Sentence of Death, the Death of Self-Trust
May 2nd 1880
by
C. H. SPURGEON
(1834-1892)
“But we had the sentence of death in ourselves, that we should not
trust in ourselves, but in God which raiseth the dead.”-2 Corinthians 1:9
We are justified, dear friends, in
speaking about our own experience when the mention of it will be for the
benefit of others. Especially is this the case with leaders in the church such
as Paul; for their experience is rich and deep, and the rehearsal of it comes
with great weight, and is peculiarly valuable. We are all the better when we
are distressed for discovering that such an one as Paul was also subject to
heaviness: we feel safe in following the line of conduct which was marked out
by the great apostle, and we are hopeful that if he came out of his troubles
which were so great, we may also be delivered out of ours which are
comparatively so little. These footprints on the sand of time help us to take
heart. By tracing the footsteps of the flock, we are helped to return to the
fold and to the Shepherd. It would have been a great calamity if such men as
David and Paul had, through a fear of seeming egotistical, withheld from us a
sight of their inner selves. God has been pleased to fill a large part of the
Bible with biographies and histories of human actions, in order that we who are
men ourselves may learn from them. Where a biography concerns mainly the inner
rather than the outer life, as in the Psalms and in Paul’s epistles, we are all
the more strengthened, instructed, directed, and comforted, for it is in the
inner life that we are most perplexed, and most in danger of going astray. God
grant us grace to make good use of the treasure of experience which is stored
up for us in his word! How rich, how varied, how admirably selected! If one man
can learn by the life of another, surely we ought to learn from such memorable
lives as those immortalized in the Scriptures. Especially may we see ourselves
as in a mirror while we steadily look into the heart of Paul.
As to our own experience of trial
and of delivering mercy, it is sent for our good, and we should endeavor to
profit to the utmost by it: but it was never intended that it should end with
our private and personal benefit. In the kingdom of God no man liveth unto
himself. We are bound to comfort others by the comfort wherewith the Lord hath
comforted us. We are under solemn obligation to seek out mourners, and such as
are in tried circumstances, that we may communicate to them the cheering testimony
which we are able personally to bear to the love and faithfulness of God. Our
Lord has handed out to us spiritual riches of joy that we may communicate
thereof to others who are in need of consolation through great tribulation. You
may think that you are not called upon to preach, and possibly you may neither
have the ability nor the opportunity for such public witness-bearing; but your
experience is a treasure, of which you are the trustee, and you are bound by
the law of gratitude to make use of all you know, all you have felt, all you
have learned by personal experience for the comforting and the upbuilding of
your brethren. To be reticent is sometimes to be treacherous: you may be found
unfaithful to your charge unless you endeavor to improve for the general good
the dealings of the Lord with your soul. I would exhort every Christian to
reflect the light which falls upon him. Brother, echo thy Master’s voice
faithfully and clearly. What the Lord has whispered to thee in thine ear in
closets, that do thou proclaim according to thine ability upon the housetops.
If thou hast found honey, eat of it; yet eat not the feast alone, but call in
others who can appreciate its sweetness that they may rejoice with thee. If
thou hast discovered a well, drink and quench thy thirst; but hasten forthwith
to call the whole caravan, that every traveler may drink also. If thou hast
been sick, and thou hast been healed, tell the glad news to all sick folk
around thee, and let them know where they too may find a cure. Peradventure thy
telling of the news may have more weight with men than all our preachings: they
know thee, and have seen the change which grace has wrought in thee, and thou
wilt by thine own experience give them proof and evidence which they cannot
gainsay. May the Holy Ghost help thee in this thing.
Let this stand for the preface to
our sermon, and let us learn, once for all, that, as Paul used his experience
for the comfort and edification of the churches, so is every believer called
upon to use his experience for the benefit of his fellow Christians.
The particular experience of which
Paul speaks was a certain trial, or probably series of trials, which he endured
in Asia. You know how he was stoned at Lystra, and how he was followed by his
malicious countrymen from town to town wherever he went, that they might excite
the mob against him. You recollect the uproar at Ephesus, and the constant
danger to which Paul was exposed from perils of all kinds; but it must not be
forgotten that he appears to have been suffering at the same time grievous
sickness of body, and that the whole together caused very deep depression of
mind. His tribulations abounded: without were fightings and within were fears.
