Jesus Desired
by
Charles H. Spurgeon
(1834-1892)
This updated and revised
manuscript is copyrighted ã 1999
by Tony Capoccia. All rights reserved.
‘Oh,
that I knew where I might find Him!’—Job 23:3
For awhile the woundings of
Jesus are given in the dark, and we do not recognise the
hand which strikes us; but it is not always to be so. Incessant
disappointments causes us to lose heart with the former refuges of our souls,
and renewed discoveries make us sadly aware of the superlative evil dwelling
in our flesh; thus stripped of all outer covering, and trembling at our own
shameful impotence, we hail with gladness the news of a Saviour for
sinners. Like being on the frail raft, the almost skeleton mariners, having
long ago devoured their last morsel, raise themselves with all their remaining
strength to catch a glimpse of a passing sail [another ship], if by chance it
may bring relief, so does the dying sinner receive with eagerness the message
of coming grace. He might have scorned the terms of mercy once, but, like a
city that has been under a siege for a long time, he is now very happy to
receive peace at any price. The grace which in his high estate he counted as a
worthless thing, is now the great object of all of his desires. He pants to see
the Man who is ‘mighty to save,’ and would count it honour to
kiss his feet or loosen his sandals. No quibbling at
sovereignty, no murmuring at self‑humiliation, no scorning the
unpurchasable gifts of discriminating love; the man is too poor to be proud,
too sick to struggle with his physician, too much afraid of death to refuse the
king's pardon because it puts him under obligation. We will be happy if we
understand this position of utter helplessness into which we must all be
brought if we would know Christ!
It is one of the strange
things in the dealings of Jesus, that even when we arrive at this state of
entire spiritual destitution, we do not always become at once the objects of his justifying
grace. Long seasons frequently intervene between our knowledge of our ruin, our
hearing of a deliverer, and the application of that deliverer's hand. The
Lord's own called ones frequently turn their eyes to the hills, and find no
help coming from there; yes, they wish to look unto him, but they are so
blinded that they cannot discern him as their
hope and consolation. This is not, as some would rashly conclude, because
he is not the Saviour for people like them. Far be from that. Unbelief cries
out, ‘Ah! my vileness disqualifies me for Christ, and my exceeding sinfulness
shuts out his love!’ How disgustingly does unbelief lie when it has just
slandered the tender heart of Jesus! How inhumanly cruel it is when it thus
takes the cup of salvation from the only lips which have a right to drink of
it!
We have noticed in the
preaching of the present day too much of a saint's gospel, and too little of a
sinner's gospel. Honesty, morality, and goodness, are commended not so much as
the marks of godliness, as the life
of it; and men are told that as they sow, so shall they reap, without the
absolutely necessary caveat that salvation is not of man, neither by man, and
that grace comes not to him that works, but to him that believes on Him that
justifies the ungodly. Our ancient preachers did not speak this way, for in all
its fulness
they declared—
‘Not the righteous, not the righteous—
Sinners, Jesus came to save.’
The words of a much maligned preacher are just as bold
and true:
‘There is nothing in men, though ever so vile, that
can bar a person from a part in Christ. Some will not have Christ, except they
can pay for him; others dare not meddle with Christ, because they are such vile
and wretched creatures, that they think it impossible that Christ should belong
to such wretched persons as they are. You do not know (says one) what an
abominable sinner I am; you look upon others, and their sins are but ordinary,
but mine are of a deep dye, and I shall die in them: the rebellion of my heart
is another kind of rebellion than is in others. Beloved, let me tell you
freely from the Lord, let men deem you as they will, and esteem yourself as bad
as you can, I tell you from the Lord, and I will make it good, there is not a
sinfulness that can be imagined in a creature that can be able to separate or
bar any of you from a part in Christ; even though you are that sinful, Christ
may be your Christ.’
‘No, I go further; suppose one person in this
congregation should not only be the vilest sinner in the world, but should have
all the sins of others, besides what he himself has committed; if all these
were laid upon the back of him, he would be a greater sinner than he is now;
yet, if he should bear all the sins of others,
as I said, there is no bar to this person, but Christ may be his portion. “He
bore the sins of many” (says the text), but he bore them not as his own, he
bore them for many. Suppose the many, that are sinners, should have all their
sins translated to one in particular, still there is no more sin than Christ
died for, though they all be collected together. If other men's sins were
transferred to you, and they had none, then they needed no Christ; all the need
they had of Christ was transferred to you, and then the whole of Christ’s
obedience would be yours. Do but observe the strain of the Gospel, you shall
find that no sin in the world can be a barricade to hinder a person from having
a part in Christ; look upon the condition of persons (as they are revealed in
the Gospel) to whom Christ has reached out to; and the consideration of their
persons will plainly show to you that there is no kind of sinfulness that can
bar a person from having a part in Christ. Consider Christ's own expression, “I
came to seek and to save that which was lost; I did not come to call the
righteous, but sinners, to repentance; those who are well have no need of a
physician, but those who are sick;” here still the persons are considered in
the worst condition (as some might think) rather than in the best. Our Saviour is
pleased to express himself in a direct way contrary to the opinion of men. “I
did not come to call the righteous, but sinners;” the poor tax collector that
had nothing to plead for himself went away more justified than the proud
Pharisee, who pleaded with God, “I thank you that I am not like other men.”’
‘Men think righteousness
brings them near to Christ; beloved, our righteousness is that which drives a
man away from Christ; do not stumble at the expression, it is the clear truth
of the Gospel; not simply does the doing of service and duty drive men away
from Christ; but the doing of duty and service to expect acceptance with Christ
or participation in Christ—this kind of righteousness is the only separation
between Christ and a people; and whereas no sinfulness in the world can exclude
a people, their righteousness may exclude them’ [Crisp].
Possibly some may object to
such terms as these as being too strong and unguarded, but a full consideration
of them will show that they are such that would naturally flow from the lips of
a Luther when he repeated over and over that faith alone was the means of our
salvation, and are fully borne out by the strong expressions of Paul when
writing to the Romans and Galatians. The fact is, that very
strong terms are necessary to make men see the whole of this truth, for it is
one which of all things the mind can least receive.
If it were possible to make men clearly understand
that justification is not in the least degree by their own works, how easy
would it be to comfort them! but herein lies the greatest of all difficulties.
Man refuse to be taught that his goodness provides no increase to God's
wealth, and his sin no decrease of divine riches; he will forever be imagining
that some little presents must be offered, and that mercy can never be the
gratuitous bounty of Heaven. Even the miserable creature who has learned his
own bankruptcy and extreme poverty, while assured that he cannot bring
anything, yet trembles to come naked and as he is. He knows he cannot do
anything, but he can scarcely believe the promise which seems too good to be
true—‘I will heal their backsliding, I will love them freely: for my anger has turned away from him’ [Hosea
14:4]. Yes, when he cannot deny the evidence of his own eyes, because the kind
word stares him in the face he will turn away from its glories under the sad
supposition that they are intended for all men except himself. The air, the
stream, the fruit, the joys and luxuries of life, he takes freely, nor ever
asks whether these were not intended for a special people; but at the upper
springs he stands afraid to dip his pitcher, lest the flowing flood should
refuse to enter it because the vessel was too earthy to be fit to contain such
pure and precious water: conscious that in Christ is all his help, it yet appears too great a presumption even to touch
the hem of the Saviour's garment. Nor is it easy to persuade the mourning
penitent that sin is no barrier to grace, but that ‘where sin abounded, grace
abounded much more;’ and only the spirit of God can make the man who knows
himself as nothing at all, receive Jesus as his all in all. When the Lord has
set his heart on a man, it is not a great difficulty that will move him from
his purpose of salvation, and therefore ‘he devises means, so that His banished
ones are not expelled from him’ [2 Samuel 14:14]. By the divine instruction of
the Holy Spirit, the sinner is taught that Jesus is the sinner's friend,
adapted to his case, and ‘able to save to the uttermost.’ Even then, too often,
the work is not complete; for the soul now labours to
find him whom it needs, and it often happens that the search is prolonged
through months of weariness and days of languishing. If the Church, in the Song
of Solomon, confesses, ‘By night on my bed I sought the one I love; I sought
him, but I did not find him. I will rise now, and go about the city; in the
streets and in the squares I will seek the one I love. I sought him, but I did
not find him’ [Song of Solomon 3:1, 2] surely, even if our reader's history
does not confirm the fact that grace is sometimes hidden, he will at least
assent to the probability of it, and pray for the many who are crying, ‘Oh,
that I knew where I might find Him!’
