of vice; if you could come out of this place and say, time after time, “We hear nothing about Jesus Christ; we do not know whether there is any Holy Spirit”: if I were gifted with ever so much ability—if these were my themes, however earnestly I pressed them, I would be guilty of withholding the grain, the true food for souls. Morality brings no food to hungry souls, although it is a good thing in its place. Pronouncements against vice are not the bread of heaven, though well enough in their place. We need to have the great doctrines of grace brought forward, for the Word of God is the sword of the Spirit, and it is by preaching the truth as it is in Jesus, that souls are won to him. I grieve to think how indistinct some preachers are upon the doctrines of grace: they dare not say “Election,” or if they do they immediately tremble, and guard their words with shields so large that the poor truth is crushed beneath them. Concerning final perseverance, effectual calling, particular redemption, or any of those grand truths in which the fatness, and savour, and marrow of the gospel is to be found, you may listen to some of them from the beginning of January to the end of December, without hearing a word. This will not do: this is taking away the backbone from the spiritual man; it is tearing away the vitals of the gospel; it is giving to the people husks for wheat, and straw and chaff, instead of grain. Above all, that ministry is an abomination which places Jesus Christ in the background. My brothers and sisters, we must not only hear something about Jesus Christ, but our preaching must be mainly about him. He must be front and centre; indeed, let me say, in some sense, he must be all that the preacher has to preach. Christ crucified must be the general summary of his ministry; and he must be able to say, when he retires from it, and is called up higher, “I have preached Christ. Of the things which I have spoken, this is the sum: I have preached my Master and what my Master gave me.” Oh my brethren, what a guilty ministry is that in which the blood has no place—the ministry which denies or undervalues the atoning sacrifice of the great Redeemer! God have mercy upon us that we have not preached this fundamental truth as earnestly as we ought to have done, but still we can plead before him, and say, we have truly desired to do it.

E’er since by faith I saw the stream
 His flowing wounds supply,
Redeeming love has been my theme,
 And shall be till I die.

What is the use of any ministry of which that is not true? It is withholding grain, and in eternity the lost will curse their destroyer.

13. But we must not talk about ministers, of whom there are not many here: we will come down to you. Many of you are Sunday School teachers: now you can sin in this way in the very same sense. Suppose as a Sunday School teacher you are content with making the little ones read through the lesson, satisfied with filling up the hour or the hour and a half, and feeling you have done a good deal in making the little fellows sit still, and so on. Ah! my brother and sister, it is very solemn work. You have undertaken to teach these young immortals, and if you are satisfied with just making them go through the routine, take heed, lest when they grow up, they come to curse you. I am afraid that many Sunday School addresses have no gospel in them. I do not see why the same gospel should not be preached to children as to grownup people. I think it should. To stand up in a Sunday School and say, “Now, be good boys and girls and God will love you,” is telling lies. I know the teachers of our school feel the importance of delivering the truth as it is in Jesus to their children, and you therefore tell them, “You are lost and ruined, and your salvation is in Jesus Christ: look to him and live.” The teacher whose general teaching is not full of Christ will be called to a sad account in the day when Christ shall come. Dear teachers of the school, whatever you do not know, do know your Lord, and whatever you cannot get into the youngsters’ heads, do make it a matter of prayer that you may get a knowledge of Christ and his atoning blood into their young hearts by the Holy Spirit. The same is also true of those of our beloved friends who conduct Bible classes, or who in any way teach the people. I do not know that I have any necessity to say this to most of you here, but still I will say it for the good of others; you must not my brethren drift away from your great theme. It is of no use to go to the people empty handed, we must take them bread; we only mock them by offering them stones, if we talk to them about the histories and precepts of Scripture and forget the cross. Let our teaching be full of grace and truth: let us deliver our souls of every doctrine as we find it in Scripture, and let us be determined that if men do perish, it shall not be for lack of knowing the way of salvation.

A Lack of Loving Zeal

14. 3. We may withhold the bread of life, dear friends, by a lack of loving zeal in our labour; because the mere relating the plan of salvation is of no great service; God may bless it, but he does not often do so.

