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BELOVED FRIENDS AND KINDRED IN
CHRIST,
The days seem like weeks
and the weeks seem like months since I went up to the house of the Lord. My heart and my
flesh are crying out for the assembly of the saints. Oh how I long to hear once more the
solemn shout of the festal throng who with the voice of joy and praise keep holy day!
I am slowly rallying. My great struggle now is with weakness. I feel as if my frail bark
had weathered a heavy storm which has made every timber creak. Do not attribute this
illness to my having laboured too hard for my Master. For his dear sake, I would that I
may yet be able to labour more. Such toils as might be hardly noticed in the ramp for the
service of one's country, would excite astonishment in the church for the service of our
God.
And now, I entreat you for love's sake to continue in prayer for me. When ye find access
to God, remember me. Mind it is not by the words of your mouth, nor yet by the cravings of
your heart, but it is by the precious blood of Christ ye must draw nigh to God. And when
ye find his sweet presence and are bedewed with his holy anointing, then pour out your
souls before him, and make mention of me in your supplications.
Yours to love and serve in
the Gospel,
C. H. SPURGEON. Clapham, Tuesday Evening, 26th October, 1858
God's Barriers Against Man's Sin
A Sermon Delivered on Sabbath Morning, November 16th, 1856, by the
REV. C.H. SPURGEON
At New Park Street Chapel, Southwark
"Fear ye not me? saith the Lord; will ye not tremble at my presence, which have placed the sand for the bound of the sea by a perpetual decree, that it cannot pass it: and though the waves thereof toss themselves, yet can they not prevail; though they roar, yet can they not pass over it? But this people hath a revolting and a rebellious heart; they are revolted and gone."Jeremiah 5:22-23.
The majesty of God, as displayed in creation and
providence, ought to stir up our hearts in adoring wonder and melt them down in willing
obedience to his commands. The Almighty power of Jehovah, so clearly manifest in the works
if his hands, should constrain us, his creatures, to fear his name and prostrate ourselves
in humble reverence before his throne. When we know that the sea, however tempestuous, is
entirely submissive to the behests of God; that when he saith, "Hitherto shalt thou
come, but no further," it dares not encroach"the pride of its waves is
stayed." When we know that God bridles the tempest, though "nature rocks beneath
his tread," and curbs the boisterous stormhe ought to be fearedverily, he
is a God before whom it is no dishonour for us to bow ourselves in the very dust. The
contemplation of the marvellous works which he doth upon "the great and wide
sea," where he tosseth the waves to and fro, and yet keepeth them in their ordained
courses, should draw forth our devoutest emotions, and I could almost say, inspire us with
homage. Great art thou, O Lord God; greatly art thou to be praised; let the world which
thou hast made, and all that therein is, declare thy glory! I can scarcely conceive a
heart so callous that it feels no awe, or a human mind so dull and destitute of
understanding, as fairly to view the tokens of God's omnipotent power, and then turn aside
without some sense of the fitness of obedience. One might think the impression would be
spontaneous in every breast, and if not, only let reason do her office, and by slower
process every mind should yet be convinced. Let your eyes behold the stars; God alone can
tell their numbers, yet he calls them all by names; by him they are marshalled in their
spheres, and travel through the aerial universe just as he gives them charge; they are all
his servants, who with cheerful haste perform the bidding of their Lord. You see
how the stormy wind and tempest like slaves obey his will; and you know that the
great pulse of ocean throbs and vibrates with its ebb and flow entirely under his control.