May Jesus smile on our humble endeavour to
trace the steps of our own soul, so that any who are in this miserable
condition may escape by the same means! O you prisoners of hope, who are
seeking a Redeemer who apparently eludes your grasp, let your earnest prayer
accompany your reading, while you fervently cry—
Saviour,
cast a pitying eye,
Bid
my sins and sorrows end:
Where
should a sinner fly?
Are
you not the sinner's friend?
Rest
in you I gasp to find,
Wretched
I, and poor, and blind.
‘Did
you ever see a soul
More
in need of help than mine?
Then
refuse to make me whole;
Then
withhold the balm divine:
But
if I do want thee most,
Come,
and seek, and save the lost.
‘Haste,
oh haste to my relief;
From
the iron furnace take;
Rid
me of my sin and grief,
For
your love and mercy's sake;
Set
my heart at liberty,
Show
forth all thy power in me.
‘Me,
the vilest of the race,
Most
unholy, most unclean;
Me,
the farthest from thy face,
Full
of misery and sin;
Me
with arms of love receive;
Me,
of sinners chief—forgive’
[C. Wesley]
We propose—
I. To mark the hopeful signs connected with this state
of heart;
II. To give certain excellent reasons why the soul
is permitted to tarry in it; and
III. To hold forth various plain directions for behaviour in
it, and escape from it.
I. It is our pleasant duty
to note the hopeful signs which gladden us when reviewing this state.
1. We are encouraged
by observing that the longing of the spirit is now entirely after Jesus—
‘Oh, that I knew where I
might find Him!’ Once, like the many whom David mentions, the question
was, ‘Who will show us any good?’ A
question indiscriminately addressed to any and all within hearing, eagerly
demanding any good in all the world. But now the desires have found a channel,
they are no longer like the widespread sheet of water covering with shallow
depth a tract of marsh teeming with malaria and pestilence, but having found a
channel, they rush forward in one deep and rapid stream, seeking the broad
ocean, where sister streams have long since mingled their floods.
For most men the complaint is true, that they will
‘search and track the stars’ with the ‘quick, piercing eye’ of the astronomer, or ‘cut through the
strong wave’ to win the pearl, or wear themselves out in smoky toil, while they
separate and strip the creature naked, till they find the raw principles within
their nests; in fine, will do anything and everything of inferior importance,
but here are so negligent that it is truly asked,
What
has man not sought out and found
But
his dear God?" [Herbert]
When the heart can express itself in the words of our
text, it is quite different, for to it every other subject is trivial, and
every other object vain. Then, too, there was the continual prayer after
pardon, conversion, washing, instruction, justification, adoption, and all
other spiritual blessings; but now the soul discerns all mercies bound up in
one bundle in Jesus, and it asks no more for the incenses of cassia, aloes, and
camphire, but asks for Him who has the savour of
all good ointments. It is no small mark of grace when we can esteem Jesus to be
all we want. He who believes there is gold in the mine, and desires to obtain
it, will not waste time before he has it; and he who knows Jesus to be full of
hidden treasures of mercy, and seeks him diligently, shall not be too long
detained from a possession of him. We have never known a sinner anxious for
Jesus—for Jesus only—who did not in due time discover Jesus as his friend,
‘waiting to be gracious.’
Our own experience reminds us of the period when we
panted for the Lord, even for Him, our only want. Vain to us were the mere
ordinances—vain as bottles scorched by the simoom [a strong, hot, sand-laden
wind of the Sahara and Arabian deserts], and drained of their waters. Vain were
ceremonies—vain as empty wells to the thirsty Arab. Vain were the delights of
the flesh—bitter as the waters of Marah [Exodus 15:23], which even the parched
lips of Israel refused to drink. Vain were the directions of the legalist
preacher‑-useless as the howling of the wind to the wanderer overtaken by
darkness. Vain, worse than vain, were our
refuges of lies, which
fell about our ears like Dagon's temple on the heads of the worshippers. We
only had one hope, one sole refuge for our misery. Except where that ark floated,
north, south, east, and west, were one broad expanse of troubled waters; excpet
where that star burned, the sky was one vast field of unmitigated darkness.
Jesus, Jesus, Jesus! he alone, he without another, had become the solitary hiding place against the storm. As the
wounded, lying on the battlefield, with wounds which, like fires, consume his
moisture, utters only one monotonous cry of insistent demand, ‘Water, water,
water!’ likewise, we perpetually send our prayer to heaven, ‘Jesus, Son of David,
have mercy on me! 0 Jesus, come to me!’
‘Gracious
Lord! incline your ear,
My requests consent to hear;
Hear
my never ceasing cry—
Give
me Christ, or else I die.
‘Wealth
and honour I
disdain,
Earthly
comforts, Lord, are vain;
These
can never satisfy,
Give
me Christ, or else I die.
‘Lord,
deny me what you wilt,
Only
ease me of my guilt;
Suppliant
at your feet I lie,
Give me Christ, or else I die.
‘All
unholy and unclean,
I am
nothing else but sin;
On
your mercy I rely,
Give
me Christ, or else I die.
‘You
do freely save the lost,
In
your grace alone I trust;
With
my earnest suit comply,
Give
me Christ, or else I die.
‘You
do promise to forgive,
All
who in Your Son believe;
Lord,
I know you cannot lie,
Give
me Christ, or else 1 die.
‘Father, does your justice frown?
Let me shelter in your Son!
Jesus, to your arms I fly,
Come and save me, or I die.’
As he that tantalises thirst with painted
rivers—as he that embitters hunger’s pangs by the offering of pictured fruits,
so were they who spoke of anything else except Christ and him crucified. Our
heart ached with a void the whole earth could not fill; it heaved with a desire
as irresistible as the mountain torrent, and as little able to be restrained as
the volcano when swelling with its fiery lava. Every power, every passion,
every wish, moved onward in one direction. Like an army pressing upwards
through a breach, did our united powers rush forward to enter the city of
salvation by one door—that door Jesus the Lord. Our soul could spare no portion
of itself for others; it pressed all of its strength into service to win
Christ, and to be found in him. And oh! how glorious did Jesus then seem! what
would we not have given to have had the scantiest morsel of his grace? ‘A
kingdom for a horse!’ cried the routed monarch. ‘A kingdom for a look—a world
for a smile—our whole selves for one kind word!’ was then our far wiser prayer.
Oh what crushing we would have endured, if in the crowd we could have
approached his person! what trampling would we have borne, if our finger might
have touched the lowest hem of his garments! Bear us witness, you hours of
ardent desire, what horrors we would have braved, what dangers we would have
encountered, what tortures we would have suffered, for one brief glimpse of Him
whom our souls desired to know! We could have trodden the burning marl [a
crumbly mixture of clays] of hell at his bidding, if his face had but been in
view; and as for Peter's march upon the deep, we would have waded to our very
necks without a fear, if it were but with half a hope of a welcome from the
Lord the other side. He had no robbers then to share his throne, no golden calf
to provoke him to jealousy. He was
the monarch reigning without a rival. Then, no part of our heart was shut up
from him; he was welcomed in every chamber of our being. There was not a tablet
of the heart which was not engraven with his name, nor a string
of our harp which did not vibrate with his praise, nor an atom of our frame
which would not have leaped for joy at the distant sound of his footsteps. Such
a condition of longing alone for Jesus is so healthy, that many advanced
believers would nearly be content to retrace their steps, if they might once
more be fully occupied with that desire to the exclusion of every other.