15. What God blesses to the saving of sinners is truth attended by the earnestness of the speaker, the loving anguish of a heart which stirs the preacher’s soul. What shall I say here? for if I speak, I only condemn myself. Think of the preaching of Baxter. He preached for many years, but he said he never went into his pulpit without his knees knocking together; and Martin Luther said the same. Truly it is enough to make any man tremble, when he feels that he is God’s mouth to immortal souls. “If they perish and you do not warn them, their blood I will require at your hand.” Surely this ought to give a melting heart and streaming eyes to God’s ministers! But, I say, I remember reading of Baxter’s ministry—oh what pleading there was in it! The man seemed as if he never would go out of the pulpit until his hearers had received the truth, he wept, and sighed, and sobbed, unless they came to Jesus Christ. You know how he followed them to their houses, watched them through the streets of Kidderminster, and would give them no rest until they thought about eternal things, and he was privileged thus to break the bread of life to many thousands, although his body was as full of physical pain as his heart was of holy anxiety. Oh for something of Mr. Baxter’s spirit to make us love the souls of men as he did! We are guilty of withholding grain, unless we preach with a sympathising, loving, tender, affectionate, earnest, anxious soul. Brothers and sisters, most of you are doing something for Jesus Christ; let me therefore put this very plainly to you. If you get through your work for God as a mere matter of form, however true may be what you have to say, and however carefully you may deliver it, yet still if the truth you deliver is not delivered with holy anxiety, with earnestness, with fervour, with love, with affection, and above all, if it is not attended with prayer, take heed lest some day you incur the curse of those from whom you withheld the bread. How would you like, Sunday School teachers, to see a lad in your class grow up and go into sin? How would you like to meet him some day on his death bed, when his vices had at last brought him to his end; how would you like that he should look into your face and say, “Ah! teacher, you were never earnest with me: you told me the truth, but you told it to me so coldly that I did not believe it. If I had seen one tear in your eye, I think there would have been one in mine. If I thought you felt what you were saying, I sometimes think I should have felt it too; but you merely kept me still and told it all to me, as if it were no great matter, and so I doubted it all, and from doubt went on to unbelief and ran into sin, and here I am. Oh that you had wept over me as such-and-such a teacher did with my brother! How different is my brother from what I am. He was in another class, and his teacher took him before God in prayer; prayed with him as well as for him, told him the truth, but did more, laboured to drive it home as with a great hammer, while he pleaded with him to lay hold on eternal life. Teacher, oh that you had been more earnest with me.” Beloved, seek to rid yourselves of any future regrets in this matter. It is great satisfaction, when you hear the death bell toll, to say, “Well, I did all I could for that soul, and whether it is in heaven or hell, my conscience is clear.” You cannot save, but still, God who works by means, may make you the instrument of conveying salvation to sinners: or, on the other hand, you may be made instruments of unrighteousness, through whom Satan may harden these children’s hearts, even to their everlasting ruin. I take the case of a Sunday School teacher, but I intend the remarks for every worker. Oh let us work for God with our whole hearts. God make us more intensely earnest. Life is earnest, death is earnest, heaven is earnest, hell is earnest, Christ is earnest, God is earnest; let us be clad with zeal, as with a coat, and go out to serve the Lord with all our soul and strength, as his Holy Spirit shall enable us.

Refusing to Labor Zealously

16. 4. Fourthly, we may be found guilty of withholding grain by refusing to labour zealously for the spread of the kingdom of Christ and the conversion of sinners. I am afraid that the Churches of the past were not altogether without a curse because of their deficiency in the matter of missions and home evangelization. During the pastorate of my venerated predecessor, Dr. Gill, this Church, instead of increasing, gradually decreased; and although the age in which he lived was honoured with many great and excellent men, yet the state of our own denomination, and the Presbyterian body, and the Independent body, in England was most lamentable. Many of the Churches were gradually sliding into Unitarianism, and the simple gospel of Jesus Christ was scarcely preached, or, where preached, it was without any power whatever: and I take it that the reason was very much that the Churches were content to be edified themselves, but had no heart of compassion for the perishing multitudes around and abroad. But notice this, from the day when Fuller, Carey, Sutcliffe, and others, met together to send out missionaries to India the sun began to dawn in a gracious revival which is not over yet, for bad as the state of the Churches now is, yet it is marvellously an improvement upon anything before the age of missions. Though not as zealous as we ought to be, the zeal of Christendom is one hundred times greater than it was then; and, as for what is done for winning souls, brethren, the Churches now are like a garden of the Lord compared with what they were then. I believe that the neglect of sending the word to the heathen brought a blight and a curse upon the Churches, which is now happily removed. Yet even today we find professors who are always doubting. They never get beyond—

