Delivered on Thursday Evening, October 6, 1882, by C. H. Spurgeon “The men marveled, saying, What manner of Man is this, that even the winds and the sea obey Him!” Matthew 8:27. “And they feared exceedingly, and said one to another, What manner of Man is this, that even the wind and the sea obey Him?” Mark 4:41. THIS story of the storm upon the lake is wonderfully full of spiritual interest. Not only does it, literally, show to us the Divine power of our blessed Master in lulling the storm, rendered the more conspicuous by being placed, side by side, with the human weakness which made Him sleep in the ship upon a pillow, but, spiritually, it is a kind of ecclesiastical history, a miniature outline of the story of the Church in all ages. No, the teaching ends not when you have read the incident in that light—it also contains a suggestive forecast of the story of every man who is making the spiritual voyage in company with Jesus.
Notice, first, how it is a kind of ecclesiastical history. There is Christ in the vessel with His disciples. What is that but
a Church with its pastor? We see in the Church a vessel bearing a rich cargo, steering for a desired haven and fitted out
for fishing on the road, should fair opportunity occur. Her being upon a sea shows her to be here below, subject to trial,
suffering, labor and peril. I scarcely know of any more apt picture of a Church than a ship upon the treacherous Galilean
sea with Jesus and His disciples sailing in it.
After a while a storm comes—this we may safely reckon upon. Whatever ship makes a fair voyage, with a favoring
wind, the ship of the Church of Jesus Christ never will. She has her calms, but these last not forever—her sail is sure to be
weather-beaten at one time or another—and the occasions are seldom far apart. The vessel which has Jesus for its Captain
is destined to feel the tempest. Christ has not come to send peace on earth, but a sword. This is His own declaration
and He knows His own intent. Every sail of the good ship which bears the flag of the Lord High Admiral of our fleet
must be beaten with the wind and every plank in her must be tried by the waves.
To Christ’s Church there are many storms and some of them of the most terrible character. Of heresy—ah, how near
to wrecking has she been with the false doctrines of Gnosticism, Arianism, Popery and Rationalism! Of persecution she
has constant experience, but sometimes exceedingly vehement has the hurricane been. In the early stages of Church history,
the pagan persecutions of Rome followed thick and fast upon each other and when Giant Pagan had emptied out all
his fury, there came a worse tyrant whose magical arts raised hurricanes of wind against the good ship—there sat, at
Rome, a harlot who persecuted the saints exceedingly—being drunk with their blood.
Then there raged a cyclone which almost drove the boat out of the water and drenched and well-near drowned her
crew—a fierce cyclone beat upon the royal vessel, so that the waves threatened to swallow her up! Tears and blood covered
the saints as with a salt and crimson spray! Hers was no pleasure trip—she went forth like the lifeboat, fashioned for
the purpose of riding out the storm. The true ship of the Lord was, and is, and will be in a storm until the Lord shall
come—and then there shall be for it no further wave of trial, but the sea of glass forever!
Note, again, that while this storm was roaring worse and worse, the Lord was in the ship, but He seemed to be
asleep. So has it often been. No Providence delivered the persecuted. No marvelous manifestations of the Spirit scattered
the heresy. The Christ was in the Church, but He was in the back part, with His head upon a pillow, asleep. You all know
the portions of Church history which this illustrates.
Then came distress. The people in the vessel began to be alarmed. They were afraid that they should utterly perish.
And do you wonder at it when the peril was so great? That distress led to prayer. Mighty prayer has often been produced
by mighty trial. Oh, how slack has the Church been in the presentation of her spiritual offering until the Lord has sent
fire upon her and that fire has seemed to kindle her frankincense so that it has begun to smoke towards Heaven! Prayer
was produced by distress and prayer brought distress to an end!
Then the Master rose up and displayed His power and Godhead. You know how He has done so in reformations and
revivals time after time. He has chided the unbelief of His trembling saints and then He has hushed the winds and the
waves—and there has been a time of peace for His poor, weather-beaten Church—a period free from bloodshed and heresy,
an era of progress and peace. The Church has a history which has many a time repeated itself. If you take an interest
in the navigation of that wondrous vessel which carries Christ and all His chosen, you will never have to complain of lack
of incidents!
