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A Revival Sermon
A Sermon Delivered on Sabbath Morning, January 26th, 1860, by the
REV. C.H. SPURGEON
At Exeter Hall, Strand
"Behold, the days come, saith the Lord, that the plowman shall overtake the reaper, and the treader of grapes him that soweth seed; and the mountains shall drop sweet wine, and all the hills shall melt."Amos 9:13.
God's promises are not exhausted when they are
fulfilled, for when once performed they stand just as good as they did before, and we may
await a second accomplishment of them. Man's promises even at the best, are like a cistern
which holds but a temporary supply; but God's promises are as a fountain, never emptied,
ever overflowing, so that you may draw from hem the whole of that which the apparently
contain, and they shall be still as full as ever. Hence it is that you will frequently
find a promise containing both a literal and spiritual meaning. In the literal meaning it
has already been fulfilled to the letter; in the spiritual meaning it shall also be
accomplished, and not a jot or tittle of it shall fail. This is rue of the particular
promise which is before us. Originally, as you are aware, the land of Canaan was very
fertile; it was a land that flowed with milk and honey. Even where no tillage had been
exercised upon it the land was so fruitful, that the bees who sucked the sweetness from
the wild flowers produced such masses of honey that the very woods were sometimes flooded
with it. It was "A land of wheat, and barley, and vines, and fig trees, and
pomegranates; a land of oil olive, and honey." When, however, the children of Israel
thrust in the ploughshare and began to use the divers arts of agriculture, the land became
exceedingly fat and fertile, yielding so much corn, that they could export through the
Phoenicians both corn, and wine, and oil, even to the pillars of Hercules, so that
Palestine became, like Egypt, the granary of the nations. It is somewhat surprising to
find that now the land is barren, that its valleys are parched, and that the miserable
inhabitants gather miserable harvests from the arid soil. Yet the promise still stands
true, that one day in the ver letter Palestine shall be as rich and fruitful as ever it
was. There be those who understand the matter, who assert that if once the rigour of the
Turkish rule could be removed, if men were safe from robbers, if the man who sowed could
reap, and keep the corn which his own industry had sown and gathered, the land might yet
again laugh in the midst of the nations, and become the joyous mother of children. There
is no reason in the soil for its barrenness. It is simply the neglect that has been
brought on, from the fact, that when a man has been industrious, his savings are taken
from him by the hand of rapine, and the very harvest for which he toiled is often reaped
by another, and his own blood split upon the soil.
But, my dear friends, while this promise
will doubtless be carried out, and every word of it shall be verified, so that the
hill-tops of that country shall again bear the vine, and the land shall flow with wine,
yet, I take it, this is more fully a spiritual than a temporal promise; and I think that
the beginning of its fulfilment is now to be discerned, and we shall see the Lord's good
hand upon us, so that is ploughman shall overtake the reaper, the mountains shall drop
sweet wine, and all he hills shall melt.
First, I shall this morning endeavour to
explain my text as a promise of revival; secondly, I shall take it as a lesson
of doctrine; then as a stimulus for Christian exertion; and I shall conclude
with a word of warning to those whose hearts are not given to Christ.
I. First, I take the text as being A
GREAT PROMISE OF SPIRITUAL REVIVAL. And here, in looking attentively at the text, we shall
observe several ver pleasant things.
