Strong Faith
JULY 15TH,
1877
by
(1834-1892)
“But
was strong in faith, giving glory to God.”-Romans 4:20.
Abraham is the father of the
faithful. When children have a noble father it is a good thing for them to be
fully conversant with his character; and therefore we shall do well to consider
the life of the great patriarch, especially marking that grand excellence which
makes him the father of believers, namely, his faith. Nor should we fail to
observe the strength of his faith, for in him it reached a very high degree; he
was not only a believer, but he was an unstaggering believer. He did not only
trust God, but he trusted God most firmly, in the teeth of all contradiction,
not so much as considering the difficulties, but believing in God without
questioning. Oftentimes I have exhorted unbelievers to faith, but now my word
is directed to those who have faith already, bidding them manifest more faith.
Where there is the root of faith we plead for the growth of faith; where there
is life our desire is that it may be found more abundantly. If you have not
believed at all, then the gospel cries to you, “Believe in the Lord Jesus
Christ, and thou shalt be saved;” but if you have believed, its voice is, “Grow
in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.” We cannot
talk to unbeievers upon the subject of strong faith, because they have none to
begin with; if they had even the weakest faith, it would save them, and become
the germ of the highest assurance, but without a beginning how can they be
exhorted to increase? There must first of all be the seed of faith in the
heart, and then it will be wise to water it, but to water barren ground is lost
labor. Have you given glory to God by believing in the Lord Jesus? Then may you
glorify him more by a stronger confidence, but not till then. Those who have
faith in God are constantly to be exhorted to grow in all graces, and
especially in the most important and fundamental grace of faith. They are
permitted to pray, “Lord, increase our faith,” with the assurance that “he
giveth more grace.” My present address will have strong faith for its subject,
let those who have believed strive after it.
Is it needful for me to remind you
that as faith at first is the work of the Holy Spirit, so must any real growth
in it be of divine operation? Any addition to faith which could come to you by
or from the flesh, if such a thing were supposable, would be an adulteration of
faith, and not an increase of it; for evermore that which is born of the flesh
is flesh, and only that which is born of the Spirit is spirit. Even if an
increase of faith could come to us by the will of man, and not by divine
working, it would not be worth the having, for it would be a counterfeit. Only
the sap of the trunk can make the branch grow; he who gave thee faith at the
first must give thee more faith if thou art to become strong in it. Yet there
is the parallel truth never to be forgotten, that while faith is the gift of
God it is also our own act. The Holy Spirit works faith in us, but we ourselves
personally believe; the Holy Ghost does not believe for us-what has he to
believe? It would be altogether absurd to conceive of the Holy Ghost as
believing or repenting! Nor if such a thing were possible could it be of any
benefit to us, for the faith which saves the soul must be personal and cannot
be performed by proxy. Faith is both God’s gift and man’s act. The Lord is the
author of our faith, but we ourselves believe. In the same manner, though the
strengthening of our faith will come through the Spirit of God, yet must it be
our own act and deed; we must ourselves believe more firmly, and our own heart
must be exercised to attain to the highest privilege. As unbelief is a sin for
which the unbeliever must be held responsible, even so is the feebleness of
faith a fault for which we are blameworthy. We are in duty bound to believe in
God without wavering, and if we neglect the matter we shall be held guilty
concerning it. It is our duty to believe, and to believe in the highest degree;
and though some professors can never see the consistency of the two statements
that faith is the gift of God and yet the duty of man, we are sure that the one
is as true as the other; and so while I shall earnestly refer you to the Spirit
of God for strength in order to obtain more faith, yet I shall not apologise
for unbelief, or treat strong faith as a work of supererogation, for which God
has no claim upon us. I most earnestly declare the responsibility of each
believer, and claim from him, as the righteous due of a faithful God, that he
do henceforth believe in him more fully than he hath heretofore done. May the
remarks I shall offer be used by the Holy Ghost to the increase and
establishment of your confidence in God.
I. Our first point is this: Strong Faith, Wherever Is Exists, Is
Supported By Abundant Reasons. It is never chargeable with being unreasonable
fanaticism or blind credence; it is a sound, prudent, justifiable thing.
