C. H. Spurgeon |
Sermons From MTP Vol. 30 - Go to Index 28 - Go to Index 29 - Go to Index 30 Go to Index 37 - Go to Index 38 - Go to Index 42 |
The Gospel 24/7 |
Sermon Suitable For Close of The Year, Delivered By C. H. Spurgeon, At Newington. “All that the Father gives Me shall come to Me, and him that comes to Me I will by no means cast out.” - John 6:37.
THESE two sentences have been looked upon as representing two sides of Christian doctrine. They enable us to see it
from two standpoints—the Godward and the manward. The first sentence contains what some call high doctrine. If by
“high” they mean “glorious towards God,” I fully agree with them, for it is a grand, God-honoring Truth which our
Lord Jesus declares in these words—“All that the Father gives Me shall come to Me.” Some have styled this side of the
Truth of God Calvinistic, but while it is true that Calvin taught it, so, also, did Augustine, Paul and our Lord, Himself,
whose Words are these. However, I will not quarrel with those who see in this sentence a statement of the great Truth of
God of predestinating Grace.
The second sentence sets forth blessed, encouraging, evangelical doctrine and is, in effect, a promise and an invitation—“
Him that comes to Me I will by no means cast out.” This is a statement without limitation of any kind. It has been
thought to leave the free Grace of God open to the free will of man, so that whoever pleases my come and may be sure
that he will not be refused. We have no permission to pare down either sentence, nor is there the slightest need to do so.
The first sentence appears to me to say that God has chosen a people and has given these people to Christ—and these
people must and shall come to Christ—and shall be saved. The second Truth of God declares that every man who comes
to Christ shall be saved, since he shall not be cast out—and that implies that he shall be received and accepted. These are
two great Truths of God—let us carry them both with us and they will balance each other.
I was once asked to reconcile these two statements and I answered, “No, I never reconcile friends.” These two passages
never fell out—they are perfectly agreed! It is folly to imagine a difference and then set about removing it! It is like
making a man of straw and then going out to fight with it. The grand declaration of the purpose of God that He will
save His own is quite consistent with the widest declaration that whoever will come to Christ shall be saved! The pity is
that it should ever be thought to be a difficulty in the two Truths, or that, supposing there is a difficulty, we should have
thought it our duty to remove it.
Believe me, my dear Hearers, the business of removing religious difficulties is the least remunerative labor under
Heaven. The truest way is to accept the difficulty, wherever you find it in God’s Word, and to exercise your faith upon it.
It is unreasonable to suppose that faith is to be exempted from trials—all the other Divine Graces are exercised—and
why should not faith be put to the test? I often feel a joy within my spirit in having to believe what I cannot understand!
And sometimes, when I have to say to myself, “How can it be?” I find a joy in replying that it is so written and, therefore,
it must be so. In spite of all reasoning stands the utterance of God—our Father speaks and doubts are silenced—His
Spirit writes and we believe! I feel great pleasure in gliding down the river of Revelation upon a voyage of discovery and,
hour by hour, obtaining fresh knowledge of Divine Truths.
But when I come to an end of progress and see my way blocked up by a sublimely awful difficulty, I find equal pleasure
in casting anchor under the lee of the obstacle and waiting till the Pilot tells me what to do next. When we cannot go
through a Truth of God, we may be led over it, or around it and what does that matter? Our highest benefit comes not of
answering riddles, but of obeying commands by the power of love! Suppose we can see no further into the subject—what
then? Shall we be troubled about that? Must there not be an end of human knowledge somewhere? May we not be perfectly
satisfied for God to appoint the boundary of understanding? Let us not, therefore, run our heads against difficulties
of our own invention—and certainly not against those which God has seen fit to leave for us.
Take, then, these two Truths of God, and know that they are equally precious portions of one harmonious whole!