Have these great things of God, these wondrous works of his, no lesson to teach us? Do
they not while declaring his glory reveal our duty? Our poets, both the sacred and the
uninspired, have feigned consciousness to those inanimate agents that they might the more
truthfully represent their honourable service. But if because we are rational and
intelligent beings, we withhold our allegiance from our rightful Sovereign, then our
privileges are a curse, and our glory is a shame. Alas, then the instincts of men very
often guide them to act by impulse more wisely than they commonly do by a settled
conviction. Where is the man that will not bend the knee in time of tempest? Where is the
man that does not acknowledge God when he hears the terrible voice of his deep-toned
thunder, and sees with alarm the shafts of his lightning fly abroad, cleaving the thick
darkness of the atmosphere? In times of plague, famine, and pestilence, men are prone to
take refuge in religionthey will make confession, like Pharaoh, when he said,
"I have sinned this time: the lord is righteous, and I and my people are
wicked;" but like him, when "the rain, and the hail, and the thunders have
ceased," when the plagues are removed, then they sin yet more, and their hearts are
hardened. Hence their sin becomes exceeding sinful, since they sin against truths which
even nature itself teaches us are most just. We might learn, even without the written
oracles of Scripture, that we ought to obey God, if our foolish hearts were not so
darkened; thus unbelief of the Almighty Creator is a crime of the first magnitude. If it
were a petty Sovereign against whom ye rebelled, it might be pardonable; if he were a man
like yourselves, ye might expect that your faults would easily find forgiveness; but since
he is the God who reigns alone where clouds and darkness are round about him, the God to
whom all nature is obedient, and whose high behests are obeyed both in heaven and in hell,
it becomes a crime, the terrible character of which words cannot pourtray, that you should
ever sin against a God so marvellously great. The greatness of God enhances the greatness
of our sin. I believe this is one lesson which the prophet intended to teach us by the
text. He asks us in the name of God, or rather, God asks us through him"Fear ye
not me? saith the Lord: will ye not tremble at my presence?"
But while it is a lesson, I do not think it is the lesson of the text. There
is something else which we are to learn from it. God here contrasts the obedience of the
strong, the mighty the untamed sea, with the rebellious character of his own people.
"The sea," saith he, "obeys me; it never breaks its boundary; it never
leapeth from its channel; it obeys me in all its movements. But man, poor puny man, the
little creature whom I could crush as the moth, will not be obedient to me. The sea obeys
me from shore to shore, without reluctance, and its ebbing floods, as they retire from its
bed, each of them says to me, in the voices of the pebbles, 'O Lord, we are obedient to
thee, for thou art our master.' But my people," says God, "are a revolting and a
rebellious people; they go astray from me." And is it not, my brethren, a marvellous
thing, that the whole earth is obedient to God, save man? Even the mighty Leviathan, who
maketh the deep to be hoary, sinneth not against God, but his course is ordered according
to his Almighty Master's decree. Stars, those wondrous masses of light, are easily
directed by the very wish of God; clouds, though they seem erratic in their movement, have
God for their pilot; "he maketh the clouds his chariot;" and the winds, though
they seem restive beyond control, yet do they blow, or cease to blow just as God willeth.
In heaven, on earth, even in the lower regions, I had almost said, we could scarcely find
such a disobedience as that which is practised by man; at least, in heaven, there is a
cheerful obedience; and in hell there is constrained submission to God, while on earth man
makes the base exception, he is continually revolting and rebelling against his Maker.
Still there is another thought in the text, and this I shall endeavour to dilate upon. Let
us read it again. "Fear ye not me? saith the Lord: will ye not tremble at my
presence?"now here is the pith of the matter"which have placed the
sand for the bound of the sea by a perpetual decree, that it cannot pass it: and though
the waves thereof toss themselves, yet can they not prevail; though they soar, yet can
they not pass over it? But this people hath a revolting and a rebellious heart; they are
revolted and gone." "The sea," says God, "is not only obedient, but it
is rendered obedient by the restraint merely of sand." It is not the rock of adamant
that restrains the sea one half so easily as just that little belt of sand and shingle
which preserves the dry land from the inundations of the ocean. "The sea obeys me,
and has for its only check the sand; and yet," says he, "my people, though they
have restraints the strongest that reason could imagine, are a revolting and a rebellious
people, and scarcely can my commands, my promises, my love, my judgment, my providence or
my word restrain them from sin."
That is the point we shall dwell upon this morning. The sea is easily restrained by a
belt of sand; but we, notwithstanding all the restraints of God, are a people bent on
revolting from him.
