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Some Sermons From
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Delivered on Sabbath Morning, February 11th, 1855 at Exeter Hall, Southwark
“But we preach Christ crucified, unto the Jews a stumblingblock,
and unto the Greeks foolishness; but unto them which are called,
both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God, and the wisdom of
God.”- 1 Corinthians 1:23, 24.
WHAT contempt hath God poured upon the wisdom of this world! How
hath he brought it to nought, and made it appear as nothing. He has
allowed it to work out its own conclusions, and prove its own folly. Men
boasted that they were wise; they said that they could find out God to
perfection; and in order that their folly might be refuted once and for ever,
God gave them the opportunity of so doing. He said “Worldly wisdom, I
will try thee. Thou sayest that thou art mighty, that thine intellect is vast
and comprehensive, that thine eye is keen, that thou canst unravel all
secrets; now, behold, I try thee: I give thee one great problem to solve.
Here is the universe; stars make its canopy, fields and flowers adorn it, and
the floods roll over its surface; my name is written therein the invisible
things of God may be clearly seen in the things which are made.
Philosophy, I give thee this problem-find me out. Here are my works-find
me out. Discover in the wondrous world which I have made, the way to
worship me acceptably. I give thee space enough to do it-there are data
enough. Behold the clouds, the earth, and the stars. I give thee time
enough; I will give thee four thousand years and I will not interfere; but
thou shalt do as thou wilt with thine own world. I will give thee men in
abundance, for I will make great minds and vast, whom thou shalt call
lords of earth; thou shalt have orators, thou shalt have philosophers. Find
me out, O reason, find me out, O wisdom; discover my nature, if thou
canst: find me out unto perfection, if thou art able; and if thou canst not,
then shut thy mouth for ever, and then I will teach thee that the wisdom of
God is wiser than the wisdom of man; yea that the foolishness of God is
wiser than men.”
And how did the reason of man work out the problem?
How did wisdom perform her feat? Look upon the heathen nations; there
you see the result of wisdom’s researches. In the time of Jesus Christ, you
might have beheld the earth covered with the slime of pollution-a Sodom
on a large scale, corrupt, filthy, depraved, indulging in vices which we dare
not mention, revelling in lusts too abominable even for our imagination to
dwell upon for a moment. We find the men prostrating themselves before
blocks of wood and stone, adoring ten thousand gods more vicious than
themselves. We find, in fact, that reason wrote out her own depravity with
a finger covered with blood and filth, and that she for ever cut herself out
from all her glory, by the vile deeds she did. She would not worship God.
She would not bow down to him who is “clearly seen” but she worshipped
any creature; the reptile that crawled, the crocodile, the viper, everything
might be a god, but not, forsooth, the God of Heaven. Vice might be made
into a ceremony, the greatest crime might be exalted into a religion, but
true worship she knew nothing of. Poor reason! poor wisdom! How art
thou fallen from heaven! Like Lucifer-thou son of the morning thou art
lost. Thou has written out thy conclusion, but it is a conclusion of
consummate folly. “After that in the wisdom of God the world by wisdom
knew not God, it pleased God by the foolishness of preaching to save them
that believe.”
Wisdom had had its time, and time enough; it had done its all, and that was
little enough; it had made the world worse than it was before it stepped
upon it, and now, says God, “Foolishness shall overcome wisdom; now
ignorance, as ye call it, shall sweep away your science; now, humble, childlike
faith, shall crumble to the dust all the colossal systems your hands have
piled.” He calls his army. Christ puts his trumpet to his mouth, and up
come the warriors, clad in fisherman’s garb, with the brogue of the lake of
Galilee-poor humble mariners. Here are the warriors, O wisdom! that are
to confound thee; these are the heroes who shall overcome thy proud
philosophers! these men are to plant their standard upon the ruined walls of
thy strongholds, and bid them fall for ever; these men, and their successors,
are to exalt a gospel in the world which ye may laugh at as absurd, which
ye may sneer at as folly, but which shall be exalted above the hills, and shall
be glorious even to the highest heavens.
