Preface
For more
than 100 years, J. C. Ryle's (John Charles Ryle) sermons have been consistently
recognized, and their usefulness and impact have continued to
the present
day, even in the outdated English of the author's own day.
Why then
should expositions already so successful and of such stature and proven
usefulness require adaptation, revision, rewrite or even editing? The answer is obvious. To increase its usefulness to today's
reader, the language in which it was originally written needs updating.
Though his
sermons have served other generations well, just as they came from the pen of
the author in the nineteenth century, they still could be lost to present and
future generations, simply because, to them, the language is neither readily
nor fully understandable.
My goal,
however, has not been to reduce the original writing to the vernacular of our
day. It is designed primarily for you
who desire to read and study comfortably and at ease in the language of our
time. Only obviously archaic
terminology and passages obscured by expressions not totally familiar in our
day have been revised. However, neither
J. C. Ryle's meaning nor intent have been tampered with.
Tony Capoccia
All
Scripture references are taken from the HOLY BIBLE: NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION
(C) 1978 by the New York Bible Society, used by permission of Zondervan Bible
Publishers.
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THOUGHTS FOR YOUNG MEN
by
J. C. Ryle
(1816-1900)
This updated and revised manuscript
is copyrighted ã 1999 by Tony
Capoccia. All rights reserved.
When the
Apostle Paul wrote his Epistle to Titus about his responsibility as a minister,
he mentioned young men as a group requiring particular attention. After speaking of older men and older women,
and young women, he adds this advice, "Encourage the young men to be
self-controlled" (Titus 2:6). I am
going to follow the Apostle's advice. I
propose to offer a few words of friendly exhortation to young men.
I am growing
old myself, but there are few things that I can remember so well as were the
days of my youth. I have a most
distinct recollection of the joys and the sorrows, the hopes and the fears, the
temptations and the difficulties, the mistaken judgments and the misplaced affections,
the errors and the aspirations, which surround and accompany a young man's
life. If I can only say something to
keep some young man walking in the right way, and preserve him from faults and
sins, which may hurt his prospects both for time and eternity, I shall be very
thankful.
There are
four things which I propose to do:
I. I will mention some general reasons why
young men need exhorting.
II. I will note some special dangers which young
men need to be warned
about.
III. I will give some general counsel which I beg
young men to receive.
IV. I will set down some special rules of
conduct which I strongly advise
young men to
follow.
On each of
these four points I have something to say, and I pray to God that what I say
may do good to some soul.
I. Reasons for Exhorting Young Men
1. What are the general reasons why young men
need specific exhortation? I will
mention several of them in order.
(1) For one thing, there is the painful fact
that there are few young men anywhere who seem to be Christians.
I speak
without respect of persons; I say it of all.
Rich or poor, gentle or rough, educated or uneducated, in the city or in
the country--it makes no difference. I
shudder to think how few young men are led by the Spirit, how few are on that
narrow road which leads to life, how few are setting their affections on things
above, how few are taking up the cross, and following Christ. I say all this with sorrow, but I believe,
in God's sight, that I am saying nothing more than the truth.
Young men,
you form a large and most important class in the population of this country;
but where, and in what condition, are your souls? Regardless of where we turn for an answer, the report will be one
and the same! Let us ask any faithful
minister of the gospel, and note what he will tell us. How many unmarried young people can he
remember who come to the Lord's Supper?
Who are the most backward about the doctrines of salvation, the most
irregular about Sunday services, the most difficult to draw to weekly Bible
studies and prayer meetings, the most inattentive to whatever is being
preached? Which part of his
congregation fills him with the most anxiety?
Who are the Reubens for whom he has the deepest "searchings of
heart"? Who in his flock are the
hardest to manage, who require the most frequent warnings and rebukes, who
cause him the greatest uneasiness and sorrow, who keep him most constantly in
fear for their souls, and seem the most hopeless? Depend on it, his answer will always be, "The Young
Men."
Let us ask
the parents in any county throughout this land, and see what they will
generally say. Who in their families
give them the most pain and trouble?
Who need the most watchfulness, and most often provoke and disappoint
them? Who are the first to be led away
from what is right, and the last to remember cautions and good advice? Who are the most difficult to keep in order
and limits? Who most frequently break
out into open sin, disgrace the name they bear, make their friends unhappy,
embitter the older relatives, and cause them to die with sorrow in their
hearts? Depend on it, the answer will
generally be, "The Young Men."
Let us ask
the judges and police officers, and note what they will reply. Who goes to the night clubs and bars the
most? Who make up street gangs? Who are most often arrested for drunkenness,
disturbing the peace, fighting, stealing, assaults, and the like? Who fill the jails, and penitentiaries, and
detention homes? Who are the class
which requires the most incessant watching and looking after? Depend on it, they will at once point to the
same group, they will say, "The Young Men."
Let us turn
to the upper classes, and note the report we will get from them. In one family the sons are always wasting
time, health, and money, in the selfish pursuit of pleasure. In another, the sons will follow no
profession, and fritter away the most precious years of their life in doing
nothing. In another, they take up a profession
as a mere form, but pay no attention to its duties. In another, they are always forming wrong connections, gambling,
getting into debt, associating with bad companions, keeping their friends in a
constant fever of anxiety. Note that
rank, and title, and wealth, and education, do not prevent these things! Anxious fathers, and heart-broken mothers,
and sorrowing sisters, could tell sad stories about them, if the truth were
known. Many a family, with everything
this world can give, numbers among its relatives some name that is never named,
or only named with regret and shame, some son, some brother, some cousin, some
nephew, who will have his own way, and is a grief to all who know him.
There is
seldom a rich family which hasn't got some thorn in its side, some blot in its
page of happiness, some constant source of pain and anxiety; and often, far too
often--the true cause is, "The Young Men"?
What shall
we say to these things? These are
facts, plain facts, facts which meet us on every side, facts which cannot be
denied. How dreadful this is! How
dreadful the thought, that every time I meet a young man, I meet one who is in
all probability all enemy of God, traveling on the wide road which leads to hell,
unfit for heaven! Surely, with such
facts before me, will you not wonder that I exhort you, you must allow that
there is a good reason.
(2) Death and judgment are waiting for young
men, even as it waits for others, and they nearly all seem to forget it.
Young men,
it is appointed for you to die; and no matter how strong and healthy you may be
now, the day of your death is perhaps very near. I see young people sick as well as the elderly. I bury youthful corpses as well as
aged. I read the names of persons no
older than yourselves in every graveyard.
I learn from books that, excepting infancy and old age, more die between
thirteen and twenty-three than at any other period of life. And yet you live as if you were sure that
presently you will never die.
Are you
thinking you will pay attention to these things tomorrow? Remember the words of Solomon, "Do not
boast about tomorrow, for you do not know what
a day may
bring forth" (Proverbs 27:1).
"I will worry about serious things tomorrow," said an unsaved
person, to one who warned him of coming danger; but his tomorrow never
came. Tomorrow is the devil's day, but
today is God's. Satan does not care how
spiritual your intentions are, or how holy your resolutions, if only they are
determined to be done tomorrow. Oh,
give no place to the devil in this matter!
All men don't live to be elderly fathers, like Isaac and Jacob. Many children die before their fathers. David had to mourn the death of his two
finest sons; Job lost all of his ten children in one day. Your lot may be like one of theirs, and when
death comes, it will be vain to talk of tomorrow, you must go at once.
Do you think
that you will have a more convenient time to think about these things? So thought Felix and the Athenians to whom
Paul preached to; but it never came.
The road to hell is paved with such ideas. Better make sure to work while you can. Leave nothing unsettled that is eternal. Run no risk when your soul is at stake. Believe me, the salvation of a soul is no
easy matter. Every one needs a
"Great salvation," whether young or old; all need to be born
again--all need to be washed in Christ's blood--all need to be sanctified by
the Spirit. Happy is that man who does
not leave these things uncertain, but never rests until he has the witness of
the Spirit within him, testifying to him that he is a child of God.
Young men,
your time is short. Your days are but a
brief shadow, a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes, a story
that is soon told. Your bodies are not
made of brass. "Even the young
men," says Isaiah, "stumble and fall" (Isaiah 40:30). Your health may be taken from you in a
moment: it only needs an accident, a fever, an inflammation, a broken
blood-vessel, and the worm would soon feed upon you in the grave. There is but a step between any one of you
and death. This night your soul might
be required of you. You are fast going
the way of all the earth, you will soon be gone. Your life is all uncertainty, your death and judgment are
perfectly sure. You too must hear the
Archangel's trumpet, and go forth to stand before the great white throne of
judgment, you too must obey that summons, which Jerome says was always ringing
in his ears: "Get up, you dead, and come to judgment." "Yes, I am coming soon," is the
language of the Judge Himself. I
cannot, dare not, will not let you alone.
Oh that you
would all take to heart the words of the Preacher: "Be happy, young man,
while you are young, and let your heart give you joy in the days of your
youth. Follow the ways of your heart
and whatever your eyes see, but know that for all these things God will bring
you to judgment" (Ecclesiastes 11:9)
Amazing, that with such a prospect of coming judgment, any man can be
careless and unconcerned! Surely none
are so crazy as those who are content to live unprepared to die. Surely the unbelief of men is the most
amazing thing in the world. The
clearest prophecy in the Bible begins with these words, "Who has believed
our message?" (Isaiah 53:1). The
Lord Jesus said, "When the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on the
earth?" (Luke 18:8). Young men,
I fear this be the report of many of you in the courts above: "They will
not believe." I fear you be
hurried out of the world, and awake to find out, too late, that death and
judgment are realities. I fear all
this, and therefore I exhort you.
(3) What young men will be, in all probability
depends on what they are now, and they seem to forget this.
Youth is the
planting time of full age, the molding season in the little space of human
life, the turning point in the history of man's mind.
By the shoot
that springs up we can judge the type of tree that is growing, by the blossoms
we judge the kind of fruit, by the spring we judge the type of harvest coming,
by the morning we judge the coming day, and by the character of the young man,
we may generally judge what he will be when he grows up.
Young men,
do not be deceived. Don't think you
can, at will, serve lusts and pleasures in your beginning, and then go and
serve God with ease at your latter end.
Don't think that you can live with Esau, and then die with Jacob. It is a mockery to deal with God and your
souls in such a fashion. It is an awful
mockery to suppose you can give the flower of your strength to the world and
the devil, and then put off the King of kings with the scraps and remains of
your hearts, the wreck and remnant of your powers. It is an awful mockery, and you may find to your loss that the
thing cannot be done.
I dare say
you are planning on a late repentance.
You do not know what you are doing.
You are planning without God.
Repentance and faith are the gifts of God, and they are gifts that He
often withholds, when they have been long offered in vain. I grant you true repentance is never too
late, but I warn you at the same time, late repentance is seldom true. I grant you, one penitent thief was
converted in his last hours, that no man might despair; But I warn you, only
one was converted, that no man might presume.
I grant you it is written, Jesus is "Able to save completely those
who come to God through him" (Hebrews 7:25). But I warn you, it is also written by the same Spirit,
"Since you rejected me when I called and no one gave heed when I stretched
out my hand, I in turn will laugh at your disaster; I will mock when calamity
overtakes you" (Proverbs 1:24, 26).
