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 Delivered on Lord's Day Morning, June 8, 1884, By C. H. Spurgeon, At Metropoolitan Tabernacle, Newington. “They are a very froward generation, children in whom is no faith.” - Deuteronomy 32:20.
“Blessed is that man that makes the Lord his trust.” - Psalm 40:4.
THESE two texts will serve to show the different estimate which God has of unbelief and of faith. He says of unbelievers,
in my text taken from Deuteronomy, “They are a very froward generation, children in whom is no faith”—as
much as to say that the absence of faith proves them to be froward, presumptuous, willful, disobedient—a people at
cross-purposes with God. He says not only that they are perverse and froward, but He adds an emphatic word—“they
are a very froward generation, children in whom is no faith.” The second text most clearly shows us that God has a high
approbation for faith, for He, Himself, by the Holy Spirit, says, “Blessed is that man that makes the Lord His trust.”
Here, then, we have set before us a great evil to which we are sadly inclined—and a great Grace which we greatly need.
May God the Holy Spirit work faith in us by His own gracious power! Alas, it is still true that “all men have not faith.”
Even when an Apostle preached, we read of the congregation, that some believed the things which were spoken, and some
believed not. There is that division among you at this time. Oh, that unbelievers may become Believers before this service
ends!
I will tell you what I shall be driving at this morning—I have a special character in view and I long to be made useful
to persons of that sort. Outspoken and naked unbelief the most of you abhor. Should unbelief display itself in its real
hideousness, you who have been brought up religiously would be startled at its approach, would close the door immediately
and bolt it fast lest such a demon of the deep should gain an entry into your souls! Consequently, unbelief, when it
attacks the regular hearer of the Gospel, takes care to disguise itself. It pretends to be something other than it is. It does
not walk abroad in all its natural deformity, but it approaches us as the Gibeonites came near to Israel when “they did
work wilily and went and made as if they had been ambassadors.”
There are those here who do not doubt, for a moment, the existence or goodness of God—neither have they any
question about the Inspiration and Infallible Truth of Holy Scripture—and yet they are entertaining within their hearts
an unbelief which eats as does a canker! A deadening unbelief is upon them so that they abide in darkness and take no
pains to come into the Light of God. Yet they do not condemn themselves, but rather look for pity as though it were
their infirmity and not their fault. To them, unbelief acts like Jezebel when she tired her hair and painted her face. Oh,
that my words could strip off the disguise of this evil thing! Of this most deceitful form of unbelief I would say, as Jehu
said of Jezebel, “Throw her down.” And then I would cry—Go see, now, this cursed thing and bury it, for it is a horrible
evil. That which prevents men from finding salvation by putting their trust in the Lord Jesus Christ is an enemy so hateful
and malicious that no quarter must be given to it! No excuse must be made for it—it must be utterly destroyed from
under Heaven!
Dear Friend, you tell me that you are by no means an infidel or a skeptic, and yet you do not believe so as to find
peace with God! You tell me that you cannot believe, which is a confession that you are so false at heart that you cannot
believe the Truth of God! It is well that you should admit this gross depravity, but I have reason to fear that you are
hardly conscious of the horrible nature of the crime which you acknowledge! I beg you to lay to heart this fact—that
unless you have faith in Jesus you will perish just as surely as if you were an open denier of the Word of God and a reviler
of His Son! There are, doubtless, degrees in the terribleness of the punishment, but there are no degrees in the certainty of
the fact that every unbeliever will be shut out from the blessing of the Gospel of Christ! “He that believes on the Son has
everlasting life: and he that believes not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of God abides on him.”
I want you to remove every flattering unction from your souls and to know for sure that, “He that believes not is
condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only-begotten Son of God” (John 3:18). Dream not
that because you do not happen to be an avowed atheist, or deist, or agnostic, that, therefore, your own form of unbelief
is harmless! We read of Israel in the wilderness that, “they could not enter in because of unbelief”—yet they were not
atheists! A passive unbelief will ruin a man as surely as an active infidelity! Suppose that an enemy is on this side of a
river, destroying everybody? To find safety, the river has to be crossed, and there is but one bridge. Yonder man declares
that he will never go over such a bridge—he does not believe in it! He asserts that it is a rotten old thing which would
break down under his weight. He hates the structure. He will not even call it a bridge at all! He ridicules all who venture
upon it. It is clear that he will stay on this side of the river and die by the pursuer’s sword. He is the type of the avowed
skeptic!
