Delivered on Lord's-Day Morning, June 4, 1882, by C. H. Spurgeon “But if our Gospel is hid, it is hid to them that are lost: in whom the god of this world has blinded the minds of them which believe not, lest the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ, who is the image of God, should shine on them.” 2 Corinthians 4:3, 4. I THINK in this case the Revised New Testament gives a better translation than does the Authorized Version and I will, therefore, read it, “But even if our Gospel is veiled, it is veiled in them that are perishing, in whom the god of this world has blinded the minds of the unbelieving, that the light of the Gospel of the Glory of Christ, who is the image of God, should not dawn upon them.” Paul had been speaking of Moses with the veil over his face and we lose the track of his thought if we use the word, “hid,” instead of, “veiled.” Our Gospel wears no veil, but exhibits all the Glory of its countenance to the sons of men. Oh that they may be able to steadfastly behold it and see in it their own salvation and the Glory of the Lord!
Observe at the outset the confidence with which Paul speaks. It is abundantly evident that he has no doubt whatever
that the Gospel which he proclaims is assuredly true. No, that it is so manifestly true that if those who have heard it do
not accept it, it must be because the god of this world has blinded their minds! The accent of conviction makes every word
emphatic. He believes and is sure! And he is convinced that those who do not believe must be under the thralldom of the
devil. This is not the ordinary style in which the Gospel is preached nowadays! We hear men courteously apologize for
stating anything as absolute, for they are fearful of being thought narrow-minded and bigoted! We hear them prove what
is clear as noonday and back up with arguments what God, Himself, has said—as if the sun needed candles to exhibit it,
or as if God’s Word needed the support of human reasoning!
The Apostle did not take the defensive ground at all! He carried the war across the border and assailed the unbelievers.
He came forth fresh from God with a Revelation and his every word seemed to challenge men with—“This is God’s
Word. Believe it, for if you do not, you will incur sin and prove that you are lost and are under the influence of the
devil.” When the Gospel was preached in that royal style, it prevailed mightily and annihilated opposition! Cavilers
came, of course. “What will this babbler say?” was a common question, but the heralds of the Cross made short work of
all cavilers, for they simply went on declaring the glorious Gospel! Their one word was, “This is from God! If you believe
it, you shall be saved. If you reject it you shall be damned.”
They made no bones about it, but spoke like men who believed in their message and judged that it left unbelievers
without excuse. They never altered their doctrine or softened the penalty of refusing it. Like fire among stubble, the
Gospel consumed all before it when it was preached as God’s Revelation. It does not spread, today, with equal rapidity
because many of its teachers have adopted what they fancy are wiser methods—they have become less certain and more
indifferent and, therefore, they reason and argue where they should proclaim and assert! Some preachers rake up all the
nonsense that any scientific or unscientific man likes to bring forward and spend half their time in trying to answer it!
What can be the use of untying the knots which are tied by skeptics? They only tie more! It is not for my servant to dispute
my message, but to deliver it correctly, as mine, and there leave it.
If we get back, again, to the old platform, and speak as from God, we shall not speak in vain, for He will surely
honor His own Word. The preacher should either speak in God’s name or hold his tongue. My Brother, if the Lord has
not sent you with a message, go to bed, or to school, or mind your farm—for what does it matter what you have to say
on your own? If Heaven has given you a message, speak it out as he ought to speak who is called to be the mouth for God!
If we are to make up our Gospel as we go along, out of our own heads, and compound our own theology as chemists
make up mixtures of drugs, we have an endless task before us and failure stares us in the face! Alas for the weakness of
human wit and the fallacy of mortal reasoning!
But if we have to deliver what God declares, we have a simple task and one which must lead to grand results, for the
Lord has said, “My Word shall not return unto Me void.” Where did the Apostle learn to speak thus positively? He tells
us in the first verse of the chapter, “Therefore seeing we have this ministry, as we have received mercy, we faint not.” He
had, himself, been once a persecutor and he had been convinced of his error by the appearance of the Lord Jesus to him.