Believe me,
you will find it no easy matter to turn to God whenever you please. It is a true saying of the godly Leighton,
"The way of sin is down hill; a man cannot stop when he wants
too." Holy desires and serious
convictions are not like the servants of the Centurion, ready to come and go at
your desire; rather they are like the unicorn in Job, they will not obey your
voice, nor attend at your bidding. It
was said of the famous general Hannibal of old, when he could have taken the
city he warred against, he would not, and in time when he would, he could
not. Beware lest the same kind of thing
happens to you in the matter of eternal life.
Why do I say
all this? I say it because of the force
of habit. I say it because experience
tells me that people's hearts are seldom changed if they are not changed when
young. Seldom indeed are men converted
when they are old. Habits have deep
roots. Once sin is allowed to settle in
your heart, it will not be turned out at your bidding. Custom becomes second nature, and its chains
are not easily broken. The prophet has
well said, "Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard its
spots? Neither can you do good who are
accustomed to doing evil" (Jeremiah 13:23). Habits are like stones rolling down hill--the further they roll,
the faster and more ungovernable is their course. Habits, like trees, are strengthened by age. A boy may bend an oak when it is a sapling--a
hundred men cannot root it up, when it is a full grown tree. A child can wade over the Thames River at
its fountain-head--the largest ship in the world can float in it when it gets
near the sea. So it is with habits: the
older the stronger--the longer they have held possession, the harder they will
be to cast out. They grow with our
growth, and strengthen with our strength.
Custom is the nurse of sin.
Every fresh act of sin lessens fear and remorse, hardens our hearts,
blunts the edge of our conscience, and increases our evil inclination.
Young men,
you may fancy I am laying too much stress on this point. If you had seen old men, as I have, on the
brink of the grave, without any feelings, seared, callous, dead, cold, hard as
stone--you would not think so. Believe
me, you cannot stand still in your souls.
Habits of good or evil are daily strengthening in your hearts. Every day you are either getting nearer to
God, or further off. Every year that
you continue unrepentant, the wall of division between you and heaven becomes
higher and thicker, and the gulf to be crossed deeper and broader. Oh, dread the hardening effect of constant
lingering in sin! Now is the accepted
time. See that your decision not be put
off until the winter of your days. If
you do not seek the Lord when young, the strength of habit is such that you
will probably never seek Him at all.
I fear this,
and therefore I exhort you.
(4) The devil uses special diligence to destroy
the souls of young men, and they don't seem to know it.
Satan knows
very well that you will make up the next generation and therefore he employs
every trick to make you his own. I
would not have you to be ignorant of his schemes.
You are
those on whom he puts his choicest temptations. He spreads his net with the most watchful carefulness, to
entangle your hearts. He baits his trap
with the sweetest morsels, to get you into his power. He displays his wares before your eyes with his utmost ingenuity,
in order to make you buy his sugared poisons, and eat his accursed treats. You are the grand object of his attack. May the Lord rebuke him, and deliver you out
of his hands.
Young men,
beware of being taken by his snares. He
will try to throw dust in your eyes, and prevent you seeing anything in its
true colors. He would eagerly make you
think that evil is good, and good is evil.
He will paint, cover with gold, and dress up sin, in order to make you
fall in love with it. He will deform,
and misrepresent, and fabricate true Christianity, in order to make you take a
dislike to it. He will exalt the
pleasures of wickedness--but he will hide from you the sting. He will lift up before your eyes the cross
and its painfulness--but he will keep out of sight the eternal crown. He will promise you everything, as he did to
Christ, if you will only serve him. He
will even help you to wear a form of Christianity, if you will only neglect the
power. He will tell you at the
beginning of your lives, it
is too soon
to serve God--he will tell you at the end, it is too late. Oh, do not be deceived!
You don't
know the danger you are in from this enemy; and it is this very ignorance which
makes me afraid. You are like blind
men, walking among holes and pitfalls; you do not see the perils which are
around you on every side.
Your enemy
is mighty. He is called "The
Prince of this world" (John 14:30).
He opposed our Lord Jesus Christ all through His ministry. He tempted Adam and Eve to eat the forbidden
fruit, and so brought sin and death into the world. He even tempted David, the man after God's own heart, and caused
his latter days to be full of sorrow.
He even tempted Peter, the chosen Apostle, and made him deny his
Lord. Surely his hostility towards man
and God is to be despised.
Your enemy
is restless. He never sleeps. He is always going around like a roaring
lion, seeking whom he may devour. He is
always going back and forth in the earth, and walking up and down on it. You may be careless about your souls: but he
is not. He wants your soul to make you
miserable, like himself, and will have your soul if he can. Surely his hatred towards men and God is to
be despised.
And your
enemy is cunning. For thousands of
years he has been reading one book, and that book is the heart of man. He ought to know it well, and he does know
it--all its weakness, all its deceitfulness, all its folly. And he has a storehouse full of temptations,
such as are most likely to do the heart of man the most harm. Never will you go to the place where he will
not find you. Go into the city--he will
be there. Go into the wilderness--he
will be there also. Sit among
drunkards--and he will be there to help you.
Listen to preaching--and he will be there to distract you. Surely such ill-will is to be despised.
Young men,
this enemy is working hard for your destruction, however little you may think
it. You are the prize for which he is
specially contending for. He foresees
you must either be the blessings or the curses of your day, and he is trying hard
to effect a place in your hearts early in your life, in order that you may help
advance his kingdom each day. Well does
he understand that to spoil the bud is the surest way to mar the flower.
Oh that your
eyes were opened, like those of Elisha's servant Dothan! Oh that you could see what Satan is scheming
against your peace! I must warn you--I
must exhort you. Whether you will hear
or not, I cannot, dare not, leave you alone.
(5) Young men need exhorting because of the
sorrow it will save them, to begin serving God now.
Sin is the
mother of all sorrow, and no sort of sin appears to give a man so much misery
and pain as the sins of his youth. The
foolish acts he did--the time he wasted--the mistakes he made--the bad company
he kept--the harm he did himself, both body and soul--the chances of happiness
he threw away--the openings of usefulness he neglected; all these things that
often embitter the conscience of an old man, throw a gloom on the evening of
his days, and fill later hours of his life with self-reproach and shame.
Some men
could tell you of the untimely loss of health, brought on by youthful
sins. Disease racks their limbs with
pain, and life is almost a weariness.
Their muscular strength is so wasted, that the slightest weight seems a
burden. Their eye has become
prematurely dim, and their natural energy abated. The sun of their health has gone down while it is yet day, and
they mourn to see their flesh and body consumed. Believe me, this is a bitter cup to drink.
Others could
give you sad accounts of the consequences of idleness. They threw away the golden opportunity for
learning. They would not get wisdom at
the time when their minds were most able to receive it, and their memory most
ready to retain it. And now it is too
late. They don't have the time to sit
down and learn. They no longer have the
same power, even if they had the time.
Lost time can never be redeemed.
This too is a bitter cup to drink.
Others could
tell you of grievous mistakes in judgment, from which they suffer all their
lives. They had to have it their own
way. They would not take advice. They formed some connection which has been
altogether ruinous to their happiness.
They chose a profession for which they were entirely unsuited. And they see it all now. But their eyes are only open when the
mistake cannot be retrieved. Oh, this
is also a bitter cup to drink!
Young men,
young men, I wish you did but know the comfort of a conscience not burdened
with a long list of youthful sins.
These are the wounds that pierce the deepest. These are the arrows that drink up a man's spirit. This is the iron that enters into the
soul. Be merciful to yourselves. Seek the Lord early, and so you will be
spared many a bitter tear.
This is the truth
that Job seems to have felt. He says,
"You write down bitter things against me and make me inherit the sins of
my youth" (Job 13:26). So also his
friend Zophar, speaking of the wicked, says, "The youthful vigor that
fills his bones will lie with him in the dust" (Job 20:11).
David also
seems to have felt it. He says to the
Lord, "Remember not the sins of my youth and my rebellious ways"
(Psalm 25:7).
Beza, the
great Swiss Reformer, felt it so strongly, that he named it in his will as a
special mercy that he had been called out from the world, by the grace of God,
at the age of sixteen.
Go and ask
believers now, and I think many will tell you much the same. "Oh that I could live my young days
over again!" He will most probably
say, "Oh that I had spent the beginning of my life in a better way! Oh that I had not laid the foundation of
evil habits so strongly in the springtime of my journey!"
Young men, I
want to save you all this sorrow, if I can.
Hell itself is truth known too late.
Be wise in time. What youth
sows, old age must reap. Do not give
the most precious season of your life to that which will not comfort you in the
latter days of your life. Sow to
yourselves rather in righteousness: break up your hard ground, don't sow among
thorns.
Sin may be
easy for you to do with your hands, or run smoothly off your tongue now, but
depend on it, the effects of your sin and you will meet again in time, however
little you may like it. Old wounds will
often ache and give pain long after they are healed, and only a scar remains:
so may you find it with your sins. The
footprints of animals have been found on the surface of rocks that were once
wet sand, thousands of years after the animal that made them has perished and
passed away; so also may it be with your sins.
"Experience,"
says the proverb, "is a hard school to attend, but fools will learn in no
other." I want you all to escape
the misery of learning in that school.
I want you to avoid the wretchedness that youthful sins are sure to
entail. This is the last reason why I
exhort you.
II. Dangers of Young Men
2. There are some special dangers that young
men need to be warned against.
(1) One danger to young men is pride.
I know well
that all souls are in fearful peril.
Old or young, it doesn't matter; all have a race to run, a battle to
fight, a heart to humble, a world to overcome, a body to keep under control, a
devil to resist; and we may very well say, Who is sufficient for these
things? But still every age and
condition has its own peculiar snares and temptations, and it is well to know
them. He that is forewarned is
forearmed. If I can only persuade you
to be on your guard against the dangers I am going to name, I am sure I shall
do your souls an essential service.
Pride is the
oldest sin in the world. Indeed, it was
before the world. Satan and his angels
fell by pride. They were not satisfied
with their first situation and status.
Thus pride stocked hell with its first inhabitants.
Pride threw
Adam out of paradise. He was not
content with the place God assigned him.
He tried to raise himself, and fell.
Thus sin, sorrow, and death entered in by pride.
Pride sits
in all our hearts by nature. We are
born proud. Pride makes us rest content
with ourselves--think we are good enough as we are--keep us from taking
advice--refuse the gospel of Christ--turn every one to his own way. But pride never reigns anywhere so
powerfully as in the heart of a young man.
How common
is it to see young men with big heads, high-minded, and impatient of any
counsel! How often they are rude and
uncourteous to all around them,
thinking
they are not valued and honored as they deserve! How often will they not stop to listen to a hint from an older
person! They think that they know
everything. They are full of conceit of
their own wisdom. They think elderly
people, and especially their relatives, are stupid, and dull, and slow. They want no teaching or instruction
themselves: they understand all things.
It almost makes them angry to be spoken to. Like young horses, they cannot bear the least control. They must be independent and have their own
way. They seem to think, like those
whom Job mentioned, "You are the people, and wisdom will die with
you" (Job 12:2). And all this is
pride.
Rehoboam was
such a person, who despised the counsel of the old experienced men who stood
before his father, and listened to the advice of the young men of his own
generation. He lived to reap the
consequences of his folly. There are
many like him.
