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The Two Effects of the Gospel
A Sermon Delivered on Sabbath Morning, May 27, 1855, by the
REV. C.H. SPURGEON
At Exeter Hall, Strand.
"For we are unto God a sweet savour of Christ, in them that are saved, and in them that perish: To the one we are the savour of death unto death; and to the other the savour of life unto life. And who is sufficient for these things?"2 Corinthians 2:15-16.
These are the words of Paul, speaking on the behalf of
himself and his brethren the Apostles, and they are true concerning all those who by the
Spirit are chosen, qualified, and thrust into the vineyard to preach God's gospel. I have
often admired the 14th verse of this chapter, especially when I have remembered from whose
lips the words fell, "Now thanks be unto God, which always causeth us to triumph in
Christ, and maketh manifest the savour of his knowledge by us in every place."
Picture Paul, the aged, the man who had been beaten five times with ,forty stripes save
one,' who had been dragged forth for dead, the man of great sufferings, who had passed
through whole seas of persecution only think of him saying, at the close of his
ministerial career, "Now thanks be unto God, which always causeth us to triumph in
Christ!" to triumph when shiprecked, to triumph when scourged, to triumph in the
stocks, to triumph under the stones, to triumph amidst the hiss of the world, to triumph
when he was driven from the city and shook off the dust from his feet, to triumph at all
times in Christ Jesus! Now, if some ministers of modern times should talk thus, we would
think little of it, for they enjoy the world's applause They can always go to their place
in ease and peace; they have an admiring people, and no open foes; against them not a dog
doth move his tongue; everything is safe and pleasant, For them to say, "Now thanks
be unto God, which always causeth us to triumph" is a very little thing; but for one
like Paul, so trampled on, so tried, so distressed, to say it-then, we say, outspoke a
hero; here is a man who had true faith in God and in the divinity of his mission.
And, my brethren, how sweet is that consolation which Paul applied to his own heart amid
all his troubles. "Notwithstanding all," he says, "God makes known the
savour of his knowledge by us in every place." Ah! with this thought a minister may
lay his head upon his pillow: "God makes manifest the savour of his knowledge."
With this he may shut his eyes when his career is over, and with this he may open them in
heaven: "God hath made known by me the savour of his knowledge in every place,"
Then follow the words of my text, of which I shall speak, dividing it into three
particulars. Our first remark shall be, that although the gospel is "a sweet
savour" in every place, yet it produces different effects in different persons;
to one it is the savour of death unto death; and to the other the savour of life unto
life." Our second observation shall be, that ministers of the gospel are not
responsible for their success, for it is said. "We are unto God a sweet savour of
Christ, in them that are saved, and in them that perish." And thirdly, yet the
gospel ministers place is by no means a light one: his duty is very weighty; for the
Apostle himself said, "Who is sufficient for these things?"
I. Our first remark is, that THE GOSPEL PRODUCES DIFFERENT EFFECTS. It must seem a strange
thing, but it is strangely true, that there is scarcely ever a good thing in the world of
which some little evil is not the consequence. Let the sun shine in brillianceit
shall moisten the wax, it shall harden clay; let it pour down floods of light on the
tropicsit will cause vegetation to be extremely luxuriant, the richest and choicest
fruits shall ripen, and the fairest of all flowers shall bloom, but who does not know,
that there the worst of reptiles and the most venomous snakes are also brought forth? So
it is with the gospel. Although it is the very sun of righteousness to the world, although
it is God's best gift, although nothing can be in the least comparable to the vast amount
of benefit which it bestows upon the human race, yet even of that we must confess, that
sometimes it is the "savour of death unto death." But then we are not to blame
the gospel for this; it is not the fault of God's truth; it is the fault of those who do
not receive it. It is the "savour of life unto life" to every one that listens
to its sound with a heart that is open to its reception. It is only "death unto
death" to the man who hates the truth, despises it, scoffs at it, and tries to oppose
its progress, It is of that character we must speak first.
