C. H. Spurgeon |
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The Gospel 24/7 |
Sermon Preached On Lord's Day Morning, February 17, 1884, By C. H. Spurgeon, At Newington. “And therefore will the Lord wait, that He may be gracious unto you and, therefore, will He be exalted, that He may have mercy upon you: for the Lord is a God of judgment: blessed are all they that wait for Him.” - Isaiah 30:18.
The people were in a great hurry to be delivered from their enemies. The Assyrians had come up in great force and
were covering the land with their armies. They had already devastated the neighboring kingdom of Israel and, therefore,
the men of Judah were afraid that they would be swallowed up quickly, even as dry stubble is devoured by fire. The
Prophet bade the inhabitants of Jerusalem remain where they were, adding, “For thus says the Lord God, the Holy One
of Israel: In returning and rest shall you be saved; in quietness and in confidence shall be your strength.” But they would
not listen to the counsel of wisdom—they preferred to follow the suggestion of their fears and go down into Egypt for
shelter.
They were impatient because they were unbelieving. They were slow to obey, but they were swift to rebel and, therefore,
the Lord cries to them by His Prophet—“Woe to the rebellious children that take counsel, but not of Me.” They
sent their princes as ambassadors to Zoan to entreat aid from the Egyptian king! Yes, they sent a great treasure upon
camels as a bribe to Pharaoh to espouse their cause against Assyria. They would not rely upon their God and so they
looked to the land of the viper and the fiery flying serpent—and were stung with bitter disappointment—for vapor and
emptiness were the help of Egypt.
It seemed as if the motto of the people then was, “We will flee upon horses; we will ride upon the swift.” Again and
again Isaiah urged them to be quiet, saying, “Your strength is to sit still,” but they would not learn that rash haste is but
ill-speed. They could not be quiet by reason of their fear and folly. But the Lord waited and turned not from His longenduring
patience. In the words of our text, He showed that if mortals could not wait, yet their Maker could ---
“Therefore will the Lord wait, that He may be gracious unto you”—and He assured them, yet again, that if they would
learn to wait, they would find it their wisdom and happiness, for, “Blessed are all they that wait for Him.”
Here is the subject of this morning’s discourse. Certain of God’s people are in trouble and distress and they are eager
for immediate rescue. They cannot wait on God’s time, nor exercise submission to His will. He will surely deliver them in
due season, but they cannot tarry till the hour comes. Like children, they snatch at unripe fruit. “To everything there is a
season, and a time to every purpose under the Heaven,” but their one season is the present—they cannot—they will not
wait. They must have their desire instantaneously fulfilled or else they are ready to take wrong means of attaining it. If in
poverty, they are in haste to be rich—and they shall not long be innocent.
If under reproach, their heart ferments towards revenge. They would sooner rush under the guidance of Satan into
some questionable policy than, in childlike simplicity, trust in the Lord and do good. It must not be so with you, my
Brothers and Sisters—you must learn a better way. I hope that the sermon of this morning may go some way, by God’s
Spirit, towards instructing you in the holy art of waiting for the Lord. “Those that wait upon the Lord, they shall inherit
the earth.” The text divides itself into two parts—first, it introduces us to a waiting God. And secondly, it speaks of
a waiting people.
I. First, we have here A WAITING GOD. I shall not confine our illustration of this waiting on the part of God to
the case of the men of Judah described in the text, but I shall come home to your own experience and speak of how the
Lord has waited that He might be gracious to you. Let us behold His long-suffering towards ourselves. In so doing we
shall not be leaving the Scripture, for the text as truly describes our own experience as that of the men of Isaiah’s day.
The Word of the Lord which is now to be considered opens, first, with a wonderful reason for waiting—“And therefore
will the Lord wait.” “Therefore”—mark that word! The Lord Jehovah does as He wills both in Heaven and earth
and His ways are past finding out, but He never acts unreasonably. He does not tell us His reasons, but He has them, for
He acts, “according to the counsel of His will.” God has His “therefore,” and these are of the most forcible kind! Full
often His “therefore” are the very reverse of ours—that which is an argument with us may be no argument with God—
and that which is a reason with Him might seem to be a reason in the opposite direction to us.
