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 By C. H. Spurgeon, At Metropoolitan Tabernacle, Newington. “I know your works: behold, I have set before you an open door, and no man can shut it: for you have a little strength, and have kept My Word, and have not denied My name. Because you have kept the Word of My patience, I also will keep you from the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all the world, to try them that dwell upon the earth.” - Revelation 3:8, 10.
THIS is a message to the angel of the Church at Philadelphia and it is full of instruction to Churches and ministers at
this present time. “He that has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says unto the Churches.” The Philadelphian Church
was not great, but it was good. It was not powerful, but it was faithful. The Spirit says, “You have a little strength.”
Every band of Believers has some strength—weak as we are in ourselves—the very fact of our possessing faith proves that
we have a portion of strength. Still, that strength is a matter of degrees, and certain Churches have a little strength—but
only a little. I suppose that the Philadelphian Church had but little strength in the following respects—the number of its
members would be small and it had, therefore, but little strength for undertaking any extensive enterprise which would
call for numerous bands of workers.
The Brethren needed all their strength concentrated on their home work, for they were few, and the miss of one or
two from home evangelization and edification would be greatly felt. A Church may have a very short muster roll and yet
it may be very dear to God, who thinks more of quality than of quantity, more of obedience than of numbers. They had
also little strength in the direction of talent. They were not like that famous Church at Corinth, where everybody could
teach everybody, but where nobody cared to learn of anyone. They had but small ability to speak with tongues, or work
miracles, or teach the Word—but they adhered faithfully to what they had been taught by the Apostles of the Lord.
They were not brilliant, but they were sound.
Churches with few men of learning or eloquence in them may yet be greatly approved of the Lord, who cares more
for Grace than learning, more for faith than talent. In all probability they were, like most of the Churches of that day,
possessed of very little pecuniary strength. They could do but little where money would be required. They were a company
of poor people with no man of means among them, but there are many such Churches that are peculiarly precious to
the heart of God, who cares nothing for gold and everything for sincerity. Possibly they were little, too, in those things
which go side by side with Grace—I mean in knowledge and in power to utter what they knew. This was a pity, but as it
was their misfortune and not their fault, they were not blamed for it.
The Lord does not blame us for having little strength, but for having little love, little faith, little zeal, little consecration.
The Philadelphian saints, like the limpet, which has but little strength, stuck firmly to the rock, and they are
commended for it. They had little strength, but they kept God’s Word and they did not deny His name. Possibly if they
had felt stronger, they might have presumptuously quit the Word of the Lord for the opinions of men, as the Galatians
did—and then they would have lost their reward. May every Church of the Lord Jesus Christ, whether it has little
strength or much, be concerned to be steadfast in the faith—loyal to King Jesus—firm in the Truths which Christ has
taught us by the Holy Spirit.
But, dear Friends, as this expression was used to the angel of the Church at Philadelphia, whom I suppose to be the
minister of the Church, I do not feel that I shall be doing any violence to the text if I take it in reference to each individual.
And I have no doubt that there will be individual Christians present at this time who, though they have but little
strength, have kept God’s Word. If so, they will receive a reward for it, according to the Grace of God. They have been
firm and steadfast in their confession of the faith, once delivered unto the saints and the Lord who gave them the Grace to
be so, will give them yet more Grace as the recompense of their fidelity.
We will speak upon the text, tonight, with a view to that, and we shall notice, first, that there is a word of praise—
God praises this faithful messenger of the Church. Secondly, He gives him a word of prospect. He says, “I have set before
you an open door, and no man can shut it: for you have a little strength, and have kept My Word.” And then, thirdly, we
shall speak upon a word of promise which is in the text in the 10th verse—“Because you have kept the Word of My patience,
I also will keep you from the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all the world, to try them that dwell
upon the earth.” Oh that my words might call out some faithful ones in these evil days! We need pillars in the house of
our God! Where are they to be found?
I. First I would remind you that our text has in it A WORD OF PRAISE. I do not think that we should be so slow as
we sometimes are in praising one another. There is a general theory abroad that it is quite right and proper to point out
to a Brother all his imperfections, for it will be a salutary medicine to him and prevent his being too happy in this vale of
tears. Is it supposed that we shall cheer him on to do better by always finding fault with him? If so, some people ought to
be very good by this time, for they have had candid friends in plenty! Find fault with a Brother and he will be kept from
growing too proud and he will, no doubt, go forward blessing you very much for your kind consideration in promoting
his humility. Remember, also, that it is much to the increase of brotherly love to have a clear eye to see the imperfections
of our friends. Does anyone in his senses really think so?