The doctrine of the text, seems to me to be thisthat without supernatural means God
can make all creatures obedient save man; but man is so disobedient in his heart, that
only some supernatural agency can make him obedient to God, while the simple agency of
sand can restrain the sea, without any stupendous effort of divine power more than he
ordinarily puts out in nature: he can not thus make man obedient to his will.
Now, my brethren, let us look back into history, and see if it has not been so. What has
been a greater problem, if we may so speak concerning the Divine mind, than that of
restraining men from sin? How many restraints God has put upon man! Adam is in the garden,
pure and holy; he has restraints that one would think strong enough to prevent his
committing a sin so contemptible and apparently unprofitable as that by which he fell. He
is to have the whole garden in perpetuity, if he will not eat of that tree of life; his
God will walk with him, and make him his friend; moreover, in the cool of the day, he
shall hold converse with angels, and with the Lord, the Master of angels; and yet he dares
eat of that holy fruit which God had set forth not to be touched by man. Then he must die.
One would think it was enough, to promise reward for obedience, and punishment for sin;
but no, the check fails. Man, left to his own free will, touches the fruit, and he falls.
Man cannot be restrained, even in his purity, so easily as the mighty sea. Since that
time, mark what God has done by way of restraint. The world has become corrupt it is
altogether covered with iniquity. Forth comes a prophet. Enoch prophesies of the coming of
the Lord, declaring that he sees him coming with ten thousand of his saints to judge the
world. That world goes on, as profane and unheeding as before. Another prophet is raised
up, and cries, "Yet a little while, and this earth shall be drowned in a flood of
water." Do men cease from sin? No; profligacy, crime, iniquities of the vilest class,
are as prevalent as before. Man rushes on to his destruction; the deluge comes and
destroys all but a favoured few. The new family goes out to people the earth: will not the
world now be clean and holy? Wait a little, and ye shall see. One of these men will do a
deed which shall render him a curse for ever, and his son Canaan shall in after years
inherit his father's curse. Not long after that you see Sodom and Gomorrah devoured with
fire which God rains out of heaven. But what of this? What though in later years Pharaoh
and his chariots are drowned in the Red sea? What though Sennacherib and his hosts perish
at midnight by the blast of an archangel? What though the world reel to and fro, and
stagger like a drunken man, being drunken with the wine of God's wrath? What though the
earth be scarred and burned by war? What though it be deluged with floods? What though it
be oppressed with famines, pestilences, and diseases? She still goes on in the same
manner; at this hour the world is a sinful, rebellious world, and until God shall work a
work in our day, such as we shall scarce believe, though a man tell it to us, the world
shall never be pure and holy. The sea is restrained by sand; we admire the beautiful
poetic fact; but man, being naturally more ungovernable than the storm and more impetuous
than the ocean, is not to be tamed; he will not bend his neck to the Lord, nor will he be
obedient to the God of the whole earth.
"But what of this fact?"you say"we know it is true; we do not
doubt it." Stay awhile; I am now coming to deal with your hearts and consciences; and
may the Holy Spirit help me in doing so! I shall divide, as God would divide them,saints
and sinners.
First of all, ye saints, I have a word to say to you. I want you to look at this as
a doctrine not more evident in the history of mankind at large, than abundantly verified
in your own case. Come, now, I want to ask of you this morning, whether it cannot be said
of you truly"The sea is bound by sand; but I am one of those people who are
bent on revolting from God, neither can any of his restraints keep me from sin." Let
us review, for a few moments, the various restraints which God has put upon his people to
keep them from sins which, nevertheless, are altogether ineffectual, without the
accompanying power of irresistible grace.
