Delivered on Lord's-Day Morning, May 28, 1882, by C. H. Spurgeon
“He that believes on Me, as the Scripture has said, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water.
(But this spoke He of the Spirit, which they that believe on Him should receive: for
the Holy Spirit was not yet given; because that Jesus was not yet glorified).”
John 7:38, 39.
“Nevertheless I tell you the truth; It is expedient for you that I go away: for if I go not away,
the Comforter will not come unto you; but if I depart, I will send Him unto you.”
John 16:7. IT is essential, dear Friends, that we should worship the living and true God. It will be ill for us if it can be said, “You worship you know not what.” “You shall worship the Lord your God and Him only shall you serve.” The heathens err from this command by multiplying gods and making this and that image to be the object of their adoration. Their excess runs to gross superstition and idolatry. I fear that sometimes we who, “profess and call ourselves Christians,” err in exactly the opposite direction. Instead of worshipping more than God, I fear we worship less than God. This appears when we forget to pay due adoration to the Holy Spirit of God. The true God is triune—Father Son, and Holy Spirit—
and though there is but one God, yet that one God has manifested Himself to us in the trinity of His sacred Persons.
If, then, I worship the Father and the Son, but forget or neglect to adore the Holy Spirit, I worship less than God.
While the poor heathen, in his ignorance, goes far beyond and transgresses, I must take care lest I fall short and fail, also.
What a grievous thing it will be if we do not pay that loving homage and reverence to the Holy Spirit which is so justly
His due. May it not be the fact that we enjoy less of His power and see less of His working in the world because the
Church of God has not been sufficiently mindful of Him? It is a blessed thing to preach the work of Jesus Christ, but it is
an evil thing to omit the work of the Holy Spirit—for the work of the Lord Jesus, itself, is no blessing to that man who
does not know the work of the Holy Spirit!
There is the ransom price, but it is only through the Spirit that we know the redemption! There is the precious blood,
but it is as though the fountain had never been filled unless the Spirit of God leads us with repenting faith to wash
therein! The bandage is soft and the ointment is effectual, but the wound will never be healed till the Holy Spirit shall
apply that which the great Physician has provided. Let us not, therefore, be found neglectful of the work of the Divine
Spirit, lest we incur guilt and inflict upon ourselves serious damage. You that are Believers have the most forcible reasons
to hold the Holy Spirit in the highest esteem, for what are you now without Him? What were you and what would you
still have been if it had not been for His gracious work upon you?
He quickened you, otherwise you had not been in the living family of God today. He gave you understanding that
you might know the Truth of God, otherwise would you have been as ignorant as the carnal world is at this hour! It was
He that awakened your conscience, convincing you of sin! It was He that gave you abhorrence of sin and led you to repent—
it was He that taught you to believe and made you see that glorious Person who is to be believed, even Jesus, the
Son of God! The Spirit has worked in you your faith, love, hope and every other Grace of God! There is not a jewel upon
the neck of your soul which He did not place there—
“For every virtue we possess, What have we learned, if we have learned aright, except by the teaching of the Holy Spirit? What can we say either in
prayer to God or in teaching to men that shall be acceptable unless we receive the unction of the Holy One of Israel?
Brothers and Sisters, who is it that has comforted us in our distresses; directed us in our perplexities; strengthened us in
our weaknesses and helped our infirmities in ten thousand ways? Is it not the Comforter whom the Father has sent in Jesus’
name? Can I speak too highly of the riches of His Grace toward us? Can I too much extol the love of the Spirit? I
know I cannot and you that know what He has worked in you delight to hear Him highly spoken of and His work and
offices set forth! We are bound by a thousand ties to seek His honor who has worked in us our salvation! Let us never
grieve Him by our ingratitude, but let us endeavor to extol Him.
For my part, it shall be the labor of this morning to impress upon you the necessity for His work and the superlative
value of it. Beloved Brothers and Sisters, notwithstanding all that the Spirit of God has already done in us, it is very possible that we have missed a large part of the blessing which He is willing to give, for He is able to “do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think.” We have already come to Jesus and we have drunk of the life-giving stream—our
thirst is quenched and we are made to live in Him. Is this all? Now that we are living in Him and rejoicing to do so, have
we come to the end of the matter?