For what is there in this chapter that can be made into a “therefore”? “Therefore will the Lord wait.” From where
does He derive the argument? Assuredly it is a reason based on His own Grace and not on the merit of man! The chapter
contains a denunciation of the false confidences of the people and, because of these, one might have concluded that the
Lord would cast them off forever. If they will have Egypt to lean upon, let them lean on Egypt till, like a spear, it pierces
their side! God might well say, “Let them alone; they are given to their idols!” But instead, He cries, “Therefore will the
Lord wait.” He will let them see the result of their carnal confidences—He will allow them time in which to test and try
Egypt and see whether Egypt is not a boaster whose help is to no purpose.
Do you not remember when it was so with you? Perhaps you began your religious life with the great mistake of hoping
to find salvation in your own goodness. You looked to your feelings, prayers, works and professions for safety. You
thought that your deliverance must come from yourself and so you sought to “work out your own salvation with fear and
trembling”—without remembering—“it is God that works in us to will and to do of His own good pleasure.” You
knew nothing of God’s Grace—you thought too much of your own good works! So many prayers and tears; so many
Church-goings or Chapel-goings; so much of sacraments, almsgivings and the like—you thought this would make up a
sweet-smelling sacrifice, acceptable to God!
Blessed be the Lord who had great patience with you! He had told you plainly enough, beforehand, that by the
works of the Law there should no flesh be justified in His sight—and you ought not to have tried that forbidden way—
but as you would try it, He suffered you to run therein till a gulf opened before you. You worked out a plan of selfsalvation
and the net result was bitter disappointment, for you saw that you could not keep the Law and you felt, also,
that if you did keep it your obedience would make no recompense for the sins of the past! You perceived that the wrath of
God was your righteous due! An abyss yawned before you! You dared not go further; neither could you trust the sandy
ground upon which you stood. You were in great distress of mind, but it was for this that the Lord had, in mercy,
waited.
I heard, some time ago, of a man who rented horses and carriages. A person wished to hire and, having heard the
price, he went round the little town to all other persons in that line of business to get something cheaper, but, as he did
not succeed, he returned to the first person and said he would hire his horse and carriage. “No,” said the other, “I am not
going to let you have it. I know why you have come to me—you have been round everywhere else and if you could have
saved a shilling you would not have come back to me.” I do not commend the tradesman, but I do not much wonder at
his conduct. See how much more patience there is in God than in man—we refuse His free salvation and go round by way
of our own merits and everywhere else to try and find some other ground of confidence. And then at last, when everything
has broken down, we come back to God and to salvation through Jesus Christ! And yet we find the Lord lovingly
waiting, graciously waiting—a God ready to pardon!
Further, these people were rebels against God, and the Lord was waiting to let them fully manifest their rebellious
spirit and be made ashamed of it. The chapter begins that way—“Woe to the rebellious children.” Further on He calls
them, “a rebellious people, lying children, children that will not hear the Law of the Lord”—was that a reason for waiting
to be gracious? Yes, with the Lord, sin shows the need of Grace and so becomes a reason for Grace. The Lord allowed
the people to show their rebellious character—to let all mankind know what kind of people God had to deal with—and
that they might, in later days, have the higher admiration of His long-suffering and of His Grace.
I think the Lord permits many sinners to go to the full length of their tether in order that they may know, in the future,
what stuff they are made of, and may never trust in themselves. Those who, from their youth up, have been under
restraint do not know the evil of their own hearts and are apt to think that they can scarcely be heirs of wrath even as
others. But those who have developed their innate depravity by actual sin dare not dream such proud falsehoods, for
their actual sins would cry them down if they did so! When the Lord leaves us to ourselves, awhile, and just stands back
and lets us have our spin, what pretty creatures we are! Ah me, it makes us blush to remember all! In later years we have
to bemoan and distrust ourselves—and admire the measureless bounty of the Grace which chose us—and would not alter
its choice notwithstanding all our untowardness! A strange “therefore” is God’s, “therefore”—“therefore will the
Lord wait that He may be gracious”—that the abundant display of the sin within the man may lead to a more thorough
and hearty confession of his fault and to a greater admiration of the splendor of the Grace which puts that sin away.