Since that day, God has always
raised up successors of the apostles. I claim to be a successor of the
apostles, not by any lineal descent, but because I have the same roll and
charter as any apostle, and am as much called to preach the gospel as Paul
himself: if not as much owned in the conversion of sinners, yet in a
measure, blessed of God; and, therefore, here I stand, foolish as Paul might
be, foolish as Peter, or any of those fisherman, but still with the might of
God I grasp the sword of truth-coming here to “preach Christ and him
crucified, unto the Jews a stumblingblock, and unto the Greeks foolishness;
but unto them which are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of
God and the wisdom of God.”
Before I enter upon our text, let me very briefly tell you what I believe
preaching Christ and him crucified is. My friends, I do not believe it is
preaching Christ and him crucified, to give our people a batch of
philosophy every Sunday morning and evening, and neglect the truth of this
Holy Book. I do not believe it is preaching Christ and him crucified, to
leave out the main cardinal doctrines of the Word of God, and preach a
religion which is all a mist and a haze, without any definite truths whatever.
I take it that man does not preach Christ and him crucified, who can get
through a sermon without mentioning Christ’s name once; nor does that
man preach Christ and him crucified who leaves out the Holy Spirit’s
work, who never says a word about the Holy Ghost, so that indeed the
hearers might say, “We do not so much as know whether there be a Holy
Ghost.” And I have my own private opinion that there is no such a thing as
preaching Christ and him crucified, unless you preach what now-a-days is
called Calvinism. I have my own ideas, and those I always state boldly. It is
a nickname to call it Calvinism; Calvinism is the gospel, and nothing else. I
do not believe we can preach the gospel, if we do not preach justification
by faith, without works; nor unless we preach the sovereignty of God in his
dispensation of grace; nor unless we exalt the electing, unchangeable,
eternal, immutable, conquering, love of Jehovah; nor do I think we can
preach the gospel, unless we base it upon the peculiar redemption which
Christ made for his elect and chosen people; nor can I comprehend a
gospel which lets saints fall away after they are called, and suffers the
children of God to be burned in the fires of damnation after having
believed. Such a gospel I abhor. The gospel of the Bible is not such a
gospel as that. We preach Christ and him crucified in a different fashion,
and to all gainsayers we reply, “We have not so learned Christ.”
There are three things in the text. First, a gospel rejected — “Christ,
crucified, to the Jews a stumbling block, and to the Greeks foolishness;”
secondly, a gospel triumphant — “unto those which are called, both Jews
and Greeks;” and thirdly, a gospel admired - it is to them who are called “the
power of God; and the wisdom of God.”
I. First, we have here A GOSPEL REJECTED. One would have imagined that
when God sent his gospel to men, all men would meekly listen, and humbly
receive its truths. We should have thought that God’s ministers had but to
proclaim that life is brought to light by the gospel, and that Christ is come
to save sinners, and every ear would be attentive, every eye would be fixed,
and every heart would be wide open to receive the truth. We should have
said, judging favourably of our fellow-creatures, that there would not exist
in the world a monster so vile, so depraved, so polluted, as to put so much
as a stone in the way of the progress of truth; we could not have conceived
such a thing; yet that conception is the truth. When the gospel was
preached, instead of being accepted and admired, one universal hiss went
up to heaven; men could not bear it; its first Preacher they dragged to the
brow of the hill, and would have sent him down headlong: yea, they did
more, they nailed him to the cross, and there they let him languish out his
dying life in agony such as no man hath borne since. All his chosen
ministers have been hated and abhorred by worldlings; instead of being
listened to, they have been scoffed at; treated as if they were the
offscouring of all things, and the very scum of mankind. Look at the holy
men in the old times, how they were driven from city to city, persecuted,
afflicted, tormented, stoned to death wherever the enemy had power to do
so. Those friends of men, those real philanthropists, who came with hearts
big with love, and hands full of mercy, and lips pregnant with celestial fire,
and souls that burned with holy influence; those men were treated as if they
were spies in the camp, as if they were deserters from the common cause
of mankind; as if they were enemies, and not, as they truly were, the best of
friends. Do not suppose, my friends, that men like the gospel any better
now, than they did then.
There is an idea that you are growing better. I do
not believe it. You are growing worse. In many respects men may be
better-outwardly better-but the heart within is still the same. The human
heart of to-day dissected, would be just like the human heart a thousand
years ago: the gall of bitterness within that breast of yours, is just as bitter
as the gall of bitterness in that of Simon of old. We have in our hearts the
same latent opposition to the truth of God; and hence we find men even as
of old, who scorn the gospel.