Assuredly not! We have reached as far as that first exhortation of the Master, “If any man thirsts, let him come unto
Me and drink.” But do you think that the generality of the Church of God have ever advanced to the next—“He that
believes on Me, as the Scripture has said, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water”? I think I am not going beyond
the grievous truth if I say that only here and there will you find men and women who have believed up to that point.
Their thirst is quenched, as I have said, and they live—and because Jesus lives they shall live also—but health and vigor
they have not! They have life, but they have not life more abundantly. They have little life with which to act upon others—
they have no energy welling up and overflowing to go streaming out of them like rivers!
They have not thought it possible, perhaps, or thinking it possible, they have not imagined it possible to themselves.
Or believing it possible to themselves they have not aspired to it, but they have stopped short of the fullest blessing. Their
wading in to the sacred river has contented them and they know nothing of “waters to swim in.” Like the Israelites of
old, they are slow to possess all the land of promise, but rather sit down when the war has hardly begun! Brothers and
Sisters, let us go in to get of God all that God will give us! Let us set our heart upon this, that we mean to have, by God’s
help, all that the infinite goodness of God is ready to bestow! Let us not be satisfied with the sip that saves, but let us go
on to the Baptism which buries the flesh and raises us in the likeness of the risen Lord—even that Baptism into the Holy
Spirit and into fire which makes us spiritual and sets us all on flame with zeal for the Glory of God and eagerness for usefulness by which that Glory may be increased among the sons of men!
Thus I introduce you to my texts and by their guidance we will enter upon the further consideration of the operations
of the Holy Spirit, especially of those to which we would aspire.
I. We will commence with the remark that THE WORK OF THE SPIRIT IS INTIMATELY CONNECTED WITH
THE WORK OF CHRIST. It is a great pity when persons preach the Holy Spirit’s work so as to obscure the work of
Christ. I have known some do that, for they have held up before the sinner’s eyes the inward experience of Believers, instead
of lifting up, first and foremost, the crucified Savior to whom we must look and live! The Gospel is not, “Behold
the Spirit of God,” but, “Behold the Lamb of God.” It is an equal pity when Christ is so preached that the Holy Spirit is
ignored—as if faith in Jesus prevented the necessity of the new birth—and imputed righteousness rendered imparted
righteousness needless.
Have I not often reminded you that in the third chapter of John, where Jesus taught Nicodemus the doctrine, “Except
a man is born again of water and of the Spirit he cannot enter the kingdom of Heaven,” we also read those blessed
words, “And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of Man be lifted up: that whoever believes
in Him should not perish, but have eternal life. For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son,
that whoever believes in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life”? The necessity for regeneration by the Spirit is
put very clearly, there, and so is the free promise that those who trust in Jesus shall be saved. This is what we ought to
do—we must take care to let both these Truths of God stand out most distinctly with equal prominence!
They are intertwined with each other and are necessary each to each—what God has joined together let no man put
asunder. They are so joined together that, first of all, the Holy Spirit was not given until Jesus had been glorified. Carefully
note our first text—it is a very striking one—“This spoke He of the Spirit which they that believe on Him should
receive: for the Holy Spirit was not yet.” The word, “given,” is not in the original—it is inserted by the translators to help explain the sense and they were, perhaps, wise in making such an addition, but the words are more forcible by themselves.
How strong the statement, “For the Holy Spirit was not yet.” Of course, we, none of us, dream that the Holy Spirit
was not yet existing, for He is eternal and self-existent, being most truly God. But He was not yet in fellowship with man
to the full extent in which He now is since Jesus Christ is glorified. The near and dear communion of God with man which
is expressed by the indwelling of the Spirit could not take place till the redeeming work was done and the Redeemer was
exalted! As far as men and the fullness of the blessing were concerned, indicated by the outflowing rivers of living water,
the Spirit of God was not yet.
“Oh,” you say,” but was not the Spirit of God in the Church in the wilderness and with the saints of God in all former
ages?” I answer, Certainly, but not in the manner in which the Spirit of God now resides in the Church of Jesus
Christ. You read of the Prophets and of one and another gracious man, that the Spirit of God came upon them, seized
them, moved them, spoke by them—but He did not dwell in them. His operations upon men were a coming and a go-
ing—they were carried away by the Spirit of God and came under His power—but the Spirit of God did not rest upon
them or abide in them.