1. In the first place, we notice a
promise of surprising ingathering. According to he metaphor here used, the harvest
is to be so great that, before the reapers can have fully gathered it in, the ploughman
shall begin to plough for the next cropwhile the abundance of fruit shall be so
surprising that before the treader of grapes can have trodden out all the juice of the
vine, the time shall come for sowing seed. One season, by reason of the abundant
fertility, shall run into another. Now you all know, beloved, what this means in the
church. It prophecies that in the Church of Christ we shall see the most abundant
ingathering of souls. Pharaoh's dream has been enacted again in the last century. About a
hundred years ago, if I may look back in my dream, I might have seen seven ears of corn
upon one stalk, rank and strong; anon, the time of plenty went away, and I have seen, and
you have seen, in your own lifetime, the seven ears of corn thin and withered in the east
wind. The seven ears of withered corn have eaten up and devoured the seven ears of fat
corn, and there has been a sore famine in the land. Lo, I see in Whitfield's time, seven
bullocks coming up from the river, fat and well-favoured, and since then we have lived to
see seven lean kine come up from the same river; and lo! the seven lean kine have eaten up
the seven fat kine, yet have they been none the better for all that they have eaten. We
read of such marvellous revivals a hundred years ago, that the music of their news has not
ceased to ring in our ears; but we have seen, alas, a season of lethargy, of soul-poverty
among the saints, and of neglect among the ministers of God. The product of the seven
years has been utterly consumed, and the Church has been none the better. Now, I take it,
however, we are about to see the seven fat years again. God is about to send times of
surprising fertility to his Church. When a sermon has been preached in these modern times,
if one sinner has been converted by it, we have rejoiced with a suspicious joy; for we
have thought it something amazing. But, brethren, where we have seen one converted, we may
yet see hundreds; where the Word of God has been powerful to scores, it shall be blessed
to thousands; and where hundreds in past years have seen it, nations shall be converted to
Christ. There is no reason why we should not see all the good that God hath given us
multiplied a hundred-fold; for there is sufficient vigour in the seed of the Lord to
produce a far more plentiful crop than any we have yet gathered. God the Holy Ghost is not
stinted in his power. When the sower went forth to sow his seed, some of it fell on good
soil, and it brought forth fruit, some twenty fold, some thirty fold, but it is written, "Some
a hundred fold." Now, we have bee sowing this seed, and thanks be to God, I have
seen it bring forth twenty and thirty fold; but I do expect to see it bring forth a
hundred fold. I do rust that our harvest shall be so heavy, that while we are taking in
the harvest, it shall be time to sow again; that prayer meetings shall be succeeded by the
enquiry of souls as to what they shall do to be saved, and ere the enquirers' meeting
shall be done, it shall be time again to preach, again to pray; and then, ere that is
over, there shall be again another influx of souls, the baptismal pool shall be again
stirred, and hundreds of converted men shall flock to Christ. Oh! We never can be
contented with going on as the churches have been during the last twenty years. I would
not be censorious, but solemnly in my own heart I do not believe that the ministers of our
churches have been free from the blood of men. I would not say a hard word if I did not
feel compelled to do it, but I am constrained to remind our brethren that let God send
what revival he may, it will not exonerate them from he awful guilt that rests upon them
of having been idle and dilatory during the last twenty years. Let all be saved who live now;
what about those that have been damned while we have been sleeping? Let God gather in
multitudes of sinners, but who shall answer for the blood of those men who have been swept
into eternity while we have been going on in our canonical fashion, content to go along
the path of propriety, and walk around the path of dull routine, but never weeping for
sinners, never agonizing for souls. All the ministers of Christ are not awake yet; but the
most of them are. There has come a glad time of arousing, the trumpet has been set to
their ear, and the people have heard the sound also, and times of refreshing are come from
the presence of the Lord our God; but they have not come before they were needed, for much
did we require them; otherwise surely the Church of Christ would have died away into dead
formality, and if her name had been remembered, it would have been as a shame and a
hissing upon the face of the earth.
2. The promise then, seems to me to
convey the idea of surprising ingatherings; and I think there is also the idea of amazing
rapidity. Notice how quickly the crops succeed each other. Between the harvest and the
ploughing there is a season even in our country; in the east it is a longer period. But
here you find that no sooner has the reaper ceased his work, or scarce has he ceased it,
ere the ploughman follows at his heels. This is a rapidity that is contrary to the course
of nature; still it is quite consistent with grace. Our old Baptist churches in the
country treat young converts with what they call summering and wintering. Any young
believer who wants to join the church in summer, must wait till the winter, and he is put
off from time to time, till it is sometimes five or six years before they admit him; they
want to try him, and see whether he is fit to unite with such pious souls as they are.
