Delivered By C. H. Spurgeon At The Opening Of A New Baptist Chapel, Trinity Road, Upper Tooting “Where the word of a king is, there is power.” Ecclesiastes 8:4. KINGS in Solomon’s day had a vast amount of power, for their word was absolute. They did according to their own will and none could check them, for, as Solomon said, “the king’s wrath is as the roaring of a lion: whoever provokes him to anger sins against his own soul.” When such a monarch happened to be wise and good, it was a great blessing to the people, for, “a king that sits in the throne of judgment scatters away all evil with his eyes.” But if he was of a hard, tyrannical nature, his subjects were mere slaves and groaned beneath a yoke of iron. We do not sufficiently give thanks
for the blessings of a constitutional government, but if we were, for a season, put beneath the power of a grinding despotism,
we should set more store by those liberties for which we have to thank our Puritan ancestors. Mercies are seldom
appreciated till they are taken away. May we not prove ungrateful under free institutions, for if so, we shall be more
brutish than any men.
There is, however, blessed be the Lord, one King whose power we do not wish, in any degree, to limit or circumscribe.
God does as He wills among the armies of Heaven and among the inhabitants of this lower world—none can stay
His hand, or say unto Him, What are you doing? In this we greatly rejoice! The personal rule of one individual would be
the best form of government if that individual were perfectly good, infinitely wise and abundant in power. And the reason
why an autocrat turns into a despot is that there is no man who is perfectly good, unselfish, or wise! God has no fault
or failing and, therefore, it is a joy that He does according to His will. He never wills anything that is not strictly just—
in the exercise of absolute sovereignty He is neither unjust nor unmerciful—it is not possible for Him to err and, therefore,
it is a great subject for joy that “the Lord reigns, He is clothed with majesty. The Lord sits upon the floods; yes, the
Lord sits King forever and ever; let Israel rejoice, and let the children of Zion be joyful in their King. “Say among the
heathen that the Lord reigns: the world also shall be established that it shall not be moved: He shall judge the people
righteously. Let the heavens rejoice, and let the earth be glad; let the seas roar, and the fullness thereof.”
Now, because God is the absolute Monarch, His Word has power about it and of that Word of power I am going to
speak at this time. May the Holy Spirit help us to think of the power of God’s Word for four purposes! First, to excite
our awe. Secondly, to ensure our obedience. Thirdly, to inspire our confidence. And, fourthly, to direct our efforts.
I. First, we would see the power of the Word of the Lord in order TO EXCITE OUR AWE OF HIM. What are we
poor creatures of a day? What is there in us as we appear in God’s sight? Do we not pass away as the flower of the field?
As for our word, what is it? We sometimes talk exceedingly proudly and we say, “shall,” and, “will,” as if we could do
anything—when, after all, our word is but breath, a vapor, a mere sound in the air! Man proposes, but God disposes.
Man resolves, but God dissolves. That which man expects, God rejects, for the Word of the Lord stands forever—but
man passes away and is not.
Think of the day before all days when there was no day but the Ancient of Days and when God dwelt all alone. Then
He willed in His mind that there should be a world created. “He spoke, and it was done: He commanded, and it stood
fast.” “By the Word of the Lord were the heavens made; and all the hosts of them by the breath of His mouth.” What a
word is that which created all things! And remember that this same word can destroy all things, for, “the heavens and the
earth, which are now, by the same word are kept in store, reserved unto fire against the Day of Judgment and perdition
of ungodly men.” If He were but to speak, all things that are would melt away as a moment’s foam dissolves into the wave
that bears it and is lost forever! “You turn man to destruction; and say, Return, you children of men”—and at that irresistible
word, man’s spirit returns to God who gave it and his body disintegrates into dust!
When the Lord created, He used no hand of cherubim or seraphim—all that we read in the sublimely simple record
of Genesis is, “God said, let there be,” and there was. His word accomplished all and when He wills to destroy either one
man or a million, His word is able to work His will. What a mighty word was that which in one night cut off the host of
Sennacherib and slew the first-born of Egypt! The Word of the Lord commanded the floods and they drowned a guilty
world—and that same word rained fire from Heaven upon Sodom and Gomorrah! Even so, in the Last Day, when the
word shall go forth from Him, He shall shake not only the earth, but also Heaven—and at His word of power both
Heaven and earth shall flee away!
