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 Thursday Evening, May 17, 1883, by C. H. Spurgeon, At Newington. ““He that says he abides in Him ought, himself, also to walk, even as He walked.” - 1 John 2:6.
“He that says he abides in Him”—that is exactly what every Christian says. He cannot be a Christian unless this is
true of him and he cannot fully enjoy his religion unless he knows for sure that he is in Christ and can boldly say as much.
We must be in Christ and abidingly in Christ, or else we are not saved in the Lord. It is our union with the Christ that
makes us Christians! By union with Him in our life we truly live—live in the favor of God. We are in Christ, dear Brothers
and Sisters, as the manslayer was in the City of Refuge—I hope that we can say we abide in Him as our sanctuary and
shelter. We have fled for refuge to Him who is the hope set before us in the Gospel! Even as David and his men sheltered
themselves in the caves of Engedi, so we hide ourselves in Christ. We each one sing and our heart goes with the words—
“Rock of ages, cleft for me, Let me hide myself in Thee.”
We have entered into Christ as into the shadow of a great rock in a weary land, as guests into a banquet hall, as returning
travelers into their homes. And now we abide in Christ in this sense, that we are joined to Him—as the stone is
in the wall, as the wave is in the sea, as the branch is in the vine—so are we in Christ! As the branch receives all its sap
from the stem, so all the sap of spiritual life flows from Christ into us. If we were separated from Him, we should be as
branches cut off from the vine, only fit to be gathered up for the fire and to be burned. We abide in Christ as our shelter,
our home and our life. Today we remain in Christ and hope forever to remain in Him as our Head.
Ours is no transient union. While He lives as our Head, we shall remain His members. We are nothing apart from
Him. As a finger is nothing without the head—as the whole body is nothing without the head—so should we be nothing
without our Lord Jesus Christ. We are in Him vitally and, therefore, we dare ask the question, “Who shall separate us
from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord?” Beloved, since we, then, are the people who say that we abide in
Him, it is upon us that the obligation of the text falls—we ought, ourselves, also to walk, even as He walked.
A Bible ought to have great weight with a conscientious man, ought it not? Then it shall be so, God helping me. If
we say so, we must! If we talk, we must walk, or it will be mere talk. If we make the profession of abiding in Christ, we
must prove it by our practice of walking with Christ. If we say that we are in Christ and abide in Him, we must take care
that our life and character are conformed to Christ or else we shall be making an empty boast. This is true of every man
who says he is in Christ, for the text is put in the most general and absolute manner—be the man old or young, rich or
poor, learned or simple, pastor or hearer—it is incumbent upon him to live like Christ if he professes to live in Christ!
The first thing about a Christian is initiation—initiation into Christ. The next thing is imitation—imitation of
Christ. We cannot be Christians unless we are in Christ and we are not truly in Christ unless in Him we live, move and
have our being—and the life of Christ is lived over again by us according to our measure. “Be you imitators of God, as
dear children.” It is the nature of children to imitate their parents. Be you imitators of Christ as good soldiers who cannot
have a better model for their soldierly life than their Captain and Lord!
Ought we not to be very grateful to Christ that He deigns to be our example? If He were not perfectly able to meet all
our other needs. If He were an expiation and nothing else, we should glory in Him as our atoning Sacrifice, for we always
put that to the front and magnify the virtue of His precious blood beyond everything! But at the same time we need an
example and it is delightful to find it where we find our pardon and justification. They that are saved from the death of
sin need to be guided in the life of holiness—and it is infinitely condescending on the part of Christ that He becomes an
example to such poor creatures as we are!
It is said to have been the distinguishing mark of Caesar as a soldier that he never said to his followers, “Go!”—he
always said, “Come!” Of Alexander, also, it was noted that in weary marches he was sure to be on foot with his warriors
and, in fierce attacks, he always was in the front. The most persuasive sermon is the example which leads the way! This
certainly is one trait in the Good Shepherd’s Character, “when He puts forth His own sheep, He goes before them.” If
Jesus bids us do anything, He first does it Himself. He would have us wash one another’s feet and this is the argument—
“You call Me, Master and Lord, and you say well; for so I am. If I, then, your Lord and Master, have washed your feet,
you, also, ought to wash one another’s feet.”
