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Now, do you not see that his must be for sinners? See, you black ones, you filthy ones,
you lost ones, you ruined ones, this is for sinners. You see it does not say it was for sensible
sinners; no, no, but sinners. It does not say, "He was numbered with awakened
transgressors;" no, it is "transgressors." It does not say that he bare the
sins of tender-hearted sinners; no, but "he bare the sin of many." This is the
only description I can find in my text. Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners,
and if in very deed and truth I know myself to be this day a sinner, I may trust Christ,
and trusting Christ I may know, as surely as there is a God in heaven, that Jesus Christ
took my sins and carried them all away. Now, I want to know whether you have got this by
an act of faith this morning. "Oh," says one, "I am a sinner, but,
but." Well, what but? If you be a sinner, you are commanded to trust Christ
this morning. "Oh, but." I will have no "buts," sir, no
"but" whatever. Are you a sinner? Yes or no. If you say "No," then I
have nothing to say to you; Jesus Christ came not to call the righteous, but sinners to
repentance. If you are a sinner, to you is the Word of this salvation sent. "But I
have been a thief!" I suppose a thief is a sinner? "But I have been a
drunkard!" A drunkard is a sinner. "But I have been an unclean liver!" You
are a sinner, then. "But I have such a hard heart!" Well, to have a hard heart
is one of the greatest sins in the world. "But I am unbelieving!" Well, that is
a sin too. You come in under the list of sinners, and I say that such Christ contemplated,
and the two sentences we have already considered prove this to a demonstration. He
contemplated such as you are when he came to save, for "he was numbered with
transgressors," and "he bare"not the virtues of many, not the merits
of many, not the good works of many, but "the sin of many." So, if you have any
sin, here is Christ the sin-bearer; and if you are a sinner, here is Christ, numbered with
you. "Oh!" says one, "but what is faith? I want to know at once."
Faith, sinner, is to believe in Jesus, and to trust in Jesus now. Saving faith can sing
this verse
It is as sinners, not as sensible sinners, not
as repenting sinners, that Jesus died for us. Sinners as sinners, Jesus Christ has chosen,
redeemed, and called; in fact, for them, and for only such, Jesus Christ came into the
world.
III. Our third sentence tells us that JESUS INTERCEDES FOR SINNERS. "And made
intercession for the transgressors."
He prays for his saints, but, dear friends, remember that by nature they are
transgressors, and nothing more.
What does our text say? He intercedes for transgressors! There is a transgressor here this
morning. He has been hearing the gospel for many yearsfor many years; and he has
heard it preached faithfully too. He is growing grey now; but while his head is getting
white his heart is black; he is an old hard-hearted reprobate, and by-and-bye, unless
grace preventsbut I need not tell that story. What is that I hear? The feet of
justice, slowly but surely coming. I hear a voice saying"Lo, these three years
I come seeking fruit on this fig-tree and find none; cut it down; why cumbereth it the
ground?" The woodman feels his axe; it is sharp and keen. "Now," says he,
"I will lay to at this barren tree, and cut it down." But hark! There is one
that maketh intercession for transgressors, hear him, hear him, "Spare it yet a
little while, till I dig about it and dung it, and if it bear fruit well; but if
not, after that thou shalt cut it down." You see there was nothing in that tree why
he should plead for it, and there is nothing in you why he should plead for you, yet he
does it. This very morning, perhaps, he is crying "Spare him yet a little while; let
him hear the gospel again; let him be entreated once more; oh! let him have another
sickness that it may make his conscience feel; let me have another endeavour with his hard
heart; it may be, it may be that he will yield." O sinner, bless God that Jesus
Christ pleads for you in that way.
But that done, he pleads for their forgiveness. They are nailing him to the cross;
the wretches are driving iron through his hands; but even while they fasten him to the
tree hear him"Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do." Oh, I
spoke to a brother this week, whose heart all-conquering love touched. He had been a great
blasphemer, and when we were talking together about the fact that Jesus Christ loved him
even when he was cursing, I saw how it broke his heart; and it broke mine too, to think
that I could rebel against Christ whilst he was loving me; that I could despise him while
he was putting himself in my way in order to do me good. Oh! it is this that breaks a
man's heart; to think that Christ should have been loving me, with the whole force of his
soul, while I was despising him, and would have nothing to do with him. There is a man
there who has been cursing, and swearing, and blaspheming, and the very man whom he has
cursed has been crying "Father, forgive him, for he knows not what he does." O
sinner, I would this might break thy heart, and bring thee to the Saviour.
