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A Caution to the Presumptuous
A Sermon Delivered on Sabbath Morning, May 13, 1855, by the
REV. C.H. SPURGEON
At Exeter Hall, Strand.
"Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall." 1 Cor. 10:12
It is a singular fact, but nevertheless most
certain, that the vices are the counterfeits of virtues. Whenever God sends from the mint
of heaven a precious coin of genuine metal, Satan will imitate the impress, and utter a
vile production of no value. God gives love; it is his nature and his essence. Satan also
fashioneth a thing which he calls love, but it is lust. God bestows courage; and it is a
good thing to be able to look one's fellow in the face, fearless of all men in doing our
duty. Satan inspires fool-hardiness, styles it courage, and bids the man rush to the
cannon's mouth for "bubble reputation." God creates in man holy fear. Satan
gives him unbelief, and we often mistake the one for the other. So with the best of
virtues, the saving grace of faith, when it comes to its perfection it ripens into
confidence, and there is nothing so comfortable and so desirable to the Christian, as the
full assurance of faith. Hence, we find Satan, when he sees this good coin, at once takes
the metal of the bottomless pit, imitates the heavenly image and superscription of
assurance, and palms upon us the vice of presumption.
We are astonished, perhaps, as Calvinistic Christians, to find Paul saying, "Let him
that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall;" but we need not be astonished, for
though we have a great right to believe that we stand, if we think we stand through the
power of Godthough we cannot be too confident of the might of the Most High, there
is a thing so near akin to true confidence, that unless you use the greatest discernment
you cannot tell the difference. Unholy presumptionit is against that which I am to
speak this morning. Let me not be misunderstood. I shall not utter one word against the
strongest faith. I wish all Little-Faiths were Strong-Faiths, that all Fearings were made
Valiants-for-Truth, and the Ready-to-Halts Asahel's Nimble-of-Foot, that they might all
run in their Master's work. I speak not against strong faith or full assurance; God giveth
it to us; it is the holiest, happiest thing that a Christian can have, and there is no
state so desirable as that of being able to say, "I know whom I have believed, and am
persuaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him." It is not
against that I speak, but I warn you against that evil thing, a false confidence and
presumption which creepeth over a Christian, like the cold death-sleep on the
mountain-top, from which, if he is not awakened, as God will see that he shall be, death
will be the inevitable consequence. "Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest
he fall."
I shall this morning attempt first, to find out the character; secondly, to show
the danger; and thirdly, to give the counsel. The character is, the man who
thinks he stands; the danger is, that he may fall; and the counsel is, "let him take
heed.
1. My first business shall be to FIND OUT THE CHARACTER intended by the presumptuous man,
the man who thinks he stands. I could find a multitude of such if I might search the wide
world o'er. I could find men in business filled with an arrogant hardihood, who, because
they have in one speculation been successful will wade far out into the stormy sea of this
contending life, risk their alland lose it too. I might mention others who,
presuming upon their health, are spending their years in sin and their lives in iniquity,
because they think their bones iron and their nerves steel, and "all men mortal but
themselves." I might speak of men who will venture into the midst of temptation,
confident in their boasted power, exclaiming with self-complacency, "Do you think I
am so weak as to sin? Oh! no; I shall stand. Give me the glass; I shall never be a
drunkard. Give me the song; you will not find me a midnight reveller. I can drink a little
and then I can stop." Such are presumptuous men. But I am not about to find them
there; my business this morning is with God's church. The fanning must begin with the
floor; the winnowing must try the wheat. So we are to winnow the church this morning to
discover the presumptuous. We need not go far to find them. There are in every Christian
church men who think they stand, men who vaunt themselves in fancied might and power,
children of nature finely dressed, but not the living children of the living God; they
have not been humbled or broken in spirit, or if they have, they have fostered carnal
security until it has grown to a giant and trampled the sweet flower of humility under its
foot. They think they stand. I speak now of real Christians, who, notwithstanding, have
grown presumptuous, and indulge in a fleshly security. May my Master arouse such, while in
preaching I endeavour to go to the core and root of the matter. For a little while I will
expatiate upon the frequent causes of presumption in a Christian.