I should suppose that after having given a sufficient trial to that manner of procedure, it would be quite as well, at
times, to try another, and to rejoice in everything which we see of Grace in our Brothers and Sisters! And sometimes to
thank God in their hearing for what we perceive in them that we are sure is the fruit of the Spirit. If they are what they
should be, they will not think so much of our little praises as to be unduly exalted, but they will be sometimes so encouraged
as to be nerved to higher and nobler things! If a man deserves my commendation, I am only paying a debt when I
give it to him—and it is dishonest to withhold it under the pretence that he would not use the payment rightly. Men who
deserve praise can bear it and some of them even need it!
I should not wonder that the kindly words of God’s people may be but a rehearsal of that, “Well done, good and
faithful servant,” which will one day sound in their ears. And it may be a useful rehearsal, too, helping them on their
weary way. Good men have many conflicts—let us minister to their comfort. At any rate, the great Head of the Church
did not think it unwise to say to the Church at Philadelphia that He thought well of it because it had kept His Word. Let
us give honor to whom honor is due and encourage those who are aiming to do right.
What had these Philadelphian Believers done that they should be praised? What they did was this—they kept the
Word of God. “You have kept My Word and you have not denied My name.” What does this mean? Does it not mean,
first, that they had received the Word of God, for if they had not heard it and held it, they could not have kept it! It was
theirs! They heard it and had no wish to hear anything else. It was theirs! They read it and searched it and made it their
own. They hoarded up Divine knowledge in their memories, preserved it in their affections, used it in their experience
and practiced it in their lives. They were not ashamed of revealed Truths of God but, on the contrary, they took it for
their possession, their heritage, their treasure, their all! I trust that many of us can say that the Doctrines of Grace are
our jewels, our estate, yes, our very life. God has put us in trust with the Gospel and we will sooner part with all that we
have than be false to our trust! It is no small privilege to be taught of the Holy Spirit as to have a taste for the Gospel, a
deep attachment to the Truths of the Covenant.
Next, we may be sure that they loved the Word of God. They had an intense delight in it. They appreciated it—they
fed upon it. They stored it up as bees store away honey and they were as ready to defend it as bees are to guard their
stores. They meditated upon it. They sought to understand it. They took delight in everything which came from the
mouth of God. Men do not keep things which they consider to be valueless! If men in our day had a higher opinion of the
Truth of God, they would be more valiant for it. People are always ready to part with that for which they have no esteem
and, for this very reason, many are quite willing to give up the Bible to critics and philosophers—those thieves and burglars
of faith. But he that keeps God’s Word, we may be sure, is deeply in love with it!
Oh, dear child of God, you may be very little in Israel, but if you love the Word of God there is a something about
you in which God takes delight! He sees you at your Bible-reading. He marks you in your endeavors to get at the meaning
of His Word. He notes you when you sit down and meditate upon His Divine thoughts. And He takes pleasure in
your eagerness to know what the will of the Lord is. He says, “I know your works.” And though you may be one of little
influence and little ability, yet He is pleased with you because you are pleased with His Word.
More, however, is meant than simply loving the Word of God, though that is no small thing. It means that they believed
it, believed it most thoroughly, and so kept it. I am afraid that there are great Truths in God’s Word which we do
not intelligently believe, but take for granted. We say, “Yes, yes, these doctrines are in the Creed,” and we put them up
on the top shelf—and by that very act we lay them aside and do not heartily believe in them for ourselves! We grow very
vexed if anybody denies them, but if there is no controversy over them, we forget them. Is this wise? We call our opponents
heterodox and our zeal for orthodoxy comes to the front—and yet, after all, it may be that we have never exercised
a personal faith about those doctrines so as to think them out for ourselves!
It is a grand thing to work your passage to a Truth of God, to mine your way to the golden ore by digging and clearing!
True Believers may be likened to those mites in the cheese which eat their way into it and penetrate into the center by
feeding upon all that lies in their way as they advance. We eat our way into the Word of God! We live upon what we
learn, tunneling through the Truth with receptive minds. The Truth of God is too great for us ever to absorb it all, but
daily and hourly we live upon it! We so believe it as to treat it as a matter of fact, valuable for everyday use. This is the
surest way to keep it, even to the end.