Shall we not do as He does whom we profess to follow? He has left His footprints that we may set our feet in them.
Will we not joyfully fix our feet upon this royal road? That is our theme at this time. We do, many of us, say that we are
in Christ—let us hear how obliged we are, by this, to walk even as He walked. Oh, Holy Spirit, let us feel the weight of
the sacred obligation! But I stop a minute. I know that there are some here who cannot say that they are in Christ. If you
are not in Christ, then you are out of Christ—and out of Christ your position is dangerous, terrible, ruinous! If we saw a
man hanging over a deep pit. If we saw a man exposed to a sea of fire and likely to perish in it, all our tender emotions
would begin to flow and we should pray in an agony of spirit, “Oh, God, save this man from danger!”
My Brothers and Sisters, there are some among us, tonight, who are in the utmost danger! In a most emphatic sense
they are already lost, for they are without God and without Christ—strangers to the commonwealth of Israel! Oh, my
Hearers, how shall I speak of you without tears? Poor souls abiding under the wrath of God! Poor souls! The mercy is
that you are not past hope! There is an arm that can reach you! There is a voice that calls you—calls you even now! Listen
to it—“Look unto Me, and be you saved, all the ends of the earth; for I am God, and besides Me there is none else.”
Can you not, even now, give one look to Him who died for you? Will you not turn the eyes of faith that way and
trust Him who was nailed to the Cross on your behalf? God grant that you may, and then I may include you, also, in the
blessed instruction of the text—“He that says he abides in Him ought, himself, also to walk, even as He walked.”
I. I shall first of all ask you to CONSIDER HOW THIS OBLIGATION IS PROVED. Let us spend a few minutes on
the question, “Why ought we to walk as Jesus did?” When we read the word, “ought,” if we are honest men, we begin to
look about us and to make enquiries as to the reason and the measure of this obligation. An, “ought,” is a compulsion to
a true heart. There is a, “needs be,” to every godly man that he should do what he ought. What, then, is the ground upon
which this, “ought,” is fixed? First, it is the design of God that those who are in Christ should walk as Christ walked. It is
a part of the original Covenant purpose for, “whom He did foreknow He also did predestinate to be conformed to the
image of His Son.” That is the drift of the plan of Grace, the aim of the Covenant.
Grace looks towards holiness, that there should be a people called forth to whom Christ should be the elder Brother,
the first-born among many brethren. You certainly have not had the purpose of God fulfilled in you, dear Friend, unless
you have been conformed to the image of His dear Son. “He has chosen us in Christ Jesus before the foundation of the
world, that we should be holy and without blame before Him in love.” This is the aim of election; this is the objective of
redemption; this is the fruit of calling; this is the reason of justification; this is the evidence of adoption; this is the earnest of Heaven—that we should be holy, even as Christ is holy—and in this respect should wear the features of the Son of
God. He has given His own Son to die for us, that we may die to sin! He has given Him to live that we may live like He
lives. In every one of us the Father desires to see Christ, so that Christ may be glorified in every one of us. Do you not feel
this to be an imperative necessity to be laid upon you? Would you have the Lord miss His purpose? You are chosen of
God to this end, that you should be, “a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a peculiar people, zealous
of good works,” and what is this but that you should walk even as He walked?
Observe, again, another point of this necessity—it is necessary to the mystical Christ that we should walk as He
walked, for we are joined unto the Lord Jesus in one body. Now, Christ cannot be made a monster—that would be a
blasphemous notion! And yet if any man had eyes, ears, hands, or other members that were not conformable to the head,
he would be a strange being. The mouth of a lion, the eye of an ox, the feathers of a bird—these things would have no
consistency with the head of a man! We read of the image in Nebuchadnezzar’s dream, that it had a head of fine gold, but
legs of iron and feet part of iron and part of clay. Surely, Christ’s spiritual body is not compounded of such discordant
elements. No, no! He must be all of one piece. The mystical body must be the most beautiful and precious production of
God, for the Church is Christ’s body, “the fullness of Him that fills all in all.”