1. And first, a very common cause, is continued worldly prosperity. Moab is settled
on his lees, he hath not been emptied from vessel to vessel. Give a man wealth; let his
ships bring home continually rich freights; let the winds and waves appear to be his
servants to bear his vessels across the bosom of the mighty deep; let his lands yield
abundantly; let the weather be propitious to his crops, and the skies smile pleasantly
upon his enterprise; let the bands of Orion be loosed for him; let the sweet influence of
the Pleiades descend upon him; let uninterrupted success attend him; let him stand among
men as a successful merchant, as a princely Dives, as a man who is heaping up riches to a
large extent, who is always prospering: or, if not wealth, let him enjoy continued health;
let him know no sickness; allow him with braced nerve and brilliant eye, to march through
the world, and live happily; give him the buoyant spirit; let him have the song
perpetually on his lips, and his eye be ever sparkling with joy:the happy, happy man
who laughs at care, and cries, "Begone, dull care, I prithee begone from me." I
say the consequence of such a state to a man, let him be the best Christian who ever
breathed, will be presumption; and he will say, "I stand." "In my
prosperity," says David, "I said, I shall never be moved." And we are not
much better than David, nor half as good. If God should always rock us in the cradle of
prosperityif we were always dandled on the knees of fortuneif we had not some
stain on the alabaster pillar, if there were not a few clouds in the sky, some specks in
our sunshineif we had not some bitter drops in the wine of this life, we should
become intoxicated with pleasure, we should dream "we stand;" and stand we
should, but it would be upon a pinnacle; stand we might, but hike the man asleep upon the
mast, each moment we should be in jeopardy. We bless God, then, for our afflictions; we
thank him for our depressions of spirit; we extol his name for the losses of our property;
for we feel that had it not so happened to us, had he not chastened us every morning, and
vexed us every evening, we might have become too secure. Continued worldly prosperity is a
fiery trial. If it be so with any of you, apply this proverb to your own state, "As
the fining pot for silver, and the furnace for gold: so is a man to his praise."
2. Again, light thoughts of sin will engender presumption. When we are first
converted, our conscience is so very tender, that we are afraid of the slightest sin. I
have known young converts almost afraid to proceed a step, lest they should put their feet
in the wrong direction. They will ask advice of their minister, and difficult cases of
moral casuistry will they bring before us, such as we hardly know how to answer. They have
a holy timidity, a godly fear, lest they should offend against God. But alas! very soon
the fine bloom upon these first ripe fruits is removed by the rough handling of the
surrounding world. The sensitive plant of young piety turns into a willow in after life,
too pliant, too easily yielding. It is sadly true, that even a Christian will grow by
degrees so callous, that the sin which once startled him and made his blood run cold, does
not alarm him in the least. I can speak from my own experience. When first I heard an
oath, I stood aghast, and knew not where to hide myself; yet now I can hear an imprecation
or blasphemy against God, and though a shudder still runs through my veins, there is not
that solemn feeling, that intense anguish, which I felt when first I heard such evil
utterances. By degrees we get familiar with sin. The ear in which the cannon has been
booming will not notice slight sounds. The men who work in those huge vessels, the
hammering of which causes immense noise, cannot at first sleep, for the continual din in
their ears; but by-and-by, they, when they are used to it, think nothing of it. So with
sin. First, a little sin doth startle us. Soon we say, "Is it not a little one?"