For, first, all the reasons which
justify our believing in God at all justify our believing in him most firmly
and continually. You do not need that I dwell upon this, because it is
self-evident; it can never be right to believe unless the statements are true,
and if true they deserve undivided faith. If you have trusted your soul with
your Redeemer because of the efficacy of his atoning blood, that argument
pleads with you to trust him yet more steadfastly and confidently. If anything
be strong enough for you to trust your eternal destiny to it, your trust ought not
to be tinctured with suspicion, or soured with mistrust; it ought to be
unalloyed as pure gold, and immovable as a granite rock. Either no confidence
or great confidence can be logically defended, but a divided heart cannot be
justified by reason. Dear brother, little faith will save thee if it be true
faith, but there are many reasons why thou shouldst seek an increase of it, and
among the rest this forcible one,-thy conscience cannot justify the weakness of
thy faith, nor answer the question, “Wherefore dost thou doubt?” If thou
believest at all, why dost thou doubt at all? If God be worthy of trust, he is
worthy of abundant trust; if it be well to lean on him at all it must be well
to lean hard. Is the Lord faithful? then do not both trust and mistrust,
believe and disbelieve. Is the promise sure? then do not believe it a little
and doubt it a little. Elias spake concerning Jehovah and Baal, “If Jehovah be
God serve him, and if Baal be God serve him”; so also would I demand in this
matter; if the gospel be a lie, deny it, but if it be a truth, believe it. Be
no longer content to mingle unbelief with faith, as if this were the utmost
credence that God’s children could give to their own Father. It is time that
this mental twilight came to an end, and that the day was known to be day, and
the night to be night. Hesitating and questioning, hoping and fearing, make but
a lame walk for a Christian pilgrim, and are unreasonable and indefensible. As
the legs of the lame are not equal, so such a state of mind has not the balance
which a wise man should seek after. If thou goest up to the ankles in the river
of faith, go further, even up to the loins, or to full swimming depth, for, if
it be right to enter into faith’s stream at all, every possible argument proves
that the deeper you go the better.
Reasons for strong faith may be
found in abundance in the character of God. He is not like ourselves, for in
him is no mixture of truth and falsehood, wisdom and folly, power and weakness.
Our reliance upon man must be cautiously given and measured out with great
prudence, for man is only man; but “the Lord is not a man that he should lie,
nor the son of man that he should repent.” His character absolutely demands
implicit faith, insomuch that, while meditating upon this subject, I felt
ashamed of myself that I should need to pray for faith in God. It is a clear
evidence of our dire depravity that we should need to be helped to believe in
one who cannot lie. It seems inevitable that a creature should trust its
Creator, and especially such a Creator; and it would be inevitable if that
creature were not exceeding depraved. For a child to trust its father is
natural, so natural that no one counts it a virtue, How marvelous is our moral
perversity that we should be so far gone out of our right condition of heart
that we have to argue ourselves into believing our God, and even then succeed
not till the Holy Spirit gives us faith. It ought to be a very hard thing for a
Christian to doubt his heavenly Father; in fact, it ought to be impossible,
seeing that the divine character is incapable of falsehood. Beloved, should we
not have strong faith who believe in a God whose very essence is pure truth?
Where deception is inconceivable doubt should be impossible. Thou believest
that never shadow of untruth ever stained the character of thy God, why then
dost thou not render to him strong faith? Thou believest also that God is
infinitely wise, and therefore he has never spoken rashly nor promised what it
might be wiser to withhold. The promise was not delivered in haste, or so
unguardedly that it might be necessary to retract it; and therefore no
alteration can be supposed. The covenant of promise stands secure even as to
its jots and tittles. If it had been foolish it might pass away, but since it
is ordered by eternal wisdom it will outlast the everlasting hills. Come, then,
beloved, should not the utmost confidence be rendered to him whose every word
is steeped in infallibility? Shouldst thou not believe with all thy heart and
soul and strength in him whose truth stands fast like the great mountains?