I shall, in speaking of the gospel rejected, endeavor to point out the two
classes of persons who equally despise the truth. The Jews make it a
stumblingblock, and the Greeks account it foolishness. Now these two very
respectable gentlemen-the Jew and the Greek-I am not going to make these
ancient individuals the object of my condemnation, but I look upon them as
members of a great parliament, representatives of a great constituency, and
I shall attempt to show that if all the race of Jews were cut off, there would
be still a “rest number in the world who would answer to the name of Jews,
to whom Christ is a stumblingblock; and that if Greece were swallowed up
by some earthquake, and ceased to be a nation, there would still be the
Greek Unto whom the gospel would be foolishness. I shall simply
introduce the Jew and the Greek; and let them speak a moment to you, in
order that you may see the gentlemen who represent you; the
representative men; the persons who stand for many of you, who as yet are
not called by divine grace.
The first is the Jew; to him the gospel is a stumblingblock. A respectable
man the Jew was in his day; all formal religion was concentrated in his
person; he went up to the temple very devoutly; he tithed all he had, even
to the mint and the cummin. You would see him fasting twice in the week,
with a face all marked with sadness and sorrow. If you looked at him, he
had the law between his eyes; there was the phylactery, and the borders of
his garments of amazing width, that he might never be supposed to be a
Gentile dog; that no one might ever conceive that he was not a Hebrew of
pure descent. He had a holy ancestry; he came of a pious family; a right
good man was he. He could not endure those Sadducees at all, who had no
religion. He was thoroughly a religious man; he stood up for his
synagogue; he would not have that temple on Mount Gerizim; he could not
bear the Samaritans, he had no dealings with them; he was a religionist of
the first order, a man of the very finest kind; a specimen of a man who is a
moralist, and who loves the ceremonies of the law. Accordingly, when he
heard about Christ, he asked who Christ was. “The Son of a carpenter.”
“Ah!” “The son of a carpenter, and his mother’s name was Mary, and his
father’s name Joseph.” “That of itself is presumption enough,” said he,
“positive proof, in fact, that he cannot be the Messiah. And what does he
say?” “Why he says, ‘Woe unto you, Scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites.’”
“That won’t do.” “Moreover,” he says, “‘It is not by the works of the flesh
that any man can enter into the kingdom of heaven.’” The Jew tied a
double knot in his phylactery at once; he thought he would have the
borders of his garment made twice as broad. He bow to the Nazarine! No,
no; and if so much as a disciple crossed the street, he thought the place
polluted, and would not tread in his steps. Do you think he would give up
his old father’s religion-the religion which came from Mount Sinai-that old
religion that lay in the ark and the overshadowing cherubim? He give that
up? not he. A vile impostor-that is all Christ was in his eyes. He thought
so. “A stumblingblock to me! I cannot hear about it! I will not listen to it.”
Accordingly, he turned a deaf ear to all the Preacher’s eloquence and
listened not at all. Farewell, old Jew. Thou sleepest with thy fathers, and
thy generation is a wandering race, still walking the earth. Farewell, I have
done with thee. Alas! poor wretch, that Christ who was thy stumbling
block, shall be thy Judge, and on thy head shall be that loud curse: “His
blood be on us and on our children.”
But I am going to find out Mr. Jew
here in Exeter Hall- persons who answer to his description-to whom Jesus
Christ is a stumblingblock. Let me introduce you to yourselves, some of
you. You were of a pious family too, were you not? Yes. And you have a
religion which you love- you love it so far as the chrysalis of it goes, the
outside, the covering, the husk. You would not have one rubric altered,
nor one of those dear old arches taken down, nor the stained glass
removed for all the world; and any man who should say a word against
such things, you would set down as a heretic at once. Or, perhaps you do
not go to such a place of worship, but you love some plain old meetinghouse,
where your forefathers worshipped, called a dissenting chapel.
Ah; it is a beautiful plain place; you love it, you love its ordinances, you love its exterior; and if anyone spoke against the place, how vexed you would feel.
