C. H. Spurgeon |
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The Gospel 24/7 |
Sermon Delivered on Lord's Day Morning, December 14, 1884, By C. H. Spurgeon, At Metropoolitan Tabernacle, Newington. “Then I said, I am cast out of Your sight; yet I will look again toward Your holy Temple.” - Jonah 2:4.
WHAT a complex creature is man! Those who fancy that they can fully describe him, do not understand him. He is a
riddle and a contradiction. As says Ralph Erskine ---
“I’m in my own and others’ eyes
A labyrinth of mysteries.”
Here, for instance, is a confession from David. “So foolish was I, and ignorant: I was as a beast before You. Nevertheless I
am continually with You: You have held me by my right hand” (Psa. 73:22, 23). Paul says, “O wretched man that I am!
who shall deliver me from the body of this death? I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord.” (Rom. 7:24, 25). He is
strengthened with all might by the Spirit of God in the inner man and yet he is weakness itself! In the text before us, Jonah
appears to be in a despairing condition—“I am cast out of Your sight,” but still he has hope, for he resolves, “Yet I
will look again toward Your holy Temple.” Everything seems lost and yet, as long as a man can look to God, nothing is
lost! God cannot see him, so he thinks, yet he talks about looking towards God—this is amazing, is it not? It is as if he
said, “I am cast out of Your sight and yet You are the Object of my sight.”
I do not know of a more gloomy sentence that human lips can speak than this—“I am cast out of Your sight.” I do
not know of a more hopeful resolution that the human heart can determine upon than this—“Yet I will look again toward
Your holy Temple.” Oh, untried and inexperienced Brothers and Sisters, be not at all disconcerted when you cannot
comprehend yourself! On the contrary, take it as one of the evidences that there is a Divine life within you when you
become a mystery to yourself! If, like a schoolboy, you can draw your own likeness on a slate with a piece of pencil and
can say, “This is all myself,” why, then you will be rubbed out and your image will be forgotten! But an immortal and
divinely-inhabited spirit which is to survive sun, moon and stars is not so readily sketched. While you are brother to the
worm and akin to corruption, you are, nevertheless, nearly related to Him that sits on the Eternal Throne! Vast regions
of wonder-land lie between your condition, as the abject prey of Death, and your portion as an heir of God by Christ
Jesus. Manhood is a great deep. I set it not side by side with the fathomless abyss of Godhead, but I know of nothing else
which surpasses it.
Our text, next, leads me to observe that faith in the child of God, whatever may be his circumstances, still comes to the
front. Here is Jonah in such a wretched condition that he says, “I am cast out of Your sight.” And yet, despite this, he
declares, “Yet I will look again toward your holy temple.” The huge Atlantic wave comes rolling on—it sweeps not only
over the feet and breast of Faith, but it rises far above her head—and, for the moment, Faith seems to be drowned. Wait
an instant and with her face ruddy from the wave and her locks streaming from the flood, Faith lifts up her head again
and cries, “Yet I will look again toward Your holy Temple.” Write Faith’s motto—INVICTA—she always rides forth
upon the white horse, conquering and to conquer! Faith is the child of the Omnipotent and shares in His Omnipotence!
She is born of the Eternal and she possesses His immortality!
You may crush and grind her, but every fragment lives. You may cast her into the fire, but she cannot be burned,
neither can the smell of fire pass upon her! You may hurl her into the great deeps but she is bound to rise again. Faith has
eyes that were made to drink in the sunlight and, so long as God is a Sun, there will be eyes of faith to rejoice in Him! If
we have faith, there is that in us which overcomes the world, baffles Satan, conquers sin, rules life and abolishes death.
All things are possible to him that believes. Faith triumphs in every place, notwithstanding that her life is one of continued trial. Sense is broken like a potter’s vessel and reason is frail as a spider’s web, but Faith abides and grows—and
reigns in the power of the Most High!