Moreover, O man of God, thou believest in One who is omnipotent, and therefore
thy believing should be strong. Thou knowest how to answer that question, “Is
anything too hard for the Lord?” for thou believest that with God all things
are possible. If it be so, then his true word spoken in wisdom can readily
enough be carried out; he has but to will it, and it is done. God’s word is
fact; for him to purpose is to perform; can there then arise any condition or
circumstance which he cannot meet? Wherefore these doubts? In the presence of
an Almighty Promiser unbelief is as ridiculous as it is sinful. “The strength
of Israel will not lie,” neither may we treat him with mistrust. Thou knowest
also that thy God is immutable. All things else change, but thy God knoweth no
shadow of a turning; he is “the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever.” Is he
the same? He doth not take back the word that goeth out of his mouth, nor
reverse his divine decree; why then question and suspect him? Better far to
believe immutably in an immutable God, Canst thou not rest in him who saith “I
am Jehovah; I change not”? Thou believest also that he is the God of love, full
of goodness, mercy, and lovingkindness. What a wanton insult it is to mistrust
one who cannot be unkind, whose very nature it is to bless his creatures, and
whose innermost soul is set upon loving and blessing his own elect. Hast thou
confided in him? then doth he not assure thee that he has graven thy name upon
the palms of his hands, that he has loved thee with an everlasting love, and
therefore with lovingkindness he has drawn thee. Wilt thou fly in the face of
changeless love, and coldly question it? Can it be possible to trust it too
confidingly? Surely all these things, and much more, in the glorious character
of the ever-beloved God, demand of us the strongest imaginable faith.
Then, again, when I turn mine eyes
from pure deity to him who is bone of our bone and flesh of our flesh, even our
Lord Jesus Christ, in whom dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead bodily, it
appears incongruous that the blessed Son of God should be received with meager
confidence. God dwelt among men in human flesh, you know it to be true that so
it was; Jesus, the Son of God, abode upon the earth throughout a lowly life
amidst poverty and shame, and, (wonder of wonders), at last he poured out his
heart’s blood for our redemption; and can we entertain a doubt of his ability
to save? Do we see those blood drops from his hand and heart, sealing the
everlasting covenant, and can we doubt? Abraham had strong confidence when he
saw the smoking furnace and the burning lamp passing between the pieces of the
slain victims, and what ought our confidence to be when we behold the Lord Jesus
Christ himself ratifying the eternal covenant by his own death? Surely if the
patriarch could find rest in the sight of the type only, we ought to rest
without thought of fear. When faith beholds the divine antitype, no thought of
disquietude should ever arise again. My soul, what more dost thou want? Is
there not here more than enough of solemn pledge and surety? Are not founts of
assurance opened in the bleeding Savior which are deeper than all fear and
higher than all hope? That wondrous sacrifice is as high above thy thoughts at
their best as the heavens are above the earth, and wilt thou return doubts and
fears as a fit recompense for such a divine confirmation of eternal love? O
Lord, help, thy servants to be strong in faith!
One other reason is perhaps of less
weight than those which have gone before, but I cannot withhold it. It is this;
we ought to give to God strong faith, because there is no evidence to the
contrary, nor any supposable evidence which could justify mistrust. All adown
the ages those who have trusted in him have never been confounded. Our fathers
trusted in him, and he helped them to suffer and to bear, to attempt and to
accomplish, to live and to die. We read just now, in the eleventh of the
Hebrews, the record of what the Lord wrought in those who believed in him. Now,
on the other side, per contra, there standeth nothing. Has one child of God
come forward wringing his hands and saying,” God hath not fulfilled his word,
and his promises are false”? We have stood, many of us, at the bedside of dying
saints, and the truth generally comes out there, yet there is not one among us,
most familiar with such scenes, who ever heard a solitary believer declare that
it is a mistake to confide in the blood of Jesus, or an error to rest in the faithfulness
of God. Somewhere or other this thing would have come out if it had been so; if
the Lord had been false to one of his people we should have had sure record of
it, and I think we might have trusted the devil and his myrmidons, who delight
in infidelity, to have circulated such a report, pretty largely, all over the
world, if they had known one such an instance; but they have not one to report.
“He forsaketh not his saints.”