1. The gospel is to some men "a savour of death unto death." Now, this
depends very much upon what the gospel is; because there are some things called gospel,
that are "a savour of death unto death" to everybody that hears them. John
Berridge says he preached morality till there was not a moral man left in the village; and
there is no way of injuring morality like legal preaching. The preaching of good works,
and the exhorting men to holiness, as the means of salvation, is very much admired in
theory; but when brought into practice, it is found not only ineffectual, but more than
thatit becomes even "a savour of death unto death." So it has been found;
and I think even the great Chalmers himself confessed, that for years and years before he
knew the Lord, he preached nothing but morality and precepts, but he never found a
drunkard reclaimed by shewing him merely the evils of drunkenness; nor did he find a
swearer stop his swearing because he told him the heinousness of the sin; it was not until
he begin to preach the love of Jesus, in his great heart of mercy-it was not until he
preached the gospel as it was in Christ, in some of its clearness, fulness, and power, and
the doctrine, that "by grace ye are saved, through faith, and that not of yourselves,
it is the gift of God" that he ever met with success. But when he did preach
salvation by faith, by shoals the drunkards came from their cups, and swearers refrained
their lips from evil speaking; thieves became honest men, and unrighteous and ungodly
persons bowed to the scepter of Jesus. But ye must confess, as I said before, that though
the gospel does in the main produce the best effect upon almost all who hear it either by
restraining them from sin, or constraining them to Christ, yet it is a great fact, and a
solemn one, upon which I hardly know bow to speak this morning, that to some men the
preaching of Christ's gospel is "death unto death," and produces evil instead of
good.
(1.) And the first sense is this. Many men are hardened in their sins by hearing the
gospel. Oh! 'tis terribly and solemnly true, that of all sinners some sanctuary
sinners are the worst. Those who can dive deepest into sin, and have the most quiet
consciences and hardest hearts, are some who are to be found in God's own house. I know
that a faithful ministry will often prick them, and the stern denunciations of a
Boanerges, will frequently make them shake. I am aware that the Word of God will sometimes
make their blood curdle within them; but I know (for I have seen the men) that there are
many who turn the grace of God into licentiousness, make even God's truth a stalking-horse
for the devil, and abuse God's grace to pall ate their sin. Such men have I found amongst
those who hear the doctrines of grace in their fulness. They will say, "I am elect,
therefore I may swear; I am one of those who were chosen of God before the foundation of
the world, and therefore I may live as I list." I have seen the man who stood upon
the table of a public house, and grasping the glass in his hand, said, "Mates! I can
say more than any of you; I am one of those who are redeemed with Jesus' precious
blood:" and then he drank his tumbler of ale and danced again before them, and sang
vile and blasphemous songs. Now, that is a man to whom the gospel is "a savour of
death unto death." He bears the truth, but he perverts it; he takes what is intended
by God for his good, and what does he do, he commits suicide therewith. That knife which
was given him to open the secrets of the gospel he drives into his own heart. That which
is the purest of all truth and the highest of all morality, he turns into the panderer of
his vice, and makes it a scaffold to aid in building up his wickedness and sin. Are there
any of you here like that manwho love to hear the gospel, as ye call it, and
yet live impurely? who can sit down and say you are the children of God, and still behave
like liege servants of the devil? Be it known unto you, that ye are liars and hypocrites,
for the truth is not in you at all. "If any man is born of God, he cannot sin."
God's elect will not be suffered to fall into continual sin; they will never "turn
the grace of God into licentiousness;" but it will be their endeavour, as much as in
them lies, to keep near to Jesus. Rest assured of this: "By their fruits ye shall
know them." A good tree cannot bring forth corrupt fruit; neither can an evil tree
bring forth good fruit." Such men, however, are continually turning the gospel into
evil, They sin with a high hand, from the very fact that they have heard what they
consider excuses their vice. There is nothing under heaven, I conceive, more liable to
lead men astray than a perverted gospel. A truth perverted is generally worse than a
doctrine which all know to be false. As fire, one of the most useful of the elements, can
also cause the fiercest of conflagrations, so the gospel, the best thing we have, can be
turned to the vilest account. This is one sense in which it is "a savour of death
unto death."
