C. H. Spurgeon |
SERMONS FROM MTP - VOL. 29 Go to Index 17 - Go to Index 28 Go to Index 29 - Go to Index 37 Go to Index 38 - Go to Index 42 |
The Gospel 24/7 |
Sermon Delivered On Lord's Day Evening, September 12, 1882, by C. H. Spurgeon, At Newington. “But my God shall supply all your need according to His riches in glory by Christ Jesus.” - Philippians 4:19. VERY beautiful, to my mind, is the sight of “Paul the aged” confined in his prison at Rome, likely, by-and-by, to be put to death, but calm, quiet, peaceful and joyful. Just now he is so happy that a gleam of sunlight seems to light up his cell and his face shines like that of an angel! He is exceedingly delighted because he has been, in his deep poverty, kindly remembered by the little Church at Philippi, for they have sent him a contribution. See how cheerful the man is—I was about to say, how contented, but I drop the word because it falls far short of the mark! He is far more happy than Caesar overhead in the palace. He is charmed with the love which has sent him this relief. Probably the gift does not come to very much, if estimated in Roman coin, but he makes a great deal of it and sits down to write a letter of thanks abounding
in rich expressions like these—“I have all things, and abound: I am full, having received of Epaphroditus the things
which were sent from you.”
His heart was evidently greatly touched, for he says, “I rejoiced in the Lord greatly, that now, at the last, your care
of me has flourished again.” See how little a gift may make a good man glad! Is it not worth while to be free with our
cups of cold water to the Prophets of the Lord? Instead of a little money, the Brothers and Sisters at Philippi receive a
boundless blessing and are enriched by the fervent prayers of the Apostle! Hear how earnestly Paul invokes benedictions
on the heads of his benefactors! Is it not a blessed state of mind which enables a heart so soon to be full to overflowing?
Some would grumble over a roasted ox, but here is Paul—rejoicing over a dinner of herbs!
So great was the disinterestedness of Paul, that there was nothing of selfishness about his joy. He did not speak in
respect of need, for he knew how to suffer need without complaint. But he looked upon the kindly contribution as a fruit
of the Grace of God in the Philippians—a generous proof that they were lifted out of heathen selfishness into Christian
love! There was little enough of kindness in the old Roman and Greek world into which Paul went preaching the Gospel.
Those were times of great hardness of heart, even to cruel heartlessness. There was no sort of provision for the poor. If a
man was poor, why, that was his own problem, and he might starve and die.
You know how hardened the people had become through the fights in the amphitheater, so that the sight of blood
produced a fierce delight in their brutal bosoms and human suffering was, to them, rather a thing to be rejoiced in than
to be prevented. There might be, here and there, a tender hand that gave coin to the poor, but, for the most part, charity
was dead. The voluptuaries of that most degenerate age planned no hospitals and built no orphanages—they were too
intent upon their gladiators and their mistresses. Self was lord paramount in Caesar’s court and all over Roman realms!
But here are people at Philippi thinking about one who had preached the Gospel to them and who is now suffering.
They are moved by a new principle—love to God in Christ Jesus has created love to the man whose words had changed
them. They will not abandon him—they will, out of their own slender means, cheer his sad condition. There were
Churches that had no such hearts of mercy, alas, that so early in the Gospel-day holy charity should be so rare! There
were people whom Paul had blessed greatly, who even quarreled about him and denied that he was an Apostle of Christ!
But not so the beloved Church at Philippi. They had, again and again, ministered to his necessities and Paul, now, rejoices
in them, again, because he delights to see another instance of the transforming power of the Grace of God upon
character, so that those who were once selfish now rejoiced, unprompted and unasked, to send their offering to him.
Was Lydia at the bottom of that subscription? I should not wonder! We know that she was open-hearted. Did the
jailer add his full share? I feel sure of it, for in the prison he courteously entertained the Apostle. These were a generous
people and Paul is happy in thinking of them. I may here dare to say that I, also, have had the same joy over many of you
when I have seen how freely you have given of your substance to the work of the Lord. It would be unfair if I withheld commendation for liberality from many now before me. You have rejoiced my heart by your gifts to the cause of God.