And shall that mysterious fullness be something defiled, deformed, full of sin, subject to Satan? God forbid! “As He
which has called you is holy, so be you holy,” and as your HEAD is holy, so be you, as members of His body, holy, too!
Ought it not to be so? Does anybody raise a question? Does not every member of Christ, by the very fact that he is joined
to Him by living union, feel at once that he must walk even as Christ walked? And this, Beloved, again, must all be the
fruit of the one Spirit that is in Christ and in us! The Father anointed Christ of old with the same anointing which rests
on us in our measure. The Holy Spirit descended upon Him and rested upon Him—and we have an unction from the
same Holy One! The Spirit of God has anointed all the chosen of God who are regenerated—He dwells with them and in
them!
Now, the Spirit of God in every case works to the same result. It cannot be supposed that the Spirit of God in any
case produces unholiness—the thought were blasphemy! The fruit of the Spirit is everything that is delightful, right and
good towards God, and generous towards man. The Spirit of God, wherever He works, works according to the mind of
God, and God is hymned as, “Holy, holy, holy,” by those pure spirits who know Him best! He is altogether without spot
or trace of sin—and so shall we be when the Spirit’s work is done! If, then, the Spirit of God dwells in you, (and if it does
not, you are not in Christ), it must work in you, conformity to Christ, that you should walk even as He walked!
Perhaps further argument is not needed, but I would have true Christians remember that this is one article of the
agreement which we make with Christ when we become His disciples. It is taken for granted that when we enter the service
of Jesus we, by that act and deed, undertake by His help to follow His example. “Whoever does not bear his cross and
come after Me, cannot be My disciple.” “Take My yoke upon you, and learn of Me, and you shall find rest unto your
souls.” You know if any man loves Christ, he must follow Him—“If you love Me, keep My commandments.” When we
took Christ’s Cross to be our salvation, we took it, also, to be our heavenly burden.
When we yielded ourselves up to Christ to be saved by Him, we, in spirit, renounced every sin. We felt that we had
come out from under the yoke of Satan and that we made no reserve for the lusts of the flesh that we might obey them,
but bowed our necks to the yoke of the Lord Jesus. We put ourselves into Christ’s hands unreservedly and we said,
“Lord, sanctify me and then use me. Take my body and all its members; take my mind and all its faculties; take my spirit
and all the new powers which You have bestowed upon me and let all these be Yours. Reign in me; always rule me absolutely,
sovereignly! I do not ask to be my own, for I am not my own, I am bought with a price.” After we have learned the
grand Truth of God that, “if One died for all, then all died,” we infer that, “Christ died for all, that we that live might
not live unto ourselves, but unto Him that died for us and rose again.”
Are we not, then, to be true to this blessed compact? “I remember my faults this day,” says one. Yes, but remember,
also, the vows that still engage you. Do not desire to escape from the sacred bond. This day remember the Lord to whom
you dedicated yourself in the days of your youth, perhaps many years ago, and entreat Him, again, to take full possession
of the purchased possession—and hold it against all comers forever. So it ought to be. He that says, “I am in Him”
ought also to walk even as He walked. Obey the sacrifice of Jesus! Yield yourselves as living sacrifices—by your hope of
being saved by Him, put your whole being into His hands to love and serve Him all your days. For, once more, inasmuch
as we are in Christ, we are now bound to live to Christ’s Glory and this is a great means of glorifying Christ.
What can we do to glorify Christ if we do not walk even as He walked? If I came and preached to you, and if I had the
tongues of men and of angels, yet if I did not seek to do as my Master did, what use to you is any that I can say? It is but
“sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal!” You know what men say to unholy preachers—they bid them be silent or be
consistent. Unholy ministers are a derision, a scoff and a by-word. And so it is with unholy Christians, too! You may
teach your children at home, or teach them in the Sunday school class—but if they see your lives to be Christless, prayerless,
godless—they will not learn any good from you. They will rather learn from what you do amiss, than from what
you say that is right. Do you blame them that it is so?