First, then, remember there is a restraint of gratitude which, to the lowly regenerated
heart, must necessarily form a very strong motive to obedience. I can conceive of nothing
that ought so much to prompt me to obedience as the thought that I owe so much to God. O
heir of heaven! thou canst look back to eternity and see thy name in life's fair book set
down; thou canst sing of electing love; thou dost believe that a covenant was made with
Christ in thy behalf, and that thy salvation was made secure in that moment when the hands
of the Eternal Son grasped the stylus and signed his name as the representative of all the
elect. Thou believest that on Calvary thy sins were all atoned for; thou hast in thy soul
the conviction that thy sins, past, present, and to come, were all numbered on the
scape-goat's head of old, and carried away for ever; thou believest that neither death nor
hell can ever divide thee from thy Saviour's breast; thou knowest that there is laid up
for thee a crown of life which fadeth not away, and thine expectant soul anticipates that
with branches of palms in thine hands, with crowns of gold on thine head, and streets of
gold beneath thy feet, thou shalt be happy for ever. Thou believest thyself to be one of
the favoured of heaven, a special object of divine solicitation; thou thinkest that all
things work together for thy good, yea, thou art persuaded that everything in providence
has a special regard to thee, and to thy favoured brethren. I ask thee, O saint, is not
this a bond strong enough to keep thee from sin? If it were not for the desperate
unstableness of thy heart, wouldst thou not be restrained from sin by this? Is not thy sin
exceeding sinful, because it is sin against electing love, against redeeming peace,
against all-surpassing mercy, against matchless affection, against shoreless grace,
against spotless love? Ah! sin has reached its climax, when it dares to sin against such
love as this. O Christian! thine affection to thy Lord and Master should restrain thee
from iniquity. And is it not a fearful proof of the terrible character of thine heart, of
thine heart even now, for still thou hast evil remaining in it, that all the ties of
gratitude are still incapable of keeping thee from unholiness. The sins of yesterday rise
to thy memory now. Oh! look back on them. Do they not tell thee that thou dost sin most
ungratefully? O saint! didst thou not yesterday use thy Master's name in vain, and not thy
Master's only, but thy Father's name? Hadst thou not yesterday an unbelieving heart? Wast
thou not petulant when girded with favours that ought to make a living man unwilling to
complain? Wast thou not, when God hath forgiven thee ten thousand talents, angry with thy
neighbour, who owed thee a hundred pence? Ah Christian! thou art not yet free from sin,
nor wilt thou be, until thou hast washed thy garments in death's black stream, and then
thou shalt be holy, as holy as the glorified and pure and spotless, even as the angels
around the throne, but not till then. I ask thee, O saint, viewing thy sins as sins
against love and mercy, against covenant promises, covenant oaths, covenant engagements,
ay, and covenant fulfilments, is not thy sin a desperate thing, and art not thou thyself a
rebellious and revolting being, seeing that thou canst not be restrained by such a barrier
of adamant as thy soul acknowledges?
Next notice, that the saint has not only this barrier against sin, but many others. He has
the whole of God's Word given him by way of warning; its pages he is accustomed to read;
he reads there, that if he break the statutes and keep not the commandments of the Lord,
his Father will visit his transgressions with a rod, and his iniquity with stripes. He has
before him in God's Word abundant examples. He finds a David going with broken bones to
his grave after his sin; he finds a Samson shorn of his locks, and with his eyes put out;
he sees proof upon proof that sin will find a man out; that the backslider in heart shall
be filled with his own ways. Abundant warnings there are for the child of God, not of
saints who have perished, for we have none such on record in Scripture, and none ever
shall finally perishbut we have many warnings of great and grievous damages
sustained by God's own children when they have sailed out of their proper course. And yet,
O Christian, against all warning and against all precept thou darest to sin. Oh! art thou
not a rebellious creature, and mayest thou not this morning humble thyself at the thought
of the greatness of thine iniquity?
Again: the saint sins against his own experience, When he looks back upon his past life he
finds that sin has always been a loss to him; he has never found any profit, but has
always lost by it. He remembers such and such a transgression; it appeared sweet to him at
the time, but oh! it made his Master withdraw his presence and hide his face. The saint
can look back on the time when sin hung like a mill-stone round his neck, and he felt the
terrible flame of remorse burning in his soul, and knew how evil a thing and bitter it is
to sin against God. And yet the saint sins. Now, if the unconverted man sins, he does not
sin against his own experience, for he has not had that true heartfelt experience that
renders sin exceeding sinful. But every time thou sinnest, O grey-headed saint, thou
sinnest with a vengeance, for thou hast had all through thy life so much proof of what sin
has been to thee. Thou hast not been deceived about it, for thou hast felt its bitterness
in thy bowels: and when thou sippest the accursed draught thou art infatuated indeed,
because thou sinnest against experience. Ay, and the youngest of the saints, have you not
been made to taste the bitterness of sin? I know you have, if you are saints! and will you
go and dip your fingers in the nauseous cup? Will you put the poisoned goblet to your lips
again? Yes, you will; but because you do so in the teeth of your experience, it ought to
make you weep, that you should be such desperate rebels against such a loving God, who has
put not merely a barrier of sand, but a barrier of tried steel to keep in your lusts, and
yet they will break forth; verily ye are a rebellious and revolting people.