Please observe, for it may be for the comfort of some here present, that Jonah was in a position altogether unique
and yet his faith stood him in good stead. You have read of Joseph in the dungeon, but his imprisonment was nothing
compared with the entombment of Jonah in the belly of a fish! You have read of Job on a dunghill in utter misery—it is a
sorry plight—but there are many Jobs in one Jonah if we reckon by present misery and distress! To lie as a living man in
a living sculpture was horrible. Jonah, no doubt, suffered from those inconveniences which, apart from miracle, would
have ended his life right speedily. A dark, stifling, pestilential cell would have been preferable to the stomach of a shark,
or whatever great fish it may have been which had swallowed him. The amazing thing is that he was aware of his position
and knew when the monster dived to the sea bottom, when it passed through a meadow of seaweed, when it neared some
great mountain and when, again, it rose to the surface! This makes the miracle all the more striking, for one is apt to
imagine that the man must have lain dormant, or at least, must, in a measure, have been unconscious while in such singular
hiding. His position was such as never mortal man had known before or since.
Now, it sometimes happens that singularity gives a sting to sorrow. When a man believes that nobody has ever suffered
as he is doing, he concludes his case to be well-near hopeless. Dear tried Friend, you cannot say this with any certainty,
I am sure, for you have comrades with you in your every grief. But Jonah could say it with absolute truthfulness—
he was where no man had been before and where no man has been since—and still to be alive. His trial was all his
own. No stranger intermeddled in it. In his affliction, he had no predecessor and no successor. He was the first and the
last that for three days and nights had dwelt in the belly of a fish! He was singular to the last degree and yet—here is the
blessedness of it—his faith was equal to his position!
You cannot banish Faith, her home is everywhere! You have seen upon the Manx penny, the three legs which must
always stand—turn the coin whichever way you please! Such is faith—throw it wherever you may, it always falls on its
feet. If faith is in a little child, it gives the child wisdom beyond its years. If it is in a decrepit old man, it makes him
strong out of feebleness. If it is faith in solitude, it blesses a man with the best of company. If it is faith in the midst of adversaries, it brings to a man the best of friends. Faith in weakness makes us strong! In poverty it makes us rich and in
death makes us live! Get a firm confidence in God and you need not enquire what is going to happen—all must be well
with you. Winding or straight, up hill or down dale, or through the fire or through the sea, if you believes, your road is
the King’s highway!
If faith does not fail, nothing fails. Faith arms a man from head to foot with mail through which neither sword, nor
spear, nor poisoned arrow can ever pierce. Though it is forged upon the anvil of the devil’s greatest subtlety, no weapon
can prosper against you, O true Believer! You are as safe as He in whom you believes, for, “He shall cover you with His
feathers and under His wings shall you trust. His truth shall be your shield and buckler.” If I might, at this time, help any
child of God who is in trouble, into a solid rest in God, I should be, indeed, delighted. Oh that the ever blessed Spirit
would help me to that end! Carefully note, first, the verdict of sense—“I am cast out of Your sight.” And, secondly, the
resolve of faith—“Yet I will look again toward Your holy Temple.” These, remember, were both found in one man at one
time.
I. First, here is THE VERDICT OF SENSE. Please notice that it comes first in the text. Sense hurriedly decides, “I
am cast out of Your sight.” It is noteworthy that unbelief is always first to speak. Whenever David observes, “I said in
my haste,” you will notice that something is to be confessed which was unwise and untrue. Unbelief cannot wait, it must
have its say—it blabs out all its silly soul at its earliest opportunity! In your own case, if you can be calm and patient,
you will speak to God’s Glory, but if you are hasty and petulant and must talk as soon as the trial comes upon you, it is
almost an absolute certainty that you will say what you will be glad to unsay! Our hasty words are often dipped in wormwood
and handed back to us that we may eat them! Hold still a while, my Brothers and Sisters, or, if you must speak,
speak to your God and not against Him—speak to your God and not to yourself.
Soliloquies are frequently an increase of woe. The heart ferments and heats itself, creating an inward fever which
parches the soul. If a vessel needs vent, it is not helped by being stirred within itself, yet such is the case when we say with
David, “I pour out my soul in me.” Better is that word, “You people, pour out your heart before Him,” even before the
living God! Brothers and Sisters, speak not to yourself, lest you seem to be a madman—you may vex your soul exceedingly
by those lone maunderings—speak to your God! Even if you utter hasty words and words of unbelief, they are better
uttered in His Presence than muttered within your own heart. He will hear them in either case, but when He perceives
that in your spirit there is no guile, though much impatience, He will freely forgive you all your childish error of too
hasty speech and help you to bear up under your woe. Speak, for silence slays! But speak to God, for He is full of compassion.