Furthermore, I will appeal to your
own experience,-have you experienced anything which casts suspicion upon the
character of God? Has the Lord been a wilderness unto you? When you have
trusted him has he failed you? Will you put your finger upon a promise which he
has broken? Search the book through and through, and find if you can one single
word of his against which you must write “false.” Oh, no; the promise tarries
sometimes, but it never lies. There is a waiting time for the testing of your
faith, but in the end it will be seen that he has withheld no good thing from
them that walk uprightly, and you will have to say at last, like hoary headed
Joshua, “There failed not ought of any good thing which the Lord had spoken
unto the house of Israel; all came to pass.” Brethren, ought we to doubt our
God when we have no cause to show for it? Is there any apology for little faith
since we cannot remember any instances of prayers unheard, deliverances denied,
or mercies refused? We have nothing of the kind to quote, and therefore when we
doubt the Lord we are guilty of wanton distrust,-may the Lord forgive us and
deliver us from it.
So much upon that first point, the
strongest faith is supported by abundant reasons.
II. And now, secondly, according to the text, Strong Faith Produces
The Most Desirable Results. We have not time to go into many of these, but we
will dwell upon one, the one mentioned in the text, “Strong in faith, giving
glory to God.” Why, this is what we live for-to glorify God. Every man who is
truly a child of God feels that he has no object which at all approaches to
this in importance; his chief end is “to glorify God and enjoy him for ever.”
Well, then, since strong faith answers to that end we ought earnestly to desire
it; but how does it appear?
Well, strong faith glorifies God
because it treats him like God. Unbelief is practical atheism; because, denying
the truthfulness of God, it takes away what is a part of the essential
character of God, and so far mars his very existence. I would not say a word to
grieve those who have but little faith, for the least faith is saving and is
most precious; but still faith wherein it is weak does not treat God like God,
it bounds and limits the Holy One of Israel! It believes him up to such a
point, or under such and such circumstances, and this is not to act towards him
as omnipresent and omnipotent. Strong faith treats God according to his
infinite character; it does not suspect him, because it knows him to be the God
of truth; it does not doubt the possibility of his accomplishing his promise,
because it knows him to be God all-sufficient; it does not question his
faithfulness, because it knows him to be absolutely immutable. Alas, we often
deal with God as if he were like ourselves, or like our fellow-men. We are
fickle, and we suppose that he is so; our fellow-men promise and fail us, and
we act as if our God were like to the son of man, who is but a worm. O beloved,
it robs God of glory when we act towards him otherwise than as he is, but it
glorifies him when we gain a scriptural conception of what he is, and act towards
him under that aspect, and what is that but to trust him without staggering? To
me, when I look at it calmly, the strongest faith does not appear to be a
wonder, it is only what the Lord has a right to receive. Considering the folly
and depravity of man, faith is a marvelous production of grace; yet looked at
from the Godward side of it, the strongest possible faith in God is only what
God may justly claim. Say you not so, O believers? Does not your Lord deserve
to be trusted at all times?
Further, strong faith brings glory
to God, because it treats him as a Father, and acts towards him in the
childlike spirit. It is very beautiful to see the confidence which our children
repose in us. Why even when the man is utterly unworthy of respect you will see
the little child still believing in his father. And as for those who are
favored with parents who-are wise and gracious, there is, there should always
be, an implicit reliance upon father’s judgment. I have known boys quote their
father with as implicit a reliance as Christians quote Scripture, or as
confidently as a Catholic quotes a bull of the Pope. Indeed, what is a father
after all but the papa, the pope, of his child to a very great degree; and
though that confidence may be mistaken, yet it is natural to the child to feel
it, and it is a sad pity that it should too often be rudely repressed by the
father’s folly. Now, every child of God ought to have unlimited confidence in
God. Is he not my Father? Can my Father do an unkind thing to me? Can my Father
be untrue? Can my heavenly Father be false or changeable? Impossible! The child
of God does not boast of his faith, for it is only a simple childlike trust,
yet it glorifieth God more than all the efforts of proud reason, for it calleth
him by the name which he loves, and it putteth him into the place which he
delights in, namely, that of Father to his own chosen. Again, strong faith
honors God because it strengthens all the other graces, and these all bring
glory to God. Without the graces of the Spirit in him a man cannot glorify God.
