|
By Charles Spurgeon
"When I see the blood, I will pass over you."—Exodus 12:13.
God's people are always safe. "All the saints are in his
hand;" and the hand of God is a place for safety, as well as a place
of honour. Nothing can hurt the man who has made his refuge God.
"Thou hast given commandment to save me," said David; and every
believing child of God may say the same. Plague, famine, war,
tempest,—all these have received commandment of God to save his
people. Though the earth should rock beneath the feet of man, yet
the Christian, may stand fast, and though the heavens should be
rolled up, and the firmament should pass away like a scroll that is
burned by fervent heat, yet need not a Christian fear; God's people
shall be saved: if they cannot be saved under the heavens,
they shall be saved in the heavens; if there be no safety for them
in the time of trouble upon this solid earth, they shall be "caught
up together with the Lord in the air, and so shall they be ever with
the Lord," and ever safe.
Now, at the time of which this Book of Exodus speaks, Egypt was
exposed to a terrible peril. Jehovah himself was about to march
through the streets of all the cities of Egypt. It was not merely a
destroying angel, but Jehovah himself; for thus it is written, "I
will pass through the land of Egypt this night, and will smite all
the first-born in the land of Egypt, both man and beast." No one
less than I AM, the great God, had vowed to "cut Rahab" with the
sword of vengeance. Tremble, ye inhabitants of the earth, for God
has come down among you, provoked, incensed, and at last awakened
from his seeming sleep of patience. He has girded on his terrible
sword, and he has come to smite you. Quake for fear, all ye that
have sin within you, for when God walks through the streets, sword
in hand, will he not smite you all? But hark! the voice of covenant
mercy speaks, God's children are safe, even though an angry God be
in the streets. As they are safe from the rod of the wicked, so are
they safe from the sword of justice—always and ever safe; for there
was not a hair of the head of an Israelite that was so much as
touched; Jehovah kept them safe beneath his wings. While he did rend
his enemies like a lion, yet did he protect his children, every one
of them. But, beloved, while this is always true, that God's people
are safe, there is another fact that is equally true, namely, that
God's people are only safe through the blood. The reason why
God spares his people in the time of calamity is, because he sees
the blood-mark on their brow. What is the basis of that great truth,
that all things work together for good to them that love God? What
is the cause that all things so produce good to them, but this, that
they are bought with the precious blood of Christ? Therefore it is
that nothing can hurt them, because the blood is upon them,
and every evil thing must pass them by. It was so that night in
Egypt. God himself was abroad with his sword; but he spared them,
because he saw the blood-mark on the lintel and on the two sideposts.
And so it is with us. In the day when God in his fierce anger shall
come forth from his dwelling place, to affright the earth with
terrors and to condemn the wicked, we shall be secure, if covered
with the Saviour's righteousness, and sprinkled with his blood, we
are found in him.
Do I hear some one say, that I am now coming to an old subject? This
thought struck me when I was preparing for preaching, that I should
have to tell you an old story over again; and just as I was thinking
of that, happening to turn over a book, I met with an anecdote of
Judson the missionary to Burmah. He had passed through unheard-of
hardships, and had performed dangerous exploits for his Master. He
returned, after thirty years' absence, to America. "Announced to
address an assembly in a provincial town, and a vast concourse
having gathered from great distances to hear him, he rose at the
close of the usual service, and, as all eyes were fixed and every
year attent, he spoke for about fifteen minutes, with much pathos,
of the precious Saviour, of what he had done for us, and of what we
owed to him; and he sat down, visibly affected. "The people are very
much disappointed," said a friend to him on their way home; "they
wonder you did not talk of something else." "Why what did
they want?" he replied: "I presented, to the best of my ability, the
most interesting subject in the world." "But they wanted something
different—a story" "Well, I am sure I gave them a story—the most
thrilling one that can be conceived of." "But they had beard it
before. They wanted something new of a man who had just come from
the antipodes." "Then I am glad they have it to say, that a man
coming from the antipodes had nothing better to tell than the
wondrous story of the dying love of Jesus. My business is to preach
the gospel of Christ; and when I can speak at all, I dare not trifle
with my commission. When I looked upon those people to-day, and
remembering where I should next meet them, how could I stand up and
furnish food to vain curiosity—tickle their fancy with amusing
stories, however decently strung together on a thread of religion?
That is not what Christ meant by preaching the gospel. And then how
could I hereafter meet the fearful charge, 'I gave you one
opportunity to tell them of ME; you spent it in describing your own
adventures!'" So I thought. Well, if Judson told the old story after
he had been thirty years away, and could not find anything better, I
will just go back to this old subject, which is always new and
always fresh to us—the precious blood of Christ, by which we
are saved.