But where are you? You say with unfeigned distress, “I am horrified to hear that man talk so of that excellent bridge.
I believe that it is well constructed and that it has carried hundreds of thousands over it. I cannot bear to hear a word
said against it, for my dear father and mother found refuge by crossing it and they are now in the land of peace.” Yet you
do not escape by that bridge, yourself, though well aware of your danger! Do you answer, “Well, I do not feel worthy to
go over it.” Why, that is nonsense! It is as if you should say, I cannot swim and, therefore, will cross over the river by
means of the bridge. Your unworthiness cannot be a reason for refusing to accept a free salvation! On the contrary, it is a
reason why you should accept it at once. However, it matters little what your excuse may be—you will perish forever if
you do not believe in Jesus!
Take another illustration. A fatal disease is abroad and a remedy has been discovered of the most effectual kind. One
man denounces the medicine, the physician who invented it and the apothecaries who distribute it—he can hardly find
words enough in the dictionary with which to express his contempt for what he calls a monstrous quackery. He will evidently
receive no benefit from the medicine. That is not your case—you are of quite another mind. You esteem the medicine,
reverence the physician and even feel an affection for the apothecaries who distribute it! No question about the matter
has ever crossed your mind—on the contrary, you are an advocate for the great remedy and believe firmly that it has
healed multitudes of persons. Why do you not take the wholesome medicine yourself? You tell me that you are trying to get
better and that you do not quite see how the medicine can heal you.
This shows that you mistrust the power of the medicine to heal you just as you are. You will derive no more benefit
from it than the other man who rails at it! It is quite impossible that any man should receive the blessing which comes
through the atoning blood of Christ unless he has faith—and whether he goes to the length of an utter contempt of the
great Sacrifice, or stands off from it because he does not feel as he could desire—he will surely die without forgiveness.
Out of Christ, the doom of eternal wrath will fall on you whether near to the Kingdom of God or far off from it.
I want to talk with those unbelieving people who are not avowedly skeptical. Some of these I have seen and I know
that they are a numerous class. They are very sincere and are really seeking after salvation, but the one thing which they
refuse to do is to believe in the Lord Jesus. They will not trust their God! They will not believe in the promise which He
has made to us in Christ Jesus! They would suffer any penance. They would give anything they possess. They would cut off
their right arm—they would consent to lose their eyes—if they might but be saved! But this one matter of trust in God
and accepting His way of salvation is the point in which they quarrel with the Most High. Upon this matter, in which the
Lord will assuredly never yield to them, they stand out very obstinately, and so prove that they are “a very froward generation,
children in whom is no faith.” If they would obtain the Lord’s blessing, the only way to it is faith. Oh, that they
would hold out no longer, for, “Blessed is that man that makes the Lord his trust.”
I. To begin, then—our first statement is UNBELIEF IS FROWARDNESS—“they are a very froward generation, children in whom is no faith.” One very frequent disguise of unbelief is that of humility. “I feel myself such a great sinner.
I feel so much evil to be in my heart, I dare not believe in Jesus!” If you judged by appearances you might think this unbelief
very modest, but, indeed, it is not so. It imitates the tone of humility, but it cannot catch the accent. This deceptive
vice dares to hint that the sinner’s unworthiness is a reason why Jesus should not be trusted! What? Would any man tell
me that his own wickedness is a reason why he should distrust me? That would be too absurd! Because you are such a sinner,
is God, therefore, a deceiver and not to be trusted? This is not humility, but audacity!
Our fearing to trust the promise of God because we are evil is a most perverse piece of wickedness. Surely, God is
true, even if we are liars! Our falsehood does not make Him false, or deprive Him of His right to be believed! Do we dare
to tell Him that He cannot save when He assuredly promises to save us if we trust Him? Do we deny His willingness to
save when He sends us gracious invitations and entreats us to turn to Him? This is insolence—not penitence! However
great a sinner you may be, there is forgiveness with God that He may be feared, for, “all manner of sin and blasphemy
shall be forgiven unto men.” Do not deny this. Do not be so profanely bold as to call Jesus a liar!