The prodigal
son in the parable was also such a person, who needed to have his share of the
inheritance so he could set himself up in the lifestyle that he desired. He could not submit to live quietly under
his father's roof, but would go into a far country, and be his own master. Like the little child that will leave its
mother's hand and walk alone, he soon feels the sting for his folly. He became wiser when he had to eat husks
with the swine. But there are many like
him.
Young men, I
beseech you earnestly, beware of pride.
Two things are said to be very rare sights in the world--one is a young
man that is humble, and the other is an old man that is content. I fear that this is only too true.
Do not be
proud of your own abilities, your own strength, your own knowledge, your own
appearance, your own cleverness. Do not
be proud of yourself, and your endowments of any kind. It all comes from not knowing yourself and
the world. The older you grow, and the
more you see, the less reason you will find for being proud. Ignorance and inexperience are the pedestal
of pride; once the pedestal is removed--pride will soon come down.
Remember how
often Scripture sets before us the excellence of a humble spirit. How strongly we are warned "Do not
think of yourself more highly than you ought" (Romans 12:3). How plainly we are told, "The man who
thinks he knows something does not yet know as he ought to know!" (1
Corinthians 8:2). How strict is the
command, "Clothe yourselves with humility" (Colossians 3:12). And again, "Clothe yourselves with
humility" (1 Peter 5:5). This is
the garment of which many seem not to have so much as a rag.
Think of the
great example our Lord Jesus Christ leaves us in this respect. He washed the feet of His disciples, saying,
"You should do as I have done for you" (John 13:15). It is written, "Though he was rich, yet
for your sakes He became poor" (2 Corinthians 8:9). And again, "He made Himself nothing,
taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness. And being found in appearance as a man, He
humbled himself" (Philippians 2:7, 8).
Surely to be proud is to be more like the devil and fallen Adam, than
like Christ.
Think of the
wisest man that ever lived--I mean Solomon.
See how he speaks of himself as a "little child," as one who
"does not know how to carry out his duties" or manage for himself (1
Kings 3:7). That was a very different
spirit from his brother Absalom's, who thought himself equal to anything:
"If only I were appointed judge in the land! Then everyone who has a complaint or case could come to me and I
would see that he gets justice" (2 Samuel 15:4). That was a very different spirit from his brother Adonijah's, who
"exalted himself, saying, I will be king" (1 Kings 1:5). Humility was the beginning of Solomon's
wisdom. He writes it down as his own
experience, "Do you see a man wise in his own eyes? There is more hope for a fool than for
him" (Proverbs 26:12).
Young men,
take to heart the Scriptures just quoted.
Do not be too confident in your own judgment. Stop being so sure that you are always right, and others
wrong. Don't trust your own opinion,
when you find it contrary to that of older men, and especially to that of your
own parents. Age gives experience, and
therefore deserves respect. It is a
mark of Elihu's wisdom, in the book of Job, that "Elihu had waited before
speaking to Job because they were older than he" (Job 32:4). And afterwards he said, "I am young in
years, and you are old; that is why I was fearful, not daring to tell you what
I know. I thought, 'Age should speak;
advanced years should teach wisdom" (Job 32:6-7). Humility and silence are beautiful graces in
young people. Never be ashamed of being
a learner: Jesus was one at twelve years; when He was found in the temple, He
was "sitting among the teachers, listening to them and asking them
questions" (Luke 2:46). The wisest
men would tell you they are always learners, and are humbled to find after all
how little they know. The great Sir
Isaac Newton used to say that he felt
himself no
better than a little child, who had picked up a few precious stones on the
shore of the sea of knowledge.
Young men,
if you would be wise, if you would be happy, remember the warning I give
you--Beware of pride.
(2) Another danger to young men is the love of
pleasure.
Youth is the
time when our passions are strongest--and like unruly children, cry most loudly
for indulgence. Youth is the time when
we have generally our most health and strength: death seems far away, and to
enjoy ourselves in this life seems to be everything. Youth is the time when most people have few earthly cares or
anxieties to take up their attention.
And all these things help to make young men think of nothing except
pleasure. "I serve lusts and
pleasures:" that is the true answer many a young man should give, if
asked, "Whose Servant are you?"
Young men,
time would not permit me to tell you all the fruits this love of pleasure
produces, and all the ways in which it may do you harm. Why should I speak of carousing, partying,
drinking, gambling, movie-going, dancing, and the like? There are few to be found who don't know something
of these things by bitter experience.
And these are only instances. All
things that give a feeling of excitement for the time--all things that drown
thought, and keep the mind in a constant whirl--all things that please the
senses and delight the flesh--these are the sort of things that have mighty
power at your time of life, and they owe their power to the love of
pleasure. Be on your guard. Do not be like those of whom Paul speaks,
"Lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God" (2 Timothy 3:4).
Remember
what I say: if you would cling to earthly pleasures--these are the things which
murder souls. There is no surer way to
get a seared conscience and a hard heart towards the things of God, than to
give way to the desires of the flesh and mind.
It seems like nothing at first, but it tells in the long run.
Consider
what Peter says: "Abstain from sinful desires, which war against your
soul" (1 Peter 2:11). They destroy
the soul's peace, break down its strength, lead it into captivity, and make it
a slave.
Consider
what Paul says: "Put to death, therefore, whatever belongs to your earthly
nature: sexual immorality, impurity, lust, evil desires and greed"
(Colossians 3:5). "Those who
belong to Christ Jesus have crucified the sinful nature with its passions and desires"
(Galatians 5:24). Once the body was a
perfect home for a soul--now it is all corrupt and disordered, and needs
constant watching. It is a burden to
the soul--not a helper; a hindrance--not an assistance. It may become a useful servant, but it is
always a bad master.
Consider,
again, the words of Paul: "Clothe yourselves with the Lord Jesus Christ,
and do not think about how to gratify the desires of the sinful nature"
(Romans 13:14). "These," says
Leighton, "are the words, the very reading of which gave Augustine a great
conviction of heart, causing an immoral young man to be turned into a faithful
servant of Jesus Christ." Young
men, I wish this might be the case with all of you.
Remember,
again, if you cling to earthly pleasures, they will all be unsatisfying, empty,
and pointless. Like the locusts of the
vision in Revelation, they seem to have crowns on their heads: but like the
same locusts, you will find they have stings--real stings--in their tails. All that glitters is not gold. All that tastes sweet is not good. All that pleases for a while is not real
pleasure.
Go and take
your fill of earthly pleasures if you will--you will never find your heart
satisfied with them. There will always
be a voice within, crying, like the leech in Proverbs 30:15, "Give!
Give!" There is an empty place
there, which nothing but God can fill.
You will find, as Solomon did by experience, that earthly pleasures are
but a meaningless show--promising contentment but bringing a dissatisfaction of
spirit--gold plated caskets, exquisite to look at on the outside, but full of
ashes and corruption within. Be wise in
your youth. Write the word
"poison" on all earthly pleasures.
The most lawful of them must be used in moderation. All of them are soul-destroying if you give
them your heart. Pleasure, must first
have the guarantee that it is not sinful--then it is to be enjoyed in
moderation.
And I will
not shrink from warning all young men to remember the seventh commandment; to
beware of adultery and sexual immorality, of all impurity of every kind. I fear that we don't very often speak on
this part of God's law. But when I see
how prophets and Apostles have dealt with this subject, when I observe the open
way in which the Reformers of our own Church denounced it, when I see the
number of young men who walk in the wicked footsteps of Reuben, and Hophni, and
Phinehas, and Amnon, I for one cannot, with a good conscience, hold my
peace. The world becomes more wicked
because of our failure to teach and preach on this commandment. For my own part, I feel it would be false
and unscriptural delicacy, in addressing men, not to speak of that which is
preeminently the "young man's sin."
The
violation of the seventh commandment is the sin above all others, that, as
Hosea says, "takes away the understanding" (Hosea 4:11). It is the sin that leaves deeper scars upon
the soul than any other sin that a man can commit. It is a sin that destroys thousands of young men in every age,
and has even overthrown a few of the saints of God in the past. Samson and David are fearful proofs. It is the sin that man dares to smile at,
and smooths over using the terms: thrills, love, uncontrollable passions, and
natural desires. But it is the sin that
the devil rejoices over, for he is the "unclean spirit;" and it is
the sin that God abhors, and declares He "will judge" (Hebrews 13:4).
Young men,
"Flee from sexual immorality" (1 Corinthians 6:18) if you love
life. "Let no one deceive you with
empty words, for because of such things God's wrath comes on those who are
disobedient" (Ephesians 5:6). Flee
from the opportunity of it--from the company of those who might draw you into
it--from the places where you might be tempted to do it. Read what our Lord says about it in Matthew
5:28, "I tell you that anyone who looks at a woman lustfully has already
committed adultery with her in his heart." Be like the holy servant Job: "I made a covenant with my
eyes not to look lustfully at a girl" (Job 31:1). Flee from talking about it. It is one of the things that ought not even
be hinted about in conversation. You
cannot even touch black grease without getting your hands dirty. Flee from the thoughts of it; resist them,
destroy them, pray against them--make any sacrifice rather than give way to
them. Imagination is the hotbed where
this sin is too often hatched. Guard
your thoughts, and there will be little fear about your actions.
Consider the
caution I have been giving. If you
forget everything else, do not let this be forgotten.
(3) Another danger to young men is
thoughtlessness.
Not thinking
is one simple reason why thousands of souls are thrown away forever into the
Lake of Fire. Men will not consider,
will not look ahead, will not look around them, will not reflect on the end of
their present course, and the sure consequences of their present ways, and wake
up to find they are damned for a lack of thinking.
Young men,
none are in more danger of this than yourselves. You know little of the perils around you, and so you are careless
how you walk. You hate the trouble of
serious, quiet thinking, and so you make wrong decisions and bring upon
yourselves much sorrow. Young Esau had
to have his brother's stew and sold his birthright: he never thought how much
he would want it in the future. Young
Simeon and Levi had to avenge the rape of their sister Dinah, and kill the
Shechemites: they never considered how much trouble and anxiety they might
bring on their father Jacob and his house.
Job seems to have been especially afraid of this thoughtlessness among
his children: it is written, that when they had a feast, and the "period
of feasting had run its course, Job would send and have them purified. Early in the morning he would sacrifice a
burnt offering for each of them, thinking, 'Perhaps my children have sinned and
cursed God in their hearts.' This was
Job's regular custom" (Job 1:5).
Believe me,
this world is not a world in which we can do well without thinking, and least
of all do well in the matter of our souls.
"Don't think," whispers Satan: he knows that an unconverted
heart is like a dishonest businessman's financial records, they will not bear
close inspection. "Consider your
ways," says the Word of God--stop and think--consider and be wise. The Spanish proverb says it well,
"Hurry comes from the devil."
Just as men marry in a rush and then are miserable with their mate, so
they make mistakes about their souls in a minute, and then suffer for it for
years. Just as a bad servant does
wrong, and then says, "I never gave it a thought," so young men run
into sin, and then say, "I did not think about it--it did not look like
sin." Not look like sin! What would you expect? Sin will not
come to you,
saying, "I am sin;" it would do little harm if it did. Sin always seems "good, and pleasant,
and desirable," at the time of commission. Oh, get wisdom, get discretion!