Let us not quibble over them, or indulge a foolish favoritism for one and a prejudice against the other, but let us receive
both with a candid, large-hearted love of the Truth of God such as children of God should exhibit. We are not called
upon to explain, but to accept! Let us believe if we cannot reconcile! Here are two jewels—let us wear them both. As
surely as this Book is true, God has a people whom He has chosen and whom Christ has redeemed from among men! And
these must and shall, by Sovereign Grace, be brought, in due time, to repentance and faith, for not one of them shall ever
perish.
But yet is it equally true that whoever among the sons of men shall come and put his trust in Christ shall receive eternal
life. “Whoever will, let him take the Water of Life freely.” ---
“None are excluded but those The two Truths of my text are by no means inconsistent with each other—they are perfectly agreed. Happy is the man
who can believe them both, whether he sees their agreement or does not see it. I was cruising, one day, in the western
Highlands. It had been a splendid day and the glorious scenery had made our journey like an excursion to Fairy Land.
But it came to an end, for darkness and night asserted their primeval sovereignty. Right ahead was a vast headland of the
isle of Arran. How it frowned against the evening sky! The mighty rock seemed to overhang the sea. Just at its base was a
little bay and into this we steamed and there we lay at anchorage all night, safe from every wind that might happen to be
seeking out its prey. In that calm loch we seemed to lie in the mountain’s lap while its broad shoulders screened us from
the wind.
Now, the first part of my text, “All that the Father gives Me shall come to Me,” rises like a huge headland high into
the heavens. Who shall scale its height? Upon some it seems to frown darkly. But here at the bottom lies the placid, glassy
lake of Infinite Love and Mercy—“Him that comes to Me I will by no means cast out.” Steam into it and be safe under
the shadow of the great rock! You will be the better for the mountain-truth as your boat snugly reposes within the glittering
waters at its foot—while you may thank God that the text is not all mountain to repel you—you will be grateful
that there is enough of it to secure you.
First, I shall bid you view that goodly mountain and then we shall sail into that pleasant loch.
I. Consider, then, with reverential joy THE ETERNAL PURPOSE. Our Lord Jesus Christ, when He found that the
mass of the people rejected Him, turned round upon them and said, “You believe not, because you are not of My sheep.”
He knew in His own heart that even if they refused Him, all would not do so—a number would assuredly believe on Him.
Therefore He boldly said, “All that the Father gives Me shall come to Me.” He threw this grand fact in the teeth of His
fierce revilers! It was His own comfort and their rebuke.
Now, I do not want to throw it at anybody tonight! On the contrary, I desire to use it as a beckoning finger to any
troubled heart that longs to come to Jesus and be saved. I saw the other day, round a gentleman’s park, a very strong and
lofty palisade—and to recomplete the exclusive apparatus, a superabundant number of tenter-hooks were nailed upon
the top of the fence and a liberal quantity half-way up. I somewhat jokingly observed upon the kindness of the proprietor,
in placing so many nails for the boys to climb up by—and so many more for them to hold on by when once they were
up. “Why,” said my companion, “those tenter-hooks would tear fingers and clothes to pieces! They are no help to climbers.”
“No,” I replied, “No more help to climbers than the remarks which your minister made upon the Sovereignty of
God could be considered to be no help to seekers of the Lord Jesus.”
The good man set forth the truth in the most awkward and pernicious manner possible; not making, thereof, steps
for earnest climbers, but tenter-hooks for unwelcome intruders. I never yet saw such a crowd desirous of salvation that
there was the slightest call for fences and tenter-hooks to keep them out—but I do see so many tremblers needing encouragement—
and so many doubters needing instruction that I delight to turn every Word, promise and doctrine of the
Lord into sweet invitations to all around me to come and welcome to the great heart of the Crucified! I am not afraid
that too many will come—my fears are all in the opposite direction! Oh, that I could hope that all my present hearers
would come to Jesus at once!
First, notice carefully, that if all that the Father gives to Christ shall come to Him, then some people shall most
surely come to Christ—and why should not you be among them? This seems to me to be a sweet suggestion for the help of
despondency when she is at her worst—some must come to Christ, why should not I come? When the devil says to you,
“You cannot come to Christ,” and you, yourself, feel as if you could not come. When sin hampers you, when doubt drags
you down, when you cannot do what you want to do—still it is decreed and determined that some people must come—
then why not you? By Divine decree they shall come! Why should not you be among them? Does not that help you? If
God blesses it, you will no longer sit on the borders of despair!