Occasionally the sacred endowment of the Spirit of God came upon them, but they knew not “the communion of the
Holy Spirit.” As a French pastor very sweetly puts it, “He appeared unto men. He did not incarnate Himself in man. His
action was intermittent—He went and came like the dove which Noah sent forth from the ark and which went to and
fro, finding no rest—while in the new dispensation He dwells, He abides in the heart, as the dove, His emblem, which
John the Baptist saw descending and alighting upon the head of Jesus. Affianced of the soul, the Spirit went off to see His
betrothed, but was not yet one with her. The marriage was not consummated until Pentecost, after the glorification of
Jesus Christ.”
You know how our Lord puts it, “He dwells with you and shall be in you.” That indwelling is another thing from
being with us. The Holy Spirit was with the Apostles in the days when Jesus was with them, but He was not in them in the
sense in which He filled them at and after the Day of Pentecost. The operations of the Spirit of God before our Lord’s
Ascension were not according to the full measure of the Gospel. But now the Spirit of God has been poured upon us from
on high! Now He has descended and now He abides in the midst of the Church. And now we enter into Him and are baptized
into the Holy Spirit, while He enters into us and makes our bodies to be His temples. Jesus said, “I will send you
another Comforter which shall abide with you forever”—not coming and going—but remaining in the midst of the
Church!
This shows how intimately the gift of the Holy Spirit is connected with our Lord Jesus Christ, inasmuch as in the
fullest sense of His indwelling, the Holy Spirit could not be with us until Christ had been glorified. It has been well observed
that our Lord sent out 70 evangelists to preach the Gospel, even as He had before sent out the 12—and no doubt
they preached with great zeal and produced much stir—but the Holy Spirit never took the trouble to preserve one of
their sermons, or even the notes of one! I have not the slightest doubt that they were very crude and incomplete, showing
more of human zeal than of Divine unction and, therefore, they are forgotten! But no sooner had the Holy Spirit fallen,
than Peter’s first sermon is recorded—and from then on we have frequent notes of the utterances of Apostles, deacons and
evangelists! There was an abiding fullness and an overflowing of blessing out of the souls of the saints, after the Lord was
glorified, which was not existing among men before that time!
Observe, too, that the Holy Spirit was given after the ascent of our Divine Lord into His Glory, partly to make that
ascent the more renowned. When He ascended up on high, He led captivity captive and gave gifts to men. These gifts were
men, in whom the Holy Spirit dwelt, who preached the Gospel unto the nations. The shedding of the Holy Spirit upon
the assembled disciples on that memorable day was the glorification of the risen Christ upon the earth! I know not in
what way the Father could have made the Glory of Heaven so effectually to flow from the heights of the New Jerusalem
and to come streaming down among the sons of men as by giving that chief of all Gifts, the gift of the Holy Spirit when
the Lord had risen and gone into His Glory!
With emphasis, may I say of the Spirit at Pentecost that He glorified Christ by descending at such a time. What
grander celebration could there have been? Heaven rang with Hosannas and earth echoed the joy! The descending Spirit
is the noblest testimony among men to the Glory of the ascended Redeemer! Was not the Spirit of God also sent at that
time as an evidence of our Divine Master’s acceptance? Did not the Father thus say to the Church, “My Son has finished
the work and has fully entered into His Glory. Therefore I give you the Holy Spirit”? If you would know what a harvest
is to come of the sowing of the bloody sweat and of the death wounds, see the first fruits! Behold how the Holy Spirit is
given, Himself, to be the first fruits, the earnest of the Glory which shall yet be revealed in us! I need no better attestation
from God of the finished work of Jesus than this blazing, flaming seal of tongues of fire upon the heads of the disciples!
He must have done His work, or such a gift as this would not have come from it.
Moreover, if you desire to see how the work of the Spirit comes to us in connection with the work of Christ, recollect
that it is the Spirit’s work to bear witness of Jesus Christ. He does not take of a thousand different matters and show
them to us, but He shall take, “of Mine,” says Christ, “and He shall show them unto you.” The Spirit of God is engaged
in a service in which the Lord Jesus Christ is the beginning and the end. He comes to men that they may come to Jesus.
Hence He comes to convince us of sin that He may reveal the great Sacrifice of sin—He comes to convince us of righteousness
that we may see the Righteousness of Christ—and of judgment that we may be prepared to meet Him when He
shall come to judge the quick and dead.