This was a great deed of mercy. He now knew that his sins were forgiven. He felt in his own heart that he was a regenerated
man, changed, cleansed, newly created and this was, to him, overwhelming evidence that the Gospel was from God.
To himself, at any rate, the Gospel was a Truth of God past argument, needing no other demonstration than its marvelous
effect upon himself!
Having received mercy for himself, he judged that other men were in need of mercy even as he was, and that the same
Gospel which had brought light and comfort to his own soul would bring salvation to them, also. This braced him to his
work. By this consciousness he was made to speak as one having authority. There was no hesitancy about him, for he
spoke what he felt. Ah, Friends, we not only deliver a message which we believe to be from God, but we tell out that
which we have tested and tried within our own souls! An unconverted preacher must be in a sorry plight, for he lacks
evidence of the Truth of God which he proclaims. A man who is not familiar with the effect of the Gospel upon his own
heart must endure much disquietude when he stands up to preach upon it. What does he really know about it if he has
never felt its power?
But if he has been converted by its means, then he is confident and is not to be moved by the questions and quibbles of
those who oppose him. His inner consciousness strengthens him in the delivery of his message. We must also feel the influence
of the Word of God that we may speak what we know and testify what we have seen. Having received mercy we cannot
but speak of that mercy positively as of a thing which we have tested and handled—and knowing that it is God who
has given us the mercy, we cannot but speak with anxious desire that others may partake of Divine Grace.
We now come to consider our text. Our first observation shall be the Gospel is, in itself, a glorious light, for in the
fourth verse Paul speaks of the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ. Secondly, this Gospel is, in itself, plain and simple.
Thirdly, if we preach it as we ought to preach it, we keep it plain and do not muddle it up by worldly wisdom. And
fourthly, it being in itself a great light and in itself, clear, therefore the preaching being clear, if men do not see it, it is because they are lost—it is a fatal sign when men are unable to perceive the light of the Gospel of the Glory of Jesus
Christ.
I. First, then, THE GOSPEL IS IN ITSELF A GLORIOUS LIGHT. In countless places it is so described in the New
Testament. This is the light which has come into the world. “The darkness is past, and the true light now shines.” Observe
that this light reveals the Glory of Christ. This is the new translation and it is a valuable one— “The light of the
Gospel of the Glory of Christ.” You know the Hebrews had a different mode of expression from the Greek and if we are
to read the Greek as though Paul Hebraized it, then we read it according to the version we have here— “the glorious
Gospel of Christ.” But if we read the Greek as Greek, then it runs, “the light of the Gospel of the Glory of Christ.” The
renderings are equally true, but the second one has a fullness and freshness of sense about it worthy of special note.
The Gospel reveals the Glory of Christ. It tells us that He is the eternal Son of the Father, by whom all things were
made, for whom all things were created and by whom they continue to exist. This might not have been good news to us if
it had stood alone, though it ought always to be good for the creature to be informed of his Creator. But the Gospel further
reveals to us that this ever-blessed Son of the Highest came down to earth in infinite pity, espoused our nature, was
born at Bethlehem and became as truly Man as He was assuredly God. This was the first note of the Gospel and there was
so much delight in it that it set all the angels in Heaven singing—and the shepherds who kept watch over their flocks by
night heard the chorales of the first Christmas rung out from the midnight sky—“Glory to God in the highest, and on
earth peace, good will toward men.”
It could not but mean peace to man that God should become Man! It could not but mean mercy to the guilty that the
Heir of Glory should be born into their race! It must be good news to us that the offended One should take upon Himself
the nature of the offender! So the first pure Gospel music rang out that made glad the ear of mankind! The Lord God
Omnipotent became Immanuel—God With Us! “Unto us a Child is born, unto us a Son is given, and His name shall be
called Wonderful.” This is the beginning of the Gospel of the Glory of Christ—He gained a greater Glory by laying
aside His Divine Glory!