But I think I said that the story of the storm upon the lake is an admirable emblem of the spiritual voyage of every
man who is bound for the fair havens in company with Jesus. We are with Christ, happy with Him and sailing pleas-
antly—will this last? Right speedily comes a storm. The ship rocks and reels. She is covered with the waves. It looks as if
our poor rowboat will sink to the bottom! Yet Jesus is in our hearts and that is our safety. We are not saved by seamanship,
but by having on board the Lord Paramount who rules all winds and waves—and never yet lost a vessel that bore
the Cross at its masthead!
Sometimes within our hearts He seems to be asleep. We hear not His voice; we see but little of His face—His eyes are
closed and He, Himself, is hidden out of sight. He has not altogether left us, blessed be His name, but He appears to be
asleep. Ah, then the ship rocks, again, and we reel, again, and we wonder that He can still sleep! Then are we driven in
awe at alarm to prayer, to which we ought to have betaken ourselves long before! It may be that we have been busy with
ropes and tackle, strengthening the mast, furling the sail, doing all kinds necessary work and, therefore, leaving undone
the most necessary work of all, namely, seeking out the Master and telling Him the story of our peril.
We pray not till we are forced to our knees, sad sinners that we are! The boat will go down! She will go down! And
now it is that we, also, go down to the cabin and begin to wake Him up with, “Master, save us! We perish!” Then you
know what happens—how the gentle rebuke passes over our spirit and we are humbled. But the grander rebuke is heard
by the winds and waves—and they are quieted and sleep at the Master’s feet—and in us and around us there is a great
calm. Oh, how profound the peace! How blessed the stillness!
We were about to say, “Would God it would last on forever,” but as yet tranquility cannot be perpetual. Our perils
of waters will be sure to repeat themselves. Often we go down to the sea in ships and do business in great waters, so that
we see the works of the Lord and His wonders in the deep. Hear how a poet sings the story—
“Fierce was the wild billow Trembled the mariners Ridge of the mountain wave, Sorrow can never be— Jesus, Deliverer! You, when the storm of death On this occasion I will not further call your attention to the storm, or to the calm, but I beg you to observe the feelings
of the disciples about the whole matter. The text says that, “The men marveled, saying, What manner of Man is this,
that even the winds and the sea obey Him!” God evidently thinks much of His people’s inward feelings, for they are recorded
here and in many other cases. The report of what these poor fishermen felt is as carefully made as the record of
what their Lord and Master said, since this was necessary to set forth the intent and purpose of their Lord’s utterances.
God often regards the external action as a mere husk, but the feeling of His people is the innermost kernel of their life-
story and He prizes it.
Some men practice introspection so much that they grow, at last, to make a kind of fetish of their inward feeling.
This is wrong. Yet there is an error on the other side in which we cease to make conscience of our feelings and think them
to be a matter of no consequence, as if there could be real life without feeling. I will cry up faith as much as anyone—but
there is no need to depreciate all the other Graces, and especially all the emotions, in order to do honor to faith! We may
honor the heir and yet see no reason for slaying all the rest of the royal seed. We must both feel aright and believe
aright—and it is sometimes good for us to have a lesson about how to feel towards our Lord Jesus Christ.
Though feeling must be secondary to faith, yet it is far from being unimportant. At this time I shall principally talk
about three feelings towards Christ. First, the men marveled. We will dwell upon that—marveling at Christ’s work. Secondly,
if you will turn to Mark, the fourth chapter and the 41st verse, you will see that Mark describes the feeling of the
men as, fearing “exceedingly.” That shall be our second head—awe-stricken at His Presence. Thirdly, we see them, in
our text, admiring His Person, for they said, “What manner of Man,” or, more correctly, “What kind of Person is this,
that even the winds and the sea obey Him!”
I. First, then, MARVELING AT HIS WORK. May I ask you to indulge, for a little while, the feeling of wonder?
You believe in Jesus Christ and you are saved. Salvation comes not by wondering, but by believing. But now, having been
saved, having passed from death unto life—and having been preserved for years upon the sea of life in the midst of many
storms and, at this moment enjoying a great calm and restfulness of spirit, I invite you to marvel. What wonderful things
Jesus has done for me! It is in my power, if I choose, to waste my time in reading romances, but I care nothing for them,
for my own life is to me more romantic than romance!
The story of God’s goodness to me is more thrilling than any work of fiction could possibly be! I am speaking to
some here who I am sure will join with me in acknowledging that there is a freshness, a novelty, a surprise power about
the dealings of God with us which we do not meet with anywhere else! Well do we sing in our hymn—
“I need not go abroad for joys— and we can also add that we need not go abroad for wonders, for we have a perfect museum at home in our own experience!