You have given up to the measure of your means and some of you beyond what we could have asked of you. The Gospel
has taught you this. To God be glory that it is so. Continue in the same spirit, that none may rob me of this joy.
The Apostle makes to them an assurance in the following verses that they shall be abundantly repaid for all that they
have done. He says to them, “You have helped me; but my God shall supply you. You have helped me in one of my
needs—my need of clothing and of food. I have other needs in which you could not help me, but my God shall supply all
your need. You have helped me, some of you, out of your deep poverty, taking from your scanty store. But my God shall
supply all your need out of His riches in Glory. You have sent Epaphroditus unto me with your offering. Well and good!
He is a most worthy Brother, and a true yoke-fellow. And for all that, God shall send a better messenger to you, for He
shall supply all your needs by Christ Jesus.”
He seems to me to make a parallel of his needs with theirs, and of his supplies from them with their supplies from the
Lord. He would seem to say—Just as God has, through you, filled me up, so shall He, by Christ, fill you up. That is a
translation of the Greek which most nearly touches the meaning—“My God shall fill up all your need according to His
riches in glory by Christ Jesus.” Will you allow me to make a break, here, for one instant? I read you, just now, the story
of the Prophet’s widow whose children were about to be taken for a debt, and how the oil was multiplied in the vessels
which she borrowed until there was enough to discharge the debt, and sufficient surplus for herself and children to live
upon.
Now, kindly take that picture and join it on to this—and we have here, first, the empty vessels. Set them out in a
row, “all your need.” Secondly, who will fill them up?—“My God shall fill up all your need.” Thirdly, after what fashion
will He do it?—“According to His riches in glory.” Fourthly, by what means will He do it?—“By Christ Jesus.”
Keep the widow and the vessels before you and let us see the miracle worked over, again, on a grand scale in our own
houses and hearts. May the Holy Spirit make the sight refreshing to our faith.
I. So, then, we will begin our discourse this evening by asking you to SET OUT THE EMPTY VESSELS. “My God
shall supply all your need.” Bring forth your vessels, even empty vessels! “All your need.” I do not suppose that you are
under any great obligation to go out, tonight, and borrow other people’s needs, for you have enough of your own at
home—needs many and varied. Very well, set them out. Hide none of them away, but put them down, one after another,
in a long row, all of them. There are needs for your body, needs for your soul. There are needs for yourselves, needs for
your families—needs for the present, needs for the future—needs for time, needs for eternity. There are needs for earth,
needs for Heaven. Your needs are as many as your moments—as many as the hairs of your head.
I suppose it would be useless for me to attempt a catalog of them—however carefully we made the list, we should
have to add a host of sundries altogether unmentionable until circumstances suggested them. I could hardly tell you all
my own needs, but I know that they are enormous and increasing with my years. I have needs as a man, as a husband, as a
father, as a citizen, as a Christian, as a pastor, as an author—in fact, every position I take up adds to my needs. If I went
through my own personal bill of requests, I could fill a document like the roll mentioned in the Old Testament, written
within and without—and hardly then could I enumerate all my own demands upon the Bank of Heaven. But if I attempted
to take all the thousands that are gathered beneath this roof and to let each man state his particular needs,
where would the computation end? The sands upon the seashore are not more innumerable!
Dear! Dear! We would need a library larger than the Bodleian to hold all the books which could be written of all the
needs of the needy congregation now before me! Well, I am not sorry for it, for here is so much the more room for the
Lord to work His miracles of bountiful Grace! Sometimes, when I have been in need for the work of the Orphanage and
the College and such things—and these times have occurred—I do solemnly assure you that I have felt a wonderful joy in
my spirit. I have watched the ebb of the funds till nearly everything has been gone and then I have joyfully said to myself,
“Now for it! The vessels are empty! Now I shall see the miracle of filling them.” What wonders the Lord has worked for
me, I cannot, now, tell you in detail, but many of you who have been my faithful helpers know how hundreds and even
thousands of pounds have poured in from our great Lord in the moment of necessity. It will always be the same, for the
Lord God is the same.