If my reader is fully resolved to satisfy his hunger
only with the manna which comes down from heaven—if he is determined to stake
his thirst at no stream except that which gushes from the Rock—if he will
accept no drink of comfort except that which is mixed with the herbs of
Gethsemane—it is, it must be, well with him. If no one but Jesus is your
delight, take heart. Augustine threw away Tully's works because there was no
Christ in them; if you, like him, do renounce all but Christ, Christ will never
renounce you.
2. Another, pleasing feature of this case is, the intense sincerity and ardent earnestness
of the soul.
Here is an ‘Oh !’—a deep, impassioned, burning
exclamation of desire. It is no fanciful wish, which a little difficulty will
presently overcome—it is no sparkle of excitement, which time will remove;
but it is a real want, fixed in the core of the heart so firmly, that nothing
but a supply of the need can silence the persistent petition. It is not the
passing sigh, which the half‑awakened heave as a compliment to an
eloquent discourse or a stirring article—it is not the transient wish of the
awestruck spectator who has seen a sudden death or a notable judgment—it is not
even the longing of a soul in love for a time with the moral excellences of Christ;
but it is the prayer of one who must pray, and who cannot, who dare not, rest
satisfied until he finds Jesus—who can no more restrain his groaning than the
light clouds can refuse to fly before the violence of the wind.
We have, we hope, many times enjoyed nearness to the
throne of grace in prayer; but perhaps never did such a prayer escape our lips
as that which we offered in the bitterness of our spirit when seeking the Saviour. We
have often poured out our hearts with greater freedom, with more delight, with
stronger faith, with more eloquent language; but never, never have we cried
with more vehemence of unquenchable desire, or more burning heat of insatiable
longing. There was then no sleepiness or sluggishness in our devotion; we did
not then need the whip of command to drive us to the labours of prayer; but our
soul could not be content unless with sighs and lamentations—with strong crying
and tears it gave vent to our bursting hearts. Then we had no need to be
dragged to out closets like oxen to the slaughter, but we flew to them like
doves to their windows; and when there we needed no pumping up of desires, but
they gushed forth like a fountain of waters, although at times we felt we could
scarcely find them a channel.
Mr. Philpot justly observes, ‘When the Lord is
graciously pleased to enable the soul to pour out its desires, and to offer up
its fervent breathings at his feet, and to give them out as He gives them in,
then to call upon the Lord is no point of duty, which is to be attended to as a
duty; it is no point of legal constraint, which must be done because the Word
of God speaks of it; but it is a feeling, an experience, and inward work, which
springs from the Lord's hand, and which flows in the Lord's own divine channel.
Thus when the Lord is pleased to pour out this ‘Spirit of grace and of supplication,’
we must pray; but we do not pray because we must; we pray because we
have no better occupation, we have no more earnest desire, we have no more
powerful feeling, and we have no more invincible and irresistible constraint.
The living child of God groans and sighs, because it is the expression of his
wants—because it is a language which pours forth the feelings of his
heart—because groans and sighs are pressed out of him by the heavy weight upon
him. A man lying in the street with a heavy weight on him will call for help;
he does not say, ‘It is my duty to cry to the passers‑by for
help;’ he cries for help because he wants to be delivered. A man with a broken
leg does not say, ‘It is my duty to send for a surgeon;’ he wants
him to set the limb. And a man with a raging disease does not say, ‘It is my
duty to send for a Physician;’ he wants him to heal his disease. So
when God the Holy Spirit works in a child of God, he prays, not out of a sense
of duty, but from a burdened heart; he prays, because he cannot but pray; he
groans, because he cannot but groan; he sighs, because he must sigh, having an
inward weight, an inward burden, an inward experience, in which, and out of
which, he is compelled to call upon the Lord.’ [Sermon on Prayer and its
Answer].
The supplication of the
penitent is not a mechanical form of devotion, followed for the sake of merit;
it is the natural consequence of the wounding of Jesus; and the one who offers
it thinks nothing of merit in presenting it, any more than in breathing, or any
other act which necessity prevents him from suspending. This ‘Oh!’ is one which
will not rise once and then sink forever; it is not the explosion of a starry
rocket, followed by darkness; but it will be an incessant exclamation of the
inner man. For example, at some of our doors, every hour brings a letter, so
also at the door of mercy, prayer will be heard at every hour from the sincere
penitent; in fact, the soul will be full of prayer even when it is not actually
praying itself—even as a censer may be filled with incense when no fire
is burning in it.
Prayer will become a state
of the soul, perpetual and habitual, needing nothing but opportunity to develop
itself in the outward act of petitioning at the feet of mercy. It is well when Mr.
Desires‑awake is sent to court, for he will surely prevail. Violence
takes the kingdom by force; hard knocks open mercy's door; swift running
overtakes the promise; hard wrestling wins the blessing.
When
the child cries clearly, his lungs are sound; and when the seeker can with
spontaneous earnestness plead for pardon, he is most surely not far from
health. When the soil of our garden begins to rise, we know that the bulb will
soon send forth its shoot; so also, when the heart breaks for the longing which
it has for God's testimonies, we then
perceive that Jesus will soon appear to gladden the spirit.
3.
We rejoice to observe the sense of
ignorance which the seeker here expresses--
’Oh, that I knew where I might find him!’ Men are by nature
very wise in matters of religion, and in their own opinion they might easily
be chosen for Doctors of Divinity without the slightest spiritual
enlightenment. It is a remarkable fact that men who find every science in the
world to be too much for them, even when they have only waded ankle-deep in the
elements of [theology], can still assume to be masters of theology, and
competent, yes, infallible judges in matters of religion. Nothing is more easy
than to pretend to be a profound acquaintance with the religion of the cross,
and even to maintain a reputation as a well taught and highly instructed
disciple of the Lamb; and, at the same time, nothing is more rare than to be
really taught by God, and illuminated by the Spirit; and yet without this the
religion of Jesus can never be really understood. Natural men will array
themselves in robes of learning, ascend the chair of profession, and from there
teach to others doctrines with which they fancy themselves to be thoroughly
conversant; and if a word were hinted of their deficiency in knowledge, and
their inherent inability to discern spiritual things, how wrathful would they
become, how fiercely would they denounce the bigotry of such an assertion, and
how furiously would they condemn the hypocrisy and fanaticism which they
conceive to be the origin of so humiliating a doctrine!
To be as little children,
and bend their necks to the yoke of Jesus, the Master, is quite out of the
question with the men of this generation, who love to philosophise the
Word, and give what they call ‘intellectual’ views of the Gospel. How little do
they suspect that, professing themselves to be wise, they have become fools!
How little do they imagine that their grand theories and learned essays are but
methods of the madness of folly, and, like paintings on the windows of their
understanding, assist to shut out the light of the Holy Spirit. Self‑conceit,
in men who are destitute of heavenly light, unconsciously exercises itself on
that very subject upon which their ignorance is of necessity the greatest. They
will acknowledge that when they have studied astronomy, its magnificence is
beyond them; they will not claim for themselves a lordship of the entire
regions of any one kingdom of knowledge: but here, in theology, they feel
themselves abundantly qualified, if they have some keenness in the original
languages, and have visited the schools of the universities; where a man might,
with as much justice, style himself professor of botany, because he knows the
scientific names of the classes and orders, although he has never seen an
actual flower arrangement—for what can education teach of theology but names
and theories? Only experience can bring the things themselves before our eyes,
and only in the light of Jesus can we discern them. We are pleased, therefore,
to discover in the utterance of the awakened soul a confession of ignorance.
The man asks ‘Where can I find the Lord?’ He is no longer self-confident, but
is willing to ask his way to heaven; he is prepared to go to the school of
piety, and learn the alphabet of godliness. He may be distinguished for his
learning, but now a little child may lead him; his titles, his gown, his
diploma, his dignity, all these are laid aside, and he sits down at the feet of
Jesus to begin again, or rather to commence learning what he never knew before.
Conviction of ignorance is
the doorstep of the temple of wisdom. ‘It is said in the Creed that Christ
descended into hell: descendit ut
ascendat—He took his rising from
the lowest place to ascend into the highest; and herein Christ reads a good
lecture to us—he teaches us that humility is the way to glory!’ [Ephr. Udall’s
Sermons] Seneca remarked, ‘I suppose that many might have attained to wisdom,
had they not thought that they had already attained it.’ [Seneca de Ira, lib.