John Bunyan, when he was describing the experience of his pilgrim, said, “Oh, world of wonders! I can say no less.”
And so it is. The life of the godly man, on the God side of it, as he receives Grace from Jesus, is a gallery of heavenly art!
He is an exhibition of Divine skill and power, a wonderland of mercy—
“Still has my life new wonders seen Let us think for a minute or two of the parallel between us and these disciples as to wonderment. Consider, first,
that the instantaneous and profound calm was contrary to Nature. The Galilean Lake lies in a deep hollow, much below
the level of the ocean, and in the sides of the cliffs and hills which shut it in, there are valleys and openings which act as
funnels, down which, blasts of cold air from the mountains often rush upon a sudden. When the time of storm is really
on, the Lake of Galilee is not tossed about like an ordinary open sea, but is rent, torn, heaved up and almost hurled out
of its bed by down-driving hurricanes and twisting whirlwinds! No sailor knows which way the wind will blow except
that it blows all ways at once and particularly downwards—as if, with a direct downdraft from Heaven, it blows vessels
into the water—and soon, changing its course, lifts them into the air!
Any mariner who is not used to that strange, wild sea, would soon lose his head and despair of life. It is like a boiling
cauldron—the spirits of the vast deep stir it to its bottom! Yet this billowy lake, in a moment, was turned to glass by the
words of Jesus—a fact far more wonderful to witness than to read about! Such a change in the uproarious elements was
altogether contrary to Nature and, therefore, “the men marveled.” Now, Beloved, look back upon what your life has
been. I do not know exactly where you begin your life story. Some commence in the slime pits of Sodom—in vice and
drunkenness. Others begin with wandering on the dark mountains of infidelity, or among the hogs and sloughs of Phariseeism
and formality.
However it may have been, it is a miracle that you should have been made to fall at Jesus’ feet and cry out for mercy
through His precious blood! That you should give up all trust and confidence in self and, at the same time, should turn
away from favorite lusts which you once reveled in, is such a wonder that nobody would have believed it, had it been
prophesied to them! Certainly you never would have believed it, yourself—and yet it has taken place—and other
unlooked-for changes have followed it. Why, you have lived, since then, in a way that would have been once condemned
by yourself as utterly absurd! Had an Oracle informed you of it, you would have ridiculed its forecast. “No,” you would
have said, “I shall never be that! I shall never feel that! I shall never do that!”
And yet, it has been so with you. The boiling cauldron of your nature has been cooled down and quieted—and an
obedient calm has succeeded rebellious rage. Is it not so? I can only say that if your religion has never produced a wonder,
I wonder that you believe in it! If there is not something about you, through Divine Grace, which quite surprises yourself,
I should not be amazed if, one of these days, you wake up and find that you have been self-deceived! Far above Nature
are the ways of Grace in men! And if you know them, they have produced in you what your natural temperament and
your worldly surroundings never could have produced. There has been fire where you looked for snow, and cool
streams where you expected flames. A growth of good wheat has been seen where Nature would have produced nothing
but thorns and briars. Where sin abounded, Grace has much more abounded, and your life has become the theater of
miracles and the home of wonders!
These men marveled, next, because the calm was so unexpected by reason. The ship was near going to pieces! A gust
of wind threatened to lift her right out of the water and the next threatened to plunge her to the bottom of the sea! The
weary fishermen certainly did not look for a calm—there were no signs of such a gift! When they said, “Master, we perish,”
I do not know what they thought their Lord would do, but they assuredly never dreamed that He would stand up in
the back part of the ship, and say, “Winds and waves, what are you doing? Your Master is here. Be still.” That was beyond
their nautical experience and their fathers had never seen such wonders in their day. They could not hope that in a
moment they should be in a profound calm!
Now, may I ask you to wonder a little at what the Lord has done for you? Has He not done for you what you never
expected? To speak for myself, I never reckoned upon standing here to preach to thousands of God’s people. When I was
first brought to Jesus I had no such hope. Why should I be taken from the school and from the desk to lead a part of His
flock? I wonder more and more that by His Grace I am what I am! Some of you, when you sit at the Communion Table,
may well feel that the most wonderful thing about it is that you should find a welcome place at the Lord’s own festival.