Now, dear child of God, as I have said before, you may have but very little strength. You may often be tempted and
tried and cast down. But if you believe the Word of God, there is more for the pleasing of God in a child-like faith than
there is in the most glittering profession or in the most showy deeds! Faith is the prize among jewels—the queen of the
virtues! Believe God’s Word and you have worked a God-like work! Believe it when others contradict it and you are a
conqueror over them all! Believe it when circumstances seem to make it questionable. Believe it when your own heart fails
you. Believe it when your sin and corruption rise within you like a fountain of foul waters and thus shall you give glory
to the God of Truth! Still hold on to the promise made to you in the Word of God and to the manifestation of God which
is seen in Christ Jesus—and you will be doing your God the honor which He deserves at your hands! And He will say, “I
know your works: for you have a little strength, but you have kept My Word.”
Furthermore, in addition to the inner possession and the hearty belief of the Truth, we must be ready to adhere to it at
all times. That, perhaps, is the central thought here—“You have kept My Word.” Why, there are great folk among us
that never care to believe according to God’s Word at all. They have thought out what they believe—their theology is
made out of their own substance, as spiders spin their webs out of their own bowels. But, surely, in everything which
concerns the doctrines of our most holy faith, we must make reference to a, “Thus, says the Lord.” It is not what I think.
It is not what some greater man may think. It is not what may be the consensus of all the enlightened minds of the period!
The decision lies with what the Lord has spoken.
God’s thoughts are as high above ours as the heavens are above the earth! Dare we drag them down and sit in judgment
on them? If the thought of the age happens to be right, well and good, but it is not upon temporary opinion that we
rest. Our faith stands not in the wisdom of man, but in the power of God! What is taught in Holy Scripture is sure Truth
to us and every other statement must bow to it. Chillingworth said what ought to be true, though I am afraid that it is
not—“The Bible and the Bible, alone, is the religion of Protestants.” I should like to see a few more of such Protestants!
Many say that we ought to keep “abreast of the times”—whatever that may mean—and that there is a certain “spirit of
the age,” to which we should be subject. This, to me, is treason against the Sovereign Truth of God. I know of one only
spirit to whom I desire to be subject and that is the Spirit of all the ages who never changes. By His teaching we are not
only 19 centuries behind the present age, but we come in at the back of all the ages of human history! If we have but little
strength, we mean to let the times and the spirits go where they like—we shall keep to the Holy Spirit and to His eternal
teachings!
Supposing that we have not such big heads as some have and cannot excogitate or multiply sophisms and inventions
as they do, it will be no small thing to be commended at the last, in these terms—“You have a little strength, but you
have kept My Word.” Brothers and Sisters, cling to God’s Word! Cling to Infallible and Immutable Revelation! Whatever
novelty comes up, keep to the Word of Jesus! Whatever discovery may be made by the wise men of the age, let Christ
be wisdom unto you! Regard the new teachers no more than you would the wise men of Gotham, for those who oppose
themselves to God’s Word are fools! Let them cry, “Lo here, or lo there,” but believe them not! The Word of God is your
anchor! The Book is our ultimatum! ---
“Within this sacred volume lies That which is not in Holy Scripture is not to be received as matter of faith in the Christian Church. But that which is
there is to be received and held with that stern steadfastness, that incorruptible faith which no more changes than the
unchanging Truths of God which it has grasped! Woe be to the man who is first a Calvinist, then an Arminian, then a
Pelagian, then a Unitarian, never finding rest for the sole of his feet—keeping nothing because he has nothing to keep!
This Philadelphian Church had won the commendation, “You have kept My Word.” Dear Hearer, see that you win it,
too!
And, no doubt, it was also intended in this sense—that they had obeyed the Word of God. “You have a little
strength.” There are very few of you, but you have been observant of all precepts and ordinances. Some think it a great
thing to be members of a popular sect—but when the great curtain rolls up and all things are seen as they are and not as
they seem—do you not think that that Church will be most commended which was truest to the teaching of the Holy
Spirit in everything? Christian chivalry should make you feel it better to be a member of a Church of six doing the Lord’s
work conscientiously than to be a member of a Church of six millions which has turned aside from it! I could not be in
communion with a church whose chief guide and authority is another book than God’s Word and whose acknowledged
Head is other than the Lord Jesus Christ!