(2.) But another. It is a fact that the gospel of Jesus Christ will increase some mens
damnation at the last great day. Again, I startle at myself when I have said it; for
it seems too horrible a thought for us to venture to utterthat the gospel of Christ
will make hell hotter to some men than it otherwise would have been. Men would all have
sunk to hell had it not been for the gospel. The grace of God reclaims "a multitude
that no man can number;" it secures a countless army who "shall be saved in the
Lord with an everlasting salvation;" but, at the same time, it does to those who
reject it, make their damnation even more dreadful. And let me tell you why.
First, because men sin against greater light; and the light we have is an excellent
measure of our guilt. What a Hottentot might do without a crime, would be the greatest sin
to me, because I am taught better; and what some even in London might do with
irnpunityset down, as it might be, as a sin by God, but not so exceeding
sinful-would be to me the very height of transgression, because I have from my youth up
been tutored to piety. The gospel comes upon men like the light from heaven. What a
wanderer must he be who strays in the light! If he who is blind falls into the ditch we
can pity him, but if a man, with the light on his eyeballs dashes himself from the
precipice and loses his own soul, is not pity out of the question?
"How they deserve the deepest
hell,
That slight the joys above!
What chains of vengeance must they feel,
Who laugh at sov'reign love!"
It will increase your condemnation, I tell
you all, unless you find Jesus Christ to he your Saviour; for to have had the light and
not to walk by it, shall be the condemnation, the very essence of it, This shall be the
virus of the guiltthat the, "light came into the world, and the darkness
comprehended it not;" for "men love darkness rather than light, because their
deeds are evil."
Again: it must increase your condemnation if you oppose the gospel. If God devises
a scheme of mercy, and man rises up against it, how great must be his sin? Who shall tell
the great guilt incurred by such men as Pilate, Herod, and the Jews? Oh! who shall picture
out, or even faintly sketch, the doom of those who cried, "Crucify him! Crucify
him!" And who shall tell what place in hell shall be hot enough for the man who
slanders God's minister, who speaks against his people, who hates his truth, who would, if
he could, utterly cut off the godly from the land? Ah! God help the infidel! God help the
blasphemer! God save his soul: for of all men least would I choose to be that man. Think
you, sirs, that God will not take account of what men have said? One man has cursed
Christ; he has called him a charlatan. Another has declared, (know that he spoke a lie)
that the gospel was false. A third has proclaimed his licentious maxims, and then has
pointed to God's Word and still, "There are worse things there!" A fourth has
abused God's ministers and held up their imperfections to radicals. Think you God shall
forget all this: it the last day? When his enemies come before him, shall he take then by
the hand and say, "The other day thou didst call my servant a dog, and spit on him,
and for this I will give thee heaven!" Rather, if the sin has not been cancelled by
the blood of Christ, he will not say, "Depart, cursed one, into the hell which thou
didst scoff at; leave that heaven which thou didst despise; and learn that though thou
saidst there was no God, this right arm shall teach thee eternally the lesson that there
is one; for he who discovers it not by my works of benevolence shall learn it by my deeds
of vengeance: therefore depart, again, I say!" It shall increase men's hell
that they have opposed God's truth. Now, is not this a very solemn view of the gospel,
that it is indeed to many "a savour of death unto death?"
(3.) Yet, once more. I believe the gospel make some men in this world more miserable
than they would be. The drunkard could drink, and could revel in his intoxication with
greater joy, if he did not hear it said, "All drunkards shall have their portion in
the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone." How jovially the Sabbath-breaker
would riot through his Sabbaths, if the Bible did not say, "Remember the Sabbath day
to keep it holy!" And how happily could the libertine and licentious man drive on his
mad career, if he were not told, "The wages of sin is death, and after death the
judgment!" But the truth puts the bitter in his cup; the warnings of God freeze the
current of his soul. The gospel is like the skeleton at the Egyptian feast. Though by day
he laughed at it, by night he will quiver as the aspen leaf, and when the shades of
evening gather around him, he will shake at a whisper. At the thought of a future state
his joy is spoiled, and immortality instead of being a boon to him, is in its very
contemplation the misery of his existence. The sweet wooings of mercy are to him no more
harmonious than peals of thunder, because he knows he despises them. Yea, I have known
some who have, been in such misery under the gospel, because they would not give up their
sins, that they have been ready to take their own lives. Oh! terrible thought! The, gospel
is "a savour of death unto death!" Unto how many here is it so? Who are now
hearing God's Word to be damned by it? Who shall retire hence to be hardened by the sound
of the truth? Why, every man who does not believe it; for unto those that receive it, it
is "a savour of life unto life," but to unbelievers it is a curse, and a savour
of death unto death."
