Sovereign Grace & Man's Responsibility
by
C. H. SPURGEON
August 1, 1858
(1834-1892)
"But Esaias is very bold, and saith, I was found of them that
sought me not; I was made manifest unto them that asked not after
me. But to Israel he saith, all day long I have stretched forth my
hands unto a disobedient and gainsaying people."--Romans
10:20-21.
Doubtless these words primarily refer to the casting away of the
Jews, and to the choosing of the Gentiles. The Gentiles were a
people who sought not after God, but lived in idolatry;
nevertheless, Jehovah was pleased in these latter times to send the
gospel of his grace to them: while the Jews who had long enjoyed the
privileges of the Word of God, on account of their disobedience and
rebellion were cast away. I believe, however, that while this is the
primary object of the words of our text, yet, as Calvin says, the
truth taught in the text is a type of a universal fact. As God did
choose the people who knew him not, so hath he chosen, in the
abundance of his grace, to manifest his salvation to men who are out
of the way; while, on the other hand, the men who are lost, after
having heard the Word, are lost because of their wilful sin; for God
doth all the day long "stretch forth his hands unto a disobedient
and gainsaying people."
The system of truth is not one straight line, but two. No man will
ever get a right view of the gospel until he knows how to look at
the two lines at once. I am taught in one book to believe that what
I sow I shall reap: I am taught in another place, that "it is not of
him that willeth nor of him that runneth, but of God that showeth
mercy." I see in one place, God presiding over all in providence;
and yet I see, and I cannot help seeing, that man acts as he
pleases, and that God has left his actions to his own will, in a
great measure. Now, if I were to declare that man was so free to
act, that there was no precedence of God over his actions, I should
be driven very near to Atheism; and if, on the other hand, I declare
that God so overrules all things, as that man is not free enough to
be responsible, I am driven at once into Antinomianism. or fatalism.
That God predestines, and that man is responsible, are two things
that few can see. They are believed to be inconsistent and
contradictory; but they are not. It is just the fault of our weak
judgment. Two truths cannot be contradictory to each other. If,
then, I find taught in one place that everything is fore-ordained,
that is true; and if I find in another place that man is responsible
for all his actions, that is true; and it is my folly that leads me
to imagine that two truths can ever contradict each other. These two
truths, I do not believe, can ever be welded into one upon any human
anvil, but one they shall be in eternity: they are two lines that
are so nearly parallel, that the mind that shall pursue them
farthest, will never discover that they converge; but they do
converge, and they will meet somewhere in eternity, close to the
throne of God, whence all truth doth spring.
Now, this morning I am about to consider the two doctrines. In the
20th verse, we have taught us the doctrines of sovereign grace--"But
Esaias is very bold, and saith, I was found of them that sought me
not; I was made manifest unto them that asked not after me." In the
next verse, we have the doctrine of man's guilt in rejecting God.
"To Israel he saith, all day long I have stretched forth my hands
unto a disobedient and gainsaying people."
I. First, then, DIVINE SOVEREIGNTY AS EXEMPLIFIED IN SALVATION. If
any man be saved, he is saved by Divine grace, and by Divine grace
alone; and the reason of his salvation is not to be found in him,
but in God. We are not saved as the result of anything that we do or
that we will; but we will and do as the result of God's good
pleasure, and the work of his grace in our hearts. No sinner can
prevent God; that is, he cannot go before him, cannot anticipate
him; God is always first in the matter of salvation. He is before
our convictions, before our desires, before our fears, before our
hopes. All that is good or ever will be good in us, is preceded by
the grace of God, and is the effect of a Divine cause within.
Now in speaking of God's gracious acts of salvation, this morning, I
notice first, that they are entirely unmerited. You will see that
the people here mentioned certainly did not merit God's grace. They
found him, but they never sought for him; he was made manifest to
them, but they never asked for him. There never was a man saved yet
who merited it. Ask all the saints of God, and they will tell you
that their former life was spent in the lusts of the flesh; that in
the days of their ignorance, they revolted against God and turned
back from his ways, that when they were invited to come to him they
despised the invitation, and, when warned, cast the warning behind
their back. They will tell you that their being drawn by God, was
not the result of any merit before conversion; for some of them, so
far from having any merit, were the very vilest of the vile: they
plunged into the very kennel of sin; they were not ashamed of all
the things of which it would be a shame for us to speak; they were
ringleaders in crime, very princes in the ranks of the enemy; and
yet sovereign grace came to them, and they were brought to know the
Lord. They will tell you that it was not the result of anything good
in their disposition, for although they trust that there is now
something excellent implanted in them, yet in the days of their
flesh they could see no one quality which was not perverted to the
service of Satan. Ask them whether they think they were chosen of
God because of their courage; they will tell you, no; if they had
courage it was defaced, for they were courageous to do evil.