Until the funds run low we cannot expect to see them replenished—when they get low, then will God come and deal
graciously with us! Money is, however, our smallest need—we need Grace, wisdom, light and comfort—and these we shall have. All our needs are occasions for blessing. The more needs you have the more blessing you will get. God has
promised to fill up all your needs. That is, all your empty vessels will be filled and, therefore, the more the merrier!
What? The more in need the better? Yes, I would have your faith believe that strange statement—your poverty shall thus
be your riches, your weakness your strength, your abasement your exaltation! Your extremity shall be an opportunity
that God will use to show the riches of His Grace! To your utter exhaustion He will draw near with all the fullness of His
inexhaustible Grace and He will replenish you till your cup runs over!
He will fill up all your empty vessels. Be not slow to fetch them out from holes and corners and place them before the
Lord, however many they may be. Weep not over the empty jars, but place them out in rows in full expectation of their
being filled to the brim! These empty vessels of yours are, some of them, I have no doubt, very large, and they even grow
larger. Most of our needs grow upon us. You still pray, “Give us this day our daily bread,” but the one loaf which was a
large answer to the prayer when you were single, would not go far at your table, now—the loaves vanish like snow in the
sun! You needed faith 50 years ago, but you need more, now, do you not? You have more infirmities and, perhaps, more
trials than in your younger days. I know that, apart from my loving Lord, I am much more needy, now, than I ever was
before. Whatever a man requires in the things of God, usually the older he grows and the more experience he has, the
more he needs, and the more of it he needs.
He needs more love than he had when he was younger, more patience, more resignation, more humility, more charity,
more wisdom, more holiness. He desires more faith and a brighter hope. He needs, especially in prospect of death,
more courage and more bold, simple, child-like confidence in his Savior, Why, some of us have needs that could not be
supplied if we could turn the stars to gold and coin them and pay them away—these could not touch the hunger of the
heart and soul! The world, itself, would be but a mouthful for our spirits’ necessity—a drop in a bucket. I know some
saints that have grown to be so deeply in debt to their Lord, to His Church and to the world, that they are hopelessly
involved in boundless obligation.
How can we meet the demands upon us? Our responsibilities are overwhelming! All that some of us have made by our
lifelong trading is a bigger stock of needs than we ever had before. The vacuum within our spirit expands and enlarges,
and we cry out, “More knowledge of the Scriptures! More of Christ! More of Grace! More of God! More of the Holy
Spirit! More power to serve God!” Our oil vessels would, each one, hold a sea—and even these are expanding! We need
more and more, and the mercy is that the text before us keeps pace with the growth—“My God shall supply all your
need.” This includes the big needs as well as the little ones! It comprehends all that can be as well as all that is! It guarantees us that our growing needs shall all be supplied. Let the vessels expand to their utmost, “Yet my God,” says Paul,
“shall fill up all those needs of yours.”
Certain of our needs, again, are of this extraordinary kind, that if they were filled up, tonight, they would be empty
tomorrow morning! Some of our necessities are fresh every morning. The crop is a daily one, it springs up every moment.
The Grace I had five minutes ago will not serve me now. Yesterday I may have possessed great love, great faith, great
courage, great humility, great joy—but I also need these today—and none can give them to me but my Lord. You had
great patience under your last trial. Yes, but old patience is stale stuff. You must grow more of that sweet herb in your
garden, for the trial that is now coming can only be sweetened by the herb content, newly gathered from the garden of
your heart and mixed with the bitter water of your afflictions.