I had sooner stand alone than yield with a crowd to an Act of Parliament which was passed to dictate to me the form
in which I may worship God! There shall come a day when it will be found that the minorities have generally saved both
the world and the Church. A struggling few may reckon themselves to be the majority when they stand alone with God,
for He counts for more than all the myriads of the earth put together! The faithful, staunch, God-fearing men that would
not budge an inch, or change a letter, or shape a syllable to please all the kings and princes of the earth, shall be found to
praise and honor in the day of the Lord’s appearing! These are the men that Christ shall stoop from His Throne to honor!
They that have trifled with His Word shall be lightly esteemed. They that have willfully broken one of the least of His
Commandments—and have taught men to do so—shall be least in the Kingdom of Heaven. Blessed and happy shall he
be who follows the Lamb wherever He goes. Blessed shall he be who only wanted to know the Lord’s will that he might
do it unquestioningly, caring nothing what the will of other people might be in the matter.
I shall put it home to you, dear Friends, again. You may have but little strength, but do you keep God’s Word? You
may never become more numerous, or more influential, but let it be true of you that you have kept God’s Word. Be students
of God’s Word and adherents of it! Take no notice of anything I say if it cannot be supported by the Word of Divine
Truth. Take equally little notice of what any man says, be he orator, thinker, bishop, or whatever he may be. There
is no value in all the brass counters which circulate among the many—they are current with the world, but the Kingdom
of God does not know them! The words of men are trifling in value—it takes a mass of them to come to the value of a
farthing. But any one Word of the Lord is worth a mint of gold! If a doctrine is of God, if it has come out of the loving
lips of the Lord Jesus—hold it fast, as for dear life. Let men call you bigot, but never mind—hold on with all your
might and your Lord will smile upon you.
Thus have I explained what the Philadelphians did. They did it under great disadvantages, but that only helped to
increase the weight of praise measured out to them. They had little talent, but they kept God’s Word. Oh, that men who
have 10 talents would not be so anxious to be original in their teaching! Oh that they would cease to display their own
thought, their own cleverness and individuality! If you have little talent, it is a pity you have not more, but still, it is for
your praise if you quit yourselves like men and stand fast in the faith! It may be you have little strength of mind, but I
hope, even then, Divine Grace enables you to be firm for the Truth of God. In other things you may be easily persuaded
and readily talked over, but be you doubly firm in the things of God! There make your mark and put your foot down.
Let it be seen that you do not go to be stirred in those vital points, till your friends say of you, “Oh, you can twist William
anywhere, but not in his religion. On that point he is a regular Puritan—there is no moving him.” May it always be
so! Even if you have but little strength, see to it that you keep Christ’s Word.
Possibly you have not much strength as to influence—your sphere may be very narrow, and your power in it very
slight. That does not matter. But it does matter that you are faithful to your Lord. If you have kept God’s Word, you
may be wielding an influence far beyond what you imagine. Good men in the dark days of Popery discovered the Truth of
God but they only lived, perhaps, in some quiet village, or shut up in a monastery—and the most they could do was to
write down what they knew and so keep it. We have met with instances where they wrote out part of the Word of God
and hid it away in a wall and, afterwards, when the wall was pulled down, the priceless record was discovered and used.
The Truth of God does not die through being buried.
Some taught the Gospel very quietly in their own family circle and so kept it. Some would get a few copies of the
New Testament and go about and sell them in their baskets—and so they kept the Truth. Those men of old time whose
influence upon their own age seemed so little, nevertheless prepared the way for those braver spirits who, by-and-by,
shone forth like the stars of the morning! Hold fast God’s Word and never mind what comes of it for the moment—
God’s seed may not grow in a day, but it will grow! If you only influence one child, who can tell what that child may be?
If you only help to strengthen one solitary Christian woman, who knows what may come to pass by her means? We see
the telegraph wires, but we do not see what messages they carry. The ropes hang down in our belfry, but the glorious
chime is aloft. We cannot see the big bells, but it is ours to pull the ropes that are near our hands and do what God bids
us to do—music will come of it somewhere! Above all, if we have but little strength of any kind, let us keep God’s Word.
Now, why should God’s Word be kept in this way? What is there to praise about keeping God’s Word? I answer,
because it is a holy thing to treasure up God’s Word. I have gone into churches on the Continent and I have seen gold and
silver plates in the sacristy, understood to be worth up to three millions of money. These were said to be the treasures of
the church. But these are the treasures of men and they shall pass away. The solid Truth of Revelation, the doctrine of the
Holy Spirit—a Divine experience given to you by that Holy Spirit—all this is the treasure of the Church! And you are
doing a holy thing when you guard it against every adversary. To this purpose are saints sent into the world—to keep
this treasure of the Church against all adversaries. Truth is the jewel for which all Believers must be ready to die.