Then again, God guards all his children with providence, in order to keep them from sin. I
could tell you, even from the little experience I have had of spiritual things, many cases
in which I feel I have been kept from sin by Divine providence. There have been seasons
when the strong hand of sin has appeared for a while to get the mastery over us, and we
have been dragged along by some strong inherent lust, which we were prone to practise
before our regeneracy. We were intoxicated with the lust, we remember how pleasurable it
was to us in the days of our iniquity, how we revelled in it, till we were on a sudden
dragged to the very edge of the precipice, and we looked down; our brain reeled, we could
not stand; and do we not remember how just then some striking providence came in our way,
and saved us, or else we should have been excommunicated from the church for violating the
rules of propriety. Ah! strange things happen to some of us; strange things have happened
to some of you. It was only a providence which on some sad and solemn occasion, to which
you never look back without regret, saved you from sin which would have been a scab on
your character. Bless God for that! But remember, notwithstanding the girdlings of his
providence, how many times you have offended; and let the frequency of your sin remind you
that you must indeed be a rebellious creature. Though he has afflicted you, you have
sinned; though he has given you chastisement, you have sinned; though he has put you in
the furnace. yet the dross has not departed from you. Oh! how corrupt your hearts are, and
how prone you are still to wander, notwithstanding all the barriers God has given you to
encompass you!
Yet, once more let me remind you, beloved, that the ordinances of God's house are all
intended to be checks to sin. He girds us by the worship of the sanctuary; he girds us by
the remembrance of our holy baptism; and all else that is connected with Christianity is
intended to check us from sin. And great are the effects which these produce; yet all are
insufficient, without the preserving grace of God, given to us day by day. Let us think,
beloved, too, that God has given to us a tender conscience, more tender than the
conscience of worldly men, because he has given us living consciences, whereas theirs are
often seared and dead. And yet, against this living conscience, against the warnings of
the Spirit, against precept, against promise, against experience, against the honour of
God, and against the gratitude they owe him, the saints of God have dared to sin, and they
must confess before him that they are rebellious, and have revolted from him. Bow down
your heads with shame while ye consider your ways, and then lift up your hearts,
Christians, in adoring love, that he has kept you when your feet were making haste to
hell, where you would have gone, but for his preserving grace. Shall not this long
suffering of your God, this tender compassion, be your theme every day
"While life, and thought, and being
last,
Or immortality endures?"
Will you not pray, that God should not cast
you away, nor take his Holy Spirit from you, though you are a rebellious creature, and
though you have revolted against him?
This is for the saints; and now may the Spirit help me, while I strive to apply it to sinners!
Sinner, I have solemn things to say to thee this morning; lend me for a few minutes thy
very closest attention; I will speak to thee as though this were the last message I should
ever deliver in thine ear. I have asked my God, that I may so speak to thee, O sinner,
that if I win not thy heart I may at least be free from thy blood; and that if I am not
able to convince thee of thy sin, I may at any rate make thee without excuse in that day
"when God shall judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ according to my
gospel." Come, then, sinner; in the first place, I bid thee consider thy guilt. Thou
hast heard what I have said. The mighty ocean is kept in obedience by God, and restrained
within its channel by simple sand; and thou, a pitiful worm, the creature of a day, the
ephemera of an hour, thou art a rebel against God. The sea obeys him; thou dost not.