Take the warning of the text, however, and be slow to murmur, remembering that the carnal nature is ever swift to
speak and sure to speak amiss.
This verdict of sense, in the next place, was apparently very correct. “I said, I am cast out of Your sight.” Did it not
seem so? Jonah had tried to get away from God and God had pursued him with a tempest and almost broken the ship to
pieces in order to be at him. As the result of the tempest, Jonah had been hurled into the sea and in the sea a great fish had
swallowed him and he had been carried down till the floods compassed him about. Did not all his surroundings confirm
his suspicion that he was a castaway? Could he expect, ever again, that the Word of the Lord would come to Jonah, the
son of Amittai? Could he hope, ever again, to stand with the joyful multitude that kept holy day in the courts of the
Lord’s house, or to present his sacrifice of thanksgiving upon Jehovah’s altar? No, if he judged by his feelings, he was
shut up to the conclusion which he expressed.
There remained nothing for him but bare life and that in such a condition that one could hardly desire to have it
continued. He reckoned, with abundant show of reason, that he must be cast out of God’s sight. Yet it was not so and,
therefore, I invite those of you who have begun to judge your God by what you feel and by what you see, to revise your
judgment—and in the future to be very diffident as to your power to come to any just conclusion as to God’s dealings
with you! Thank God, you will be wrong if you despair. It is much better for you to show your faith by relying on your
God than to display your folly by saying, “I am cast out.”
As this verdict of sense seemed to be correct, Jonah must have felt that it was assuredly deserved. If the Lord had dealt
with Jonah according to his sins, he would have been a castaway. He had hurried to Joppa and taken a passage in a ship to
go to Tarshish, or anywhere else, to flee from the Presence of God. Now, what was a fitter punishment for him than that
he should be cast out from the sight of God? Had not this been his inquiry at Joppa, “Where shall I go from Your
Spirit?” Was not this his demand, “Where shall I flee from Your Presence?” Now he has his answer—he is carried down
till the depth closed him round about! His waywardness had come home to him—he had been paid in his own coin and
what could Jonah feel, but that he was filled with his own ways? Had he died in the sea, he could not have doubted the
Lord’s justice. If he had been driven away as an outcast, it would have been righteous retribution to a runaway who refused
his Master’s service. This must have made him doubly sorrowful! A guilty conscience is the most sour ingredient of
all. When each wave howled in Jonah’s ear, “You deserve it,” he was in an evil plight, indeed.
One sharp part of Jonah’s misery was that God’s hand was so evidently in his misery. He sees it and trembles. Observe
how he ascribes all to God—“You have cast me into the deep, in the midst of the seas; and the floods compassed me
about; all Your billows and Your waves passed over me.” We can bear a blow from an enemy, but a wound from our best
friend is difficult! If the Lord, Himself, goes forth against us, the war is one to tremble at! If the messenger of grief is
commissioned by Jehovah, Himself, and we know it—mere carnal reason concludes that all is finally over—and that
henceforth all we can do is to sit down and die! Faith thinks not so, but this is after the manner of flesh and sense.
Observe that this verdict of sense, “I am cast out from God,” was very bitter to Jonah. You can see by the way in
which he speaks that it is a heavy burden to him and yet it seems strange that it should be so. Here is a man who, when he
was in a wrong state of heart, sought to flee from the Presence of the Lord and, therefore, went to the seacoast on purpose;
rejoiced to find a ship bound for a distant and almost unknown land; paid the fare to sail therein of set purpose that
he might get away from God—and now that he thinks he is away from God, he is filled with horror and dismay! By this
we know the children of God—even at their worst estate.