’Tis a point I long to know.

There they stay, and never know whether they are saved or not. Full assurance is to be a tempting morsel which they have not yet tasted. Their eyes do not sparkle with heavenly delight; they do not know what it is to sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus; their raptures are very few, their joys very shallow. I will tell you why. In almost every case these people do nothing for souls; they withhold the grain, and therefore they incur this curse in their souls, that they shall not enjoy their own religion because they do not want to lead other people into it. If you put your hands into your pockets and say, “Well, glory be to God; I trust I am one of the elect, and whatever becomes of the rest of mankind really is not my concern. Every man for himself, I say”—that is such an unchristian spirit, so antagonistic to the whole life of Jesus Christ, that if you are severely whipped in providence, I can only hope you may be blessed by it; but I would not pray that the rod may be removed until you are scourged into a better frame of mind. Commend me to the Christian who says, “I bless God I am saved; now what can I do for others?” The first thing in the morning he prays, “God help me to say a word to some soul today.” During the day, wherever he may be, he is watching for his opportunity, and will do good if he can. He is concerned about his children: it sometimes breaks his heart to think that they are not saved. If he happens to have an ungodly wife, it is his daily burden, “Oh God, save my wife!” When he goes to a place of worship he does not expect the minister to make sermons always on purpose for him, but he says “I shall sit here and pray God to bless the word,” and if he looks around the chapel and sees one whom he loves, he prays for him, “God send the word home to him.” When the service is over, a man of this kind will waylay the unconverted, and try to have a personal word with them; and see if he cannot discover some beginnings of grace in their souls. This is how earnest Christians live; and let me tell you, as a rule, although they have the griefs of other men’s souls to carry, they do not have much grief about their own. As a rule, their Master favours them with the light of his countenance; they are watering others and they are watered themselves also. May this be your work and mine! But some of you say nothing for Christ at all. You are too timid you say, and others of you are too indifferent, too thoughtless about others. Oh, the opportunities many of you have lost! Oh, the many who have died to whom you might have spoken but you did not! Oh, the people who are now in the darkness of ignorance who get no light from you! You have light, but you keep it. They are dying, and you have the healing medicine, but you will not tell them about it. May God deliver you from the curse of those who thus withhold the grain.

17. We will only mention one more form of this evil. Some may be said to be guilty of withholding the grain, because while they themselves do not speak for Christ, they do not help those who can. No Christian man ought to go to bed with an easy conscience, if he has thousands of pounds which he does not require, which lies idle unused for God. There must be many Christians in this rich country who have not consecrated their substance to the Lord. When a man can say, “I have money which I really do not need, and my children do not require it; and this is money absolutely needed for God’s cause,” ought he to keep it from the Lord Jesus? Must you confess that so many missionaries might be sent out tomorrow, if you just drew a cheque and handed it over to the proper quarter, then why not do it? A destitute neighbourhood needs a place of worship, and if I can build it if I am able, how am I to answer for it to my Lord?