Our condition apart from our God may be compared to those fabled vessels that we read of in mythology that were
so full of holes that, though the 50 daughters of Danaus labored hard to fill them up, they could never accomplish the
task. You and I are such leaky vessels that none but God can ever fill us! And when we are filled, none but God can keep
us full. Yet so the promise stands, “My God shall supply all your need”—all the vessels shall be filled and shall be kept
full! We have certain needs, dear Friends, that are very pressing and, perhaps, most clamorous at this moment. Some
needs are urgent—they must be supplied, and supplied speedily—or we shall perish with hunger, or die of sickness, or
wither up in despair. Here let me add a caution—I dare not tell you that God will supply all the needs of everybody, for
this promise is to the children of God—and in its most emphatic sense it is only to a certain class, even, among them.
Those persons who profess to be Christians and, when they were well-to-do, never helped anybody else—I think the
Lord will let them pinch a bit, and know what a condition of poverty is like that they may become more sympathetic with
the poor. I have known good stewards and the Lord has sent them more, for they have dealt well with what they had.
They have given away their substance by shovelfuls and the Lord has sent it back by cartloads and entrusted them with
more! Others who have been bad stewards and have not served their Master well, have lost what they had, and have come
to poverty. Let us hope that their substance has gone to somebody that will use it better! But, meanwhile, they have to
pinch, and deservedly so.
But, remember, the Apostle is speaking to people of a very different character from that. He is speaking to the Philippians
and I think that there is a point in that pronoun, “My God shall supply all your need.” You have been generous
in helping the Lord’s servant and the Lord will repay you. Up to the measure of your ability you have served His Church
and helped to carry on His work in the world and, therefore, God will supply all your need. This is not spoken to hoarding
Judas, but to the generous who had voluntarily yielded of their substance when a fit opportunity was given them.
Will any of you bring your need to God and test Him by the same conduct? Remember that old promise of His, “Bring
you all the tithes into the storehouse, that there may be meat in My house, and prove Me now herewith, says the Lord of
Hosts, if I will not open you the windows of Heaven, and pour you out a blessing, that there shall not be room enough to
receive it.”
There is that that scatters and yet increases. Give, and it shall be given unto you. Oh yes, our gracious God will fill
all the vessels at once, if time presses! If your needs urgently require to be filled, bring them to Him. I began by saying
that few of us had any great call to borrow other people’s empty pots. Yet there are some of us whose main anxiety is
about the vessels that we have borrowed. We need more oil than others for this very reason, that we care for others. Certain
of us have been called to a life which intertwists itself with many lives. We have been led by Grace and Providence to
take upon ourselves the needs of thousands. Every genuine warm-hearted Christian does this, more or less. We try to
make other men’s needs our own needs by working for the poor, the ignorant, the sick, the helpless. You that care for
our orphan children may well join with me in prayer that the Lord will fill up all those empty vessels which we have borrowed
of poor widows.
Think of my hundreds of borrowed vessels in the Orphanage and of the number in the College. Blessed be the Lord
my God, He will fill up all these! Those whom we try to help in different ways, especially those we try to lead to the Savior,
are like the woman’s borrowed vessels—and they are not a few! You have made their spiritual needs your own. You
have come before God to pray for them as for your own soul and you shall be heard. You have talked to your neighbors
and laid yourself out for their good, as if your own eternal destiny were in their stead—rest fully assured that the Lord
that filled the borrowed pots in Elisha’s day will also supply your borrowed needs! “My God will fill up all your needs.”
It is a blessed word! Bring out your vessels and see if it is not true!
I should like to see every Christian here setting out all his vessels in rows at once, whatever they may be. Do not put
your cares away in the back room and say, “I shall draw them out tomorrow and begin worrying over them.” Instead of
that, while the oil is flowing, bring them here, before the Lord, that the oil may have free course and find suitable storage.
Would you limit the miracle? Have you one forgotten need? Make haste with it! Still, the oil is multiplying! Come
one! Come all! Arrange your vessels and the Lord will fill up your needs, by His Grace, and fill your mouths with a song!
