Young Man, Is This For You?
“And it came to pass the day after, that He went into a city called Nain;
and many of His disciples went with Him and much people. Now when He came near
to the gate of the city, behold, there was a dead man carried out, the only son
of his mother and she was a widow: and much people of the city was with her. And
when the Lord saw her, He had compassion on her and said unto her, Weep not. And
He came and touched the bier: and they that bare him stood still. And He said,
Young man I say unto you, Arise.
And he that was dead sat up and began to speak. And He delivered him to his
mother. And there came a fear on all: and they glorified God, saying, That a
great prophet is risen up among us; and, That God has visited His people. And
this rumor of Him went forth throughout all Judea and throughout all the region
round about.” Luke 7:11-17.
Behold, dear Brethren, the overflowing, ever-flowing power of our Lord Jesus
Christ! He had worked a great work upon the centurion’s servant, and now, only a
day after, he raises the dead. “It came to pass the day after, that He went into
a city called Nain.” Day unto day utters speech concerning His deeds of
goodness. Did He save your friend yesterday? His fullness is the same. If you
seek Him, His love and grace will flow to you today. He blesses this day and He
blesses the day after. Never is our Divine Lord compelled to pause until He has
recruited His resources. Virtue goes out of
Him forever. These thousands of years have not diminished the greatness of His
power to bless.
Behold, also, the readiness and naturalness of the outgoings of His life-giving
power. Our Savior was journeying and He works miracles while on the road—“He
went into a city called Nain.” It was incidentally, (some would say
accidentally), that He met the funeral procession. But at once He restored to
life this dead young man. Our blessed Lord was not standing still, as one
professionally called in—He does not seem to have come to Nain at anyone’s
request for the display of His love. But He was passing through the gate into
the city for some reason which is not recorded.
See, my Brethren, how the Lord Jesus is always ready to save! He healed the
woman who touched him in the throng when He was on the road to quite another
person’s house. The mere spilling and droppings of the Lord’s cup of grace are
marvelous. Here He gives life to the dead when He is en route. He scatters His
mercy by the roadside and anywhere and everywhere His paths drop fatness. No
time, no place can find Jesus unwilling or unable. When Baal is on a journey, or
sleeps, his deluded worshippers cannot hope for his help. But when Jesus
journeys or sleeps, a word will find Him ready to conquer death, or quell the
tempest.
It was a remarkable incident, this meeting of the two processions at the gates
of Nain. If someone with a fine imagination could picture it, what an
opportunity he would have for developing his poetical genius! I venture on no
such effort. Yonder a procession descends from the city. Our spiritual eyes see
death upon the pale horse coming forth from the city gate with great exultation.
He has taken another captive. Upon that bier behold the spoils of the dread
conqueror! Mourners, by their tears, confess the victory of death. Like a
general riding in triumph to the Roman capitol, death bears
his spoils to the tomb. What shall hinder him?
Suddenly the procession is arrested by another—a company of disciples and much
people are coming up the hill. We need not look at the company but we may fix
our eyes upon One who stands in the center, a Man in whom lowliness was always
evident and yet majesty was never wanting. It is the living Lord, even He who
only has immortality and in Him death has now met his destroyer. The battle is
short and decisive—no blows are struck—for death has already done his utmost.
With a linger the chariot of death is arrested—with a word the spoil is taken
from the mighty and the lawful
captive is delivered.
Death flies defeated from the gates of the city, while Tabor and Hermon, which
both looked down upon the scene, rejoice in the name of the Lord. This was a
rehearsal upon a small scale of that which shall happen by-and-by, when those
who are in their graves shall hear the voice of the Son of God and live—then
shall the last enemy be destroyed. Only let death come into contact with Him who
is our life and it is compelled to relax its hold. Whatever may be the spoil
which it has captured, soon shall our Lord come in His glory and then before the
gates of the New Jerusalem we shall see the miracle at the gates of Nain
multiplied a myriad times.