18. I cannot understand how a man can love God when he only lives to heap up riches. I can with great difficulty imagine such a case, but I fear that such cannot be real piety. It seems to me that, if I have any religion in my soul, it will make me not only say with Dr. Watts:—

Were the whole realm of nature mine,
That were a present far too small;
Love so amazing, so divine
Demands my soul, my life, my all.

but I think it would make me carry it out. I will not propose to you that you should act indiscreetly in giving, so as to impoverish your families, or deprive yourselves of what is necessary; you know I am not so foolish. But I am speaking to many Christians who have not only enough but to spare, and who will continue to accumulate, and accumulate, and accumulate, and I cannot think that they can feel that they are doing right in the sight of God. Oh God! this great city needing preachers, needing the gospel—thousands needing even bread to keep them from starving—and for your professing people to he heaping their coffers fuller and fuller! Why surely, if I do this, I am heaping up wrath against the day of wrath, and I shall find it come into my bosom hot and fierce from the God of Hosts, to whom my gold and my silver will cry out against me. Let us not be guilty of this, but each in our own position, as far as we can, let us be aiding others to preach the word if we cannot preach it ourselves. Dozens of young men are desirous to enter our College, and you can help them to go out to preach, if you cannot preach yourself.

Those Blessedness of Those Who Break the Bread of Life

19. II. I am pleased to turn to the other subject for a minute or two. I am to speak upon THE BLESSEDNESS WHICH THOSE POSSESS WHO BREAK THE BREAD OF LIFE.

20. To describe it is altogether beyond my power. You must know, and taste, and feel it, beloved. There are many blessednesses in doing good to others. God is a good paymaster; he pays his servants while at work as well as when they have done it; and one of his payments is this, an easy conscience. If you have spoken faithfully only to one person, when you go to bed at night, you feel happy in thinking “Today I have discharged my conscience of that man’s blood.” You do not know how delightful a Sunday evening is for some of us when God has helped us to be faithful; how sweet to feel, “I have made many blunders, shown many infirmities of the flesh, and so on, but I have preached the gospel and preached it with my whole heart to the best of my ability.” One feels a burden taken off one’s back, and there is a joy and satisfaction unknown to those who sit at home doing nothing. You in your class at the Sunday School, I know you feel when Sunday is over, though it is a very hard day’s work for some of you after the six days of toil in the week, you feel “I thank God I did not spend that afternoon in lolling around at home, but I did speak a word for Jesus.” You will find such a peace of mind that you would not give it up for all the world. Then there is a great comfort in doing something for Jesus. Look into his face, what would you not do for him? When first converted did you not think you could do ten thousand things for Jesus; the moment your burden was off your back and your sins forgiven, how you felt you could follow him through floods and flames! Have you lived up to your resolutions, brethren? Have you kept up to your own ideas of Christian duties? I do not suppose any of us can say that we have. Still, what little we have done has been an unspeakable delight, when we have felt that we have been crowning his head, and strewing palm branches in his path. Oh what a happiness to place jewels in his crown, and give to him to see of the travail of his soul! Beloved, there is very great reward in watching the first buddings of conviction in a young soul! To say of that girl in the class, “She seems so tender of heart, I do hope that there is the Lord’s work there.” To go home and pray over that boy, who said something in the afternoon to make you think he must know something more than he seemed to know! Oh, the joy of hope! But as for the joy of success ! It is unspeakable. I remember the first soul that God ever gave me—she is in heaven now—but I remember when my good deacon said to me, “God has set his seal on your ministry in this place, sir.” Oh, if anyone had said to me, “Someone has left you twenty thousand pounds,” I should not have given a snap of my fingers for it, compared with that joy which I felt when I was told that God had set his seal on my ministry. “Who is it?” I asked. “Why, it is a poor labouring man’s wife! She went home brokenhearted by the sermon two or three Sundays ago, and she has been in great trouble of soul, but she has found peace, and she says she would like to speak to you.” I felt like the boy who has earned his first guinea, like a diver who has been down to the depths of the sea and brought up a rare pearl—I prize each one whom God has given me, but I prize that woman most. Since then my God has given me many thousands of souls, who profess to have found the Saviour by hearing or reading words which have come from my lips. Well, this joy, overwhelming as it is, is a hungry sort of joy—you want more of it: for the more spiritual children you have, the more your soul desires to see them multiplied. Let me tell you, that to be a soul winner is the happiest thing in this world, and with every soul you bring to Jesus Christ, you seem to get a new heaven here upon earth. But what will be the joy of soul winning when we get up above! What happiness to the Christian minister to be greeted on his entrance into heaven by many spiritual children! They will call him “Father,” for although they are not married nor given in marriage, although natural relationships are all over, yet spiritual relationships last for ever. Oh! how sweet is that sentence, “Enter into the joy of your Lord.” Do you know what the joy of Christ is over a saved sinner? You cannot guess it. You would need to know the griefs he suffered to save that sinner. Oh the joys he must feel when he sees that sinner saved as the result of his griefs: this is the very joy which you and I are to possess in heaven: “Enter into the joy of your Lord.” Yes, when he mounts the throne, you shall mount with him. When the heaven rings with “Well done, well done,” you shall partake in the reward; you have toiled with him, you have suffered with him, you shall now reign with him; you have sown with him, you shall reap with him; you were despised with him, you shall now be honoured with him; your face was covered with sweat like his and your soul was grieved for the sins of men as his soul was, now shall your face be bright with heaven’s splendour as is his countenance, and now shall your soul be filled with beautiful joys even as his soul is. He who breaks bread, blessings shall be upon his head.

