The Sons of God
A Sermon Delivered on Sabbath Morning, October 7th, 1860, by the
REV. C.H. SPURGEON
At Exeter Hall, Strand
"The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit, that we are the children of God; and if children, then heirs; heirs of God, and joint heirs with Christ; if so be that we suffer with him, that we may be also glorified together."Romans 8:16, 17.
My brethren, what a contrast there is between the present and future estate of the child of God! The believer is here the brother to the worm; in heaven he shall be next of kin to the angels. Here he is covered with the sweat and dust which he acquired by Adam's fall; there his brow shall be bright with the immortality which is conferred upon him by the resurrection of Christ. Here the heir of heaven is unknown; he is in disguise, full often clad in the habiliments of poverty, but there his princely character shall be discerned and acknowledged, he shall be waited upon by angels, and shall share in the admiration which the universe shall pour upon the glorified Redeemer. Well said our poet just now,
"It doth not yet appear, how great we must be made."
I think I need not remind you of your
condition here below; you are too conversant with it, being hourly fretted with troubles,
vexed with your own infirmities, with the temptations of Satan, and with all the
allurements of this world. You are quite conscious that this is not your rest. There are
too many thorns in your nest, to permit you to hope for an abiding city below the skies. I
say, it is utterly needless for me to refresh your memories about your present condition;
but I feel it will be a good and profitable work if I remind you that there are high
privileges of which you are possessors even now; there are divine joys which even this day
you may taste. The wilderness has its manna; the desert is gladdened with water from the
rock. God hath not forsaken us; the tokens of his goodness are with us, and we may rejoice
in full many a gracious boon which is ours this very day. I shall direct your joyous
attention to one precious jewel in your treasury, namely, your adoption into the family of
God.
There are four things of which I shall speak this morning. First, a special privilege;
second, a special proof of it, the Spirit bearing witness with our spirit; then
thirdly, a special privilege, that of heirship; and fourthly, the practical part of
the sermon and the conclusion shall be a special manner of life demanded of such
persons.
I. First, then, my brethren, a SPECIAL PRIVILEGE mentioned in the text. "We are
the children of God." And here I am met upon the very threshhold by the
opposition of certain modern theologians, who hold that sonship is not the special and
peculiar privilege of believers. The newly discovered negative theology, which, I fear,
has done some damage to the Baptist denomination, and a very large amount of injury to the
Independent bodythe new heresy is to a large degree, founded upon the fiction of the
Universal Fatherhood of God. The old divines, the Puritans, the Reformers, are now in
these last days, to be superseded by men whose teaching flatly contradicts all that we
have received of our forefathers. Our old ministers have all represented God as being to
his people a father, to the rest of the world a judge. This is styled by our new
philosophers as old cumbersome scheme of theology, and it is proposed that it be swept
awaya proposition which will never be carried out, while the earth remaineth, or
while God endureth. But, at any rate, certain knight-errants have set themselves to do
battle with windmills, and really believe that they shall actually destroy from the face
of the earth that which is a fundamental and abiding distinction, without which the
Scriptures are not to be understood. We are told by modern false prophets, that God in
everything acts to all men as a father, even when he cast them into the lake of fire, and
send upon them all the plagues that are written in his book. All these terrible things in
righteousness, the awful proofs of holy vengeance in the judge of all the earth, and
successfully neutralized in their arousing effect, by being quietly written among the
loving acts and words of the Universal Father. It is dreamed that this is an age when men
do not need to be thundered at; when everybody is become so tender-hearted that there is
no need for the sword to be held "in terrorum" over mortals; but that everything
is to be conducted now in a new and refined manner; God the Universal Father, and all men
universal sons. Now I must confess there is something very pretty about this theory,
something so fascinating that I do not wonder that some of the ablest minds have been
wooed and won by it. I, for my part, take only one objection to it, which is that it is
perfectly untrue and utterly unfounded, having not the lightest shadow of a pretence of
being proved by the Word of God. Scripture everywhere represents the chosen people of the
Lord, under their visible character of believers, penitents, and spiritual men, as being
"the children of God," and to none but such is that holy title given. It speaks
of the regenerate, of a special class me as having a claim to be God's children. Now, as
there is nothing like Scripture, let me read you a few texts, Romans viii.