Thus, you see, our subject would naturally conduct us to the doctrine of the
resurrection of the dead, which is one of the foundation stones of our most holy
faith. That grand Truth of God I have often declared to you and will do so again
and again. But at this time I have selected my text for a very practical
purpose. It concerns the souls of some for whom I am greatly anxious. The
narrative before us records a fact, a literal fact—but the record may be used
for spiritual instruction. All our Lord’s miracles were intended to be
parables—they were intended to instruct as well as to impress—they are sermons to the eyes, just as His spoken discourses were sermons to the
ears. We see here how Jesus can deal with spiritual death. And how He can impart
spiritual life at His pleasure. Oh, that we may see this done this morning in
the midst of this great assembly!
I. I shall ask you first, dear Friends, to reflect that THE SPIRITUALLY DEAD
CAUSE GREAT GRIEF TO THEIR GRACIOUS FRIENDS.
If an ungodly man is favored to have Christian relatives, he causes them much
anxiety. As a natural fact, this dead young man, who was being carried out to
his burial, caused his mother’s heart to burst with grief. She showed by her
tears that her heart was overflowing with sorrow. The Savior said to her, “Weep
not,” because He saw how deeply she was troubled. Many of my dear young friends
may be deeply thankful that they have friends who
are grieving over them. It is a sad thing that your conduct should grieve
them—but it is a hopeful circumstance for you that you have those around you who
do thus grieve.
If all approved of your evil ways, you would, no doubt, continue in them and go
speedily to destruction. But it is a blessing that arresting voices do at least
a little hinder you. Besides, it may yet be that our Lord will listen to the
silent oratory of your mother’s tears and that this morning He may bless you for
her sake. See how the Evangelist puts it—“When the Lord saw her, He had
compassion on her and said unto her, Weep not.” And then He said to the young
man, “Arise.”
Many young persons who are in some respects amiable and hopeful, nevertheless,
being spiritually dead, are causing great sorrow to those who love them most. It
would perhaps be honest to say that they do not intend to inflict all this
sorrow. Indeed, they think it quite unnecessary. Yet they are a daily burden to
those whom they love. Their conduct is such that when it is thought over in the
silence of their mother’s chamber, she cannot help but weep. Her son went with
her to the House of God when he was a boy, but now he finds his pleasure in a
very different quarter.
Being beyond all control now, the young man does not choose to go with his
mother. She would not wish to deprive him of his liberty, but she laments that
he exercises that liberty so unwisely. She mourns that he has not the
inclination to hear the Word of the Lord and become a servant of his mother’s
God. She had hoped that he would follow in his father’s footsteps and unite with
the people of God. But he takes quite the opposite course. She has seen a good
deal about him lately which has deepened her anxiety—he is forming
companionships and other connections which are sadly harmful to him. He has a
distaste for the quietude of home and he has been exhibiting to his mother a
spirit which wounds her.
It may be that what he has said and done is not meant to be unkind. But it is
very grievous to the heart which watches over him so tenderly. She sees a
growing indifference to everything that is good and an unconcealed intention to
see the vicious side of life. She knows a little and fears more as to his
present state and she dreads that he will go from one sin to another till he
ruins himself for this life and the next. O Friends, it is to a gracious heart a
very great grief to have an unconverted child. And yet more so if that child is
a mother’s boy, her only boy, and she a desolate woman, from whom her husband
has been snatched away.
To see spiritual death rampant in one so dear is a sore sorrow which causes many
a mother to mourn in secret and pour out her soul before God. Many a Hannah has
become a woman of a sorrowful spirit through her own child. How sad that he who
should have made her the most glad among women has filled her life with
bitterness! Many a mother has had to grieve over her son as almost to cry,
“Would God he had never been born!” It is so in thousands of cases. If it is so
in your case, dear Friend, take home my words to yourself and reflect upon them.