Furthermore, the Gospel tells us that this same mighty God, the Everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace dwelt here
among men, preaching and teaching, and working miracles of matchless mercy, everywhere proving Himself to be man’s
brother, sympathetic and tender and gentle, receiving to Himself even the lowest of the people and bowing Himself to the
least of the race. It is written, “Then drew near unto Him the publicans and sinners for to hear Him.” And again He took
little children into His arms and blessed them, and said, “Suffer the little children to come unto Me, and forbid them
not.” There was a Gospel about all that He did and a Glory which men who are pure in heart both see and admire!
His life was good news—it was a new and a glad thing that God should dwell among men and be found in fashion as
a Man. The God that hates sin and whose wrath burns against iniquity, tabernacled among sinners and saw and felt their
evil ways and prayed for them, “Father, forgive them.” His Glory lay in His being so patient, gentle and self-sacrificing,
and yet so just and true. Well did John say, “The Word was made flesh and dwelt among us, (and we beheld His Glory,
the Glory as of the Only-Begotten of the Father), full of Grace and truth.” But the Gospel’s biggest bell, which rings out
with clearest note, is that this Son of God, in due time, gave Himself for our sins, making an offering of His whole Human
Nature as a propitiation for the guilt of men! Herein is an excessive Glory of love!
What a sight it was to see Him in the garden oppressed with our load of guilt till the bloody sweat was forced from
Him! To see Him bearing that stupendous weight up to the Cross and there hanging in agonies of death, bearing the desertion
of His Father and all the thick clouds of darkness that came of it—dying—the “Just for the unjust to bring us to
God”! It was the Glory of Christ that He was there bereft of all Glory! Never can a more glorious thing be said of Him
than that He, for our sakes, was obedient to death, even the death of the Cross! And this is the Gospel we preach, the
Gospel of Substitution, that Jesus stood in the sinner’s place and bore in the sinner’s stead what was due to the Law of
God on account of man’s transgression.
Tell it out among the heathen that the Lord reigns from the Cross—
“Fling out the banner! Let it float No more gladsome news could come to man than that the Incarnate God had borne man’s s sins and died in man’s place!
Yet there is another note, for He that died and was buried is risen from the dead and has borne our nature up into
Glory—and there He wears it at the Father’s right hand. His loving heart is still occupied with the same Divine errand
that brought Him down below—He is, by His intercession, saving sinners whom He purchased with His blood! He is
able to save them to the uttermost who come unto God by Him, seeing He always lives to make intercession for them!
This is the Gospel of the Glory of Christ! It is our Lord’s Glory that He mediates between man and God, pleading for
the unjust ones, using as His all-prevailing argument the blood which He has shed. But I must not leave out the fact that
He who now in Glory pleads for sinners will speedily come, again, to gather all His own unto Himself, to shed abroad on
them the fullness of His own Glory and to take them up to be with Him where He is. There is wondrous light in the Gospel,
both for the future and the present! It sets forth to us the Glory of Christ, the Glory of love, the Glory of mercy, the
Glory of a blood which can wash the blackest, white! The Glory of a plea which can make the poorest prayer, acceptable!
The Glory of a living and triumphant Savior, who, having put His hands to the work, will not fail nor be discouraged
till all the purposes of infinite love shall be achieved by Him. This is “the Gospel of the Glory of Christ” and the light of
it is exceedingly clear and bright!
We are now called to a second Truth of God—the Gospel is a light which reveals God, Himself, for, according to
our text, the Lord Jesus is the image of God. Did not Jesus say, “He that has seen Me has seen the Father”? For, first, our
Lord Jesus is the image of God in this sense, that He is essentially One with God. He is “the brightness of the Father’s
Glory and the express image of His Person.” He is “very God of very God,” as the creed has it, and I know not how better
to express the idea. Our Lord Himself said, “I and My Father are One.” But the text means more than that. Christ is
the image of God in this sense, that He shows us what God is. If you know the Character of Jesus, you know the Character
of God.