Question them whether they were chosen of God because of their
talent; they will tell you, no; they had that talent, but they
prostituted it to the service of Satan. Question them whether they
were chosen because of the openness and generosity of their
disposition; they will tell you that that very openness of temper,
and that very generosity of disposition, led them to plunge deeper
into the depths of sin, than they otherwise would have done, for
they were "hail fellow, well met," with every evil man, and ready to
drink and join every jovial party which should come in their way.
There was in them no reason whatever why God should
have mercy upon them, and the wonder to them is that he did not cut
them down in the midst of their sins, blot out their names from the
book of life, and sweep them into the gulf where the fire burneth.
that shall devour the wicked. But some have said that God chooses
his people because he foresees that after he chooses them, they will
do this, that, and the other, which shall be meritorious and
excellent. Refer again to the people of God, and they will tell you
that since their conversion they have had much to weep over.
Although they can rejoice that God has begun the good work in them,
they often tremble lest it should not be God's work at all. They
will tell you that if they are abundant in faith yet there are times
when they are superabundant in unbelief; that if sometimes they are
full of works of holiness, yet there are times when they weep many
tears to think that those very acts of holiness were stained with
sin. The Christian will tell you that he weeps over his very tears;
he feels that there is filth even in the best of desires; that he
has to pray to God to forgive his prayers, for there is sin in the
midst of his supplications, and that he has to sprinkle even his
best offerings with the atoning blood, for he never else can bring
an offering without spot or blemish. You shall appeal to the
brightest saint, to the man whose presence in the midst of society
is like the presence of an angel, and he will tell you that he is
still ashamed of himself. "Ah!" he will say, "you may praise me, but
I cannot praise myself, you speak well of me, you applaud me, but if
you knew my heart you would see abundant reason to think of me as a
poor sinner saved by grace, who hath nothing whereof to glory, and
must bow his head and confess his iniquities in the sight of God."
Grace, then is entirely unmerited.
Again, the grace of God is sovereign. By that word we mean that God
has an absolute right to give that grace where he chooses, and to
withhold it when he pleases. He is not bound to give it to any man,
much less to all men; and if he chooses to give it to one man and
not to another, his answer is, "Is thine eye evil because mine eye
is good? Can I not do as I will with mine own? I will have mercy on
whom I will have mercy." Now, I want you to notice the sovereignty
of Divine grace as illustrated in the text: "I was found of them
that sought me not, I was made manifest to them that asked not after
thee." You would imagine that if God gave his grace to any he would
wait until he found them earnestly seeking him. You would imagine
that God in the highest heavens would say, "I have mercies, but I
will leave men alone, and when they feel their need of these mercies
and seek me diligently with their whole heart, day and night, with
tears, and vows, and supplications, then will I bless them, but not
before." But, beloved, God saith no such thing. It is true he doth
bless them that cry unto him, but he blesses them before they cry,
for their cries are not their own cries, but cries which he has put
into their lips; their desires are not of their own growth, but
desires which he has cast like good seed into the soil of their
hearts. God saves the men that do not seek him. Oh, wonder of
wonders! It is mercy indeed when God saves a seeker; but how much
greater mercy when he seeks the lost himself! Mark the parable of
Jesus Christ concerning the lost sheep; it does not run thus: "A
certain man had a hundred sheep, and one of them did go astray. And
he tarried at home, and lo, the sheep came back, and he received it
joyfully and said to his friends, rejoice, for the sheep that I have
lost is come back." No; he went after the sheep: it never would have
come after him; it would have wandered farther and farther away. He
went after it; over hills of difficulty, down valleys of despondency
he pursued its wandering feet, and at last he laid hold of it; he
did not drive it before him, he did not lead it, but he carried it
himself all the way, and when he brought it home he did not say, the
sheep is come back," but, "I have found the sheep which was lost."