You think that what they do there, they ought to do everywhere; in fact
your church is a model one; the place where you go, is exactly the sort of
place for everybody; and if I were to ask you why you hope to go to
heaven, you would, perhaps, say, “Because I am a Baptist,” or, “Because I
am an Episcopalian,” or whatever other sect you belong to. There is
yourself; I know Jesus Christ will be to you a stumblingblock. If I come
and tell you that all your going to the house of God is good for nothing; if I
tell you that all those many times you have been singing and praying, all
pass for nothing in the sight of God, because you are a hypocrite and a
formalist. If I tell you that your heart is not right with God, and that unless
it is so, all the external is good for nothing, I know what you will say — “I
shan’t hear that young man again.” It is a stumblingblock. If you had
stepped in anywhere where you had heard formalism exalted; if you had
been told “this must you do, and this other must you do, and then you will
be saved,” you would highly approve of it. But how many are there
externally religious, with whose characters you could find no fault, but who
have never had the regenerating influence of the Holy Ghost; who never
were made to lie prostrate on their face before Calvary’s cross; who never
turned a wishful eye to yonder Savior crucified; who never put their trust
in him that was slain for the sons of men. They love a superficial religion,
but when a man talks deeper than that, they set it down for cant. You may
love all that is external about religion, just as you may love a man for his
clothes-caring nothing for the man himself. If so, I know you are one of
those who reject the gospel.
You will hear me preach; and while I speak
about the externals, you will hear me with attention; whilst I plead for
morality, and argue against drunkenness, or show the heinousness of
Sabbath-breaking, all well and good; but if once I say, “Except ye be
converted, and become as little children, ye can in no wise enter into the
kingdom of God;” if once I tell you that you must be elected of God-that
you must be purchased with the Savior’s blood-that you must be converted
by the Holy Ghost-you say, “He is a fanatic! Away with him, away with
him! We do not want to hear that any more.” Christ crucified, is to the
Jew-the ceremonialist-a stumblingblock.
But there is another specimen of this Jew to be found. He is thoroughly
orthodox in his sentiments. As for forms and ceremonies, he thinks nothing
about them. He goes to a place of worship where he learns sound doctrine.
He will hear nothing but what is true. He likes that we should have good
works and morality. He is a good man, and no man can find fault with him.
Here he is, regular in his Sunday pew. In the market he walks before men
in all honesty-so you would imagine. Ask him about any doctrine, and he
can give you a disquisition upon it. In fact, he could write a treatise upon
anything in the Bible, and a great many things besides. He knows almost
everything; and here, up in this dark attic of the head, his religion has taken
up its abode; he has a best parlour down in his heart, but his religion never
goes there-that is shut against it. He has money in there-mammon,
worldliness; or he has something else-self-love, pride. Perhaps he loves to
hear experimental preaching; he admires it all; in fact, he loves anything
that is sound. But then he has not any sound in himself: or rather, it is all
sound and there is no substance. He likes to hear true doctrine; but it never
penetrates his inner man. You never see him weep. Preach to him about
Christ crucified, a glorious subject, and you never see a tear roll down his
cheek; tell him of the mighty influence of the Holy Ghost-he admires you
for it, but he never had the hand of the Holy Spirit on his soul; tell him
about communion with God, plunging into Godhead’s deepest sea, and
being lost in its immensity-the man loves to hear, but he never experiences,
he has never communed with Christ and accordingly when once you begin
to strike home, when you lay him on the table, take out your dissecting
knife, begin to cut him up, and show him his own heart, let him see what it
is by nature, and what it must become by grace -the man starts, he cannot
stand that; he wants none of that-Christ received in the heart and accepted.
Albeit, that he loves it enough in the head, ‘tis to him a stumblingblock,
and he casts it away. Do you see yourselves here my friends? See
yourselves as others see you? See yourselves as God sees you? For so it is,
here be many to whom Christ is as much a stumblingblock now as ever he
was.
O ye formalists! I speak to you; O ye who have the nutshell, but abhor
the kernel; O ye who like the trappings and the dress; but care not for that
fair virgin who is clothed therewith: O ye who admire the paint and the
tinsel, but abhor the solid gold, I speak to you; I ask you, does your
religion give you solid comfort? Can you stare death in the face with it, and
say, “I know that my Redeemer liveth?” Can you close your eyes at night,
singing as your vesper song-
“I to the end must endure, Can you bless God for affliction; Can you plunge in accoutred as ye are,
and swim through all the floods of trial? Can you march triumphant
through the lion’s den, laugh at affliction, and bid defiance to hell? Can
you? No! Your gospel is an effeminate thing; a thing of words and sounds,
and not of power. Cast it from you, I beseech you: it is not worth your
keeping; and when you come before the throne of God, you will find it will
fail you, and fail you so that you shall never find another; for lost, ruined,
destroyed, ye shall find that Christ who is now skandalon, “a
stumblingblock,” will be your Judge.