2. But, blessed be God, the gospel has a second power. Besides being "death unto
death," it is "a savour of life unto life." Ah! my brethren, some of us
could speak, if we were allowed this meaning, of the gospel as being "a savour of
life" to us. We can look back to that hour when we were "dead in trespasses and
sin." In vain all Sinai's thunders; in vain the rousing of the watchmen; we slept on
in the death-sleep of our transgressions; nor could, an angel have aroused us. But we look
back with joy to that hour when first we stepped within the walls of a sanctuary, and
savingly heard the voice of mercy. With some of you it is but a few weeks. I know where ye
are and who ye are. But a few weeks or months ago ye too were far from God, but now ye are
brought to love him. Canst thou look back my brother Christian, to that very moment when
the gospel was to theewhen thou didst cast away thy sins, renounce thy lusts, and
turning to God's Word, received it with full purpose of heart? Ah! that hourof all
hours the sweetest! Nothing can be compared, therewith. I knew a person who for forty or
fifty years had been completely deaf. Sitting one morning at her cottage door as some
vehicle was passing, she thought she heard melodious music. It was not music; it was but
the sound of the vehicle. Her ear had suddenly opened, and that rough sound seemed to her
like the music of heaven, because it was the first she had heard for so many years. Even
so, the first time our ears were opened to hear the words of lovethe assurance of
our pardonwe never heard the word so well as we did then; it never seemed so sweet;
and perhaps, even now, we look back and say,
"What peaceful hours I then enjoyed!
How sweet their memory still!"
When first it was "a savour of life" unto our
souls.
Then, beloved, if it ever has been "a savour of life," it will always be
"of life;" because it says it is not of savour of life unto death, but a savour
of life unto life. "Now I must aim another blow at my antagonists the Arminians; I
cannot help it. They will have it that sometimes the gospel is a savour of life unto
death. They tell us that a man may receive spiritual life, and vet may die eternally. That
is to say, a man may be forgiven, and yet be punished afterwards; he may be justified from
all sin, and yet after that, his transgressions can be laid on his shoulders again. A man
may be born of God, and yet die; a man may be loved of God, and yet God may hate him
to-morrow. Oh! I cannot bear to speak of such doctrines of lies; let those believe them
that like. As for me, I so deeply believe in the immutable love of Jesus that I suppose
that if one believer were, to be in hell, Christ himself' would not long stay in heaven,
but would cry, "To the rescue!" Oh! if Jesus Christ were in glory with one the
gems wanting in his crown, and Satan had that gem, he would say, "Aha! prince of
light and glory, I have one of thy jewels!" and he would hold it up, and then he
would say, "Aha! thou didst die for this man, but thou hadst not strength enough to
save him; thou didst love him oncewhere is thy love? It is not worth having, for
thou didst hate him afterwards!" And how would he chuckle over that heir of heaven,
and hold him up, and say, "This man was redeemed; Jesus Christ purchased him with his
blood:" and plunging him in the waves of hell, he would say, "There purchased
one see how I can rob the Son of God!" And then again he would say, This man was
forgiven, behold the justice of God! He is to be punished after he is forgiven. Christ
suffered for this mans sins, and yet," says Satan with a malignant joy, "I have
him afterwards; for God exacted the punishment twice!" Shall that e'er be said? Ah!