Unbelief also claims to be timid. It cries, “I am afraid to come to Christ, afraid to trust Him with my soul.” This is
not true fear, but an evil pride! The voice is the voice of Jacob, but the hands are the hands of Esau! The sound is that of
an amiable timorousness, but the spirit is that of frowardness. Friends, if you truly feared God, you would tremble at the
idea of distrusting Him. It is a very daring act of impiety to question any promise of the Most High—it is the height of
rebellion to deny the power of the death of His dear Son! That kind of timidity and humility is to be shunned and to be
abhorred which dares to make God’s love a dream and His mercy a fiction! Since the Lord’s mercy endures forever; since
Jesus has never yet cast out a soul that has come to Him, it is folly to talk of being afraid to come to Him! Dread doubting
and fear not to trust your God!
Unbelief is a very froward thing. We repeat the statement and go on to prove it because, in the first place, it calls God
a liar. Can anything be worse than this? God says, “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you shall be saved,” and the unbeliever
replies, “I cannot believe that Jesus will save me.” That is to say, translating it into plain English—You do not
think that God speaks the Truth! You do not believe that God is able to make His promises good to you. You do, in effect,
imagine that He has said a great deal more than He means, or promised more than He is able to perform! At any
rate, you think it unsafe to trust Him with your soul. I beseech you, if you must transgress, do not select a sin so presumptuous and so provoking as the sin of denying the Truth of the Most High! “He that believes not God has made Him
a liar because he believes not the record that God gave of His Son. And this is the record, that God has given to us eternal
life and this life is in His Son.”
Oh, you poor, timorous soul, as some would call you, I will not flatter you, or excuse you, for I am afraid you must
be very proud or you would not look the great Father in the face, and say, “You will not receive me if I come back to
You like the prodigal child”—when, again and again, He invites you to return and promises to receive you. O Soul, can
you dare to look up to the Cross of Jesus and say, “There is no life in a look at the Crucified One for me”? Can you even
think of the Holy Spirit and then say that He has no power to change a heart so black and hard as yours? Oh that this
miserable slander of God and of His Christ might be stopped!
Again, unbelief is great frowardness because it refuses God’s way of salvation. No man can read the Scriptures without
seeing God’s way of salvation is not by works nor by feelings, but by trusting in the Son of God who has offered a full
atonement for sin. Now the sinner says, “Lord, I would do or suffer anything if I might, thereby, be saved.” God’s answer
is, “Trust in My Son”—and this is put into a great many shapes to make it plain! Jesus says, “This is the work of
God”—the highest and noblest work—“that you believe on Him whom He has sent.” But the soul wriggles away from
this believing in Jesus. It cries, “Surely I must feel this, that, and the other!” Oh foolish heart!
Stop all these vain observations and listen to this one thing—“Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and you shall be saved!” If you will make the Lord your trust, you shall be blessed—but if you will not, you are assuredly accursed—seeing you have rejected the blood of the Eternal Sacrifice, refused the way of mercy which Infinite Love has appointed and done despite to the Spirit
of God. To what a pitch of madness you have reached! You will sooner destroy your own soul than treat your God as
you would treat an honest man! You can trust your wife, your husband, your father, or your friend—but you will not
trust your Maker! You will sooner go to Hell than trust yourself with Christ! Ah me! Ah me!
Unbelief is a very froward thing, again, because it very often makes unreasonable demands of God. When Thomas
said, “Unless I put my finger into the print of the nails, and thrust my hand into His side, I will not believe,” he was
speaking very frowardly. I have heard the sinner say, “Oh, Sir, if I could have a dream! If I could be broken down with
anguish, or if I could enjoy some remarkable revelation—THEN I would believe God!” This, also, is frowardness. And
so you dare look the Eternal in the face and say, “You shall be a liar to me unless You will gratify my whims and wishes,
and do this or that to prove what I admit to be true.” Will you say to your fellow man, “Sir, you have offered to help me
in this time of need. I am quite willing to depend upon you for that help, provided you will do it in my way—the way
which you propose for my assistance I utterly reject”? You will probably turn your friend against you if you talk so!