Suppose there is a plague in the city, but there are some people predestinated to be healed? I would be glad to know
of that fact! I would be almost glad of it if it was sure that I was not one of the favored ones, for I rejoice in the good of
others—but I would be still more glad to press to the physician with this assurance upon my mind—some must be
healed, why should not I? There is a famine in the land. I hear that it is revealed by a sure prophet that a certain number
never shall die of famine. Then why should not I outlive the dreadful days and be among them? Why not? I hear one say,
“Suppose I am not one of God’s elect?” To Him I answer, “Suppose you are?” Better still, suppose that you leave off supposing
altogether and just go to Jesus Christ and see!
To go to Him is your wisdom—your immediate business, as laid down in His Word—therefore, delay not! Instead
of shutting myself out, as some do, because it is written, “All that the Father gives Me shall come to Me”—I shut myself
in and say—“Then I will be among them.” Why should I not? Oh, Lord, if You have ordained that some shall come, then
I see that to them no difficulties can be insuperable and I will, therefore, come to You, myself, and in Your name enter in
where every coming one is welcome!
In the next place, I find that those that come to Christ, according to this text, come because of the Father and the Son.
Read it. “All that the Father gives Me shall come to Me.” That is, they come to Jesus. Why is it that they are made to
come? Because the Father has given them to Christ! Why is it that they shall come? Is it because there is some good thing
in them? No, there is nothing said upon that point either one way or the other. Is it because they have strong wills and
firm determinations and, therefore, come? The Scripture is equally silent upon that point, except that it says elsewhere
that the New Birth is not of the will of man! The reason that is given why they shall come to Jesus is because something
was done for them by the Father and by the Son. Why, then, should I not come?
Suppose I am weak? Suppose I am sinful? Suppose I am seven times more sinful than anybody else? Yet, since this
“shall come” depends not on the character of those to whom the promise is made, but upon a certain something done for
them by the Father and the Son, why should I not be among those for whom the Father and the Son have done this certain
thing? And why should I not, therefore, be made to come to Jesus? There never was a soul that really wanted to come
to Jesus but what it could come and did come! There never was a pining, longing sinner that was long kept away from
Christ! When he wanted Christ, Christ wanted him a hundred times as much!
If you have the least desire or the faintest longing after the Lord Jesus Christ, then the cords of love are about you
and His mighty hands are drawing home those cords! Yield to the sweet pressure and you shall come, not because of what
you are, or what you have ever been, but because of what the Father is doing and because of what the Son is doing! It is
written, “No man can come to Me except the Father which has sent Me draws him.” And when He is drawing, you can
come. The Father is drawing you since you are longing to come and are anxious to find a Savior! Now, do not turn this
Truth of God about so as to set it edgeways and make a chevaux de frise of it to keep yourself from getting to Christ. The
doctrine of the Divine Purpose is not a thorn hedge to keep you off from the Tree of Life—on the contrary, you are
bound to regard it as an open door! “Some must come. Why not I? Those that come do so because of something done for
them by the Father and of the Son—why should not that have been done for me? Why should I not draw near to God?”
Notice, thirdly, that these people are, all of them, saved because they come to Christ. Observe the words—“All that
the Father gives Me shall come to Me.” They are not saved in any other way than by coming to Christ. Here are certain
people that are different from others, for the Father has given them to Christ. Yes, but it does not matter how different
they are from others—they have to be saved in the same way as other people. There is no way of salvation specially prepared
for these peculiar people—they must still follow the King’s highway. The one common way of salvation is by coming
to Christ—and all that the Father has given to Christ must come in by this gate! This is the one door that God has
opened—there is no other—there shall never be any other!