Indeed among us all there is a tendency to imagine that conversion must be a slow
workthat as the snail creeps slowly on its way, so must grace move very leisurely in
the heart of man. We have come to believe that there is more true divinity in stagnant
pools than in lightning flashes. We cannot believe for a moment in a quick method of
travelling to the kingdom of heaven. Every man who goes there must go on crutches and limp
all the way; but as for the swift beasts, as for the chariots whose axles are hot with
speed, we do not quite understand and comprehend that. Now, mark, here is a promise given
of a revival, and when that revival shall be fulfilled this will be one of the signs of
itthe marvellous growth in grace of those who are converted. The young convert shall
that ver day come forward to make a profession of his faith; perhaps before a week has
passed over his head you will hear him publicly defending the cause of Christ, and ere
many months have gone you shall see him standing up to tell to others what God has done
for his soul. There is no need that the pulse of the Church should for ever be so slow.
The Lord can quicken her heart, so that her pulse shall throb as rapidly as the pulse of
time itself; her floods shall be as the rushing of the Kishon when it swept the hosts of
Sisera in its fury. As the fire from heaven shall the Spirit rush from the skies, and as
the sacrifice which instantly blazed to heaven, so shall the Church burn with holy and
glorious ardour. She shall no longer drive heavily with her wheels torn away, but as the
chariot of Jehu, the son of Nimshi, she shall devour the distance in her haste. That seems
to me to be one of the promises of the textthe rapidity of the work of grace, so
that the plougher shall overtake the reaper.
3. But a third blessing is very manifest
here, and one indeed which is simply given to us. Notice the activity of labour
which is mentioned in the text. God does not promise that there shall be fruitful crops
without labor; but here we find mention made of ploughmen, reapers, treaders of grapes,
and sowers of seed; and all these persons are girt with singular energy. The ploughman
does not wait, because saith he, the season has not yet come for me to plough, be seeing
that God is blessing the land, he has his plough ready, and no sooner is one harvest
shouted home than he is ready to plough again. And so with the sower; he has not to
prepare his basket and to collect his seed; but while he hears the shouts of the vintage,
he is ready to go out to work.
Now, my brethren, one sign of a true
revival, and indeed an essential part of it is the increased activity of God's labourers.
Why, time was when our ministers, thought that preaching twice on Sunday was the hardest
work to which a man could be exposed. Poor souls, they could not think of preaching on a
week-day, or if there was once a lecture, they had bronchitis, were obliged to go to
Jerusalem and lay by, for they would soon be dead if they were to work too hard. I never
believed in the hard work of preaching yet. We find ourselves able to preach ten or twelve
times a week, and find that we are the stronger for it,--that in fact, it is the
healthiest and most blessed exercise in the world. But the cry used to be, that our
ministers were hardly done by, they were to be pampered and laid by, done up in velvet,
and only to be brought out to do a little work occasionally, and then to be pitied when
that work was done. I do not hear anything of that talk now-a-days. I meet with my
brethren in the ministry who are able to preach day after day, day after day, and are not
half so fatigued as the were; and I saw a brother minister this week who has been having
meetings in his church every day, and the people have been so earnest that they will keep
him ver often from six o'clock in the evening to two in the morning. "Oh!" said
one of the members, "our minister will kill himself." "Not he," said
I, "that is the kind of work that will kill no man. It is preaching to a sleepy
congregation that kills good ministers, but not preaching to earnest people." So when
I saw him, his eyes were sparkling, and I said to him, "Brother, you do not look like
a man who is being killed," "Killed, my brother," said he, "why I am
living twice as much as I did before; I was never so happy, never so hearty, never so
well." Said he, "I sometimes lack my rest, and want my sleep, when my people
keep me up so late, but it will never hurt me; indeed," he said, "I should like
to die of such a disease as thatthe disease of being so greatly blessed." There
was a specimen before me of the ploughman who overtook the reaper,--of one who sowed seed,
who was treading on the heels of the men who were gathering in the vintage. And the like
activity we have lived to see in the Church of Christ. Did you ever know so much doing in
the Christian world before? There are grey-headed men around me who have known the Church
of Christ sixty years, and I think they can bear me witness that they never knew such
life, such vigour and activity, as there is at present. Everybody seems to have a mission,
and everybody is doing it. There may be a great many sluggards, but they do not come
across my path now. I used to e always kicking at them, and always being kicked for doing
so. But now there is nothing to kick atevery one is at workChurch of England,
Independents, Methodists, and Baptiststhere is not a single squadron that is
behindhand; they have all their guns ready, and are standing, shoulder to shoulder, ready
to make a tremendous charge against the common enemy. This leads me to hope, since I see
the activity of God's ploughmen and vine dressers, that there is a great revival
coming,--that God will bless us, and that right early.