The cause of grief lies here—we mourn that they should be in such a case. In the
story before us the mother wept because her son was dead. And we sorrow because
our young friends are spiritually dead. There is a life infinitely higher than
the life which quickens our material bodies. And oh, that all of you knew it!
You who are unrenewed do not know anything about this true life. Oh, how we wish
you did! It seems to us a dreadful thing that you should be dead to God, dead to
Christ, dead to the Holy Spirit. It is sad, indeed, that you should be dead to
those Divine Truths which are the delight and strength of our souls—dead to
those holy motives which keep us back from evil and spur us on to virtue.
Dead to those sacred joys which often bring us very near the gates of Heaven. We
cannot look at a dead man and feel joy in him, whoever he may be—a corpse,
however delicately dressed, is a sad sight. We cannot look upon you, you poor
dead souls, without crying out, “O God, shall it always be so? Shall not these
dry bones live? Will You not quicken them?” The Apostle speaks of one who lived
in pleasure and he said of her, “She is dead while she lives.” Numbers of
persons are dead in reference to all that is true and noble and most Divine. And
yet in other respects they are full of life and activity. Oh, to think that they
should be dead to God and yet so full of happiness and energy! Marvel not that
we grieve about them.
We also mourn because we lose the help and comfort which they ought to bring us.
This widowed mother no doubt mourned her boy not only because he was dead but
because in him she had lost her earthly stay. She must have regarded him as the
staff of her age and the comfort of her loneliness. “She was a widow”—I question
if anybody but a widow understands the full sorrow of that word. We may put
ourselves by sympathy into the position of one who has lost her other self, the
partner of her life. But the most tender sympathy cannot fully realize the
actual cleavage of bereavement and the desolation of love’s loss. “She was a
widow”—the sentence sounds like a knell.
Still, if the sun of her life was gone, there was a star shining. She had a boy,
a dear boy, who promised her great comfort. He would, no doubt, supply her
necessities and cheer her loneliness and in him her husband would live again and
his name would remain among the living in Israel. She could lean on him as she
went to the synagogue. She would have him to come home from his work at evening
and keep the little home together and cheer her hearth. Alas, that star is
swallowed up in the darkness. He is dead and today he is carried to the
cemetery.
It is the same spiritually with us in reference to our unconverted friends. With
regard to you that are dead in sin we feel that we miss the aid and comfort
which we ought to receive from you in our service of the living God. We want
fresh laborers in all sorts of places—in our Sunday school work, our mission
among the masses and in all manner of service for the Lord we love! Ours is a
gigantic burden and we long for our sons to put their shoulders to it. We looked
forward to seeing you grow up in the fear of God and stand side by side with us
in the great warfare against evil and in holy labor for the Lord Jesus.
But you cannot help us, for you are yourselves on the wrong side. Alas, alas,
you hinder us by causing the world to say, “See how those young men are acting!”
We have to spend thought and prayer and effort over you which might usefully
have gone forth for others. Our care for yonder great dark world which lies all
around us is very pressing but you do not share it with us—men are perishing
from lack of knowledge and you do not help us in endeavoring to enlighten them.
A further grief is that we can have no fellowship with them. The mother at Nain
could have no communion with her dear son now that he was dead, for the dead
know not anything. He can never speak to her, nor she to him, for he is on the
bier, “a dead man carried out.” O my Friends, certain of you have dear ones whom
you love and they love you. But they cannot hold any spiritual communion with
you, nor you with them. You never bow the knee together in private prayer, nor
mingle heart with heart in the appeal of faith to God as to the cares which
prowl around your home. O young man, when your mother’s heart leaps for joy
because of the love of Christ shed abroad in her soul, you cannot understand her
joy. Her feelings are a mystery to you.
If you are a dutiful son, you do not say anything disrespectful about her
religion. But yet you cannot sympathize in its sorrows or its joys. Between your
mother and you there is upon the best things a gulf as wide as if you were
actually dead on the bier and she stood weeping over your corpse. I remember, in
the hour of overwhelming anguish when I feared that my beloved wife was about to
be taken from me, how I was comforted by the loving prayers of my two dear
sons—we had communion not only in our grief but in our confidence in the living
God. We knelt together and poured out our hearts unto God and we were comforted.