God Himself is invisible and is not seen of mortal eyes; neither can He be comprehended of finite mind. He cannot,
indeed, be truly known at all except by the teaching of the Holy Spirit. But all that can be known of God is fairly written
in capital letters in the Person of Jesus. What higher conception of God can you have? Even those who have denied our
Lord’s Deity have yet been subdued into admiration by His matchless Character. Read His life through and see if you
could improve it. Can you suggest anything that should be left out, or anything that could be added? He is God and in
Him we see God as far as it is possible for us to discern that matchless Father of our spirits! Thus the Gospel is full of
light, revealing, first, the Mediator and then the Lord God, Himself.
Now, dear Friends, this Gospel of the Glory of Christ is really light to us, that is to say, it brings with it all that the
metaphor of light sets forth. First of all it brings illumination. It is a lighting up of the soul “to know You, the only true
God, and Jesus Christ whom You have sent.” It is light to the understanding to be able to see that the Only-Begotten has
revealed the Father. Man feels after God as if, by chance, he may find Him and the heathen stumbles upon this and that in
his blind groping. Perhaps the world was nearest the truth when it called Him, “the unknown God.” When the wisdom
of this world once began to define and to describe the Deity—then it proved its own folly. “The world by wisdom knew
not God,” but in the Person of the Lord Jesus we have the true icon, the image and representation of the Godhead.
It cannot be said of true Christians, “You worship you know not what,” for we know what we worship! Each one of
us can affirm, “I know whom I have believed.” We have no question about who is our God, or what He is. There is a
knowledge given by the Gospel to men which creates daylight in the understanding. But it is light in another sense,
namely, that of comfort. Let a man see God in Jesus Christ and he cannot be unhappy. Is it sin that burdened him? Let
him see Jesus Christ bearing sin in His own body on the Cross and let him believe in this same Sin-Bearer—and that burden
is gone! Let him be fretting under the cares and trials of life and let him get a view, by faith, of Jesus—an infinitely
greater Sufferer—sympathizing with him in his sorrow and surely the sting of his grief is removed!
Is he afraid to die? Let him hear Jesus say, “I am the Resurrection and the Life,” and he shall be taught to long for
death rather than to dread it! Is he troubled about the things to come? Does the awful future hover darkly before him?
Let him only hear Jesus say, “I am He that lives and was dead, and am alive forevermore, amen, and hold the keys of Hell
and death,” and he will no longer be afraid of the separate world of spirits of which Christ has the key nor will he tremble
at the burning of the world and the ruin of creation—for he has a hold upon One who has said—“Because I live, you
shall live, also.” Never did such another light ever shine upon the sons of men! Neither for instruction nor for comfort
can this eternal Truth of God be rivaled!
It were not in the power of an archangel to tell you the joy which this “Gospel of the Glory of Christ” has given to
the sons and daughters of affliction! Wherever it comes, it liberates the captive mind and removes the pains of remorse.
At the very sight of it, tearful eyes are brightened till they flash with delight! Oh, the joy unspeakable of having Christ to
be our Savior and the glorious God to be our Father! He is rich to all the intents of bliss who knows this. This is light
and all else is darkness!
We now advance a step, and observe that—II. THIS GOSPEL IS, IN ITSELF, MOST PLAIN AND CLEAR. The
Gospel contains nothing which can perplex anybody unless he wishes to be perplexed. There is nothing in the Gospel
which a man may not apprehend if he desires to apprehend it. It is all plain to the man who yields his understanding to
his God. Whenever I get a book which puzzles me, very much, to make out its meaning, I wish I could send it back to the
author and tell him to write it over, again, because I am sure he is not very clear about his own meaning—or else he
could easily make me know what he meant. A man has never fairly mastered a subject until he is able to communicate his
thoughts on that subject so that persons of ordinary intelligence can tell what he means.