Solomon made shields of gold which were borne before the king when he went into the house of the Lord, but Rehoboam
took away the shields of gold and put shields of brass in their place. It is to be feared many are doing the same at
this moment. Let us bear our protest—the gold is good enough for us. Do not throw away the best for the sake of getting
something that may be newer, but that must be far inferior. I hold one single sentence out of God’s Word to be of
more certainty and of more power than all the discoveries of all the learned men of all the ages!
I might have seen the Alexandrian library burned without losing a night’s rest, for the mass of its contents must have
been mere rubbish. But were there one single verse of the New Testament which it were possible to blot out from human
memory and record, one might be willing to lay down his life to save the glorious sentence! The mind of man sends forth
pure and impure water—and it is hard to discern between the two—but from the heart of God there wells up, undiluted
and unmingled, a stream of Living Truth which is more for man’s benefit than all else out of Heaven! Warriors guard
kings, crowns and thrones, but the Living Truth of the living God is infinitely more worthy of our watch! Oh for 10,000
valiant men to stand about the bed of the Truth of God, each man with his sword upon his thigh because of fear in the
night. Therefore, as it is a holy thing, a heavenly thing, a priceless thing, keep God’s Word!
Besides, it is a wise thing, for you that have but little strength, to keep God’s Word. The feebler you are, the more
closely should you keep to the Scriptures. Remember what Solomon says—“The conies are a feeble folk,” but he puts
them down as wise people, for they have their habitation in the rocks. If a disputer can once get you away from the Bible,
he can swallow you alive, but if you will keep to Scripture and handle this weapon, “It is written. It is written,” the disputer
may be the arch-fiend, himself, but he cannot possibly get the victory over you! Your wisdom is not to try to gain
keenness of mind that you may emulate the critic, but to lay hold upon God’s Word and cling to it, for therein shall be
your safety and your victory!
Again, dear Friends, we ought to hold fast to the Truth of God because if we have little strength, it is there that we
shall get more strength. We shall never grow stronger by leaving the eternal Word of God! No, but as we cling to God in
feebleness, the Divine strength of the Word of God is infused into our souls. Besides, God’s Word is a supporting thing
and he who quits it leaves his chief Helper. He that receives it shall live, but without it there is no spiritual life. Therefore let us hold it. If men would take away from us certain dainties which are sweet but which are not necessary, we might be content to let them rid us of such superfluities. But if they come to take away bread and water from the poor and needy,
then we cannot accept it. For this we must stand up and fight to the death!
The Word that comes out of Christ’s mouth is the daily manna of our heavenly life and it behooves every Christian,
however feeble or however strong, to keep the Word of God with all his might against all comers, since it is his life. I am
at this pass—I will sooner die than yield the Gospel! I may be a fool and an old-fashioned bigot, but I am not a turncoat,
and I cannot quit the Word of the Lord. If I must be the last of the Puritans, I will not be ashamed of it. My Lord will
revive His buried Truth as sure as He is God—the present madness will cease with its own short hour. So much, then,
with regard to this word of praise.
II. I will not be long on the next point, while I just remind you that there is A WORD OF PROSPECT—“Behold, I
have set before you an open door, and no man can shut it: for you have a little strength, and have kept My Word.” It
seems to me to mean just this—“You have been faithful; therefore I will use you. You have been steadfast; therefore I will
employ you.” For a considerable period of human life, it may be God does not give to all of us a field of usefulness, but
He provides a field of trial. There are some to whom He opens the gate of usefulness early because He sees in them a spirit
that will bear the temptation of success. But in many other cases it is questionable whether they could bear promotion
and, therefore, the Lord permits them to be tried in different ways until He sees that they are found faithful—and then
He puts them into His service and gives them an opportunity of bearing witness for Him.
Now, dear Friend, perhaps up to now you have been perfectly satisfied with holding the Truth of God with all your
might and being faithful to it in private and in your own daily life. I want to suggest to you that if you have done this for
some time, the time has now arrived when you may go forward to something more. There are opportunities before you,
now, which were not there before—these are placed before you, especially, because you have been tried and have been
proved faithful. If you will now begin to talk to others about that which you love so well, you will be astonished to find
how gladly they will receive it from you.