II. Secondly, let us enquire, WHO IS TO FILL THESE VESSELS? Paul says, “My God will supply all your need.”
“My God!” Oh, that is grand! It were foolish talking if any other name were mentioned! God can supply all the needs of
His people, for He is All-Sufficient—but nobody else can. He can do it without any help, for nothing is too hard for the
Lord. He is able to number the myriads of His creatures and attend to the commissariat of them all, so that not one of
them shall lack—“He calls them all by their names, by the greatness of His power not one fails.” “They that wait upon
the Lord shall not want any good thing.” As for you, dear Brothers and Sisters, “trust in the Lord and do good, so shall
you dwell in the land, and verily you shall be fed.” He that promises to fill up all your empty vessels is one who can do
it—there is no limit to the goodness and power of God!
Then, notice that sweet word which Paul has put before the glorious word, “God.” He writes—“My God.” As Paul
looked at the money which the Philippians had sent him and, perhaps, at the warm garments that would cover him in the
cold, damp jail, he cried, “See how my God has supplied me!” And then he says, “My God shall supply you.” This same
God, Paul’s God—“shall fill up all your need.” Wonderfully had God protected Paul from the malice of those who
sought for his life. Very wonderfully had he been carried by Divine power through unparalleled labors, so that he had
been made to triumph in every place in the preaching of the Gospel! And thus Paul had learned from day to day to get a
firmer grip of his God, and say, “My God!” with more and more emphasis.
Jehovah was not to Paul the unknown god, but, “My God.” With God he dwelt and in Him he reposed all his cares.
This same God is our God! Think of that, poor friend, in your hour of need. Think of that, you afflicted widow
woman—you have Paul’s God to go to! Think of that, dear child of God in trouble—you have the same God as Paul
had and He is as much yours as He was Paul’s! His arm has not waxed short, neither has His heart grown hard towards
any of His children! “My God,” says Paul, “who is also your God, will supply all your need.” Who is this God that will
supply all our needs? Paul’s God, remember, was and is the God of Providence! And what a wonderful God He is.
We speak as if we were some very important part of the universe, but really, what are we? Our little island can
scarcely be found upon the globe till you hunt long for it! What a tiny speck this congregation must be! But God supplies
the needs of all the millions of mankind. “Mankind,” I said—but I ought to have included all the other creatures, too—
the myriads of herring in the sea, the multitudes of birds that sometimes darken the sun in their migrations, the countless
armies of worms and insects, strangely supplied, we know not how! And yet, “Your heavenly Father feeds them.”
Is that all the sphere of His Providence? No, far from it! I suppose that this round world of ours is but one apple in
the orchard of creation, one grain of dust in the corner of God’s great palace. But all yon orbs, with all the living things
that may be peopling every star, He supplies. And how? “He opens His hand and supplies the need of every living thing.”
See how easy to Him is this universal provision—He does but open His hand and it is done! This is the God that will supply
all your need! He calls the stars by name! He leads out Arcturus with his sons. He loosens the bands of Orion. He does
great things without number—and shall He not feed and clothe you, O you of little faith? Yes, be you sure of this, the
God of Providence shall supply all your needs for this life and its surroundings.
If that suffice you not, let me remind you that this God is the God of Grace, for Paul, above all men, counted Divine
Grace to be his treasure—his God was the God of Grace. Chiefly He is the God who gave His Son to bleed and die for
men. Oh, stand at Calvary and see God’s great Sacrifice—the gift of His only-begotten Son! And when you have marked
the wounds of the Well-Beloved and seen Jesus die, answer me this—“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?” What will He deny us who has given
up the best jewel that He had, the glorious One that Heaven could not match? There was never the likes of Jesus, and yet
He bowed His head to die on our behalf!
Oh, my dear, dear Friends, if you are anxious, tonight, and vexed with many cares, do think of that! It is the God
and Father of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ who says that He will fill up all your need! Do you doubt Him? Can you?
Dare you distrust Him? Now, take a flight above this present cloud-land and behold the God of Heaven! Think of what
God is up yonder—
“Beyond, beyond this lower sky, Behold the splendor of God! Gold in Heaven is of no account—the streets of that city are all of pure gold like unto
transparent glass! The riches and the merchandise of nations are but as rags and rottenness compared with the most
common utensils of God’s great House above! There they possess inexhaustible treasures and everything that is precious,
for the walls of the New Jerusalem are described as made of 12 manner of precious stones, as if these stones were so common
in Immanuel’s land that they built the walls with them! The gates are each one a pearl. What pearls are those! Is God
rich? Inconceivably, incalculably rich, so that He clothes the very grass of the field more gloriously than Solomon
clothed himself!