Men do not seek God first; God seeks them first; and if any of you
are seeking him to-day it is because he has first sought you. If you
are desiring him he desired you first, and your good desires and
earnest seeking will not be the cause of your salvation, but the
effects of previous grace given to you. "Well," says another, "I
should have thought that although the Saviour might not require an
earnest seeking and sighing and groaning, and a continuous
searching, after him, yet certainly he would have desired and
demanded that every man, before he had grace, should ask for it."
That, indeed, beloved, seems natural, and God will give grace to
them that ask for it; but mark, the text says that he was manifested
"to them that asked not for him." That is to say, before we ask, God
gives us grace. The only reason why any man ever begins to pray is
because God has put previous grace in his heart which leads him to
pray. I remember, when I was converted to God, I was an Arminian
thoroughly. I thought I had begun the good work myself, and I used
sometimes to sit down and think, "Well, I sought the Lord four years
before I found him," and I think I began to compliment myself upon
the fact that I had perseveringly entreated of him in the midst of
much discouragement. But one day the thought struck me, "How was it
you came to seek God?" and in an instant the answer came from my
soul, "Why, because he led me to do it; he must first have shown me
my need of him, or else I should never have sought him; he must have
shown me his preciousness, or I never should have thought him worth
seeking;" and at once I saw the doctrines of grace as clear as
possible. God must begin. Nature can never rise above itself. You
put water into a reservoir, and it will rise as high as that, but no
higher if let alone. Now, it is not in human nature to seek the
Lord. Human nature is depraved, and therefore, there must be the
extraordinary pressure of the Holy Spirit put upon the heart to lead
us first to ask for mercy. But mark, we do not know an thing about
that, while the Spirit is operating; we find that out afterwards. We
ask as much as if we were asking all of ourselves. Our business is
to seek the Lord as if there were no Holy Spirit at all. But
although we do not know it, there must always be a previous motion
of the Spirit in our heart, before there will be a motion of our
heart towards him.
"No sinner can be beforehand with thee,
Thy grace is most sovereign, most rich, and most free."
Let me give you an illustration. You see that man on his horse
surrounded by a body of troopers. How proud he is, and how he reins
up his horse with conscious dignity. Sir, what have you got there?
What are those despatches you treasure up with so much care? "Oh,
sir, I have that in my hand that will vex the church of God in
Damascus. I have dragged the fellows into the synagogue, both men
and women; I have scourged them, and compelled them to blaspheme;
and I have this commission from the high priest to drag them to
Jerusalem, that I may put them to death." Saul! Saul! have you no
love for Christ? "Love to him! No. When they stoned Stephen, I took
care of the witnesses' clothes, and I rejoiced to do it. I wish I
had had the crucifying of their Master, for I hate them with perfect
hatred, and I breathe out threatenings and slaughter against them."
What do you say of this man? If he be saved, will you not grant that
it must be some Divine sovereignty that converts him? Look at poor
Pilate, how much there was that was hopeful in him. He was willing
to save the Master, but he feared and trembled. If we had had our
choice, we should have said, "Lord, save Pilate, he does not want to
kill Christ, he labours to let him escape; but slay the bloodthirsty
Saul, he is, the very chief of sinners." "No," says God, "I will do
as I will with mine own." The heavens open, and the brightness of
glory descends--brighter than the noon-day sun. Stunned with the
light he falls to the ground, and a voice is heard addressing him,
"Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? it is hard for thee to kick
against the pricks." He rises up; God appears to him: "Lo, I have
made thee a chosen vessel to bear my name among the Gentiles." Is
not that sovereignty--sovereign grace, without any previous seeking?
God was found of him that sought not for him; he manifested himself
to one that asked him not. Some will say, that was it miracle; but
it is one that is repeated every day in the week. I knew a man once,
who had not been to the house of God for a long time; and one Sunday
morning, having been to market to buy a pair of ducks for his Sunday
dinner, he happened to see a house of God opened as he was passing
by. "Well," he thought, "I will hear what these fellows are up to."
He went inside; the hymn that was being sung struck his attention;
he listened to the sermon, forgot his ducks, discovered his own
character, went home, and threw himself upon his knees before God,
and after a short time it pleased God to give him joy and peace in
believing. That man had nothing in him to begin with, nothing that
could have led you to imagine he ever would be saved, but simply
because God would have it so, he struck the effectual blow of grace,
and the man was brought to himself. But we are, each of us who are
saved, the very people who are the best illustrations of the matter.