Are not actions far more forcible than words? Suppose you Church members are unjust in your trade? Suppose that
in your common conversation you are loose? Suppose that in your acts you are licentious or untrue—what does the
world say of your Christianity? Why, it becomes to them a thing of contempt! They sniff at it. It is so much dung and
sweepings of the street to them and so it ought to be! In the early ages some of the worst opponents of Christianity used
to wing their shafts with the inconsistencies of Christian professors—and they were wise in their generation. One of them
said, “Where is that catholic holiness of which we have often heard so much?” And another said, “We heard of these
people, that they love their Christ and love other men so that they would even die for love of their brethren—but many of
them do not love as well as the heathen whom they despise.”
I dare say there was a good deal of slander and scandal in what they said, but I am also afraid that if it were said today,
there would be a vast deal of sorrowful truth in it! Christian love is by no means so plentiful as it might be, nor holy
living, either. Is not this the thing that weakens the preaching of the Gospel—the lack of living the Gospel? If all the
professed Christians who live in London really walked as Christ walked, would not the salt have more effect upon the
corrupt mass than the stuff which is now called, “salt,” seems to have? We preach here in the pulpit, but what can we do
unless you preach at home? It is you preaching in your shops, in your kitchens, in your nurseries, in your parlors, in the
streets which will inform the masses of Christ! This is the preaching—the best preaching in the world—for it is seen as
well as heard. I heard one say he liked to see men preach with their feet. And this is it, “they ought also to walk even as
Christ walked.” No testimony excels that which is borne in ordinary life! Christ ought to be glorified by us and, therefore,
we ought to be like He is, for if we are not, we cannot glorify Him, but must dishonor Him.
Now, that is my first point. Consider how this obligation is proved and when you have weighed the argument, pray
the Holy Spirit to make you yield to its gentle pressure.
II. Now, secondly, CONSIDER WHEREIN THIS WALKING WITH CHRIST AS HE WALKED CONSISTS. Here
is a wide subject. I have a sea before me with as much sailing room as Noah in the ark! I can only just point out the direction
in which you should sail if you would make a prosperous voyage. First, Brothers and Sisters, to put it all together in
one word, the first thing that every Christian has to see to is holiness. I will not try at any great length to explain what
that word means because it always sounds to me as if it explains itself.
You know what wholeness is—a thing without a crack, or flaw, or break—complete, entire, uninjured, whole.
Well, that is the main meaning of holy. The Character of God is perfectly holy. In it nothing is lacking; nothing is redundant.
When a thing is complete, it is whole, and this, applied to moral and spiritual things, gives you the inner meaning
of, “holy.” When a man is healthy, perfectly healthy in spirit, soul and body, then he is perfectly holy, for sin is a moral
disorder and righteousness is the right state of every faculty. The man whose spiritual health is altogether right is right
towards God, right towards himself, right towards men, right towards time, right towards eternity! He is right towards
the first table of the Law and right towards the second table. He is an all-around man! He is a whole man, a holy man!
The Truth of God is within him; the Truth of God is spoken by him; the Truth of God is acted by him. Righteousness
is in him—he thinks the right thing and chooses that which is according to the law of uprightness. There is justice in
him. He abhors that which is evil. There is goodness in him; he follows after that which will benefit his fellow men. I cannot
spare the time to tell you all that the word, “holy,” means, but if you wish to see holiness, look at Christ! In Him you
see a perfect Character, an all-around Character. He is the perfect One—be you like He in all holiness!
We must go a little into detail, so I say, next, one main point in which we ought to walk according to the walk of our
great Exemplar is obedience. Our Lord Jesus Christ took upon Himself the form of a Servant—and what service it was
that He rendered! “He was a Son; yet learned He obedience by the things that He suffered.” And what obedience that
dear Son of God rendered to the Father! He did not come to do His own will, but the will of Him that sent Him. He
yielded Himself up to come under the Law to God and to do the Father’s will. Now in this respect we ought to walk even
as He walked. We have not come into the world to do what we like, to possess what we choose, or to say, “That is my notion
and, therefore, so shall it be.” Sin promised freedom and brought us bondage! Grace now binds us and ensures us
liberty!