Remember the words of Solomon: "Make level paths for your feet and
take only ways that are firm" (Proverbs 4:26).
Some, I dare
say, will object that I am asking what is unreasonable; that youth is not the
time of life when people ought to be grave and thoughtful. I answer, there is little danger of their
being too much so in the present day.
Foolish talking and kidding, and joking, and excessive amusement, are
only too common. I don't argue the fact
that there is a time for all things; but to be always flippant and joking is
anything but wise. What does the wisest
of men say--"It is better to go to a house of mourning than to go to a
house of feasting, for death is the destiny of every man; the living should
take this to heart. Sorrow is better
than laughter, because a sad face is good for the heart. The heart of the wise is in the house of
mourning, but the heart of fools is in the house of pleasure" (Ecclesiastes
7:2-4). Matthew Henry tells a story of
a great statesman in Queen Elizabeth's time, who retired from public life in
his latter days, and gave himself up to serious thought. His former merry companions came to visit
him, and told him that he was becoming somber: "No," he replied,
"I am serious; for everyone around me is serious. God is serious in observing us--Christ is
serious in interceding for us--the Spirit is serious in striving with us--the
truths of God are serious--our spiritual enemies are serious in their endeavors
to ruin us--poor lost sinners are serious in hell--and why then should you and
I not be serious too?"
Oh, young
men, learn to be thoughtful! Learn to
consider what you are doing, and where you are going. Make time for calm reflection.
Commune with your
own heart,
and be still. Remember my caution--Do
not be lost merely for the lack of thought.
(4) Another danger to young men is contempt of
Christianity.
This also is
one of your special dangers. I always
observe that none pay so little outward respect to Christianity as young
men. None take so little part in our
services, when they are present at them--use Bibles so little--sing so
little--listen to preaching so little.
None are so generally absent at prayer meetings, Bible Studies, and all
other weekday helps to the soul. Young
men seem to think they do not need these things--they may be good for women and
old men, but not for them. They appear
ashamed of seeming to care about their souls: one would almost fancy they
considered it a disgrace to go to heaven at all. And this is contempt of Christianity--it is the same spirit which
made the young people of Bethel mock Elisha--and of this spirit I say to all
young men, Beware! If it is worthwhile
to be a
Christian,
it is worthwhile to be in earnest about it.
Contempt of
holy things is the straight road to hell.
Once a man begins to make a joke of any part of Christianity, then I am
never surprised to hear that he has turned out to be an unbeliever.
Young men,
have you really made up your minds to this?
Have you clearly looked into the fires which are before you, if you
persist in despising Christianity? Call
to mind the words of David: "The fool says in his heart, 'There is no
God'" (Psalm 14:1). The fool, and
no one but the fool has said it: but he has never proved it! Remember, if there ever was a book which has
been proved true from beginning to end, by every kind of evidence, that book is
the Bible. It has defied the attacks of
all enemies and faultfinders. "The
Word of the LORD is flawless" (Psalm 18:30). It has been tested in every way, and the more it has been tested,
the more evidently has it been shown to be the very handiwork of God
Himself. What will you believe, if you
do not believe the Bible? There is no
choice but to believe something ridiculous and absurd. Depend on it, no man is so grossly naive as
the man who denies the Bible to be the Word of God; and if it be the Word of
God, be careful that you don't despise it.
Men may tell
you that there are difficulties in the Bible; things hard to understand. It would not be God's book if there were
not. And what if there are? You don't despise medicines because you
cannot explain all that your doctor does with them. But whatever men may say, the things needed for salvation are as
clear as daylight. Be very sure of
this--people never reject the Bible because they cannot understand it. They understand it too well; they understand
that it condemns their own behavior; they understand that it witnesses against
their own sins, and summons them to judgment.
They try to believe it is false and useless, because they don't like to
believe it is true. An evil lifestyle
must always raise an objection to this book.
Men question the truth of Christianity because they hate the practice of
it.
Young men,
when did God ever fail to keep His word?
Never. What He has said, He has
always done; and what He has spoken, He has always made good.
Did He fail
to keep His word at the flood? No. Did
He fail with Sodom and Gomorrah? No.
Did He fail with unbelieving Jerusalem? No. Has He failed with the Jews up to this very hour? No. He has never failed to fulfill His
word. Take care, lest you be found
among those who despise God's Word.
Never laugh
at Christianity. Never make a joke of
sacred things. Never mock those who are
serious and earnest about their souls.
The time may come when you will count those happy whom you laughed at--a
time when your laughter will be turned into sorrow, and your mockery into
seriousness.
(5) Another danger to young men is the fear of
man's opinion.
"The
fear of man" will indeed "prove to be a snare" (Proverbs
29:25). It is terrible to observe the
power which it has over most minds, and especially over the minds of the
young. Few seem to have any opinions of
their own, or to think for themselves.
Like dead fish, they go with the stream and tide: what others think is
right, they think is right; and what others call wrong, they call wrong
too. There are not many original
thinkers in the world. Most men are
like sheep, they follow a leader. If it
was the fashion of the day to be Roman Catholics, they would be Roman Catholics,
if it was to be Islamic, they would be Islamic. They dread the idea of going against the current of the
times. In a word, the opinion of the
day becomes their religion, their creed, their Bible, and their God.
The thought,
"What will my friends say or think of me?" nips many a good
inclination in the bud. The fear of
being looked at, laughed at, ridiculed, prevents many a good habit from being
taken up. There are Bibles that would
be read this very day, if the owners dared.
They know they ought to read them, but they are afraid: "What will
people say?" There are knees that
would be bent in prayer this very night, but the fear of man forbids it:
"What would my wife, my brother, my friend, my companion say, if they saw
me praying?" Oh, what wretched
slavery this is, and yet how common!
"I was afraid of the people and so I gave into them," Saul
said to Samuel, "and so he violated the Lord's command" (1 Samuel
15:24). "I am afraid of the
Jews," said Zedekiah, the graceless king of Judah: and so he disobeyed the
advice which Jeremiah gave him (Jeremiah 38:19). Herod was afraid of what his guests would think of him: so he did
that which made him "greatly
distressed,"
he beheaded John the Baptist. Pilate
feared offending the Jews: so he did that which he knew in his conscience was
unjust--he delivered up Jesus to be crucified.
If this is not slavery, what is?
Young men, I
want you all to be free from this bondage.
I want each of you to care nothing about man's opinion, when the path of
duty is clear. Believe me, it is a
great thing to be able to say "No!"
Here was good King Jehoshaphat's weak point--he was too easy and
yielding in his dealings with Ahab, and therefore caused many of his troubles
(1 Kings 22:4). Learn to say
"No!" Don't let the fear of
not seeming good-natured make you unable to do it. When sinners entice you, be able to say decidedly, "I will
not give in to them" (Proverbs 1:10).
Consider how
unreasonable this fear of man is. How
short lived is man's hostility, and how little harm he can do you! "Who are you that you fear mortal men,
the sons of men, who are but grass, that you forget the LORD your Maker, who
stretched out the heavens and laid the foundations of the earth?" (Isaiah
51:12-13). And how thankless is this
fear! No one will really think better
of you for it. The world always
respects those the most, who act boldly for God. Oh, break these bonds, and cast these chains from you! Never be ashamed of letting men see that you
want to go to heaven. Do not think it a
disgrace to show that you are a servant of God. Never be afraid of doing what is right.
Remember the
words of the Lord Jesus: "Do not be afraid of those who kill the body but
cannot kill the soul. Rather, be afraid
of the One who can destroy both soul and body in hell" (Matthew 10:28). Try only to please God, and He will soon
make others pleased with you.
"When a man's ways are pleasing to the LORD, he makes even his
enemies live at peace with him" (Proverbs 16:7).
Young men,
be of good courage. Don't worry what
the world says or thinks: you will not always be with the world. Can man save your soul? No. Will man be your judge in the great and
dreadful day of judgment? No. Can man
give you a good conscience in this life, a good hope in death, a good answer in
the morning of resurrection? No! no! no!
Man can do nothing of the sort.
Then "Do not fear the reproach of men or be terrified by their
insults. For the moth will eat them up
like a garment; the worm will devour them like wool" (Isaiah 51:7-8). Call to mind the saying of Gardiner: "I
fear God, and therefore I have no one else to fear." Go and be like him.
Such are the
warnings I give you. Take them to
heart. They are worth thinking
about. I am greatly mistaken if they
are not greatly needed. The Lord grant
that they have not been given to you in vain.
III.
General Counsels to Young Men
3. In the third place, I wish to give some
general counsels to young men.
(1) Try to get a clear view of the evil of
sin.
Young men,
if you did know what sin is, and what sin has done, you would not think it so
strange that I exhort you as I do. You
do not see it in its true colors. Your
eyes are naturally blind to its guilt and danger, and therefore you cannot
understand what makes me so worried about you.
Oh, don't let the devil succeed in persuading you that sin is a small
matter!
Think for a
moment what the Bible says about sin; how it dwells naturally in the heart of
every man and woman alive (Ecclesiastes 7:20; Romans 3:23), how it defiles our
thoughts, words, and actions, and that continually (Genesis 6:5; Matthew
15:19), how it renders us all guilty and abominable in the sight of a holy God
(Isaiah 64:6; Habakkuk 1:13), how it leaves us utterly without hope of
salvation, if we look to ourselves (Psalm 143:2; Romans 3:20), how its fruit in
this world is shame, and its wages in the world to come--death (Romans 6:21,
23). Think calmly about all this. I tell you this day, it is just as sad to be
dying of cancer and not knowing it, as it is to be a living man, and not know
it.
Think what
an awful change sin has worked on all our natures. Man is no longer what he was when God formed him out of the dust
of the ground. He came out of God's
hand upright and sinless (Ecclesiastes 7:29).
In the day of his creation he was, like everything else, "very
good" (Genesis 1:31). And what is
man now? A fallen creature, a ruin, a
being that shows the marks of corruption all over, his heart like
Nebuchadnezzar, degraded and earthly, looking down and not up, his affections
like a household in disorder, calling no man master, all extravagance and
confusion, his understanding like a lamp flickering in the socket, impotent to
guide him, not knowing good from evil, his will like a rudderless ship, tossed
to and fro by every desire, and constant only in choosing any way rather than
God's.
What a wreck
man is, compared to what he might have been!
We may understand such figures being used as blindness, deafness,
disease, sleep, death, when
the Spirit has
to give us a picture of man as he is.
And man as he is, remember, was made so by sin.
Think, too,
what it has cost to make atonement for sin, and to provide a pardon and
forgiveness for sinners. God's own Son
must come into the world, and take upon Him our nature, in order to pay the
price of our redemption, and deliver us from the curse of a broken law. He who was in the beginning with the Father,
and by whom all things were made, must suffer for sin the just for the
unjust--must die the death of a criminal, before the way to heaven can be laid
open to any soul. See the Lord Jesus
Christ despised and rejected of men, scourged, mocked, and insulted--look at
Him bleeding on the cross of Calvary--hear Him crying in agony, "My God,
my God, why have you forsaken me?"
Note how the sun was darkened, and the rocks shook at the sight; and
then consider, young men, what must be the evil and guilt of sin.