What am I doing to be of a doubtful mind? Is He my Father and will He let me suffer need? What? I, starving, and
my Father owning Heaven? No, no!—
“He that has made my Heaven secure, My precious text is one which, years ago, when we built the Orphanage, I caused to be cut on one of the pillars of the entrance.
You will notice it inside the first columns on either side whenever you go there. “My God shall supply all your
need according to His riches in glory by Christ Jesus.” This I took for the foundation of the Institution and set my seal to
it as true. And it has been so! Time would fail me if I were to tell how often God has interposed, there, for His numerous
family—those children that are cast upon the Divine Fatherhood. He has honored His own promise and our faith—and
I believe He always will. There on the forefront of the Orphanage stands also the words—“The Lord will provide.” You
shall see whether it is not so. As long as that place stands, my God shall supply our need and it shall be a standing encouragement to us all.
Think of the far more extensive orphanage of our Brother Mueller, of Bristol, with those 2,500 children living simply
through prayer and faith, and yet as abundantly supplied as the Queen in her palace! Nothing is needed where God is
the Provider. The Lord will supply without fail! Let us trust without fear. Go and plead this promise with the Lord your
God and He will fulfill it to you as well as to the rest of His saints.
III. Now, thirdly, let us enquire IN WHAT STYLE WILL GOD SUPPLY HIS PEOPLE’S NEEDS? He will do it in
such style as becomes His wealth—“according to His riches.” There are several ways of doing most things. There is more
than one way of giving a penny to a beggar. You can throw it at him, if you like, or pitch it in the mud as if you threw a
bone to a dog. Or you may hand it to him in a sort of huff as if you said, “Take it, and be off with you.” Or you may drag
the coin out of your pocket as unwillingly as if you were losing your eye-tooth. There is yet another way—namely that
which makes the copper turn to gold—by a way of doing it courteously and with kindness which expresses sympathy
with the poor creature’s need. Always give good things in the best way, for your heavenly Father does so.
Now, how does God supply His children? Stingily, miserably, grudging them every penny’s worth? Certainly not! I
hope that it was never your misery to dine with a grudging man who watched every mouthful that went down your
throat as if there was so much the less for him! Why, when one does eat, at whatever table it may be, if it is the most
common fare, one likes a welcome. It is the welcome which makes the Covenant invitation so sweet, when you hear the
exhortation, “Eat, O Friends; drink, yes, drink abundantly, O beloved.” One enjoys the welcome of a heart which pleases
all it can—like the Scot woman at a great communion meeting when there was nobody to take the people in—“Come
in,” she said. “Come in! I have room for 10 of you in my house, and I have room for 10,000 of you in my heart. Come
along with you. Nobody so welcome as you that have been sitting at my Master’s table with me.”
How, then, does God dispense His favors? How does He fill up the vessels? The way He does it is not according to our
poverty, nor according to our merit, “but according to His riches.” He gives like a king! Brothers and Sisters, I must
correct myself—He gives as God and as only God can give—according to His own God-like riches. No, that is not all.
He will do it in a style consistent with His present Glory. It is “according to His riches in glory,” which means that, as
rich as God is in glory, so rich is He in giving. He never demeans Himself in the mercies that He gives. He gives according
to His rank and that is the highest conceivable. He gives so as to bring Him new Glory. I never heard of one of His children
receiving a great blessing from Him and then saying that it did not glorify God to bestow it. No, no! The more He
gives, the more glorious He is in the eyes of men!
And He delights to give, that His Glory may be seen, and that the riches of His manifested Glory may be increased.
Withholding would not enrich the Lord of Heaven! Rather would it impoverish Him in Glory. But giving enriches Him
with more revealed Glory and He, therefore, delights to scatter His bounty. The fact is, Brethren, God gives gloriously!