Iii. C. 36]
We must first be emptied of
every particle of fleshly wisdom,
before we can say that ‘Jesus became for us wisdom from God’ [1 Corinthians
1:30]. We must know our folly, and confess it, before we can be accepted as the
disciples of Jesus. It is marvellous how soon he strips us of
our grand apparel, and how easily our wisdom disappears like a bubble vanishing
in air. We were never greater fools than when, in our own opinion, our wisdom
was the greatest; but as soon as real wisdom came, right away our opinion of
ourselves fell from the clouds to the bottom of the mountains. We were no
divines or doctors when we were under the convincing hand of the Spirit; we
were far more like babes because of our ignorance, and we felt ourselves to be
nothing but beasts because of our folly [Psalm 73:22]. Like men lost in dark
woods, we could not find our paths; the roads which were once apparent enough,
were then hedged up with thorns; and the very entrance to the narrow way had to
be pointed out by Evangelist [Bunyan’s Pilgrim from Pilgrim’s Progress],
and marked by a light. Nevertheless, blessed is he who desires to learn the
fear of the Lord, for he shall find it to be the beginning of wisdom.
Nor, in the present case,
has a sense of ignorance driven the man to pry into secrets too deep for human
wisdom. He does not exclaim, ‘Oh that I knew the origin of sin, or how
predestination joins with the freewill of man’ No; he seeks only this, ‘Oh,
that I knew where I might find Him! Many are puzzling themselves about abstract questions while their
eternal interests are in imminent peril; such men are like the man who counted
the stars, but taking no heed to his feet, fell into a pit and perished. ‘We
may sooner think to span the sun, or grasp a star, or see a gnat swallow a
leviathan, than fully understand the debates of eternity . . . . . Too great a
inquisitiveness beyond our line is as much a provoking arrogance as a blockish
[unwise, stupid] negligence of what is revealed, is a slighting ingratitude’
[Charnock’s Divine Attributes]. The spirit that is made alive disdains to pluck
the wild flowers of carnal knowledge; he is not ambitious to reach the tempting
beauties blooming on the edge of the cliffs which skirt the sea of the
unrevealed; but he anxiously looks around for the rose of Sharon, the lily of
the valley. Therefore, he who studies only to know Christ, shall soon, by the
assistance of the Holy Spirit, learn enough to spell out his own salvation.
4. An evidence of grace is presented to us by the absence of all choice as to where the
Saviour is discovered.
‘Oh, that I knew where I might find him!’ Here is no
stipulation; Jesus is wanted, and let him be wherever he may, the soul is prepared
to go after him. We, when in this state of experience, knew little of sect or
denomination. Before our conviction we could fight for names, like mercenaries
for other men’s countries. The mottos of our party were higher in our esteem
than the golden rules of Christianity; and we should not have been grieved at
the destruction of every other division of religious professors, if our own
might have been elevated on the ruins. Every rule and form, every custom and
relic, we would have stained with our blood, if necessary, in order to preserve
them; and mightily did we shout concerning our own Church, ‘Great is Diana of
the Ephesians’ [Acts 19:28]. There was not a nail in the church door that we
did not revere—not a vestment which we did not admire; or, if we did not love
pomp, then simplicities were magnified into our very household gods. We hated
the doctrines, practices, and rituals of the Roman Catholic Church, but were
essentially a Roman Catholic; for we could have joined His Unholiness [the
Pope] in all his anathemas [formal curses, excommunications], if he would but
have hurled them against those who differed from us. We too did, in our
own fashion, curse by bell, book, and candle, all who were not of our faith and
order; and could scarcely think it possible that many attained salvation beyond
the light of our Church, or that Jesus condescend to give them so much as a
transient visit.
How changed we were when, by Divine grace, the
sectarianism of our ungodliness hid its head in shame! We then thought that we
would go among Methodists, Baptists, Episcopalians, Independents,
Presbyterians, or anywhere, so that we could but find a Redeemer for our
guilty souls. It is more than probable that we found it necessary to shift our
quarters, and attend the very house which we recently detested, to bow with the
people whom we once held in abhorrence. All the fancies of our former lives
dissolved before the heat of our desire. The hunter loves the mountain which
shades his valley more than all its giant brothers; but nevertheless, when in
hot pursuit of the chamois [extremely agile goat], he leaped from crag to
crag, and does not ask what the name of
the rock is upon which the object of his chase has bounded; so the sinner,
ardently following after the Saviour, will pursue him wherever
he goes.
Nor at such seasons did we
regard, the respectability of the denomination or the grandeur of the structure
in which God was adored. The chapel in the dark alley, the despised and deserted
church, the disreputable schoolroom, were now no longer noticed with a sneer;
but whether under the vaulted sky of heaven, the
cobwebbed roof of a
barn, the dingy ceiling of a village station, or the magnificent roof of the
temple of the great assembly, we only sought one thing, and when that one thing
was found, then all places were equal. No praising of a church for its
architectural beauty—no despising of a meeting‑house for its native
ugliness; both buildings were valued not by their shape but by their contents;
and where Jesus was more easily to be found, there did we make our haunt. It is
true our servants, our farmers, and our paupers, sat with us to hear the same
word; but we did not observe the difference, though once perhaps we might have
looked aghast if any but my lady in satin, or my lord in superfine broad cloth,
had ventured into a pew within the range of our breath. To us the company did
not matter, so long as the Master of the Feast would just reveal himself. The
place might be unconsecrated, the minister unordained, the clerk uneducated,
the sect despicable, and the service unpretending, but if Jesus just showed his
face, then that was all we wished for. There is no authentic account of the
dimensions, the fashion, or furniture, of the room in which Jesus suddenly
appeared and pronounced his ‘peace be with you.’ Nor do we think that any one
of the assembly even so much as thought about the layout of the room while
their Lord was present. It is good when we are content to go wherever the Lamb
leads us. Doubtless, the catacombs of Rome, the glens of Scotland, and the
conventicles [A religious meeting place, especially a secret or illegal one] of
England, have been frequented more by the King of kings than cathedrals or
royal chapels: therefore the godly are not concerned so much where they
worship, looking only for His presence which makes a hovel glorious, and
deplore His absence, which makes even a temple desolate. We would in our
anxious mood have followed Jesus into the cave, the mountain, the ravine, or
the catacomb, so that we might but have been within the circle of his
influence.
Nor would we have blushed
to have sought Jesus among his kinsfolk and acquaintances—the sick, the poor,
the uneducated, but yet sincere children of light. How we delighted to sit in
that upper room where stars looked between the tiles, and hear the heavenly
conversation which, from a dull platform surrounded by ragged hangings, a
feeble saint of the Lord held with us! Like divers, we valued the pearl, even
though the shell might be a broken one, nor did we care where we went to get
it. When those creaking stairs trembled beneath our weight, when that
bottomless chair afforded us uneasy rest, and when the heat and odorous fumes
of that sickroom drove our companion away, did we not feel more than doubly
repaid while that friend of Jesus told us of all his love, his
faithfulness and grace? It is frequently the case that the most despised
servants of the Lord are made the chosen instruments of comforting distressed
souls, and building them up
in the faith.
The writer confesses
his eternal obligations to an old cook, who was despised as an Antinomian [a
person who denies the fixed meaning or universal applicability of moral law],
but who in her kitchen taught him many of the deep things of God, and removed
many a doubt from his youthful mind. Even eminent men have been indebted to
humble individuals for their deliverance: take, for instance, Paul, and his
comforter, Ananias; and in our own day, John Bunyan, instructed by the holy
women at Bedford. True seekers will hunt everywhere for Jesus, and will not be
too proud to learn from beggars or little children. We take gold from dark
mines or muddy streams; therefore it would be foolish to refuse instruction in
salvation from the most unlettered or uncouth. Let us be truly sincere in
seeking Christ, then circumstance and place will be lightly esteemed.
We also note that there is
no condition for distance in this question, it is only ‘where;’ and though it
be a thousand miles away, the man’s feet are ready for the journey. Desire
leaps over space; leagues to it are inches, and oceans narrow into straits.