Did some of you expect, a year ago, that you would be here, now, on a Thursday night, listening to a talk about Jesus
Christ?
Why, you hardly know how you got here! You can scarcely tell the way by which the Lord has led you to be a lover
of the Gospel. Look at your inner feelings, as well as your outward position—are you not often made the subject of desires,
of longings, of groanings and, on the other hand, of enjoyments, of sweet and precious endearments, of high and
gracious expectations which utterly surprise you as you remember what you used to be? Are you not “like them that
dream” when you think over the Lord’s loving kindness? And if others say, “the Lord has done great things for you,”
does not your heart chime in with all its bells and ring out notes of joy, “The Lord has done great things for us, of which
we are glad”? Come, indulge your wonder! Admire and marvel at the exceeding Grace of God towards you in working
contrary to Nature, contrary to all reasonable expectations and bringing you to be His dear and favored child! Marvels
of mercy, wonders of Grace belong unto God Most High!
Besides this, the idea of a storm which should immediately be followed by a great calm was a strikingly new experience.
These fishermen of the Galilean Lake had never seen it after this fashion before. We read in the Old Testament of some,
to whom it was said, “You have not gone this way before,” and certainly the same might have been said to these
disciples. “You have been in storms, but you never before, in your lives, were one minute in a storm and the next in a
calm.” It must have been enough to make them weep for joy, or, at least, it must have led them to hold up their hands in
glad astonishment! The deliverance worked by their Lord was so fresh, so altogether new that marveling was natural!
Well, now, Brothers and Sisters, to come back to ourselves, again—have you not often experienced that which has
astounded you by its novelty? Are not God’s mercies new every morning? I address some of you who have been 40 or 50
years in the ways of God—do you not find a continual freshness in the manifestations of God’s goodness to you, both in
Providence and Grace? Let me ask you, has religious life been to you like mounting a treadmill, monotonous, wearisome,
uniform? If so, there is something wrong about you, for while we live near to God, we dwell under new heavens and walk
upon a new earth! When a man travels through the Alps on a bright sunshiny day, all things are as new, as though born
that morning—that drop of dew on the grass—he never saw before! That drifting cloud has newly arrived upon the
scene. Never before has the traveler seen the face of Nature radiant with the same smile as that which now delights him.
Has it not been so with you in the journey of life? Have not all things become new and remained new since you were
born anew? Has not Grace been heaped upon Grace, so that each new experience has excelled its predecessor? Still have I
beheld fresh beauties in my Master’s face, fresh glories in my Master’s Words, fresh assurance of His faithfulness in His
Providence, fresh joy in my Master’s Spirit as He has dealt graciously with my soul! I know that it is so with you and I
want you to marvel at it, that God should take so much trouble to manifest Himself to poor creatures that are not worth
His treading on—that He should devise a thousand things most rare and new for such insignificant insects of a day as we
are. Glory be to His blessed name, it may well be said of us, “The men marveled and said, What manner of Person is this
who deals so with His people?” “Who is a God like unto You? What is man that You are mindful of Him? And the son of
man that you visit him?” These three things made the disciples wonder.
There was another. I should think that it was a great marvel to them that a calm was sent so soon after the storm.
Man needs time, but God’s Word runs very quickly. Man travels with weary feet—the Lord rides upon a cherub and does
fly, yes, He flies upon the wings of the wind! The particles of air and the drops of water were all in confusion through the
storm, rushing as if chaos had come, again, rising in whirlwinds and falling in cataracts! Yet they did but see the face of
their Maker and they were still! In one single instant there was a calm! Have not you and I experienced instantaneous
workings of Divine Grace upon our spirits? It may not be so with all, but some of us, at the first instant of our faith, lost
the burden of sin in a moment! Our load was all gone before we knew where we were. The change from sorrow to joy was
not worked in us by degrees, but in a moment the sun leaped above the horizon and the night of our soul was over.
Has it not been so since? We have been, in the midst of God’s people, as heavy as lead and without power to enjoy a
Truth of God, or to perform a holy act. The hymns seemed a mockery and the prayer an empty form—and yet, in a single
moment, the rod of the Lord has touched the rock and the waters have flowed forth—and by the very means of Grace
which seemed so dull and powerless, we have been enlivened and comforted! We have blessed the Lord that we ever came
to the place. I do not know how it is that we undergo such sudden changes. Yes I do—it is because God works all good
things in us and He is able to accomplish, in an instant, that which we could not effect in a year! He can, in a moment,
change our prison into a palace and our ashes into beauty. He can bid us put off our sackcloth and put on the wedding
garments of delight. As in the twinkling of an eye, this corruptible shall put on incorruption, so in an instant our spiritual
death can blossom into heavenly life! This is a great wonder. Go and marvel at what the Lord has so speedily done for you.