Come! Pluck up heart, my dear Friend—you that are bowing your head like a bulrush—the best saint in Heaven
found his way there by a simple trust in Jesus Christ! Why cannot you get there in the same way? Many sinners of the
deepest dye have been saved through Jesus Christ—and why should not you be saved in the same way? Ask Peter, and
James, and John, and Paul and all the rest of them, whether they entered into Heaven by a private bridge thrown across
for them, alone—and they will tell you that they were saved by the one Redeemer! As no Scripture is of private interpretation,
so be sure that there is no private and secret Savior for a few favored persons!
Other foundation can no man lay than that which is laid, which is Jesus Christ. God’s elect can only be saved by coming
to Christ. Jesus says, “All that the Father gives Me shall come to Me,” for they cannot be saved any other way! Coming
to Christ is the one essential thing. “Oh,” says one, “I sometimes wish that I knew whether I was one of God’s elect.”
Why should you wish to know anything out of its turn, when you can learn every Truth that you need by studying other
Truths which lead up to it? You come to Christ and you will know that you were given to Christ—for none come to Him
but those who are His—and by their coming to Him they give the best evidence of their election.
You know what the Brother in Cornwall said to Malachi, who was rather a stout Calvinist? He said, “Now, Malachi,
I owe you £2. Before I discharge the debt I need you to tell me whether I am predestinated to pay you.” Malachi
opened wide his hand and said, “Put the £2 there and I will tell you directly.” Like most sensible folk, he preferred to
prophesy after the event—and there are many advantages in keeping to that method! It is evidently the natural order of
things for uninspired folk. Whether the Father gave me to Christ or not, I cannot discover till I know whether I have
come to Christ! When I know that I have truly come to Christ with all my heart, then I am certain that I was given to
Christ and I find no difficulty in so believing! Yes, my heart is glad to think that I am saved in the same way as others are
saved!
Yet, once again, from this text it is most clear that if I come to Christ, the Father gave me to Christ. If I, whoever I may
be, do but simply trust Jesus—for that is the coming, here, meant—then I am one whom the Father gave to His Son. If,
just as I am, I cast myself upon His blood and righteousness and become His disciple, sworn to follow Him, hoping, by
His help, to tread in His footsteps—then I may know that, long before the daystar knew its place, or planets ran their
round, the Eternal Father had looked upon me with eyes of everlasting love—and that He still accepts me and will never
cast me away! Is it not so? “All that the Father gives Me shall come to me” and, if I have come, then the Father has given
me to Christ! The great question is answered; the eternal mystery is unveiled and my spirit may rejoice in God, my Savior,
and in all the precious things of that Everlasting Covenant which is ordered in all things and sure!
So much about that huge, overhanging mass of rock! Of that I am going to say no more. Only under its lee I have
anchored long ago and at that anchorage I mean, still, to remain. Since I have come to Jesus, I know that I belong to Him
by the Great Father’s gift—and I am right well assured that the purpose of God shall be fulfilled in me—and that He
will assuredly bring me, with all the rest of His elect, to His Kingdom and Glory, where we shall see His face forever! This
may be called old-fashioned doctrine—I care not what it is called—it is my life and I dare rest my soul’s weight upon it
for time and for eternity!
II. Now we enter into smooth water—the mystery is opened, let us partake of the joy of it. We have, in the second
place, to speak to you for a little time on THE EVERLASTING GOSPEL—“Him that comes to Me I will by no means
cast out.” You may forget my first head if you like, especially if you are troubled by it, but I earnestly beseech you remember the second. “Him that comes to Me I will by no means cast out.” This is one of the most generous Gospel texts
that I remember to have met with between the covers of this Book. Generous, first, as to the character to whom the promise
is made. “Him that comes to Me”—that is the character. The man may have been guilty of an atrocious sin, too black to
mention, but if he comes to Christ, he shall not be cast out!
To that atrocious sin he may have added many others, till the condemning list is full and long—but if he comes to
Christ, he shall not be cast out. He may have hardened his neck against the remonstrances of prudence and the entreaties
of mercy. He may have sinned deeply and willfully—but if he comes to Christ, he shall not be cast out! He may have made
himself as black as night—as black as Hell—but if he shall come to Christ, the Lord will not cast him out! I cannot tell
what kind of persons may have come into this Hall tonight—but if burglars, murderers and dynamite-men were here, I
would still bid them come to Christ, for He will not cast them out!