How I blessed God that I had in my children such sweet support! But suppose they
had been ungodly young men? I should have looked in vain for holy fellowship and
for aid at the Throne of Grace. Alas, in many a household the mother cannot have
communion with her own son or daughter on that point which is most vital and
enduring because they are spiritually dead—while she has been quickened into
newness of life by the Holy Spirit.
Moreover, spiritual death soon produces manifest causes for sorrow. In the
narrative before us the time had come when her son’s body must be buried. She
could not wish to have that dead form longer in the home with her. It is a token
to us of the terrible power of death that it conquers love with regard to the
body. Abraham loved his Sarah. But after a while he had to say to the sons of
Heth, “Give me a possession of a burying place with you, that I may bury my dead
out of my sight.” It happens in some mournful cases that character becomes so
bad that no comfort in life can be enjoyed while the erring one is within the
home circle.
We have known parents who have felt that they could not have their son at home
so drunken, so debauched had he become. Not always wisely, yet sometimes almost
of necessity, the plan has been tried of sending the incorrigible youth to a
distant colony in the hope that when removed from pernicious influences he might
do better. How seldom so deplorable an experiment succeeds! I have known mothers
who could not think of their sons without feeling pangs far more bitter than
those they endured at their birth. Woe, woe to him who causes such heartbreak!
What an awful thing it is when love’s best hopes gradually die down into despair
and loving desires at last put on mourning and turn from prayers of hope to
tears of regret!
Words of admonition call forth such passion and blasphemy that prudence almost
silences them. Then have we before us the dead young man carried out to his
grave. A sorrowful voice sobs out, “He is given unto idols, let him alone.” Am I
addressing one whose life is now preying upon the tender heart of her that
brought him forth? Do I speak to one whose outward conduct has at last become so
avowedly wicked that he is a daily death to those who gave him life? O young
man, can you bear to think of this? Are you turned to stone? I cannot yet
believe that you contemplate your parents’ heartbreak without bitter feelings.
God forbid that you should!
We also mourn because of the future of men dead in sin. This mother, whose son
had already gone so far in death that he must be buried out of sight, had the
further knowledge that something worse would befall him in the sepulcher to
which he was being carried. It was impossible for her to think calmly of the
corruption which surely follows at the heels of death. When we think of what
will become of you who refuse the Lord Christ we are appalled. “After death the
judgment.” We could more readily go into details as to a putrid corpse than we
could survey the state of a soul lost forever. We dare not linger at the mouth
of Hell. But we are forced to remind you that there is a place, “where their
worm dies not and the fire is not quenched.”
There is a place where those must abide who are driven from the presence of the
Lord and from the glory of His power. It is an unendurable thought that you
should be, “cast into the lake of fire, which is the second death.” I do not
wonder that those who are not honest with you are afraid to tell you so and that
you try yourself to doubt it. But with the Bible in your hand and a conscience
in your bosom you cannot but fear the worst if you remain apart from Jesus and
the life He freely gives. If you continue as you are and persevere in your sin
and unbelief to the end of life, there is no help for you but that you must be
condemned in the Day of Judgment.
The most solemn declarations of the Word of God assure you that, “he that
believes not shall be damned.” It is heartbreaking work to think that this
should be the case with any of you. You prattled at your mother’s knee and
kissed her cheek with rapturous love—why, then, will you be divided from her
forever? Your father hoped that you would take his place in the Church of
God—how is it that you do not even care to follow him to Heaven? Remember, the
day comes when, “one shall be taken, and the other left.” Do you renounce all
hope of being with your wife, your sister, your mother at the right hand of God?
You cannot wish them to go down to Hell with you—have you no desire to go to
Heaven with them?