no. It is "a savour of life unto life," and not of life unto death. Go, with
your vile gospel; preach it where you please; but my Master said, "I give unto my
sheep ETERNAL life." You give to your sheep temporary life, and they lose it; but,
says Jesus, "I give unto my sheep ETERNAL life, and they shall never perish, neither
shall man pluck them out of my hands." I generally wax warm when I got to this
subject, because I think few doctrines more vital than that of the perseverance of the
saints; for if ever one child of God did perish, or if I knew it were possible that one
could, I should conclude, at once that I must , and suppose each of you would do the same;
and then where is the joy and happiness of the gospel? Again I tell you the Arminian
gospel is the shell without the kernel; it is the husk without the fruit; and those who
love it may take it to themselves. We will not quarrel with them. Let them go and preach
it. Let them go and tell poor sinners, that if they believe in Jesus they will be damned
after all, that Jesus Christ will forgive them and yet the Father send them to hell. Go
and preach your gospel, and who will listen to it? And if they do listen, is it worth
their hearing? I say no; for if I am to stand after conversion on the same footing as I
did before conversion then it is of no use for me to have been converted at all. But whom
he loves he loves to the end.
"Once in Christ, in Christ for ever;
Nothing from his love can sever."
It is "a savour of life unto
life." And not only, "life unto life" in this world, but of "life unto
life" eternal. Every one who has this life shall receive the next life; for "the
Lord will give grace and glory, and no good thing will he withhold from them that walk
uprightly."
I am obliged to leave this point; but if my Master will but take it up, and make his word
,a savour of "life unto life" this morning, I shall rejoice in what I have said.
II. But our second remark was, that THE MINISTER IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR HIS SUCCESS. He is
responsible for what he preaches; he is accountable for his life and actions; but he is
not responsible for other people. If I do but preach God's word, if there never were a
soul saved, the King would say, "Well done, good and faithful Servant!" If I do
but tell my message, if none should listen to it, he would say, "Thou hast fought the
good fight: receive thy crown." You hear the words of the text: "We are unto God
a sweet savour of Christ, as well in them that perish, as in them that are saved."
This will appear, if I just tell you what a gospel minister is called in the Bible.
Sometimes he is called an ambassador. Now, for what is an ambassador responsible?
He goes to a country as a plenipotentiary; he carries terms of peace to the conference; he
uses all his talents for his master; he tries to show that the war is inimical to the
prosperity of the different countries; he endeavours to bring about peace; but the other
kings haughtily refuse it. When he comes home does his master say, "Why did not you
make peace?" "Why, my Lord," he would say, "I told them the terms; but
they said nothing." "Well, then," he will say, "thou hast done thy
duty; I am not to condemn thee if the war continues." Again the minister of the
gospel is called a fisherman. Now a fisherman is not responsible for the quantity
of fish he catches, but for the way he fishes. That is a mercy for some ministers, I am
sure, for they have neither caught fish, for neither caught fish nor even attracted any
round their nets. They have been spending all their life fishing with most elegant silk
lines, and gold and silver hooks; they always use nicely polished phrases; but the fish
will not bite for all that, whereas we of a rougher order have put the hook into the jaws
of hundreds. However, if we cast the gospel net in the right place, even if we catch none,
the Master will find no fault with us He will say, "Fisherman! didst thou labour?
Didst thou throw the net into the sea in the time of storms?" "Yes, my Lord, I
did." "What hast thou caught?" "Only one or two." "Well, I
could have sent thee a shoal, if it so pleased me; it is not thy fault; I give in my
sovereignty where I please; or withhold when I choose; but as for thee, thou hast well
laboured, therefore there is thy reward." Sometimes the minister is called a sower.