I suppose that the most of you are tolerably decent as to moral character and to you I say, if you come to Christ, He
will not cast you out. Children of godly parents, hearers of the Word of God, He will not cast you out! You who lack
only one thing, but that the one thing necessary, He will not cast you out! Backsliders! Are there some such here who
have almost forgotten the way to God’s sanctuary—for whom the Sabbath bell proclaims no Sabbath now? Come to
Jesus and He will not cast you out! Oh, you Londoners, you have grown weary of God’s House and of God’s Day—
millions of you, but if with all your irreligion you are here tonight, this Truth of God holds good for you,
also—if you trust in Jesus, He will not cast you out!
If, amidst this company, there should be some whose characters we had better not describe and who already shrink
into themselves at the very idea of being picked out and mentioned by name—yet if such persons come to Jesus, He will
gladly receive them! Be your character what it may, you who are wrapped in mystery—you shall not be cast out! I wish
that I could convince those who are troubled about a life of grievous sin, for to the life-long transgressor the text is still
true! My Lord proclaims an act of oblivion concerning all the past. It shall be as though it had never been! Through Jesus
Christ, if you will but believe in Him, the whole past shall be rolled up and put away as though it had never known an
existence—and you, yourself, shall be born again!
When Naaman came up from washing in the Jordan we read that, “His flesh came again like unto the flesh of a little
child and he was clean.” And so it shall be with you. The old man took the fair-haired child upon his knee and ran his
fingers through its locks, and said, “Young child, God keep you from the sin into which I have plunged. My old life is
full of evil. It is now almost over and I am past hope. Would God I were a child again!” Lo, the Angel of Mercy whispers
to anyone in that condition, “You may be a child again!” The man a hundred years of age may yet be made a child! And
he that is a gray-beard in infamy may yet become a babe in innocence through the cleansing power of the water and the
blood which flowed from the side of Jesus!
Go and write it across the brow of night! Write it in new stars if you can—“Him that comes to Me I will by no
means cast out.” Then hang it up over the midday heavens and let the sun cast all his beams upon it, till it seems written
in the splendor of God—“Him that comes to Me I will by no means cast out.” The character who will be received is not
mentioned, lest in mentioning one sinner, another should seem to be excluded. No limit is set to the extent of sin—any
“him” in all the world—any blaspheming, devilish “him” that comes to Christ shall be welcomed! I use strong words
that I may open wide the gate of mercy. Any “him” that comes to Christ—though he come from slum or taproom, betting
ring or gambling hall, prison or brothel—Jesus will by no means cast out!
Further, this text is a very generous one because it gives no limit to the coming. The only limit to the way of coming is
that they come to Christ. I have known some come to Christ running to Him—a willing, speedy, earnest pace. You read
of that in the Gospels. They were so glad to hear of a Savior that they flew to Him at once! Many young children and
young people do this and they are blessed in the deed. Come along with you, you lively and tender spirits! He will not
cast you out if you leap and rush to Him! If you run all of a sudden to Him tonight—if you make a dash for Christ—He
will not cast you out. Alas, a great many, when they come to Christ, advance very limpingly. They are burdened with a
huge load of sin and fettered with doubts and fears—and so they make slow progress. They do not look to Jesus and live
all at once. They keep looking here and looking there, instead of looking to Him. They are a long while in coming, for
they are afraid, ignorant and dull.
Never mind, Brothers and Sisters. The snail got into the Ark! And if you come to Christ, He will not cast you out
though your pace is sadly sluggish. Some look to Christ as soon as they hear of Him, with clear, bright eyes like those of
Rachel. Oh, such a look! They seem to drink in Christ and His salvation all at once with those bright eyes. But I have met
with many whose look is like that of Leah, who had tender eyes—they look through the mists of their doubt and the
showers of their tears—and they do not half see Christ as they should. Yes, but that half-clouded look will save them!