Beggars must not be choosers—certainly not with God! If I mistrust a friend who has been good to me all my life, it
is an unjust thing. And if I tell him that I cannot believe him unless he will do what I choose to demand of him, I am insulting
him. This towards man is evil—but what is it towards God? What? Must God do according to our mind and play
the lackey to us or else He shall be under this penalty—that we will not believe His Word nor accept His gracious forgiveness?
Shame on unbelief, that it should be so insulting to the God of Heaven before whom angels bow with veiled
countenances! Surely, the devil, himself, cannot go further than unbelief—nor so far—for he believes and trembles!
Unbelief is very froward, next, because it indulges hard thoughts of God. Why do you not trust your God to save you
by the blood of Jesus? Do you say that, “Salvation by faith is too good to be true”? Is anything too good to come from
God, who is infinitely good? Is He not Love? Do you say, “If I were to come to Him, He would not receive me”? How
dare you say that when it is written, “Him that comes to Me I will by no means cast out”! “Oh, I have so offended that if I
were to cry, ‘Father, I have sinned,’ I could not expect Him to forgive my offense.” This is a base slandering of the heavenly
Father! What penitent has He ever repelled? You know not how good He is—He is inconceivably gracious, He delights
in mercy! It is His joy to pass by transgression, iniquity and sin. Have you never heard that, “as the heavens are
higher than the earth, so are His ways higher than your ways, and His thoughts than your thoughts”? Has He not declared
that He will abundantly pardon? Has He not said, “Come now, and let us reason together, says the Lord: though
your sins are as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they are red like crimson, they shall be as wool”? Why will
you so cruelly defame the Ever-Merciful One? Turn from this wickedness or you will destroy your own soul!
And yet again, unbelief is a very froward thing because it disparages the Lord Jesus. It tramples upon the blood of the
Son of God! The unbelieving sinner virtually asserts that he has discovered the limit of the Savior’s power to save and
that he stands just over the margin to which His Grace extends, for he thinks that Jesus may save anyone except himself!
O Soul, do you doubt the infinite virtue of the Divine Sacrifice? Do you question the power of the intercession of the
risen Lord? Is it not true, as He has said it, that He is, “able to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by Him,
seeing He always lives to make intercession for them”? “Oh, but I am such a singular person.” And are you so singular
that you have a right to limit the Holy One of Israel? Oh, if you did but know my Lord and Master, you would not talk
so, for He, with a word, can cast out devils, heal the sick and raise the dead! He has but to say “Son, your sins are forgiven
you,” and they are forgiven! He has but to look on you, poor sinner, and you shall live! Yes, be assured that if you
will look on Him, you shall live! Has He not said, “Look unto Me, and be you saved, all the ends of the earth”? Has He
not also said, “He that believes in Me, though he were dead, yet shall he live”? If you believe, you shall see the Glory of
God! Trust Him, trust Him! He deserves your trust, for He is a great Savior for the greatest of sinners.
And do you not think it is another instance of great frowardness that unbelief casts reflections upon the Holy Spirit?
It seems to say, “I feel sorely afraid and, therefore, there is no peace for me. I am too hardened and foolish for the Holy
Spirit to lead me to faith in Jesus and, therefore, I will not trust.” “Is anything too hard for the Lord?” Change you,
man? Why, He has turned millions from darkness to the Light of God! Look upward—see what hosts surround the
Throne of Glory and “day without night” magnify His saving Grace! Not save you? Who are you that you should stand
out against the witness of the Spirit of Truth? Will you refuse the three-fold witness of the Spirit, the water and the
blood? Who are you that you should set yourself up as a kind of vanquisher of Grace, conquering Grace by your sins and
saying to the ocean of God’s love, “This far shall you come, but no further”? Your unbelief is a very froward thing—
nothing can be said for it—it dishonors Father, Son and Holy Spirit! It denies the Inspired Scripture and keeps your
soul in cruel bondage.
This vile unbelief has in it a tendency to destroy the Gospel itself. If it could but have its own way, it would undermine
the whole fabric of salvation. When a man says that God cannot save him, he suggests that there maybe others in the same
case. Where, then, is Christ’s wisdom in bidding us preach the Gospel to every creature? If it would be vain for one man
to believe, each one of us would be afraid that it would be vain for us, also, and where, then, would be the Gospel promise?