14."As many are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God."
Surely no one is so daring as to say, that all men are led by the Spirit of God; yet may
it readily enough be inferred from our text, that those who are not led by the Spirit of
God are not the sons of God, but that they and they alone who are led, guided and inspired
by the Holy Spirit, are the sons of God. A passage from Galatians iii. 26."For
ye are all the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus," declaring as it seems to
me, and rightly enough, that all believers, all who have faith in Christ are the children
of God, and that they become actually and manifestly so by faith in Christ Jesus, and
implying that those who have no faith in Christ Jesus, are not God's sons, and that any
pretence which they could make to that relationship would be but arrogance and
presumption. And hear ye this, John i. 12."To as many as received him, to them
gave he power to become the sons of God." How could they have been the sons of God
before, for "to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that
believe on his name, who were born not of blood,"then they were not make
the sons of God by mere creation"nor of the will of the flesh," that is to
say, not by any efforts of their own "but of God." If any text can be more
conclusive than this against universal sonship, I must confess I know of none, and unless
these words mean nothing at all, they do mean just this, that believers are the sons of
God and none besides. But listen to another word of the Lord in the first epistle of John,
iii. 1-."In this the children of God are manifest, and the children of the
devil: whosoever doeth no righteousness is not of God, neither he that loveth not his
brother." Here are two sorts of children, therefore all are not the children of God.
Can it be supposed that those who are the children of the devil are nevertheless the
children of God? I must confess my reason revolts against such a supposition, and though I
think I might exercise a little imagination, yet I could not make my imagination
sufficiently an acrobat to conceive of a man being at the same time a child of the devil,
and yet a real child of God. Hear another, 2 Corinthians, vi. 17."Come out from
among them, and be ye separate, saith the Lord, and touch not the unclean thing; and I
will receive you, and will be a Father unto you, and ye shall be my sons and daughters,
saith the Lord Almighty." Is not that "coming out" necessary to sonship,
and were they his sons, were they his daughters, had they any claim or right to call him
Father, until they came out from the midst of a wicked world, and were separate? If so,
why doth God promise them what they have already. But again, Matthew v. 9.
"Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God." A
fine title indeed if it belongs to every man! Where is the blessedness of the title, for
they might be lovers of strife, and yet according to modern theologians they might still
be the sons of God. Let us mark a yet more positive passage, Romans ix. 8."The
children of the flesh, these are not the children of God." What then is to be said to
this, "These are not the children of God." If any man will contradict that
flatlywell, be it so. I have no argument with which to convince the man who denies
so strong and clear a witness. Listen to the divine apostle John, where in one of his
epistles he is carried away in rhapsody of devout admiration, "Behold what manner of
love the Father hath bestowed upon us, that we should be called the sons of God." And
then he goes on giving a description of those who are the sons of God, who could not mean
any but those who by a living faith in Christ Jesus, have cast their souls once for all on
him. As far as I can guess, the main text on which these people build the doctrine of the
universal Fatherhood, is that quotation which the apostle Paul took from a heathen
poet"As certain also of your own poets have said, For we are also his
offspring." The apostle endorses that sentiment by quoting it, and against that
endorsement we can of course have no contention; but the word there used for
"offspring," expresses no idea of Fatherhood in the majestic sense of the term,
it is a word which might be used as appropriately for the young of animals, the young of
any other creature, it has not about it the human sympathies which belong to a father and
a son. I know, besides this, nothing which could support this new theory. Possibly they
fancy that creation is a paternal act, that all created things are sons. This is too
absurd to need an answer, for if so, horses and cows, rats and mice, snakes and flies are
children of God, for they are surely creatures as well as we. Taking away this
corner-stone, this fancy theory tumbles to the ground, and that theory which seemed to be
as tall as Babel, and threatened to make as much confusion, may right soon be demolished,
if you will batter it with the Word of God. The fact is, brethren, that the relationship
of a son of God belongs only to those who are "predestinated unto the adoption of
children by Jesus Christ, according to the good pleasure of the Father's will:"
Ephesians i. 5. The more you search the Bible, the more sure will you be that sonship is
the special privilege of the chosen people of God and of none beside.