4. We have not yet, however, exhausted
our text. The latter part of it says, "The mountains shall drop sweet wine." It
is not a likely place for wine upon the mountains. There may be freshets and cataracts
leaping down their sides; but who ever saw fountains of red wine streaming from rocks, or
gushing out from he hills. Yet here we are told that, "The mountains shall drop sweet
wine;" by which we are to understand that conversions shall take place in unusual
quarters. Brethren, this day is this promise literally fulfilled to us. I have this week
seen what I never saw before. It has been my lot these last six years to preach to crowded
congregations, and to see many, many souls brought to Christ; it has been no unusual thing
for us to see the greatest and noblest of the land listening to the word of God; but this
week I have seen, I repeat, what mine eyes have never before beheld, used as I am to
extraordinary things. I have seen the people of Dublin, without exception, from the
highest to the lowest, crowd in to hear the gospel. I have known that my congregation has
been constituted in a considerable measure of Roman Catholics, and I have seen them
listening to the Word with as much attention as though they had been Protestants. I have
seen men who never heard the gospel before, military men, whose tastes and habits were not
likely to be those of the Puritanic minister, who have nevertheless sat to listen; nay,
they have come againhave made it a point to find the place where they could hear the
besthave submitted to be crowded, that the might press in to hear the Word, and I
have never before seen such intense eagerness of the people to listen to the Gospel. I
have heard, too, cheering news of work going on in the most unlikely quartersmen who
could not speak without larding their conversation richly with oathshave
nevertheless come to hear the Word; they have listened, and have been convinced, and if
the impression do not die away, there has been something done for them which they will not
forget even in eternity. But the most pleasing thing I have seen is this, and I must tell
it to you. Hervey once said, "Each floating ship, a floating hell." Of all
classes of men, the sailor has been supposed to be the man least likely to be reached by
the gospel. In crossing over from Holyhead to Dublin and backtwo excessively rough
passages-I spent the most pleasant hours that I ever spent. The first vessel that I
entered, I found my hands ver heartily shaken by the sailors. I thought, "What can
these sailors know of me?" and they were calling me "brother." Of
course, I felt that I was their brother too; but I did not know how they came to talk to
me in that way. It was not generally the way for sailors to call ministers, brother. There
was the most officious attention given, and when I made the enquiry "What makes you
so kind?" "Why," said one, "because I love your Master, the Lord
Jesus." I enquired, and found that out of the whole crew there were but three
unconverted men; that though the most of them had been before without God, and without
Christ, yet by a sudden visitation of the Spirit of God they had all been converted. I
talked to many of these men, and more spiritual, heavenly-minded men I never yet saw. They
have a prayer-meeting every morning before the boat starts, and another prayer-meeting
after she comes to port; and on Sundays, when they lay-to off Kingstown or Holyhead, a
minister comes on board and preaches the gospel; the cabins are crowded; service is held
on deck when it can be; and said an eyewitness to me, "The minister preaches very
earnestly, but I should like you to hear the men pray; I never heard such praying
before," said he, "they pray with such power, as only a sailor can pray."