Any looking will save you if it is looking to Christ—and any coming, if it is coming to Chris, will save you!
Coming to sacraments may condemn you! Coming to priests will ruin you! But coming to Christ will save you! If
your simple faith takes hold of Christ’s salvation, there is life in that grip. If your thoughts think of Him, if your heart
embraces Him, if your soul trusts Him, however weakly and imperfectly you do it, He will not cast you out! Oh, this is
glorious truth to my mind—is it not so to yours? So long as we but come to Him, our Savior will not cast us away! I feel
glad to be preaching this Gospel in Exeter Hall—are you not glad to hear it? If you are not, you are a sorry lot.
Thirdly, there is no limit, here, as to time. “Him that comes to Me I will by no means cast out” is a glorious, free utterance, compassing every age. There may be some little children here—indeed, I am glad to see boys and girls mingling
with the congregation. Listen to me, my children! I am always glad to see you and we preachers make a great mistake if
we do not preach to you. Oh, dear John and Jane, Mary and Thomas—I wish you would come to Christ while you are yet
young—and put your trust in Him and become young Christians. There is no reason why you should not! You are old
enough to die; and you are old enough to sin; and you are old enough to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ! Why should
you not do so at once?
When I was just about 15 years of age I was helped by God’s Spirit to cast myself upon Christ. And have I ever regretted
that I came to Jesus so soon? No! I wish that I could have come 15 years before and that I had known Christ as
soon as I learned to know my mother! Some of you have heard about Jesus from your infancy. His name was part of the
music with which your mother sang you to sleep. Oh, that you may know Jesus by faith as well as by hearing! Do not
think that you have to wait till you are grown up before you may come to Jesus. We have baptized quite a number of boys
and girls of 10, 11 and twelve. I spoke the other day with a little boy nine years of age and I tell you that he knew more
about Christ than many gray-headed men do—and he loved Jesus most heartily!
As the sweet child talked to me about what Christ had done for him, he brought tears into my eyes, to see how happily
and brightly he could speak of what he had felt in his own soul, of the Savior’s power to bless. You young children
are like rosebuds and you know everybody likes a rosebud better than a full-blown rose. My Lord Jesus will gladly receive
you as rosebuds! Offer yourselves to Him, for He will not cast you away! I am sure He never will. If any here are in
the opposite extremity of life, I would remind them that, “him that comes to Me I will by no means cast out” applies to
the aged as well as to the young!
I heard it said by a minister—a very earnest man—that if persons were not converted before they were 45, he hardly
believed that they would ever be converted afterwards. And he gave it as a note of his observation that he had not seen
any persons converted after forty-five. I wished that I had been in his pulpit. I should not have questioned his statements,
but I would have overlaid them with others of another character. Surely this Brother had been living in some minute
hamlet or other, or else he had never preached the Gospel, in its fullness, to every creature! Perhaps he did not believe in
the conversion of the aged and, consequently, no aged persons were converted by his means. I have seen as many people
converted of one age as another—that is to say, in proportion to the number of them—for there are not so many people
in the world over 50 as there are under 50 and, consequently, a large proportion of those persons who make up our congregations
are young.
We have in our regular gatherings a fair number of all ages. And as to the additions to the Church, I have noticed
that there is about the same proportion of very young children as of very old men and women. We have baptized, upon
profession of faith, men and women over 80 years of age, about whose conversion we had as firm a conviction as we had
about the conversions of the little ones—neither more nor less. Who shall dare say that there is an age after which God’s
Grace does not work? I challenge anyone to bring a text which looks that way! Furthermore, I challenge the truth of any
observations which arrive at such a result. My own preaching has been such that young and old in equal proportions
have attended it and in equal proportions they have been saved. However old you may be, my Master bids me say to you,
“him that comes to Me I will by no means cast out.”
Come along, come along, dear old Friend, though you cannot come without your cane! Come along, though your
eyes are failing—come in your spectacles! Though you cannot do much for my Master, He can do everything for you!