I call to your notice the strong expressions which he uses in the eighth verse:
“We were pressed” he says. The word is such as you would use if you were
speaking of a cart loaded with sheaves, till it could not bear up under the
weight: it is over-loaded, and threatens to break down and fall by the way. Or
the word might be used if you spoke of a man who was weighted with too great a
burden, under which he was ready to fall: or perhaps, better still, if you were
speaking of a ship which had taken too much cargo, and sank nearly to the
water’s edge, looking as if it must sink altogether through excessive pressure.
Paul says that this was his condition of mind when he was in Asia,- “We were
pressed.” To strengthen the language he adds, “out of measure.” He was pressed
out of measure; he could convey no idea of the degree of pressure put upon
him-it seemed to be beyond the measure of his strength. All trials, we are
taught in the Scripture, are sent to us in measure, and so were Paul’s, but for
the time being he himself could see no limit to them, and he seemed to be quite
crushed. Paul could not tell how much he was tried; he could not calculate the
pressure; it was more severe than he could estimate. So great, so heavy was the
burden upon his mind, that he gave up calculating its weight. Then he adds
another word, “above strength,” because a man may be pressed out of measure,
and yet he may have such remarkable strength that he may bear up under all. The
posts, and bars, and gates of Gaza must have pressed Samson, and they must have
pressed him out of measure, but still not beyond his strength, because gigantic
force was given to those mighty limbs of his, so that he carried readily what
would have crushed another man. Paul says that the pressure put upon him was
beyond his strength, he was quite unable to cope with it, and his spirits so
failed him that he adds, insomuch that we despaired even of life.” He gave
himself up for a dead man, for no way of escape was visible to him. Into
whatsoever town he entered he was followed by the Jews; the fickle mob soon
turned against him; even the converts were not always faithful. He had been
stoned and beaten with rods, and men had sworn to take his life. Perils of
robbers beset him in lonely places, while tumult and assault befell him in the
cities. Meanwhile, the thorn in his flesh worried him, afflictions and cares of
all kinds weighed upon him, and altogether his mind was bowed down under the
pressure which had come upon him. What a deep bass there is in this note, “We
were pressed out of measure, above strength, insomuch that we despaired even of
life”! May we be spared so grievous a condition, or if that cannot be, may we
be profited by it.
We shall in the sermon of this
morning, as the Holy Spirit, the Comforter, may help us, endeavor to show the
reason for such affliction, and the good effect of it. First, I shall direct
your attention to the disease mentioned in the text as one to be prevented by
the sentence of death- “that we should not trust in ourselves.” Secondly, we
shall dwell for a little upon the treatment, “we had the sentence of death in
ourselves;” and, thirdly, we will observe the cure, “we should not trust in
ourselves, but in God which raiseth the dead.”
—————
I. The first point is The Disease-the tendency to trust in ourselves.
And we remark upon it, first, that
this is a disease to which all men are liable, for even Paul was in danger of
it. I do not say that Paul did trust in himself, but that he might have done
so, and would have done so, if it had not been for the Lord’s prudent dealings
with him both in the matter of this great trial in Asia and in the incident of
the thorn in the flesh. Where a sharp preventive is used it is clear that a
strong liability exists. My brethren, I should have thought that Paul was the
last man to be in danger of trusting in himself: so singularly converted, so
remarkably clear in his views of the gospel; indeed, so thorough in his faith,
so intense in his zeal, so eminent in his humility was Paul that all could see
that his reliance was upon grace alone. No writer that ever lived has set in so
clear a light the fact that all things are of God, and that we must walk by
faith and depend alone upon God if we would find salvation and eternal life:
and yet you see, my brethren, it was possible that the great teacher of grace
should have trusted in himself. He was a man in whose life we see no sort of
self-confidence. I cannot recall anything that he did or said which looks like
vanity or pride. He exhibits deep humility of spirit, and great faith in God,
but he evidently has no confidence in himself,-such confidence he is always
disclaiming. He looks upon his own works and his own righteousness as dross and
dung, that he may win Christ; and when he does speak of himself it is generally
with special self-denials,- “I, yet not I, but the grace of God which was with
me.” “By the grace of God,” saith he, “I am what I am.” It is plain then that
no clearness of knowledge, no purity of intent, and no depth of experience can
altogether kill in our corrupt nature the propensity to self-reliance. We are
so foolish that we readily yield to the witchery which would cause us to trust
in ourselves. This widespread folly has no respect for knowledge, age, or
experience, but even feeds upon them. I have heard men say several times, and I
have been ashamed as I have heard the boast,- “I am sure there is no likelihood
that I should ever trust in myself; I know better.” Brother, you are trusting
in yourself when you say so: the subtle poison is in your veins even now. You
do not know what folly you can commit. You are such a fool that even while you
say, “I know my folly,” you are probably even then betraying your self-conceit.