You have been a receiver until now and that is well and good. But, now that you have become filled, overflow to others
and let them receive of your joy! “How do I know that they will accept it?” you ask. I know it from this fact—that, as
a general rule, the man that keeps God’s Word has an open door before him. If you have been vacillating and shifty and
tricky—and have believed everything and nothing—nobody will take any particular notice of what you say, except to
shut the door against your uncertain prattle. But when they have observed how you stand to the Truth of God—how
solid and steadfast you are—they will give up disputing with you and come to inquire what your views really are. People
do not care about knocking their heads against brick walls, or fighting against pillars of iron! And when they see that
you are firm and unmoved, they will say, “We must let him have his own way.”
When a man begins his Christian life in a kind of dubious, half-hearted way, his friends do not know whether he is
really going to carry it out or not. At any rate, as he endeavors to avoid all persecution, they do not know what to think
of him and so, they feel encouraged to treat him as one who can be pressed and squeezed at pleasure. If there is a secret
entrance to Heaven, he prefers it—he means to go round about and climb over the wall somewhere, or sneak in at the
back gate. This poor creature has no power or influence! He is rather ridiculous than useful. Nobody ever respects him.
Nobody cares a button about him. The devil, himself, does not trouble him much, for he knows that he will do no harm
to his kingdom, let him talk as he likes.
But the man who says, “I am going straight for Glory and if anybody gets in my way, so much the worse for him, for
I am bound to take the right road”—such a man will find a pretty clear track. Mr. Moody would say, “Make a bee line
for Heaven.” A bee knows the nearest way and keeps to it with all its force. Let me hear each one of you say, “I am not
going to take any corners, or twists, or windabouts but, straight away, by God’s Grace, what He bids me do, I am going
to do! What He bids me believe, I am going to believe. And if there is anything to be suffered for it, all right. I have
added it all up and I count the reproach of Christ to be greater riches than all the treasures of Egypt.” This is the right
kind of resolution. God help you to keep to it.
Before you, my Brother, the Lord God has set an open door. Go ahead! Do not be afraid! People will be willing to
hear what you have to say and, what is more, people will be converted by what you say, for God has set before you this
open door and no man can shut it! It is amazingly easy to go through a door when it is wide open and it will be very easy
for you—much easier than you think! Now that you have been schooled, by God’s Spirit, into steadfastness of character
to say, in God’s name, dependent upon God’s strength, what He has taught you, you will bring many to Christ because
you, yourself, abide in Christ! Come, Brother, you did not reckon that such usefulness would ever fall to your lot, did
you? Cheer up and get to work! Wake up to holy energy!
In the Sunday school there are little children that you will be the means of bringing to Christ if you lead a class! And
out at the street corners there are folks that you will turn to the Savior if you have but the courage to stand up and
preach! Out in the villages, or in the crowded city, many hearts await you. I say not this of you all, but only of confirmed
and faithful ones. If you feel, “I never can give up the Bible. I can never forsake the Truths of God that I have learned
from it—they are stamped on my heart, they are cut into the very center of my soul,” then you are the man who may
safely go forth to publish the Truth! There is an open door before you which no man can shut! Gird up your loins and
enter it! Rush to the front! Victory lies before you!
God means to use you. You are a vessel fit for the Master’s use and there never was a vessel fit for His use that He did
not use one day or other. The hour needs its man quite as much as the man needs the hour. Take time by the forelock and
honor your God! The Lord help you to keep His Word and then to go in for public testimony!
III. Our last point was to be A WORD OF PROMISE for, according to the 10th verse, it is written, “Because you
have kept the Word of My patience, I also will keep you from the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all the
world, to try them that dwell upon the earth.” Those who keep God’s Word, shall, themselves, be kept from temptation.
The Lord returns into His servants’ bosoms that which they render to Him—He gives keeping for keeping.
Now, I shall speak for myself and for you—and I know that we can bear witness that this promise is true. One says to
me, “Are you not perplexed about the prevalence of modern thought—the new phase of divinity that has come up of late,
and the general progress that is being made towards a new theology? Does it not trouble you?” Not a bit! Modern ideas
do not affect me in the slightest. If all men that live or ever shall live should throw away the old Calvinism, there remains
one that will hold it, for this reason—that he could not hold any other—I must be crushed out of existence before my
convictions of the truth of the Doctrines of Grace in the old-fashioned form can ever be taken from me! I am miserable,
wretched, lost, if the Doctrines of Grace are not true! I am joyous, glad, strong, happy if these doctrines are true. I cannot
give them up—and especially because as I read, and the more I read—I perceive these things to be written in the
Word of God and, therefore, I must hold them.