Oh, you that are the people of God, you may sometimes, in your willfulness, wish that you could get away from the
all-searching eyes of God, but if you could do so it would be Hell for you! If you are a child of God, you must dwell in the
Presence of God. It is your life and you cannot be happy anywhere else. Oh, redeemed, regenerate man, it is impossible,
now, for your once renewed spirit ever to be happy in the beggarly elements of your former condition! Except in the Divine
atmosphere of heavenly love there is no rest for you. You are spoiled for this world, O heir of the world to come!
There was a time when its dainties would have been sweet to your taste and your soul could have been filled with them,
but that day is over, now—you must eat the Bread of Heaven or starve!
If you are not happy in your God, you are doomed to be happy nowhere. There is no choice left for you. Your very
nature is so affected, now, that as the needle rests not unless it points to the pole, so can your heart never be quiet except
in Jesus! The light of His Countenance must be light to you, or you must walk in darkness! Your music must come from
Jesus’ lips, or else there is nothing for you but wailing and gnashing of teeth! Your Heaven must be in His embrace—
there is no Heaven elsewhere for you! Nor would we wish to have it different. I am sure I can say from my very soul that if
God would leave me, it would be to me a Hell worse than Dante or Milton could imagine! What if I still had to pursue
my holy calling and to preach! What woe to preach without Him! What a hollow mockery! If I were bound to continue
the outward form of prayer and of a moral life, what vanity of vanities would it all be without my Lord!
Without God? Brothers, Sisters, can you bear the thought? It is not the pang of Hell, nor its fires, nor its undying
worm, nor anything else that can be pictured of amazing terror that causes such alarm as the bare thought of being severed
from God! To be cast out from His sight were Hell, indeed! Now, I should think that if Jonah had been in a calm
state of mind and had been able to consider things in the light of the Truth of God, it ought to have given him some
ground of hope that he was not cast out from God, after all, because he was so unhappy at the idea of being so cast out.
Will the Lord leave a soul that is distressed by such leaving? No spirit is wholly cast off from God if it longs after God. If
you can be content without God, you are, indeed, a lost one! But if there is in you a wretched rankling discontent at the
very thought of being severed from your God, then you are His and He is yours—and no eternal division shall come between
you and Him!
Thus I have brought out somewhat the force of this verdict of sense—“I am cast out of Your sight.” But I want you,
further, to notice that it was not true. There was ground for grief, but not for this despairing inference. The verdict was
not sustained by sufficient evidence. It was a great deal more than Jonah should have said, “I am cast out of Your sight.”
What? Alive in the sea, Jonah? Alive in the deep? Alive in the belly of a fish? And you say that you are cast out from
God’s sight! Surely if God were anywhere in the world, it were in that great fish! Where else could there have been surer
proof of His present power and Godhead than in keeping a man alive in a living morgue? There was a constant standing
miracle for three days and nights! And where there is a miracle, there is God most visibly seen! If Jonah could have asked
the seas and asked the deep places of the earth, they would have told him that the Lord was not far away. If he could have
asked the fish, itself, it would have acknowledged that God was there!
If those who go down to the sea in ships, see the works of the Lord and His wonders in the deep, much more might he
have seen them who went into the sea in a fish’s belly! There is a text that Jonah could never have heard, which I commend
to you against the time when you get to be where Jonah was. I do not suppose you will ever be literally buried alive
in a fish, but you may spiritually sink as deep as the Prophet did. What is that text? “Him that comes to Me I will by no
means cast out” (John 6:37). Jonah said, “I am cast out”—but that was not true. Poor Jonah! The mariners cast him
out, but God did not—he was cast out of the ship, but not out of the sight of God! The Lord of old was faithful and it
was His rule never to cast away His people. Even as David says, “For the Lord will not cast off forever: but though He
causes grief, yet will He have compassion, according to the multitude of His mercies.”
Mark the text I quoted from our Lord’s own lips—“Him that comes to Me I will by no means cast out.” Never question
this sacred Word of God! He will never, never cast out a single one that trusts Him! So that if ever you should be in a
condition which seems, to you, quite as forlorn as that of this Prophet in the midst of the sea, you may yet be sure that
you are not cast off, nor cast out. He who says he is cast out, says more than can possibly be true since the Infallible promise
is, “Him that comes to Me I will by no means cast out.” It is not for us to forge a lie against the God of the whole
earth! He does not speak that which is false, but out of His mouth proceeds Truth. Even if all things in earth and Hell
should swear that the Lord has cast away one of His own believing people, it will be our duty to disbelieve them all, for it
is impossible that He should cast out any Believer, for any reason or motive whatever!