I have found out the Jew, and I have now to discover the Greek. He is a
person of quite a different exterior to the Jew. As to the phylactery, to him
it is all rubbish; and as to the broad-hemmed garment, he despises it. He
does not care for the forms of religion; he has an intense aversion, in fact,
to broadbrimmed hats, or to everything which looks like outward show. He
appreciates eloquence; he admires a smart saying; he loves a quaint
expression; he likes to read the last new book; he is a Greek, and to him
the gospel is foolishness. The Greek is a gentleman found in most places
now-a-days: manufactured sometimes in colleges, constantly made in
schools, produced everywhere. He is on the exchange; in the market; he
keeps a shop; rides in a carriage; he is a noble, a gentleman; he is
everywhere; even in court. He is thoroughly wise. Ask him anything, and
he knows it. Ask for a quotation from any of the old poets, or any one else,
and he can give it you. If you are a Mahommedan, and plead the claims of
your religion, he will hear you very patiently. But if you are a Christian,
and talk to him of Jesus Christ, “Stop your cant,” he says, “I don’t want to
hear anything about that.” This Grecian gentleman believes all philosophy
except the true one; he studies all wisdom except the wisdom of God; he
seeks all learning except spiritual learning; he loves everything except that
which God approves; he likes everything which man makes, and nothing
which comes from God; it is foolishness to him, confounded foolishness.
You have only to discourse about one doctrine in the Bible, and he shuts
his ears; he wishes no longer for your company; it is foolishness. I have met
this gentleman a great many times. Once when I saw him, he told me he did
not believe in any religion at all; and when I said I did, and had a hope that
when I died I should go to heaven, he said he dared say it was very
comfortable, but he did not believe in religion, and that he was sure it was
best to live as nature dictated. Another time he spoke well of all religions,
and believed they were very good in their place, and all true; and he had no
doubt that if a man were sincere in any kind of religion, he would be all
right at last. I told him I did not think so, and that I believed there was but
one religion revealed of God-the religion of God’s elect, the religion which
is the gift of Jesus.
He then said I was a bigot, and wished me good morning. It was to him
foolishness. He had nothing to do with me at all. He either liked no
religion, or every religion. Another time I held him by the coat button, and
I discussed with him a little about faith. He said, “It is all very well, I
believe that is true Protestant doctrine.” But presently I said something
about election, and he said, “I don’t like that; many people have preached
that and turned it to bad account.” I then hinted something about free
grace, but that he could not endure, it was to him foolishness. He was a
polished Greek, and thought that if he were not chosen, he ought to be. He
never liked that passage- “God hath chosen the foolish things of this world
to confound the wise, and the things which are not, to bring to nought
things that are.” He thought it was very discreditable to the Bible; and
when the book was revised, he had no doubt it would be cut out. To such a
man-for he is here this morning, very likely come to hear this reed shaken
of the wind-I have to say this: Ah! thou wise man, full of worldly wisdom;
thy wisdom will stand thee here, but what wilt thou do in the swellings of
Jordan? Philosophy may do well for thee to lean upon whilst thou walkest
through this world; but the river is deep, and thou wilt want something
more than that. If thou hast not the arm of the Most High to hold thee up
in the flood and cheer thee with promises, thou wilt sink, man; with all thy
philosophy, thou wilt sink; with all thy learning, thou shalt sink, and be
washed into that awful ocean of eternal torment, where thou shalt be for
ever. Ah! Greeks, it may be foolishness to you, but ye shall see the Man
your Judge, and then ye shall rue the day that e’er ye said that God’s
gospel was foolishness.
II. Having spoken thus far upon the gospel rejected, I shall now briefly
speak upon the GOSPEL TRIUMPHANT. “Unto us who are called, both Jews
and Greeks, it is the power of God, and the wisdom of God.” Yonder man
rejects the gospel, despises grace, and laughs at it as a delusion. Here is
another men who laughed at it too; but God will fetch him down upon his
knees. Christ shall not die for nothing. The Holy Ghost shall not strive in
vain. God hath said, “My word shall not return unto me void, but it shall
accomplish that which I please, and it shall prosper in the thing whereto I
sent it.” “He shall see of the travail of his soul, and shall be abundantly
satisfied.” If one sinner is not saved, another shall be. The Jew and the
Greek shall never depopulate heaven. The choirs of glory shall not lose a
single songster by all the opposition of Jews and Greeks; for God hath said
it; some shall be called; some shall be saved; some shall be rescued.