To this day, my wonder is, that ever the Lord should have chosen
thee. I cannot make it out; and my only answer to the question is,
"Even so, Father, for so it seemed good in thy sight."
I have now, I think, stated the doctrine pretty plainly. Let me only
say a few words about it. Some people are very much afraid of this
truth. They say, "It is true, I dare say, but still you ought not to
preach it before a mixed assembly; it is very well for the comfort
of God's people, but it is to be very carefully handled, and not to
be publicly preached upon." Very well, sir, I leave you to settle
that matter with my Master. He gave me this great book to preach
from, and I cannot preach from anything else. If he has put anything
in it you think is not fit, go and complain to him, and not to me. I
am simply his servant, and if his errand that I am to tell is
objectionable, I cannot help it. If I send my servant to the door
with a message, and he delivers it faithfully, he does not deserve
to be scolded. Let me have the blame, not the servant. So I say;
blame my Master, and not me, for I do but proclaim his message.
"No," says one, "it is not to be preached." But it is to be
preached. Every word of God is given by inspiration, and it is
profitable for some good end. Does not the Bible say so? Let me tell
you, the reason why many of our churches are declining is just
because this doctrine has not been preached. Wherever this doctrine
has been upheld. it has always been "Down with Popery." The first
reformers held this doctrine and preached it. Well said it Church of
England divine to some who railed at him, "Look at your own Luther.
Do you not consider him to be the teacher of the Church of England?
What Calvin and the other reformers taught is to be found in his
book upon the freedom of the will." Besides, we can point you to a
string of ministers from the beginning even until now. Talk of
apostolic succession! The man who preaches the doctrines of grace
has an apostolic succession indeed. Can we not trace our pedigree
through a whole line of men like Newton, and Whitfield, and Owen,
and Bunyan, straight away on till we come to Calvin, Luther, and
Zwingle; and then we can go back from them to Savonarola, to Jerome
of Prague, to Huss, and then back to Augustine, the mighty preacher
of Christianity; and from St. Augustine to Paul is but one step. We
need not be ashamed of our pedigree; although Calvinists are now
considered to be heterodox, we are and ever must be orthodox. It is
the old doctrine. Go and buy any puritanical book, and see if you
can find Arminianism in it. Search all the book stalls over, and see
if you can find one large folio book of olden times that anything in
it but the doctrine of the free grace of God. Let this once be
brought to bear upon the minds of men, and away go the doctrines of
penance and confession, away goes paying for the pardon of your sin.
If grace be free and sovereign in the hand of God, down goes the
doctrine of priestcraft, away go buying and selling indulgences and
such like things; they are swept to the four winds of heaven, and
the efficacy of good works is dashed in pieces like Dagon before the
ark of the Lord. "Well," says one, "I like the doctrine; still there
are very few that preach it, and those that do are very high." Very
likely; but I care little what anybody calls me. It signifies very
little what men call you. Suppose they call you a "hyper," that does
not make you anything wicked, does it? Suppose they call you an
Antinomian, that will not make you one. I must confess, however,
that there are some men who preach this doctrine who are doing ten
thousand times more harm than good, because they don't preach the
next doctrine I am going to proclaim, which is just as true. They
have this to be the sail. but they have not the other to be the
ballast. They can preach one side but not the other. They can go
along with the high doctrine, but they will not preach the whole of
the Word. Such men caricature the Word of God. And just let me say
here, that it is the custom of a certain body of Ultra-Calvinists,
to call those of us who teach that it is the duty of man to repent
and believe, "Mongrel Calvinists." If you hear any of them say so,
give them my most respectful compliments, and ask them whether they
ever read Calvin's works in their lives. Not that I care what Calvin
said or did not say; but ask them whether they, ever read his works;
and if they say "No," as they must say, for there are forty-eight
large volumes, you can tell them, that the man whom they call "a
Mongrel Calvinist," though he has not read them all, has read a very
good share of them, and knows their spirit; and he knows that he
preaches substantially what Calvin preached--that every doctrine he
preaches may be found in Calvin's Commentaries on some part of
Scripture or other. We are TRUE Calvinists, however. Calvin is
nobody to us. Jesus Christ and him crucified, and the old fashioned
Bible, are our standards. Beloved, let us take God's Word as it
stands. If we find high doctrine there, let it be high; if we find
low doctrine, let it be low; let us set up no other standard than
the Bible affords.