Obedience is the law of every spiritual nature. It is the Lord’s will that in His house His Word should be the supreme
Law, for so only can our fallen natures be restored to their original glory. Set the wandering stars in their spheres and
rule them by the majestic sway of the sun—and then they will keep their happy estate! Understanding, heart, life—
everything—is now to enter into the service of God, even the Father, and it is to be ours to say, “Lord, show me what
You would have me to do.” Surely, beyond any other quality, we see in the career of the Son of God the perfection of selfabnegation!
No man was ever so truly free as Jesus and yet no man was so fully subservient to the heavenly will! There
was never a pilot so able to steer these seas according to his own judgment and never one so carefully to follow the channel
as marked down in the chart. Christ’s obedience was the unique originality of absolute obedience.
Dear Friends, you see how it ought to be with you, also. It is ours to walk in cheerful subservience to the mind of the
Father, even as Jesus did. Does this strike you as an easy thing? It is child’s work, certainly, but assuredly it is not child’s
play. Such a life would necessarily be one of great activity, for the life of Jesus was intensely energetic. The life of Christ
was as full as it could be. After He had been developed and disciplined by 30 years of seclusion, He showed Himself
among men as one moved to vehemence with love—“He was clad with zeal as with a cloak.” From the day of His Baptism
till His death, He went about doing good. It is amazing what was packed into about three years—each action had a
world of meaning within itself—and there were thousands of such acts!
Each sermon was a complete revelation and every day heard Him pour forth such sermons! His biography is made up
of the essence of life. Someone remarks that it is amazing that He did not begin His active life when He was younger. We
reply that it is beautiful that He did not, because He was not called to it—and He was best obeying the Father by living
in obscurity. Those 30 years at Nazareth were 30 wonderful years of obedience—obedience tested by obscurity, patience,
restraint and, perhaps, dullness. Who among us would find such obedience easy? Would we not far rather rush into action
and make ourselves a name? Some of us, perhaps, never learned the obedience of being quiet—but it is a wonderful
one. Oh, for more of it! Do we know the obedience of being hidden when our light seems needed?—the obedience of going
into the desert for 40 years, like Moses, with nothing to do but wait upon God till God shall put us in commission?
There is a wonderful service in waiting till the order comes for us actively to be at it. Samuel said, “To obey is better than
sacrifice.” It is, in fact, better than anything which we can possibly present to God.
But when our Lord was, at length, loosed from His obscurity, with what force He sped along His life-way! How He
spent Himself! It was a candle burning not only at both ends, but altogether. He not only had zeal burning in His heart,
but, like a sheet of flame, it covered Him from head to foot! There is never an idle hour in the life of Christ. It is wonderful
how He sustained the toil. Perhaps He measured out His zeal and His open industry by the fact that He was only to be
here below for a short time. It might not be possible, for others, that they should do as much as He did in so short a space
because they are intended to live longer and must not destroy future usefulness by present indiscretion. But still, activity
was the rule of our Master’s existence. He was at it, always at it, altogether at it, spending and being spent for His Father—
such was His mode of walking among men. Oh, Friends, if we, indeed, are in Him, we ought also to walk even as
He walked! Wake up, you lazy ones!
Next, we ought to walk as Christ did in the matter of self-denial. Of course, in this work of self-denial we are not
called to imitate Christ in offering up ourselves as a propitiatory sacrifice. That would be a vain intrusion into things
which are His peculiar domain. The self-denials which we practice should be such as He prescribes us. There is a willworship,
which is practiced in the Church of Rome, of self-denials which are absurd and must, I think, be hateful in the
sight of God rather than pleasing to Him. Saint Bernard was a man whom I admire to the last degree and I count him to
be one of the Lord’s choice ones. Yet in the early part of his life there is no doubt that he lessened his powers of usefulness
to a large extent by the emaciation which he endured and the way in which he brought himself to death’s door.
At times he was incapable of activity by reason of the weakness which he had incurred through fasting and exposure
to the elements. There is no need to inflict useless torture upon the body! When did the Savior thus behave Himself?