That therefore which will produce in our character all those various lights
which are the reflections of the divine excellence as it shone in the Lord
Jesus, is the chief means of our glorifying God, and is therefore to be prized.
Faith is the root of whatsoever things are lovely and pure and of good repute,
and in proportion as it is strong all these precious things flourish, therefore
it greatly tends to magnify the Lord. Strong faith peculiarly glorifies God
because it gives a striking testimony to the world. I do not think the world
notices much the common faith of ordinary Christians; the faith which relies
upon God ordinarily in good times the outside world does not think much of; but
even carnal minds are compelled to view with astonishment the faith which
glories in God when all temporal things are swept away. The faith which can
practice eminent self-denial, or which can achieve, through the power of God,
enterprises which appear foolhardy to mere reason, that is the faith which
attracts the eyes of men; they see your strong faith, and they glorify your
Father which is in heaven. I pray God that we may always have such a faith that
it may be worthwhile for men to study it. I have known some faith which would
have required a man to put a microscope to his eye to be able to perceive it at
all, and when we have declared that little faith saves the soul, the worldling
has replied, “Well, it is a very small concern, at any rate.” Brethren, ask
that your faith may grow; let it embrace God heartily, let it rest in him
without a fear, and even the ungodly will be obliged to confess that this is
the finger of God. Strong faith glorifies God again because it enables him to
work great works in us and through us. As our Savior could not do many mighty
works in a certain place because of their unbelief, so is God hampered with
regard to some of us, because we have such little confidence in him. He has
given to some men all the abilities necessary for the conversion of many souls,
all the knowledge, all the utterance and a large part of the zeal; but they do
not believe in him, and therefore they are not established. Some men’s words
actually create distrust in the minds of others, for they themselves are so
diffident in spirit that they rather baulk the children of God in their
progress than help them to advance in the divine life. Search, O my brethren
and sisters, whether it be not so. He who has little faith will be made useful
according to the littleness of his faith, but, if he had more, the Master might
use him more. If we trusted more, our life would be holier, happier, serener,
more close with God, and more useful; and why should we not? Give me a reason
why we should not. Oh, Spirit of the living God, why should we not? Help thou us
now to be strong in faith, giving glory to God!
III. Now I advance to a third observation, which I trust may give some
comfort to those who are little in Israel. Strong Faith Which Gives Glory To
God May Be Exercised By Persons Who Are Otherwise Exceedingly Weak. What a joy
this is to you who are sufferers in body. You do not often creep out of your
bed which is now growing so hard through your having laid upon it these months.
It is quite a holiday to you to be found in the house of God now and then.
Well, dear brother, dear sister, you cannot do apostolic work and range a
continent, fervently blazing out the truth, but you can have strong faith in
God; you may exhibit a placid patience, a sweet resignation, a sacred
hopefulness as to the future, a divine disdain as to the fear of death; and if
these abound in you the circle of friends who know you and tenderly watch you
are receiving from your example the utmost benefit, and perhaps, though you may
not be able to enter into active service, you may be tutoring others by the
strength of your faith, and they will accomplish great things as the result of
your example. At any rate, the weakness of your body need not prevent your
exercising the strong faith which glorifies God.
So, too, dear friends, you may have
but few talents, you may be conscious that you have no brilliancy of intellect,
that you are not persons of remarkable parts or attainments, and yet you may
glorify God by strong faith. You need not be a genius in order to give glory to
God, for the strength of your faith will do it. Many a man who is of slender
intellect glorifies God far more than your great thinker, because the great
thinker is too often filled with a high conceit of his own thoughts, and will
not follow God’s word, whereas the poor unintellectual believer rises superior
to him by taking the intellect of God to be his guiding star. You can glorify
God, dear brethren, by holding firmly to the truth of which you understand so
little, but which you love so heartily. Though you do not know the whole of its
meaning you are in much the same condition as your more advanced brethren, for
who knows the whole meaning of God’s mind? What you do know you are resolved to
hold with iron grip, and by so doing you greatly honor your Lord.