like Lot did of Zoar. Then there comes another, larger, and then another, until by degrees
we begin to regard it as but a little ill; and then you know, there comes an unholy
presumption, and we think we stand. "We have not fallen," say we, "we only
did such a little thing; we have not gone astray. True, we tripped a little, but we stood
upright in the main. We might have uttered one unholy word, but as for the most of our
conversation, it was consistent." So we palliate sin; we throw a gloss over it, we
try to hide it. Christian, beware! when thou thinkest lightly of sin, then thou hast
become presumptuous. Take heed, lest thou shouldst fall. Sin a little thing! Is it
not a poison! Who knows its deadliness? Sin a little thing! Do not the little foxes
spoil the vines? Sina little thing! Doth not the tiny coral insect build a rock that
wrecks a navy? Do not little strokes fell lofty oaks? Will not continual droppings wear
away stones? Sina little thing! It girded his head with thorns that now is
crowned with glory. Sina little thing! It made him suffer anguish,
bitterness, and woe, till he endured
"All that incarnate God could bear, with strength enough, and none to spare."
It is not a little thing, sirs. Could you weigh it in the scales of eternity, you would fly from it as from a serpent, and abhor the least appearance of evil. But alas! loose thoughts of sin often beget a presumptuous spirit, and we think we stand.
3. A third reason often is, low thoughts
of the value of religion. We none of us value religion enough. Religious furor, as it
is called, is laughed at everywhere; but I do not believe there is such a thing as
religious furor at all. If a man could be so enthusiastic as to give his body to be burned
at the stake, could he pour out his drops of blood and turn each drop into a life, and
then let that life be slaughtered in perpetual martyrdom, he would not love his God too
much. Oh, no! when we think that this world is but a narrow space; that time will soon be
gone, and we shall be in the for-ever of eternity; when we consider we must be either in
hell or in heaven throughout a never- ending state of immortality, how sirs, can we love
too much? how can we set too high a value on the immortal soul? Can we ask too great a
price for heaven? Can we think we do too much to serve that God who gave himself for our
sins? Ah! no; and yet my friends, most of us do not sufficiently regard the value of
religion. We cannot any of us estimate the soul rightly; we have nothing with which to
compare it. Gold is sordid dust; diamonds are but small lumps of congealed air that can be
made to melt away. We have nought with which to compare the soul; therefore we cannot tell
its value. It is because we do not know this, that we presume. Doth the miser who loves
his gold let it be scattered on the floor that his servant may steal it? Doth he not hide
it in some secret place where no eye shall behold it? Day after day, night after night, he
counteth out his treasure because he loves it. Doth the mother trust her babe by the
river-side? Doth she not in her sleep think of it? and when it is sick, will she leave it
to the care of some poor nurse, who may suffer it to die? Oh! no; what we love, we will
not wantonly throw away; what we esteem most precious, we will guard with the most anxious
care. So, if Christians knew the value of their souls, if they estimated religion at its
proper rate, they never would presume; but low thoughts of Christ, low thoughts of God,
mean thoughts of our souls' eternal statethese things tend to make us carelessly
secure. Take heed, therefore, of low ideas of the gospel, lest ye be overtaken by the evil
one.
4. But again, this presumption often springs from ignorance of what we are, and where
we stand. Many Christians have not yet learned what they are. It is true, the first
teaching of God is to shew us our own state, but we do not know that thoroughly till many
year s after we have known Jesus Christ. The fountains of the great deep within our hearts
are not broken up all at once; the corruption of our soul is not developed in an hour.