“Come, you blessed,” will be the voice of Jesus to those who imitated their
gracious Savior. And “Depart from Me, you cursed, into everlasting fire,
prepared for the devil and his angels,” must be the sentence upon all who refuse
to be made like the Lord. Why will you take your part and lot with accursed
ones? I do not know whether you find it easy to hear me this morning. I find it
very hard to speak to you because my lips are not able to express my heart’s
feelings. Oh that I had the forceful utterance of an Isaiah, or the passionate
lamentations of a Jeremiah with which to arouse your affections and your fears!
Still, the Holy Spirit can use even me, and I beseech Him so to do. But I have
said enough on this point. I am sure you see that the spiritually dead cause
great grief to those of their family who are spiritually alive.
II. Now let me cheer you while I introduce the second head of my discourse,
which is this—FOR SUCH GRIEF THERE IS ONLY ONE HELPER—BUT THERE IS A HELPER.
This young man is taken out to be buried. But our Lord Jesus Christ met the
funeral procession. Carefully note the “coincidences,” as skeptics call them but
as we call them—“Providences”—of Scripture. This is a fine subject for another
time. Take this one case. How came it that the young man died just then? How
came it that this exact hour was selected for his burial? Perhaps because it was
evening. But even that might not fix the precise moment. Why did the Savior that
day arrange to travel five-and-twenty miles, so as to arrive at Nain in the
evening? How came it to pass that He happened just then to be coming from a
quarter which naturally led Him to enter at that particular gate from which the
dead would be carried?
See, He ascends the hill to the little city at the same moment when the head of
the procession is coming out of the gate! He meets the dead man before the place
of sepulture is reached. A little later and he would have been buried. A little
earlier and he would have been at home lying in the darkened room and no one
might have called the Lord’s attention to him. The Lord knows how to arrange all
things—His forecasts are true to the tick of the clock. I hope some great
purpose is to be fulfilled this morning. I do not know why you, my Friend, came
in here on a day when I am discoursing on this particular subject. You did not
think to come, perhaps, but here you are. And Jesus has come here, too. He has
come here on purpose to meet you and quicken you to newness of life. There is no
chance about it—eternal decrees have arranged it all and we shall soon see that
it is so. You spiritually dead are being met by Him in whom is life eternal.
The blessed Savior saw all at a glance. Out of that procession He singled out
the chief mourner and read her inmost heart. He was always tender to mothers. He
fixed His eye on that widow. For He knew that she was such, without being
informed of the fact. The dead man is her only son—He perceives all the details
and nothing is hid from His infinite mind. O young man, Jesus knows all about
you. Jesus, who is invisibly present this morning, fixes His eyes on you at this
moment. He has seen the tears of those who have wept for you. He sees that some
of them despair of you, and are in their great grief acting like mourners at
your funeral.
Jesus saw it all and, what was more, entered into it all. Oh, how we ought to
love our Lord that He takes such notice of our griefs and especially our
spiritual griefs about the souls of others! You, dear Teacher, want your class
saved—Jesus sympathizes with you. You, dear Friend, have been very earnest to
win souls, Know that in all this you are workers together with God. Jesus knows
all about our travail of soul and He is at one with us therein. Our travail is
only His own travail rehearsed in us, according to our humble measure. When
Jesus enters into our work it cannot fail. Enter, O Lord, into my work at this
hour, I pray You, and bless this feeble word to my hearers! I know that hundreds
of Believers are saying, “Amen.” How this cheers me!
Our Lord proved how He entered into the sorrowful state of things by first
saying to the widow, “Weep not.” At this moment He says to you who are praying
and agonizing for souls, “Do not despair! Sorrow not as those who are without
hope! I mean to bless you. You shall yet rejoice over life given to the dead.”