Though you have only a little time to live on earth, you will have all eternity in Heaven through which you can praise
Him! I am sure you will be one of the most eager at that work. I think you will be like an old woman of my acquaintance.
When I spoke to her about her conversion at an advanced age, she said, “Sir, if the Lord Jesus Christ ever does save such a
poor old sinner as I am, He shall never hear the last of it.” That is just why I want Him to save you—for then He will
never hear the last of it! You will praise Him forever and forever for what He has done for you! Will you not?
Oh, my dear Hearers, come to Jesus! Come in the morning when the dew is on your branch, for He will not cast you
out. Come in the heat of noon, when the drought of care parches you—and He will not cast you out. Come when the
shadows have grown long and the darkness of the night is gathering about you, for He will not cast you out! The door is
not shut, for the gate of Mercy closes not, so long as the gate of Life is open! Oh, fly to Christ and find mercy, now!
Once again, dear Friends, I want you to notice in my text the blessed certainty of this salvation. “Him that comes to
Me I will by no means cast out.” Two or three negatives in the Greek language make a negation stronger, though they
would have no such effect in the English tongue. It is a very strong negative here. “Him that comes to Me I will not not
cast out,” or, “I will never never cast out.” As much as to say—On no account, or for no reason, or on no pretence, or
from no motive whatever will I ever, in time or in eternity, cast out the soul that comes to Me. That is how it stands—a declaration of absolute certainty from which there can be no escaping! What a blessed thing it is to get your foot on certainties!
Certain preachers, who are much cried up nowadays, are very uncertain preachers, for they do not, themselves, know
what they will be propounding tomorrow! They make their creed as they go along and a very poor one it is when they
make it. I believe in something sure and certain, namely, in Infallible Scripture and that which the Lord has written
therein, never to be altered while the world stands. My text is certain as the Truth of Christ Jesus and if we have ever seen
that beautiful face of His, we could not distrust Him! Can your imagination picture, for a minute, the ever-blessed face of
the Son of God? Could you look into that face and suspect Him of a lie? And when He says, “Verily, verily, I say unto
you, he that believes in Me has everlasting life,” the saying must be true! If you believe in Him, you have everlasting life!
When He says, “him that comes to Me I will never never cast out,” the declaration must be true. He never, never, can
cast you out, whoever you may be, however long you may live, or whatever else may happen—if you but come to Him!
There are plenty of reasons, apparently, why He should cast you out, but He has knocked them all on the head by saying,
“I will by no means cast out!” That is, “In no way, and under no pretext, will I ever cast out a soul that comes to Me.”
Now, if Christ does not cast us out, then He receives us—and if He receives us, we are received into the heart of God! We
are received into eternal life and, by-and-by, we shall be received into everlasting blessedness! Oh, the joy of my text, in
that it is so certain!
So I shall close here, dear Friends, with just a word or two of further encouragement by noticing the personality of
my text, for in this, a part of the liberality consists. Do you observe that the first part of the text began with, “All that
the Father gives Me shall come to Me”? Yes, but when Christ began to deal with sinners with broken hearts, He dropped
the, “all,” and every form of general statement, and He came to the personal singular pronoun —“him that comes to Me
I will by no means cast out.” Now, herein He meant to say to everyone in this Hall, “If you come to Me, I will not cast
you out.” It is not, “If you and another come,” for, if so, it would be put in the plural—“If you come.” But it is, “him
that comes.” You alone! Your servant alone! Your child alone! But specially yourself alone—if YOU come to the Lord
Jesus, He will not cast you out!
You cannot doubt this. Come, then, my dear Hearers, believe your Savior! I am not talking, tonight, to persons who
doubt the veracity of the Son of God. I am not talking to persons who think Christ a liar. You know that He would receive
you if you would come. Then, why do you not come? But you mean to come, do you, by-and-by? Then why not now?
What is it that holds you back? How dare you delay! Will you be alive next week? How can you be sure of a day, or an
hour? When money is to be given away, I do not find that persons generally delay to receive it, and say, “I should rather
have it next year.” No, they say, “A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.”