What do we know? We know not what spirit we are of. We are capable of almost
everything that the devil is capable of. Ay, and if the grace of God should
leave us, though we had been exalted to stand like Paul and say, “I am not a
whit behind the very chief of the apostles,” yet should we fall, like Lucifer,
and perish with pride. The silliest of the vices may overcome the wisest of saints.
Trust in self is one of the most foolish of sins, though the commonness of it
hides its contemptible character. When we say, “I am surprised that I should
have acted so unwisely,” we betray our secret pride, and confess that we
thought ourselves wonderfully wise. If, my brother, you knew yourself you would
not be surprised at anything that you might do. If you had a proper estimate of
yourself it would rather cause you surprise that you were ever right than that
you were sadly wrong, for such is the natural weakness, folly, and vanity of
our deceitful hearts, that when we err even in the most foolish way, it may be
said of us that we are only acting out our own selves, and we should do the
same again, if not worse, were we left by the Spirit of God.
Notice, secondly, that trusting in
self is evil in all men, since it was evil in an apostle. Paul speaks of it as
a fault, which God in mercy prevented, “that we should not trust in ourselves.”
Why, beloved, if you or I were to trust in ourselves, we should be fit objects
for ridicule and derision, for what is there in us that we can trust to? But as
for Paul, in labors more abundant, in stripes above measure, laying himself out
for the church of God with heroic zeal, and wearing himself out with self-denials,
at first sight it seems that there was somewhat in him whereof he might glory.
He walked with God, and was like his Master and Lord. He was a humble but
admirable imitation of the Lord Jesus, and the mind that was in Christ was also
in him: he was a noble man; take him for all in all we know not where to find
his like. His was one of the most beautiful, well-balanced, forceful, and
influential of human characters, and yet it would have been a most injurious
thing to him to have trusted in himself in any degree. He was singularly
judicious, far-seeing, and prudent, and yet he might not rely on himself. If
this he so: if his revelations from God, if his deep experience, if his intense
consecration, if his remarkable wisdom, if his splendid education, if his
logical mind, and fervent spirit,-if all these combined could not warrant him
in trusting to himself, what folly would be ours if we became self-sufficient?
If a lion’s strength be insufficient, what can the dogs do? If the oak
trembles, how can the brambles boast? If such poor things as we are dare to be
self-confident, we deserve to smart for it. May God keep us from this evil in
all its disguises, whether it beguiles us in the form of boastfulness of our
own righteousness, or flatters us into reliance upon our own judgment; for in
any shape it is a sin against God, and a mischief to ourselves. May the God of
all grace destroy it, root and branch.
We see, dear friends, in the next
place, that it must be highly injurious to trust in ourselves, since God himself
interposed to prevent his dear servant from falling into it. The Lord warded
off the evil by sending Paul a great trouble when he was in Asia: thus doth our
all-wise and almighty God arrange providence to prevent his servants from
falling into self-trust. Depend upon it, he is doing the same for us, since we
have even greater need: he is arranging all our ways and steps that we may not
wander into self-conceit. Peradventure, our heavenly Father is at this present
time afflicting some of you, denying you your heart’s desire, or taking from
you the delight of your eyes, placing you in circumstances where you are
puzzled and bewildered, and do not know what to do at all; and all for this
reason, that you may become sick of yourself and fond of Christ; that you may
know your own folly, and may trust yourself with purpose of heart to the divine
wisdom: for, rest assured, nothing can happen to you that is much worse than to
trust yourselves. A man may escape from poverty, but if he falls into
self-confidence he has of two evils fallen into the worse: a man may escape
from a great blunder, and yet if he grows proud because he was so prudent, it
may happen that his conceit of his own wisdom may be a worse evil than the
mistake which he might have made. Anything is better than vainglory and
self-esteem. Self-trust before God is a monster evil which the Lord will not
endure; indeed, he so abhors it that he has pronounced a curse upon it: “Cursed
is the man that trusteth in man and maketh flesh his arm.” That dread word of
warning emphatically applies to those who trust in themselves.