My heart was lifted up with joy, to think of a ship being made a floating Churcha
very Bethel for God. When I came back by another ship I did not expect to see the like;
but it was precisely the same. The same work had been going on. I walked among hem and
talked to them. They all knew me. One man took out of his pocket an old leather covered
book in Welch"Do you know the likeness of that man in front?" said he,
"Yes," I said, "I think I do: do you read these sermons?" "Yes,
sir," replied he, "we have had your sermons on board this ship, and I read hem
aloud as often as I can. If we have a fine passage coming over, I get a few around me, and
read hem a sermon." Another man old me a story of a gentleman who stood laughing when
a hymn was being sung; and one of the men proposed that they should pray for him. They
did, and that man was suddenly smitten down, and began on the quay to cry for mercy, and
plead with God for pardon. "Ah! Sir," said the sailors, "we have the best
proof that there is a God here, for we have seen this crew marvellously brought to a
knowledge of the ruth; and here we are, joyful and happy men, serving the Lord."
Now, what shall we say of this, but that
the mountains drop sweet wine? The men who were loudest with their oaths, are now loudest
with their songs; those who were the most darling children of Satan, have become the most
earnest advocates of the truth: for mark you, once get sailors converted, and there is no
end to the good they can do. Of all men who can preach well, sailors are the best. The
sailor has seen the wonders of God in the deep; the hardy British Tar has got a heart that
is not made of such cold stuff as many of the hearts of landsmen; and when that heart is
once touched, it gives great big beats; it sends great pulses of energy right through his
whole frame; and with his zeal and energy what may he not do, God helping him and blessing
him?
5. This seems to be in the textthat
a time of revival shall be followed by very extraordinary conversion. But, albeit that in
the time of revival, grace is put in extraordinary places, and singular individuals are
converted, yet these are not a bit behind the usual converts; for if you notice the text
does not say, "the mountains shall drop wine" merely, but they "shall drop sweet
wine." It does not say that the hill shall send forth little streams; but all the
hills shall melt. When sinners, profligate and debauched persons, are converted to
God, we say, "Well, it is a wonderful thing, but I do not suppose they will be very
first class Christians." The most wonderful thing is, that these are the best
Christians alive; that the wine which God brings from the hills is sweet wine; that when
the hills do melt they all melt. The most extraordinary ministers of any time, have
been most extratordinary sinners before conversion. We might never have had a John Bunyan,
if it had not have been for the profanity of Elstow Green; we might never have heard of a
John Newton, if it had not have been for his wickedness on shipboard. I mean he would not
have known the depths of Satan, nor the trying experience, nor even the power of divine
grace, if he had not been suffered wildly to stray, and then wondrously to be brought
back. These great sinners are not a whit behind the Church. Always in revival you will
find his to be the case, that the converts are not inferior to the best of the converts of
ordinary seasonsthat the Romanist, and the men who have never heard the gospel, when
they are converted, are as true in their faith, as hearty in their love, as accurate in
their knowledge, and as zealous in their efforts, as the est of persons who have ever been
brought to Christ. "The mountains shall drop sweet wine, and all the hills shall
melt."
II. I must now go on to the other point
very brieflyWHAT IS THE DOCTRINAL LESSON WHICH IS TAUGHT IN OUR TEXT: AND WHAT IS
TAUGHT TO US BY A REVIVAL? I think it is just this,--that God is absolute monarch of the
hearts of men. God does not say here if men are willing; but he gives an absolute
promise of a blessing. As much as to say, "I have the key of men's hearts; I
can induce the ploughman to overtake the reaper; I am master of the
soilhowever hard and rocky it may be I can break it, and I can make it
fruitful." When God promises to bless his Church and to save sinners, he does not
add, "if the sinners be willing to be saved?" No, great God! Thou leadest free
will in sweet captivity, and thy free grace is all triumphant. Man has a free will,
and God does not violate it; but the free will is sweetly bound with fetters of the divine
love till it becomes more free than it ever was before. The Lord, when he means to save
sinners, does not stop to ask hem whether they mean to be saved, but like a rushing mighty
wind the divine influence sweeps away every obstacle; the unwilling heart bends before the
potent gale of grace, and sinners that would not yield are made to yield by God. I know
this, if the Lord willed it, there is no man so desperately wicked here this morning that
he would not be made now to seek for mercy, however infidel he might be; however rooted in
his prejudices against the gospel, Jehovah hath but to will it, and it is done. Into thy
dark heart, O thou who hast never seen the light, would the light stream; if he did but
say, "Let there be light," there would be light. Thou mayest bend thy fist and
lift up thy mouth against Jehovah; but he is thy master yetthy master to destroy
thee, if thou goest on in thy wickedness; but thy master to save thee now, to change thy
heart and turn thy will, as he turneth the rivers of water.