II. Follow me, dear Friends, and may the Lord make it profitable to you while I dwell during the rest of my time
upon THE RESOLVE OF FAITH. Oh that the Holy Spirit may work in us “like precious faith” with Jonah! “Yet,” Jonah
says, “even if I am cast out, yet I will look again toward Your holy Temple.” Jonah was a man of God when he was in
his worst state of mind—at no time was the eternal life quite extinct within him. An ugly kind of saint this Jonah, when
he was in the sulks! A proud, self-conscious, willful and morose being—hard to love! Yet, as an oyster may bear a precious
pearl within its rough shell, so did the harsh Prophet contain, within his being, a priceless jewel of faith—faith
eminent, prevalent, triumphant—faith of the highest degree!
This faith put him upon prayer. The chapter begins, “Then Jonah prayed unto the Lord his God out of the fish’s
belly.” Jonah had not prayed when he went down to Joppa. He had taken the management of himself into his own hands
and referred nothing to God as to that rash voyage. How could he pray in such a temper? He paid his fare to go to
Tarshish—he did not pray God’s blessing on that expenditure, I am quite sure. When the sea began to work and was
tempestuous, he was in the sides of the ship, but he did not pray. No, he went to sleep! His conscience had become stupid
and seared as with a hot iron—there was no prayer in him—but there was a certain numbness of mind and lethargy of
heart.
And now he gets into the fish’s belly, a very close, dead place, where one would think he would lie in a state of coma,
or in a sort of fainting fit, if it were possible for him to live at all! Yet there he begins to pray. You will find God’s children praying where you thought they would despair and, on the other hand, you may discover that they do not pray
where you thought they would abound in supplication. “Oh,” says one man, “if I could have my time all to myself and
had not the worry of this family and this business, what a deal of time I would spend in prayer!” Would you? I would not
guarantee your abundant devotion!
Some of those who have least time for prayer, pray most, and those who have most opportunity and everything congenial,
are too often found to be most slack in their petitions. Jonah’s oratory was narrow and this pressed the prayer out
of him. He did not pray in the sides of the ship, where he had room enough and to spare. He prayed where he could not
get upon his knees, or hear his own voice. Laid out in his living coffin, he began his pleading. One would think it hard to
make the belly of Hell, the gate of Heaven, but Jonah did. He prays and one of the surest evidences of a living faith is
prayer. If you cannot do anything else, you can pray—and if you are a child of God, you will as surely pray as a man
breathes or as a child cries—you cannot help it! Prayer is your vital breath, your native air. Whether on the land or in
the sea, prayer is your life and you cannot exist without it if you are, indeed, born from on high. Answer, dear Hearer, is
it not so? It is not the prayer-book, but the prayer-faith that we must have! Have you such faith?
I beg you to notice, however, that this faith of Jonah showed itself not in prayer to God in general, but the passage
runs, “Then Jonah prayed unto the Lord HIS God.” There is a mint of meaning here! If you go upstairs and pray to God,
as everybody’s God, you have done what every Jack, Tom and Harry may do. But to go to your closet and cry to the Lord
as your own God is what none but an heir of Grace can do. Oh to cry—“My Father and my Friend! My God in Covenant!
My God to whom I have spoken years ago and from whom I have heard full many a time! You whom I love! You
who loves me, Jehovah, my God!”
This laying hold upon God as our own God is a business which the outer-court worshipper knows nothing of. Have
some of you got a God at all? “Oh,” you say, “I know there is a God.” Yes, I know there is a bank, too, but that does not
make me rich! What is your God to me? I want to say, “my God,” or I cannot be happy! Have you a God to yourself, all
to yourself, for if it is so, you will pray the prayer of faith when you draw near to Him—and this will prove that whatever
your condition may be, you are not cast out from the sight of the Most High!