Do not think that the Spirit of God has come or ever will come among us to teach us a new Gospel, or something
other than is written in the Scriptures. Men come to me with their stories and fancies and tell me that they were revealed
to them by the Holy Spirit. I abhor their blasphemous impertinence and refuse to listen to them for a minute! They tell
me this and that absurdity—and then father it upon the Spirit of Wisdom! It is enough to try our patience to hear their
foolish ravings, but to find the Holy Spirit charged with them is more than we can bear! We have tests and judgments by
which to know whether they who claim to speak by the Holy Spirit do so or not—for the testimony of the Spirit is always
most honorable to our Lord Jesus Christ—and does not concern itself with the trifles of time and the follies of the
flesh.
It is by the Gospel of Jesus Christ that the Spirit of God works in the hearts of men. “Faith comes by hearing and
hearing by the Word of God”—the Holy Spirit uses the hearing of the Word of God for the conviction, conversion, consolation
and sanctification of men. His usual and ordinary method of operation is to fasten upon the mind the things of
God and to put life and force into the consideration of them. He revives in men’s memories things that have long been
forgotten and He frequently makes these the means of affecting the heart and conscience. The men can hardly remember
hearing these Truths of God, but still, they were heard by them at some time or other! Saving Truths are such matters as
are contained in their substance in the Word of God and lie within the range of the teaching, or the Person, or work, or
offices of our Lord Jesus Christ. It is the Spirit’s one business here below to reveal Christ to us and in us—and to that
work He steadily adheres.
Moreover, the Holy Spirit’s work is to conform us to the likeness of Jesus Christ. He is not working us to this or that
human ideal, but He is working us into the likeness of Christ that He may be the First-Born among many brethren. Jesus
Christ is that standard and model to which the Spirit of God, by His sanctifying processes, is bringing us till Christ is
formed in us the hope of Glory. It is for the Glory of Jesus that the Spirit of God always works. He works not for the
Glory of a Church or of a community—He works not for the honor of a man or for the distinction of a sect—His one
great objective is to glorify Christ! “He shall glorify Me,” is our Savior’s declaration, and when He takes of the things of
Christ and shows them to us, we are led more and more to reverence and love and to adore our blessed Lord Jesus Christ.
I will not detain you longer with this. You will see how the works of Jesus and of the Spirit are joined together indissolubly, so that we may neither set the work of Jesus before the work of the Spirit nor the work of the Spirit before the
work of Jesus. But we are glad to joy in both and to make much of them. As we delight in the Father’s love and the Grace
of our Lord Jesus, so do we equally rejoice in the communion of the Holy Spirit and, therefore, these Three agree in One.
II. We will now advance another step and here we shall need our second text. THE OPERATIONS OF THE HOLY
SPIRIT ARE OF INCOMPARABLE VALUE. They are of such incomparable value that the very best things we can
think of are not thought to be so precious as these are. Our Lord Himself says, “It is expedient for you that I go away: for
if I go not away, the Comforter will not come unto you.” Beloved Friends, the Presence of Jesus Christ was of inestimable
value to His disciples and yet it was not such an advantage to His servants as the indwelling of the Holy Spirit! Is not this
a wonderful statement? Well might our Lord preface it by saying, “Now I tell you the truth,” as if He felt that they
would find it a hard saying, for a hard saying it is!
Consider for a moment what Christ was to His disciples while He was here—and then see what must be the value of
the Spirit’s operations when it is expedient that they should lose all that blessing in order to receive the Spirit of God!
Our Lord Jesus Christ was to them their Teacher. They had learned everything from His lips. He was their Leader—they
had never to ask what to do—they had only to follow in His footsteps. He was their Defender—whenever the Pharisees
or Sadducees assailed them, He was like a brazen wall to them! He was their Comforter—in all times of grief they resorted
to Him and His dear sympathetic heart poured out floods of comfort at once. What if I were to say that the Lord
Jesus Christ was everything to them, their All in All? What a father is to his children, yes, what a mother is to her suckling,
that was Jesus Christ to His disciples! And yet the Spirit of God’s abiding in the Church is better, even, than all this!
Now take another thought. What would you think if Jesus Christ were to come among us now, as in the days of His
flesh? I mean not as He will come, but as He appeared at His first advent. What joy it would give you! Oh, the delights,
the heavenly joys, to hear that Jesus Christ of Nazareth was on earth, again, a Man among men! Should we not clap our
hands for joy? Our one question would be, “Master, where do You dwell?” for we should all long to live just where He
lived. We could then sympathize with the Negroes when they flocked into Washington in large numbers to take up their
residence there. Why, do you think, did they come to live in that city? Because Massa Abraham Lincoln, who had set
them free, lived there! And they thought it would be glorious to live as near as possible to their great friend!