Great God, we do adore You, for You are both Creator and Destroyer by Your Word! Think how God’s Word both
makes alive and kills. He promised Abraham that he should have a seed in whom all the nations of the earth should be
blessed. It seemed impossible that there should come from him a son that should be the founder of a race—his body was
dead and Sarah was old—yet God, in due time, made them to laugh, for Isaac was born into the house! The Lord sets the
solitary in families. “He makes the barren woman to keep house and to be a joyful mother of children.” It is the Lord
who makes alive and, equally is it the Lord who kills. It only needs God to will it and the pestilence lays men low in
heaps, like the grass of the meadow when the mower’s scythe has passed over it. The Lord has but to call for pestilence or
war and myriads of men are laid low.
If He wills to chasten by famine, He calls for devouring insects and they invade the land. And this Joel attributes to
the word of Jehovah, when He says, “And the Lord shall utter His voice before His army; for His camp is very great: for
He is strong that executes His word: for the day of the Lord is great and very terrible; and who can abide it?” Oh, how we
ought to worship You, You dread Supreme, upon whose Word life and death are made to hang! I might in another division
of this part of my subject remind you of the power which attends both His promises and His threats. God has never
promised without performing, in due time, to the last jot and tittle. Has He said, and shall He not do it? Has He commanded,
and shall it not come to pass? The gifts and calling of God are without repentance—He turns not from His
Covenant engagements and swerves not from the performance of His Word.
Those that have resisted Him have found His threats to be true, also—let Pharaoh confess how the plagues followed
fast upon the Word of the Lord till even his stout heart was melted within him! Men have gone on, for a while, resisting
God, and in their pride they have laughed Him to scorn, but, by-and-by, He has spoken to them in His wrath and vexed
them in His hot displeasure. Who can stand against this terrible God, whose word overthrows the mighty, and casts the
proud beneath His feet? There is power in God’s Word to foretell, so that, when He tells what is to be in the future, we
know that it shall come to pass. “Seek you out of the Book of the Lord, and read: no one of these shall fail, none shall
want her mate.” Thus says the Lord, “I have spoken it, I will also bring it to pass; I have purposed it, I will also do it.”
In the Word of the Lord there is also power to predestinate as well as to foretell, so that what He decrees is fixed and
certain. “There are many devices in a man’s heart; nevertheless the counsel of the Lord, that shall stand.” The Lord has
said it, “My counsel shall stand, and I will do all My pleasure.” Let this be your joy, today, that whatever is promised of
the latter day and of the Glory that is to be revealed, is sure to come to pass, for the mouth of the Lord has spoken it. It
seems impossible that the heathen should ever be the Lord’s, or that the uttermost parts of the earth should be Christ’s
possession, but it will be, for the King has said it, and, “Where the word of a king is, there is power.”
We fear that the time will never arrive when peace shall reign through all the world—and when men shall hang the
helmet in the hall and study war no more—but the vision of faith shall yet become a fact, for, “Where the word of a king
is, there is power.” He spoke of old of Edom and Moab, Philistia and Ammon, Nineveh and Babylon, Greece and Rome.
And whatever He has spoken has been fulfilled! Not one word of the prophecies of Daniel and Ezekiel has failed of its
accomplishment! And we may be sure that not one glorious vision of the seer of Patmos will remain a dream. Let us worship
the great Ordainer, Benefactor and Ruler, whose every word is the word of a King, in which there is power—
“His very word of Grace is strong II. Secondly, we would think of the power of God’s Word in order TO ENSURE OUR OBEDIENCE TO IT. Whenever
God gives a word of command, it comes to us clothed with authority, and its power over our minds should be immediate
and unquestioned. I hope that, in laying the foundation of the spiritual building that is to be erected in connection with this place, you will take care to do it according to the directions of the Divine statute-book. One is our Master, even
Christ, and we have to do our Master’s will, not our own. Some Christian people do not view the authority of God’s
Word as paramount, but consult human leaders or their preferences. This is to begin with the word of man—a weak and
sandy foundation! I beseech you do not so.