Having thus, as far as I can, established my point, that the privilege of our text is a
special one, let me dwell upon it for a moment and remark that, as a special one, it is an
act of pure unmistakeable grace. No man has any right to be a son of God. If we are
born into his family it is a miracle of mercy. It is one of the ever-blessed exhibitions
of the infinite love of God which without any cause in us, has set itself upon us. If thou
art this day an heir of heaven, remember, man, thou wast once the slave of hell. Once thou
didst wallow in the mire, and if thou shouldst adopt a swine to be thy child, thou couldst
not then have performed an act of greater compassion than when God adopted thee. And if an
angel could exalt a gnat to equal dignity with himself, yet would not the boon be
such-an-one as that which God hath conferred on thee. He hath taken thee from the
dunghill, and he hath set thee among princes. Thou hast lain among the pots, but he hat
made thee as a dove whose wings are covered with silver, and her feathers with yellow
gold. Remember that this is grace, and parentage,look back to the hole of the pit
whence thou art digged, and the miry clay whence thou wast drawn. Boast not, if thou art
in the true olive. Thou art not there, because of thine original, thou art a scion from an
evil tree, and the Divine Spirit hath changed thy nature, for thou wast once nothing but a
branch of the vine of Gomorrah. Ever let humility bow thee to the very earth while thine
adoption lifts thee up to the third heaven.
Consider again, I pray you, what a dignity God hath conferred upon youeven upon you
in making you his son. The tall archangel before the throne is not called God's Son, he is
one of the most favoured of his servants, but not his child. I tell thee, thou poor
brother in Christ, there is a dignity about thee that even angels may well envy. Thou in
thy poverty art as a sparkling jewel in the darkness of the mine. Thou in the midst of thy
sickness and infirmity art girt about with robes of glory, which make the spirits in
heaven look down upon the earth with awe. Thou movest about this world as a prince among
the crowd. The blood of heaven runs in thy veins; thou art one of the blood royal of
eternitya son of God, descendant of the King of kings. Speak of pedigrees, the
glories of heraldrythou hast more than heraldry could ever give thee, or all the
pomp of ancestry could ever bestow.
II. And now I press forward to notice that in order that we may know whether we are
partakers of this highthis royal relationship of children of God, the text furnishes
us with a SPECIAL PROOF"The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit that
we are the children of God. You will notice here, my beloved, that there are two witnesses
in courttwo who are ready to prove our filiation to the eternal God. The first
witness is our spirit; the second witness is The Spirit, the eternal Spirit
of God, who beareth witness with our spirit. It is as if a poor man were called into court
to prove his right to some piece of land which was disputed. He standeth up and beareth
his own faithful testimony; but some great one of the landsome nobleman who lives
nearrises, stands in the witness box, and confirms his witness. So is it with our
text. The plain, simple spirit of the humble-minded Christian cries, "I am God's
child." The glorious Spirit, one with God, attests the truth of the testimony, and
beareth witness with our spirit that we are the children of God.
Let us notice in the first place, how it is that our spirit is able to bear
witness; and as this is a matter of experience, I can only appeal to those who are the
true children of God; for no others are competent to give testimony. Our spirit bears
witness that we are the children of God, when it feels a filial love to God. When bowing
before his throne we can boldly say "Abba Father.""Thou art my
father," then our spirit concludes that we are sons, for thus it argues, "I feel
to thee as a child feeleth to its parent, and it could not be that I should have the
feeling of a son if I had not the rights of a sonif I were not a child thou wouldst
never have given to me that filial affection which no dares to call thee
"Father."
Sometimes, too, the spirit feels that God is its Father not only by love but by trust. The
rod has been upon our back and we have smarted very sore, but in the darkest hour we have
been able to say, "The time is in my Father's hands; I cannot murmur; I would not
repine; I feel it is but right that I should suffer, otherwise my Father would never have
made me suffer." He surely doth not afflict willingly, nor grieve the children of man
for nought; and when in these dark gloomy times we have looked up to a Father's face, and
have said, "Though thou slay me, yet will I trust in thee; thy blows shall not drive
thee from me; they shall but make me say, "Show me wherefore thou contendest with me,
and purge me from my sin."" Then our spirit beareth witness that we are the
children of God.