Let us take heart and dismiss all unbelieving fear. Our Lord then went to the
bier and just laid His finger upon it and they that carried it stood still of
their own accord. Our Lord has a way of making bearers stand still without a
word. Perhaps, today, yonder young man is being carried further into sin by the
four bearers of his natural passions, his infidelity, his bad company, and his
love of strong drink. It may be that pleasure and pride, willfulness and
wickedness are bearing the four corners of the bier. But our Lord can, by His
mysterious power, make the bearers stand still. Evil influences have become
powerless, the man knows not how.
When they stood quite still, there was a hush. The disciples stood around the
Lord, the mourners surrounded the widow and the two crowds faced each other.
There was a little space and Jesus and the dead man were in the center. The
widow pushed away her veil and gazing through her tears wondered what was going
on. The Jews who came out of the city halted as the bearers had done. Hush!
Hush! What will HE do? In that deep silence the Lord heard the unspoken prayers
of that widow woman. I doubt not that her soul began to whisper, half in hope
and half in fear—“Oh, that He would raise my son!”
At any rate, Jesus heard the flutter of the wings of desire if not of faith.
Surely her eyes were speaking as she gazed on Jesus, who had so suddenly
appeared. Here let us be as quiet as the scene before us. Let us be hushed for a
minute and pray God to raise dead souls at this time. [Here followed a pause,
much silent prayer and many tears.]
III. That hush was not long, for speedily the Great Quickener entered upon
His gracious work. This is our third point— JESUS IS ABLE TO WORK THE MIRACLE OF
LIFE-GIVING.
Jesus Christ has life in Himself and He quickens whom He will (John 5:21). Such
life is there in Him that “he that lives and believes in Him, though he were
dead, yet shall he live.” Our blessed Lord immediately went up to the bier. What
lay before Him? It was a corpse. He could derive no aid from that lifeless form.
The spectators were sure that he was dead, for they were carrying him out to
bury him. No deception was possible, for his own mother believed him dead and
you may be sure that if there had been a spark of life in him she would not have
given him up to the jaws of the grave. There was then no hope—no hope from the
dead man, no hope from anyone in the crowd either of bearers or of disciples.
They were all powerless alike.
Even so, you, O Sinner, cannot save yourself—neither can any of us—or can any of
us save you. There is no help for you, dead Sinner, beneath yon skies. No help
in yourself or in those who love you most. But, lo, the Lord has laid help on
One that is mighty. If Jesus wants the least help, you cannot render it, for you
are dead in sins. There you lie, dead on the bier and nothing but the sovereign
power of Divine omnipotence can put heavenly life into you. Your help must come
from above.
While the bier stood still, Jesus spoke to the dead young man, spoke to him
personally—“Young man, I say unto you, Arise.” O Master, personally speak to
some young man this morning. Or, if You will, speak to the old, or speak to a
woman. But speak the Word home to them. We mind not where the Lord’s voice may
fall. Oh that it would now call those around me, for I feel that there are dead
ones all over the building! I stand with biers all about me and dead ones on
them. Lord Jesus, are You not here? What is wanted is Your personal call. Speak,
Lord, we beseech You!
“Young man,” said He, “Arise.” And He spoke as if the man had been alive. This
is the Gospel way. He did not wait till He saw signs of life before He bade him
rise. But to the dead man He said, “Arise.” This is the model of Gospel
preaching—in the name of the Lord Jesus, His commissioned servants speak to the
dead as if they were alive. Some of my Brethren laugh at this and say that it is
inconsistent and foolish. But all through the New Testament it is even so. There
we read, “Arise from the dead and Christ shall give you light.” I do not attempt
to justify it. It is more than enough for me that so I read the Word of God. We
are to bid men believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, even though we know that they
are dead in sin and that faith is the work of the Spirit of God.
Our faith enables us, in God’s name, to command dead men to live and they do
live. We bid unbelieving man believe in Jesus and power goes with the Word and
God’s elect do believe. It is by this Word of faith which we preach that the
voice of Jesus sounds out to men. The young man who could not rise, for he was
dead, nevertheless did rise when Jesus bade him. Even so, when the Lord speaks
by His servants the Gospel command, “Believe and live,” it is obeyed and men
live.