Think, also,
what sin has already done on the earth.
Think how it threw Adam and Eve out of Eden, brought the flood upon the
old world, caused fire to come down on Sodom and Gomorrah, drowned Pharaoh and
his army in the Red Sea, destroyed the seven wicked nations of Canaan,
scattered the twelve tribes of
Israel over
the face of the earth. Sin alone did
all this.
Think,
moreover, of all the misery and sorrow that sin has caused, and is causing, to
this very day. Pain, disease, death,
strifes, quarrels, divisions, envy, jealousy, malice, deceit, fraud, and
cheating, violence, oppression, robbery, selfishness, unkindness, and
ingratitude; all these are the fruits of sin.
Sin is the parent of them all.
It is sin that has so marred and spoiled the face of God's creation.
Young men,
consider these things, and you will not wonder that we preach as we do. Surely, if you did think of them, you would
break with sin forever. Will you play
with poison? Will you sport with hell? Will you take fire in your hand?
Will you harbor your deadliest enemy in your arms? Will you go on living as if it mattered nothing,
whether your sins were forgiven or not, whether sin had dominion over you, or
you over sin? Oh, awake to a sense of
sin's sinfulness and danger! Remember
the words of Solomon: "Fools mock at making amends for sin, but goodwill
is found among the upright" (Proverbs 14:9).
Hear, then,
the request that I make of you this day, pray that God would teach you the real
evil of sin. If you would have your
soul saved then get up and pray.
(2) Seek to become acquainted with our Lord
Jesus Christ.
This is,
indeed, the principal thing in Christianity.
This is the cornerstone of Christianity. Till you know this, my warnings and advice will be useless, and
your endeavors, whatever they may be, will be in vain. A watch that does not keep time is as
useless as religion without Christ.
But don't
let me be misunderstood. It is not the
mere knowing of Christ's name that I mean, it is the knowing of His mercy,
grace, and power, the knowing of Him not by the hearing of the ear, but by the
experience of your hearts. I want you
to know Him by faith, I want you, as Paul says, to know "the power of his
resurrection; becoming like Him in His death" (Philippians 3:10). I want you to be able to say of Him, He is
my peace and my strength, my life and my consolation, my Physician and my
Shepherd, my Savior and my God.
Why do I
make such a point of this? I do it
because in Christ alone "all His [God's] fullness dwells" (Colossians
1:19), because in Him alone there is a full supply of all that we require for
the needs of our souls. Of ourselves we
are all poor, empty creatures, empty of righteousness and peace, empty of
strength and comfort, empty of courage and patience, empty of power to stand,
or go on, or make progress in this evil world.
It is in Christ alone that all these things are to be found--grace,
peace, wisdom, righteousness, sanctification, and redemption. It is just in proportion as we live upon
Him, that we are strong Christians. It
is only when self is nothing and Christ is all our confidence, it is only then
that we shall do great exploits. Only
then are we armed for the battle of life, and shall overcome. Only then are we prepared for the journey of
life, and shall move forward. To live
on Christ, to draw all from Christ, to do all in the strength of Christ, to be
ever looking to Christ; this is the true secret of spiritual prosperity. "I can do everything," says Paul,
"through Him who gives me strength" (Philippians 4:13).
Young men, I
set before you Jesus Christ this day, as the treasury of your souls; and I
invite you to begin by going to Him.
Let this be your first step--go to Christ. Do you want to consult friends?
He is the best friend: "a friend who sticks closer than a
brother" (Proverbs 18:24). Do you
feel unworthy because of your sins? Do
not fear: His blood cleanses from all sin.
He says, "Though your sins are like scarlet, they shall be as white
as snow; though they are red as crimson, they shall be like wool" (Isaiah
1:18). Do you feel weak, and unable to
follow Him? Do not fear: He will give
you the power to become sons of God. He
will give you the Holy Spirit to live in you, and seal you for His own; He will
give you a new heart, and He will put a new spirit within you. Are you troubled or beset with a strange
bent to evil? Do not fear: there is no
evil spirit that Jesus cannot cast out, there is no disease of soul that He
cannot heal. Do you feel doubts and
fears? Throw them aside: "Come to
Me," He says; "whoever comes to me I will never drive away." He knows very well the heart of a young
man. He knows your trials and your
temptations, your difficulties and your foes.
In the days of His flesh He was like yours--a young man at
Nazareth. He knows by experience a
young man's mind. He can understand the
feeling of your temptations--because He Himself suffered when He was
tempted. Surely you will be without
excuse if you turn away from such a Savior and Friend as this.
Hear the
request I make of you this day--if you love life, seek to become acquainted
with Jesus Christ.
(3) Never forget that nothing is so important as
your soul.
Your soul is
eternal. It will live forever. The world and all that it contains will pass
away--firm, solid, beautiful, well-ordered as it is, the world will come to an
end. "The heavens will disappear
with a roar; the elements will be destroyed by fire, and the earth and
everything in it will be laid bare" (2 Peter 3:10). The works of statesmen, writers, painters,
architects, are all short lived: your soul will outlive them all. The angel's voice shall proclaim one day,
that "There will be no more delay!" (Revelation 10:6).
Try, I beg
you, to realize the fact, that your soul is the one thing worth living
for. It is the part of you which ought always
be considered first. No place, no
employment is good for you, which injures your soul. No friend, no companion deserves your confidence, who makes light
of your soul's concerns. The man who
hurts you, your property, your character, only does you temporary harm. Your true enemy is the one who plots to
damage your soul.
Think for a
moment why you were born into the world.
Not merely to eat and drink, and indulge the desires of the flesh, not
merely to dress up your body, and follow its lusts wherever they may lead you,
not merely to work, and sleep, and laugh, and talk, and enjoy yourselves, and
think of nothing but time. No! you were
meant for something higher and better than this. You were placed here to train for eternity. Your body was only intended to be a house
for your immortal spirit. It is flying
in the face of God's purposes to do as many do--to make the soul a servant to
the body, and not the body a servant to the soul.
Young men,
God does not show favoritism or respects the honors bestowed by men. He rewards no man's heritage, or wealth, or
rank, or position. He does not see with
man's eyes. The poorest saint that ever
died in a ghetto is nobler in His sight than the richest sinner that ever died
in a palace. God does not look at
riches, titles, education, beauty, or anything of the kind. There is only one thing that God does look
at, and that is the immortal soul. He
measures all men by one standard, one measure, one test, one criterion, and
that is the state of their souls.
Do not
forget this. Keep it in view, morning,
noon, and night, the interests of your soul.
Rise up each day desiring that your soul may excel, lie down each
evening, inquiring of yourself whether you soul has really grown. Remember Zeuxis, the great painter of
old. When men asked him why he labored
so intensely, and took such extreme pains with every picture, his simple answer
was, "I paint for eternity."
Do not be ashamed to be like him.
Set your immortal soul before your mind's eye, and when men ask you why
you live as you do, answer them in his spirit, "I live for my
soul." Believe me, the day is fast
coming when the soul will be the one thing men will think of, and the only
question of importance will be this, "Is my soul lost or saved?"
(4) Remember it is possible to be a young man
and yet to serve God.
I fear the
snares that Satan lays for you on this point.
I fear that he will succeed in filling your minds with the vain notion,
that to be a true Christian as a youth is impossible. I have seen many carried away by this delusion. I have heard it said, "You are
requiring an impossibility in expecting so much Christianity from young people. Youth is no time for seriousness. Our desires are strong, and it was never intended
that we should keep them under such strong Christian control, as you wish us to
do. God meant for us to enjoy
ourselves. There will be plenty of time
for religion in the future." And
this kind of talk is only too much encouraged
by the
world. The world is only too ready to
wink at youthful sins. The world
appears to think it a matter of course that young men must "sow their wild
oats." The world seems to take it
for granted that young people must be irreligious, and that it is not possible
for them to follow Christ.
Young men, I
will ask you this simple question--Where will you find anything of this in the
Word of God? Where is the chapter or
verse in the Bible which will support this talking and reasoning of the world? Doesn't the Bible speak to old and young
alike, without distinction? Is not
sin--sin, whether committed at the age of twenty or fifty? Will it form the slightest excuse, in the
day of judgment, to say, "I know I sinned, but I was young
then?" Show your common sense, I
beg of you, by giving up such vain excuses.
You are responsible and accountable to God from the very moment that you
know right and wrong.
I know very
well that there are many difficulties in a man's way. But there are always difficulties in the way of doing right. The path to heaven is always narrow, whether
we be young or old.
There are
difficulties, but God will give you the grace to overcome them. God is no hard master. He will not, like Pharaoh, require you to
make bricks without straw. He will make
sure that the path He requires us to walk is never an impossible road. He never gave commands to man which He would
not give man the power to perform.
There are
difficulties, but many a young man has overcome them in the past, and so can
you. Moses was a young man with
passions like yourself; but see what is said of him in Scripture: "By
faith Moses, when he had grown up, refused to be known as the son of Pharaoh's
daughter. He chose to be mistreated
along with the people of God rather than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a
short time. He regarded disgrace for
the sake of Christ as of greater value than the treasures of Egypt, because he
was looking ahead to his reward" (Hebrews 11:24-26). Daniel was a young man when he began to serve
God in Babylon. He was surrounded by
temptations of every kind. He had few
people with him, and many against him.
Yet Daniel's life was so blameless and consistent, that even his enemies
could not find any fault in him, except "it has something to do with the
law of his God" (Daniel 6:5). And
these are not solitary cases. There is
a cloud of witnesses whom I could name.
Time would not allow me, if I were to tell you of young Isaac, young
Joseph, young Joshua, young Samuel, young David, young Solomon, young Abijah,
young Obadiah, young Josiah, young Timothy.
These were not angels, but men, with natural hearts like your own. They too had obstacles to contend with,
lusts to
mortify, trials to endure, hard places to travel, like any of you. But young as they were, they all found it
possible to serve God. Will they not
all rise in judgment and condemn you, if you persist in saying it cannot be
done?
Young men,
try to serve God. Resist the devil when
he whispers it is impossible. Try, and
the Lord God of the promises will give you strength in the trying. He loves to meet those who struggle to come
to Him, and He will meet you and give you the power that you feel you
need. Be like the man whom Bunyan's
Pilgrim saw in the Interpreter's house, go forward boldly, saying "Write
down my name." Those words of our
Lord are true, though I often hear them repeated by heartless and unfeeling
tongues: "Seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to
you" (Matthew 7:7).
Difficulties
which seemed like mountains shall melt away like snow in spring. Obstacles which seemed like giants in the
distance, will dwindle into nothing when you actually face them. The lion that blocks the way that you are
traveling and causes you great fear, will prove to be chained and unable to
harm you. If men believed the promises
more, they would never be afraid of their assigned duties. But remember that little word I press upon
you, and when Satan says, "You cannot be a Christian while you are
young:" answer him, "Get behind me, Satan: by God's help I will
try."
(5) Determine as long as you live to make the
Bible your guide and adviser.
The Bible is
God's merciful provision for sinful man's soul, the map by which he must steer
his course, if he would attain eternal life.
All that we need to know, in order to make us peaceful, holy, or happy,
is richly contained there. If a young
man wants to know how to begin his life well, let him hear what David says:
"How can a young man keep his way pure? By living according to your
word" (Psalm 119:9).