Nor does he end there. He next prays that those for whom he intercedes may be saved,
and may have a new life given them. "I will pray the Father, and he shall give
you another Comforter, that he may abide with you for ever; even the Spirit of truth; whom
the world cannot receive." Every soul that is quickened by the Holy Spirit is so
quickened as the result of his intercession for transgressors. His prayer brings down the
life, and dead sinners live. When they live he does not cease to pray for them, for by his
intercession they are preserved. They are tempted and tried, but hear what he says.
"Satan hath desired to have thee that he may sift thee as wheat, but I have prayed
for thee that thy strength fail not." Yes, brethren, beloved, and this is the reason why
we are not condemned, for our Apostle puts it"Who is he that
condemneth?" and the answer he gives is, "Christ hath died, yea, rather, hath
risen again, who ever maketh intercession for us;" as if that intercession choked at
once the advocate of hell, and delivered us from condemnation. And more, our coming to
glory is the result of the pleading of Christ for transgressors. "Father, I will
that they also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am, that they may behold my
glory."
There are a great many sermons preached that have not the gospel in them, especially those
sermons the drift of which is to tell the sinners "Go home and pray; go home and
pray." That is very good advice, but it is not the gospel. The sinner might answer
me, "How can I come before God as I am; I cannot plead before him, for I am a wretch
undone; if I should stand in his presence he would drive me from him." Behold Jesus
Christ maketh intercession for transgressors. It is a common saying in the world, that a
man who pleads his own cause has a fool for his client, certainly it is so in heaven. But
when Christ comes in, the Wonderful, the Counsellor, he takes up the brief, and now the
adversary trembles, for no sooner does he find that the suit is put into the hands of him
who is the advocate of his people than he knows that his case is lost, and that the sinner
will go free. So, sinner, you are safe if he pleads for you. "Ah," say you,
"but if he asks me what he should plead I have nothing to tell him." You know
the counsellor goes into the cell, and he says to the prisoner"Now, just tell
me the case; what can I say in your favour?" The criminal replies, "Well, there
is so-and-so, and so-and-so," and perhaps he is able to say "Why, sir, I am as
innocent as a new-born babe of the whole affair, and I can prove an alibi, or I can
do this or that." Very well; the advocate having ground to go upon, pleads the case
in the court right confidently. But now I hear you say, "Ah, I cannot tell the Lord
Jesus Christ what he is to plead, for I have nothing to plead; the fact is I am guilty,
and thoroughly guilty too, and I deserve to be punished, and must be; I have nothing to
plead." Now what does our blessed Advocate say? "Oh," saith he, "but I
have the plea in myself;" and up he rises in the court of law, and when the
accusation is read he puts in this to that accusation"In the name of the sinner
for whom I intercede, and with whom I am numbered, I plead absolution and forgiveness
through punishment already borne." "How?" saith Justice. And he shows the
nail-prints in his hands, and lays bare his side, and says, "I suffered for that
sinner; I was punished with the sinner's punishment, and therefore I claim, as the reward
of my passion and my agony, that the sinner should go his way." Do you not see that
Christ is a precious pleader because he can appear for us, and what is more, he can find a
plea for us. "Ah!" I hear you say, "but I have no means of getting such an
advocate as that; I wish I had, but I have nothing to give him; if he asks any fees I have
nothing; I do not deserve the love of Christ; I do not know why he should take up my
cause; if he would I should be saved, but I cannot think he will, for I cannot hope to pay
him." "Nay," says he, "but I will take up your cause freely,
willingly, cheerfully, and I will make intercession for you, not because you deserve it,
but because you need it; not because you are not a transgressor, but because you
are." That very thing, sinner, that makes you think Christ will not look at you, is
the very reason why he will. You are full of disease. "Ah!" say you, "the
physician will never look at such an arm as that;" but because the ulcer is reeking,
that is why he stops and says, "I will cure that." Your qualification is your
disqualification, and what you think to be the reason why he never will look at you, is
certainly the only reason you can plead why he should. You are nothing; you are utterly
lost; you have no merit; you have nothing unless the Lord Jesus Christ make prevalent,
acceptable, and perpetual intercession for transgressors.
I come to a conclusion reluctantly; but I must say these few words. There are some of you
that make very light of sinning. I pray you be reasonable, and think this matter over. It
was no light thing for God to save a sinner, for the Son of God himself must be numbered
with sinners, and smart and die for sinners, or else they could not be saved. Touch not
the unclean thing; hate it. If it is deadly to a holy Christ, it must be damnable to you.
Oh! pass it by, and loathe it as the Egyptians loathed the water of the river when it was
turned to blood in their sight.