And are there not times with you, my dear friends, when your hearts feel that they would
be emptied and void, unless God were in them. You have perhaps received an increase to
your wealth, and after the first flush of pleasure which was but natural, you have said,
"Vanity of vanities, all is vanity; this is not my joy." You have had many
mercies in your family, but you have felt that in them all there was a lack of something
which could satisfy your heart, and you have felt that that something was God. My God,
thou art my all in allthe circle where my passions move, the centre of my soul. Now
these longingsthese pantings for something more than this world can give
youwere but the evidences of a child-like spirit, which was panting after its
Father's presence. You feel you must have your Father, or else the gifts of his providence
are nothing to you. That is, your spirit beareth witness that you are the child of
God. But there are times when the heir of heaven is as sure that he is God's child as he
is sure that he is his own father's son. No doubt can make him question. The evil one may
whisper, "If thou be the son of God." But he says, "Get thee hence,
Satan, I know I am the son of God." A man might as well try to dispute him out of the
fact of his existence as out of that equally sure fact that he has been born again, and
that by gracious adoption he has been taken into the family of God. This is our witnessing
that we are born of God.
But the text, you see, furnishes us with a higher witness than this. God that cannot lie,
in the person of the Holy Ghost, graciously condescendeth to say "Amen" to the
testimony of our conscience. And whereas our experience sometimes leads our spirit to
conclude that we are born of God, there are happy times when the eternal Spirit from off
the throne, descends and fills our heart, and then we have the two witnesses bearing
witness with each other, that we are children of God. Perhaps you ask me, how is this. I
was reading a passage by Dr. Chalmers the other day, in which he says, that his own
experience did not lead him to believe that the Holy Spirit ever gave any witness of our
being the children of God, apart from the written Word of God, and his ordinary workings
in our hearts. Now, I am not sure that the doctor is perfectly right. As far as his own
experience went I dare say he was right, but there may be some far inferior to the doctor
in genius, who nevertheless were superior in nearness of fellowship with God, and who
could therefore go a little farther than the eloquent divine. Now, I do believe with him
this morning, that the chief witness of God the Holy Spirit lies in thisthe Holy
Spirit has written this book which contains an account of what a Christian should be, and
of the feelings which believers in Christ must have. I have certain experiences and
feelings; turning to the Word, I find similar experiences and feelings recorded; and so I
prove that I am right, and the Spirit bears witness with my spirit that I am born of God.
Suppose you have been enabled to believe in Jesus Christ for your salvation; that faith
has produced love to Christ; that love to Christ has led you to work for Christ; you come
to the Bible, and you find that this was just the very thing which was felt by early
believers; and then you say, "Good Lord, I am thy son, because what I feel is what
thou has said by the lips of thy servant must be felt by those who are thy children."
So the Spirit confirms the witness of my spirit that I am born of God.
But again, everything that is good in a Christian you know to be the work of God the Holy
Ghost. When at any time then the Holy Spirit comforts yousheds a sweet calm over
your disturbed spirit; when at any period he instructs you, opens to you a mystery you did
not understand before; when at some special period he inspires you with an unwonted
affection, an unusual faith in Christ; when you experience a hatred of sin, a faith in
Jesus, a death to the world, and a life to God, these are the works of the Spirit. Now the
Spirit never did work effectually in any but the children of God; and inasmuch as the
Spirit works in you, he doth by that very working give his own infallible testimony to the
fact that you are a child of God. If you had not been a child he would have left you where
you were in your natural state; but inasmuch as he hath wrought in you to will and to do
of his own good pleasure, he that put his stamp on you as being one of the family of the
Most High. But I think must go a little further than this. I do believe that there is a
supernatural way in which apart from means, the Spirit of God communicates with the spirit
of man. My own little experience leads me to believe that apart from the Word of God,
there are immediate dealings with the conscience and soul of man by the Holy Spirit,
without any instrumentality, without even the agency of the truth. I believe that the
Spirit of God sometimes comes into a mysterious and marvellous contact with the spirit of
man, and that at times the Spirit speaketh in the heart of man by a voice not audible to
the ear, but perfectly audible to the spirit which is the subject of it. he assures and
consoles directly, by coming into immediate contact with the heart. It becomes our
business then to take the Spirit's witness through his Word, and through his works, but I
would seek to have immediate, actual, undivided fellowship with the Holy Ghost, who by his
divine Spirit, should work in my spirit and convince me that I am a child of God.