If it were not for this doctrine, I
wonder where the ministry would be. Old Adam is too strong for young Melancthon. The power
of our preaching is noughtit can do nothing in the conversion of men by itself; men
are hardened, obdurate, indifferent; but the power of grace is greater than the power of
eloquence or the power of earnestness, and once let that power be put forth, and what can
stand against it? Divine Omnipotence is the doctrine of a revival. We may not see it in
ordinary days, by reason of the coldness of our hearts; but we must see it when
these extraordinary works of grace are wrought. Have you never heard the Eastern fables of
the dervish, who wished to teach to a young prince the fact of the existence of a God! The
fable hath it, that the young prince could not see any proof of the Existence of a First
Cause: so the dervish brought a little plant and set it before him, and in his sight the
little plant grew up, blossomed, brought forth fruit, and became a towering tree in an
hour. The young man lifted up his hands in wonder, and he said, "God must have done
this." "Oh, but," said the teacher, thou sayst, "God has done this,
because it is done in an hour: hath he not done it, when it is accomplished in twenty
years?" It was the same work in both cases; it was only the rapidity that astonished
his pupil. SO, brethren, when we see the church gradually built up and converted, we lose
the sense perhaps of a present God; but when the Lord causes the tree suddenly to grow
from a sapling to a strong tall monarch of the forest then we say, "This is
God." We are all blind and stupid in a measure, and we want to see sometimes some of
these quick upgoings, these extraordinary motions of divine influence, before we will
fully understand God's power. Learn, then, O Church of God to-day, this great lesson of
the nothingness of man, and the Eternal All of God. Learn, disciples of Jesus, to rest on
him: look for your success to his power, and while you make your efforts, trust not
in your efforts, but in the Lord Jehovah. If ye have progressed slowly, give him thanks
for progress; but if now he pleases to give you a marvellous increase, multiply your
songs, and sing unto him that worketh all things according to the counsel of his will.
III. I now desire, with great
earnestness, as the Holy Ghost shall help me, to make the text A STIMULUS FOR FURTHER
EXERTION.
The duty of the Church is not to be
measured by her success. It is as much the minister's duty to preach the gospel in adverse
times as in propitious seasons. We are not to think, if God withholds the dew, that we are
to withhold the plough. We are not to imagine that, if unfruitful seasons come, we are
therefore to cease from sowing our seed. Our business is with act, not with result. The
church has to do her duty, even though that duty should bring her no present reward.
"If they hear thee not, Son of man, if they perish they shall perish, but
their blood will I not require at thine hands." If we sow the seed, and the birds of
the air devour it, we have done what we were commanded to do, and the duty is accepted
even though the birds devour the seed. We may expect to see a blessed result, but even if
it did not come we must not cease from duty. But while this is true so far, it must
nevertheless be a divine and holy stimulant to a gospel labourer, to know that God is
making him successful. And in the present day we have a better prospect of success than we
ever had, and we should consequently work the harder. When a tradesman begins business
with a little shop at the corner, he waits a while to see whether he will have any
customers. By-and-bye his little shop is crowded; he has a name; he finds he is making
money. What does he do? He enlarges his premises; the back yard is taken in and covered
over; there are extra men employed; still the business increases, but he will not invest
all his capital in it till he sees to what extent it will pay. It still increases, and the
next house is taken, and perhaps the next: he says, "This is a paying concern, and
therefore I will increase it." My dear friends, I am using commercial maxims, but
they are common-sense rules, and I like to talk so. There are, in these days, happy
opportunities. There is a noble business to be done for Christ. Where you used to invest a
little capital, a little effort, and a little donation, invest more. There never was such
heavy interest to be made as now. It shall be paid back in the results cent, per cent;
nay, beyond all that you expected you shall see God's work prospering. If a farmer knew
that a bad year was coming, he would perhaps only sow an acre or two; but if some prophet
could tell him, "Farmer, there will be such a harvest next year as there never
was," he would say, "I will plough up my grass lands, I will stub up those
hedges: ever inch of round I will sow." So do you. There is a wondrous harvest
coming. Plough up your headlands; root up your hedges; break up your fallow ground, and
sow, even amongst the thorns. Ye know not which shall prosper, this or that; but ye may
hope that they shall be alike good. Enlarged effort should always follow an increased hope
of success.