Some saints are conscious of
weakness of every sort, but they must not, therefore, think that they cannot
honor God by strong faith, for Abraham, of whom the text is spoken, was a
special instance of this. He was so old that his body was now dead, and yet he
believed that he would be the progenitor of the chosen seed. He knew that death
was written upon him as to all that matter, and yet he was quits certain that
God who had promised would certainly perform. Do you feel this morning almost
dead spiritually? Dear lover of Jesus, have you wandered from him, so that your
consciousness of life in him is dimmed and you hardly know whether you are in
him or not, for you are so lethargic, your soul cleaveth to the dust? Now is
the time to trust him; when sin abounds, when fears are thickest, when
temptations are most furious, when want comes upon thee like an armed man, now
is the time to trust in God. Summer weather faith is poor stuff, but a faith
which bums on through the long, dark, dreary winter, a. faith which is not
damped by the rain nor buried by the snow-storm,-this is faith indeed, and
glorifieth God. The depth of your weakness is just the height of your
possibilities of honoring the Lord. If you are nothing, so much the more room
for God to be everything; if you are unworthy, the more room for confidence in
the righteousness of Christ; and if you are dead, you are the better able to
prove the truth of your Lord’s words concerning the believer, “though he were
dead, yet shall he live.” God grant us grace that whatever our circumstances or
conditions, we may have the same conquering faith towards God.
IV. Now, fourthly, This Strong
Faith Varies As To Its Manner Of Working, very much according to the person and
his circumstances. There is one thing that strong faith does not do which some
think it would be sure to do-it never blusters, and it never talks big and
boasts of what it will accomplish. “Though all men should forsake thee, yet
will not I,” is not the language of strong faith, that is the prattle of Master
Peter with his pride uppermost. Some men are in their own opinion in such a
fine condition that they could push the whole world before them, and drag the
church after them; I do not know what they could not do. Yes, but there is a
great deal of difference between confidence in yourself and confidence in God.
I have noticed that the faith which goes forth against the world with the
dauntless courage of a lion is the very faith which lies down like a lamb at
Jesus’ feet. The next thing to “I can do all things” is “Without Christ I can
do nothing.” Consciousness of personal weakness attends a brave reliance upon
God, and shows itself in modesty and quietude of manner. Barking dogs do not
often bite, and those men who promise much very seldom perform. Strong faith
has a quiet tongue, and does the daring deed without preliminary boasting. It
does not advertise its coming victories, but falls upon the Midianites at dead
of night, and with its lamps and pitchers puts them to the rout. Point me to
one boastful word that ever fell from Abraham. All the Scriptural heroes of
faith were doers, and not blusterers. David said little to his envious
brothers, but he brought home the giant’s bleeding head, and bade its dumb
mouth tell of what he had done.
Faith exercises itself as in the
case of Abraham, by believing God’s word. God had said many things to Abraham,
and Abraham believed them all. That is a rare thing nowadays. The school of
modern thought, which considers itself to be the most infallible thing now
extant, always cuts and shapes divinity according to its own views of what it
ought to be; in fact, it has a God of its own, cut out of the brown paper of
its philosophies-a God of soft effeminacy, who is no more like the Jehovah of
Abraham than the Venus of Paphos. These men believe, not what the Bible says,
but what they imagine it ought to say. Their doctrinal views are like the camel
which was evolved by a German philosopher out of his own consciousness; he had
never seen one, but he produced it according to his own notion of what it ought
to be, and he was very strong against humps; he would never believe that a real
camel had a hump, because his consciousness did not suggest such a thing. Much
of intellectual religion nowadays is just that; we have certain gentry about
who evolve a gospel out of their own brain, and of course they utterly despise
the gospel which actually exists because it is not like their model. We are
asked to bow down and worship the calf which comes out of their furnace, but
that we shall not do while our faith is strong. We believe God’s every word as
far as we know it. If I know a doctrine to be in God’s word, it is infallible
to me. If I have ever in thought gone beyond that which is revealed, I do
heartily repent of such presumption; brethren, say you not so? If I see in
God’s Book two truths which I cannot square with one another, I believe them
both. There is a middle term somewhere, though I know not where to find it; and
for the present I believe without that explanatory truth. There are the two
things, God has said them, and they must be true, and it is mine to believe
them. Let God be true and every man a liar. This is where strong faith is
wanted in these days; we need a settled creed, and a clear, comprehensive view
of revealed truth, even if we should in consequence be called old-fashioned or
imbecile. We need to be more old-fashioned than ever. I am a Radical in many
things, but in the doctrines of the gospel I would have you to be Conservative
to the backbone, not for an hour yielding any point of truth to the most
brilliant thinker that the world can produce. Thinkers are not appointed to
tinker up a gospel for us; thank God, we have a perfect gospel already. Their
shifting gospel changes about every ten years, and comes out spick and span as
a new theology, but we have grasped the old infallible truth, and we mean to
hang to it for dear life, being strong in faith, giving glory to God.