Now, the Lord has, in His own mind, a clearly-defined way of salvation for men and He has expressed Himself without
ambiguity. Certain divines like to preach an incomprehensible Gospel, for it gives them the air of wisdom in the
judgment of the foolish. Certain hearers prefer sermons which they cannot understand. To them the difficult and intricate
are as marrow and fatness. I heard of one who said he liked a bit of gristle in the sermons, or a bone to try his teeth
upon. We could easily gratify such friends, but we see no authority in Scripture for gratifying this longing. I carefully
endeavor to take the stones out of the fruit before preparing the dish. When we are eating, it is by no means a good thing
to swallow the bones, for our digestion might not master them and we might be injured by their presence within.
Souls want spiritual nutriment, not problems and riddles. So, when a man preaches the Gospel so that you cannot
make heads or tails of it, you need not fret, for what he has to say is not worth your trouble in listening to it! If it is the
Lord’s own Gospel, you who are doers of the Lord’s will can understand it. And if you cannot, it is not the Gospel of the
Glory of Christ, but a gospel of human inventing! The true Gospel is simplicity itself. Listen! That God should come
among men and espouse our Nature is so far a great mystery that we do not know how it could be! Blessed be God, we do
not need to know how it was done—we only know that it was done and that fact is enough for us. We understand that
the Word was made flesh and dwelt among us, and we rejoice therein. Observe the doctrine of the Atonement—this, also,
as a fact is plain enough! How it became right for Christ to suffer in our place and for His sufferings to be an expiation
for our sins may be a very deep question, but the fact is clearly revealed.
I do not think Substitution to be a bewildering mystery, but some do. What if it is? The secret reason of it is nothing
to us! If God has set forth Christ to be a Propitiation for our sins, our most reasonable course is to accept Him. We need
not quarrel with Grace because we cannot understand everything about it. It is wiser to eat that which is set before us
than to die of hunger because we do not know all the secrets of cooking! I am not asked to understand how God justifies
us in Christ, but I am asked to believe that He does! The fact is plain enough and the fact is the objective of faith. That
Jesus should suffer in my place is a simple matter of the Truth of God and in it there is no darkness at all. That precious
doctrine that we are justified by faith—that all the merit of Christ’s glorious work comes to us simply by our believing—
is there any difficulty about that? I know that men may argue till they are blue in the face, but the doctrine is plain as a
pikestaff!
At times persons enquire, “What is believing?” Well, it is trusting, depending, leaning upon, relying upon—that is
all. Is there anything hard about that? Do you want to put on your spectacles to see through it? Will it require a week to
work your way into the idea? No, the fact that God was made flesh and dwelt among us, and that being found in fashion
as a Man, He became obedient to death for our sakes and that He now bids us simply trust Him and we shall live, is as
simple as any Truth within the sphere of knowledge! Some people would like a gospel of puzzlement—they prefer a little
confusion of the intellect—they love to wander in a luminous haze in which nothing is clearly defined. They feel that they
are getting on when they are leaving others behind and rising into sublime absurdity!
Now, suppose the Gospel consisted in terrible mysteries, bristling with matters hard to be understood? Suppose it
required 18 volumes to be read through before you could see it? Suppose it needed mathematical precision and classical
elegance before you could see it—millions would never get to Heaven, for they have never read through a single volume
and, therefore, they are not likely to digest a library! Some men are so busy and some have their brains so constituted
that they never will be deep students—and if the Gospel required of them deep thought and long research—they might
give themselves up for lost. If men needed to be philosophers in order to be Christians, the majority of men would be out
of the pale of hope! If the masses of the people must read hard before they can catch the idea of salvation by faith in Christ
Jesus, they will never catch the idea—they must inevitably perish.
And would you, learned men, like them to perish? I fear that some of you have less concern about that than about
your own credit for talent and thought! For the sake of getting a profound little gospel all to yourselves, you would dig
a moat around the Cross of Christ to keep the vulgar crowd from intruding! That is not the Gospel, nor the spirit of the
Lord Jesus! Take care lest you miss the Truth of God yourselves! I fear that while you are fumbling for the latch of
Heaven’s gate, the people whom you despise will get inside the door and be singing, “Glory, hallelujah, we have found
the Savior.” The Lord permits the disputer of this world to stumble, while those who receive the Kingdom of God as
little children, find out the great secret and rejoice in it!