Now let me ask my congregation, do any of you know that you are God's children? Say not,
"In my baptism, wherein I was made a member of Christ, and a child of God."
There are not many in England, I think, who believe those words. There may be a few who
do, but it has never been my misfortune to meet with them. Every one knows that it is a
disgrace to a matchless prayer-book, that such words should be permitted to stand
there-words so infamously untrue that by their gross untruthfulness they cease to have the
destructive effect which more cunning language might have produced, because the conscience
of man revolts against the idea that the sprinkling of drops of water upon the infants's
brow can ever make it a member of Christ, and a child of God. But I ask you, does your
spirit say to-day "I am God's child." Do you feel the longings, the loves, the
confidences of a child? If not, tremble, for there are but two vast families in this
world. They are the family of God, and the family of Satan their character how
differenttheir end, how strangely divided! But let me say again to thee, hast thou
ever felt that the Holy Ghost has borne witness with thy spirit in his word, and in his
work, in thee; and in that secret whisper has he ever said to thee, "Thou art my son,
this day have I begotten thee." I conjure thee, give no sleep to thine eyes, no
slumber to thine eyelids, till by this divine mysterious agency, thou art new made, new
born, and new begotten, and so admitted not only nominally but really into the living
family of the living God.
III. I shall now pass on to my third point. If it be settled in our mind by the true
witnessthe spirit within us, and the Spirit of God,that we are God's children,
what a NOBLE PRIVILEGE now appears to our view. "HEIRS OF GOD, and joint heirs with
Christ." It does not always follow in human reasoning "if children, then
heirs," because in our families but one is the heir. There is but one that can claim
the heir's rights, and the heir's title. It is not so in the family of God. Man as a
necessary piece of political policy, may give to the heir that which surely he can have
not more real right to in the sight of God, than the rest of the familymay give him
all the inheritance, while his brethren, equally true born, may go without; but it is not
so in the family of God. All God's children are heirs, however numerous the family, and he
that shall be born of God last, shall be as much his heir as he who was born first. Abel,
the protomartyr, entering alone into heaven, shall not have a more secure title to the
inheritance than he who, last of woman born, shall trust in Christ, and then ascend into
his glory. In heaven's logic it is true, "if children, then heirs."
And see what it is that we are heirs of. The apostle opens with the grandest part of the
inheritance firstheirs of Godheirs not of God's gifts, and God's works,
but heirs of God himself. It was said of king Cyrus, that he was a prince of so amiable a
disposition, that when at any time he sat down at meat, if there were aught that pleased
his appetite, he would order it to be taken away and given to his friends with this
message, "King Cyrus found that this food pleased his palate, and he thought his
friend should feed upon that which he enjoyed himself." This was thought to be a
singular instance of his affability, and his kindness to his courtiers. But our God doeth
more than this, he doth not send merely bread from his table, as in the day when man did
eat angel's food; he doth not give us merely to drink the wines on the lees well
refinedthe rich wines of heavenbut he gives himself himself to us. And
the believer is to be the heir, I say, not merely of God's works, not simply of God's
gifts, but of God himself. Talk we of his omnipotence?his Allmightiness is ours.