II. Now then for the second point. "There now," says my ultra
friend, "he is going to contradict himself." No, my friend, I am
not, I am only going to contradict you. The second point is MAN'S
RESPONSIBILITY. "But to Israel he saith, All day long I have
stretched forth my hands unto a disobedient and gainsaying people."
Now, these people whom God had cast away had been wooed, had been
sought, had been entreated to be saved; but they would not, and
inasmuch as they were not saved, it was the effect of their
disobedience and their gainsaying. That lies clearly enough in the
text. When God sent the prophets to Israel, and stretched forth his
hands, what was it for? What did he wish, them to come to him for?
Why, to be saved. "No," says one, "it was for temporal mercies." Not
so, my friend; the verse before is concerning spiritual mercies, and
so is this one, for they refer to the same thing. Now, was God
sincere in his offer? God forgive the man that dares to say he was
not. God is undoubtedly sincere in every act he did. He sent his
prophets, he entreated the people of Israel to lay hold on spiritual
things, but they would not, and though he stretched out his hands
all the day long, yet they were "a disobedient and gainsaying
people," and would not have his love; and on their head rests their
blood.
Now let me notice the wooing of God and of what sort it is. First,
it was the most affectionate wooing in the world. Lost sinners who
sit under the sound of the gospel are not lost for the want of the
most affectionate invitation. God says he stretched out his hands.
You know what that means. You have seen the child who is disobedient
and will not come to his father. The father puts out his hands, and
says, "Come, my child, come; I am ready to forgive you." The tear is
in his eye, and his bowels move with compassion, and he says, "Come,
come." God says this is what he did--"he stretched out his hands."
That is what he has done to some of you. You that are not saved
to-day are without excuse, for God stretched out his hands to you,
and he said, "Come, come." Long have you sat beneath the sound of
the ministry, and it has been a faithful one, I trust, and a weeping
one. Your minister has not forgotten to pray for your souls in
secret or to weep over you when no eye saw him, and he has
endeavoured to persuade you as an ambassador from God. God is my
witness, I have sometimes stood in this pulpit, and I could not have
pleaded harder for my own life than I have pleaded with you. In
Christ's name, I have cried, "Come unto me all ye that labour and
are heavy laden, and I will give you rest." I have wept over you as
the Saviour did, and used his words on his behalf, "O Jerusalem,
Jerusalem, how often would I have gathered thy children together as
a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not." And
you know that your conscience has often been touched; you have often
been moved; you could not resist it. God was so kind to you; he
invited you so affectionately by the Word; he dealt so gently with
you by his providence; his hands were stretched out, and you could
hear his voice speaking in your ears, "Come unto me, come: come now,
let us reason together; though your sins be as scarlet they shall be
as wool; though they be red like crimson they shall be whiter than
snow." You have heard him cry, "Ho every one that thirsteth, come ye
to the waters." You have heard him say with all the affection of a
father's heart, "Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous
man his thoughts, and let him turn unto the Lord, and he will have
mercy upon him, and unto our God, for he will abundantly pardon."
Oh! God does plead with men that they would be saved, and this day
he says to every one of you, "Repent, and be converted for the
remission of your sins. Turn ye unto me. Thus saith the Lord of
hosts; consider your ways." And with love divine he woos you as a
father woos his child, putting out his hands and crying, "Come unto
me, come unto me." "No," says one strong-doctrine man, "God never
invites all men to himself; he invites none but certain characters."
Stop, sir, that is all you know about it. Did you ever read that
parable where it is said, My oxen and my fatlings are killed, and
all things are ready; come unto the marriage." And they that were
bidden would not come. And did you never read that they all began to
make excuse, and that they were punished because they did not accept
the invitations. Now, if the invitation is not to be made to
anybody, but to the man who will accept it, how can that parable be
true? The fact is, the oxen and fatlings are killed; the wedding
feast is ready, and the trumpet sounds, "Ho every one that
thirsteth, come and eat, come and drink." Here are the provisions
spread, here is an all-sufficiency; the invitation is free; it is a
great invitation. "Whosoever will, let him come and take of the
water of life freely." And that invitation is couched in tender
words, "Come to me, my child, come to me." "All day long I have
stretched forth my hands."