Point me to a single mortification of a needless kind! Enough self-denials come naturally in every Christian man’s way to
make him try whether he can deny himself in very deed for the Lord’s sake. You are thus tested when you are put in positions
where you might get gain by an unrighteous act, or win fame by withholding a Truth of God, or earn love and
honor by pandering to the passions of those around you. May you have Grace enough to say, “No, it cannot be. I love
not myself, but my Lord. I seek not myself, but Christ. I desire to propagate nothing but His Truths—not my own
ideas.” Then will you have exhibited the self-denial of Jesus!
These self-denials will sometimes be difficult to flesh and blood. And then in the Church of God to be able to give all
your substance, to devote all your time, to lay out all your ability—this is to walk as Jesus walked. When weary and
worn, still to be busy. To deny yourself things which may be allowable, but which, if allowable to you, would be dangerous
to others—this, also, is like the Lord. Such self-denial as may be helpful to the weak you ought to practice. Think
what Christ would do in such a case and do it! And whenever you can glorify Him by denying yourself, do it. So walk as
He did who made Himself of no reputation, but took upon Himself the form of a Servant and who, though He was rich,
brought Himself down to poverty for our sakes, that we might be rich unto God. Think of that!
Another point in which we ought to imitate Christ most certainly is that of lowliness. I wish that all Christians did
this. I sometimes see Christian women dressed up—well, like women of the world—though not with half a worldling’s
taste. And when I see men so big that they cannot speak to poor people, as if they were made of something better than
ordinary flesh and blood—when I notice a haughty, high, hectoring disposition anywhere—it grates upon my feelings
and makes me wonder whether these blunderers hope to go to the Heaven of the lowly. The Lord Jesus would never have
been half as big as some of His followers are! What great folk some of His disciples are, as compared with Him! He was
lowly, meek, gentle—a Man who so loved the souls of others that He forgot Himself! You never detect in the Lord Jesus
Christ any tendency towards pride or self-exaltation. Quite the reverse—He is always compassionate and condescending
to men of low estate.
And then note, again, another point, and that is His great tenderness, gentleness and readiness to forgive. His dying
words ought to ring in the ears of all who find it hard to pass by affronts, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what
they do.” Did He not set us an example of bearing and forbearing? “Who, when He was reviled, reviled not again.” For
every curse He gave a blessing! You cannot be Christians if this spirit of love is foreign to you. “Oh,” you say, “we endorse
the Confession of Faith.” I do not care! You must love your enemies, or you will die with the Creed in your throats!
“Oh,” you say, “we are regular in our pews, hearing the Gospel.” I do not care! You must forgive them that trespass
against you, or you will go from your pews to Hell! “Oh, but we have been baptized, and we come to Communion.” I do
not care even about that, for unless you are made meek and lowly in heart, you will not find rest unto your souls.
Pride goes not before salvation, but before destruction! A haughty spirit is no prophecy of elevation, but the herald
of a fall! Take care, take care, you that say that you are in Christ—you ought also to walk in all the lowliness and in all
the tenderness of Christ—or else at the end you will be discovered to be none of His. Hard, cruel, unrelenting, ironhearted
professors will no more go to Heaven than the hogs they fatten! There is one little big word which tells us more
than all this about how Christ walked, and that is the word, “LOVE.” Jesus was Incarnate Love! “God is Love,” but God
is a spirit, therefore, if you wish to see Love embodied, look at Christ!
He loves the little children and suffers them to come to Him. He loves the widow—He is tender to her and raises her
dead son. He loves the sinners and they draw near to Him. He loves all sinful and tempted and tried ones and, therefore,
He comes to seek and to save. He loves the Father, first, and then, for the Father’s sake He loves the myriads of men. Do
you love nobody? Do you live within yourself? Are you immured within your own ribs? Is self all your world? Then you
will go to Hell! There is no help for it, for the place of unloving spirits is the bottomless Pit! Only he that loves can live in Heaven, for Heaven is love—and you cannot go to Heaven unless you have learned to love and find it your very life to do
good to those around you!