And then, to think that it should have been so perfect! When a storm subsides, the sea is generally angry for hours, if
not for days. A great wind at Dover, yesterday, would make the Channel rough for some time. But when our Lord Jesus
makes a calm, the sea forgets her raging and smiles at once! In fact, “He makes the storm a calm, so that the waves are
still.” The winds hush all their fury and are quiet in an instant when He bids them rest. And oh, when the Lord gives joy
and peace and blessedness to His people, He does not do it by halves! “When He gives quietness, who, then, can make
trouble?” There is no such thing as a half-blessing for a child of God. The Lord gives Him fullness of peace—“the peace
of God which passes all understanding.” He causes him to enjoy quiet, through believing, and He enables him to rejoice
in tribulation, also, for tribulation works blessing to the souls of men.
I feel that I cannot speak as I could wish, but I shall finish this division of the discourse by saying that one point of
wonder was that the calm was worked so evidently by the Master’s Words. He spoke and it was done. He poured no oil
upon the waters. His will was revealed in a Word and that will was Law. Not an atom of matter dares to move if the Divine
fiat forbids—the sovereignty of Jesus is supreme—and His Word is with power. Now, dear Friend, I know that
there must have been very much that is wonderful in your life as a Christian, but do not think yourself the only partaker
of such wonderment! Let us all sit down and enquire, each one, “Why is this to me? Why me, Lord? How can such great
Grace be shown to me? And how can the Son of God stoop to look at me and take me into marriage union with Himself
and promise that I shall live because He lives—that I shall reign because He reigns?”
Sit down, I say, and believingly marvel, and marvel, and marvel, and never leave off marveling! And let me drop one
little word into your ear. Is there something that you need of God concerning which unbelief has said that it is too wonderful
to be expected? Let that be the reason why you shall expect it! There is nothing to a Christian so probable as the
unexpected—and there is nothing which God is so likely to do for us as that which is above all we ask or even think! God
is at home in wonderland! If what you need is a commonplace thing, perhaps it may not come. But if it strikes you as a
marvel, you are in a fit state of heart to honor God for it and you are likely to receive it!
Do not think that because between you and Heaven, if you reach it, there will be a giant causeway of marvels, therefore
you will never get there! But, on the contrary, conclude that the God who began to save you by so great a miracle as
the gift and death of His own dear Son, will go on to perfect your salvation even if He has to fling into the sea a thousand
heavens to make stepping stones for you to tread upon so you can reach His Presence. “He that spared not His own Son,
but freely delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not, with Him, also freely give us all things?” Therefore expect wonders!
These men marveled—expect to keep on marveling till you get to Heaven—and to keep on marveling when you are
in Heaven and throughout eternity! Wonder will be a principal ingredient of our adoration in Heaven! We—
“Shall sing with wonder and surprise I have been somewhat long on this first head. I will therefore give you a little, and only a little, upon the second.
II. Let us now see how the disciples were AWE-STRICKEN AT OUR LORD’S PRESENCE. Mark says that “the
men feared greatly.” They feared greatly because they found themselves in the Presence of One who had stilled the winds
and the waves! Brothers and Sisters, it is well to cultivate that holy familiarity which comes from nearness to Jesus and
yet we ought always to be humbled by a sense of that nearness. Permit me to remind the boldest Believer that our loving
Lord is still God over all! He is to be honored and reverenced, worshipped and adored by all who draw near to Him.
However much He is our Brother, He says, “You call me Master and Lord, and you do well, for so I am.”
He is all the greater because of His condescension to us and we are bound to recognize this. Whenever Jesus is near,
the feeling of holy awe and solemn dread will steal over true disciples. I am afraid of that way of being so familiar with
Christ as to talk of Him as, “dear Jesus” and, “dear Lord,” as if He were some Jack or Harry that we might pat on the
back whenever we liked. No, no. This will never do! It is not such language as men would use to their prince—let them
not, thus, address the King of kings! However favored we may be, we are but dust and ashes—and our spirit must be
chastened with reverence.