“Perish the virtue, as it ought, abhorred, If the righteous and good are not saved, if they reject the gospel, there are
others who are to be called, others who shall be rescued, for Christ will not
lose the merits of his agonies, or the purchase of his blood.
“Unto us who are called” I received a note this week asking me to explain
that word “called;” because in one passage it says, “Many are called but
few are chosen,” while in another it appears that all who are called must be
chosen. Now, let me observe that there are two calls. As my old friend
John Bunyan says, “The hen has two calls, the common cluck, which she
gives daily and hourly, and the special one which she means for her little
chickens.” So there is a general call, a call made to every man; every man
hears it. Many are called by it; you are all called this morning in that sense;
but very few are chosen. The other is a special call, the children’s call. You
know how the bell sounds over the workshop to call the men to work-that
is a general call. A father goes to the door and calls out. “John, it is dinnertime?”-
that is the special call.
Many are called with the general call, but
they are not chosen; the special call is for the children only, and that is
what is meant in the text, “Unto us who are called, both Jews and Greeks,
Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God.” That call is always a
special one. While I stand here and call men, nobody comes; while I preach
to sinners universally, no good is done; it is like the sheet lightning you
sometimes see on the summer’s evening, beautiful, grand, but who have
ever heard of anything being struck by it? But the special call is the forked
flash from heaven; it strikes somewhere, it is the arrow sent in between the
joints of the harness. The call which saves, is like that of Jesus, when he
said, “Mary,” and she said unto him, “Rabboni.” Do you know anything
about that special call my beloved? Did Jesus ever call you by name? Canst
thou recollect the hour when he whispered thy name in thine ear, when he
said, “Come to me?” If so, you will grant the truth of what I am going to
say next about it,-that it is an effectual call. There is no resisting it. When
God calls with his special call, there is no standing out. Ah! I know I
laughed at religion; I despised, I abhorred it; but that call! Oh! I would not
come. But God said, “Thou shalt come. All that the Father giveth to me
shall come.” “Lord, I will not.” “But thou shalt,” said God. And I have
gone up to God’s house sometimes almost with a resolution that I would
not listen, but listen I must. Oh! how the word came into my soul! Was
there a power of resistance? No; I was thrown down; each bone seemed to
be broken; I was saved by effectual grace. I appeal to your experience, my
friends. When God took you in hand, could you withstand him? You stood
against your minister times enough. Sickness did not break you down;
disease did not bring you to God’s feet; eloquence did not convince you;
but when God put his hand to the work, ah! then what a change; like Saul,
with his horses going to Damascus, that voice from heaven said, “I am
Jesus whom thou persecutest. Saul, Saul, why persecutes thou me?” There
was no going further then. That was an effectual call Like that, again,
which Jesus gave to Zaccheus, when he was up in the tree: stepping under
the tree, he said, “Zaccheus, come down, to-day I must abide at thy
house.” Zaccheus, was taken in the net, he heard his own name; the call
sank into his soul; he could not stop up in the tree, for an Almighty impulse
drew him down.
And I could tell you some singular instances of persons
going to the house of God and having their characters described, limned
out to perfection, so that they have said, “He is painting me, he is painting
me.” Just as I might say to that young man here who stole his master’s
gloves yesterday, that Jesus calls him to repentance. It may be that there is
such a person here; and when the call comes to a peculiar character, it
generally comes with a special power. God gives his ministers a brush, and
shows them how to use it in painting life-like portraits, and thus the sinner
hears the special call. I cannot give the special call; God alone can give it,
and I leave it with him. Some must be called. Jew and Greek may laugh,
but still there are some who are called, both Jews and Greeks.
Then to close up this second point, it is a great mercy that many a Jew has
been made to drop his self-righteousness; many a legalist has been made to
drop his legalism and come to Christ, many a Greek has bowed his genius
at the throne of God’s gospel. We have a few such. As Cowper says:
“We boast some rich ones whom the gospel sways, |