There is one thing about Jonah I want you particularly to notice, that as his faith made him pray and made him pray
to the Lord, his God, his faith made him deal familiarly with holy Scripture. “What?” you ask—“how do you know
that?” He had but a small Bible compared with ours, but he had laid much of it up in his memory. Evidently he loved the
Book of Psalms, for his prayer is full of David’s expressions. Kindly look at Jonah’s prayer. I think I am right in saying
that there are no less than seven extracts from the Psalms in that prayer and its preface. It was Jonah’s own prayer and no
man compiled it for him, for he was far away from the haunts of men. Yet his heart led him to his former readings and his
memory came to his aid with expressions most suitable and forcible, borrowed from a former much tried servant of the
Lord.
A deep experience is bound to resort to Scripture for its expression. Human compositions suffice for surface work,
but when all God’s waves and billows have gone over us, we quote a Psalm. When our soul faints within us, we are not to
be revived by human songs, but we turn to the grave sweet melodies of Inspiration. When a true child of God is in trouble,
it is wonderful how dear the Bible becomes to him—yes, the very words of it! I say the very words of it, for I care
nothing about the scorn which attaches to a belief in, “Verbal Inspiration.” If the words are not Inspired, neither is the
sense, since there can be no sense apart from the words. My soul knows what it is to hang her hope upon a single Word of
God and to find her trust accepted! I would not even change the expression of our translation in many places—not that I
am bound by a translation, for God’s original is that which we accept as Infallible, but yet there are translations which
are evidently accurate, for the Lord’s own Spirit has made them unutterably dear to His saints.
There are circumstances connected with the very words of many a text and with God’s dealing with us through those
words—and in such instances we cling even to the English text with all our might. I think you will find that tried saints
are the most Biblical saints. In summer weather we delight in hymns, but in winter’s storms we fly to Psalms. Your frothy
professors quote Dickens or George Eliot, but God’s afflicted quote David or Job! Those Psalms are marvelous! David
seems to have lived for us all—he was not so much one man as all men in one. Somewhere or other, the great circle of his
experience touches yours and mine—and the Holy Spirit, by David, has furnished us with the best expressions which we
can utter before the Lord in prayer. Give me the faith which loves the Scriptures! Faith comes by hearing and hearing by
the Word of God—and true faith always loves the Word from which it sprang—it feeds thereon and grows thereby!
In proportion as people begin to criticize the Scriptures and to doubt the authenticity of this and that—in that proportion
they move out of the latitude of faith. The region of criticism is cold as the polar seas. Faith loves a warmer atmosphere.
The faith of God’s elect clings to God and reverences His Word. By every Word that proceeds out of the
mouth of God shall man live—and upon such meat Jonah lived where others would have died.
I desire to come close up to my text, while I bid you note that faith dares come to God with a, “yet.” Jonah said, “Yet I
will look again toward Your holy Temple.” Faith in her worst circumstances trusts God. Clog her, load her, shut her up,
yet she looks to God, alone! “O God, I trusted You once when I was but young and I felt my need of a Savior! I came to
You, then, and, by Your Grace I looked to Jesus and found peace at once! But then I did not know the evil of sin as I
know it now.” What then? Why, with this new knowledge, yet will I look to Jesus! I did not know, then, the depravity of
my heart as I know it now, but yet with this fresh sense of guilt I will, by God’s Grace, look as at the first! I did not
know, then, Your great and exceeding wrath against sin as I know it now, but yet, with this fuller discovery, I will look
to You. I did not know the burden of life, then, as I know it now. I did not know the power of Satan over me, then, as I
know it now—yet will I look again unto Your holy Temple!
With all these new weights and fresh encumbrances I do, today, by Your Grace, what I did many years ago—I throw
myself on You, my Lord, and trust in Your matchless plan of salvation through the precious blood of Christ! It charmed
me once, it charms me yet again. This is the perseverance and determination of Faith. She leaps over all walls and dashes
through all hedges with her, “yet.” Come what may, she has looked to Christ and she means to do so whatever may arise
to suggest some other course.
According to the Hebrew, the word should be rendered, “only,” instead of, “yet”—“only I will look again toward
Your holy Temple.” Faith looks to God only. Faith comes alone to her God and seeks no company to keep her in countenance.