The Lord would wait, again, for yet another reason, namely, to let them suffer somewhat of the effect of their sin. He
permitted them to send their ambassadors to Egypt that they might come back disappointed. And He allowed the Assyrians
to devastate the land that they might feel the pinch of famine and learn that it is an evil and a bitter thought to forsake
the living God. It has a purifying effect upon men to let them bathe in the bitter waters which flow from the foul
fountain of their iniquity! It is well that they should see what kind of serpent is hatched from the egg of evil.
Perhaps some of us were left in the same way and we shall never forget what we thus learned—we were allowed to go
on in sin and we did so until we began to feel the result of it! And now we flee from it with horror. We put our hand into
the fire until it was burned—and now we dread the fire. The quittance of self, the abhorrence of sin, the clinging to the
Lord which come out of our miseries, are all precious and, therefore, does the Lord wait to be gracious—wait until we
set a just value upon that Grace—and have a due horror of the sin from which it delivers us.
Once more, I do not doubt that the Lord waited in this case to be gracious until the people should begin to pray, for
that seems to be the turning point in this affair. The Prophet says, “He will be very gracious unto you at the voice of your
cry; when He shall hear it, He will answer you.” The Lord is listening for the sinner’s prayer! How is it that you have not
prayed long ago, O troubled spirit? Why have those lips been dumb for years? What? With all your sense of sin and with
a clear idea of the misery that will come of it, do you still refuse to pray? Then you may well wonder that the Lord should
wait! It is a marvel that He should have any patience with a prayerless soul! The open display of His Grace in your soul in
the form of pardoned sin will not appear to you until it is said, “Behold, he prays!”
Why, then, are you so slow to cry to Him? If mercy is to be had for the asking, what shall become of the man who
never asks? If God says, “Only acknowledge your transgressions,” what must be the fate of him who will not acknowledge
his transgressions? If the Lord sets Mercy’s door before us, and writes over it, “Knock, and it shall be opened unto you,”
how can we be excused if we do not knock at once? And yet such was my condition once—and such was yours, my Brothers
and Sisters in Christ! We did not feel the guilt of our sin! We would not acknowledge that we had erred! We did not
recognize the misery that sin brought upon us! We did not pray! We did not seek the Lord through Jesus Christ! Yet all
that long while the Lord of Mercy waited that He might be gracious to us! The reason why He should have exercised such
forbearance and long-suffering is hard to see until we look into the goodness of His heart—until we see in the heart of
His compassion, the deep fountains of love from which rivers of mercy flow. Behold how the heart of God yearns towards
His people! Was it ever more clearly seen than in His long forbearance, His waiting to be gracious unto us?
This leads us to notice, in the second place, the singular patience of God in that waiting. What does it mean when we
are told that the Lord waits that He may have mercy upon us? It means that He kept back the sword of Justice! It is inevitable
that where there is evil, God shall be angered with it. It is not a matter of arbitrariness with Him, but it is inevitable
that the Judge of all the earth should take vengeance upon evil and wrong. God must punish sin! This is one of the
fixed and settled principles of His very existence! Here, the attribute of long-suffering patience comes in and spares the
guilty from time to time, giving space for repentance. Justice waits awhile, that Love may try her hand and bring the
rebel to a better mind. With some of us, the Lord must have drawn the sword right out of the scabbard! And yet He put it
back, again, into the sheath, bidding it be quiet a little longer. With some of us the Lord must have lifted up the axe to
cut us down, for we have been such cumberers of the ground—and yet His mercy has stayed His justice and the axe has
been laid by for mercy’s sake.