Let me add to all this, that he who says that Christ is in him ought also to live as Christ lived in secret. And how was
this? His life was spent in abounding devotion. Ah, me! I fear I shall condemn some here when I remind them of the hymn
we just now sang ---
“Cold mountains and the midnight air If the perfect Christ could not live without prayer, how can such poor imperfect ones as we are live without it? He had no
sin within Him and yet He had need to pray! He was pure and holy and yet He must wait upon God all day long! He often
spoke with His Father and when the night came and others went to their beds, He withdrew Himself into the wilderness
and prayed. If the Lord Jesus is in you, you must walk as He walked in that matter. And, then, think of His delight in
God. How wonderful was Christ’s delight in His God! I can never think of His life as an unhappy one. He was, it is true,
“a Man of Sorrows and acquainted with grief,” but still there was a deep spring of wondrous happiness in the midst of
His heart which made Him always blessed, for He said to His Father, “I delight to do Your will, O My God! Yes, Your
Law is within My heart.”
He delighted in God! Many a sweet night He spent in those prayer-times of His in fellowship with the Father. Why,
it was that which prepared Him for the agony of His bloody sweat and for the, “Why have You forsaken Me?” Those
love-visits, those near and dear communing which His holy heart had with the Father were His secret meat and drink!
And you and I must also delight in God. This charming duty is far too much neglected. Strange that this honey should so
seldom be in men’s mouths! Listen to this text, “Delight yourself, also, in the Lord, and He shall give you the desires of your heart.” Many a man says, “I should like to have the desires of my heart.” Brothers and Sisters, here is the royal road
to it—the King’s ascent to His treasury—“Delight yourself, also, in the Lord.” But listen! It is very likely you would
not obtain the desire that is now in your heart if you did that, for he that delights himself in God rises above the desires of
the flesh and of the mind! He comes to desire that which God desires and, therefore, it is that he wins the desire of his
heart!
But, oh, the pleasure, the joy, the bliss of delighting in God! How many times have I sung to myself that last dear
stanza of the Psalm in which the inspired poet sings ---
“For yet I know I shall Him praise, Oh, what a pleasure! “Mine own God is He.” Rich men glory in wealth; famous men in valor; great men in honor and I
in “my own God.” There is nothing about God but what is delightful to a saint! The infinite God is infinitely delightful
to His people! Once get really to know God and to be like He—and even His sternest attributes—His power, His justice,
His indignation against sin will come to be delightful to you! Those men who are quibbling at what God does—
questioning what God has revealed—do not know Him, for to know Him is to adore Him! Oh, Brothers and Sisters, let
us find our pleasure, our treasure, our Heaven, our ALL in the Lord our God, even as our Lord Jesus did! In this thing
let us walk even as He walked.
I am not quite done. Dear Friends, we ought to walk in holy contentment. Jesus was perfectly content with His lot.
When the foxes had holes and the birds of the air had nests—and He had nowhere to lay His head—He never murmured,
but found rest in pursuing His life-work. The cravings of covetousness and pining of ambition never touched our Lord.
Friends, if you do, indeed, say that you abide in Him, I pray you be of the same contented spirit. “I have learned,” said
the Apostle—as if it were a thing which had to be taught—“in whatever state I am, therewith to be content.” In a word,
Christ lived above this world—let us walk as He walked. Christ lived for God and for God, alone. Let us live after His
fashion.
And Christ persevered in such living. He never turned aside from it at all, but as He lived so He died, still serving His
God, obedient to His Father’s will, even unto death. May our lives be a mosaic of perfect obedience and our deaths the
completion of the fair design. From our Bethlehem to our Gethsemane may our walk run parallel with the pathway of
the Well-Beloved! Oh, Holy Spirit, work us to this sacred pattern!
III. I close now by saying, in the last place, consider, dear Friends, WHAT IS NECESSARY FOR ALL THIS. First,
it is necessary to have a nature like that of Christ. You cannot give out sweet waters so long as the fountains are impure.
“You must be born again.” There is no walking with Jesus in newness of life unless we have a new heart and a right spirit.
See to it, dear Friends, that your nature is renewed—that the Holy Spirit has worked in you a resurrection from among
the dead, for, if not, your walk and conversation will savor of death and corruption! A new creature is essential to likeness
to Christ—it is not possible that the carnal mind should wear the image of Jesus.