Now, no farmer expects a sower to be responsible for the harvest; all he is responsible
for is, does be sow the seed? and does he sow the right seed? If he scatters it on good
soil, then he is happy; but if it falls by the way-side, and the fowls of the air devour
it, who shall blame the sower? Could he help it? Nay, he did his duty; he scattered the
seed broad-cast, and there he left it. Who is to blame? Certainly not the sower. So,
beloved, if a minister comes to heaven with but one sheaf on his shoulder, his Master will
say, "O reaper! once a sower! where didst thou gather thy sheaf?" "My Lord,
I sowed upon the rock, and it would not grow; only one seed on a chance Sabbath morning
was blown a little awry by the wind, and it fell on a prepared heart; and this is my one
sheaf." "Hallelujah!" the angelic choirs resound, "one sheaf from a
rock is more honour to God than a thousand sheaves from a good soil; therefore, let him
take his seat as near the throne as yon man, who, stooping beneath his many sheaves, comes
from some fertile land, bringing his sheaves with hm." I believe that if there are
degrees in glory, they will not be in proportion to success, but in proportion to the
earnestness of our endeavours. If we mean right, and if with all our heart we strive to do
the right thing as ministers if we never see any effect, still shall we receive the crown.
But how much more happy is the man who shall have it in heaven said to him, "He
shines for ever, because he was wise, and won many souls unto righteousness." It is
always my greatest joy to believe, that if I should enter heaven, I shall in future days
see heaven's gates open, and in shall fly a cherub, who, looking me in the face, will
smilingly pass along to God's throne, and there bow down before him and when has paid his
homage and his adoration, he may fly to me, and though unknown, shall clasp my hand. and
if there were tears in heaven, surely I should weep, and he would say, "Brother, from
thy lips I heard the word; thy voice first admonished me of my sin; here I am, and thou
the instrument of my salvation." And as the gates open one after another, still will
they come in; souls ransomed, souls ransomed; and for each one of these a starfor
each one of these another gem in the diadem of gloryfor each one of them another
honor, and another note in the song of praise. Blessed be that man that shall die in the
Lord, and his works shall follow him; for thus saith the Spirit.
What will become of some good Christians now in Exeter Hall, if crowns in heaven are
measured in value by the souls that are saved? Some of you will have a crown in heaven
without a single star in it. I read a little while ago, a piece upon the starless crown in
heavena man in heaven with a crown without a star! Not one saved by him! He will sit
in heaven as happy as he can be, for sovereign mercy saved him; but oh! to be in heaven
without a single star! Mother! what sayest thou to be in heaven without one of thy
children to deck thy brow with a star? Minister! what wouldst thou say to be a polished
preacher and yet have no star? Writer! will it well become thee to have written even as
gloriously as Milton, if thou shouldst be found in heaven without a star? I am afraid we
pay too little regard to this. Men will sit down and write huge folios and tomes, that
they may have them put in libraries for ever, and have their names handed down by fame!
but how few are looking to win stars for ever in heaven! Toil on, child of God, toil on;
for if thou wishest to serve God, thy bread cast upon the waters shall be found after many
days. If thou sendest in the feet of the ox or the ass, thou shalt reap a glorious harvest
in that day when he comes to gather in his elect. The minister is not responsible for his
success.
III. But yet, in the last place, TO PREACH THE GOSPEL IS HIGH AND SOLEMN WORK. The
ministry has been very often degraded into a trade. In these days men are taken and made
into ministers who would have made good captains at sea, who could have waited well at the
counter, but who were never intended for the pulpit. They are selected by man, they are
crammed with literature; they are educated up to a certain point; they are turned out
ready dressed; and persons call them ministers. I wish them all God-speed, every one of
them; for as good Joseph Irons used to say, "God be with many of them, if it be only
to make them hold their tongues." Man-made ministers are of no use in this world, and
the sooner we get rid of them the better. Their way is this: they prepare their
manuscripts very carefully, then read it on the Sunday most sweetly in sotto voce,
and so the people go away pleased. But that is not God's way of preaching. If so, I am
sufficient to preach forever. I can buy manuscript sermons for a shilling; that is to say,
provided they have been preached fifty times before, but if I use them for the first time
the price is a guinea, or more. But that is not the way. Preaching God's word is not what
some seem to think, mere child's playa mere business or trade to be taken up by any
one. A man ought to feel first that he has a solemn call to it; next, he ought to know
that he really possesses the Spirit of God, and that when he speaks there is an influence
upon him that enables him to speak as God would have him, otherwise out of the pulpit he
should go directly; he has no right to be there, even if the living is his own property.