To Christians the Word of God is the only rule of faith and practice. Our doctrine is of authority because it is God’s
Word, and for no other reason. Our ordinances are valid because instituted by God’s Word—they are idle ceremonies if
they are not so commanded. All the rites, rules and regulations of man are of no value. The book of human decrees is not
to be regarded in the Church of Christ. You may put in the front of it, “printed by authority,” but to the Church of
Christ it has no authority! You may adopt a creed as the standard of any particular Church, but that gives it no authority
to bind the conscience! It may be authorized by princes, bishops and holy men, but where it differs from the Word of
the Lord, or adds thereto, it is, to the children of God, as a puff of wind! The sole authority in the Church is Christ, Himself --- He is the Head of His Church and His Word is the only authority by which we are ruled --- for, “where the word of
a king is, there is power,” but all are usurpers who act as lords in the Church, where Jesus, alone, is Master and Lord.
Christians should more diligently search the Word of God to find out what the will of the Lord is on all matters affecting
their everyday life. A loyal subject of the great King wants to know what the King would have him do. When he
knows it, it is not for him to question or to cavil, but to obey. Brothers and Sisters, let us obey, in all things, the King’s
Word, and give to His Holy Word the honor that it justly claims, for, “where the word of a king is, there is power.”
Every precept that He gives, He intends us to keep. He does not ordain it that we may question it. He commands, that we
may obey. Let me refer you to what Solomon says in the second verse of this chapter, “I counsel you to keep the king’s
commandments.” This is admirable counsel for every Christian—if the commandments were of men, even the wisest of
men, we might break them and, perhaps, do right in breaking them. But if they are of the King who gives the command,
even the Lord Jesus Christ, who is the King in Zion, then the advice of the Preacher is wise and weighty—“I counsel you
to keep the king’s commandments.”
Perhaps some of you would ask me, this afternoon, “What is the best course for me to pursue in certain difficult
cases?” “I counsel you to keep the King’s Commandments.” “But I am a young man just beginning life and may get into
trouble if I am rigidly scrupulous in doing that which is right.” “I counsel you to keep the King’s Commandments.”
“But at this present time I may lose my job if I keep all His statutes. Could I not wink rather hard and forget one of the
Commandments for a little while?” “I counsel you to keep the King’s Commandments.” If He is a King, then it is a solemn
hazard to your soul if you come short of the least of His Commandments! Remember that one treason makes a traitor!
One leak sinks a ship. One fly spoils the whole box of ointment. He that bought us with His blood deserves to be
obeyed in all things, with all our heart, mind, soul and strength!
Such a King as we have ought never to hear us ask the reason why He commands, but we should be like the brave men
of Balaclava, of whom the poet said—
“Theirs not to reason why, Solomon goes on to say, “Be not hasty to go out of his sight.” There is such power in God’s Word that I would have you
also obey this precept and seek to remain in His Presence. Some of His people seek to get away from their Lord instead of
keeping close to Him. So little do they delight in communion with their God that they seem to say, “Where shall I go
from Your Spirit? Or where shall I flee from Your Presence?” Did it never happen to you as it did to Jonah, when he felt
he had to go to Tarshish, though the Lord told him to go to Nineveh? He did not want such a large field of labor, such
an anxious and unrewarding post of duty—he would rather go to a village station, or to a seaside place. For a time he
believed that Providence helped him, for he found a ship going to Tarshish.
There are many devil’s providences which make sin easy and obedience difficult. The precept, not the Providence, is
the rule of duty! The providence which gave Judas the opportunity to sell his Master did not excuse that son of perdition!
“So he paid the fare thereof, and went down into it, to go with them unto Tarshish from the Presence of the Lord.” Alas,
poor Jonah! To be thus eager to run counter to the Word of a King! I remember how I felt when first in London—I
could not endure the horrible wilderness of bricks by which I was surrounded! I sighed for the green fields and the fresh air—and I longed to get back to my country charge. But this kind of self-indulgence will not do! “Where the word of a
king is, there is power,” and wherever the King sends you, you must go, and go without questioning.
If He should send you to preach at the gates of Hell, go and preach there! “Be not hasty to go out of His sight,” for if
you get out of the sight of the King—if you no longer wait in His blessed Presence, depend upon it—like Jonah, you
will fall into trial, tempest, sinking and terror! There may be no whale to swallow you and cast you up, again—they are
not so plentiful, now, as they were then—and you may not be delivered so easily as Jonah! Keep in the Lord’s Presence
and favor, no matter where you may have to go in order to do so. Walk in communion with Christ in whatever path He
may point out to you. Never mind how rough it is! Do not imagine it is the wrong road because it is so rough—rather
reckon it to be right because it is rough, for seldom do smoothness and rightness go together. Oh, to abide in Christ the
Word, and to have His Word abiding in us!