If Jesus lived anywhere, it would not matter where! If it were in the desert or on the bleakest of mountains, there
would be a rush to the place! How would the spot be crowded! What rents they would pay for the worst of tenements if
Jesus was but in the neighborhood! But don’t you see the difficulty? We could not all get near Him in any literal or corporeal
fashion. Now that the Church is multiplied into millions of Believers, some of the Lord’s followers would never be
able to see Him—and the most could only hope to speak with Him now and then! In the days of His flesh the 12 might see
Him every day and so might the little company of disciples—but the case is altered, now that multitudes are trusting in
His name.
If our Lord were at this time living in the United States, we should be much grieved to have an ocean between us and
our Leader—all the companies that could be formed would not be able to run enough boats to carry us over. If the Master
personally came here to this little island, it would not hold all the vast company of the faithful who would flock to it.
It is much better to have the Holy Spirit, because He is dwelling with us and in us! The difficulties of the bodily Presence
are too great and so, though we would be thankful, like the Apostles, if we had known Christ after the flesh, yet we do
not marvel that they expressed little sorrow when they said that after the flesh they knew Him no more. The Comforter
had filled the void caused by His absence and made them rejoice because the Lord had gone unto His Father!
Are we not apt to think that if our Lord Jesus were here it would give unspeakable strength to the Church? Would
not the enemy be convinced if they saw Him? No, they would not! If they heard not Moses and the Prophets, neither
would they be converted though one rose from the dead! Jesus rose, but they did not, therefore, believe. If our Lord had
lingered here all this while, His Presence would not have converted unbelievers, for nothing can do that but the power of
the Holy Spirit! “But,” you say, “surely it would thrill the Church with enthusiasm. Fancy the Lord Himself standing on
this platform this morning in the same garb as when He was upon earth. Oh, what rapturous worship! What burning
zeal! What enthusiasm! We should go home in such a state of excitement as we never were in before!”
Yes, it is even so, but then the Lord is not going to carry on His Kingdom by the force of mere mental excitement—
not even by such enthusiasm as would follow the sight of His Person. The work of the Holy Spirit is a truer work, a
deeper work, a surer work and will more effectually achieve the purposes of God than even would the enthusiasm to
which we should be stirred by the bodily Presence of our well-beloved Savior. The work is to be spiritual and, therefore,
the visible Presence has departed. It is better that it should be so. We must walk by faith and by faith alone! How could
we do this if we could see the Lord with these mortal eyes? This is the dispensation of the unseen Spirit, in which we render
Glory to God by trusting in His Word and relying upon the unseen energy.
Now, faith works and faith triumphs though the world sees not the foundation upon which faith is built, for the
Spirit who works in us cannot be discerned by carnal minds. The world sees Him not, neither knows Him. Thus, you see
that the operations of the Holy Spirit must be inestimably precious. There is no calculating their value, since it is expedient
that we lose the bodily Presence of Christ rather than remain without the indwelling of the Spirit of God.
III. Now go back to my first text, again, and follow me in the third head. Those operations of the Spirit of God, of
which I am afraid some Christians are almost ignorant, are of wondrous power. The text says, “He that believes on Me,
out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water.” THESE OPERATIONS ARE OF MARVELOUS POWER. Brothers
and Sisters, do you understand my text? Do rivers of living water flow out of you?
Notice, first, that this is to be an inward work—the rivers of living water are to flow out of the midst of the man.
The words, are, according to our version, “Out of his belly”—that is, from his heart and soul. The rivers do not flow out
of his mouth—the promised power is not oratory. We have had plenty of words, floods of words—but this is heart work.
The source of the rivers is found in the inner life. It is an inward work at its fountainhead. It is not a work of talent and
ability, show, glitter and glare—it is altogether an inward work. The life-flood is to come out of the man’s inmost self—
out of the heart and essential being of the man. Homage is shown too generally to outward form and external observance,
though these soon lose their interest and power. But when the Spirit of God rests within a man, it exercises a home
rule within him and he gives great attention to what an old divine was known to call, “the home department.” Alas,
many neglect the realm within which is the chief province under our care. O my Brothers and Sisters in Christ, if you
would be useful, begin with yourself! It is out of your very soul that a blessing must come. It cannot come out of you if it
is not in you! And it cannot be in you unless God the Holy Spirit places it there.