Young men, I
charge you to make a habit of reading the Bible, and not to let the habit be
broken. Do not Let the laughter of
friends, do not let the bad customs of the family you live in, don't let any of
these things prevent your doing it.
Determine that you will not only have a Bible, but also make time to
read it too. Allow no man to persuade
you that it is only a book for Sunday school children and old women. It is the book from which King David got
wisdom and understanding. It is the
book which young Timothy knew from his childhood. Never be ashamed of reading it.
Do not "scorn instruction" (Proverbs 13:13).
Read it with
the prayer that the Holy Spirit's grace will help you understand it. It has been said, "A man may just as
soon read the Scripture without eyes, as understand the spirit of it without
grace."
Read it
reverently, as the Word of God, not of man, believing implicitly that what it
approves is right, and what it condemns is wrong. Be very sure that every doctrine which will not stand the test of
Scripture is false. This will keep you
from being tossed to and fro, and carried about by the dangerous opinions of
these latter days. Be very sure that
every practice in your life which is contrary to Scripture, is sinful and must
be given up. This will settle many a
question of conscience, and cut the knot of many a doubt. Remember how differently two kings of Judah
read the Word of God: Jehoiakim read it, and at once tore the page to pieces,
and burned it in the fire (Jeremiah 36:23).
And why? Because his heart rebelled against it, and he was resolved not
to obey. Josiah read it, and at once
tore his clothes, and cried mightily to the Lord (2 Chronicles 34:19). And why? Because his heart was tender and
obedient. He was ready to do anything
which Scripture
showed him
was his duty. Oh that you may follow
the last of these two, and not the first!
And read it
regularly. This is the only way to
become "mighty in the Scriptures."
A quick glance at the Bible now and then does little good. At that rate you will never become familiar
with its treasures, or feel the sword of the Spirit fitted to your hand in the
hour of conflict. But store up your
mind with Scripture, by diligent reading, and you will soon discover its value
and power. Texts will rise up in your
hearts in the moment of temptation.
Commands will suggest themselves in times of doubt. Promises will come across your thoughts in
the time of discouragement. And thus
you will experience the truth of David's words, "I have hidden your word
in my heart that I might not sin against you" (Psalm 119:11); and of
Solomon's words, "When you walk, they will guide you; when you sleep, they
will watch
over you;
when you awake, they will speak to you" (Proverbs 6:22).
I dwell on
these things more because this is an age of reading. There seems no end to the producing of many books, though few of
them are really profitable. There seems
a rage for cheap printing and publishing.
Newspapers of every sort abound, and the tone of some, which have the
widest circulation, speaks badly for the taste of the age. Amidst the flood of dangerous reading, I plead
for my Master's book, I call upon you not to forget the book of the soul. Do not let newspapers, novels, and romances
be read, while the prophets and Apostles be despised. Do not let the exciting and sensual swallow up your attention,
while the edifying and the sanctifying can find no place in your mind.
Young men,
give the Bible the honor due to it every day you live. Whatever you read, read that first. And beware of bad books: there are plenty in
this day. Take heed what you read. I suspect there is more harm done to souls
in this way than most people have an idea is possible. Value all books in proportion as they are
agreeable to Scripture. Those that are
nearest to it are the best, and those that are farthest from it, and most
contrary to it, the worst.
(6) Never make an intimate friend of anyone who
is not a friend of God.
Understand
me, I do not speak of acquaintances. I
do not mean that you ought to have nothing to do with anyone but true
Christians. To take such a line is
neither possible nor desirable in this world.
Christianity requires no man to be discourteous.
But I do
advise you to be very careful in your choice of friends. Do not open all your heart to a man merely
because he is clever, agreeable, good-natured, and kind. These things are all very well in their way,
but they are not everything. Never be
satisfied with the friendship of any one who will not be useful to your soul.
Believe me,
the importance of this advice cannot be overrated. There is no telling the harm that is done by associating with
godless companions and friends. The
devil has few better helps in ruining a man's soul. Grant him this help, and he cares little for all the armor with
which you may be armed against him.
Good education, early habits of morality, sermons, books, all, he knows
well, will avail you little, if you will only cling to ungodly friends. You may resist many open temptations, refuse
many plain snares; but once you take up a bad companion, and he is
content. That awful chapter which
describes Amnon's wicked conduct about Tamar, almost begins with these words,
"Now Amnon had a friend, a very shrewd man" (2 Samuel 13:3).
You must
remember, we are all creatures of imitation: precept may teach us, but it is
example that draws us. There is that in
us all, that we are always disposed to catch the ways of those with whom we
live; and the more we like them, the stronger does the disposition grow. Without our being aware of it, they
influence our tastes and opinions; we gradually give up what they dislike, and
take up what they like, in order to become closer friends with them. And, worst of all, we catch their ways in
things that are wrong far quicker than in things that are right. Health, unhappily, is not contagious, but
disease is. It is far more easy to
catch a chill than to impart a warmth; and to make each other's religion
dwindle away, than grow and prosper.
Young men, I
ask you to take these things to heart.
Before you let any one become your constant companion, before you get
into the habit of telling him everything, and going to him with all your
troubles and all your pleasures--before you do this, just think of what I have
been saying; ask yourself, "Will this be a useful friendship to me or
not?"
"Bad
company" does indeed "corrupt good character" (1 Corinthians
15:33). I wish that text were written
in the hearts of all young men. Good
friends are among our greatest blessings; they may keep us away from much evil,
remind us of our course, speak an appropriate word at the right time, draw us
upward, and draw us on. But a bad
friend is a burden, a weight continually dragging, us down, and chaining us to
earth. Keep company with an unsaved
man, and it is more than probable you will in the end become like him. That is the general consequence of all such
friendships. The good go down to the
bad, and the bad do not come up to the good.
The world's proverb is only too correct: "Clothes and company tell
true tales about character."
"Show me who a man lives with and I will show you what he is."
I dwell upon
this point, because it has more to do with your prospects in life than first
appears. If you ever marry, it is more
than probable you will choose a wife from among your circle of friends or their
acquaintances. If Jehoshaphat's son
Jehoram had not formed a friendship with Ahab's family, he would most likely
not have married Ahab's daughter. And
who can estimate the importance of a right choice in marriage? It is a step which, according, to the old
saying, "either makes a man or ruins him." Your happiness in both lives may depend on it. Your wife must either help your soul or harm
it. She will either fan the flame of
Christianity in your heart, or throw cold water upon it, and make it burn low. She will either be, wings or handcuffs, an
encouragement or an hindrance to your Christianity, according to her
character. He that finds a good wife
does indeed "finds a good thing;" so if you have the desire to find
one, be very careful how you choose your friends.
Do you ask
me what kind of friends you should choose?
Choose friends who will benefit your soul, friends whom you can really
respect, friends whom you would like to have near you on your deathbed, friends
who love the Bible, and are not afraid to speak to you about it, friends that
you would not be ashamed of having at the coming of Christ, and the day of
judgment. Follow the example that David
sets for you: he says, "I am a friend to all who fear you, to all who
follow your precepts" (Psalm 119:63).
Remember the words of Solomon: "He who walks with the wise grows
wise, but a companion of fools suffers harm" (Proverbs 13:20). But depend on it, bad company in this
life, is the sure way to procure worse
company in the life to come.
IV.
Special Rules for Young Men
4. In the last place, I will set down some
particular rules of conduct which I strongly advise all young men to follow.
(1) For one thing, resolve at once, by God's
help, to break off every known sin, however small.
Look within,
each one of you. Examine your own
hearts. Do you see there any habit or
custom which you know is wrong in the sight of God? If you do, don't delay for a moment in attacking it. Resolve at once to lay it aside. Nothing,
darkens the eyes of the mind so much, and deadens the conscience so surely, as
an allowed sin. It may be a little one,
but it is not any less dangerous. A
small leak will sink a great ship, and a small spark will kindle a great fire,
and a little allowed sin in like manner will ruin an immortal soul. Take my advice, and never spare a little
sin. Israel was commanded to kill every
Canaanite, both great and small. Act on
the same principle, and show no mercy to little sins. Well says the book of the Song of Songs, "Catch for us the
foxes, the little foxes that ruin the vineyards"
(Song of
Songs 2:15).
You can be
sure that no wicked man ever meant to be so wicked at his first
beginnings. But he began with allowing
himself some little sins, and that led on to something greater, and that in
time produced something greater still, and thus he became the miserable being
that he now is. When Hazael heard from
Elisha of the horrible acts that he would one day do, he said with
astonishment, "How could your servant, a mere dog, accomplish such a
feat?" (2 Kings 8:13). But he
allowed sin to take root in his heart, and in the end he did them all.
Young men,
resist sin in its beginnings. They may
look small and insignificant, but mind what I say, resist them, make no
compromise, let no sin lodge quietly and undisturbed in your heart. There is nothing finer than the point of a
needle, but when it has made a hole, it draws all the thread after it. Remember the Apostle's words, "A little
yeast works through the whole batch of dough" (1 Corinthians 5:6).
Many a young
man could tell you with sorrow and shame, that he traces the ruin of all his
worldly prospects to the point I speak of--to giving way to sin in its
beginnings. He began habits of
deception and dishonesty in little things, and they grew on him. Step by step, he has gone on from bad to
worse, till he has done things that at one time he would have thought
impossible till at last he has lost his standing, lost his character, lost his
peace, and almost lost his soul. He
allowed a gap in the wall of his conscience, because it seemed a little one,
and once allowed, that gap grew larger every day, till in time the whole wall
seemed to come down.
Remember
this especially in matters of truth and honesty. Be careful in even the least syllable spoken. "Whoever can be trusted with very
little can also be trusted with much" (Luke 16:10). Whatever the world may like to think, there
are no little sins. All great buildings
are made up of little parts--the first stone is as important as any other. All habits are formed by a succession of
little acts, and the first little act is of mighty consequence. The axe in the fable only begged the trees
to let him have one little piece of wood to make a handle, and he would never trouble
them any more. He got it, and then he
soon cut them all down. The devil only
wants
to get the
wedge of a little allowed sin into your heart, and you will soon be all his
own. It is a wise saying, "There
is nothing small between us and God, for God is an infinite God."
There are two
ways of coming down from the top of a ladder; one is to jump down, and the
other is to come down by the steps: but both will lead you to the bottom. So also there are two ways of going to hell;
one is to walk into it with your eyes open--few people do that; the other is to
go down by the steps of little sins--and that way, I fear, is only too
common. Put up with a few little sins,
and you will soon want a few more. Even
a heathen could say, "Who was ever content with only one sin?" If you put up with little sins then your
path in life will be worse and worse every year. Jeremy Taylor very clearly described the progress of sin in a
man:
First it startles him, then it becomes pleasing, then easy, then
delightful, then frequent, then habitual, then a way of life! Then the man
feels no guilt, then obstinate, then resolves never to repent, and
then he is damned.
Young men,
if you don't want to come to this, remember the rule I give you this
day--resolve at once to break off every known sin.
(2) Resolve, by God's help, to shun everything
which may prove an occasion of sin.