When Jesus is near us, we ought to exceedingly fear because we have doubted Him. If you had been suspicious of a
dear friend and had indulged hard thoughts about him and, all of a sudden you found yourself sitting in the same room
with him, you would feel awkward, especially if you understood that he knew what you had said and thought. Oh, you
will feel ashamed of yourself, my Brothers and Sisters, if Jesus shall draw near to you! The wisest thing you can do in such
a case is to say, “My Master, my Lord, since You favor me with Your Presence, I will first fall at Your feet and confess
that I doubted You; that I thought that the stormy wind would swallow up the vessel and that the waves would devour
both You and me. Forgive me, Master, forgive me for having thought so evil of You.”
Whenever we are near to Christ, one of the first feelings should be that of great humiliation. Let us fall at His feet
and confess how ill we have thought of Him. Brethren, we have been so foolish as to fear His creatures, paying to them a
sort of worship of fear, as if they had more power to harm than Jesus had to help! We clothe wind and sea with attributes
which belong only to God—and look upon our trials as if they tried the Lord, too—and vanquished Him because they
vanquish us. Are we not, because of this, smitten with dread in the Presence of the Christ? And then the next feeling
should be—since He has come to me, this Mighty One who has worked such marvels for me, let me try to order myself
aright in His Presence.
I notice whenever the Lord Jesus Christ is very present in this congregation how carefully everybody sings. I notice
about tune, time and tone a difference from the singing which is usual and even from that singing which comes of having
an acquired skill in music. Though it may seem a trifle, yet I cannot help observing that when people come to the Communion
Table, as a matter of routine they frequently behave roughly, walking noisily and looking about, or else they sit
like statues, with a chill propriety of posture and vacancy of countenance. But you will notice that fellowship with Jesus
affects the glance of the eyes, the thoughts of the soul and, consequently, the movements of the body. When a man is truly
conscious that Jesus, the Wonder-Worker is near, he fears exceedingly.
If ever you say to Jesus, “You know that I love You,” mind you, put, “Lord,” before it—“Lord, You know all
things”—for He is still your Lord. Where Jesus is, there is godly fear, which is, by no means, the same as slavish fear.
Every true child has a reverence for his father. Every true daughter has a loving respect for her mother. So is it with us
towards our Lord Jesus. We owe so much to Him and He is so great and so good—and we are so little and so sinful—
that there must be a blessed sense of holy awe whenever we come before Him. Indulge it. Indulge it now! You know how
John puts it—“When I saw Him, I fell at His feet as dead.”
Why, that is the man who leaned His head on the bosom of Christ! Yes, that is the man who fell at His feet as dead. If
your head has never leaned upon the bosom of the Lord, I should not wonder if you can hold it up in His Presence! But
when it has once lain there, in confiding love, reposing upon boundless Mercy, then that head of yours will lie in the dust
uncrowned if God has honored it—for it will be your delight to cast your crown at His feet and give Him all the Glory!
O, reign forever, King of Kings and Lord of Lords! Conquer me, my Lord! Subdue me perfectly! Make dust of me beneath
Your feet! If You shall be but the tenth of an inch the higher for my downcasting, Oh, my Master, and my Lord,
with joy I would shrink to nothing before You, that You may be All in All! May this be your feeling and mine. The men
feared exceedingly—let us fear, also, after a believing sort.
III. Now to close. The third thing is ADMIRING THE PERSON OF Jesus, for these men who marveled, and who
feared exceedingly, admired the Person of Him who had set them free from the storm, saying, “What manner of Person is
this, that even the wind and the sea obey Him?” Come, let us admire and adore the Nature of Christ which is altogether
beyond our comprehension! The winds and the sea obeyed Him though He had slept like other men. When His head was
that of an infant, the crown of the universe was about His brow! When He was in the carpenter’s shop, He was still the
Creator of all worlds! When He went to die upon the Cross, a myriad of angels would have come to rescue Him if He had
but willed it. Even in His humiliation He was still the Son of the Highest, God over all, blessed forever!
Now that He is exalted in Heaven, do not forget the other side of the question—believe that He is just as much Man,
now, as when He was here—as truly a Brother of our race as He is God over all, blessed forevermore. Let us now give our
hearts to admiration of Him in His complex Nature which is beyond comprehension. He is my next of kin and yet my
God—at once my Redeemer and my Lord! We may each one cry with Job, “I know that my next of kin lives, and that He
shall stand in the latter day upon the earth. And though, after my skin, worms devour this body, yet in my flesh shall I see
God.”