The calculations of God—did you ever think of them? Well, let me say that He always calculates so as to leave something
to spare, by which to illustrate the infinity of His goodness. I know that it is so. He does not give us just as much light as
our eyes can take in, but He floods the world with splendor till we shade our eyes amidst the blaze of noon. After this
fashion did His only-begotten Son feed the thousands when He multiplied bread and fish for them to eat. We read that
“they did all eat”—no doubt they were hungry enough to do a great deal of that sort of labor! So far so good. But it is
added, “and were filled.”
It takes a good deal to fill men who have come a long way into the country and have had nothing to eat for a whole
day. But they were filled, fainting and famished though they had been. Yes, but do not stop there—“And they took up of
the fragments 12 baskets full.” The Lord always has baskets full of leftovers remaining for the waiters. He will be sure to
fill all your needs till you have no other need remaining and have provision on hand for needs not yet arrived. Will the
day ever come when we shall say, “Bring yet another need for God to fill,” and the answer will be, “I have no more
needs”? Then the oil of Grace will stop, but not till then! No, according to what I have said, it will not stop then, but it
will go on flowing and flowing, and flowing and flowing, world without end, “according to His riches in glory by Christ
Jesus.” The Lord will give enough, enough for all time, enough of all, enough for all, and more than enough!
There shall be no real need of any Believer but what the Lord will fill it full and exceed it. It is a wonderful expression
“filled with all the fullness of God.” It pictures our being in God and God in us. One has illustrated it by taking a
bottle, holding it in the sea and getting it right full—there is the sea in the bottle! Now, throw it right into the waves
and let it sink—and you have the sea in the bottle and the bottle in the sea! So God enters into us and, as we cannot hold
more, He makes us come into Himself! Into the very fullness of Christ are we plunged! What more can the amplest imagination
conceive, or the hungriest heart desire? Thus God will supply our needs. Well may you fill others, who are yourselves
so filled by God! Well may you serve His cause with boundless generosity when the infinite liberality of God is thus
ensured to you!
IV. Lastly, let us notice BY WHAT MEANS THE LORD FILLS OUR NEEDS. It is “by Christ Jesus.” Does God
supply all His people’s needs by Christ Jesus? Yes, first, by giving them Christ Jesus, for there is everything in Christ Jesus.
Christ is all! The man who has Christ has all things, as says the Apostle, “All things are yours, for you are Christ’s,
and Christ is God’s.” You will never have a spiritual need which is not supplied in Christ. If you need courage, He can
create it. If you need patience, He can teach it. If you need love, He can inspire it! You need washing, and there is the
Fountain. You require a garment, and there is the robe of Righteousness. You would have great needs if you went to
Heaven without Christ, but you shall not go there without Him! And even there He shall supply you with everything! He
it is that prepares your mansion, provides your wedding dress, leads you to His Throne and bids you sit there with Him
forever. God will supply your eternal needs by giving you Christ.
Moreover, all things shall come to you by virtue of Christ’s merit. You deserve no good thing, but He deserves it and
He says, “Set it to My poor servant’s account.” You may use Christ’s name at the Bank of Heaven freely, for though God
might not give His favor to you, He will always give it to His dear, dying, risen, pleading Son! When Jesus’ name is
quoted, all things are yielded by the Father. God will give you all things by Christ—therefore do not go to anybody else
after those things. If you have begun in the Spirit, do not attempt to be perfected by the flesh. If your only hope is in what
Christ has done, stick to that and add nothing to it! Be this your motto—
“None but Jesus! Jesus is our All-in-All! We are complete in Him! We need no addenda to the volume of His love. Christ, and Christ,
alone, shall supply all your need—all your fresh springs are in Him. “It pleased the Father that in Him should all fullness
dwell; and of His fullness we have all received, and Grace for Grace.”