And note again, this invitation was very frequent. The words, "all
the day long," may be translated "daily"--"Daily have I stretched
forth my hands." Sinner, God has not called you once to come, and
then let you alone, but every day has he been at you; every day has
conscience spoken to you; every day has providence warned you, and
every Sabbath has the Word of God wooed you. Oh! how much some of
you will have to account for at God's great bar! I cannot now read
your characters, but I know there are some of you who will have a
terrible account at last. All the day long has God been wooing you.
From the first dawn of your life, he wooed you through your mother,
and she used to put your little hands together, and teach you to
say,
"Gentle Jesus meek and mild,
Look upon a little child,
Pity my simplicity;
Suffer me to come to thee."
And in your boyhood God was still stretching out his hands after
you. How your Sunday-school teacher endeavoured to bring you to the
Saviour! How often your youthful heart was affected; but you put all
that away, and you are still untouched by it. How often did your
mother speak to you, and your father warn you; and you have
forgotten the prayer in that bed-room when you were sick, when your
mother kissed your burning forehead, knelt down and prayed to God to
spare your life, and then added that prayer, "Lord, save my boy's
soul!" And you recollect the Bible she gave you, when you first went
out apprentice, and the prayer she wrote on that yellow front leaf.
When she gave it, you did not perhaps know, but you may now; how
earnestly she longed after you, that you might be formed anew in
Christ Jesus; how she followed you with her prayers, and how she
entreated with her God for you. And you have not yet surely
forgotten how many Sabbaths you have spent, and how many times you
have been warned. Why you have had waggon-loads of sermons wasted on
you. A hundred and four sermons you have heard every year, and some
of you more, and yet you are still just what you were.
But sinners, sermon hearing is an awful thing unless it is blessed
to our souls. If God has kept on stretching out his hands every day
and all the day, it will be a hard thing for you when you shall be
justly condemned not only for your breaches of the law, but for your
wilful rejection of the gospel. It is probable that God will keep on
stretching out his hands to you until your hairs grow grey, still
continually inviting you: and perhaps when you are nearing death he
will still say, "Come unto me, come unto me." But if you still
persist in hardening your heart, if still you reject Christ, I
beseech you let nothing make you imagine that you shall go
unpunished. Oh! I do tremble sometimes when I think of that class of
ministers who tell sinners that they are not guilty if they do not
seek the Saviour. How they shall be found innocent at God's great
day I do not know. It seems to be a fearful thing that they should
be lulling poor souls into sleep by telling them it is not their
duty to seek Christ and repent, but that they may do as they like
about that, and that when they perish they will be none the more
guilty for having heard the Word. My Master did not say that.
Remember how he said, "And thou, Capernaum, which art exalted unto
heaven, shalt be brought down to hell: for if the mighty works,
which have been done in thee, had been done in Sodom, it would have
remained until this day. But I say unto you, That it shall be more
tolerable for the land of Sodom in the day of judgment, than for
thee." Jesus did not talk thus when he spoke to Chorazin and
Bethsaida; for he said, "Woe unto thee, Chorazin! woe unto thee,
Bethsaida! for if the mighty works, which were done in you, had been
done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long ago in
sackcloth and ashes. But I say unto you, It shall be more tolerable
for Tyre and Sidon at the day of judgment, than for you."
It
was not the way Paul preached. He did not tell sinners that there
was no guilt in despising the cross. Hear the apostle's words once
more: "For if the word spoken by angels was stedfast, and every
transgression and disobedience received a just recompence of reward,
how shall we escape, if we neglect so great salvation, which at the
first began to be spoken by the Lord, and was confirmed unto us by
them that heard him." Sinner, at the great day of God thou must give
an account for every warning thou hast ever had, for every time thou
hast read thy Bible, ay, and for every time thou hast neglected to
read it; for every Sunday when the house of God was open and thou
didst neglect to avail thyself of the opportunity of hearing the
Word, and for every time thou didst hear it and didst not improve
it. Ye who are careless hearers, are tying faggots for your own
burning for ever. Ye that hear and straightway forget, or hear with
levity, are digging for yourselves a pit into which ye must be cast.
Remember, no one will be responsible for your damnation but
yourself, at the last great day. God will not be responsible for it.
"As I live saith the Lord"--and that is a great oath--"I have no
pleasure in the death of him that dieth. but had rather that he
should turn unto me and live." God has done much for you. He sent
you his Gospel. You are not born in a heathen land; he has given you
the Book of Books; he has given you an enlightened conscience; and
if you perish under the sound of the ministry, you perish more
fearfully and terribly, than if you had perished anywhere else.