It is an
excellent saying, "He that would be safe from the acts of evil, must
widely avoid the occasions." There
is an old fable, that the butterfly once asked the owl how she should deal with
the fire, which had singed her wings; and the owl counseled her, in reply, not
to even look at its smoke. It is not
enough that we determine not to commit sin, we must carefully keep at a
distance from all approaches to it. By
this test we ought to examine the ways we spend our time--the books that we
read, the friends that we visit, the part of society which we interact
with. We must not be content with
saying, "There is nothing wrong here;" we must go further, and say,
"Is there anything here which may cause me to sin?"
This is one
great reason why idleness is to be avoided.
It is not that doing nothing is of itself so wicked; it is the
opportunity it affords to evil and empty thoughts; it is the wide door it opens
for Satan to throw in the seeds of bad things; it is this which is mainly to be
feared. If David had not given
opportunity to the devil, by walking on his house-top in Jerusalem with nothing
to do, he probably never would have seen Bathsheba bathing, nor murdered her
husband Uriah.
This, too,
is one good reason why worldly entertainments are so objectionable. It may be difficult, in some instances, to
show that they are, in themselves, positively unscriptural and wrong. But there is little difficulty in showing
that the tendency of almost all of them is most injurious to the soul. They sow the seeds of an earthly and sensual
frame of mind. They war against the
life of faith. They promote an
unhealthy and unnatural craving after excitement. They minister to the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eye,
and the pride of life. They dim the
view of heaven and eternity, and give a false color to the things of time. They take away time for private prayer, and
Scripture reading, and calm communion with God. The man who mingles in them is like one who gives Satan an
advantage. He has a battle to fight,
and he gives his enemy the help of sun, and wind, and hill. It would indeed be strange if he did not
find himself continually overcome.
Young men,
endeavor, as much as you can, to keep clear of everything which may prove
injurious to your soul. People may say
you are too conscientious, too particular, and ask where is the great harm of
such and such things? But don't listen
to them. It is dangerous to play tricks
with sharp tools: it is far more dangerous to take liberties with your immortal
soul. He that would be safe must not
come near the brink of danger. He must
look on his heart as a barrel of gunpowder, and be cautious not to handle one
spark of temptation more than he can help.
What is the
use of your praying, "Lord keep me from temptation," unless you are
careful not to run into it and "keep me from evil," unless you show a
desire to keep out of its way? Take an
example from Joseph--Not merely did he refuse solicitation to sin from his
master's wife, but he showed his prudence in refusing to even be "with
her" (Genesis 39:10). Take to
heart the advice of Solomon, not only to "Not set foot on the path of the
wicked," but to "Avoid it, do not travel on it; turn from it and go
your way" (Proverbs 4:15); "Do not gaze at wine when it is red, when
it sparkles in the cup, when it goes down smoothly!" (Proverbs
23:31). The man who took the vow of a
Nazarite in Israel, not only took no wine, but be even abstained from grapes in
any shape whatever. "Hate what is
evil," says Paul to the Romans (Romans 12:9); not merely not to do it;
"Flee the evil desires of youth," he writes to Timothy; get away from
them as far as possible (2 Timothy 2:22).
Oh, how needful are such cautions!
Dinah just had go out among the wicked Shechemites, to see their ways,
and she lost her virginity. Lot just
had pitched his tent near sinful Sodom, and he lost everything but his
life.
Young men,
be wise with your time. Do not always
be trying to see how near you can allow the enemy of souls to come, and yet
escape him. Hold him at arm's
length. Try to keep clear of temptation
as far as possible, and this will be one great help to keep clear of sin.
(3) Resolve never to forget the eye of God.
The eye of
God! Think of that. Everywhere, in every house, in every field,
in every room, in every company, alone or in a crowd, the eye of God is always
on you. "The eyes of the Lord are
everywhere, keeping watch on the wicked and the good" (Proverbs 15:3), and
they are eyes that read hearts as well as actions.
Endeavor, I
beg you, to realize this fact. Remember
that you have to deal with an all-seeing God, a God who never sleeps, a God who
understands your thoughts, and with whom the night shines as the day. You may leave your father's house, and go
away, like the prodigal, into a far country, and think that there is nobody to
watch your conduct; but the eye and ear of God are there before you. You may deceive your parents or employers,
you may tell them lies, and act one way before their faces, and another behind
their backs, but you cannot deceive God.
He knows you through and through.
He heard what you said as you came here today. He knows what you are thinking of at this minute. He has set your most secret sins in the
light of His countenance, and they will one day come out before the world to
your shame, except you take heed.
How little
is this really felt! How many things
are done continually, which men would never do if they thought they were
seen! How many matters are transacted
in the rooms of imagination, which would never bear the light of day! Yes; men entertain thoughts in private, and
say words in private, and do acts in private, which they would be ashamed and
blush to have exposed before the world.
The sound of a footstep coming has stopped many a deed of
wickedness. A knock at the door has
caused many an evil work to be hastily suspended, and hurriedly laid
aside. But oh, what miserable folly is
all this! There is an all-seeing
Witness with us wherever we go. Lock
the door, pull down the blind, turn out the light; it doesn't matter, it makes
no difference; God is everywhere, you cannot shut Him out, or prevent His
seeing. "Nothing in all creation
is hidden from God's sight. Everything
is uncovered and laid bare before the eyes of him to whom we must give
account" (Hebrews 4:13). Young
Joseph understood this well when his employer's wife tempted him. There was no one in the house to see them,
no human eye to
witness
against him; but Joseph was one who lived as seeing Him that is invisible:
"How could I do such a wicked thing and sin against God?"
(Genesis
39:9)
Young men, I
ask all of you to read Psalm 139. I
advise all of you to learn it by heart.
Make it the test of all your dealings in this world's business: say to
yourself often, "Do I remember that God sees me?"
Psalm 139
“O LORD, you
have searched me and you know me. You
know when I sit and when I rise; you perceive my thoughts from afar. You discern my going out and my lying down;
you are familiar with all my ways.
Before a word is on my tongue you know it completely, O LORD. You hem me in--behind and before; you have
laid your hand upon me. Such knowledge is
too wonderful for me, too lofty for me to attain.”
“Where can I
go from your Spirit? Where can I flee from your presence? If I go up to the heavens, you are there; if
I make my bed in the depths, you are there. If I rise on the wings of the dawn, if I settle on the far
side of the sea, even there your hand will guide me, your right hand will hold
me fast. If I say, ‘Surely the darkness
will hide me and the light become night around me,’ even the darkness will not
be dark to you; the night will shine like the day, for darkness is as light to
you.”
“For you
created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother's womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and
wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well. My frame was not hidden from you when I was
made in the secret place. When I was
woven together in the depths of the earth, your eyes saw my unformed body. All the days ordained for me were written in your book before one
of them came to be.”
“How precious
to me are your thoughts, O God! How vast is the sum of them! Were I to count them, they would outnumber
the grains of sand. When I awake, I am still with you.”
“If only you
would slay the wicked, O God! Away from me, you bloodthirsty men! They speak of you with evil intent; your
adversaries misuse your name. Do I not
hate those who hate you, O LORD, and abhor those who rise up against you? I have nothing but hatred for them; I count
them my enemies. Search me, O God, and
know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts. See if there is any offensive way in me, and lead me in the way
everlasting.”
“Live as in
the sight of God. This is what Abraham
did, he walked before Him. This is what
Enoch did, he walked with Him. This is
what heaven itself will be, the eternal presence of God. Do nothing that you would not like God to
see. Say nothing, you would not like
God to hear. Write nothing, you would
not like God to read. Go no place where
you would not like God to find you.
Read no book of which you would not like God to say, ‘Show it to
Me.’ Never spend your time in such a
way that you would not like to have God say, ‘What are you doing?’”
(4) Be diligent in the practice of your
Christianity.
Be regular
in going to church, whenever it is open for prayer and preaching, and it is in
your power to attend. Be regular in
keeping, the Lord's day holy, and determine that God's day out of the seven
shall always be given to its rightful owner.
I would not
want to leave any false impression on your minds. Do not go away and say I told you that going to church made up
the whole of Christianity. I will tell
you no such thing. I have no wish to
see you grow up formalists and Pharisees.
If you think the mere carrying of your body to a certain building, at
certain times, on a certain day in the week, will make you a Christian, and
prepare you to meet God, I tell you flatly you are miserably deceived. All services without heart-service are
unprofitable and vain. They only are true
worshipers who "Worship the Father in spirit and in truth, for they are
the kind of worshipers the Father seeks" (John 4:23).
But the
practices of Christianity are not to be despised because they are not
saviors. Gold is not food, you cannot
eat it, but you would not say it is useless, and throw it away. Your soul's eternal well-being most
certainly does not depend on the practices of Christianity, but it is certain
that without them, as a general rule, your soul will not do well. God might take all who are saved to heaven
in a chariot of fire, as He did Elijah, but He does not do so. He might teach them all by visions, and
dreams, and miraculous interventions, without requiring them to read or think
for themselves, but He does not do so.
And why not? Because He is a God
that works by means, and it is His law and will that in all man's dealings with
Him means shall be used. No one but a
fool would think of building a house
without
ladders and scaffolding, and just so no wise man will despise means.
I dwell on
this point, because Satan will try hard to fill your minds with arguments
against the practices of Christianity.
He will draw your attention to the numbers of persons who use them and
are no better for the using. "See
there," he will whisper, "do you not observe that those who go to
church are no better than those who stay away?" But do not let this move you.
It is never fair to argue against a thing because it is improperly
used. It does not follow that the
practices of Christianity can do no good because many do them and get no good
from them. Medicine is not to be
despised because many take it and do not recover their health. No man would think of giving up eating, and
drinking because others choose to eat and drink improperly, and so make
themselves sick. The value of the
practices of Christianity, like other things, depends, in a great measure, on
the manner and spirit in which we use them.
I dwell on
this point too, because of the strong anxiety I feel that every young man
should regularly hear the preaching of Christ's gospel. I cannot tell you how important I think this
is. By God's blessing, the ministry of
the gospel might be the means of converting, your soul, of leading you to a
saving knowledge of Christ, of making you a child of God in action and in
truth. This would indeed be cause for
eternal thankfulness. This would be an
event over which angels would rejoice.
But even if this were not the case, there is a restraining power and
influence in the ministry of the gospel, under which I earnestly desire every
young man to be brought. There are
thousands whom it keeps back from evil, though it has not yet turned them to
God--it has made them far better members of society--though it has not yet made
them true Christians. There is a
certain kind of mysterious power in the faithful preaching of the gospel, which
has an effect on multitudes who
listen to it
without receiving it into their hearts.
To hear sin exposed for what it is, and holiness lifted up, to hear Christ
exalted, and the words of the devil denounced--to hear the kingdom of heaven
and its blessedness described, and the world and its emptiness exposed; to hear
this week after week, Sunday after Sunday, is seldom without a good effect to
the soul. It makes it far harder
afterwards to run out and commit gross sins.
It acts as a wholesome check upon a man's heart. This, I believe, is one way in which that
promise of God is made good, "My word that goes out from my mouth: it will
not return to me empty" (Isaiah 55:11).
There is so much truth in that strong saying of Whitefield, "The
gospel keeps many a person from going to jail and from being hanged, if it does
not keep him from hell."