Where, at one time, a mile would tire the body, a long journey after the Word
is counted as nothing: yes, to stand in the house of God for hours during service
is considered a pleasure and not a hardship. The devoted Hindu, to find a hopeless
salvation, will roll himself along for hundred of miles: it seems only natural
then, that we, when searching for eternal life, should ‘count all things loss
for the excellence of the knowledge of Christ Jesus our Lord’ [Philippians
3:8]. Mary Magdalene only needed to know where they had laid her Lord and her
resolve was, ‘I will take him away;’ for surely, she thought, her bodily
strength could never fail under such a burden, and she measured the power of
her body by the strength of her love. So do destitute sinners, who need a
Saviour, utterly laugh at hazards or hardships which may intervene. Come
mountain or valley, rapid or rock, whirlpool or tempest, desire has equipped
the traveller with an omnipotence of heart, and a world of dangers is trodden
beneath the feet, with the shout of Deborah—‘O my soul, march on in strength!’
[Judges 5:21]
‘I doubt not,’ said
Rutherford to Lady Kenmure, ‘that if hell were betwixt you and Christ, as a
river which ye behoved to cross ere ye could come at him, but ye would
willingly put in your foot, and make through to be at him, upon hope that he
would come in himself into the deepest of the river, and lend you his hand.’
Doubtless it is so with you, reader, if you are as we have described.
We also think we may be allowed to add, that the
earnest inquirer does not object to any position of humiliation which may be
required of him before he can ‘see Jesus.’ It is only demanded ‘where?’ and
though the reply may be, ‘Over there, in the cell of repentance, on your bended
knees, stripped of all your glories, shall you alone behold him,’ your lurking
pride will be revealed without delay; but an instantaneous and joyful obedience
will manifest that the one absorbing passion has entirely swallowed up all
ideas of dignity, honour, and pride.
Like Benhadad, when in danger, hearing that the king
of Israel is a merciful king, we will consent to put sackcloth on our loins,
and ropes on our necks, and go in to him, hoping for some words of favour. We
surrender to discretion, yielding the weapons of our sins and the baggage of
our pleasures. He that is down so low as to be wholly submissive, will find
that even justice will not strike him. Mercy always flies near the ground. The
flower of grace grows in the small valley of humility. The stars of love shine
in the night of our self‑despair. If truth does not lie in a well,
certainly mercy does. The hand of justice spares the sinner who has thrown away
both the sword of rebellion and the plumes of his pride. If we will do and be
anything or everything, so that we may but win Christ, we shall soon find him
to be everything to us. There is no more hopeful sign of coming grace than an
emptiness of our own selfish terms and conditions, for ‘God resists the proud,
but gives grace to the humble’ [James 4:6]
Thus we have tried to sum
up all the promises which this state affords, but cheering though they may be,
we fear few will accept the comfort they afford; for ‘like vinegar on soda, is
one who sings songs to a heavy heart;’ [Proverbs 25:20] and it is generally
useless to express sympathy to a patient undergoing an operation, by reflecting
on the benefits of that operation, seeing that while the pain lasts he will
still cry out and groan. Nevertheless, we who have escaped cannot refrain from
singing outside the walls of the dungeon, in the hope that some within may hear
and take heart. Let us say to every mourner in Zion, Be of good cheer, for ‘He
who walked in the garden, and made a noise that made Adam hear his voice, will
also at some time walk in your soul, and make you hear a more sweet word, yet
ye will not always hear the noise and din of his feet when He walketh’
[Rutherford]. Ephraim is bemoaning and mourning [Jeremiah 31:18] ‘when he
thinks God is far off, and does not listen; and yet God is like the bridegroom,
standing only behind a thin wall, [Song 2:9] and he himself says, I have surely
heard Ephraim bemoaning himself.’ ‘I will surely have mercy on him, says the
Lord’ [Jeremiah 31:20]
You
be of good cheer, O seeker; go on, for hope prophesies success, and the signs
of your case predict a happy deliverance. None who are like you have failed in
the end; persevere, and be saved.
II. We have now arrived at our second division,
wherein we proposed to consider the
reasons of this tarrying. May our Divine Illuminator enlighten us while we
write!
We believe that many are
delayed because they do not seek in the right way, or because they do not
eagerly seek, we have nothing to do with these persons at this time; we are
dealing with the genuine convert, the sincere searcher, who still cannot find
his Lord. To the exercised mind no question is more difficult to answer than
this, ‘Why does he not hear?’ but when delivered from our distress, nothing is
more full of joy than the rich discovery that ‘he has done all things well.’
If our reader is now in sorrow, let him believe what
he cannot see, and receive the testimony of others who now bear witness that
‘God's way is in the sea, and his path in the great waters.’
1. We now perceive that it
afforded pleasure to Jesus, to
view the labours of our faith in pursuit after him.
Jesus does often hide his face from his children, that he may hear the
sweet music of their cry. When the woman of Canaan came before our Lord, he did
answer her at all; and when her insistence prevailed somewhat, a harsh sentence
was all she obtained. Yet the blessed Jesus was not angry with her, but was
pleased to behold her faith struggling amid the waves of his seeming neglect,
and finding anchorage even on that hard word which appeared like a rock ready
to wreck her hopes. He was so charmed with her holy daring and heavenly
resolution, that he detained her for a time to feast his eyes upon the lovely
spectacle. The woman had faith in Christ, and Jesus would let all men see what
faith can do in honour of its Lord.
Great kings have among their attendants certain well
trained artistes who play before
them, while they, sitting with their court, behold their feats with pleasure.
Now, Faith is the king's champion, whom he delights to put upon labours of
the most herculean kind. Faith has, when summoned by its Master, stopped
the sun and chained the moon; it has dried the sea and divided rivers; it has
dashed bulwarks to the ground; quenched the violence of fire; stopped the
mouths of lions; turned to flight the armies of the aliens, and robbed death of
its prey.
Importunity
is the king's running footman; he has been known to run
month after month without losing his breath, and over mountains he leaps with
the speed of Asahel; therefore, the Lord at times tries his endurance, for he
loves to see what his own children can perform. Prayer, is also one of the royal musicians; and although many do
prefer his brother, who is called Praise, yet this one has always had an equal
share of the king's favour. His lute played so sweetly that the heavens have
smiled with sunshine for the space of three years and six months [James 5:17,
18], then at the sound of lute; and when again the melodious notes were heard,
the same skies did weep for joy and rain descended on the earth. Prayer has
made God's axe of vengeance stop in mid air, when hastening to cut down
hindrance to the ground; and his sword has been lulled to sleep in its scabbard
by the soft sonnets of prayer, when it sung of pardons bought with blood.
Therefore, because Jesus delighted in these courtiers [an attendant at a
sovereign's court] whom he has chosen, he always finds them work to do, whereby
they may minister unto his good pleasure. Surely you who walk in darkness, and
see no light, may be well content to grope your way for a while, if it is true
that this midnight journey is but one of the feats of faith, which God is
pleased that you should perform. Go on then in confidence.
2. We may sometimes regard
this delay as an exhibition of Divine
sovereignty.
God is not bound to persons nor to time; as he gives
to whom he pleases, so he also bestows his favours in
his own time and manner. Very frequently the prayer and the answer attend each
other, as the echo does the speaker's voice. Usually it is, ‘Before they call,
I will answer; and while they are still speaking, I will hear’ [Isaiah 65:24].
But Divine prerogative must be manifested and maintained, and therefore he
sometimes gives temporary denials or protracted delays. Through some of our
village squares the right of way is private, and in order to maintain the
right, although the road is usually open, yet there are gates which at times are
closed for a season, lest anyone should imagine that they could demand a
passage; so, although mercy is free and speedy, yet it is not always immediate,
so that men may know that the giver has a right to refuse. Jesus is no paid
physician, who is obligated to give us his calls; therefore he will sometimes
step in late in the day, that we may remember that he is not our debtor.