First, then, the blood; secondly, its efficacy;
thirdly, the one condition appended to it;—"When I see
the blood;" and fourthly, the practical lesson.
I. First, then, THE BLOOD ITSELF. In the case of the Israelites it
was the blood of the Paschal Lamb. In our case, beloved, it is the
blood of the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sins of the world.
1. The blood of which I have solemnly to speak this morning, is,
first of all, the blood of a divinely appointed victim. Jesus
Christ did not come into this world unappointed. He was sent here by
his Father. This indeed is one of the underlying ground-works of the
Christian's hope. We can rely upon Jesus Christ's acceptance by his
Father, because his Father ordained him to be our Saviour from
before the foundation of the world. Sinner! when I preach to thee
the blood of Christ this morning, I am preaching something that is
well pleasing to God; for God himself did choose Christ to be the
Redeemer; he himself set him apart from before the foundation of the
world, and he himself, even Jehovah the Father, did lay upon him the
iniquity of us all. The sacrifice of Christ is not brought to
you without warrant; it is not a something which Christ did
surreptitiously and in secret; it was written in the great decree
from all eternity, that he was the Lamb slain from before the
foundation of the world. As he himself said, "Lo I come; in the
volume of the book it is written of me, I delight to do thy will
O God." It is God's will that the blood of Jesus should be shed.
Jesus is God's chosen Saviour for men; and here, when addressing the
ungodly, here, I say, is one potent argument with them. Sinner! You
may trust in Christ, that he is able to save you from the wrath of
God, for God himself has appointed him to save.
2. Christ Jesus, too, like the lamb, was not only a divinely
appointed victim, but he was spotless. Had there been one sin
in Christ, he had not been capable of being our Saviour; but he was
without spot or blemish—without original sin, without any practical
transgression. In him was no sin, though he was "tempted in all
points like as we are." Here, again, is the reason why the blood is
able to save, because it is the blood of an innocent victim, a
victim the only reason for whose death lay in us, and not in
himself. When the poor innocent lamb was put to death, by the head
of the household of Egypt, I can imagine that thoughts like these
ran through his mind. "Ah" he would say, as he struck the knife into
the lamb, "This poor creature dies, not for any guilt that it has
ever had, but to show me that I am guilty, and that I deserved to
die like this." Turn, then, your eye to the cross, and see Jesus
bleeding there and dying for you. Remember,
"For sins not his own, he died to atone;"
Sin had no foothold in him, never troubled him. The prince of this
world came and looked, but he said, "I have nothing in Christ; there
is no room for me to plant my foot—no piece of corrupt ground, which
I may call my own." O sinner, the blood of Jesus is able to save
thee, because he was perfectly innocent himself, and "he died the
just for the unjust, to bring us to God."
But some will say, "Whence has the blood of Christ such power to
save?" My reply is, not only because God appointed that blood, and
because it was the blood of an innocent and spotless being, but
because Christ himself was God. If Christ were a mere man, my
hearers, you could not be exhorted to trust him; were he ever so
spotless and holy, there would be no efficacy in his blood to save;
but Christ was "very God of very God;" the blood that Jesus shed was
Godlike blood. It was the blood of man, for he was man like
ourselves; but the divinity was so allied with the manhood, that the
blood derived efficacy from it. Can you imagine what must be the
value of the blood of God's own dear Son? No, you cannot put an
estimate upon it that should so much as reach to a millionth part of
its preciousness. I know you esteem that blood as beyond all price
if you have been washed in it; but I know also that you do not
esteem it enough. It was the wonder of angels that God should
condescend to die; it will be the wonder of all wonders, the
unceasing wonder of eternity, that God should become man to die. Oh!
when we think that Christ was Creator of the world, and that on his
all-sustaining shoulders did hang the universe, we cannot wonder
that his death is mighty to redeem, and that his blood should
cleanse from sin. Come hither saints and sinners; gather in and
crowd around the cross, and see this man, overcome with weakness,
fainting, groaning, bleeding, and dying. This man is also "God over
all, blessed for ever," Is there not power to save? Is there not
efficacy in blood like that? Can you imagine any stretch of sin
which shall out-measure the power of divinity—any height of iniquity
that shall overtop the topless steeps of the divine? Can I conceive
a depth of sin that shall be deeper than the infinite? or a breadth
of iniquity that shall be broader than the Godhead? Because he is
divine, he is "able to save to the uttermost, them that come unto
God by him." Divinity appointed, spotless, and divine, his blood is
the blood whereby ye may escape the anger and the wrath of God.