In this Church we feel very little of the temptation which tries all the world. Very seldom are any of our friends unsettled
in their minds, or tormented with these hornets of heresy. “Alas,” said one minister to me, “I see some of my best
people becoming skeptical! Are you not worried by seeing the thoughtful ones drifting off into new views?” “No, not at
all.” “Why not?” “Because the Grace of God keeps our people to their moorings. They know what they believe and they
have no desire to change.” If a man does not believe the Doctrines of Grace, he comes to hear me once and he says, “I am
not going there any more.” He talks to some of you and you are so dogmatic and firmly rooted, he calls you pig-headed
and says it is no use arguing with such bigots! And so he goes to argue somewhere else! This is exactly as we would have
it!
When a bushel is full of wheat, the good corn keeps the chaff out of the measure. This is the Lord’s way of delivering
those who keep His Word—thus He shuts them away from the temptation that comes upon others. He seems to say,
“Dear child, since you will not go beyond My written Word, you shall not be tempted to go beyond it. I will cause the
enemies of the Truth of God to leave you alone. You shall be offensive to them, or they to you and you shall soon part
company.” Remember how Mr. Bunyan pictures it? When Talkative came up to gossip with Christian and Hopeful, he
chattered away upon all sorts of topics and they were wearied with him. To get rid of him, Christian said to Hopeful,
“Now we will talk a little about experimental godliness.” And when they began to speak about what they had tasted and
handled of Divine Truth, Mr. Chatterbox dropped behind. He did not like spiritual conversation—neither do any of the
breed! The holy pilgrims were not so rude as to tell him to go—they only talked about heavenly things which he did not
understand—and he went of his own accord!
I believe that results are sure to follow holy conversation and sound preaching. Keep to the Truth of God and the
modern school will give you a wide berth. But if any of you try the double-shuffle in religion—the plan of trying to believe
a little of everything and not much of anything—if you try to hold with the hare and run with the hounds, you will
be tempted to deadly error and it will serve you right! In the temptation you will fall, for, indeed, you are fallen already!
Keep the Word of God and the Word of God will keep you! You will be shielded from half the temptations that fret and
worry professors if you take your place and keep it against all comers.
Or perhaps the text may mean that if the temptation shall come, you shall be preserved from it. The deliberatelyformed
conviction that the Word of God is the standard of our faith—and the unwavering habit of referring everything
to it and standing and falling by it may not deliver us from every error, but will save us from that which is the substance
of every error—that is, the habit of trusting to our own understanding or relying upon the understandings of our fellow
men. I value more a solid confidence in the Word of God than even the knowledge that comes out of it, for that faith is a
saving habit, a sanctifying habit and, in every way, a strengthening and confirming and preserving habit. May God grant
to us that whatever form of temptation may come upon the face of the earth, we may stand fast for His Truth, so that
none of us may perish like Judas, the son of perdition!
All this I have spoken to the people of God, but I am not ignorant that there are some here who do not know God’s
Word, nor love it. They have never embraced it and, to them, no blessing can come through it. But why should you not
receive it? Does it not strike you as being reasonable that if God has spoken, His creatures ought to believe what He has
spoken—that after He has laid down the Law there should remain no room for questioning? ---
“This is the judge that ends the strife, Come, then, and search the Scriptures, for in them you think you have eternal life and they are they which testify of
Christ. And let it not be said that you will not come unto Him that you might have life. As God bears testimony in His
Word to His own dear Son, believe that testimony! Accept the Savior whom He has given and find immediate salvation—
find it tonight!
Go out of this place saying, “I believe it.” “He that believes has everlasting life,” for, “this is life eternal, to know
You, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom You have sent.” I guarantee you if you get faith into your soul and the
Word of God becomes your joy and comfort, you will never let it go! You will sing as we did, just now, and as I sang very
heartily ---
“Let all the forms that men devise So may God bless you! Amen.
PORTION OF SCRIPTURE READ BEFORE SERMON—John 17.
HYMNS FROM “OUR OWN HYMN BOOK”—669, 667, 486. |