He has not been called to preach God's truth, and unto him God says, "What hast thou
to do, to declare my statutes?"
But you say, "What is there difficult about preaching God's gospel?" Well it
must be somewhat hard; for Paul said, "Who is sufficient for these things?" And
first I will tell you, it is difficult because it is so hard as not to be warped by your
own prejudices in preaching the word. You want to say a stern thing; and your heart says,
"Master! in so doing thou wilt condemn thyself;" then the temptation is not to
say it. Another trial is, you are afraid of displeasing the rich in your congregations.
Your think, "If I say such-and-such a thing, so-and-so will be offended; such an one
does not approve of that doctrine; I had better leave it out." Or perhaps you will
happen to win the applause of the multitude, and you must not say anything that will
displease them, for if they cry, "Hosanna" to day, they will cry, "Crucify,
crucify," to-morrow. All these things work on a minister heart. He is a man like
yourselves; and he feels it. Then comes again the sharp knife of criticism, and the arrows
of those who hate him and hate his Lord; and he cannot help feeling it sometimes. He may
put on his armour, and cry, "I care not for your malice;" but there were seasons
when the archers sorely grieved even Joseph. Then he stands in another danger, lest he
should come out and defend himself; for he is a great fool whoever tries to do it. He who
lets his detractors alone, and like the eagle cares not for the chattering of the
sparrows, or like the lion will not turn aside to rend the snarling jackalhe is the
man, and he shall be honoured. But the danger is, we want to set ourselves right. And oh!
who is sufficient to steer clear from these rocks of danger? "Who is
sufficient," my brethren, "for these things?" To stand up, and to proclaim,
Sabbath after Sabbath, and week-day after week-day, "the unsearchable riches of
Christ."
Having said thus much, I may draw the inferenceto close upwhich is: if the
gospel is "a savour of life unto life," and if the minister's work be solemn
work, how well it becomes all lovers of the truth to plead for all those who preach it,
that they may be "sufficient for these things." To lose my Prayer-book, as I
have often told you, is the worst thing that can happen to me. To have no one to pray for
me would place me in a dreadful condition. "Perhaps," says a good poet,
"the day when the world shall perish, will be the day unwhitened by a prayer;"
and, perhaps, the day when a minister turned aside from truth, was the day when his people
left off to pray for him, and when there was not a single voice supplicating grace on his
behalf. I am sure, it must be so with me. Give me the numerous hosts of men whom it has
been my pride and glory to see in my place before I came to this hall: give me those
praying people, who on the Monday evening met in such a multitude to pray to God for a
blessing, and we will overcome hell itself, in spite of all that may oppose us. All our
perils are nothing, so long as we have prayer. But increase my congregation; give me the
polite and the noble,give me influence and understanding; and I should fail to do
anything without a praying church. My people! shall I ever lose your prayers? Will ye ever
cease your supplications? Our toils are nearly ended in this great place, and happy shall
we be to return to our much-loved sanctuary. Will ye then ever cease to pray? I fear ye
have not uttered so many prayers this morning as ye should have done; I fear there has not
been so much earnest devotion as might have been poured forth. For my own part, I have not
felt the wondrous power I sometimes experience. I will not lay it at your doors; but never
let it be said, "Those people, once so fervent, have become cold!" Let not
Laodiceanism get into Southwark; let us leave it here in the West-end, if it is to be
anywhere; let us not carry it with us. Let us "strive together for the faith once
delivered unto the saints:" and knowing in what a sad position the standard. bearer
stands, I beseech you rally round him; for it will be ill with the army,
"If the standard bearer fall, as fall
full well he may.
For never saw I promise yet, of such a deadly fray."
Stand up my friends; grasp the banner yourselves, and maintain it erect until the day shall come, when standing on the last conquered castle of hell's domains, we shall raise the shout, "Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah! The Lord God Omnipotent reigneth!" Till that time, fight on.
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