"Son of man," said the angel of Ezekiel, "I will show thee the abominations
of Israel." He then took him in at one door, where he saw abominable things, and
stood aghast. "Son of man, I will show thee greater abominations than these;"
then he takes him into another chamber, and Ezekiel says, "Surely I have now seen the
worst." "No," says the angel, "I will show thee greater things than
these." So, all our life long the Holy Spirit reveals to us the horrid abomination of
our hearts. I know there are some here who do not think anything about it; they think they
are good-hearted creatures. Good hearts, have you? Good hearts! Jeremiah had a better
heart than you, yet he said, "The heart is deceitful above all things, and
desperately wicked; who can know it?" No; the black lesson cannot be learned in a
night. God alone knows the evil of the heart; and Young says, "God spares all eyes
but his own that awful sightthe vision of a human heart." If we could but see
it, we should stand aghast. Well, it is ignorance of this that makes us presume. We say,
"I have a good nature, I have a noble disposition; I have none of those hot and angry
passions that some have; I can stand secure; I have not that dry, tindery heart that is on
fire in a moment; my passions are weakened; my powers for evil are somewhat taken down,
and I may stand safely." Ah! ye little know that it is when ye talk like this, that
ye presume. O worm of the dust, thou art not yet free from an evil nature, for sin and
corruption remain in the heart even of the regenerate; and it is strangely true, though it
appears a paradox, as Ralph Erskine said, that a Christian sometimes thinks himself
"To good and evil equal bent
And both a devil and a saint."
There is such corruption in a Christian,
that while he is a saint in his life, and justified through Christ, he seems a devil
sometimes in imagination, and a demon in the wishes and corruptions of his soul. Take
heed, Christian, thou hast need to be upon the watch tower; thou hast a heart of unbelief;
therefore watch thou both night and day.
5. But to finish this delineation of a presumptuous manPride is the most
pregnant cause of presumption. In all its various shapes it is the fountain of carnal
security. Sometimes it is pride of talent. God has endowed a man with gifts; he is
able to stand before the multitude, or to write for the many; he has a discerning mind, he
has a judgment, and such like things. Then says he, " As for the ignorant, those who
have no talent, they may fall; my brother ought to take care: but look at me. How am I
wrapped in grandeur!" And thus in his self-complacency he thinks he stands. Ah! those
are the men that fall. How many that flamed like comets in the sky of the religious world
have rushed into space and been quenched in darkness! How many a man who has stood like a
prophet before his fellows, and who would exclaim as he wrapped himself in his conceit,
"I, only I am alive, I am the only prophet of God;" and yet that only prophet
fell; his lamp was quenched, and his light put out in darkness. How many have boasted of
their might and dignity, and have said, "I have built this mighty Babylon," but
then they thought they stood, and they fell at once. "Let him that thinketh he
standeth," with the proudest talents, "take heed lest he fall."
Others have the pride of grace. That is a curious fact; but there is such a thing
as being proud of grace. A man says, "I have great faith, I shall not fall; poor
little faith may, but I never shall." " I have fervent love," says another
man, "I can stand, there is no danger of my going astray; as for my brother over
there, he is so cold and slow, he will fall, I dare say." Says another, "I have
a most burning hope of heaven, and that hope will triumph; it will purge my soul from
sense and sin, as Christ the Lord is pure. I am safe." He who boasts of grace, has
little grace to boast of. But there are some who do that, who think their graces can keep
them, knowing not that the stream must flow constantly from the fountain head, else the
bed of the brook shall soon be dry, and ye shall see the pebbles at the bottom. If a
continuous stream of oil come not to the lamp, though it burn brightly to-day, it shall
smoke to-morrow, and noxous will be the scent thereof. Take heed that thou neither
gloriest in thy talents nor in thy graces.
Many are worse still; they think they shall not fall because of their privileges. "I
take the sacrament, I have been baptized in an orthodox manner, as written in God's word;
I attend such and such a ministry; I am well fed; I am fat and flourishing in the courts
of my God. If I were one of those starved creatures who hear a false gospel, possibly I
might sin; but oh! our minister is the model of perfection; we are constantly fed and made
fat; surely we shall stand." Thus in the complacency of their priviledges they run
down others, exclaiming, "My mountain standeth firm, I shall never be moved."
Take heed, presumption, take heed. Pride cometh before a fall; and a haughty spirit is the
usher of destruction. Take heed; watch thy footsteps; for where pride creepeth in, it is
the worm at the root of the gourd, causing it to wither and die. "Let him that
thinketh he standeth," because of pride of talent, or grace, or privilege, "take
heed lest he fall."