To you who make but little of Christ, there is this word: you know what sin means; I do
not think you can ever make too much of sin, but I pray you do not make too little of
Christ. To you who think you have no qualifications for Christ, I say this closing
sentence: I do beseech you get rid of that foul, that legal, that soul-destroying idea
that Christ wants any preparation by you or in you before you come to him. You may come to
him now; nay, more, you are commanded to come to him now, just as you are. And to
every man among you to-day, and to every woman and child, I preach this gospel in the name
of Jesus Christ: "Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved."
Trust him nowin your seatstanding in the aislescrowded in these
galleries trust him now; God commands you. "This is the commandment,
that ye believe on Jesus Christ whom he hath sent." As Peter said, so say I,
"Repent and be converted, every one of you;" and as Paul said to the Philippian
jailer, so say I, "Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, and thy
house." If you do not, this shall condemn you; not your sin, but your unbelief; for
they that believe not are condemned already, Why, why are such condemned? Because they
believe not. That is the accusation; that is the damning crime and curse.
"Well," says one, "then if God commands me to trust Christ, though I
certainly have no reason why I should, then I'll do it." Ah! soul, do it then. Can
you do it? Can you trust him now? Is it a full trust? Are you leaning on your feelings?
Give them up. Are you depending a little on what you mean to do? Give that up. Do you
trust him wholly? Can you say, "His blessed wounds, his flowing blood, his perfect
righteousness, on these I rest. I do trust him, wholly?" Are you half afraid to say
you do? Do you think it is such a bold thing? Do it then; do a bold thing for once! Say,
"Lord, I'll trust thee, and if thou cast me away, I'll still trust thee; I bless thee
that thou canst save me, and that thou wilt save me." Can you say that? I say, have
you believed in him? You are saved, then; you are not in a salvable state, but you are
saved; not partly, but wholly saved; not some of your sins blotted out, but all; behold
the whole list, and it is written at the bottom of them all: "The blood of Jesus
Christ cleanseth us from all sin." But I hear one say, "It is too good to be
true!" Soul, wilt thou be lost through thinking little things of Christ?
"Ah!" says another, "it is too simple; if this be the gospel, we shall have
all the ragamuffins in the streets believing in Christ and being saved." And glory be
to God if it be so! For my part I am never afraid of big sinners being saved. I would have
every harlot, I would have every whoremonger and adulterer to be saved. I would not be
afraid that they would go on in their sins if they believed in Christ. Oh! no; faith in
Christ would change their nature; and it will change yours too; for this is salvation: to
have the nature changed, to be made a new creature in Christ, and to be made holy. Come,
soul, wilt thou trust him? I do not like you all to go away after crowding in here without
getting that blessing. Some of you have come up to the Handel Festival; but here is better
music if you trust Christ, for you shall hear the bells of heaven ringing, and all the
music of the angels as they rejoice over you as a brother redeemed. Many of you have come
up to see the Great Exhibition; but here is a greater wonder than that, if you came into
this place this morning in a state of nature, and go out in a state of grace, only to wait
a little while, and then to reach a state of glory! Some of you have come up to see the
great Cattle Show; but here is something better to see than ever was reared on English
pasture; here is food for your souls; here is that whereof if a man eateth he shall live
for ever; and here it is held out to you. Nothing can be plainer. Trust Christ and you are
saved. Outside in the street there is a drinking-fountain. When you get there, if you are
thirsty go to it; you will find no policeman there to send you away. No one will cry,
"You must not drink because you do not wear a satin dress." "You must not
drink because you wear a fustian jacket." No, no, go and drink; and when you have
hold of the ladle and are putting it to your lips, if there should come a
doubt"I do not feel my thirst enough," still take a drink whether you do
or not. So I say to you, Jesus Christ stands like a great flowing fountain in the corners
of the street, and he inviteth every thirsty soul to come and drink. You need not stop and
say, "Am I thirsty enough? Am I black enough?" You do want it whether you think
you do or not. Come as you are; come as you are. Every fitness is legality; every
preparation is a lie; every getting ready for Chrst is coming the wrong way. You are only
making yourselves worse while you think you are making yourselves better. You are like a
boy at school who has made a little blot, and he gets out his knife to scratch it out, and
makes it ten times worse than before. Leave the blots alone. Come as you are. If you are
the blackest soul out of hell, trust Christ, and that act of trust shall make you clean.
This seems a simple thing, and yet it is the hardest thing in the world to bring you to
it; so hard a thing that all the preachers that ever preached cannot make a man believe in
Christ. Though we put it as plainly as we can, and plead with you, you only go away and
say, "It is too good to be true;" or else you despise it because it is so
simple; for the gospel, like Christ, is despised and rejected of men, because it has no
form and comeliness, and no beauty in it that they should desire it. Oh! may the Holy
Ghost lay this home to you; may he make you willing in the day of his power. I hope he
has; I trust he has, so that ere we go we may all join in singing this one verse, and then
separate;
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