Because of the intercession of the Lord Jesus, the Lord has put the lifted thunderbolt down—and here we are, still
the living—the living, I trust, to adore our long-suffering God! There are some dear friends before me who must forever
highly honor the forbearance of God in sparing them through so many years of sin till, at last, their gray heads bowed
before His Grace! It could have been easy enough for God to have destroyed them when they were running riot in their
youth! Yes, easier to destroy them than to spare them! Have not some of you been in positions where, if you had been
killed, it would have seemed only according to the order of Nature that you should be? But your being spared was a
miracle of Providence! A special interposition of goodness! The brand in the fire will be consumed by being left alone.
And if it is to escape, it must be plucked from the burning. Well, then, bless that God who waited and held back the
punishment that was due to you! Bless the Judge who was so slow to call you to account, who postponed the day of trial! Yes,
and issued a reprieve to let you live when you were already condemned!
This patience of God signifies more, however, than delay in punishment—it means the continuance of privileges, for
the Lord told these people that although He might give them the bread of adversity and the water of affliction on account
of their sins—yet He would not take away their teachers from them! They would still be instructed, warned and
invited to come to Him. Now, if God were to send a word of mercy to a man, once, and that man willfully refused His
message, it would be perfectly just on God’s part if He said, “I will never send another ambassador! It was condescension
on My part to invite this rebel to be at peace with Me and since he declines to do so, he has made his choice of war—and
surely I will contend with him. As he has made his bed, so shall he lie in it! As he prefers to be My enemy, so let him be, to
his own destruction.”
Ah me, how long does Mercy linger! How earnestly she pleads with men to be kind to themselves! Instead of hasty
wrath against His people when they rejected His Word, the Lord sent Prophet after Prophet to them. And when they
stoned one and slew another, He even sent His own Son, saying, “They will reverence My Son.” Still did the heralds of
salvation cry, “Turn you, turn you, why will you die?” Has it not been so with some of us? We heard the Gospel when we
were quite young and we have continued to hear it till we are quite old, so patient is the Lord! It may be that I speak to
some who have continued to hear that Gospel every Sabbath and have determinedly refused it throughout a long life.
Shall it continue to be so? Dare we always provoke the Lord?
Still the white flag is hung out and the silver trumpet knows no note but, “Mercy, mercy, mercy!” Oh that man
would hear that note and turn to the Lord! O my Brethren, the man who loves not the Lord Jesus is already “Anathema
Maranatha!” All holy intelligences say, “Amen” to his being held accursed and yet the Lord permits him to tread His
courts and hear His Word—and gives him space in which to repent of his evil deeds! He waits that He may be gracious
unto you, therefore He bids His ministers wait upon you in hope and proclaim to you, over and over again, the lovingkindness
of the Lord! So singular was God’s patience that He even increased His holy agencies to lead the people to Himself.
He says—“Your ears shall hear a word behind you, saying, This is the way, walk you in it.”
Do we not remember how, when their public ministry seemed to miss us, we began to be bothered by an inward force
more powerful than visible ministries? Conscience cried aloud and accused us from within doors. I remember well when it
dogged my heels wherever I went—it would not be at peace with me until I was at peace with God! Do you not remember
in your own case when it began to be very hard to sin? The drags were clapped on and you could not gallop down the hill
as you wished to do? You found it hard to kick with naked feet against the sharp pricks of conscience! You found it difficult
to go to Hell—you had to leap fence and rail and ditch—and you were tired of such steeple-chasing. The voice of
Jesus from without seemed echoed from within! You could hardly tell where the voice came, but it was always following
and crying, “This is the way, walk you in it.”
O the devices of infinite Love! What patience was shown by the Lord to send this inward monitor! Why did He not
say, “They have Moses and the Prophets; let them hear them”? Though we had Moses and the Prophets, the Scriptures to
read and the Gospel to hear, yet He added to all this the still small voice! In addition to a summons from without, He
added a pleader within! Did we contend against even this? Alas, we did, for we seemed determined to destroy ourselves!
Behold, what manner of patience the Lord has exercised towards us according to the abundance of His Grace.