Next, it is life-giving work. Out of the heart of the man, out of the center of his life, are to flow rivers of living water.
That is to say, he is instrumentally to communicate to others the Divine life. When he speaks; when he prays; when he
acts, he shall so speak and pray and act that there shall be going out of him an emanation which is full of the life of Grace
and godliness. He shall be a light by which others shall see! His life shall be the means of kindling life in other men’s bosoms.
“Out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water.” Note the plenitude of it. The figure would have been a surprising
one if it had said, “Out of him shall flow a river of living water.” But it is not so—it says rivers.
Have you ever stood by the side of a very abundant spring? We have some such not far from London. You see the
water bubbling up from many little mouths. Observe the sand dancing as the water forces its way from the bottom and
there, just across the road, a mill is turned by the stream which has just been created by the spring! And when the waterwheel
is turned, you see a veritable river flowing forward to supply Father Thames. Yet this is only one river! What
would you think if you saw a spring yielding such supplies that a river flowed from it to the north and a river to the
south, a river to the east and a river to the west? This is the figure before us—rivers of living water flowing out of the
living man in all directions!
“Ah,” you say, “I have not reached to that.” A point is gained when you know, confess and deplore your failure. If
you say, “I have all things and abound,” I am afraid you will never reach the fullness of the blessing. But if you know
something of your failure, the Lord will lead you further. It may be that the Spirit of Life which comes forth for you is
but a trickling brooklet, or even a few tiny drops. Then be sure to confess it and you will be on the way to a fuller blessing!
What a Word of God is this! Rivers of living water!! Oh that all professing Christians were such fountains! See how
spontaneous it is—“Out of his belly shall flow.” No pumping is required! Nothing is said about machinery and hydraulics!
The man does not need exciting and stirring up, but, just as he is, influence of the best kind quietly flows out of him!
Did you ever hear a great hubbub in the morning, a great outcry, a sounding of trumpets and drums? And did you
ever ask, “What is it?” Did a voice reply, “The sun is about to rise and he is making this noise that all may be aware of
it”? No, he shines, but he has nothing to say about it! Even so, the genuine Christian just goes about flooding the world
with blessings and, so far from claiming attention for himself, it may be that he is unconscious of what he is effecting!
God so blesses him that his leaf does not wither and whatever he does is prospering, for he is like a tree planted by the
rivers of water that bring forth its fruit in its season—his verdure and fruit are the natural outcome of his vigorous life.
Oh, the blessed spontaneity of the work of Grace when a man gets into the fullness of it, for then he seems to eat and
drink and sleep eternal life! And he spreads a savor of salvation all round! And this is to be perpetual—not like intermittent
springs which burst forth and flow in torrents and then cease—but it is to be an everyday gushing out!
In summer and winter, by day and by night, wherever the man is, he shall be a blessing. As he breathes, he shall
breathe benedictions! As he thinks, his mind shall be devising generous things. And when he acts, his acts shall be as
though the hand of God were working by the hand of man! I hope I hear many sighs rising up in the place! I hope I hear
friends saying, “Oh that I could get to that.” I want you to attain the fullness of the favor! I pray that we may all get it
because Jesus Christ is glorified! Therefore the Holy Spirit is given in this fashion, given more largely to those in the
kingdom of Heaven than to all those holy men before the Lord’s ascent to His Glory.
God gives no stinted blessing to celebrate the triumph of His Son! God gives not the Spirit by measure unto Him. On
such an occasion Heaven’s grandest liberality was displayed. Christ is glorified in Heaven above and God would have
Him glorified in the Church below by vouchsafing a Baptism of the Holy Spirit to each of us. So I close by this, which I
hope will be a very comforting and inspiriting reflection.
IV. THESE OPERATIONS OF THE SPIRIT OF GOD ARE EASILY TO BE OBTAINED BY THE LORD’S CHILDREN.
Did you say you had not received them? They are to be had! They are to be had at once! First, they are to be had
by believing in Jesus. “This spoke He of the Spirit, which they that believe on Him should receive.” Do you not see that it
is faith which gives us the first drink and causes us to live? And this second, more abundant blessing of being, ourselves,
made fountains from which rivers flow, comes in the same way! Believe in Christ, for the blessing is to be obtained not by
the works of the Law, nor by so much fasting, striving, or effort—but by belief in the Lord Jesus!