I hope I have touched some here; I trust the lancet has been sharp; I have taken the
scalpel, and I hope I have discovered something. O ye presumptuous ones, I speak to you;
and I shall do so while next I warn you of your danger.
II. I shall be more brief on the second pointTHE DANGER. He who thinks he stands is
in danger of a fall. The true Christian cannot possibly suffer a final fall, but he is
very much disposed to a foul fall. Though the Christian shall not stumble so as to destroy
his life, he may break his limb. Though God has given his angels charge over him, to keep
him in all his ways, yet there is no commission to keep him when he goes astray; and when
he is astray he may thrust himself through with many sorrows.
1. I must now try and give you the reason why a man who thinks he stands is more exposed
to the danger of falling than any other. First, because such a man in the midst of
temptation will be sure to be more or less careless. Make a man believe he is very
strong, and what will he do? The fight is thickening around him; yet he has his sword in
his scabbard. "Oh," saith he, " my arm is nimble and strong; I can draw it
out and strike home." So perhaps he lies down in the field, or sloth-fully sleeps in
his tent; "for," saith he, "when I hear enemies approaching, such is my
prowess and such my might, that I can mow them down by thousands. Ye sentinels watch the
weak; go to the Ready-to-halts and the Fearings, and arouse them. But I am a giant; and
let me once get this old Toledo blade in my hand, it will cut through body and soul.
Whenever I meet my enemies I shall be more than conqueror." The man is careless in
battle. He lifteth up his helmet, as it is said Goliath did, and then a stone pierceth his
forehead; he throws away his shield, and then an arrow penetrateth his flesh; he will put
his sword into his scabbard, then the enemy smiteth him, and he is ill prepared to resist.
The man who thinks he is strong, is off his guard; he is not ready to parry the stroke of
the evil one, and then the poignard entereth his soul.
2. Again, the man who thinks he stands will not be careful to keep out of the way of
temptation, but rather will run into it. I remember seeing a man who was going to a
place of worldly amusementhe was a professor of religionand I called to him,
"What doest thou there, Elijah?" "Why do you ask me such a question as
that?" said he. I said, "What doest thou here, Elijah? Thou art going
there." "Yes," he replied, with some sort of blush, "but I can do that
with impunity." "I could not," said I; "if I were there I know I
should commit sin. I should not care what people said about it; I always do as I like, so
far as I believe it to be right; I leave the saying to anybody who likes to talk
about me. But it is a place of danger, and I could not go there with impunity."
"Ah!" said he, "I could; I have been before, and I have had some sweet
thoughts there. I find it enlarges the intellect. You are narrow-minded; you do not get
these good things. It is a rich treat I assure you. I would go if I were you."
"No," I said, "it would be dangerous for me: from what I hear, the name of
Jesus is profaned there; and there is much said that is altogether contrary to the
religion we believe. The persons who attend there are none of the best, and it will surely
be said that birds of a feather flock together." "Ah, well," he replied,
"perhaps you young men had better keep away; I am a strong man, I can go;" and
off he went to the place of amusement. That man, sirs, was an apple of Sodom. He was a
professor of religion. I guessed there was something rotten at the core from that very
fact; and I found it so by experience, for the man was a downright sensualist even then.
He wore a mask, he was a hypocrite, and had none of the grace of God in his heart.
Presumptuous men will say they can go into sin, they are so full of moral strength; but
when a man tells you he is so good, always read his words backwards, and understand him to
mean that he is as bad as he can be. The self- confident man is in danger of falling
because he will even run into temptation in the confidence that he is strong, and able to
make his escape.