But Abraham’s was not alone
receptive faith; his was a faith which obeyed the precept. The test of his
obedience was the strange command to take his only son and offer him up for a
sacrifice, but he went to do it, and in God’s account he did do it, for he had
the will to do it at God’s bidding. You and I must be willing to do what God
tells us, as God tells us, when God tells us, because God tells us, but only
strong faith will be equal to such complete obedience.
Then Abraham’s faith awakened in him
great expectations. He was looking for an heir, an heir from whom should spring
a seed as the stars of heaven for multitude; he expected that quite as
confidently as you and I expect to-morrow. We shall be full of expectation if
we have strong faith; looking for blessings, expecting prayers to be answered,
and promises to be fulfilled. We shall not cry “How wonderful!” every time a
prayer is answered, but we shall reckon it a matter of necessity that God
should stand to every word that cometh out of his mouth. May the Lord give you
such strong faith as this, and may it work in this fashion.
But time chides me, as it did the
apostle when he entered upon this subject. You may well pardon me if I am
prolix, for even so was he, until he said, “Time would fall us to speak of
Gideon and Jephtha,” and so on.
V. Our last point is, Faith Is Especially To Be Expected In Certain
Quarters. Here I wish to speak very pointedly and personally to all my brethren
and sisters in Christ.
Dear friends, there ought to be
strong faith in us who know God. “They that know thy name will put their trust
in thee, for thou, Lord, hast not forsaken them that seek thee”; and if he does
not forsake the seekers, much less will he forsake those who have found him and
trusted in him. Brethren, there are some men you can trust till you know them,
but if it be true that when you do know them you can no longer trust them, it
proves that they have a bad character. Now, you who know the Lord ought never
to throw your God under such a suspicion. If you know him, trust him. I know
you will.
We expect strong faith next from
those who have had a long experience of him. We can almost forgive you young
people who have just started in the Christian life if you are vexed with doubts
and fears, though truly God does not deserve them even of you; but when your
sires begin to doubt, what shall we say of them? What, have you known him fifty
years and cannot you trust him yet? What, my dear brother, has the Lord kept
you till you are seventy! How long do you expect to live? To eighty? Well, he
has been good to you for seven tens, cannot you trust him for the last ten?
What, tested him over and over again, and never found a flaw in his
fidelity-been in deep waters and kept from sinking, and yet are you
mistrustful? What are those things upon your feet? Shoes of iron and brass. He
said they should be. Are you afraid that after all you will be footsore and
shoeless? He promised, “as thy days so shall thy strength he.” How has it been?
Why, you say, “It has been so up to this moment;” then why not to the end?
Speak well of the bridge which has carried you over so many times. As I have
already said, you cannot put your linger upon a single instance in which the
good Lord has deceived you, and if you never doubt your Lord till you have
reason for it you will never doubt him at all. Come, come, let those of us who have
been twenty-five years in the ways of God put aside our childish doubts. Yet I
warrant you this is easier said than done; and, though we talk thus, and we
know it is true and right, alas, our nature goeth readily astray into a wicked
and provoking distrust of God. Further, dear friends, those ought to trust him
who have lived in fellowship with him. If you have been on the top of Tabor; if
you have known the kisses of his mouth and tasted of his love, which is better
than wine; if you have been emparadised in his arms, in the full assurance of
faith and the enjoyment of perfect love; why should you come down from the
mountain and distrust him? God forbid that we should do this. May the
recollection of the hill Mizar and the Hermonites come freshly over our minds
this morning, and may we rest in our God. Those who are getting near to heaven
ought not to distrust him. I see upon some of you the marks of the coming end.