If it could be proven that any one man, if he believed in Jesus, would not be saved, then the Gospel itself would be
disproved! Who among us would have any ground for believing in Christ if we knew it were possible to believe in Him
and yet to be cast away? What is this but to rob us all of hope? Why, man, you are scuttling the ship! I mean that such is
the tendency of your unbelieving talk.
If Jesus is not worthy to be trusted and you seem to say so by your own refusal to trust Him, then all of us who are
resting upon Him for salvation are under a delusion! Do you mean to say this? If you, as a sinner, cannot be saved upon
believing in Christ, then the whole Gospel is called into question—you have broken the whole staff of bread for the souls
of men! Oh, wicked unbelief! God-dishonoring, soul-killing unbelief! Dear Hearer, be warned against it, for it will shut
you out of Heaven unless you shut it out of your heart!
II. And now, secondly, we turn to the better side of our subject and remark that FAITH HAS THE DIVINE APPROVAL.
“Blessed,” says God, “is that man that makes the Lord his trust.” We are sure that it so. Wherever there is
faith, God is pleased with it, for faith is the sure mark of God’s elect. We can only know them by their believing in the
Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life. God would never have set that of which He disapproved to be the mark of His eternal
choice, but, as He makes faith in Jesus to be the token of His covenanted ones, He must approve of it. Remember that
God has been pleased, in His great love, to make this the main requirement of the Gospel. “He that believes and is baptized
shall be saved.” “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you shall be saved.”
The Lord puts faith into the very forefront because He delights in it. I find not that the Lord has promised salvation
to love, or to patience, or to courage—admirable as these Graces are—He has put this crown upon the head of faith.
“Your faith has saved you; go in peace.” The Lord must certainly approve of that which He makes to be the grand necessity
of salvation! Do you not know that God has made faith to be the one thing necessary in the matter of prayer? If you
come before Him in prayer, He will not ask you to bring your hands laden with gifts, nor to drop from your tongue
choice words of eloquence! But you “must believe that He is, and that He is a rewarder of them that diligently seek Him,”
or else you can have nothing at His hands. If, then, God has made the efficacy of prayer to turn upon faith, He must have
a high estimate of it! He has made faith to be the master key by which all the chambers of His treasury may be unlocked
and, therefore, depend upon it, He will never cast it out as unwarranted and presumptuous. “Blessed is that man that
makes the Lord His trust,” whoever that man may be!
Beside that, He has been pleased to make faith to be the mode and manner of the spiritual life. “The just shall
live”—how? By works? No—“the just shall live by faith.” There is no living except by faith. Let any child of God try to
live by sense or reason, even for a day, and see how miserable he will be! It comes to this with me—I must believe my God
or else I perish. I can walk the waves by faith—but, beginning to doubt—I sink. It is only as I trust that my soul can
bear her daily burden and perform her daily duty. If, then, God has made faith to be the way of His people, rest assured it
can never be wrong for a soul to exercise faith in Him. Why, Brothers and Sisters, look what God has done to make us
believe! He cannot object to our trusting in Him, seeing He works to that end! For this purpose the Scriptures are in our
hands. John says, “These are written that you might believe that Jesus is the Christ” (John 20:31). The Lord multiplies
His exceedingly great and precious promises that we might have strong consolation and find it easy to put our trust in
Him!
His Holy Spirit comes on purpose to work faith in the soul and the witness of the Holy Spirit in the Word, and in the
hearts of His people, is intended to create and nourish faith in God. The Lord rewards faith even in this life! Read the 11th
Chapter of Hebrews—see what men gained, what they enjoyed, what they did by faith! Unbelief does nothing, gets nothing,
rejoices in nothing! But faith wins the blessing. The Covenant was made with Abraham, who “staggered not at the
promise of God through unbelief.” Who are Abraham’s seed? Why, they that trust as Abraham trusted, that exhibit a
whole-hearted confidence in God, feeling that what He has promised, He is able, also, to perform! Oh Souls, you cannot
have too much faith in God! You need never say, “May I believe?” It is altogether another question—How dare you
doubt your God? “But is it true,” asks one, “that faith means trusting in God?” That is it. God bids you trust Jesus and
you shall be saved. Will you accept His testimony and trust Jesus? That is the whole of it.