4. Once more; the blood of which we speak today, is blood
once shed for many for the remission of sin. The paschal lamb
was killed every year; but now Christ hath appeared to take away sin
by the offering up of himself and there is now no more mention of
sin, for Christ once for all hath put away sin, by the offering of
himself. The Jew had the lamb every morning and every evening, for
there was a continual mention of sin; the blood of the lamb could
not take it away. The lamb availed for to-day, but there was the sin
of to-morrow, what was to be done with that? Why, a fresh victim
must bleed. But oh, my hearer, our greatest joy is, that the blood
of Jesus has been once shed, and he has said, "It is finished."
There is no more need of the blood of bulls or of goats, or of any
other sacrifice; that one sacrifice hath "perfected for ever them
that are sanctified." Trembling sinner! come to the cross again; thy
sins are heavy, and many; but the atonement for them is completed by
the death of Christ. Look then to Jesus, and remember that Christ
needs nothing to supplement his blood. The road between God and man
is finished and open; the robe to cover thy nakedness is complete,
without a rag of thine; the bath in which thou art to be washed is
full, full to the brim, and needs nothing to be added thereunto. "It
is finished!" Let that ring in thy ears. There is nothing now that
can hinder thy being saved, if God hath made thee willing now to
believe in Jesus Christ. He is a complete Saviour, full of grace for
an empty sinner.
5. And yet I must add one more thought, and then leave this point.
The blood of Jesus Christ is blood that bath been accepted. Christ
died—he was buried; but neither heaven nor earth could tell whether
God had accepted the ransom. There was wanted God's seal upon the
great Magna Charta of man's salvation, and that seal was put, my
hearer, in that hour when God summoned the angel, and bade him
descend from heaven and roll away the stone. Christ was put in
durance vile in the prison house of the grave, as a hostage for his
people. Until God had signed the warrant for acquittal of all his
people, Christ must abide in the bonds of death. He did not attempt
to break his prison; be did not come out illegally, by wrenching
down the bars of his dungeon; he waited: he wrapt up the napkin,
folding it by itself: he laid the grave-clothes in a separate place;
he waited, waited patiently; and at last down from the skies, like
the flash of a meteor, the angel descended, touched the stone and
rolled it away; and when Christ came out, rising from the dead in
the glory of his Father's power, then was the seal put upon the
great charta of our redemption. The blood was accepted, and sin was
forgiven. And now, soul, it is not possible for God to reject thee,
if thou comest this day to him, pleading the blood of Christ. God
cannot—and here we speak with reverence too—the everlasting God
cannot reject a sinner who pleads the blood of Christ: for if he did
so, it were to deny himself, and to contradict all his former acts.
He has accepted blood, and he will accept it; he never
can revoke that divine acceptance of the resurrection; and if thou
goest to God, my hearer, pleading simply and only the blood of him
that did hang upon the tree, God must un-God himself before he can
reject thee, or reject that blood.
And yet I fear that I have not been able to make you think of the
blood of Christ. I beseech you, then, just for a moment try to
picture to yourself Christ on the cross. Let your imagination figure
the motley crew assembled round about that little hill of Calvary.
Lift now your eyes, and see the three crosses put upon that rising
knoll. See in the centre the thorn-crowned brow of Christ. Do you
see the hands that have always been full of blessing nailed fast to
the accursed wood! See you his dear face, more marred than that of
any other man? Do you see it now, as his head bows upon his bosom in
the extreme agonies of death? He was a real man, remember. It was a
real cross. Do not think of these things as figments, and fancies,
and romances. There was such a being, and he died as I describe it.
Let your imagination picture him, and then sit still a moment and
think over this thought: "The blood of that man, whom now I behold
dying in agony, must be my redemption; and if I would be saved, I
must put my only trust in what he suffered for me, when he himself
did 'bear our sins in his own body on the tree.'" If God the Holy
Spirit should help you, you will then be in a right state to proceed
to the second point.
II. THE EFFICACY OF THIS BLOOD. "When I see the blood I will pass
over you."
1. The blood of Christ hath such a divine power to save, that
nothing but it can ever save the soul. If some foolish Israelite
had despised the command of God, and had said, "I will sprinkle
something else upon the doorposts," or, "I will adorn the lintel
with jewels of gold and silver," he must have perished; nothing
could save his household but the sprinkled blood. And now let us all
remember, that "other foundation can no man lay than that which is
laid, Jesus Christ," for "there is none other name given among men
whereby we must be saved." My works, my prayers, my tears, cannot
save me; the blood, the blood alone, has power to redeem.
Sacraments, however well they may be attended to, cannot save me.
Nothing but thy blood, O Jesus, can redeem me from the guilt of sin.