Suppose the Gospel had been such a difficult thing to explain and such a very hard matter to understand—what
would become of the many who are now rejoicing in Christ and yet have, by birth and constitution, the most shallow
capacities? It is wonderful how one but little raised above an idiot can yet grasp the Gospel! What a blessing that it is so!
I have heard of a poor boy whom his teachers had been instructing for years and, one day, they said to him, “Well, Jack,
have you a soul?” “No, I’ve got no soul.” They feared that they had lost their labor, but their minds were changed when
he added, “I had a soul, once, and I lost it. And Jesus Christ came and found it and so I let Him keep it.” That was better
Gospel than we get from many a learned divine! He had the whole thing at his fingertips! Christ had found his soul and
was keeping it for him—even He who will not fail to keep that which we have committed to His charge.
We clap our hands for joy because the Gospel reveals the plain man’s pathway to Heaven and makes the most illiterate
wise unto salvation! The shepherd on Salisbury Plain can understand the Gospel as well as the Bishop in Salisbury
Cathedral! And the dairyman’s daughter can feel its power as fully as a Princess! Suppose the Gospel were hard to be understood,
what should we do at our deathbed? We are sent to see persons who have neglected attendance upon the means of Grace and are dying in ignorance. It is our sorrowful task to explain the path of life to them when they are entering
upon the dark descent of death.
While the lamp continues to burn, we have hope and, therefore, we proceed to state the way by which a sinner may
return to God. Is it not well to have it packed away in a small compass and expressed in common words? We tell them
that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners and that whoever believes in Him shall not perish, but have everlasting
life. What could we do if the Gospel were not, thus, plain? Must I have a handcart and wheel it about with me, so as
to carry to each dying man half-a-dozen folios in Latin? Nothing of the kind! Right well do Cowper’s often-quoted lines
set forth the plainness of the Gospel and rebuke those who reject it on that account—
“Oh how unlike the complex work of man, Inscribed above the portal from afar Heaven on such terms? (They cry with proud disdain) — III. Thirdly, IN THE TRUE PREACHING OF THE GOSPEL, THIS SIMPLICITY IS PRESERVED. Paul expressly
said— “Having this hope in us, we use great plainness of speech.” And again, “My speech and my preaching was
not with enticing words of man’s wisdom, but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power.” The Apostle Paul was a
deep thinker, a man of profound insight and subtle mind. The bent of his mind was such that he would have made a
metaphysician of supreme rank, or a mystic of the deepest darkness—but he went against his natural inclinations and
devoted all his energies to the unveiling of the Gospel! It was a sublime self-denial for him to put on one side all his logic
among the other things which he counted loss for Christ—for he says, “I determined not to know anything among men
save Jesus Christ and Him crucified.”
He “determined.” He was resolute and had made up his mind to it, or he would not have accomplished it. He was the
man who wrote some things hard to be understood, which Peter mentions, but when he came to the Gospel, he would
have nothing but simplicity! He was tender among them as a nurse with her child and made himself an instructor of
babes, dealing out the Word of God with such plainness as children would require! The true man of God will not veil the
Gospel beneath performances and ceremonies! Mark those who do this and avoid them! We see “His Reverence” walking
with clasped hands to the right and to the left, repeating Latin sentences unknown by the people! He turns and bobs, and
turns again! We see his face for a moment and then his back. I suppose it is all meant for edification—but I, poor creature—
cannot find the least instruction in it, nor, as far as I can discover, do the people who are looking on!
What do these little boys in pretty gowns, making such a smoke, mean? And what are these flowers and images on
the altar? What a splendid cross is that which adorns the priest’s back! It seems to be made of roses. The folks look on and
some are wondering where he buys his lace, while others are speculating as to the quantity of wax which will be consumed
in those candles every hour—and there is the end of it—Christ is veiled behind the millinery, if He is there at all! I know
numbers who would disdain to do that and yet they hide their Lord under finery of language. It is a grand thing to
mount aloft upon the wings of eloquence and display the Glory of speech till you ascend, in a splendid peroration, as
many another exhibition closes with fireworks. But this is not becoming to preachers of the Lord Jesus!