Now, once more, I would to God that some poor soul here that has no faith—that has no good thing about him—
would, nevertheless, look over his house and see whether he has not an empty vessel somewhere. All that Christ wants of
you, poor Sinner, is that you should be empty and come and let Him fill you with His Grace! Come along with you, just
as you are! Bring no good works, no prayers, no anything—but come with all your sins, follies and failures which you
may look upon as so many empty pots! Come to Jesus for everything. “But I have scarcely a sense of need,” you say. Come
to Him for that, too! You must be very needy to be in need of that. Come and get it from Him. I tell you, Soul, you do
not need a half-farthing’s worth of your own—for what you think you have will only keep you from Jesus!
Come in all your poverty—a beggar, a king of beggars! Come and be made rich by Jesus! You that have not a rag to
cover your sin with—you that are only fit to be put into the devil’s dust bin and thrown away as worthless—come along
with you! My Lord Jesus is ready to receive those that Satan, himself, flings away! If you are such that you cannot find
anything in yourself that is desirable and even your old companions, who once cheered you on, now think you too mean
for them—yet come into my Master’s company—for, “this Man receives sinners.” Come with your beggary and bankruptcy—
you cannot dig, but to beg be not ashamed, for, “My God will supply all your need according to His riches in
glory by Christ Jesus.”
As for you that have not trusted my Lord and boast that you can do very well without Him, I suppose I must leave
you to fight your own way. You declare that you will carry on your own business and will not be dependent upon God, nor fall into any fanatical ideas, as you are pleased to call them. But we shall see. Already we see that the youths faint and
are wearied and the young men utterly fall. We see that the young lions lack and suffer hunger and, also, that the bestlaid
plans of wisest men go oft awry. And they that have felt assured that they could fight their own way—even they have
come to terrible failure. We shall see how you fare. They that mount up with wings as eagles and are proud and vainglorious—
even these go down to destruction so that no flesh has reason to glory.
As for me, let me wait upon the Lord God and live by faith in Him. Is it not better to drink of life out of the deep,
inexhaustible fullness of God than to go forever pumping and pumping at your own shallow cisterns which hold water?
Self-reliance may be well enough, but God-reliance eclipses it as the sun outshines the stars! “Oh, rest in the Lord, and
wait patiently for Him.” “Trust in the Lord, and do good; so shall you dwell in the land, and verily you shall be fed.”
“He shall cover you with His feathers, and under His wings shall you trust: His truth shall be your shield and buckler.”
There is a God and those who love Him and trust Him and serve Him know that He is a good Master. Job was slandered
by the devil when he came and said, “Does Job serve God for nothing?” He insinuated that Job made a good thing out of
his religion and was moved by selfish motives.
It was a great lie and yet, in a certain sense, it is true. If anybody says the same of you, admit that it is true. Acknowledge that you do make a fine thing out of your religion. God will not let you serve Him for nothing—you shall never
have to ask the question—“What profit is there if we serve God?” You shall have His peace, His love, His joy, His supplies
according to His riches in glory by Christ Jesus! You shall know that in keeping His Commandments there is great
reward! Believer, you shall have everything through Christ and nothing without Him! He that trusts not the Savior and
prays not to Him, shall be like Gideon’s fleece—when all around it was wet the fleece was dry! But the man who trusts
God and blesses His name shall be like Gideon’s fleece—when all around was dry it was full of moisture!
God will not hear a man’s prayers except through Christ Jesus! But if that name is mentioned, the gates of Heaven fly
open! God withholds no real good from the man of God who is in Christ. But our plea must be Jesus, first, and Jesus last,
and Jesus in between! We must present the bleeding Lamb before God each morning and each night. I pray you seek no
mercy of God apart from Christ, but lay hold upon God in Christ—and you shall have enough for all your need! May
God the Holy Spirit cause you to abide in Christ Jesus for His name’s sake. Amen.
PORTIONS OF SCRIPTURE READ BEFORE SERMON—2 Kings 4:1-7 and Philippians 4.
HYMNS FROM “OUR OWN HYMN BOOK”—84 (SONG II), 23 (FIRST VERSION), 708. |