Speak we of his omniscience?all his wisdom is engaged in our behalf. Do we say that
he is love?that love belongs to us. Can we glory that he is full of immutability,
and changes not?that eternal unchangeableness is engaged for the defence of the
people of God. All the attributes of divinity are the property of God's
childrentheir inheritance entailed upon them. Nay, he himself is ours. Oh what
riches! If we could say this morning, that all the stars belong to us; if we could turn
the telescope to the most remote of the fixed stars, and then could say with the pride of
possession, so natural to man, "That star, a thousand times bigger than the sun, is
mine. I am the king of that inheritance, and without me doth not a dog move his
tongue." If we could then sweep the telescope along the milky way, and see the
millions upon millions of stars that lie clustered together there, and could cry,
"All these are mine," yet these possessions were but a speck compared with that
which is in the text. Heir of God! He to whom all these things are but as nothing, gives
himself up to the inheritance of his people.
Note yet a little further concerning the special privilege of heirship,we are joint
heirs with Christ. That is, whatever Christ possesses, as heir of all things, belongs
to us. Splendid must be the inheritance of Jesus Christ. Is he not very God of very God,
Jehovah's only begotten Son, Most High and glorious, though he bowed himself to the grave
and became the Servant of servants, yet God over all, blessed for ever. Amen.
Oh! what angelic tongue shall hymn his glory? What fiery lips shall ever speak of his
possessions, of his riches,the unsearchable riches of God in Christ Jesus. But,
beloved, all that belongs to Christ belongs to Christ's people. It is as when a man doth
marry. His possessions shall be shared by his spouse; and when Christ took his Church unto
himself he endowed her with all his goods, both temporal and eternal. He gives to us his
raiments, and thus we stand arrayed. His righteousness becomes our beauty. He gave to us
his person, it has become our meat and our drink; we eat his flesh and drink his blood. He
gave to us hi inmost heart; he loved us even to the death. He gave to us his crown; he
gave to us his throne; for "to him that overcometh will I give to sit upon my throne,
even as I have overcome, and have sat down with my Father upon his throne." He gave
to us his heaven, for "where I am, there shall my people be." He gave to us the
fulness of his joy, for "my joy shall be in you, that your joy may be full." I
repeat it, there is nothing in the highest heaven which Christ has reserved unto himself,
"for all things are yours, and ye are Christ's and Christ is God's."
I cannot stay longer on that point, except just to notice, that we must never quarrel with
this divine arrangement. "Oh," say you, "we never shall." Stay, stay,
brother; I have known you do so already, for when all that is Christ's belongs to you, do
ye forget that Christ once had a cross, and that belongs to you? Christ once wore a thorny
crown, and if you are to have all that he has, you must bear the thorny crown too? Have
you forgotten that he had shame and spitting, the reproach, the rebuke of men, and that he
conceived all those to be greater riches than all the treasures of this world? Come, I
know as you look down the inventory, you are apt to look a little askance on that cross,
and you think, "Well, the crown is glorious, but I love not the spittle, I care not
to be despised and rejected of men." Oh! you are quarreling with this divine
arrangement, you are beginning to differ with this blessed policy of God. Why, one would
have thought you would rejoice to take your Master for better or for worse, and to be
partaker with him, not only in his glories but in his sufferings. So it must be, "If
so be that we suffer with him that we also may be glorified together." Is there a
place into which your Master went that you would be ashamed to enter? If so, methinks your
heart is not in a right state. Would you refuse to go with him to the garden of his agony?
Believer, would you be ashamed to stand and be accused as he was, and have false witness
born against you? And would you blush to sit side- by-side with him, and be made nothing
of as he was? Oh, when you start aside at a little jest, let your conscience prick you,
and say, "Am I not a joint heir with Christ, and am I about to quarrel with the
legacy? Did he not say, "In the world ye shall have tribulation; but be of good
cheer, I have overcome the world?" And oh, would you be ashamed to die for Christ;
methinks, if you are what you should be, you will glory in tribulations also, and count it
sweet to suffer for Christ. I know the world turns this into ridicule and says, "That
the hypocrite loves persecution;" no, not the hypocrite, but the true believer; he
feels that though the suffering must ever be painful, yet for Christ's sake, it becomes so
glorious that the pain is all forgotten.