I always tell our young men that one of their commandments should be, “You shall not ramble on.” To attempt anything
grand in language when we are preaching salvation is to leave our proper work! Our one business is to tell out the
Gospel plainly. We deal in bread, not in flowers! Let tawdry ornaments be left to the stage or to the bar, where men
amuse themselves or dispute for gain—or let these poor gewgaws be reserved for the Senate where men will defend or
denounce according as it suits their party. It is not ours to make the worse appear the better, or to hide the Truth of God
under floods of words. As for us, we are to hide ourselves behind the Cross and make men know that Jesus Christ came to
save the lost—and that if they believe in Him they shall be saved at once and forever! If we do not make them know this,
we have missed our mark, however grandly we have performed. What? Shall we become acrobats with words, or jugglers
displaying wonders? Then God is insulted, His Gospel is degraded and souls are left to perish!
I venture to put in a word for myself and then leave this point. I can say with the Apostle, “I have used great plainness
of speech” and, therefore, if the Gospel which I have preached is hidden, I have not produced the veil. I have used
vulgar words when I thought that they would be better understood and I have told all sorts of simple stories when I
thought I could make the Gospel known. I have never used a hard word where I could help it. My one desire has been by
manifesting the Truth of God to touch your consciences and win your hearts. If you see not the light, it is not because I
have hidden it from you.
IV. With this we close. IF THE GOSPEL IS VEILED TO OUR HEARERS, IT IS A FATAL SIGN. “If our Gospel is
hid, it is hid to them that are lost.” The god of this world has blinded their unbelieving eyes lest the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ should dawn upon them. Not to believe, understand, appreciate and accept the Gospel is a sign of perishing. I want to put this very plainly to any here who say that they have not received the Gospel because they cannot
understand it and they see nothing remarkable in it. If you have heard it plainly preached, it is so plain in itself that if it
is hid from your eyes it is because you are still in the gall of bitterness and in the bonds of iniquity!
You who receive the Gospel are saved! Faith is the saving token. If you believe that Jesus is the Christ, you are born
of God—if you have accepted Him as your Savior whom God sets forth as such—then you are saved. But if you say,
“No, I cannot see it,” then your eyes are blinded and you are lost! The sun is bright enough, but those who have no sight
are not enlightened. Do you say, “I cannot receive the Gospel. I need something more difficult”? By sinful pride your
judgment is perverted and your heart is hardened! While you are still among the unbelieving, you are still among the
perishing—and the god of this world blindfolds you! O Spirit of God, convince men of this sin—that they believe not on
Jesus Christ. This work is out of Your servant’s power, but, oh, You perform it! Oh that our text, like a sharp knife, may
cut deep and reach the conscience! May this Truth of God pierce between the joints and marrow and discern the thoughts
and intents of your hearts!
According to the text, he that believes not on Jesus Christ is a lost man. God has lost you—you are not His servant.
The Church has lost you—you are not working for the Truth. The world has lost you, really—you yield no lasting service
to it. You have lost yourself to right, to joy, to Heaven. You are lost, lost, lost, like the prodigal son when he was
away from his father’s house. You are lost like the sheep that went astray from the fold. It is not only that you will be
lost, but that you are lost, for, “He that believes not is condemned already, because he has not believed on the Son of
God.” Press those two words upon your conscience— “Condemned already”—lost even now! You are perishing! That is
to say, you are gradually passing into that condition in which you must abide forever as one that has perished before God
and become utterly useless and dead.