But the Savior, you observe, spoke with His own authority—“Young man, I say unto
you, Arise.” Neither Elijah nor Elisha could thus have spoken. But He who spoke
thus was very God of very God. Though veiled in human flesh and clothed in
lowliness, He was that same God who said, “Let there be light” and there was
light. If any of us are able by faith to say, “Young man, Arise,” we can only
say it in His name—we have no authority but what we derive from Him. Young man,
the voice of Jesus can do what your mother cannot. How often has her sweet voice
wooed you to come to Jesus but wooed in vain? Oh, that the Lord Jesus would
inwardly speak to you! Oh, that He would say, “Young man, Arise.”
I trust that while I am speaking, the Lord is silently speaking in your hearts
by His Holy Spirit. I feel sure that it is even so. If so, within you a gentle
movement of the Spirit is inclining you to repent and yield your heart to Jesus.
This shall be a blessed day to the spiritually dead young man, if now he accepts
his Savior, and yields himself up to be renewed by Divine Grace! No, my poor
Brother, they shall not bury you! I know you have been very bad and they may
well despair of you. But while Jesus lives we cannot give you up.
The miracle was worked straightway—for this young man, to the astonishment of
all about him, sat up. His was a desperate case but death was conquered, for he
sat up. He had been called back from the innermost dungeon of death, even from
the grave’s mouth. But he sat up when Jesus called him. It did not take a month,
nor a week, nor an hour—no, not even five minutes. Jesus said, “Young man,
Arise. And he that was dead sat up, and began to speak.” In an instant the Lord
can save a sinner. Before the words I speak can have more than entered your ear,
the Divine flash which gives you eternal life can have penetrated your breast
and you shall be a new creature in Jesus Christ, beginning to live in newness of
life from this hour—no more to feel spiritually dead—or to return to your old
corruption.
New life, new feeling, new love, new hopes, new company shall be yours, because
you have passed from death unto life. Pray God that it may be so, for He will
hear us.
IV. Our time has gone and although we have a wide subject we may not linger.
I must close by noticing that THIS WILL PRODUCE VERY GREAT RESULTS. To give life
to the dead is no little matter.
The great result was manifest, first, in the young man. Would you like to see
him as he was? Might I venture to draw back the sheet from his face? See there
what death has done? He was a fine young man. To his mother’s eye he was the
mirror of manhood! What a pallor is on that face! How sunken are the eyes! You
are feeling sad. I see you cannot bear the sight. Come, look into this grave
where corruption has gone further in its work. Cover him up! We cannot bear to
look at the decaying body! But when Jesus Christ has said, “Arise,” what a
change takes place!
Now you may look at him. His blue eyes have the light of Heaven in them. His
lips are coral red with life. His brow is fair and full of thought. Look at his
healthy complexion, in which the rose and the lily sweetly contend for mastery!
What a fresh look there is about him, as of the dew of the morning! He has been
dead but he lives, and no trace of death is on him. While you are looking at him
he begins to speak. What music for his mother’s ear! What did he say? Why, that
I cannot tell you. Speak yourself as a newly-quickened one and then I shall hear
what you say.
I know what I said. I think the first word I said when I was quickened was,
“Hallelujah.” Afterwards, I went home to my mother and told her that the Lord
had met with me. No words are given here. It does not quite matter what those
words are, for any words proved him to be alive. If you know the Lord, I believe
you will speak of heavenly things. I do not believe that our Lord Jesus has a
dumb child in His house—they all speak to Him and most of them speak of Him. The
new birth reveals itself in confession of Christ and praise of Christ. I warrant
you that his mother, when she heard him speak, did not criticize what he said.
She did not say, “That sentence is ungrammatical.”