That being done, the next thing that is necessary is a constant anointing of the Holy Spirit. Can any Christian here
do without the Holy Spirit? Then I am afraid that he is no Christian. But, as for us, we feel every day that we must cry for
a fresh visitation of the Spirit, a renewed sense of indwelling, a fresh anointing from the Holy One of Israel—or else we
cannot walk as Christ walked. And then, again, there must be in us a strong resolve that we will walk as Christ walked,
for our Lord, Himself, did not lead that holy life without stern resolution. He set His face like a flint that He would do
the right thing and He did.
Do not, I pray you, be led astray by thoughtlessly following your fellow men—it is a poor, sheepish business—
running in crowds. Dare to be singular! Dare to stand alone! Stand to it firmly that you will follow Christ. A Christian
man in a discussion attempted to defend the Truth of God, but his opponent grew angry and cried out vehemently again
and again, “Hear me! Hear me!” At last the good man answered, “No, I shall not hear you, nor shall you hear me, but let
us both sit down and hear the Word of the Lord.” And that is the thing to do, Brothers and Sisters, to be hearing Christ
and following Him! I am not to learn of you, nor you of me, but both of Christ—so shall we end all controversy in a
blessed agreement at His feet! God help us to get there.
And so, once again, I add that if we want to walk as Christ walked, we must have much communion with Him. We
cannot possibly get to be like Christ except by being with Him. I wish that we could rise to be so much like the Savior
that we should resemble a certain ancient saint who died a martyr’s death, to whom the world said, “What are you?” He
said, “I am a Christian.” They asked, “What trade do you follow?” And he said, “I am a Christian.” They inquired,
“What language do you speak?” And he said, “I am a Christian.” “But what treasures have you?” they asked, and he
replied, “I am a Christian.” They asked him what friends he had, and he said, “I am a Christian”—for all he was, and all
he had, and all he wished to be, and all he hoped to be—were all wrapped up in Christ.
If you live with Christ you will be absorbed by Him and He will embrace the whole of your existence! And, in consequence,
your walk will be like His walk. Take care that you do not in all things copy any but Christ, for if I set my watch
by the watch of one of my friends and he sets his watch by that of another friend, we may all be wrong! If we shall, each
one, take his time from the sun, we shall all be right! There is nothing like going to the fountainhead. Take your lessons
in holiness, not from a poor erring disciple, but from the Infallible Master! God help you to do so.
A person has written to me, this morning, to say that he has painted my portrait but that he cannot finish it until he
sees me. I should think not! Certainly you cannot paint a portrait of Christ in your own life unless you see Him—see Him
clearly, see Him continually! You may have a general notion of what Christ is like and you may put a good deal of color
into your copy—but I am sure you will fail unless you see the grand original. You must commune with Jesus! You know
what we did when we went to school—our schoolmasters were not quite so wise, then, as schoolmasters are now. They
wrote at the top of the page a certain line for us to follow—and a poor following it was!
When I wrote my first line, I copied the writing-master’s model. But when I wrote the next line I copied my copy of
the top line, so that when I reached the bottom of the page I produced a copy of my copy of my copy of my copy of the top
line! Thus my handwriting fed upon itself and was nothing bettered but rather grew worse. So one man copies Christ,
perhaps. A friend who hears him preach, copies him. And his wife at home copies the hearer and somebody copies her—
and so it goes on all down the line till we all miss that glorious handwriting which Jesus has come to teach us! Keep your
eyes on Christ, dear Brothers and Sisters! Never mind me! Never mind your friends! Never mind the old doctor that you
have been hearing so long!
Look to Jesus and to Him alone! We have had our sects and our divisions by that coping of the lines of the boys, instead
of looking to the top line that the Master wrote. “He that says he abides in Him ought, himself, also to walk even as
He walked” May the Spirit of God cause us to do it! Amen and Amen!
PORTION OF SCRIPTURE READ BEFORE SERMON—1 John 2.
HYMNS FROM “OUR OWN HYMN BOOK”—425, 262, 646. |