3. Another reason is, that these strong men sometimes will not use the means of grace, and
therefore they fall. There are some persons here, who never attend a place of worship very
likely; they do not profess to be religious; but I am sure they would be astonished if I
were to tell them, that I know some professedly religious people who are accepted in some
churches as being true children of God, who yet make it a habit of stopping away from the
house of God, because they conceive they are so advanced that they do not want it. You
smile at such a thing as that. They boast such deep experience within; they have a volume
of sweet sermons at home, and they will stop and read them; they need not go to the house
of God, for they are fat and flourishing. They conceit themselves that they have received
food enough seven years ago to last them the next ten years. They imagine that old food
will feed their souls now. These are your presumptuous men. They are not to be found at
the Lord's table, eating the body and drinking the blood of Christ, in the holy emblems of
bread and wine. You do not see them in their closets; you do not find them searching the
Scriptures with holy curiosity. They think they standthey shall never be moved; they
fancy that means are intended for weaker Christians; and leaving those means, they fall.
They will not have the shoe to put upon the foot, and therefore the flint cutteth them;
they will not put on the armour, and therefore the enemy wounds themsometimes well-
nigh unto death. In this deep quagmire of neglect of the means, many a haughty professor
has been smothered.
4. Once more, the man who is self- confident runs a fearful hazard, because God's
Spirit always leaves the proud. The gracious Spirit delights to dwell in the low
places. The holy dove came to Jordan; we read not that it ever rested on Bashan. The man
upon the white horse rode among the myrtle trees, not among the cedars. The myrtle trees
grew at the foot of the mountains; the cedars on the summit thereof. God loves humility.
He who walks with fear and trembling, fearing lest he should go astray, that man the
Spirit loves; but when once pride creeps in, and the man declares, "Now I am in no
danger," away goes the dove; it flies to heaven and will have nought to do with him.
Proud souls, ye quench the Spirit. Ye arrogant men, ye grieve the Holy Ghost. He leaves
every heart where pride dwelleth; that evil spirit of Lucifer he abhors; he will not rest
with it; he will not tarry in its company. Here is your greatest danger, ye proud
ones that the Spirit leaves those who deny their entire dependence on him.
III. The third point is THE COUNSEL. I have been expounding the text; now I want to
enforce it. I would, if my Lord would allow me, speak home to your souls, and so picture
the danger of a presumptuous man, that I would make you all cry out to heaven that sooner
might you die than presume; that sooner might you be found amongst those who lie prostrate
at the foot of Christ, trembling all their lives, than amongst those who think they stand,
and therefore fall. Christian men, the counsel of Scripture is" Take
heed."
1. First, take heed, because so many have fallen. My brother, could I take thee
into the wards of that hospital where lie sick and wounded Christians, I could make you
tremble. I would show you one, who, by a sin that occupied him not a single moment, is so
sore broken, that his life is one continued scene of misery. I could show you another one,
a brilliant genius, who served his God with energy, who is nownot a priest of the
devil it is true, but almost thatsitting down in despair, because of his sin. I
could point you to another person, who once stood in the church, pious and consistent, but
who now comes up to the same house of prayer as if he were ashamed of himself, sits in
some remote corner, and is no longer treated with the kindness he formerly received, the
brethren themselves being suspicious, because he so greatly deceived them, and brought
such dishonor upon the cause of Christ. Oh! did ye know the sad pain which those endure
who fall. Could ye tell how many have fallen, (and have not perished, it is true,) but
still have dragged themselves along, in misery, throughout their entire existence, I am
sure ye would take heed. Come with me to the foot of the mountain of presumption. See
there the maimed and writhing forms of many who once soared with Icarian wings in the airy
regions of self-confidence; yet there they lie with their bones broken, and their peace
destroyed. There lies one who had immortal life within him; see how full of pain he
appears, and he looks a mass of helpless matter. He is alive, it is true, but just alive.