Let me, then, think most solemnly of
the fact that if I am relying upon myself for acceptance with God, or for power
to serve him, I am cursed. I am so, and I must be so, because trusting in
myself means idolatry, and idolatry is a cursed thing. The self-truster puts
himself into God’s place, for God alone is to be relied upon. “Trust in him at
all times; ye people, pour out your heart before him.” Trusting in yourself,
you lift yourself into the throne where God alone may sit, and so you become a
traitor. To trust yourself is the result of a gross falsehood, and it also
imputes falsehood to the God of truth; for you do, as it were, deny that God
can be believed, and you assert that you can be trusted; whereas, the Lord
declares that no man is the proper object of trust. “He that trusteth in his
own heart,” saith he, “is a fool”; but you will not have it so, and therefore
you give God the lie.
To trust in one’s self is a piece of
impertinent pride, insulting to the majesty of heaven. It is a preference of
ourselves to God, so that we take our own opinion in preference to his
revelation. We follow our own whim in preference to his providential direction;
we, as it were, become gods to ourselves, and act as if we knew better than
God. It is, therefore, a very high crime and misdemeanor against the majesty of
heaven that we should trust in ourselves; and in whomsoever this exists, it
makes a man intolerable to God.
Yet, brethren, this fourth remark
must be made, that this evil is very hard to cure; for it seems that to prevent
it in Paul it was necessary for the Great Physician to go the length of making
him feel the sentence of death in himself; nothing short of this could cure the
tendency. On another occasion it written, “Lest I should be exalted above
measure, there was given to me a thorn in the flesh, the messenger of Satan to
buffet me.” In the case mentioned in our text the buffeting of Satan does not
seem to have sufficed; but God in his providence and love saw it necessary to
cause the sentence of death to ring out its knell in the apostle’s heart. A
sentence of death! Can you conceive the feeling of a man who has just seen the
judge put on the black cap and pronounce sentence of death? The condemned cell,
the iron bars, the prison fare, the grim warders, these are nothing, but
sentence of death-sentence of death! This is terrible. Paul must feel that woe.
A sharp knife was needful to cut out the cancer of self-trust even from such an
one as Paul. This bitter potion, bitter as gall, he must drink even to the
dregs. The sentence must not only be in his ear, but be in his very self. “We
had the sentence of death in ourselves.” Nothing short of this could prevent his
being polluted with self-trust; for if less suffering would have sufficed, the
Lord would have spared him so dread a sorrow. As stones fall towards the earth,
so do we gravitate towards self. If we are zealous, self-trust says, “What a
zealous man you are, you can certainly carry everything before you.” If we grow
diffident, then this same pride whispers, “What a humble, modest person you
are; you are not conceited or rash, you can well be trusted.” If God grants us
a little success in working for him we blow the trumpets that all men may be
aware of it. Our Lord can scarcely send us on the commonest errand without
danger of our becoming like Jack-in-office, too proud to be borne with. The
Lord cannot allow us a little sweet communion with Christ but what we say, “Oh,
what joy I have had. What delights at his table! What a precious season of
private prayer! I am somebody.” Yes, we are prone to sacrifice before this
basest of idols-I say the basest of idols, for surely there is no idolatry so
utterly degrading as the worship of one’s self. Alas, we cannot get rid of the
flavor of the Egyptian leeks and onions; self clings to us as a foul odor not
to be got out of our unclean flesh. Does the Lord teach us much of his word?
Then we grow proud of knowledge. Does the Lord help us to comfort his people?
Then we set up at once for something wonderful in the church. Does Christ
reveal himself to us as he does not to the world? Ah, then our heads are ready
to smite the stars, we are so great. God save us from this subtle malady, this
spiritual leprosy. I think I may add even if nothing else bat the sentence of
death in ourselves can stop us from trusting in ourselves, then let even this
remedy be used.