Oh! our hearts loathe the
pride which does not bow to Divine sovereignty, but arrogantly declares God to
be under obligations to his creatures. Those who are full of this satanic
spirit will not assert this in plain language, but while they quibble at
election, talking with sinful breath about ‘partiality,’ ‘injustice,’ ‘respect
of persons’ and other things like these, they too plainly show that their old
nature is yet unhumbled by Divine grace. We are sure of this, that no convinced
sinner, when under a sense of his deserved punishment, will ever dispute the
justice of God in damning him, or quarrel with the distinguishing grace which
Heaven gives to one and not to another. If such a person has not yet been able
to subscribe to the doctrine of sovereign, discriminating, electing grace, we
do not wonder that he has found no peace; for truly Jesus will have him know
that his bounties are in his own hand, and that no one can lay any claim to
them.
Herbert, in his Country Parson, says, ‘He gives no set
pension unto any, for then, in time, it will lose the name of charity with the
poor, and they will reckon upon it, as on a debt;’ truly it would be so even
with the lovingkindnesses of the Lord, if they were always bestowed when man at
first desires them. There is nothing over which the Lord is more jealous than
his crown—his sovereignty—his right to do as he will with his own. How grateful
should we be that he uses such lenient and gentle means to preserve his dignity;
and that while he might, if he pleased, blockade the gates of salvation
forever, he does only for a moment cause them to be closed, that we may sing
all the more loudly when we obtain an entrance through them.
3. A ministry
devoid of gospel grace is a frequent cause of long delays in finding the Saviour.
Some of us, in the days of our sorrow for sin,
were compelled by circumstances to sit under a legalist preacher who only
increased our pain, and aggravated our woe. Destitute of all joy and
mercy, but most of all lacking a clear view of Jesus the Mediator, the sermons
we heard were wells without water, and clouds without rain. Elegant in diction,
admirable in style, and faultless in composition, they fell on our ears even as
the beautiful crystals of snow fall upon the surface of a brook, and only tend
to swell its floods. Good morality, consistent practice, upright dealing,
amiable behaviour, gentle bearing, and modest behavior, were the
everyday themes of the pulpit; but, alas! they were of as little service to us
as instructions to dance would be to a man who has lost both his legs. We have
often been reminded by such preachers, of the doctor who told a poor penniless
widow that her sick son could easily be cured if she would give him the best
wine, and remove him at once to Baden‑Baden [A city in Germany, which has
long been one of Europe's most fashionable spas.]—the poor creature’s fingers
staring all the while through the tips of her wornout gloves, as if they wished
to see the man who gave advice so profoundly impracticable.
Far be it from us to condemn
the preaching of morality by such men, for it is doubtless all they can preach,
and their intentions being good, it is probable they may sometimes be of
service in restraining the community from acts of disorder; but we do deny the
right of many to call themselves Christian ministers, while they constantly and
systematically neglect to declare the truths which lie at the very foundation
of the Gospel. A respected bishop of the Episcopalian denomination [Bishop
Lavington], in addressing the clergy of the last century, said, ‘We have long
been attempting to reform the nation by moral preaching. With what effect?
None. On the contrary, we have dexterously preached the people into downright
infidelity. We must change our voice; we must preach Christ and him crucified;
nothing but the Gospel is the power of God unto salvation.’ We fear that in
some measure this is the case even now—oh, that we would dare to hope
otherwise! Let those of us who are engaged in the work of the ministry take
heed to ourselves, and to our doctrine, that we cause no needless pain, and
retard no man’s progress to a Saviour; and let our reader look to his own
soul’s salvation, and select his pastor, not for his eloquence, learning,
friendliness, or popularity, but for his clear and constant testimony to the
Gospel of Christ. The witness of the pulpit must be incessantly evangelical,
nor is a single exception to be allowed. A venerable theologian justly writes,
‘Faithful preachers never preach mere
philosophy, nor mere metaphysics, nor mere morality’ [Emmons]. How many poor
souls may now be in bondage by your lifeless preaching, O you who love anything
better than the simple Gospel! What are you but polished bolts on the door of
the dungeon of the distressed, or a well‑dressed enemy soldier, scaring
men from the palace of mercy? Ah! it will be good for some if they shall be able
to wash their hands of the blood of souls, for truly in the cells of eternal
condemnation there are heard no yells of horror more appalling than the
shrieks of damned ministers. Oh, to have misled men—to have ruined their souls
forever!
Happy suicide [Mr.
Sadlier], who by his own hand escapes the sound of the curses of those he
victimized! happy in comparison with
the man who will forever hear the accusing voices of the many who have sunk to
perdition through the rottenness of the doctrine which he offered them for
their support. Here, on our knees we fall, and pray for grace that we may ever
hold up Jesus to the sinner; not doctrine without Jesus, which is as the pole
without the brazen serpent, but Jesus—a whole Jesus—to poor lost sinners. We
are sure that many convinced souls have tarried long in the most distressing
condition, simply because, by reason of the poverty of their spiritual food,
their weakness was so great that the cry of Hezekiah was theirs—‘This day is a
day of trouble; for the children have come to birth, but there is no strength
to bring them forth’ [Isaiah 37:3]. May our glorified Jesus soon come into his
Church, and raise up shepherds after his own heart, who, endowed with the Holy
Spirit, full of sympathy, and burning with love, shall visit those who are out
of the way, and guide the wanderer to the fold. Such men are still to be found.
O reader, search them out, sit at their feet, receive their word, and do not be
disobedient to the commands which they utter from heaven.
4.
Misunderstanding of the nature of salvation, in some cases, delays the
happy hour of Christ's appearance.
A natural tendency to legalist ideas dims the mind to
the perception of the doctrine of Jesus, which is grace and truth. A secret
desire to do something in part to aid Jesus, prevents us from viewing him as ‘all our Salvation, and all our
desire.’ Humbled though we have been by the cutting down of all our
righteousness, yet the old root will sprout—‘at the scent of water it will
bud;’ and so long as it does so, there can be no solid peace, no real cleaving
to Christ. We must learn to spell the words law
and grace, without mingling the
letters.
While sick men take two
kinds of medicine there is little hope of a cure, especially if the two drinks
are compounded of opposing ingredients; the bird which lives on two trees
builds its nest on neither; and the soul halting between grace and works can
never find rest for the sole of its foot. Perhaps, my reader, a secret and
almost imperceptible self‑trust is the very thing which shuts out Christ
from your soul. Search and look.
Many seekers are expecting some extraordinary sign and
wonder before they can believe. They imagine that conversion will come upon
them in some marvellous manner, like Mary's visitation by the angel. Like
Naaman, they are dreaming that the prophet will strike his hand over the place
of disease, and they shall recover. ‘Go and wash in Jordan seven times’ has not
enough mystery in it for their poor minds: ‘Unless these people see signs and
wonders, they will by no means believe’ [John 4:48]. However, let no one hope
for miracles; wonders do occur: some are brought to Jesus by vision and
revelation, but far more are drawn by the usual means of grace, in a manner
which is far removed from the marvellous. The Lord is not in the
whirlwind, the Lord is not in the fire; but usually he speaks in the still
small voice. Surely it should be enough for us, if we find pardon in the
appointed method, without desiring to have rare and curious experiences, with
which, in later years, we may gratify our own self-love, and elevate ourselves
as singular favourites of heaven.
Regeneration is indeed a supernatural work, but it is
usually a silent one. It is a pulling down of strongholds, but the earth does
not shake with the fall; it is the building of a temple, but there is no sound
of hammer at its erection; like the sunrise, it is not heralded by the a
trumpet blast, nor do wonders hide beneath its wings. We know who the mother of
mystery is; do we desire to be her children? Strange phantoms and marvellous
creatures find their dwelling place in darkness;
light is not in relationship with mystery; let none be hoping to find it
so. Believe and live is the plan of
the Gospel; if men would but lay aside their old ideas, they would soon find
Jesus as their very present help; but because they look for unpromised
manifestations, they seek in vain, until disappointment has taught them wisdom.
5. Although the seeking
penitent has renounced all known sin, yet it
may be that some sin of ignorance yet remains unconfessed, and unrepented of,
which will frequently be a cause of great and grievous delay.