With Him is the residue of the Spirit. He is prepared to give this to you, yes, to every one of you who believe on His
name. He will not, of course, make all of you preachers—for who, then, would be hearers? If all were preachers, the
other works of the Church would be neglected. But He will give you this favor—that out of you there shall stream a Divine
influence all round you to bless your children, to bless your servants, to bless the workmen in the house where you
are employed and to bless the street you live! In proportion as God gives you opportunity, these rivers of living water
will flow in this channel and in that—and they will be pouring forth from you at all times—if you believe in Jesus for
the full blessing and can, by faith, receive it.
But there is another thing to be done as well, and that is to pray. And here I want to remind you of those blessed
Words of the Master, “Everyone that asks receives; and he that seeks finds; and to him that knocks it shall be opened. If a
son shall ask bread of any of you that is a father, will he give him a stone? Or if he ask for a fish, will he, for a fish give
him a serpent? Or if he shall ask for an egg, will he offer him a scorpion? If you, then, being evil, know how to give good
gifts unto your children: how much more shall your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to them that ask Him?” You
see, there is a distinct promise to the children of God that their heavenly Father will give them the Holy Spirit if they ask
for His power—and that promise is made to be exceedingly strong by the instances joined to it. If there is a promise that
God can break (which there is not), this is not the promise, for God has put it in the most forcible and binding way.
I know not how to show you its wonderful force! Did you ever hear of a man who, when his child asked for bread,
gave him a stone? Go to the worst part of London and will you find a man of that kind? You shall, if you like, get among
pirates and murderers, and when a little child cries, “Father, give me a bit of bread and meat,” does the most wicked father
fill his own little one’s mouth with stones? Yet the Lord seems to say that this is what He would be doing if He were
to deny us the Holy Spirit when we ask Him for His necessary working—He would be like one that gave his children
stones instead of bread! Do you think the Lord will ever bring Himself down to that? He says, “How much more shall
your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to them that ask Him?”
He makes it a stronger case than that of an ordinary parent! The Lord must give us the Spirit when we ask Him, for
He has, herein, bound Himself by no ordinary pledge. He has used a simile which would bring dishonor on His name and
that of the very grossest kind, if He did not give the Holy Spirit to them that ask Him! Oh, then, let us ask Him at once
with all our hearts! Am I not so happy as to have in this audience some who will immediately ask? I pray that some who
have never received the Holy Spirit at all may now be led, while I am speaking, to pray, “Blessed Spirit, visit me! Lead me
to Jesus.” But especially those of you that are the children of God—to you is this promise especially made! Ask God to
make you all that the Spirit of God can make you—not only a satisfied Believer who has drunk for himself—but a useful
Believer who overflows the neighborhood with blessing!
I see here a number of friends from the country who have come to spend their holiday in London. What a blessing it
would be if they went back to their respective Churches overflowing! There are numbers of Churches that need flooding!
They are dry as a barn floor and little dew falls on them. Oh that they might be flooded! What a wonderful thing a flood
is! Go down to the river; look over the bridge and see the barges and other crafts lying in the mud. All the king’s horses
and all the king’s men cannot tug them out to sea! There they lie, dead and motionless as the mud, itself! What shall we
do with them? What machinery can move them? Have we a great engineer among us who will devise a scheme for lifting
these vessels and bearing them down to the river’s mouth? No, it cannot be done! Wait till the tide comes in! What a
change! Each vessel walks the water like a thing of life! What a difference between the low tide and the high tide! You
cannot stir the boats when the water is gone, but when the tide is at the full, see how readily they move—a little child
may push them with his hand!
Oh, for a flood of Divine Grace! May the Lord send to all our Churches a great springtide! Then the indolent will be
active enough and those who were half dead will be full of energy. I know that in this particular dock several vessels are
lying that I should like to float, but I cannot stir them. They neither work for God nor come out to the Prayer Meetings!
They do not give of their substance to spread the Gospel. If the flood would come, you would see what they are capable
of—they would be active, fervent, generous, abounding in every good word and work! So may it be! So may it be! May
springs begin to flow in all our Churches and may all of you who hear me this day get your share of the streams!
Oh that the Lord may now fill you and then send you home bearing a flood of Grace with you! It sounds odd to
speak of a man’s carrying home a flood within him and yet I hope it will be so—and that out of you shall flow rivers of
living water! So may God grant it for Jesus’ sake. Amen. |