No, this is not all, for all this while God was passing by our rejections of Him, blotting out our sinful refusals and
insulting despising of His goodness. You know how it would be, even with your own child, if you were to say to him,
“My Child, I am ready to forgive you if you will confess your fault.” If he would not acknowledge that he was wrong, but
held out stubbornly, you might have considerable patience, but I question if that patience would last for days and weeks.
Your rod would soon be spoken with. Men that have been very famous for bearing insults have, at last, been compelled,
in vindication of their own honor, to put an end to the provocation. How grievously far have you and I carried our insults
of God!
Do I not speak to some who are carrying the provocation a long way even now? You will not accept the Son of God
by whom alone you can be saved! To save you it was necessary that Jesus should die, but you trample on His blood! It was
not possible for you to enter Heaven unless the Lord Jesus should be your Substitute and bear your sin—and you have
heard all about that wonderful Truth of God—and have yet acted as if it were nothing to you. You have not believed on
Jesus! You have rejected the Father’s testimony concerning Him and resisted the witness of the Spirit of God! This you
have done for many a day. The tears have started in your eyes, but you have wiped them away and they have gone as the
dew of the morning disappears in the heat of the sun. You have, at times, been driven to your chamber and to your knees,
but you have forgotten your hurried prayers and, again, the dog has returned to his vomit and the sow that was washed,
to her wallowing in the mire! This cannot always last—men cannot always thrust their fingers into God’s eyes at this
rate! The wonder is that it has lasted so long.
Please remember that all this while God has been waiting and everything has been ready, ready for the sinner to come
to Him. Listen to the Divine Words—“My oxen and My fatlings are killed, and all things are ready: come unto the marriage.”
Alas, they would not come! So it was with us who are now brought in to enjoy the provisions of Grace—and so it
is with many who are still outside the banquet hall—they do despite unto the love and mercy of God and the provision of
His boundless Grace. Of multitudes Jesus says sorrowfully, “You will not come unto Me that you might have life.” I wish
I could better set forth the singular waiting of the Lord that He may have mercy upon us, but I pray the Holy Spirit to
bless my feeble utterances to all that hear me this day.
I must now notice a most remarkable action which follows upon the waiting. After the Lord had displayed His patience
to His people, He resolved to go further, and He proceeded to a most notable matter which is thus described—
“Therefore will He be exalted, that He may have mercy upon you.” You and I would have turned the text round the other
way and said—“Therefore will He have mercy upon you, that He may be exalted”—that would be true, but it is not the
Truth here taught. The picture represents the Lord, as it were, as sitting still and allowing His people, through their sin,
to bring suffering upon themselves. But now, after long patience, He awakens Himself to action. I think I hear Him say,
“They will not come to Me. They refuse all My messengers. They plunge deeper and deeper into sin, now will I see what
My Grace can do!”
He rises as one who means to put forth His power. He stands ready for action. And now, as if that were not enough,
He says to Himself, “I will be exalted. I will go up to My Throne that I may have mercy upon them. I will manifest My
power. I will take the ensigns of My dominion into My hands and act as a Sovereign. I will have mercy on whom I will
have mercy—and where sin abounded shall much more Grace abound.” Oh, how I love to speak of the Lord exalted in
Christ Jesus upon the Throne of Grace! Glory be to His name! Do you see what a wonderful thing is the work of Grace in
saving men—“Therefore will He be exalted, that He may have mercy upon you.” He will take to Himself an absolute
Sovereignty, mount to the Throne, and display His reigning Grace! Where else is there any hope for men?
It also bears this meaning. When a man is about to deal a heavy stroke, he lifts himself up to give the blow—he exalts
himself to bring down the scourge more heavily upon the shoulder. Even so the Lord seems to say, “I will put forth all
My might. I will exercise all My skill. I will display all My attributes up to their greatest height, that I may have mercy
upon these hardened, stiff-necked sinners—I will be exalted that I may have mercy upon them.” As if He would, in some
way, make His greatness to be more illustrious than it had ever been seen before, by doing the most splendid act He had
ever done, namely, by having mercy upon these provoking sinners for whom He had been waiting so long! Oh, but this is
a surpassingly glorious text!