When we were first saved, it was by faith, only, and we must still be saved in the same way. In Jonah’s case all
props were knocked away—he had nothing to look to in the whale’s belly at the bottom of the sea. But then and there he
trusted God and that was all. He could not think very clearly, nor confess before men. Neither could he be or do anything,
for he was packed away in quarters too close for action. But he could look again towards the Temple of God and
this, alone, he did!
He could give the faith-look when all looking with the eyes was far out of the question. How could he tell in which
direction to look for the Temple when all around him rolled the dark sea? His look was inward and spiritual and he was
content to do that, and only that. His state was looking, looking—only looking. Be it ours to believe, to believe and yet
again to believe! Jonah looked, again, to the place where God revealed Himself and we look to the Person of the Lord
Jesus Christ, in whom dwells all the fullness of the Godhead bodily! He looked to the Mercy Seat sprinkled with the
blood of Sacrifice, where the Lord was known to pardon and bless all suppliant sinners. And we, also, look to Jesus as the
great Propitiation.
To this look we will add nothing as a ground of trust! Jesus only is our hope and we will only look to Him! We will
add nothing to our look, our look to Christ! He alone is our stay and our comfort. It is a blessed thing to get clear of all
secondary hopes and to live by faith alone. Mixtures will not do in the hour of trial. A single eye is what is needed—the
least division in your trust is painful and dangerous. If you have lost some of your first light, look again! Look toward
His holy Temple at once and the Light of God shall surely return to you!
Do you notice here that faith is driven to do according to her first acts—“Yet I will look again.” You know faith is
described in other ways beside looking. It is taking, grasping, possessing, feeding, but faith, first of all, is looking, and
so, whenever you fall into grievous trouble, it will be wise to resort to the beginning of your confidence and hold it fast
to the end. If you cannot grasp, yet look! There are several grades of faith and when you cannot reach the higher grade, it
will be wise to enter fully into the lower one. Remember, the lowest form of faith will save—and even the smallest measure
of faith is effectual for salvation, though not for consolation. Look! Look to Jesus! “There is life in a look.” There is
Heaven in a look. “Look unto Me and be you saved, all the ends of the earth.” Look! If you cannot go forth to fight by
faith, stand still and look by faith. If you cannot declare the glory of the Lord, yet look! If you cannot tell what God has
done for you, yet keep on looking by faith to see what God will do for you! Do your first work and, as your first work
was a simple look at the Crucified One, look again to Him!
With this I shall close, urging dear friends here present, even if they forget all the rest of my text, to remember those
two words, “Look again.” If any of you are in trouble, I will bid you go home with only these two words ringing in your
ears, “Look again!” If you did look once, but have fallen into new darkness, look again! I mean, this morning, and I
would ask you to follow me in it—to look to my Lord Jesus Christ, again, as I did at the first. It is frequently a great
benefit to overhaul the foundations and begin again at the beginnings. I looked to Christ 33 years ago, or more—and so
did some of you. But the devil may say, “Your faith was fancy; your conversion was a delusion.” Be it so, O Satan! We
will not dispute with you, but we will begin again from this moment!
It is such a mercy that faith does not need to grow old before it saves us—the faith born this moment saves the soul in
its very birth! Is it so, that your faith is not more than five minutes old, my Brothers and Sisters? Have you only just begun
to trust Christ? Well, your faith has saved you quite as effectually as the faith of a man who has believed in Christ for
50 years! We must believe anew each day—yesterday’s believing will not do for today. Let us now look to Jesus Christ
upon the Cross and trust Him, this morning, as if we never trusted Him before. “I will look again toward Your holy
Temple.” It will do each man good to look anew to that Cross which is the sole hope of his soul. There is nothing more
sweetening to the spirit than to confess sin and accept mercy in the original style—and to go to Jesus anew just as we
went at first. Let us do so at this moment!
A person proudly said, the other day, that he could no longer sing ---
“I’m a poor sinner, and nothing at all, He had got beyond that! Highty tighty, here’s a fine fellow! He has just risen from the dunghill and is come to be a grand
gentleman all at once! Nothing will do for him but ---
“See the conquering hero comes, nothingness with a deeper emphasis than ever—and he would, like the publican, cry—“God be merciful to me, a sinner!”