Consider, I beseech thee, how many restraints God has put on thee: he has not checked thy
lusts with sand but with beetling cliffs; and yet thou hast burst through every bound in
the violence of thy transgressions. Perhaps he has checked thy soul by the remembrance of
thy guilt. Thou hast this morning felt thyself a despiser of God; or if not a despiser,
thou art a mere hearer, and hast no part nor lot in this matter. Dost thou not remember
thy sins in the face of thy mother's counsels and thy father's strong admonitions? Do they
never check thee? Dost thou never think thou seest a mother's tears coming after thee?
Hast thou never heard a father's prayer for thee? When thou hast been spending thy nights
in dissipation, and hast gone home late to thy bed, hast thou never thought thou hast seen
thy father's spirit at thy bed side, offering one more prayer for an Absalom, his son, or
for an Ishmael, his rebellious child? Consider what thou hast learned, child! Baptized
with a mother's tears, almost immersed in them; thou wast early taught to know something
of God; when thou didst go from thy mother's knees, thou wentest to those of a pious
teacher; thou wast trained in a Sabbath school, or at any rate thou wast taught to read
the Bible. Thou knowest the threatenings of God; it is no new tale to thee, when I warn
thee that sinners must be condemned; it is no new story when I tell thee that saints shall
wear the starry crown; thou knowest all that. Consider, then, how great is thy guilt; thou
hast sinned against light and knowledge; thou art not the Hottentot sinner, who sins in
darkness, but thou art a sinner before high heaven, in the full light of day; thou hast
not sinned ignorantly, thou hast done it when thou knewest better; and when thou comest to
he lost, thou shalt have an additional doom, because thou didst know thy duty, but thou
didst it not. I charge that home upon thee, I charge it solemnly upon thy conscience; is
it true, or is it not? Some of you have had other things. Don't you remember, some little
time ago, when sickness was rife, you were stretched on your bed? One night you will never
forget; sickness had got strong hold of you, and the strong man bowed himself. Do you not
remember what a sight you had then of the regions of the damned; not with your eyes, but
with your conscience? You thought you heard their shrieks; you thought you would be
amongst them yourself soon. Methinks I see you; you turned your face to the wall, and you
cried, "O God, if thou wilt save my life, I will give myself to thee!" Perhaps
it was an accident; thou didst fear that death was very near; the terrors of death laid
hold of thee, and thou didst cry, "Oh! God, let me but reach home in safety, and my
bended knees and my tears pouring in torrents, shall prove that I am sincere in the vow I
make." But didst thou perform that vow? Nay, thou hast sinned against God; thy broken
vows have gone before thee to judgment. Dost thou think it a little thing to make a
promise to thy fellow creature and break it? It may be so in thine estimation, but not so
in that of honest men. But dost thou think it a little thing to promise to thy Maker, and
to break thy promise? There is no light penalty for sinning against the Almighty God; it
will cost thee thy soul, man, and thy soul's blood for ever, if thou goest on in this
fashion. Vow and pay, or if thou payest not, vow not; for God shall visit those vows upon
thee, in the day when he maketh inquisition for blood, and destroyeth thy soul. Thou hast
been guarded thus; remember that thou hast had extraordinary deliverances, the disease did
not kill thee; thy broken bones were healed; thou didst not die; when the jaws of death
were uplifted, they did not close upon thee: here thou art still. Thy life is spared.