The snowflakes of many winters lie on your brows, nay, the wind has blown even
those away from some of you and left the summit bare. You will soon behold your
Lord, your eyes will soon see the King in his beauty in the land that is very
far off. Do not let it be among the last memories of earth that you doubted
your Beloved. Oh, you who have known him from your youth, and have proved his
faithfulness till you have come to palsied age, do not now begin to suspect
your gracious God. You do not doubt the partner of your bosom, who has shared
your sorrows for half a century and has been the comfort of your life,-you do
well to trust in her, for it is said of such, “The heart of her husband doth
safely trust her”; but surely she is not to be relied upon so implicitly as
your God! Oh, dear aged brother, permit one who is but a little child compared
with you to entreat you. Console and cheer the younger people by the exhibition
of confidence and serenity wrought in you by strong faith.
Lastly, we who are teachers of
others ought to have strong faith in God. I think we may at times profitably
mention our own doubts and fears for the encouragement of those who are
terribly downcast, but it ought always to be done with very great prudence and
much regret. I recollect once speaking of my own tremblings, when preaching,
and a venerable brother said to me afterwards, “I do not think, dear pastor,
that you were right in speaking of your own transgressions so freely. You
encouraged the people certainly by what you said about yourself, but I hardly
think they ought to be encouraged. Now, suppose you were to go into the pulpit
and say ’there are some of you who are thieves; it is very wrong of you, but
still do not despair, for I thieve a little myself.’ Why, you know,” he said,
“you would not be doing good, but harm; and yet thieving is not more truly a
sin than doubting God, in fact there is the utmost sin in unbelief.” I replied
to my good brother that he was right, and I thanked him for the correction.
Whenever, dear hearers, you catch any of us who are teachers doubting and
fearing, do not pity us, but scold us. We have no right to be in Doubting
Castle. Pray do not visit us there. Follow us as far as we follow Christ, but
if we get into the horrible Slough of Despond, come and pull us out by the hair
of our heads if necessary, but do not fall into it yourselves. Never say, “My
beloved pastor went there, and therefore I may go there.” No, but say, “Even
our minister fell into that error, and therefore I will keep as far from it as
ever I can, for if the teacher slips the disciple may easily do so, and therefore
I must very carefully watch against unbelief.”
Brethren, we shall never succeed in
winning sinners to faith if we preach what we do not intensely believe. I do
verily believe that the sinner is lost, and that unless grace saves him, he is
lost forever. I believe that eternal punishment will fall upon him unless he
repents and believes in Jesus Christ. I do believe that Jesus shed his precious
blood, and that whosoever believeth in him is saved beyond all fear of
destruction, saved by the blood of the Lamb. We must preach in a believing
manner, knowing our message to be true, or else men will die in unbelief. And,
what is more, I do not think we shall have many conversions unless we expect
God to bless the word, and feel certain that he will do so. We must not wonder
and be astonished if we hear of a dozen or two conversions, but let the
astonishment be that thousands are not converted when they hear such divine
truth, and when we ask the Holy Spirit to attend it with divine energy. God
will bless us in proportion to our faith. It is the rule of his kingdom.
“According to your faith so be it unto you.” O God, give thy ministers more
faith! Let us believe thee firmly! Oh, that we could believe thee up to the
fullest possible measure of faith, and never doubt thee again. If the enemy
number thousands, give us the faith of Samson to throw ourselves upon them, and
in the name of God to smite them, and though we ourselves as to all power to
convert others are as dead men, and though the sinner be dead, yet help us to
believe that souls can be begotten again by the preaching of the gospel, and
let us preach with confidence in the divine power. O Lord, grant this to us,
for Jesus’ sake. Amen.
Added to Bible Bulletin Board's "Spurgeon Collection" by:
Tony Capoccia
Bible Bulletin Board
Box 314
Columbus, New Jersey, USA, 08022
Websites: www.biblebb.com and www.gospelgems.com
Email: tony@biblebb.com
Online since 1986