She was too glad to hear him speak at all, that she did not examine all the
expressions which he used. Newly-saved souls often talk in a way which after
years and experience will not justify. You often hear it said of a revival
meeting that there was a good deal of excitement and certain young converts
talked absurdly. That is very likely—but if genuine grace was in their souls and
they bore witness to the Lord Jesus, I, for one, would not criticize them very
severely. Be glad if you can see any proof that they are born again and mark
well their future lives. To the young man himself a new life had begun—life from
among the dead.
A new life also had begun in reference to his mother. What a great result for
her was the raising of her dead son! Henceforth he would be doubly dear. Jesus
helped him down from the bier and delivered him to his mother. We have not the
words He used. But we are sure that He made the presentation most gracefully,
giving back the son to the mother as one presents a choice gift. With a majestic
delight which always goes with His condescending benevolence, He looked on that
happy woman and His glance was brighter to her than the light of the morning, as
He said to her, “Receive your son.”
The thrill of her heart was such as she would never forget. Observe carefully
that our Lord, when He puts the new life into young men, does not want to take
them away with Him from the home where their first duty lies. Here and there one
is called away to be an Apostle or a missionary—but usually He wants them to go
home to their friends and bless their parents and make their families happy and
holy. He does not present the young man to the priest but He delivers him to his
mother. Do not say, “I am converted and therefore I cannot go to business any
more, or try to support my mother by my trade.” That would prove that you were
not converted at all.
You may go for a missionary in a year or two’s time if you are fitted for it.
But you must not make a dash at a matter for which you are not prepared. For the
present, go home to your mother and make your home happy and charm your father’s
heart and be a blessing to your brothers and sisters and let them rejoice
because, “he was dead and is alive again. He was lost and is found.”
What was the next result? Well, all the neighbors feared and glorified God. If
yonder young man who last night was at the music-hall and a few nights ago came
home very nearly drunk. If that young man is born again, all around him will
wonder at it. If that young man who has got himself out of a situation by
gambling, or some other wrong-doing, is saved, we shall all feel that God is
very near us. If that young man who has begun to associate with evil women and
to fall into other evils, is brought to be pure-minded and gracious, it will
strike awe into those round about him. He has led many others astray and if the
Lord now leads him back it will make a great hubbub and men will enquire as to
the reason of the change and will see that there is a power in religion alter
all.
Conversions are miracles which never cease. These prodigies of power in the
moral world are quite as remarkable as prodigies in the material world. We want
conversion, so practical, so real, so Divine—that those who doubt will not be
able to doubt—because they see in them the hand of God.
Finally, note that it not only surprised the neighbors and impressed them but
the rumor of it went everywhere. Who can tell? If a convert is made this
morning, the result of that conversion may be felt for thousands of years, if
the world stands so long. Yes, it shall be felt when a thousand, thousand years
have passed away, even throughout eternity. Tremblingly have I dropped a smooth
stone into the lake this morning. It has fallen from a feeble hand and from an
earnest heart. Your tears have shown that the waters are stirred. I perceive the
first circlet upon the surface.
Other and wider circles will follow as the sermon is spoken of and read. When
you go home and tell what God has done for your soul, there will be a wider
ring. And if it should happen that the Lord should open the mouth of one of this
morning’s converts to preach His Word, then no one can tell how wide the circle
will become. Ring upon ring will the Word spread itself, until the shoreless
ocean of eternity shall feel the influence of this morning’s Word. No, I am not
dreaming. According to our faith so shall it be. Grace this day bestowed by the
Lord upon one single soul may affect the whole mass of humanity.
God grant His blessing, even life forevermore. Pray much for a Blessing, my dear
Friends, I beseech you, for Jesus Christ’s sake. And pray much for me. Amen.
Added to Bible Bulletin Board's "Spurgeon Collection" by:
Tony
Capoccia
Bible Bulletin Board
Box 119
Columbus, New Jersey, USA, 08022
Websites:
www.biblebb.com and
www.gospelgems.com
Email:
tony@biblebb.com
Online since 1986