Solomon then says, “Stand not in an evil thing.” There is such power in the Word of God that He can readily destroy
you, or heavily chastise you. Therefore, be quick to amend and, “stand not in an evil thing.” Repent, obey, submit,
confess, seek pardon at once! He who is a courtier in a king’s court, if he offends against his sovereign, or does anything
disgraceful, apologizes and trusts that he will not so offend any more and oh, you child of God, if at any time you shall
offend against your gracious Sovereign and He frowns on you, humble yourself, for His stroke is heavy! “Be you not as
the horse, or as the mule, which have no understanding: whose mouth must be held in with bit and bridle.” Have a tender
mouth—let God guide you with His eyes—let a word be enough for you!
I wish we all had great tenderness of conscience. We should tremble at God’s Word and humble ourselves in the dust
before Him, praying to be cleansed by His Grace. If a person wished to practice deeds of infamy, he would not do it in the
Queen’s audience room, especially if her eyes were fixed upon him! And so sin should be impossible to a Believer who lives
in the Presence of the King, in whose Word there is power! Will you offend Him to His face and slight Him in His own
courts? No! Yield yourself to His mercy and let your holy life prove that His Word has power over your heart and conscience.
III. And now, thirdly, TO INSPIRE OUR CONFIDENCE, let us think that “where the word of a king is, there is
power.” If there is a heart here that is seeking mercy, if you can go before God with such a promise as this in your mouth,
“Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts: and let him return unto the Lord, and He will
have mercy upon him; and to our God, for He will abundantly pardon”—that Word of His is not a mere sound—there
is the power of the Truth of God in it! If you do what He, there, bids you do, you shall find that He can and will abundantly
pardon! Whatever sins you have committed, though they are too many to count, and too awful to mention, if you
will come and trust yourself with Jesus Christ, God’s Word is that you shall be saved—and saved you shall be! “He that
believes on Him is not condemned.” “He that believes on the Son has everlasting life.” Come and plead these words, now,
you who feel your sinfulness, and you shall prove, in your joyful experience, that they are the power of God unto salvation!
Even the very worst may come and plead the promises! And they shall obtain immediate pardon and full forgive-
ness—and their soul shall know it because of the sweet peace that comes from forgiven sin! Do you tell me that you cannot
conquer your evil passions and corrupt desires? Here is a promise from the Word of the Lord, “From all your filthiness
and from all your idols, will I cleanse you. A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you”
(Ezek. 36:25). Now come and plead these precious promises! There is power in them—they are the Words of a King, and
if you plead them at the Mercy Seat, you shall become a new creature in Christ Jesus! Old things shall pass away! All
things shall become new!
When you get a promise from God, treat it as undoubted truth and rely upon it as you do upon the promise of your
father or your friend. There are men around you whose promises you never can believe—when they promise to pay you,
you dare not regard it as an asset in business, for you are too sadly aware that you have a little bundle of their I O U’s,
already, and you have had a view of their dishonored bills and checks endorsed with “insufficient funds.” But God’s
Word is not like that of false and fickle mortals. No charge of falsehood or failure can be brought against the God of
Truth! He has never broken His Word, yet, and He never will! Then, dear Souls, if you need forgiveness of sin and renewal
of heart, get the promise to that effect and believe it with all your soul! And as sure as it is the Word of a King you
shall be washed in the blood and in the water which flowed from the wounded side of the crucified Christ.
And you Christian people, are there any of you who are struggling, at this time, with a remaining corruption which
you cannot conquer? Come and lay hold of the promise that you shall overcome and plead it before the Mercy Seat! If you
do but get any promise of God suited to your case, make quick use of it, for there is power in it! It is the Word of a King!
Mr. Durham, the writer of ancient and precious comments upon Solomon’s Song and the Revelation, when dying, was
somewhat distressed in mind and said to a friend who was standing by his bedside, “Out of all the Scriptures there is not
one text that yields me comfort, save only one, and that is one that I have often held out to perishing sinners, little thinking
I should have to cling to it myself—‘him that comes unto Me I will in no wise cast out.’ Brother So-and-So, do you
think that this is strong enough to bear my weight now?” “Yes,” his friend replied, “and to bear the weight of ten thousand
times ten thousand if they rest upon it.”