It is an appalling truth that this is proved by the fact that you do not understand the Gospel, or, if you understand
it, you do not appreciate it—you do not see beauty or Glory in it, or, if you do, in a measure appreciate it, and see some
Glory in it, yet it has never stirred your affection or drawn your heart towards its great Subject. In a word, you have not
come to trust in Jesus! He is the only One that you can trust to salvation and yet you reject Him! It must be the simplest
thing in all world to trust in Christ and yet you will not do that simple thing! Trust in Him should be attended to at once
and ought not to be delayed—and yet you have delayed for years! If faith brings salvation, why not have salvation? Why
abide, still, in unbelief—in unbelief of the most glorious Truth that God, Himself, ever revealed to men—in unbelief of
that which you dare not deny? Oh, what a condition to be in—willfully in darkness, shutting your eyes to the Light of
God! You are certainly lost!
The Apostle explains how a man gets into that condition. He says that Satan, the god of this world, has blinded his
mind. What a thought it is that Satan should set up to be God! Christ is the image of God. Satan is the imitator of
God—he mimics God and holds an usurped power over men’s minds and thoughts. To maintain his power, he takes
great care that his dupes should not see the light of the Gospel. The veils he uses are such as men’s selfish hearts approve,
for he speaks thus—“If you were to become a Christian, you would never get on in the world.” He claps a sovereign on
each eye and then you cannot see, though the sun shines at midday! Pride binds a silken band across the eyes and thus,
again, the Light of God is excluded. Satan whispers, “If you become a Christian, you will be laughed at!” And he hoodwinks
his victim with fear of ridicule. He has many a crafty device by which he perverts the human judgment till they
cannot see that which is self-evident—and will not believe that which is unquestionable!
He makes the gain of Heaven to seem inconsiderable when weighed with the little loss which religion may involve.
He hides from the soul the bliss of forgiven sin, of adoption into God’s family and the certainty of eternal Glory by
throwing dust into the eyes, so that the mind cannot look at things truthfully. What shall I say, in closing, but this—are
you lost, any of you? Upon the showing of the text all of you are to whom the Gospel is hidden! Well, but thank God you
may yet be found—lost today, but you need not be lost tomorrow! Lost while sitting in these pews—but you may be
found before you leave the Tabernacle! The Good Shepherd has come to find His lost sheep. Have you any desire after
Him? Have you any wish to return to Him? Then look to Him with a trustful glance!
You are not lost if so you look, nor shall you ever be! He that believes in Jesus is saved and saved eternally. Are any of
you blinded? You must be so if the Gospel is hid from you, so that you cannot see its brightness. Ah, but you need not
remain in the dark! There is One here, today, who opens blind eyes! Cry to Him as did the two blind men, “You, Son of
David, have mercy on me! You, Son of David, have mercy on me!” The Messiah came on purpose to give sight to the
blind—it was a part of His commission when He came forth from the Father’s Glory. He will give sight to you! Oh seek
it! Is the god of this world your master? He must be if you do not see the Glory of the Gospel! But he need not be your
god any longer! I pray the Holy Spirit to help you to dethrone this intruder. Why should you adore him? What good has
he ever done for you? What is there about his character that makes him worthy to be your god?
Break off his yoke! Burst the fetters which now hold you his slave. The true God has come in the flesh to set you free
and to destroy all the works of the devil! Whatever keeps you from beholding the Glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ
can be removed. I am sent to say, in my Master’s name, “Whoever believes in Him is not condemned: he that believes and
is baptized shall be saved.” “Come now, and let us reason together, says the Lord: though your sins are as scarlet, they
shall be as white as snow; though they are red like crimson, they shall be as wool.” Trust the Savior, trust the Incarnate
God! Trust Him now and trust Him at once—and though a moment ago you were black as Hell’s midnight, you shall be
clean and bright as Heaven’s eternal noon!
In one instant sins that have taken you 50 years to accumulate shall disappear! The transgressions of all your days
shall be plunged beneath the sea and shall be found no more! Only be willing and obedient—and yield yourselves up to
the Incarnate God who always lives to take care of those who put their trust in Him! May the Lord bless you, dear
Friends, forevermore. Amen and Amen. |