Oh, to have Christ in the hand and to get Him now! And why not now? Is it because you really do not understand
what it is to receive Him, or to believe in Him? It is, indeed, the simplest thing in the world—and that is the only reason
why it is so difficult! It is so exceedingly simple that men cannot believe that it can be as we put it. Indeed, it is so! Faith is simply to trust Christ! And trusting Christ brings with it the new life and salvation from sin. I sometimes put it in Watt’s
way ---
“A guilty, weak, and helpless worm, But after I had once been preaching, a young man said to me, “Sir, I cannot fall.” “Oh dear,” I said, “then I do not
know how to talk; for I meant not a thing you could do, but the cessation of all your efforts! Just falling, or if you will see
it better, just tumbling down—because you cannot stand upright.” Because I cannot save myself, I fall into Christ’s
arms. Ceasing to hold to anything of my own, I just drop upon Him. “Still,” you say, “there must be something more
than that.”
There is nothing more than that! If you believe that Jesus is the Christ, you are born of God. “He that believes and is
baptized shall be saved, but he that believes not shall be damned.” “He that with his heart believes, and with his mouth
makes confession of Him, shall be saved.” “Oh, but I must—I must—I must do something mysterious, or feel something
which at present is far beyond me.” Thus you call God a liar and put away from you eternal life! Have you never read the
story of the good ship that had been a long time at sea and the captain had lost his reckoning? He drifted up the mouth of
the great Amazon River and, after he had been sailing for a long time up the river without knowing that he was in a river
at all, they ran short of water.
When another vessel was seen, they signaled her, and when they got near enough for speaking they cried, “Water!
We are dying for water!” They were greatly surprised when the answer came back, “Dip it up! Dip it up! You are in a
river. It is all around you.” They had nothing to do but to fling a bucket overboard and have as much water as they
liked! And here are poor souls crying out, “Lord, what must I do to be saved?” when the great work is done and all that
remains for them is to receive the free gift of eternal life! What must you do? You have done enough for one lifetime, for
you have undone yourself by your doing! That is not the question! It is, “Lord, what have You done?” And the answer is,
“It is finished! I have done it all. Only come and trust Me.”
Sinner, you are in a river of Grace and mercy! Over with the bucket, man! And drink to the full, for you will never
exhaust the stream of Grace. A river is free to every dog that runs along the bank—every cow that stands by the river
may drink to the full! So is the mercy of God free to every sinner, be he who he may, that does but come to Jesus! That
river runs near to you tonight! Stoop down, you thirsty ones, and drink and live! But you say, “I must feel different from
what I do now.” You need not come with your bad feelings. “Oh, I have not yet a broken heart,” says one. Come to
Christ and He will break your heart. “But I do not feel my need as I ought.” Come to Christ and He will help you to feel
your need. “Oh, but I am nobody!” You are the very person that Christ delights in, for to you He will be everybody!
Do you see that beautiful tree in the orchard loaded with fruit? It is a pear tree. From top to bottom it is covered
with fruit. I think I never saw such a sight—every branch is bowing down. Some boughs are ready to break with the luscious
burden. As I listen to the creaking boughs, I can hear the tree speak. What does it say? It says, “Baskets, baskets,
baskets! Bring baskets!” Now, then, who has a basket? “I have one,” cries yonder friend, “but it is of no use, for there is
nothing in it.” Bring it here, man! That is the very kind of basket the tree needs! A person over there says, “Oh, I have a
basket—a splendid basket. It is just the thing. It is full from top to bottom.”
You may keep your basket to yourself. It is of no use to my loaded tree. Where is there an empty basket? Who has an
empty basket? Come along with you! Come and pick from the tree as long as you like. Bring all your baskets. Bring thousands
and thousands of baskets, all empty, and fill them all! Do you notice as we fill the baskets that the fruit begins to
multiply? There is more when we have filled the baskets than there was at first, for this inexhaustible tree produces more
and more fruit, as fast as we pluck from it. What is wanted by the Lord Jesus is an empty soul to receive out of the fullness
which God has treasured up in Him!
God bless every one of you, for His name’s sake. Amen. |