Come, believer, will you be partaker with Christ to-day in the battle, and then divide
this spoil with him? Come, will you wade with him through the deep waters, and then at
last climb up the topless hills with him? Are you prepared now to be despised and rejected
of men that you may at last ascend up on high, leading captivity captive? The inheritance
cannot be divided; if you will have the glory, you must have the shame. He that will live
godly in Christ Jesus must suffer persecution. Come, men, put your face against all
weathers; be ready to come up hill, with the snow blowing in your face, be ready to march
on when the tempest howls, and the lightnings flash over head, and the snow becomes
knee-deep; nay, be ready to go into the crevasse with him, and perish, if need be. Who
quarrels with this sacred regulation? Certainly no true child of God; he would not have it
altered, even if he might.
IV. And now I come to my last point, upon which briefly but I hope interestingly. The
SPECIAL CONDUCT naturally expected from those who are partakers of the peculiar privileges
of being the children of God. In the golden age of Rome, if a man were tempted to
dishonesty, he would stand upright, look the tempter in the face, and say to him, "I
am a Roman." He thought that a sufficient reason why he should neither lie nor cheat.
It ought to be ten times more than sufficient answer to every temptation, for a man to be
able to say, "I am a son of God; shall such a man as I yield to sin?" I have
been astonished in looking though old Roman history at the wonderful prodigies of
integrity and valour which were produced by idolatry, or rather, which were produced by
patriotism, and that principle which ruled the Romans, namely, love of fame. And I say it
this morning, it is a shameful thing that ever idolatry should be able to breed better men
than some who profess Christianity. And I think I may stand firmly while I argue here,
that if a Roman, a worshipper of Jupiter or Saturn, became great or glorious, a Son of God
ought to be nobler far. Look ye, sirs, at Brutus; he has established a republic, he has
put down tyranny, he sits upon the judgment seat; his two sons are brought before him,
they have been traitors to the commonwealth. What will the father do? He is a man of a
loving heart and loves his sons, but there they stand. Will he execute justice as a judge,
or will he prefer his family to his country? He covers his face for a moment with his
hands, and then looking down at his sons, and finding that the testimony is complete
against them, he says, "Lictors, do your work." They bare their backs, the rod
scourgeth them. "Complete the sentence, lictors;" and their heads are smitten
off in the father's presence. Stern justice swayed his spirit, and no other feeling could
for a single moment make him turn aside. Christian men, do you feel this with regard to
your sins. When you have been sitting on the judgment bench; there has been some favourite
sin brought up, and you have, oh, let me blush to say it, you have wished to spare it, it
was so near your heart, you have wished to let it live, whereas should you not as the son
of God have said, "If my eye offend me, I will pluck it out and cast it from me, if
my right hand offend me, I will cut it off, rather than I should in anything offend my
God." Brutus slays his sons; but some Christians would spare their sins. Look again
at that noble youth, Mutius Scoevola. He goes into the tent of King Pyrrhus with the
intention to put him to death, because he is the enemy of his country; he slays the wrong
man; Pyrrhus orders him to be taken captive. A pan of hot coals is blazing in the tent;
Scoevola puts out his right hand and holds it; it crackles in the flame; the young man
flinches not, though his fingers drop away. "There are 400 youths," says he,
"in Rome as brave as I am, and that will bear fire as well; and tyrant," he says
"you will surely die."" Yet here are Christian men, who, if they are a
little sneered at, or snubbed, or get the cold shoulder for Christ's sake, are half
ashamed of their profession, and would go and hide it. And if they are not like
Petertempted to curse and swear to escape the blessed imputationthey would
turn the conversation, that they might not suffer for Christ. Oh for 400 Scoevolas, 400
men who for Christ's sake would burn, not their right hands, but their bodies, if indeed
Christ's name night be glorified, and sin might be stabbed to the heart. Or, read you that
old legend of Curtius, the Roman knight. A great gulf had opened in the Forum, perhaps
caused by an earthquake, and the auspices had said that the chasm could never be filled
up, except the most precious thing in Rome could be cast into it. Curtius puts on his
helmet, and his armour, mounts his horse and leaps into the cleft, which is said to have
filled at once, because courage, valour, and patriotism, were the best things in Rome. I
wonder how many Christians there are who would leap like that into the cleft. Why, I see
you, sirs, if there is a new and perilous work to be done for Christ, you like to be in
the rear rank this time; if there were something honourable, so that you might ride on
with your well caparisoned steeds in the midst of the dainty ranks ye would do it; but to
leap into certain annihilation for Christ's sakeOh! heroism, where is it
fledwhither has it gone. Thou Church of God, surely it must survive in thee; for to
whom should it more belong to die and sacrifice all, than to those who are the sons of
God. Look ye again at Camillus. Camillus had been banished from Rome by false accusations.