Oh! my dear hearers, some of you are the worst; you have regularly sat in these
pewsGod is my witness, how earnestly I have longed for you all in the bowels of
Christ. I have not shunned to declare the whole counsel of God to you. If I had been a
time-server, and kept back part of the truth, much more honour would I have received from
men than I have received; but I have cleared my conscience, I trust, from your blood. How
many times have I seen men and women cry, the hot tears falling down their cheeks in quick
succession? and expected that I should have seen a change in some of your lives. But how
many of you there are, who have gone on sinning against warnings, which, I am sure, though
they may have been excelled in eloquence, have never been exceeded in heartiness! Do you
think it a little thing to sin against God's ambassador? It is no little sin: every time
we sin against the warnings we have received, we sin so much the more heinously. But there
are someI had hope for you, but ye have gone back to the ways of perdition; I have
cried, "Turn ye, turn ye, why will ye die?" But I have been obliged to go to my
Master with that exclamation, "Who hath believed our report? and to whom is the arm
of the Lord revealed?" Woe unto thee, Bethsaida; it were better for thee that thou
hadst been Tyre and Sidon than that thou shouldst have been left in the midst of
privileges, if thou shouldst perish at last! Woe unto you, hearers of New Park Street! Woe
unto you that listen not to the voice of the minister here! If ye perish beneath our
warnings, ye shall perish in a horrible manner! Woe unto thee, Capernaum! thou art exalted
unto heaven, but thou shalt be cast down to hell." Woe unto thee, young woman! thou
hast had a pious mother, and thou hast had many warnings. Woe unto thee, young man! thou
hast been a profligate youth; thou hast been brought to this house of prayer from thine
infancy, and thou art sitting there even now; often does thy conscience prick thee; often
thy heart hast told thee that thou art wrong; and yet thou art still unchanged! Woe unto
thee! Woe unto thee! And yet will I cry unto my God, that he would avert that woe and
pardon thee; that he would not let thee die, but bring thee unto himself, lest now ye
perish in your sins. Ye sinners! God has a controversy with you; he tames the sea, but ye
will not be tamed; nothing but his marvellous grace exerted in you will ever check you in
your lusts. You have sinned against warnings and reproofs, against providences, mercies,
and judgments, and still ye sin.
Oh! my hearers, when you sin, you do not sin so cheaply as others; for when you sin, you
sin in the very teeth of hell. There is not a man or woman in this place, I am sure, who,
when he or she sins, does not know that hell is the inevitable consequence! Sirs, ye do
not sin in the dark. When God shall give you the wages of your iniquity, you shall not be
able to say, "O God, I did not know this would be the pay for my labour." When
thou didst sow tares, thou couldst not expect that thou shouldst reap wheat; thou knowest
"that they who sow carnal things, shall reap carnal things;" thou art sowing to
the flesh, but not with the hope that thou wilt reap salvation; for thou knowest that
"he who soweth to the flesh, shall of the flesh reap corruption." Sinner, it is
a dreadful thing to sin, when God puts hell before thee! What! sin when he has given out
his threatening? Sin! while Sinai is thundering, while hell is blazing? Ay, that is to sin
indeed. But how many of you, may dear hearers, have sinned like this. I would to God, that
he would turn this house into a Bochim, that you might weep over your guilt. It is the
hardest thing in the world to make men believe their guilt. If we could once get them to
do that, we should find that Christ would reveal to them his salvation. I cannot with my
poor voice and my weak utterance, even bring you to think that it is Christ Jesus in the
ministry of his Spirit who can give you a true and real sense of your sin. Hath he done
so? Hath he blessed my words to any of you? Do any of you feel your sins? Do any of you
know that you are rebellious? Do you say, from this time forth you will mend your ways?
Sirs, let me tell you, you cannot do that. Are you better than the mightiest of men? The
best of men are but men at the best, and they are convinced that they cannot tame their
own turbulent passions. God saith that the sea can be tamed with sand; but the heart of
man cannot be restrained, it is still revolting. Dost thou think thou canst do that, which
God saith is impossible? Dost thou suppose thyself stronger than God Almighty? What! canst
thou change thine own heart, when God declares that we must he born again from above, or
else we cannot see the kingdom of heaven? Others have tried to do it, but they cannot. I
beseech thee, do not try to do it with thine own strength. I am glad thou knowest thy
guilt; but O do not increase that guilt, by seeking to wash it out in the foul stream of
thine own resolutions. Go and tell God that thou knowest thy sin, and confess it before
him, and ask him to create in thee a clean heart, and renew in thee a right spirit. Tell
him thou knowest that thou art rebellious, and thou art sure that thou always wilt be,
unless he change thy heart; and I beseech thee, rest not satisfied until thou hast a new
heart. My hearer, be not content with Baptism; be not content with the Lord's Supper; be
not content with shutting up your shop on Sunday; be not content with leaving off
drunkenness; be not content with giving up swearing. Remember, you may do all that, and be
damned. It is a new heart and a right spirit you want; begin with that, and when you have
that, all the rest will come right. Bethink thee, my hearer; thou mayest varnish and gild
thyself, but thou canst never change thyself. Thou mayest moralise, but thou canst never
spiritualise thy heart. But just bethink thee. Thou art this morning lost; and just think
of this,thou canst do nothing whatever to save thyself. Let that thought rise in thy
soul, and lay thee very low; and when thou goest to God, cry, "O Lord, do what I
cannot do; save me, O my God, for thy mercy's sake."