I remember thinking, “Surely, if God saves me, He will be a God, indeed!” He did save me because He is a God, indeed.
Here is the proof of it—“Look unto Me and be you saved, all you ends of the earth; for I am God.” Because He is
God, He saves those who look to Him! Somebody here says, “Well truly, if the Lord were to crown His patience by
bringing me to Himself I should think more of His glorious Grace than ever I have done before.” Just so, and He means
to make you think after that manner! Our Lord intends to make you stand at His feet weeping, as that woman did who
had been a sinner and who so loved Him that she washed His feet with tears—and wiped them with the hair of her head
because she had sinned much and much had been forgiven. Jesus loves to make converts like these. “Oh, magnify the Lord
with me, and let us exalt His name together!” is a fit speech for a great sinner!
But how can we magnify the Lord? He is already infinitely great—how can we magnify Him or make Him great? We
can do it by our thoughts—we can greaten Him in our own esteem and in the esteem of our fellow men. We can cry out in
wonder at His exceeding mercy—“Who is a God like unto You, that pardons iniquity and passes by the transgression of
the remnant of His heritage?” We never cry out, “Who is a God like unto You?” until we see Him forgiving sin! Then is
He robed in an excellent and surpassing Glory! The Lord is exalted when He has mercy upon sinners in Christ Jesus because
by this deed of Grace He glorifies every attribute, reveals His wisdom, displays His power, honors His justice and
displays His love! His power is more resplendent in saving souls than in making worlds! His justice is more honored in
the Sacrifice of Christ than in sending offenders to Hell! And His love is more resplendent than is all the gifts of His
Providence!
If you would see the Sun of Righteousness at seven times its ordinary strength—behold it shining with Grace and the
Truth of God upon men who deserve to be thrust into outer darkness—if God has magnified His own name in our salvation,
let us magnify it, too! O you saints of His, remember forever those words, “His Glory is great in your salvation:
honor and majesty have you laid upon Him.” One thing more before I leave this waiting God and that is, there is a final
success to all this waiting. When the waiting turns to a glorious transaction of Grace upon the sinner’s heart and conscience,
then the time of love has come. Observe that it is written, “He will be very gracious unto you at the voice of your
cry.” When God has waited for the soul—that soul is brought to wait on Him. God’s patience is not in vain towards His
chosen. When God deals with His redeemed, He does not deal in vain! The Almighty is not defeated. Jehovah is an Omnipotent
God—He works out His own pleasure upon men and we see Him, by His patience and Grace, causing men to
pray—yes, and to weep!
That is implied in the 19th verse—“They shall weep no more”—then they did weep till He forgave! Their tears and
prayers are flowing, for He declares, “He will be very gracious unto you at the voice of your cry.” Now, also, they listen
eagerly to the Gospel, for they count it a privilege that “their teachers shall not be removed into a corner any more.”
They value their ministers and look at them with careful love, as it is here written—“Your eyes shall see your teachers.”
Those whom they formerly despised, they now esteem and delight in! They begin, also, to obey the voice of the Lord, for
they hear the voice behind them saying, “This is the way.” This great change comes to transgressors when God deals with
them in His own effectual manner—then they mourn for sin, pray for mercy, listen with attentive ears to the message of
love—and then they bow themselves down before the present God and desire nothing so much as to lie at peace with
Him.
Meanwhile, one of the chief and most evident tokens of their change is their casting away of the sin they formerly
loved. “You shall defile, also, the covering of your graven images of silver and the ornament of your molten images of
gold: you shall cast them away as a menstrual cloth. You shall say unto it, Get you hence.” See what free Grace can do? It
is no enemy of holiness, but the direct cause of it! The love of God reigning in the heart makes a man hate his sin! God
never forgives sin without making us forsake sin. When He casts our sins into the depths of the sea, He causes us to do the
same. When the Lord says to our sin, “Be gone from My memory,” we say to it, “Be gone from my heart.” Repentance,
faith, holiness and zeal all follow upon the effectual working of Divine Grace. Oh, that all of you were under its power!