In common life we exhibit faith in man and no one blames us for a legitimate trust. A man says that he has received a
thousand pounds. How is that? He has nothing in his hand but a bank-note and that is merely a bit of paper. Yet he is
quite confident that he has the thousand pounds because he has faith in the Bank of England and in its promises. That is
my own mind as to God’s promise—it is to me the thing which it promises, even as the note for £1,000 is a thousand
pounds. “Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.” If you believe God as you believe
your friend, you are saved—for faith has brought you into the state of salvation. But this is what men will not come to.
They will stop and mutter and sputter, and spin all kinds of cobwebs—and invent all sorts of theories in order to evade
the sweet necessity of trusting in the Lord! Simply and wholly to hang upon the bare arm of God and trust the merit of
His Son—this is what they will not come to—for they are “a very froward generation, children in whom is no faith.”
Furthermore, it is not unreasonable, but it is highly reasonable that God should take pleasure in faith. Beloved, look
at yourselves. Judge of the Lord from yourselves in this matter—for the Lord Jesus permits you so to judge of the Father’s
mind. You who are fathers, what would you say of your child if he did not believe your promise? If he said that he
could not trust you, what would you think of him? If your boy had offended, but refused to ask pardon because he could
not believe that you would forgive him, what would be your judgment of his character? Would you be pleased with him if
he would not confess that he was wrong, but took to sulking because he thinks you are unwilling to forgive? Would you
take pleasure in such a child as that? No, but one of the beautiful things about your little children is just this—that they
have not a thought or a care—but trust you implicitly! They never question where Monday’s dinner will come from—
father has always found food—father will always do so.
If you make them a promise of a treat on Saturday, look how they will jump for joy! Though there is still a week to
come before that promise is to be fulfilled, yet they begin to live on the prospect of it and they enjoy the pleasure a hundred
times over by the expectation of it! They will ask you tomorrow whether it is not already Saturday. You are pleased
that your children should trust you—it would be most unpleasant for you if they did not. When children have lost confidence
in their parents, farewell to domestic peace! If you, being evil, love to be trusted, must it not be so with God? If
you, a poor sinner, come and say, “Lord, I have greatly sinned, but I believe You are such a greatly loving Father that
you can blot it all out for Jesus’ sake,” do you not think that He will be pleased to hear your confidence? But He cannot
be pleased with you when you say, “Lord, I know all about Your Gospel and its blessings, but I really cannot trust You!”
Oh, naughty words! Vile words! How can they look for favors who thus throw dirt into the face of God? How shall He
bestow His Grace on men who will not even believe Him?
God will accept our faith, for it is in conformity with our position towards Him. What position ought the creature
to occupy to its Creator? Should it not constantly depend upon Him? What position should a sinner occupy towards His
Savior? Should He not rely upon Him most heartily? What position should a child of God occupy towards the Divine
Father but one of loving confidence? Brothers and Sisters, God loves faith because faith supplies the missing link between
us and Himself! If we cannot keep His Law perfectly, as, indeed, we cannot, for we have already broken it—yet if we trust
Him, our heart is right before Him! The complete confidence of the heart is the essence of obedience and the fountain of
it. A servant who thinks evil of his master cannot be an acceptable servant to any man—he will be looking out for his
own interests and, whenever they come crosswise with those of his master, we know what will happen! But if, after having
acted very crookedly, the man should have proof of his master’s affection for him, and should come to the belief that his
master is a model of goodness, then you have laid the foundation of another kind of service, such as no wages can purchase!
From a loving trust there will proceed patience, diligence, zeal, fidelity, obedience and everything which is suitable
in a servant towards a good master.
So, when a soul comes to make the Lord its trust, it has set out upon the right track, and though it is but at the head
of the way, yet it will make advances and arrive at no mean degree of rightness with God. “Oh,” says one, “it seems such
a small matter to simply trust.” It may seem so, but within the compass of that little thing there lies a force whose power
it would be difficult to measure. Every Grace in embryo lies within true faith! It is a virtue which contains within it seed
enough to sow all the acreage of life with holiness! O my Hearer, God blesses faith, therefore, I pray you, render it to
Him! God has put His curse on unbelief—oh, may His Spirit help you to shake yourself free of it this day!