God, who searches
Jerusalem with candles, will have us examine ourselves most thoroughly. He has
issued a search warrant to conviction, which gives that officer a right to
enter every room of our house, and command every Rachel to rise from her seat
lest the images should be beneath her [Genesis 31:34, 35]. Sin is so skilful in
deception, that it is hard to discover all its lurking places; neither is it
easy to detect its character when brought before our eyes, since it will often
borrow the garb of virtue, and appear as an angel of light; nor should we
ourselves use sufficient diligence in its destruction, if the delay of the
needed mercy did not urge us to a more vigorous pursuit of the traitors who
have brought us into grief. Our gracious Lord, for our own sake, desires the
execution of our secret sins, and by his frowns he causes to be on guard lest
we should indulge or harbour them.
Never, perhaps, shall we again possess so deep a
horror of sin as in that moment when we almost despaired of deliverance from
it, and therefore never shall we be so fully prepared to exterminate it.
Eternal wisdom will not allow a season so favorable to pass without improvement;
and having melted our heart in the furnace till the scum floated on the
surface, it does not allow it to cool until the dross has been removed. Look to
yourself, O seeker, for perhaps the cause of your pain lies in your own heart.
How small a splinter prevents the healing of a festered wound; extract it, and
the cure is easy. Be wise; what you do, do quickly, but do it perfectly; thus
you shall do good work for eternity, and speed the hour of your acceptance. Be
sure sin will find you out, unless
you find it out first. A warrior
stimulated the valour of his soldiers by simply pointing to the enemy and
exclaiming, ‘Lads, there they are, if you
do not kill them, they will kill you.’ Thus we would remind you, that sin will destroy you if you do not destroy it. Be concerned, then, to drive it from
your heart.
6. Usefulness in
after life is often increased by the bitter experience with which the soul
is exercised while seeking after Jesus.
Since this has already received our attention, we will
close our meditations on the reasons for protracted delay, by the simple
remark, that it is of far more importance to a penitent to use every means for
obtaining the Saviour's blessing, than to inquire into the motives which
have, up till now, made him deaf to his petitions. Earnestly do we entreat the
mourner to strive to enter in at the narrow gate, and to continue his cry—‘Oh,
that I knew where I might find him!’
III. It is now our pleasant duty to direct the
troubled spirit to the means of obtaining
speedy and lasting peace.
May the God who opened the eyes of the desolate Hagar
in the wilderness, and guided her so that she saw a well of water where she
filled her empty bottle, use us as his finger to point the thirsting, dying
sinner to the place where He stands,
who once said, ‘If anyone thirsts, let him come to me and drink’ [John 7:37].
Our rules shall be expressed in simple words—that the wayfaring man, though a
fool, may not err therein.
1. Go where he goes.
Do you desire to present a
petition to the king‑-will you not go to his palace to do it? Are you
blind—where should you sit but at the wayside, begging? Have you a painful
disease—where is there a place more fitting for you than the porch of Bethesda,
where my Lord walks? Are you affected with palsy—do you not desire to be in
his presence, though on your bed, you will be let down to the spot where he
stands?’ Did not Obadiah and Ahab journey through the whole land of Israel to
find Elijah? and will you not visit every place where there is hope of meeting
Jesus? Do you know where his haunts are? Have you not heard that he dwells on
the hill of Zion, and has fixed his throne of mercy within the
gates of Jerusalem? Has it not been told to you that he often comes up to the
feast, and mingles with the worshippers in his temple? Have not the saints
assured you that he walks in the midst of his Church, even as John, in a
vision, saw him among the golden lampstands? Go, then, to the city which he has
chosen for his dwelling place, and wait within the doors which he has
condescended to enter. If you know of a gospel minister, sit in the solemn
assembly over which he is leader. If you have heard of a church which has been favoured
with visits from its Lord, go and sit in their midst, that when he comes he may
bid you to put your hand into his side, and do not be faithless but believing.
Lose no opportunity of attending the word: Thomas doubted, because he was not
there when Jesus came.
Let sermons and prayers be your delight, because they
are roads on which the Saviour walks. Let the righteous be
your constant company, for such persons always bring Him when they come. The
least thing you can do is to stand where grace usually dispenses its favour.
Even the beggar writes his petition on the flagstone of a frequented
thoroughfare, because he hopes that among the many that pass by, a few at least
will give him charity; learn from him to offer your prayers where mercies are
known to move in the greatest number, that among them all, there may be one for
you. Keep your sail up when there is no wind, that when it blows you will not
have to prepare for it; use means when you see no grace attending them, for
thus will you be in the way when grace comes. It is better to go fifty times
and gain nothing than lose one good opportunity. If the angel does not stir the
pool, yet still lie there, for it may be that the moment when you leave it,
that it will be the season of his descending [John 5:4-8]. ‘Being on the way,
the Lord met with me,’ said one of old; you be on the way, that the Lord may
meet with you. Old Simeon found the infant Messiah in the Temple; had he
deserted its hallowed courts he might never have said, ‘My eyes have seen your
salvation’ [Luke 2:30]. Be sure to stay in mercy's way.
2. Cry after Him.
You have been lying in his path for many days, but he has not turned his eye on
you. What then? Are you content to let him pass you by? Are you willing to lose
so precious an opportunity? No! you desire life, and you will not be ashamed to
beg loudly for it: you will not fear to take him for an example of whom it is
written, ‘When he heard that it was Jesus of Nazareth, he began to cry out and
say, “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!” Then many warned him to be quiet;
but he cried out all the more, “Son of David, have mercy on me!”’ [Mark 10:47,
48]. It is an old proverb, ‘We lose nothing by asking,’ and it is in older
promise, ‘Ask, and you will receive.’ Do not be not afraid of crying too
loudly. It is recorded, to the honour of Mordecai, that he cried
with a loud cry; and we know that the kingdom of heaven suffers violence. Do
not think it is possible to pray too frequently, but at morning, at noon, and
at evening time, lift up your soul to God. Do not let despondency stop the
voice of your supplication, for He who hears the young ravens when they cry,
will in due time listen to the trembling words of your desire. Give Him no rest
until he hears you; like the persistent widow, you always be at the heels of
the great One; do not give up because the past has proved apparently fruitless,
remember Jericho stood firm for six days, but yet when they gave a great shout,
it fell flat to the ground. ‘"Arise, cry out in the night, at the
beginning of the watches; pour out your heart like water before the face of the
Lord. Let tears run down like a river day and night; give yourself no relief;
give your eyes no rest’ [Lamentations 2:19, 18]. Let groans, and sighs, and
vows keep up a perpetual assault at heaven's doors.
‘Groans freshened with vows, and vows made salt with
tears;
Unscale
his eyes, and scale his conquered ears:
Shoot
up the bosom‑shafts of your desire,
Feathered
with faith, and double‑forked with fire;
And
they will hit: fear not, where heaven bids come,
Heaven
is never deaf, but when man's heart is dumb.’
Augustine sweetly writes, ‘Thou mayest seek after honours,
and not obtain them; thou mayest labour for riches, and yet remain
poor; thou mayest dote on pleasures, and have many sorrows. But our God of his
supreme goodness says, Who ever sought me,
and found me not? whoever desired me, and obtained me not? whoever loved
me, and missed of me? I am with him that seeks for me: he hath me already that
wisheth for me; and he that loveth me is sure of my love.’ O reader, try it and
see whether it is not so, for we have found it so.
3. Think of his promises.
He has uttered many sweet and gracious words, which are like the call of
the hen, inviting you to nestle beneath his wings, or like white flags of truce
bidding you to come without fear. There is not a single promise which, if
followed up, will not lead you to the Lord. He
is the centre of the circle, and the promises, like the radius, all
meet in him, and then become Yes and Amen. As the streams run to the ocean, so
do all the sweet words of Jesus tend to himself: launch your small vessel upon
any one of them, and it shall bear you onward to the broad sea of his love.