Forever blessed be the Lord who waits to be gracious! And then, being gracious unto us, makes us gracious and causes us
to bring forth the fruits of righteousness to His honor and praise.
II. Now learn the lesson of the whole subject. Under our second head we have A WAITING PEOPLE—“Blessed are
all they that wait for Him.” God’s waiting people wait only upon God. They are not trusting to the arm of flesh, nor
looking to the changeable creature. They do not rely upon themselves, nor depend upon their own experiences, or their
mental acquirements. Here is their song ---
“My spirit looks to God alone Dear Friends, you can judge whether you are the people of God or not by this—Can you say, “My Soul, wait only
upon God, for my expectation is from Him”? “Trust you in the Lord forever: for in the Lord Jehovah is everlasting
strength.” God’s waiting people wait upon God expectantly. They are looking for everything from Him, for He is their All
in All. They have had a great deal from God, but they expect more from Him. They already swim in a river of Grace and
they are floating on to an ocean of Glory! They know that they have nothing in themselves and they rejoice that they
have everything in their God. Every morning they see that the light of the day comes from above and so, for spiritual
things, they lift up their eyes to the hills, where comes their help! They are not waiting in despair, nor even in hesitation—
they are waiting in hope—a joyous and assured hope of blessedness in reserve. They confidently expect to find
their way in the Lord grow brighter and brighter and still brighter—from the twilight of the morning to the shining of
the perfect day. Oh, my Brothers and Sisters, let us wait and watch, even as men look for the dawn because they know
that it will not fail them.
“But,” you ask, “what are they waiting for?” I answer, God’s people are waiting upon Him patiently for many things.
Sometimes they wait for the tokens of His Grace—they are believing in the Lord Jesus Christ and yet they may not, for
the moment, enjoy the peace and comfort which are theirs by faith. If they had more faith their peace would at once be as
a river, but it is well if they have faith enough to wait for that peace. At times faith may be very weak and then it is well if
it clings and abides in its place. A man may believe and be saved and yet he may not be sure of his own salvation, nor discern
the safety and blessedness of his condition in Christ Jesus. Oh Soul, if you cannot get out of the dark, believe in the
dark! If you have light enough just to look to Christ by faith, though you cannot perceive all His beauties and His glories,
yet remember you are bid to look and are saved by looking, however dim the light may be!
If you can but look to the Cross so as to trust wholly to the Lamb of God, He has taken away your sin! All the joy of
the Lord and all the peace and all the rest that come of faith do not come at once—you must wait for them. These are the
ripe ears of corn and you must plow in hope and sow in faith before these can be reaped. The Graces of the Christian
character—the assurance of faith, the strength of courage, the mellowness of experience—all these are peaceable fruits of
righteousness which will come in their season and not before. Surely some of the Lord’s people appear to attain to joy
and peace at once and keep it all their days. These are favored, indeed! I wish that we were in the same case, but if we are
not, let us not despair, but still trust in the Lord our Righteousness ---
“And when your eyes of faith are dim, If He has never yet given you a comfortable word, still cling to Him as she did whom He likened to the dogs, but who
yet replied, “Truth, Lord. Yet the dogs eat of the crumbs that fall from their masters’ table.” It is yours to look to
Christ—it is His to give you the Light of God! If your face, as yet, is not lightened, yet keep it towards the sun, even Jesus
the Lord. “Who is among you that fears the Lord, that obeys the voice of His servant, that walks in darkness and has
no light? Let Him trust in the name of the Lord and stay upon His God.” It must, in the end, be well with the man who
trusts in God and waits for Him! Yes, it is already well, for the Lord in our text pronounces all such to be blessed, and
blessed they are! Let us wait for those spiritual delights and inward joys which are the portion of Believers. And if they
come not immediately, let us solace ourselves with this present benediction—“Blessed are all they that wait for Him.”