Let me name
another point which is closely connected with this subject. Let nothing ever tempt you to become a
Christian who does not make every effort to attend church on Sunday and make
the day special to the Lord. Make up
your mind to give all your Sundays to God.
A spirit of disregard for this day is growing up among us with fearful
rapidity, and not least among young men.
Sunday vacations, Sunday visiting, Sunday excursions, to the exclusion
of church attendance and honoring of the Lord, are becoming more common every
year than they were, and are doing infinite harm to souls.
Young men,
be jealous on this point. Whether you
live in the city or in the country, take up a decided line; resolve not to miss
church on Sunday and the fellowship of God's people. Do not let the plausible argument of "needing to sleep-in to
rest your body," do not let not the example of all those around you, do
not let the invitation of companions pull you away from fellowship and worship;
let none of these things move you to depart from this settled rule, that
Sunday's are for God's honor and for fellowship with His people.
Once you
don't consider Sundays important or anything special in your Christian life,
then in the end you will give up caring for your soul. The steps which lead to this conclusion are
easy and common. Begin with not
honoring the Lord's Day, and you will soon not honor God's people; cease to
honor God's book; and in time you will give God no honor at all. Let a man lay the foundation of having no
respect for God's worship or the fellowship of the saints, and I am never
surprised if he finishes with no God.
It is a remarkable saying of Judge Hale, "Of all the persons who
were convicted of capital crimes while he was on the bench, he found only a few
who would not confess, on inquiry, that they began their career of wickedness
by a neglect of the church and God's people."
Young men,
you may have friends who forget the honor of the Lord's day; but resolve, by
God's help, that you will always remember to keep it special. Honor it by a regular attendance at some place
where the gospel is preached. Settle
down under a faithful ministry, and once settled, let your place in church
never be empty. Believe me, you will
find a special blessing following you: "If you keep your feet from
breaking the Sabbath and from doing as you please on my holy day, if you call
the Sabbath a delight and the LORD'S holy day honorable, and if you honor it by
not going your own way and not doing as you please or speaking idle words, then
you will find your joy in the LORD, and I will cause you to ride on the heights
of the land and to feast on the inheritance of your father Jacob" (Isaiah
58:13-14). And one thing is very
certain, your feelings about Sunday and the fellowship will always be a test
and criterion of your fitness for heaven.
Fellowship and worship are a foretaste and a fragment of heaven. The man who finds them a burden and not a
privilege, may be sure that his heart stands in need of a mighty change.
(5) Resolve that wherever you are, you will
pray.
Prayer is
the life-breath of a man's soul.
Without it, we may have a name to live, and be counted Christians; but
we are dead in the sight of God. The
feeling that we must cry to God for mercy and peace is a mark of salvation; and
the habit of spreading before Him our soul's needs is an evidence that we have
the spirit of adoption. And prayer is
the appointed way to obtain the relief of our spiritual necessities. It opens the treasury, and sets the fountain
flowing. If we don't have, it is
because we don't ask.
Prayer is
the way to procure the outpouring of the Spirit upon our hearts. Jesus has promised the Holy Spirit, the
Comforter. He is ready to come down
with all His precious gifts, renewing, sanctifying, purifying, strengthening,
cheering, encouraging, enlightening, teaching, directing, guiding, into all
truth. But then He waits to be asked.
And here it
is, I say it with sorrow, here it is that men fall short so miserably. Few indeed are to be found who pray: there
are many who go down on their knees, and say a form perhaps, but few who pray;
few who cry out to God, few who call on the Lord, few who seek as if they
wanted to find, few who knock as if they hungered and thirsted, few who
wrestle, few who strive with God earnestly for an answer, few who give Him no
rest, few who continue in prayer, few who pray always without ceasing and do
not grow weak. Yes: few pray! It is just one of the things assumed as a matter
of course, but seldom practiced; a thing which is everybody's business, but in
fact hardly anybody performs.
Young men,
believe me, if your soul is to be saved, you must pray. God has no speechless children. If you are to resist the world, the flesh,
and the devil, you must pray: it is in vain to look for strength in the hour of
trial, if it has not been sought for.
You may be thrown in with those who never do it, you may have to sleep
in the same room with someone who never asks anything of God, still, mark my
words, you must pray.
I can
believe that you find it difficult to do, difficulties about opportunities to
pray, and times to pray, and places to pray.
I dare not lay down too strict rules on such points as these. I leave them to your own conscience. You must be guided by circumstances. Our Lord Jesus Christ prayed on a mountain;
Isaac prayed in the fields; Hezekiah turned his face to the wall as he lay upon
his bed; Daniel prayed by the riverside; Peter, the Apostle, on the
housetop. I have heard of young men
praying in stables and haylofts. All
that I contend for is this, you must know what it is to "go into your
room, close the door and pray to your Father, who is unseen"
(Matthew
6:6). There must be stated times when
you must speak to God face to face, you must every day have your times for
prayer--You must pray.
Without
this, all my advice and counsel is useless.
This is that piece of spiritual armor which Paul names last in his list,
in Ephesians 6, but it is in truth that is first in value and importance. This is that meat which you must eat daily, if
you would travel safely through the wilderness of this life. It is only in the strength of this that you
will get onward towards the mountain of God.
I have heard it said that some people who grind metal sometimes wear a
magnetic mouthpiece at their work, which catches all the fine metal dust that
flies around them, prevents it from entering their lungs, and so saves their
lives. Prayer is the mouthpiece that
you must wear continually, or else you will never work uninjured by the
unhealthy atmosphere of this sinful world.
You must pray.
Young men,
be sure no time is so well spent as that which a man spends on his knees. Make time for this, whatever your situation
may be. Think of David, King of Israel:
what does be say? "Evening, morning and noon I cry out in distress, and he
hears my voice" (Psalm 55:17).
Think of Daniel. He had all the
business of a kingdom on his hands; yet he prayed three times a day. See there the secret of his safety in wicked
Babylon. Think of Solomon. He begins his reign with prayer for help and
assistance, and hence his wonderful prosperity. Think of Nehemiah. He
could find time to pray to the God of heaven, even when standing in the presence
of his master, Artaxerxes. Think of the
example these good men have left you, and go and do likewise.
Oh that the
Lord may give you all the spirit of grace and supplication! "Have you not just called to me: 'My
Father, my friend from my youth'" (Jeremiah 3:4). Gladly would I consent to the fact that all
of this message should be forgotten, if only this doctrine of the importance of
prayer might be impressed on your hearts.
V.
Conclusion
And now I
hurry towards a conclusion. I have said
things that many perhaps will not like, and not receive; but I appeal to your
consciences, Are they not true?
Young men,
you all have consciences. Corrupt and
ruined by the fall as we are, each of us has a conscience. In a corner of each heart there sits a
witness for God, a witness who condemns when we do wrong, and approves when we
do right. To that witness I make my
appeal this day, are not the things that I have been saying true?
Go then,
young men, and resolve this day to remember your Creator in the days of your
youth. Before the day of grace is past,
before your conscience has become hardened by age, and deadened by repeated
trampling under foot, while you have strength, and time, and opportunities, go
and join yourself to the Lord in an everlasting covenant not to be forgotten. The Spirit will not always strive. The voice of conscience will become feebler
and fainter every year you continue to resist it. The Athenians said to Paul, "We want to hear you again on this
subject" but they had heard him for the last time (Acts 17:32). Make haste, and don't delay. Linger and hesitate no more.
Think of the
unspeakable comfort you will give to parents, relatives, and friends, if you
take my counsel. They have expended
time, money, and health to raise you, and make you what you are. Surely they deserve some consideration. Who can know the joy and gladness which
young people have in their power to give?
Who can tell the anxiety and sorrow that sons like Esau, and Hophni, and
Phinehas, and Absalom may cause? Truly
indeed does Solomon say, "A wise son brings joy to his father, but a
foolish son grief to his mother" (Proverbs 10:1). Oh, consider these things, and give God your
heart! Let it not be said of you at
last, as it is of many, that your "youth was a disorder, your manhood a
struggle, and your old age a regret."
Think of the
good you might be doing for the world.
Almost all the eminent saints of God sought the Lord early. Moses, Samuel, David, Daniel, all served God
from their youth. God seems to delight
in putting special honor upon young servants; and think of what we could
expect, if young men in our own day would consecrate the springtime of their
lives to God? Workers are wanted now in
almost every great and good cause, and cannot be found. Technology of every kind for spreading truth
exists, but there are not people to make it work.
Money is
more easily obtained for doing good than men.
Ministers are wanted for new churches, missionaries are wanted for new
fields, teachers are wanted
for Sunday
School, many a good cause is standing still merely for want of workers. The supply of godly, faithful, trustworthy
men, for posts like those I have named, is far below the demand.
Young men of
the present day, you are wanted for God.
This is an age of activity. We
are shaking off some of our past selfishness.
Men no longer sleep the sleep of apathy and indifference about others,
as their forefathers did. They are
beginning to be ashamed of thinking like Cain, "Am I my brother's
keeper?" A wide field of
usefulness is open before you, if you are only willing to enter into it. The harvest is great, and the workers are
few. Be zealous of good works. Come, come to the aid of the Lord against
the wickedness of this age.
This is, in
some sort, to be like God, not only good, but doing good (Psalm 119:68). This is the way to follow the steps of your
Lord and Savior: "He went around doing good" (Acts 10:38).
And who can
doubt that this is the path which makes an immortal soul beautiful? Who would not rather leave this world like
Josiah, grieved by all, than depart like Jehoram, "to no one's
regret?" (2 Chronicles
21:20). Is it better to be idle,
frivolous, to live for your body, your selfishness, your lusts, and your pride,
or to spend and be spent in the glorious cause of usefulness to your fellow
men--to be a blessing to your country and the world, to be the friend of the
prisoner and the captive, to be the spiritual father of hundreds of immortal
souls in heathen lands, to be a burning and a shining light, an epistle of
Christ, known and read of all men, the
inspiration
of every Christian heart that comes across your path? Oh, who can doubt? Who
can for one moment doubt?
Young men,
consider your responsibilities. Think
of the privilege and luxury of doing good.
Resolve this day to be useful.
Give your hearts at once to Christ.
Think,
lastly, of the happiness that will come to your own soul, if you serve God,
happiness as you travel through life, and happiness in the end, when the
journey is over. Believe me, whatever
vain notions you may have heard, believe me, there is a reward for the
righteous even in this world. Godliness
has indeed the promise of this life, as well as of that which is to come. There is a solid peace in feeling that God
is your friend. There is a real
satisfaction in knowing that however your unworthiness, you are complete in
Christ, that you have an enduring portion, that you have chosen that good part
which shall not be taken from you.
The
backslider in heart may well be content with his own ways, but "the good
man [will be] rewarded for his" (Proverbs 14:14). The path of the worldly
man grows
darker and darker every year that he lives; the path of the Christian is like a
shining light, brighter and brighter to the very end. His sun is just rising when the sun of the worldly is setting
forever; his best things are all beginning to blossom and bloom forever, when
those of the worldly are all slipping out of his hands, and passing away.
Young men,
these things are true. Listen to the
word of exhortation. Be persuaded. Take up the cross. Follow Christ. Yield
yourselves to God.
Transcribed and
Provided 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