—————
II. But now I invite you for a few minutes to look at The Treatment
ordained for the apostle’s cure: “We had the sentence of death in ourselves,”
which means, first, that he seemed to hear the verdict of death passed upon him
by the conditions which surrounded him. So continually hounded by his malicious
countrymen, he felt certain that one day or other they would compass his
destruction: so frequently subject to popular violence, he felt that his life
was not worth a moment’s purchase: and, withal, so sick in body and so
depressed in spirit he felt that he might at any moment expire. The original
conveys the idea, not only of a verdict from without, but of an answer of
assent from within. There was an echo in his consciousness; an inward dread; a
sort of presentiment that he was soon to die. The world threatened him with
death, and he felt that one of these days the threat would be carried out, and
that very speedily. And yet it was not so: he survived all the designs of the
foe. My brethren, we often feel a thousand deaths in fearing one. We die before
we die, and find ourselves alive to die again. Death seems certain, and yet the
bird escapes even out of the fowler’s hand. Just when he was about to wring its
neck it flew aloft. Hark, how it sings, far above his reach. “Unto God the Lord
belong the issues from death.” A witty saying puts it, “Let us never say die
till we are dead”; but then we shall most truly say we live forever and ever.
Let us postpone despair till the evil comes.
Into a low state of spirit was Paul
brought: death appeared imminent, and his eye of faith gazed into the
eternities, and this prevented his trusting in himself. The man who feels that
he is about to die is no longer able to trust in himself. After this manner the
remedy works our health. What earthly thing can help us when we are about to
die? Paul needed not to say, “My riches will not help me,” for he had no
wealth. He had no need to say, “My lands and broad acres cannot comfort me
now,” for he had no foot of land to call his own: his whole estate lay in a few
needles, with which he made and mended tents. His trade implements and a
manuscript book or two were all his store. He says, in effect, “Nothing on
earth can help me now. My tongue, with which I preached, cannot plead with
death, whose deaf ear no oratory can charm. My epistles and my power of writing
cannot stand me in any stead, for no pen can arrest the death-warrant: it is
written, and I must die. Friends cannot help me. Titus, Timothy, none of these
can come to my aid. Neither Barnabas nor Silas can pass through the death-stream
with me: I must ford the torrent alone.” He felt as every man must who is a
true Christian, and is about to die, that he must commit his spirit unto
Christ, and watch for his appearing. He determined, whether he did die or live,
that he would spend and be spent for the Lord Jesus. Brethren, we do not yet
know what dying is: the way to the other land is an untrodden path as yet. We
read about heaven, and so on, but we know very little of the way thither. To
the mind of one about to die the unknown frequently causes a creeping sensation
of fear, and the heart is full of horror. Paul felt the chill of death coming
over him, and by this means his trust in himself was killed, and he was driven
to rely upon his God. If nothing else will cure us of self-confidence we may be
content to have the rope about our neck, or to lay our neck upon the block, or
to feel the death-rattle in our throats: we may be satisfied to sink as in the
deep waters, if this would cure us of trusting in ourselves. Such was the case with
Paul, when his gracious Master put forth his hand to turn him aside from all
glorying in the flesh.
What was more, I think Paul means
here that the sentence of death which he heard outside wrought within his soul
a sense of entire helplessness. He was striving to fight for the kingdom and
gospel of Christ, but he saw that he must be baffled if he had nothing to rely
upon but himself; he was hampered and hemmed in on every side by the opposing
Jews, who would not permit him to go about his work in peace. He despaired even
of his life. He was not able to get at his work, for these persons were always
about him, howling at him, uttering falsehoods against him, and hindering him.
He became so worried and wearied that he was pressed and oppressed, immeasurably
loaded and brought into such a state of mind that all inward comfort failed
him, and he was obliged to look above for succor. His faculties were cramped as
with a mortal rigor, his reason argued against him, and his imagination rather
created terrors than expectations. He knew the experience so poetically
described by Kirke White in his hymn upon the star of Bethlehem:
“Deep
horror, then, my vitals froze,
Death-struck,
I ceased the tide to stem.”
And he also knew the joy of the
other two lines of the verse-
“When
suddenly a star arose,
It was the
star of Bethlehem.”