III. My time has failed me and, therefore, I must close by noticing, in the last place, this fact—that FAITH IS
BLESSEDNESS. “Blessed is that man that makes the Lord his trust.” To believe in God is to be blessed by God. “Oh,
but,” says one, “I believe in God and I am in great trouble.” Just so, and within that trouble there dwells a measureless
blessing! Your trial is the veil which covers the face of a loving God. Faith will make you sing with the author of this
Psalm, “I waited patiently for the Lord.” Faith says, “I am in deep trial, but all things work together for my good. It is,
therefore, a great gain to me to be as I am. All these griefs and woes are but a heavenly surgery to cure me of the malady
of inbred sin.” This enables the Believer to receive correction with patience. He knows that all is right and, therefore, the
child of God frets not and does not kick against the pricks. As in the old days of surgery, a brave man laid himself down
and gave himself up to the knife, so does the Believer resign himself to sharp affliction because he knows that it is necessary
for his spiritual life and will tend to his perfection in Grace. Thus faith distils a potent medicine from poisonous
plants and extracts light out of darkness. Is not this enough to make a man blessed?
Faith, again, releases the afflicted out of trouble. Turn to the Psalm, again, and read—“I waited patiently for the
Lord, and He inclined unto me, and heard my cry. He brought me up also out of an horrible pit, out of the miry clay, and
set my feet upon a rock, and established my goings. And He has put a new song in my month, even praise unto our God:
many shall see it and fear, and shall trust in the Lord.” If you are shut in by affliction, like a man in a deep pit and, if instead of rising out of it by your exertions, you only sink lower, like one who struggles to rise out of miry clay. If you see
no way of escape, whatever, do not despair or resort to desperate means, or think bad of God, but just pray and trust—
and soon, like David, you shall bear witness to the blessedness of trusting! “Stand still and see the salvation of the Lord.”
The Lord knows how to deliver the righteous when they cannot guess how He will do it! Jehovah is not limited in ways
and means. Is the Lord’s arm waxed short? Trust in the Lord in the dark and He will bring forth your righteousness as
the light and your judgment as the noonday. Thousands of saints who have tried and proved the faithfulness of the Lord
unite in chorus to declare that He has delivered His people and will deliver them!
The man that makes the Lord his trust is blessed because his faith creates in him a deep peace. It is responsibility
which causes the wear and tear of life—at least it is so in my case. Now, he who trusts a matter with the Lord sees that
the fulfillment of the promise lies with God and not with him. When we trust in the Lord, we cease to worry because it is
the Lord’s business to answer to our faith ---
“Tis mine to obey, ‘tis His to provide.”
He who takes the Lord for his Guide no longer worries about the way. He who takes Him for his Watchman rests in perfect
peace. He who accepts Him as a Savior looks for sure salvation at His hands. There is a wonderful calm in the heart
when we can commit our way unto the Lord—then we delight ourselves in the Lord—and He gives us the desires of our
heart. That blessed act of casting every burden upon the Lord is faith’s masterpiece and it gives a sweet quietus to all
care. To rest in perfect peace of mind is the best blessedness beneath the stars—and we have it, for we hear the Spirit say
concerning all the people of God, “And the Lord shall help them, and deliver them: He shall deliver them from the
wicked, and save them, because they trust in Him.”
Now, suppose you and I were laboring to reach Heaven by our own merits? Then we might bid farewell to peace, for
all the way we would be terribly afraid that we had not done enough, or suffered enough, or prayed enough, or repented
enough. There is no rest upon that bed, for it is shorter than a man may stretch himself. But, “we who have believed, enter
into rest.” Jesus is our Rest—in Him we have peace with God. If I could make the Lord Jesus my trust and yet be lost
I should be a great loser, but I should not lose so much as God would! How is that? I should lose my salvation, but the
Lord would lose His Glory, His truthfulness, His goodness! His Gospel would be dishonored and His Son robbed of His
reward. That cannot be! When a man trusts his money with a firmly established bank, he does not sit up all night to protect
his cashbox and iron safe. No, his money is out of his own keeping and he feels at ease about it. Thus we commit our
body, soul and spirit into the pierced hands of Jesus who has redeemed us, and we know and are confident that He is able
to keep that which we have committed unto Him until that day. None can know perfect rest of heart but those
whose minds are stayed on God by a sincere trust in Him.