My dear hearers, have I spoken harshly to you, or wilt ye rather take it in love? Ye who
have sinned thus terribly against God, do ye feel it? Well, I have no grace to offer
to thee, I have no Christ to offer to thee, but I have Christ to preach to
thee. Oh! what shall I say? This:you are a sinner. "It is a faithful saying,
and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, even
the chief." Art thou a sinner? Then he came to save thee. Oh! joyful sound. I am
ready to leap in the pulpit for very joy, to have this to preach to thee. I can clap my
hands with ecstacy of heart, that I am allowed again to tell thee"It is a
faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to
save sinners." Let me tell you that when he came into this world he was nailed to the
cross, and that there he expired in desperate griefs and agony; and there he shrieked,
"My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" There the blood ran from his hands
and feet, and because he suffered he is able to forgive. Sinner, dost thou believe that?
Thou art black; dost thou believe, in the face of thy blackness, that Christ's blood can
make thee white? What sayest thou, sinner? God has convinced thee of thy sin; art thou
willing to be saved in God's way this morning? If thou art willing, thou shalt be saved.
It is written,"Whosoever will, let him come." Art thou thirsty this
morning? come hither and drink. Art thou hungry? come and eat. Art thou dying? come and
live. My Master bids me tell you, all you who feel your sins, that you are forgiven; all
you who know your transgressions, he bids me tell you this:" I, even I, am he
that blotteth out your transgressions, for my name's sake." Hast thou been an
adulterer, hast thou been a whore-monger, a thief, a drunkard, a Sabbath-breaker, a
swearer? I find no exception in this proclamation;"Whosoever will, let him
come." I find no exception in this;"Him that cometh I will in nowise cast
out." Dost thou know thy guilt? then I do not ask thee what thy guilt is. Though thou
wert the vilest creature, again, I tell thee, if thou knowest thy guilt, Christ will
forgive thee. Believe it, and thou art saved.
And now will ye go away and forget all this? Some of you have wept this morning. No
wonder; the wonder is that we do not all weep, until we find ourselves saved! You will go
away to-morrow to your farms and to your merchandize, to your shops, and to your offices;
and the impression that may have been produced on you this Sabbath morning will pass away
like the morning cloud. My hearers, I would not weep, though you should call me all the
names you can think of, but I wilt weep because you will not weep for yourselves. Sinners,
why will ye be damned? Is it a pleasant thing to revolt in the flames of hell? Sirs, what
profit is there in your death! What! is it an honorable thing to rebel against God? Is it
an honor to stand and be the scorn of God's universe? Dost thou say thou shalt not die;
yet thou wilt put it off a little while? Sinner, thou wilt never have a more convenient
season; if to-day is inconvenient, to-morrow will be more so. Put it off to-day, wipe away
the tears from your eyes, and the day may come when you would give a million worlds for a
tear, but you shall not be able to get one. Many a man has had a soft heart; it has passed
away, and in after years he has said, "Oh, that I could but shed a tear!" O God!
make thy word like a hammer this morning, that it may break the rocky heart in pieces! Ye
who know your sins, as God's ambassador, I beseech you, "be ye reconciled unto
God." "Kiss the Son, lest he be angry, and ye perish from the way, when his
wrath is kindled but a little." Remember, once lost, ye are lost for ever; but if ye
are once saved, ye are certainly saved for ever. "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ,
and thou shalt be saved," said Paul of old; Jesus himself hath said "He that
believeth and is haptised shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned."
I will not finish with a curse. "He that believeth shall be saved." God give you
all an interest in that eternal blessing, for the Lord Jesus' sake!
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