What was said of that text is true of every other Word of God! The promise of the Lord will bear the weight of sin
and justice, life and death, judgment and Hell. Lean your whole weight on the Word of God and you shall find it to be
like Mount Zion which cannot be removed, but abides forever! For my own part, I have no shadow of a hope but in the
Word of the Lord—His Spirit has delivered me from all reliance upon duties, or feelings, or experiences. The Word of
the Lord is the life of my soul. In the words of King Jesus there is power to save you, to renew you, to pardon you, to preserve
you, to sanctify you and to perfect you! If you have hold on the promises, they will hold you for time and eternity,
too.
Then, are there any of you in great trouble? I cannot know all your cases, but if any one of you has a trial which you
could not tell, or a trouble which, if you did tell it, nobody could help you out of—go and spread it before the Lord.
Remember His Word, “Many are the afflictions of the righteous: but the Lord delivers him out of them all.” Go and tell
Him that He has thus spoken and that He has therein pledged Himself to deliver you out of all afflictions—and be sure of
this, He will be as good as His Word! Do you expect to die soon? Are you somewhat distressed because sickness is undermining
your constitution? Be not afraid, for His Spirit teaches you to sing, “Yes, though I walk through the valley of the
shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for You are with me; Your rod and Your staff they comfort me.” Go and tell the
Lord of His own Word and you will look forward to death without fear, singing—
“Knowing as I am known, That Resurrection word, Brothers and Sisters, one more point is gained concerning the fear of death when we remember that it is the voice of
a King which will recall our bodies from the grave and, “where the word of a king is, there is power.” Do we ask mournfully
as we survey the graveyard, “Can these dry bones live?” We are not slow to answer with assurance of faith! He that
brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, that great Shepherd of the sheep, will also bring forth from their sepulchers
all His sheep! “If the Spirit of Him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwells in you, He that raised up Christ from the
dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by His Spirit that dwells in you.” We do not doubt this when we remember
that with the trumpet of the archangel shall also be heard the voice of God, which voice shall speak the Omnipotent
Word—
“Break from His throne, illustrious morn! IV. Fourthly, I am coming to my last point, on which I shall crave a little time—and here I intend to address myself
to all people of God who are associated in Church fellowship, striving to do the Lord’s service and to you who will be so
associated here. My text is to be used TO DIRECT YOUR EFFORTS. You need power—not the power of money, or
mind, or influence, or numbers—but “power from on high.” All other power may be desirable, but this power is indispensable.
Spiritual work can only be done by spiritual power. I counsel you, in order to get spiritual power in all that you do,
to keep the King’s Commandments, for “where the word of a king is, there is power.” Lay not a stone of your
spiritual Church without His overseeing! Do all things according as He has ordained! Regard Him as the wise Master
Builder and be, all of you, under the command of His Word.
The day comes when much that has been built shall be destroyed, for the fire will try every man’s work of what sort it
is. It is very easy to heap up a Church with wood, hay and stubble, which the fire will soon destroy. And it is very difficult
work to build one up with gold, silver and precious stones, for these are rare materials and must be diligently sought for,
laboriously prepared and carefully guarded. The materials that will stand the fire of temptation, trial, death and the like,
are not to be brought together by any word but the Word of the Lord—and these, alone, are worth having. I had sooner
have half-a-dozen Christian people, truly spiritual and obedient to the Word of the Lord in all things, than I would have
half-a-dozen thousands of nominal Christians who neither care about the Word of God nor the King. If you need power,
keep the King’s Commandments! Keep close to them in all things and make it the Law of your house and the slogan of
your flag.
Wherein you go beyond the Word of God, you go beyond the power. And wherein you stop short of the Word of
God, you also stop short of the power. In the King’s Word there is power and you will have power as long as you keep to
it—and real power is nowhere else to be found. Let us take care that we do not look elsewhere for power, for that will be
leaving the Fountain of Living Waters to hew out for ourselves broken cisterns which hold no water. I fear that some
Christian people have been looking in many other directions for the power which can only be found in the Word of the
King. At one time we were told that power lay in an educated ministry. People said, “We must have a minister who
knows Greek and Latin! You cannot save souls unless you are familiar with the heathen classics.” This superstition has
suffered many a blow from the manifest successes of those whose only language is the grand old Saxon!