Faith, in addition to bringing peace, creates a holy elevation of character, and that is blessedness. The man who lives
by sight and walks according to the judgment of the flesh is confined within a range too narrow for blessedness. He is not
much above the brute that perishes! His provender and stall are the main dependence of his joy! But the man that lives by
faith ranges among eternal things and drinks from celestial fountains! His is a high, sublime, mysterious life. Is it not the
life of God in man? I have compared the ascent of faith to climbing a succession of lofty stairways. Up from the depths we
have already risen by no other means than faith in the Invisible! Not a single step before us can we see. Beneath and
around, clouds and darkness roll in enormous masses—the mist hangs thick over our pathway. Like the world, which
the Lord hangs upon nothing, so our life has no visible dependence! We put down our foot on what seems thin as air and
behold—it is firm as a rock beneath us! Rising, ever rising, we tread from stair to stair and are safe as the Throne of the
Eternal—but we never see more than one step at a time and at times scarcely so much as that. Sight brings us no comfort,
but Faith fills us with delight, for above her head shines out as clear as the sun, the Words of the Immutable Jehovah!
“Ah,” cries one, “I could not live with nothing to depend upon!” Oh, my Brother, is God nothing? Elijah had nothing
to depend upon, for Cherith dried up and the ravens came no more with bread and meat. And the widow woman had
only flour enough for one more meal—yet the little meal in the barrel wasted not and the cruse of oil never failed! Isaiah
had nothing to depend upon but God, you know—that is to say, he had only everything. The Believer has nothing to
depend upon except his God, but what more does he need? What more could he have? Mark how yon heavens stand without
a pillar! See how the round world floats in space without a stay! What more does the universe require than the power
of the Eternal? O Believer, get out into these deep waters where there is sea room for faith and no weak creatures to interfere
with unmingled reliance upon God—for blessed is that man whose life is rendered sublime by an undivided confidence
in the living God!
Lastly, blessed is the believing man when he thinks of dying, for he is sure and certain that he cannot truly die. Faith
has so linked him with the one living God that he feels immortality pulsing through his entire nature! When he comes to
lie on the bed of sickness and gradually decays, he has no fear of his departure! On the contrary, he looks forward with
expectation to be delivered from the bondage and sinfulness of this mortal life and to be admitted into the liberty and
perfection of the life eternal! Look at him as he quits the shores of earth—he is not torn away by violence, forced unwillingly
into an unknown hereafter—no, he undresses for his last rest solemnly but expectantly! A song is on his lips and
glory is in his heart! He has finished his work; he has been washed from his sin; he has embraced the promise and now he
falls asleep upon the breast of his Redeemer—assured that he shall wake up in the likeness of his Lord! “Mark the perfect
man and behold the upright: for the end of that man is peace.”
Oh, Souls, if you will believe, you shall have both Heaven on earth and Heaven in Heaven! But if you will not believe
your God—your Savior—many sorrows shall be to you and, in the end, you will destroy yourselves forever! It matters
not what excuses you make about this, or that, or the other—if you will not trust your God, He will have nothing to do
with you! If you cannot believe Him. If you will make His Son to be false. He must say at the last, “Depart from Me, you
cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels.” It cannot be otherwise! This shall make the great division between you and the righteous—that you believe not in Him—while they have made the Lord their trust. If you
believe in the Lord Jesus, you shall be numbered with His chosen! And all His promises shall be fulfilled to you, for with
you has He made an everlasting covenant which shall stand fast forever and ever when all visible things have melted away!
May God uplift you from the miry clay of unbelief to the rock of confidence in Him, for Christ’s sake! Amen.
PORTION OF SCRIPTURE READ BEFORE SERMON—Psalm 40.
HYMNS FROM “OUR OWN HYMN BOOK”—192, 738, 685. |