This doctrine is as much God's Word as the other. You ask me to
reconcile the two. I answer, they do not want any reconcilement; I
never tried to reconcile them to myself, because I could never see a
discrepancy. If you begin to put fifty or sixty quibbles to me, I
cannot give any answer. Both are true; no two truths can be
inconsistent with each other; and what you have to do is to believe
them both. With the first one, the saint has most to do. Let him
praise the free and sovereign grace of God, and bless his name. With
the second, the sinner has the most to do. O sinner, humble thyself
under the mighty hand of God, when thou thinkest of how often he
hath shown his love to thee, by bidding thee come to himself, and
yet how often thou hast spurned his Word and refused his mercy, and
turned a deaf ear to every invitation, and hast gone thy way to
rebel against a God of love, and violate the commands of him that
loved thee.
And now, how shall I conclude? My first exhortation shall be to
Christian people. My dear friends, I beseech you do not in any way
give yourselves lip to any system of faith apart from the Word of
God. The Bible, and the Bible alone, is the religion of Protestants;
I am the successor of the great and venerated Dr. Gill, whose
theology is almost universally received among the stronger
Calvinistic churches; but although I venerate his memory, and
believe his teachings, yet he is not my Rabbi. What you find in
God's Word is for you to believe and to receive. Never be frightened
at a doctrine; and above all, never be frightened at a name. Some
one said to me the other day, that he thought the truth lay
somewhere between the two extremes. He meant right, but I think he
was wrong, I do not think the truth lies between the two extremes,
but in them both. I believe the higher a man goes the better, when
he is preaching the matter of salvation. The reason why a man is
saved is grace, grace, grace; and you may go as high as you like
there. But when you come to the question as to why men are damned,
then the Arminian is far more right than the Antinomian. I care not
for any denomination or party, I am as high as Huntingdon upon the
matter of salvation, but question me about damnation, and you will
get a very different answer. By the grace of God I ask no man's
applause, I preach the Bible as I find it. Where we get wrong is
where the Calvinist begins to meddle with the question of damnation,
and interferes with the justice of God; or when the Arminian denies
the doctrine of grace.
My second exhortation is,--Sinners, I beseech every one of you who
are unconverted and ungodly, this morning to put away every form and
fashion of excuse that the devil would have you make concerning your
being unconverted. Remember, that all the teaching in the world can
never excuse you for being enemies to God by wicked works. When we
beseech you to be reconciled to him, it is because we know you will
never be in your proper place until you are reconciled. God has made
you; can it be right that you should disobey him? God feeds you
every day: can it be right that you should still live in
disobedience to him? Remember, when the heavens shall be on a blaze,
when Christ shall come to judge the earth in righteousness and his
people with equity, there will not be one excuse that you can make
which will be valid at the last great day. If you should attempt to
say, "Lord, I have never heard the word;" his answer would be, "Thou
didst hear it; thou heardest it plainly." "But Lord, I had an evil
will." "Out of thine own mouth will I condemn thee; thou hadst that
evil will, and I condemn thee for it. This is the condemnation, that
light is come into the world, and men love darkness rather than
light, because their deeds are evil." "But Lord," some will say, "I
was not predestinated." "What hadst thou to do with that? Thou
didst; do according to thine own will when thou didst rebel. Thou
wouldest not come unto me, and now I destroy thee for ever. Thou
hast broken my law--on thine own head be the guilt." If a sinner
could say at the great day, "Lord, I could not be saved anyhow his
torment in hell would be mitigated by that thought: but this shall
be the very edge of the sword, and the very burning of the fire"--Ye
knew your duty and ye did it not: ye trampled on everything that was
holy; ye neglected the Saviour, and how shall ye escape if ye
neglect so great salvation?"
Now, with regard to myself; you may some of you go away and say,
that I was Antinomian in the first part of the sermon and Arminian
at the end. I care not. I beg of you to search the Bible for
yourselves. To the law and to the testimony; if I speak not
according to this Word, it is because there is no light in me. I am
willing to come to that test. Have nothing to do with me where I
have nothing to do with Christ. Where I separate from the truth,
cast my words away. But if what I say be God's teaching, I charge
you, by him that sent me, give these things your thoughts, and turn
unto the Lord with all your hearts.