Paul’s mind was so struck with death
within himself that he could not stem the torrent, and would have drifted to
despair had he not given himself up into the hands of grace divine, and proved
the loving power of God.
My brethren, you may never have
experienced this, and I do not wish that you may do so to the same extent as
the apostle, for the Lord may not bring you into a condition of exaltation,
where you are so exposed to the peril of self-confidence, and therefore it may
not be necessary to make you feel to the same extent this sentence of death;
but I am aware that some of God’s people here know what it is to see death
written upon everything within them and around them, and these dare not trust
in themselves. Ah, there are times with some of us when we appear to lose all
power to think aright, when we set ourselves to a subject, and our brain will
not exercise itself upon it: when we wish to do right, and cannot tell which of
two courses is the proper one. At times we cannot make out our way; we kneel to
pray, and find that we cannot pray as we were wont to do, the whole energy and
force of our spirit seems to be shriveled up as though the simoom had blown
over the meadow of our soul, and left every blade of grass and floweret dead
beneath its burning breath. Such things do happen unto men, and when they
happen this is God’s severe but effectual treatment, whereby he prevents their
trusting in themselves. You have said sometimes of a very useful person,- “God
honors that man, and I am afraid he will be proud.” You might well tremble for
him were it not that behind the door God whips the man, and makes him loathe
himself in dust and ashes. If the great Father favors any one of you with
usefulness to any great extent or degree, depend upon it he will favor you also
with humiliations and spiritual conflicts, unless, indeed, you have so much
grace that you do not need these correctives, and this is not the case with
many. Brethren, take the bitter with the sweet; all things work together for
good, not one alone, neither the exaltation nor the depression. alone, but “all
things work together for good to them that love God.” The compound brings the
benefit to us: as one drug in a compound medicine counteracts another, and the
whole result is health, so is it with the total sum of divers providences, it
brings benefit to us and glory to God.
I think I need not say any more
about this remedy, except to notice that the Lord uses the same treatment in
dealing with men who as yet are not saved. Why is it that one of the first
works of grace on a man is to take away all his comfort and hope? I will soon
tell you. Suppose that a poor man had fallen into such a state of mind that he
could not bear the sun, but lived in perpetual candlelight. He dreamed that no
light could equal his poor tapers, and he despised the sun:--candles for him,
he hated daylight. By the way, I am not wild in this supposition, for there are
people who cannot worship God without candles, even in the daylight, and yet
they are not said to be insane. But to return to the imaginary case, our poor,
weak-minded friend is prejudiced against the sun, and we aim to bring him into
brightness. How shall we proceed? I think we had better blow out his candles,
and leave him in the dark, and then, perhaps, he will be willing to try the
light of heaven. Then I would take him out of doors, and let him see the sun;
and, after he had once beheld its superior light, he would never be able to praise
his poor candles again. The first thing is to blow his candles out; and the
first thing to bring a man to Christ, the divine light, is to put out his own
feeble tapers of self-trust. I have heard of one who fell into the water and
sank, and a strong swimmer standing on the shore did not at the same instant
plunge in, though fully resolved to rescue him. The man went down the second
time, and then he who would rescue him was in the water swimming near him, but
not too near, waiting very cautiously till his time came. He who was drowning
was a strong, energetic man, and the other was too prudent to expose himself to
the risk of being dragged under by his struggles. He let the man go down for
the third time, and then he knew that his strength was quite exhausted, and
swimming to him he grasped him and drew him to shore. If he had seized him at
first, while the drowning man had strength, they would have gone down together.
The first part of human salvation is the sentence of death upon all human power
and merit. When all hope in self is quite gone, Christ comes in, and with his
infinite grace rescues the soul from destruction. As long as you think you can
swim, you will kick, and struggle, and drown; but when you see the futility of
all your own efforts, and perceive that you are without strength, you will
leave yourselves with Jesus, and be saved. The eternal power will come in when
your power goes out. The sentence of death in yourselves will prevent your
trusting in yourselves: death recorded and death confessed to be a just penalty
will expel all vain hope, and grace will be welcomed, and the heart will
believe with a true faith wrought in it by the Spirit of God.