Then the cry was, “Well, really, we do not need these men of education—we need fluent speakers, men who can tell a
great many anecdotes and stories—these are men of power.” I hope we shall outgrow this delusion, also. The Lord
works by either of these classes of men, or by others who have not the qualifications of either of them, or by another sort
of men, or 50 sorts of men, so long as they keep to the Word of the King, in which there is power! There is power in the
Gospel if it is preached by a man utterly without education—unlearned men have done great things by the power of the
Word of God! The polished doctor of divinity has been equally useful when he has kept to his Master’s Word. But if either
of these has forgotten to make Christ’s Word first and last, the preaching has been, alike, powerless, whether uttered
by the illiterate or the profound.
Others have thought it necessary, in order to have power among the masses, (that is the cant phrase), that there
should be fine music. An organ is, nowadays, thought to be the power of God—and a choir is a fine substitute for the
Holy Spirit! They have tried that kind of thing in America, where solos and quartets enable singing men and singing
women to divide their services between the church and the theater! Some churches have paid more attention to the choir
than to the preaching. I do not believe in it! If God had meant people to be converted in that way, He would have sent
them a command to attend the music halls and operas, for there they will get far better music than we can hope to give
them.
If there are charms in music to change the souls of men from sin to holiness and if the preaching of the Gospel will
not do it—let us have done with Peter and Paul, with Chalmers and with Chrysostom—and let us exalt Mozart and
Handel into their places! And let the great singers of the day take the places of the pleaders for the Lord. Even this would
not content the maniacs of this age, for with the music room they crave the flippancy of the theater. Combine with philosophy
the sweet flowers of oratory and those of Covent Garden, adding thereto the man-millinery and gewgaws of
Rome—and then you can exclaim with the idolaters of old—“These are your gods, O Israel.” Men are now looking for
omnipotence in toys! But we do not believe it. We come back to this, “Where the word of a king is, there is power,” and
while we are prepared to admit that all and everything that has to do with us can be the vehicle of spiritual power if God
so wills, we are more than ever convinced that God has spiritual power to give by His word, alone!
We must keep to the King’s word if we desire to have this spiritual power for the Lord’s work. Whatever you find in
Scripture to be the command of the Lord, follow it, though it leads you into a course that is difficult for the flesh to
bear—I mean a path of singular spirituality and nonconformity to the world. Remember that, after all, the Truth of
God may be with the half-dozen and not with the million. Christ’s power may be with the handful as it was at Pentecost,
when the power came down upon the despised disciples—and not upon the chief priests and scribes—though they had
the sway in religious matters! If we want to win souls for Christ we must use the Word of God to do it! Other forms of
good work languish unless the Gospel is joined with them.
Set about reforming, civilizing and elevating the people, and you will lose your time unless you evangelize them. The
total abstinence movement is good and I would that all would aid it, but it effects little unless the Gospel furnishes the
motive and the force. It will win its way in proportion as it is carried on in subordination to the Gospel and is viewed as a
means to reach a still higher end! The rod works no wonder till Moses grasps it and moral teaching has small force till
Jesus operates by it. Those who doubt the power of the Gospel and leave it for other forms of hopeful good, leave
strength for weakness, Omnipotence for insufficiency. More and more I am persuaded that it is where the Word of a King
is that there is power, and all the rest is feebleness until that Word has infused might into it.
Everyone must buy his own experience, but mine goes to prove to me that the direct and downright preaching of the
Gospel is the most profitable work which I ever engage in—it brings more Glory to God and good to men than all lecturing
and addressing upon moral subjects. I should always, if I were a farmer, like to sow that seed which would bring
me the best return for my labor. Preaching the Gospel is the most paying thing in the world—it is remunerative in the
very highest sense. May your minister stick to the Gospel, the old-fashioned Gospel, and preach nothing else but Jesus
Christ and Him Crucified! If people will not hear that, do not let them hear anything at all! It is better to be silent than
to preach anything else. Paul said, and I will say the same, “I determined not to know anything among you, save Jesus
Christ, and Him Crucified.”
Then again, if you need power, you must use this Word in pleading. If your work here is to be a success, there must
be much praying. Everything in God’s house is to be done with prayer. Give me a praying people and I shall have a powerful
people. The Word of the King is that which gives power to our prayers. I have been requested to preach in certain
places and I have replied that I could not go. In a little time I have received a letter to remind me that two years before I
promised to go. This altered the case—I had no choice. I must go, whether I could or not, for my word was pledged to it.
So if you can go to the Lord with His pledged Word and say, “Lord, You have said it. You must do it,” He will be true
to His Word to you, for there is power in the Word of a King! There is power in accepting that Word, in getting it into
you, or receiving it. You will never keep the Truth of God till you have received this Word of a King into your spiritual
being and absorbed it into your spiritual nature. Oh, that you might, every one of you, eat the Word of God, live on it
and make it your daily food!