Ye know not how some of those enter heaven who are saved, "so as by fire." One
man walks to heaven; he keeps consistent; God is with him, and he is happy all his journey
through. Another says, "I am strong, I shall not fall." He runs aside to pluck a
flower; he sees something which the devil has laid in his way; he is caught first in this
gin, and then in that trap; and when he comes near the river, instead of finding before
him that stream of nectar of which the dying Christian drinks, he sees fire through which
he has to pass, blazing upon the surface of the water. The river is on fire, and as he
enters it he is scorched and burned. The hand of God is lifted up saying, "Come on,
come on;" but as he dips his foot in the stream, he finds the fire kindling around
him, and though the hand clutches him by the hair of the head, and drags him through, he
stands upon the shore of heaven, and cries, " I am a monument of divine mercy, for I
have been saved so as by fire." Oh ! do you want to be saved by fire, Christians?
Would ye no rather enter heaven, singing songs of praises? Would ye not glorify him on
earth, and then give your last testimony with, "Victory, victory, victory, unto him
that loved us;" then shut your eyes on earth, and open them in heaven? If you would
do so, presume not. "Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall."
2. Once more, my brother, take heed, because a fall will so much damage the cause of
Christ. Nothing has hurt religion one-half, or one thousandth part, so much as the
fall of God's people. Ah ! when a true believer sins, how will the world point at him.
"That man was a deacon, but he knows how to charge exorbitantly. That man was a
professor, but he can cheat as well as his neighbours. That man is a minister, and he
lives in sin." Oh ! when the mighty fallit is rejoice fir tree, for the cedar
has fallenhow does the world exult ! They chuckle over our sin; they rejoice over
our faults; they fly around us, and if they can see one point where we are vulnerable, how
will they say, "See these holy people are no better than they should be."
Because there is one hypocrite, men set down all the rest the same. I heard one man say, a
little while ago, that he did not believe there was a true Christian living, because he
had found out so many hypocrites. I reminded him that there could be no hypocrites if
there were no genuine ones. No one would try to forge bank notes if there were no genuine
ones. No one would think of passing a bad sovereign if there were no sterling coin. So the
fact of their being some hypocrites proves that there are some genuine characters. But let
those who are so, take heed; let them always, in their conduct, have the ring of true
gold. Let your conversation be such as to become the gospel of Christ, lest by any means
the enemy get the advantage over us, and slander the name of Jesus.
And especially is this incumbent upon the members of our own denomination, for it is often
said that the doctrines we believe have a tendency to lead us to sin. I have heard it
asserted most positively, that those high doctrines which we love and which we find in the
Scriptures, are licentious ones. I do not know who has the hardihood to make that
assertion, when they consider that the holiest of men have been believers in them. I ask
the man who dares to say that Calvinism is a licentious religion, what he thinks of the
character of Augustine, or Calvin, or Whitfield, who in successive ages were the great
exponents of the system of grace; or what will he say of those Puritans, whose works are
full of them? Had a man been an Arminian in those days, he would have been accounted the
vilest heretic breathing; but now we are looked upon as the heretics, and they the
orthodox. We have gone back to the old school; we can trace our descent from
the Apostles. It is that vein of free grace running through the sermonising of Baptists,
which has saved us as a denomination. Were it not for that, we should not stand where we
are. We can run a golden link from hence up to Jesus Christ himself, through a holy
succession of mighty fathers, who all held these glorious truths; and we can say of them,
where will you find holier and better men in the world? We are not ashamed to say of
ourselves, that however much we may be maligned and slandered, ye will not find a people
who will live closer to God than those who believe that they are saved not by their works,
but by free grace alone. But, oh ! ye believers in free grace, be careful. Our enemies
hate the doctrine; and if one falls, "Ah there," say they, "see the
tendency of your principles." Nay, we might reply, see what is the tendency of your
doctrine. The exception in our case proves the rule is true, that after all, our
gospel does lead us to holiness. Of all men, those have the most disinterested piety, the
sublimest reverence, the most ardent devotion, who believe that they are saved by grace,
without works, through faith, and that not of themselves, it is the gift of God. Christian
take heed, lest by any means Christ should be crucified afresh, and should be put unto an
open shame.