—————
III. Thirdly, let us think of The Cure. It was sharp medicine, but it
worked well with Paul, for we find first that Paul’s self-trust was prevented:
any rising token of it was effectually removed. He says, “We had the sentence
of death in ourselves, that we should not trust in ourselves.” Under this
influence he preached as though he ne’er might preach again. a dying man to
dying men. I have heard of brethren who do not expect to die. I do not wish to
disturb their hope if it gives them comfort, but I know there is something very
salutary in my own sense of the nearness of death. Christ may come, it is true,
and this faith has the same effect as the expectation of going home to him, but
one way or the other, the sense of the insecurity of this mortal life is good
for us. To bring death very near to the mind is a solemn, searching,
sanctifying exercise. Our forefathers of centuries ago were wont to have a
death’s-head on the table where they read their Bibles. I do not recommend so
sickening a device; we can have a memento more in better form than that; still,
it is greatly wise to talk with our last hours, to be familiar with the grave,
to walk among those little hillocks where our predecessors sleep, and to
remember that all the world is like a sandy sea-beach, where after the tide has
gone innumerable little worm-casts cover all the plain. Such a worm-cast I too
shall leave behind me. This world is full of death’s handiwork, a very
charnel-house; nay, better, name it a God’s acre, a sleeping-place, where
myriads lie waiting for the awakening trumpet. We, too, may expect to sleep
with them, and therefore we must not confide in ourselves. Art thou a dying
man, and canst thou trust thyself? More frail than the moth, driven up and down
like a sere leaf in the tempest, canst thou trust thyself? I hope a sense of
death will work a cure of that tendency in us.
When the sentence of death assumes
the form of an experience of despair as to everything that is of our own
selves, then it has thoroughly wrought the cure. I have gone up and down in my
own soul where once sweet things did sing and fair hopes bloomed, and I have
searched in every chamber to hear a note or find a flower, and I have found
nought but silence and death. I have gone abroad into the fields of my
imagination, where once I saw much that made my heart right glad, and I have
seen a valley of dry bones, where death reigned alone. Everything which I
formerly rejoiced in was touched by the paralyzing hand; all was dead within
me, sentence was passed, and apparently executed upon my whole being. If a man
does not trust God then, when will he? and if this does not take him off from
self-confidence, what is to do it? This treatment never fails when the Holy
Spirit uses it.
Remember, this was only half the
result in Paul’s case, for he does not only say that by this sentence of death he
was delivered from trusting in himself, but he was led to trust “in God which
raiseth the dead.” Now, my brethren) we have come out of the gloom of the
sepulcher into the glory of the resurrection. “God which raiseth the dead” is
our hope. The doctrine of the resurrection is essential to the Christian
system, and Paul takes it for granted. When he was delivered from trusting in
himself because of the sentence of death, the first thing he did was to trust
in the God and Father of his risen Lord.
For first he argued thus,-If I die,
what matters it? God can raise me from the dead. If they stone me, if they
smite me with the sword, if they fling me headlong into the sea, I shall rise
again. I know that my Redeemer liveth, and that I shall see him when he appeareth.
He inferred, also, that if God could
raise him from the dead he could preserve him from a violent death. He that
could restore him if he were dead and rotten in the tomb could certainly keep
him from dying till all his life-work was accomplished. This inference is
unquestionably true.
“Plagues
and deaths around me fly,
Till he
bids I cannot die;
Not a
single shaft can hit
Till the
God of love thinks fit.”
Immortal is every believer till his
work is done. Paul felt this and was comforted.
He argued yet further that if God
can raise the dead and call together the separate atoms of a body long since
dissolved, and rebuild the house out of such ruin, then surely he could take
his fainting powers, over which the sentence of death has passed, and he could
use them for his own purposes. Thus would I also reason with myself when I am
deeply depressed. He can make me feel his life within me again; and he can make
great use of me under all my weaknesses and difficulties. It needs omnipotence
to wake the dead; that same omnipotence can make me triumph and enable me to do
its will, whatever may stand in my way. Is not this a blessed form of
argument,-that God who raiseth the dead can do for me, can do in me, can do by
me great things, for which his name shall have glory for ever and ever?
Added to Bible Bulletin Board's "Spurgeon Collection" by:
Tony Capoccia
Bible Bulletin Board
Box 314
Columbus, New Jersey, USA, 08022
Websites: www.biblebb.com and www.gospelgems.com
Email: tony@biblebb.com
Online since 1986