Lost on a dreary moor, the wanderer discovers his cottage by the light in the
window casting a gleam over the darkness of the waste; so also must we find out
‘our dwelling place’ by the lamps of promise which our Saviour has
placed in the windows of his word. The handkerchiefs brought from the person of
Paul healed the sick; surely the promises, which are the garments of Christ,
will benefit all diseases. We all know that the key of promise will unfasten
every lock in Doubting Castle; will we be content to lie any longer in that
dungeon when that key is already in our hand? A large number of the ransomed of
the Lord have received their liberty by means of a cheering word applied with
power. Be constant in reading the word and meditation upon it. Amid the fair
flowers of promise grows the rose of Sharon—pluck the promises, and you may
find Him with them. He feeds among the lilies—do you feed there
also. The sure words of Scripture are the footsteps of Jesus imprinted on the
soil of mercy—follow the track and find Him. The promises are cards of
admission not only to the throne, the mercy seat, and the audience chamber, but
to the very heart of Jesus. Look up to the sky of Revelation, and you will yet
find a constellation of promises which shall guide your eye to the star of
Bethlehem. Above all, cry aloud when you read a promise, ‘Remember the word to
your servant, upon which you have caused me to hope’ [Psalm 119:49].
4. Meditate on
his person and his work.
If we were better acquainted
with Jesus, we would find it easier to believe him. Many souls mourn because
they cannot make themselves believe; and the constant exhortations of minister,
persuading them to faith, cause them to sink deeper in the mire, since all
their attempts prove ineffectual. It would be good for both if they would
remember that the mind is not to be compelled to belief by exhortation or force
of will; a small acquaintance with the elements of mental science would suffice
to show them that faith is a result of previous states of the mind, and flows
from those antecedent conditions, but is not a position to which we can attain
without passing through those other states which the Divine laws, both of
nature and of grace, have been made into the stepping stones. Even in natural
things, we cannot believe a thing simply because we are persuaded to do so; we
require evidence; we ask, ‘What are we to believe?’ we need instruction on the matter
before we can lay hold of it. In spiritual things, we especially need to know
what we are to believe, and why. We cannot by one stride mount to faith, and it
is at least useless, not to say cruel, to urge us to do so, unless we are told
the grounds on which our faith must rest. Some men endeavour to
preach sinners to Christ; we prefer
to preach Christ to sinners. We
believe that a faithful exhibition of Jesus crucified will, under the Divine
blessing, beget faith in hearts where fiery and vehement oratory have failed.
Let this be borne in mind by those who are bewailing themselves, in the words
of John Newton:
‘Oh,
could but I believe,
Then
all would easy be;
I
would, but cannot—Lord, relieve!
My
help must come from thee.’
You will not need to have
to pray in this fashion very long, if you can obey the rule we would put before
you, which is, meditate on Jesus; reflect upon the mystery of his incarnation
and redemption; and frequently picture the agonies of Gethsemane and Calvary.
The cross not only demands faith, but causes it. The same Christ who requires
faith for salvation infuses faith into all those who meekly and reverently
meditate upon his sacrifice and mediation. We learn to believe in an honest man
by an acquaintance with him, even so (although faith is the gift of God, yet
he gives it in the use of the means) it comes to pass that by frequent consideration
of Jesus, we know him, and therefore trust in him. You go to the gloomy brook
of Kedron, make Gethsemane your garden of retirement, tread the blood‑stained
Gabbatha, climb the hill of Calvary, sit at the foot of the accursed tree,
watch the victim in his agonies, listen to his groans, mark his flowing blood,
see his head bowed on his breast in death, look into his open side; then walk
to the tomb of Joseph of Arimathea, behold him rise, witness his ascension, and
view him exalted far above principalities and powers, as the mediator for
sinful men: thus shall you see and believe, for truly hard is that unbelief
which can endure such sights; and if the Holy Spirit leads you to a true vision
of them, you shall inevitably believe, finding it impossible to any longer be
incredulous. A true view of Calvary will strike unbelief with death, and put
faith into its place. Spend hours in holy retirement, tracing his pilgrimage of
woe, and you shall soon sing,
‘Oh
how sweet to view the flowing
Of
his soul-redeeming blood;
With
Divine assurance knowing
That
he made my peace with God!’
5. Venture on Him.
This is the last but best advice we can give you, and if you have attended to
that which precedes it, you will be enabled to follow it. We have said
‘venture,’ but we imply no venture of risk, but one of courage. To be saved it
is required of you to renounce all hope of salvation by any means except
Jesus—that you have submitted to. Next you are called upon to cast yourself
entirely on him, prostrating yourself before his cross, content to rely wholly
on Him. Do this and you are saved, refuse and you are damned. Subscribe your
name to this simple rhyme‑
’I'm a poor sinner, and nothing at all,
But Jesus Christ is my all in all;’
and, doing this, you are
secure of heaven.
Do you delay because of
unworthiness? Oh, do not do so, for he invites you just as you are. You are not
too sinful, for he is ‘able to save to the uttermost.’ Do not think little of
his power or his grace, for he is infinite in each; only fall flat upon his
gracious declaration, and you shall be embraced by his mercy. To believe is to
take Jesus at his word, and when all things deny you the hope of salvation,
still call Him yours. Now we beseech you launch into the deep, now cut your
moorings and give yourself up to the gale, now leave the rudder in his hands,
and surrender your keeping to his guardianship. In this way alone shall you
obtain peace and eternal life.
May the Directing Spirit
lead us each to Him in whom there is light, and whose light is the life of men.
TO
THE UNCONVERTED READER
______________________
FRIEND,—Love for your
soul constrains us to set apart this small attachment for your special benefit.
Oh that you had as much love for your own soul as the writer has! Though he may
have never seen you, yet remember when he wrote these lines he prayed a special
prayer for you, and he had you on his heart while he penned these few but
earnest words.
O Friend, you are no seeker of Jesus, but the reverse!
To your own confusion you are going from him instead of to him!
Oh, stop a moment and consider your ways—your position—your end!
As for your ways, they are not only wrong
before God, but they are uneasy to yourself. Your conscience, if it is not
seared with a hot iron, is every day thundering at you on account of your paths
of folly. Oh that you would turn from your error, while you can still hear the
promise, ‘Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts;
let him return to the Lord, and he will have mercy on him; and to our God, for
He will abundantly pardon’ [Isaiah 55:7]. Do not be betrayed into a continuance
in these ways in the vain hope that your life will be prolonged to an
indefinite period, in which you hope to accomplish repentance; for life is as
frail as the bubble on the breaker, and as swift as the Indian arrow. Tomorrow
may never come, oh use ‘today’—
‘Now, is the constant syllable ticking from the
clock of time;
Now, is the watchword of the
wise; Now, is on the banner of the prudent.
Cherish your today, and prize it well, or ever it be
engulfed in the past;
Husband it, for who
can promise if it shall have a tomorrow?’
[Tupper’s Proverbial Philosophy]
‘Tomorrow is a fatal
lie—the wrecker's beacon—wily snare of the destroyer;’ be wise, and see to your
ways while time waits for you.
Next, consider your position. A condemned
criminal waiting for execution; a tree, at the root of which the axe is
gleaming ; a target, to which the shaft of death is speeding; an insect beneath
the finger of vengeance waiting to be crushed; a wretch hurried along by the
strong torrent of time to an inevitable precipice of doom.
Your present position is
enough to pale the cheek of carelessness, and move the iron knees of profanity.
A man asleep in a burning house, or with his neck upon the block of the headsman,
or lying before the mouth of a cannon, is not in a more dangerous situation
than you are. Oh you must think, before desolation, destruction, and damnation,
seal up your destiny, and stamp you with despair!
Be sure, also, that you consider your final end, for it is yours whether you
consider it or not. You are ripening for hell; oh, how will you endure its
torments! Ah! If you would afford a moment to visit, in your imagination, the cells of the condemned, it
might benefit you forever. What! are you afraid to examine the house in which
you are to dwell? What! rush to a place and be afraid to see a picture of it?
Oh let your thoughts precede you, and if they bring back a dismal story, it may
induce you to change your mind and tread another path! You will lose nothing by
meditation, but rather gain much by this means. . Oh let the miseries of lost
souls warn you lest you also come into this place of torment! May the day soon
arrive when you can cry after the Lord, and then even you shall be delivered!
Transcribed and
updated (English) 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