And let me give you another
encouragement. Recollect that even when this revival comes, an instrumentality will still
be wanted. The ploughman is wanted, even after the harvest, and the treader of grapes is
wanted, however plentiful the vintage; the greater the success the more need of
instrumentality. They began at first to think in the North of Ireland that they could do
without ministers; but now that the gospel is spread, never was there such a demand for
the preachers of the gospel as now. Proudly men said in their hearts, "God has done
this without the intervention of man." I say, they said it proudly, for there is such
a thing as proud humility; but God made them stoop. He made them see that after all he
would bless the Word through his servantsthat he would make the ministers of God
"mighty to the pulling down of strongholds." Brothers and sisters, you need not
think that if better times should come, the world will do without you. You will be wanted.
"A man shall be precious as the gold of Ophir." They shall take hold of your
skirts, and they shall say, "Tell us what we must do to be saved." They shall
come to your house; they shall ask your prayers; they shall demand your instructions; and
you shall find the meanest of the flock become precious as a wedge of gold. The ploughman
shall never be so much esteemed as when he follows after the reaper, and the sower of seed
never so much valued as when he comes at the heels of those that tread the grapes. The
glory which God puts upon instrumentality should encourage you to use it.
And now I beseech and intreat you, my
dear brothers and sisters, inhabitants of this great City of London, let not this
auspicious gale pass away without singular effort. I sometimes fear lest the winds should
blow on us, and we should have our sails all furled, and therefore the good ship should
not speed. Up with the canvas now. Oh! Put on ever stitch of it. Let every effort be used,
while God is helping us. Let us be earnest co-workers with him. Methinks I see the clouds
floating hither; they have come from the far west, from the shore of America; they have
crossed the sea, and the wind has wafted them till the green isle received the showers in
its northern extremity. Lo! the clouds are just now passing over Wales, and are refreshing
the shires that border on the principality. The rain is falling on Oxfordshire and
Gloucestershire; divine grace is distilling, and the clouds are drawing nearer and nearer
to us. Mark, my brethren, they tarry not for men, neither stay they for the sons of men.
They are floating o'er our heads to-day. Shall they float away, and shall we still be left
as dry as ever? 'Tis yours to-day to bring down he rain, though 'tis God's to send the
clouds. God has sent this day over this great city a divine cloud of his grace. Now, ye
Elijahs, pray it down! To your knees, believers, to your knees. You can bring it
down, and only you. "For this thing will I be enquired of by the house of Israel to
do it for them." "Prove me now herewith," saith the Lord of hosts,
"and see if I will not open the windows of heaven, and give you such a blessing that
you shall not have room to contain it." Will you lose the opportunity, Christians?
Will you let men be lost for want of effort? Will you suffer this all-blessed time to roll
away unimproved? If so, the Church of one thousand eight hundred and sixty is a craven
Church, and is unworthy of its time; and he among you, men and brethren, that has not an
earnest heart to-day, if he be a Christian, is a disgrace to his Christianity. When there
are such times as these, if we do not every man of us trust in the plough, we shall indeed
deserve the worst barrenness of soul that can possibly fall upon us. I believe that the
Church has often been plagued and vexed by her God, because when God has favoured her she
has not made a proper use of the favour. "Then," saith he, "I will make
thee like Gilboa; on thy mount there shall be no dew; I will bid the clouds that they rain
no more rain upon thee, and thou shalt be barren and desolate, till once again I pour out
the Spirit from on high." Let us spend this week ins special prayer. Let us meet
together as often as we can, and plead at the throne; and each man of you in private be
mighty with your God, and in public be diligent to your efforts to ring your fellow-men to
Christ.