You have read of those charming seasons which are enjoyed by choice saints in communion with Jesus. And you have
said, “Oh, that I knew where I might find Him!” Trust you well and wait, for the Lord will reveal Himself to you. Possibly
you are looking back to your own past history and sighing ---
“What peaceful hours I once enjoyed, Those years which the locust has eaten shall be restored to you—only be you hopeful, trustful and obedient. Lean heavily
upon your God! It is a poor faith which only believes as far as the eyes can see. Believe that your Lord loves you when He
smites you! Believe that He loves you though He slay you! Do not doubt the Lord nor limit Him. He cannot change!
Hang on His arm even when He lifts it to chasten you. If you cannot rejoice in the light of His Countenance, yet rest in
the shadow of His wings.
Yes, we must be a waiting people and, assuredly, we may not complain, for we caused the Lord to wait for us many a
day. What patience He has had! Cannot we be patient? Sometimes God’s people have to wait for the fulfillment of His
promises. Every promise will be kept, but not today nor tomorrow. God’s Word has its due season and His times are the
best times. We may also have to wait for answers to our prayers. Prayer will be heard—yes, it is heard the moment it is
uttered—but it may not be answered just yet. The bread cast on the waters of prayer will be found again, but it may not
be till after many days. Watch unto prayer, if it is long that you have sought a favor from your God. Wait upon the Lord
and so renew your strength.
vThere is a benefit even about hungering and thirsting when it is for the bread of Heaven and the wine of the kingdom.
Pray on! Wait on! Knock! And if the door is not opened, knock again! And if the door is still closed, knock again
with greater earnestness than before! “Men ought always to pray and not to faint.” If your importunity is worked up to
the pitch of enthusiasm, it shall be well with you, for “the kingdom of Heaven suffers violence and the violent take it by
force.” Frequently we may have to wait for temporal blessings. It may not be safe for us to obtain the desires of our heart
because our heart is, as yet, too much occupied with the world and the things thereof. We may have to wait for deliverance
from trouble, for, as yet, the furnace may not have accomplished its refining work. You may be ill, and you may
pray God to make you well, but He may still allow His Beloved to be sick—to you, sickness may be healthier than
health!
You are very poor and you would like to struggle out of abject penury. By all means struggle on, but do not murmur
if you should not be successful. Poverty may be a richer state for you than wealth! There may be something in your character
which cannot be perfected except by suffering and labor—and it is better that your character be perfected than
your substance increased. None of us can come to the highest maturity without enduring the summer heat of trials. As the
sycamore fig never ripens if it is not bruised; as the corn does not leave the husk without threshing; and as wheat makes
no fine flour till it is ground, so are we of little use till we are afflicted! Why should we be so eager to escape such benefits?
We shall have to wait with patience, saying, “The will of the Lord be done.”
He waited to give Grace to us! Let us wait to give glory to Him! Brothers and Sisters, wait cheerfully. If God sees fit
to say, “Wait,” do not be angry with Him. Why give way to hurry and worry? O rest in the Lord! Your strength is to sit
still. One of the most lovely flowers of the new creation is entire submission to the Divine Will—he who has it is not far
from Heaven. Yet you will have to wait, a little, for Glory which is yours by a Covenant of salt. Do you not, at times,
suffer a heavenly homesickness? Do you not grow weary of these wildernesses and long for the mountains of spices and
the gardens of the blessed? Do you not long for the wings of a dove? I am afraid you would not manage them if you had
them—dove’s wings would hardly suit this cumbrous clay!
It is not easy to long for Heaven and yet to wait! Yet we are better where we are waiting than attempting to fly where
the Lord has not called us. Wait, for there is yet more business to be done for your Master. Would you go to your rest
before your day’s work is fairly finished? Wait, for it is necessary for others, if not for yourself. Wait and work on! How
many years were wasted before you came into the vineyard? How little have you accomplished since? Wait! For the vision
of Glory is sure—as sure as though it were tomorrow, or today at this very hour!—
“Heaven is nearing! How much further?
Count the milestones one by one! PORTION OF SCRIPTURE READ BEFORE SERMON—Isaiah 30:1-26.
HYMNS FROM “OUR OWN HYMN BOOK”—27, 218, 590. |