I believe that as a child of God grows in sanctification, he deepens in humility. And as he advances to perfection, he
sinks in his own esteem. Oh that men would give over that bladder-blowing which seems to be so much admired in certain
quarters! We have had much occasion to mourn over the lower life of some professors, but the higher life of others is not
a bit better—it is false, proud, censorious, and unpractical!
Those who boast of perfection will have much to grieve over when once they come to their senses and stand in truth
before the living God! No man talks of living without sin till he is taken in the net of self-deception! I have walked with
God for many years and enjoyed the light of His countenance, but my experience is that I am, this day, obliged to take a
far lower place before Him than ever I took before, while ---
“Less than nothing I can boast, Brothers and Sisters, whether you will do so or not, I flee to the Cross again! In the Rock of Ages I again hide myself!
Who among us dares to come forth from that Divine shelter? “Jesus, lover of our soul, let us to Your bosom fly.” Let all
of us sing as though it were for the first time ---
“Just as I am—without one plea Dear Friends, it is due to God, it is due to Christ, it is due to the Gospel that we should, every day, believe with the
same simplicity of undivided trust. Keep on believing in Christ, “to whom coming as unto a living stone.” We are to live
by faith! You may be quite sure that you are permitted to do this, for Christ is always a sinner’s Savior. If you cannot
come to Him as saints, come to Him as sinners! If your unfitness for fellowship as a servant comes before your mind and
breaks your heart, yet remember that you may always return as a prodigal son! If you cannot feed in green pastures as
sheep of the fold, yet yield to the strong hand of Him who seeks the lost sheep. If you cannot come to Jesus as you should,
yet come just as you are. If your garments are not clean as they should be, yet come and wash them white in the blood of
the Lamb.
This ought to be done more readily by us every day, for it should be a growingly easy thing to believe our God as
experience proves His faithfulness. When we are at our worst, let us trust with unshaken faith. Remember that then is the
time when we can most glorify God by faith. To trust Christ when you have a shallow sense of sin, when your heart is
glad and your face is bright, is but a slender trusting Him. But to believe that He can cleanse you when your heart is
black as Hell—when you cannot see one good trait in all your character, when you see nothing but fault and imperfection
about your entire life, when all your outward circumstances seem to speak of an angry God and all your inward feelings
threaten you with doom from His right hand—this is to believe, indeed! Such faith the Lord deserves of you.
Oh, if you are only a little sinner, a little Savior and a little faith may serve your turn. If you have but little fear and a little burden, and little care, and little need—why then you cannot greatly prove or trust your Lord! But if you are up to
your neck in sorrow, yes, if you are drowned in it as Jonah was, and are driven well-near to despair, then you have a
great God and you should glorify Him by greatly trusting Him! If you are tempted to lay violent hands upon yourself, or
to do some other rash and evil deed, do no such thing, but trust yourself with your God and this will give Him more
Glory than seraphim and cherubim can do.
To believe in the promise of God, as you read it in His Word, is a grand thing. To believe it though you are sick and
sorry—though ready to die—this is to glorify the Lord! Brothers and Sisters, if I live, I will believe the promise! If I die
I will believe the promise! And when I rise again I will believe the promise! Let us resolve to believe though the world is
in flames and the pillars thereof are removed. Let us believe though the sun is turned into darkness and the moon into
blood! Let us believe though all the powers of the earth are marshaled in fight and Gog and Magog gather themselves
together to battle. Let us believe though the trumpet sounds for judgment and the Great White Throne is set in the open
Heaven!
Why should we doubt? The Covenant confirmed by promise and by oath—and ratified with the blood of Jesus—
places every Believer under the broad shield of Divine Truth—so what cause can there be for fear? O my Hearer, do you
believe in Christ? Do you trust your God? If you can stand to that, you are not only a saved man, but you already give
glory to God. So may He help you to do. Amen.
PORTION OF SCRIPTURE READ BEFORE SERMON—Jonah 1 and 2.
HYMNS FROM “OUR OWN HYMN BOOK”—90, 598, 533. |