And now what more can I say ? Oh ye, my beloved, ye my brethren, think not that ye stand,
lest ye should fall. Oh ye fellow heirs of everlasting life and glory, we are marching
along through this weary pilgrimage; and I, whom God hath called to preach to you, would
turn affectionately to you little ones, and say, take heed lest ye fall. My brother,
stumble not. There lieth the gin, there the snare. I am come to gather the stones out of
the road, and take away the stumbling blocks. But what can I do unless, with due care and
caution, ye yourselves walk guardedly. Oh, my brethren; be much more in prayer than ever.
Spend more time in pious adoration. Read the Scriptures more earnestly and constantly.
Watch your lives more carefully. Live nearer to God. Take the best examples for your
pattern. Let your conversation be redolent of heaven. Let your hearts be perfumed with
affection for men's souls. So live that men may take knowledge of you that you have been
with Jesus, and have learned of him; and when that happy day shall come when he whom you
love shall say, "Come up higher," let it be your happiness to hear him say,
"Come my beloved, thou hast fought a good fight, thou hast finished thy course, and
henceforth there is laid up for thee a crown of righteousness that fadeth not away".
On, Christian, with care and caution ! On, with holy fear and trembling ! On yet, with
faith and confidence, for thou shalt not fall. Read the next verse of this very chapter:
"He will not suffer you to be tempted above that which ye are able to bear, but will,
with the temptation, also make a way to escape."
But I have some here, perhaps, who may never hear my voice again; and I will not let my
congregation go, God helping me, without telling them the way of salvation. Sirs, there
are some of you who know ye have not believed in Christ. If ye were to die where ye now
sit ye have no hope that ye would rise amongst the glorified in bliss. How many are there
here who if their hearts could speak, must testify that they are without God, without
Christ, and strangers from the common-wealth of Israel. Oh, let me tell you then, what ye
must do to be saved. Does your heart beat high? Do ye grieve over your sins? Do ye repent
of your iniquities? Will ye turn unto the living God? If so, this is the way of salvation;
"Whosoever believeth and is baptised shall be saved." I cannot reverse my
Master's orderhe says, "believeth," and then "baptised;" and he
tells me that "he that believeth not shall be damned." Oh, my hearers, your
works cannot save you. Though I have spoken to Christians, and exhorted them to live in
good works, I talk not so to you. I ask ye not to get the flower before ye have the seed.
I will not bid you get the roof of your house before ye lay the foundation. Believe on the
name of the Lord Jesus Christ, and ye shall be saved. Whosoever here will now cast himself
as a guilty worm flat on Jesuswhoever will throw himself into the arms of
everlasting love, that man shall be accepted; he shall go from that door justified and
forgiven, with his soul as safe as if he were in heaven, without the danger of its ever
being lost. All this is through belief in Christ.
Surely ye need no argument. If I thought ye did I would use it. I would stand and weep
till ye came to Christ. If I thought I was strong enough to fetch a soul to Jesus, if I
thought that moral suasion could win you, I would go round to each of your seats and beg
of you in God's name to repent. But since I cannot do that, I have done my duty when I
have prophesied to the dry bones. Remember we shall meet again. I boast of neither
eloquence nor talent, and I cannot understand why ye come here; I only speak right on, and
tell you what I feel; but mark me, when we meet before God's bar, however ill I may have
spoken, I shall be able to say, that I said to you, "Believe on the name of Jesus,
and ye shall be saved." Why will ye die, O house of Israel? Is hell so sweet, is
everlasting torment so much to be desired, that therefore ye can let go the glories of
heaven, the bliss of eternity? Men, are ye to live for ever? or, are ye to die like
brutes? "Live !" say you, Well, then, are you not desirous to live in a state of
bliss? Oh, may God grant you grace to turn to him with full purpose of heart! Come, guilty
sinner, come! God help you to come, and I shall be well repaid, if but one soul be added
to the visible fold of Jesus, through aught I may have said.
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