He was ill-treated, abused, and slandered, and went away to retirement. Suddenly the
Goths, the old enemies of Rome, fell upon the city. They surrounded it; they were about to
sack it, and Camillus was the only man who could deliver it. Some would have said within
themselves "Let the caitiff nation be cut off. The city has turned me out; let it rue
the day that it ever drove me away." But no, Camillus gathers together his body of
followers, falls upon the Goths, routs them and enters in triumph into Rome though he was
an exile. Oh Christian, this should ever be your spirit, only in a higher degree. When the
Church rejects you, casts you out, annoys, despises you, still be ready to defend her, and
when you have an ill name even in the lips of God's people, still stand up for the common
cause of Zion, the city of our solemnities. Or look you at Cincinnatus. He is chosen
Dictator, but as soon as ever his dictatorship is over he retires to his little farm of
three acres, and goes to his plough, and when he is wanted to be absolute monarch of Rome
he is found at his plough upon his three acres of land and his little cottage. He served
his country, not for himself, but for his country's sake; and can it be that you will not
be poor yet honest for Christ's sake! Will you descend to the tricks of trade to win
money. Ah, then, the Roman eclipses the Christian. Will you not be satisfied to serve God
though you lose by it; to stand up and be thought an arrant fool, because you will not
learn the wisdom of this world; to be esteemed a mad fanatic, because you cannot swim with
the current. Can you not do it? Can you not do it? Then again I say to you, "Tell it
not in Gath and publish it not in Askelon, then has a heathen eclipsed a Christian."
May the sons of God be greater than the sons of Romulus. One other instance let me give
you. You have heard of Regulus the Roman general; he was taken prisoner by Carthagenians,
who anxiously wished for peace. They told him to go home to Rome, and see if he could not
make peace. But his reply was, "No, I trust they will always be at war with you, for
Carthage must be destroyed if Rome is to prosper." They compelled him, however, to
go, exacting from him this promise, that if the Romans did not make peace he would come
back, and if he came back they would put him to death in the most horrid manner that ever
cruelty could invent. Regulus returns to Rome; he stands up in the senate and conjures
them never to make peace in Carthage, but ot his wife and children, and tells them that he
is going back to Carthage, and of course the tell him that he need not keep faith with an
enemy. I imagine that he said, "I promised to go back, and though it is to pangs
indescribable, I will return." His wife clings to his shoulder, his children seek to
persuade him; they attend him to the waters' edge; he sails for Carthage; his death was
too horrible to be described. Never martyr suffered more for Christ than that man suffered
for his word's sake. And shall a Christian man break his promise? shall a son of God be
less true than a Roman or a heathen? Shall it be, I say, that integrity shall be found in
heathen lands and not be found here? No. May you be holy, harmless, sons of God, without
rebuke, in the midst of a crooked and perverse generation. I used this argument; I thought
it might be a new one; I am sure it is a forcible one. You cannot imagine, surely, that
God is to allow heathens to eclipse his children. Oh! never let it be so. So live, so act,
ye sons of God, that the world may say of you, "Yes, these men bring forth the fruits
of God; they are like their Father; they honour his name; they are indeed filled with his
grace, for their every word is as true as his oath; their every act is sincere and
upright; their heart is kind, their spirit is gentle; they are firm but yet they are
generous; they are strict in their integrity, but they are loving in their souls; they are
men who, like God, are full of love; but like him are severely just. They are sternly
holy; they are, like him, ready to forgive, but they can by no means tolerate iniquity,
nor hear that sin should live in their presence." God bless you, ye sons of God, and
may those of you who are strangers to him, be convinced and converted by this sermon, and
seek that grace by which alone you can have your prayer fulfilled:
"With them numbered may we be,
Now and through eternity."
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