IV. I have done, when I have uttered a
WORD OF WARNING to those of you who know not Christ.
I am aware that I have many here on
Sabbath mornings who never were in the habit of attending a place of worship at all. There
is many a gentleman here to-day, who would be ashamed in any society, to confess himself a
professor of religion. He has never perhaps, for a long time heard the gospel preached;
and now there is a strange sort of fascination that has drawn him here. He came the first
time out of curiosityperhaps to make a joke at the minister's expense; he has found
himself enthralled; he does not know how it is, but he has been all this week uneasy, he
has been wanting to come again, and when he goes away to-day, he will be watching for next
Sabbath. He has not given up his sins, but somehow they are not so pleasurable as they
used to be. He cannot swear as he did; if an oath comes out edgeways, it does not roll out
in the round form it used to do: he knows better now. Now, it is to such persons that I
speak. My dear friends, allow me to express my hearty joy that you are here, and let me
also express the hope that you are here for a purpose you do not as yet understand. God
has a special favour to you, I do trust, and therefore he has brought you here. I have
frequently remarked, that in any revival of religion, it is not often the children of
pious parents that are brought in, but those who never knew anything of Christ before. The
ordinary means are usually blessed to those who constantly attend hem; but the express
effort, and the extraordinary influence of the Spirit, reach those who were outside the
pale of nominal Christians, and made no profession of religion. I am I hopes it may meet
you. But if you should despise the Word which you have heard; if the impression that has
been madeand you know it has been madeshould die away, one of the most awful
regrets you will ever have when you come to your right sense and reason in another world
will be the feeling that you had an opportunity, but that you neglected it. I cannot
conceive a more doleful wail than that of the man who cries at last in hell, "The
harvest is pastthere was a harvest; summer is endedthere was a
summerand I am not saved." To go to perdition in ordinary times is hell;
but to go from under the sound of an earnest ministry, where you are bidden to come to
Christ, where you are entreated with honest tears to come to Jesusto go there after
you have been warned is to go not to hell merely, but to the ver hell of hell. The
core and marrow of damnation is reserved for men who hear the truth, and feel it too, but
yet reject it, and are lost. Oh! My dear hearer, this is a solemn time with you. I pray
that God the Holy Spirit may remind you that it may be now or never with you. You may
never have another warning, or if you have it, you may row so hardened that you may laugh
at it and despise it. My brother, I beseech thee, by God, by Christ Jesus, by thine own
immortal welfare, stop and think now whether it be worth while to throw away the hallowed
opportunity which is now presented to thee. Wilt thou go and dance away thine impressions,
or laugh them out of thy soul? Ah! man, thou mayest laugh thyself into hell, but thou
canst not laugh thyself out of it.
There is a turning point in each man's life when his character becomes fixed and settled. That turning point may be to-day. It may be that there shall be some solemn seat in this hall, which is a man knew its history he would never sit in it,--a seat in which a man shall sit and hear the Word, and shall say, "I will not yield; I will resist the impression; I will despise it; I will have my sins, even if I am lost for them." Mark your seat, friend, before you go; make a blood-red stain across it, that next time we come here we may say, "Here a soul destroyed itself." But I pray the rather that God the Holy Spirit may sweetly whisper in thy heart"Man, yield, for Jesus invites thee to come to him." Oh, may my Master smile into your face this morning, and say, "I love thy soul; trust me with it. Give up thy sins; turn to me." O Lord Jesus, do it! And men shall not resist thee. Oh! Show them thy love, and they must yield. Do it, O thou Crucified One, for thy mercy's sake! Send forth thine Holy Spirit now, and bring the strangers home; and in this hall grant thou, O Lord, that many hearts may be fully resigned to thy love, and to thy grace!
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