Opening the Granary

21. III. Now I have to open the GRANARY for a minute myself.

22. Hungry sinners, wanting a Saviour, we cannot withhold the bread from you. You may never come to hear the gospel again; we, therefore, will open the granary very wide. Christ Jesus, the Son of God, became man to save men, and inasmuch as God’s wrath was due to sin, Christ took the sin of all who have ever believed, or ever shall believe on him, and, taking all their sins, he was punished in their room and place, and stead, so that God can now justly forgive sin because Christ was punished in the place of sinners, and suffered divine wrath for them. Now this is the way of salvation, that you trust this Son of God with your soul, and, if you do so, then know that your sins are now forgiven you, and that you are saved. Concerning this salvation, just hear these few words.

23. It is a satisfying salvation. Here is all that you can ever want. Your conscience shall be at ease for ever if you believe in Jesus: your worst sins shall no longer trouble you, your blackest iniquities shall no longer haunt you. Believing in Jesus, every sin you have of thought and word and deed shall be cast into the depths of the sea and shall never be mentioned against you any more for ever.

24. It is an all sufficient salvation too. However great your sins, Christ’s blood can take them all away. However deep your needs, Christ can supply them. You cannot be so big a sinner as he is a Saviour. You may be the worst sinner outside of hell, but you are not too great for him to remove your sins; he can carry elephantine sinners upon his shoulders, and bear gigantic mountains of guilt upon his head into the wilderness of forgetfulness. He has enough for you however deep your necessity.

25. It is, moreover, a complete salvation. Sovereign mercy does not stand on the mountain and cry to you, climb up here and I will save you. Eternal mercy comes down the valley to you just where you are, and meets your case just as it is, and never leaves you until it has made you fit to be a partaker of the inheritance of the saints in light. Christ does not want you to pay one talent out of the hundred and promise to pay for you the ninety-nine. He will discharge all your debts of sin. All that you need to take you up to heaven is provided in Jesus.

26. This is a present salvation—a salvation which, if it comes to you, will save you now. You shall be a child of God this very hour, and before that clock shall strike again, you shall rejoice in the peace which the Spirit of God gives you, if you believe on him.

27. It is an available salvation, freely presented to you in Christ Jesus. Remember the text of two or three Sundays ago: “Whoever will, let him take of the water of life freely.” Jesus casts no one out who comes to him. Oh that you may be led to come this morning.

28. Thus I have tried to avoid the sin of withholding grain; and if any in this house of prayer have been guilty of it, I pray you avoid the curse of the people, and seek the blessing of the Most High God, from this day endeavouring to scatter everywhere the bread of life. Go and work for God wherever you have an opportunity, and help us in our prayers and efforts to send out more labourers into the harvest, for the harvest truly is plenteous, but the labourers are few. Amen.

[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon—Proverbs 11

Footnotes

  1. Smock frock: A loose fitting garment of coarse linen or the like, worn by farm labourers over or instead of a coat and usually reaching to midleg or lower. OED.  

http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2010/10/25/withholding-grain