Because He lives as my Kinsman—there is the sweetness of it and because He is my God—there is the Glory of it! He
is both tenderly compassionate for my infirmities and gloriously able to overcome them. He is a complete Savior because
He is both Human and Divine. Come, my Soul, bow down in wonder that God should send such a Savior as this to you! A
person asked me the other day whether I had seen a book entitled, “Sixteen Saviors.” I answered—“No, I have not and I
do not want to know of 16 saviors. I am perfectly satisfied with One.” If all who dwell in Heaven and earth could be made
into saviors and the whole were put together, you might blow them away as a child blows away thistledown! There is this
one Savior, the Son of Man, and yet the mighty God—and He cannot be moved! Joy then, my Brothers and Sisters, and
rejoice in the Nature of your blessed Lord!
Next, rejoice in His power which has no limit, so that even the winds and the waves obey Him. The winds—can they
have a master? The waves that cast their spray upon the face of princes—can they acknowledge a sovereign? Yes, the
most fickle of elements and the most unruly of forces are all under the power of Jesus! Joy and rejoice in this. Little, as
well as great, yon Atlantic that divides the world and that little drop in the basin of Gennesaret are alike in the hands of
Jesus! The power of God is seen in a falling mountain when it crashes village, but it is as truly present when the seeds are
scattered from the pod of the gorse, or a rose leaf falls upon the garden walk. God is seen when an angel flashes from
Heaven to earth and is He not seen when a bee flits from flower to flower?
Jesus is the Master of the little as well as of the great! Yes, He is King of all things and I joy, this moment, to think
that even the wicked actions of ungodly men, though they are not deprived of their sinfulness, so as to make the men the
less responsible, are, nevertheless, overruled by that great Lord of ours who works all things according to the counsel of
His will! In the front I see Jesus leading the van of Providence. Behind He guards the rear. On the heights I see Jesus
reigning King of Kings and Lord of Lords. In the deeps I mark the terror of His justice as He binds the dragon with His
chain. Let the universal cry of “Hallelujah” rise unto the Son of God, world without end!
Sit down and admire and adore His unlimited power—and then conclude by paying homage to that sovereignty of
His which brooks no question, for the winds and waves did not only perform His will, but, as if they were waking into
life and rising into intelligent knowledge of Him, they are said to obey Him—from which I gather that Christ is not only
the forceful Master of unintelligent agencies, but that He is the Sovereign Master of things that can obey Him—and He
will be obeyed. Ah, you may bite at Him and hiss at Him, but as the viper broke his teeth against the file, yet hurt it not,
so shall the ungodly exercise all their craft and all their strength—and the result shall be shame and confusion of face to
them.
The kingdom of our Lord and Master is, by some, thought to be a long way off, and His cause is despaired of by
faint-hearted men. But He that sits in the heavens laughs at the impatience of saints as well as at the impiety of sinners,
for He knows that all is well! Out of seeming evil He produces good and from that good a better, still, and better still in
infinite progression! All things move towards His eternal coronation! As once every atom of history converged to His
Cross, so does it today project itself towards His crown—the Lord Jesus comes to His well-earned Throne as surely as He
came to the shameful Cross! He comes and when He comes, it shall be as when He rose in the ship and rebuked the winds,
and the men marveled—for all storms of raging passion, conflicting opinion and fierce warfare shall be hushed—and He
shall be admired in His saints and glorified in all them that believe! Even unbelievers shall marvel at Him and say, “What
manner of Person is this, that even earth and Hell obey Him and all things are subject to His sovereign power!”
Happy are the eyes that shall see Him in that day with joy! Happy are the men who shall sit at the right hand of the
Coming One! Oh, Beloved, your eyes and mine shall see it if we have first looked to the Redeemer upon the Cross and
found salvation in Him! Courage, Brothers and Sisters, let the waves dash and the winds howl—the Lord of Hosts is
with us—the God of Jacob is our refuge! All is safe because of His Presence and all shall end gloriously because of His
manifestation! The Lord bless you, in tempest and in calm, for Christ’s sake. Amen.
PORTION OF SCRIPTURE READ BEFORE SERMON—Matthew 8.
HYMNS FROM “OUR OWN HYMN BOOK”—243, 222. |