And then, there is power in the practicing of it. Where there is life through the King’s Word, it will be a strong life.
The sinner’s life is a feeble life, but an obedient life—an earnest Christian life—a life of strength. Even those who hate it
and abhor it, cannot help feeling that there is a strange influence about it which they cannot explain, and they must respect
it. You will see its power in this place! I know you will see it, for you are resolved, in God’s strength, that it shall be
so. You will see its power to fill the place. There is nothing so attractive as the Gospel of Christ! If you were to give a man
the Tabernacle at Newington, and say to him, “There, you may lecture on geology, astronomy, or anything you like,
twice on the Sunday, and every night in the week as well, if you please, and see if you can keep up a full congregation,” he
would fail!
The people would not come for any length of time and, yet, without any great oratory, we preach the Gospel again
and again, and the people come—they cannot help it! They hear nothing new—it is always the same thing over and over
again, and yet it is never monotonous! There is always a glorious freshness about the Gospel. That one silver bell of the
Gospel has more melody in it than can be drawn from all the bells in all the steeples in the world! There is more sweetness
in that one name, Jesus, than in all the harps of angels, let alone the music of men! When Jesus Christ’s Deity is denied in
any chapel, it soon becomes a howling wilderness. If Christ, the Son of God, is gone, all is gone! A certain minister
preached Universalism, or the doctrine that everybody would be saved in the end, and after a time his chapel became
empty. His neighbor, who preached that those who did not believe would be lost forever, had his house full.
One day the Universalist met his neighbor, and asked him, “How is it that the people come to you when you preach
that unbelievers will be sent to Hell, and they do not come to me, though I tell them that in the end they will all be in
Heaven?” The other replied, “They suspect that what I tell them is true and that what you tell them is false.” Where gentlemen
of this order have been preaching, people have sense enough to come to the conclusion that if what they say is false it
is not wise to hear them! And if what they say is true there is no need to hear them. Certain gentlemen are proving to the
world that there is no need of themselves, for if men are not lost, what need is there of a preacher to tell them how they
can be saved? He that cries peace and safety, if he is a watchman, might as well hold his tongue. If the watchman woke
you up in the middle of the night crying out, “All’s well! A fine starlight night!” you would be very much inclined to
exclaim, “Why on earth do you go about disturbing people when there is nothing the matter? Go home and get to bed
with you!”
And thus these smooth-speaking gentlemen are finding out that they are not needed and people are ready to say of
them, “Let them go home to bed and there let them abide.” But on the other hand, if you preach Jesus Christ, and even
the terrible things of His Word, there will be a full house, for conscience bids men hear. When you preach the Gospel,
souls will be saved! To secure that end, you must stick to the Gospel, for that is the one means ordained by God for the
conversion of sinners. The other day a Gospel minister spoke to a woman who had attended certain revival services, in
which there was much shouting of, “Come to Jesus,” but nothing about Jesus. She said, “I heard you preach this afternoon,
and if what you preached is true, then I am a lost woman, and I have been converted 10 times, already.” Ah me!
What is the use of such poor work as this?
We must teach the King’s Word if our work is to be blessed to the salvation of souls. We must plow with the Law
and let the people know what sin means and what repentance means—then we may hopefully sow them with the Gospel.
Some time ago we were told that there was no need of repentance and that repentance only meant a change of mind. But
what tremendous change of mind true repentance means! Never speak lightly of repentance. Then, too, the preaching of
the Truth of God—the whole Truth of God—will bring a power of union among you, so that you who love the Lord
will be heartily united. When Christian people quarrel, it is generally because they do not get sufficient spiritual food.
Dogs fight when there are no bones and Church members fall out when there is no spiritual food. We must give them
plenty of Gospel, for the Gospel has the power of sweetening the temper and making us put up with one another!
Preach the King’s Word, for it will give you power in private prayer, power in the Sunday school, power in the
Prayer Meeting, power in everything that you do because you will live upon the King’s own Word and His Word is meat
to the soul! The Prophet said, “Your Words were found, and I did eat them; and Your Word was unto me the joy and
rejoicing of my heart.” If you try this meat, you will all find it is nourishing to you, also. The Lord bless you and grant
that it may be so. Amen. |