Though I should give rivers of oil, and ten thousand of the fat of
fed beasts; yea, though I should give my first-born for my
transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul, all
would be useless. Nothing but the blood of Jesus has in it the
slightest saving-power. Oh! you that are trusting in your infant
baptism, your confirmation, and your Lord's Supper, you are trusting
in a lie. Nothing but the blood of Jesus can save. I care not how
right the ordinance, how true the form, how scriptural the practice,
it is all a vanity to you if you rely in it. God forbid I should say
a word against ordinances, or against holy things; but keep them in
their places. If you make then the basis of your soul's salvation,
they are lighter than a shadow, and when you need them most you
shall find them fail you. There is not, I repeat it again, the
slightest atom of saving-power anywhere but in the blood of Jesus.
That blood has the only power to save, and aught else that you rely
upon shall be a refuge of lies. This is the rock, and this is the
work that is perfect; but all other things are day dreams; they must
be swept away in the day when God shall come to try our work of what
sort it is. THE BLOOD stands out in solitary majesty, the only rock
of our salvation.
2. This blood is not simply the only thing that can save, but it
must save alone. Put anything with the blood of Christ, and you
are lost; trust to anything else with this and you perish. "It is
true," says one, that the Sacrament cannot save me, but I will trust
in that, and in Christ too." You are a lost man, then. So jealous is
Christ of his honour, that anything you put with him, however good
it is, becomes, from the fact of your putting it with him, an
accursed thing. And what is it that thou wouldst put with Christ?
Thy good works? What! wilt thou yoke a reptile with an angel—yoke
thyself to the chariot of salvation with Christ? What are thy good
works? Thy righteousnesses are "as filthy rags;" and shall filthy
rags be joined to the spotless celestial righteousness of Christ? It
must not, and it shall not be. Rely on Jesus only, and thou canst
not perish; but rely on anything with him, and thou art as surely
damned as if thou shouldst rely upon thy sins. Jesus only—Jesus
only—Jesus only—this is the rock of our salvation.
And here let me stop, and combat a few forms and shapes which our
self-righteousness always takes. "Oh," says one, "I could trust in
Christ if I felt my sins more." Sir, that is a damning error.
Is thy repentance, thy sense of sin, to be a part-Saviour? Sinner!
the blood is to save thee, not thy tears, Christ's death, not
thy repentance. Thou art bidden this day to trust in Christ; not in
thy feelings, not in thy pangs on account of sin. Many a man has
been brought into great soul distress, because he has looked more at
his repentance than at the obedience of Christ—
"Could thy tears for ever flow,
Could thy zeal no respite know;
All for sin could not atone,
Christ must save and Christ alone."
"Nay," says another, "but I feel that I do not value the blood of
Christ as I ought, and therefore I am afraid to believe." My friend,
that is another insiduous form of the same error. God does not say,
"When I see your estimate of the blood of Christ, I will pass over
you; no, but when I see the blood." It is not your estimate
of that blood, it is the blood that saves you. As I said before,
that magnificent, solitary blood, must be alone.
"Nay," says another, "but if I had more faith then I should have
hope." That, too, is a very deadly shape of the same evil. You are
not to be saved by the efficacy of your faith, but by the efficacy
of the blood of Christ. It is not your believing, it is Christ's
dying. I bid you believe, but I bid you not to look to your
believing as the ground of your salvation. No man will go to heaven
if he trusts to his own faith; you may as well trust to your own
good works as trust to your faith. Your faith must deal with Christ
not with itself. The world hangs on nothing; but faith cannot hang
upon itself, it must hang on Christ. Sometimes, when my faith is
vigorous, I catch myself doing this. There is joy flowing into my
heart, and after awhile I begin to find that my joy suddenly
departs. I ask the causes, and I find that the joy came because I
was thinking of Christ; but when I begin to think about my
joy, then my joy fled. You must not think of your faith but of
Christ. Faith comes from meditation upon Christ. Turn, then, your
eye, not upon faith but upon Jesus. It is not your hold of Christ
that saves you; it is his hold of you. It is not the efficacy of
your believing in him; it is the efficacy of his blood applied to
you through the Spirit.
I do not know how sufficiently to follow Satan in all his windings
into the human heart, but this, I know, he is alway strying to keep
back this great truth—the blood, and the blood alone has power to
save. "Oh," says another, "if I had such-and-such an experience then
I could trust." Friend, it is not thine experience, it is the blood.
God did not say, "When I see your experience," but "When I see
the blood of Christ." "Nay," says one, "but if I had
such-and-such graces, I could hope." Nay, but he did not say, "When
I see your graces," but "When I see the blood." Get grace,
get as much as you can of faith, and love, and hope, but oh, do not
put them where Christ's blood ought to be. The only pillar of your
hope must be the Cross, and aught else that you put to buttress up
the cross of Christ is obnoxious to God, and ceases to have any
virtue in it, because it is an anti-Christ. The blood of Christ,
then alone, saves; but anything with it, and it does not save.
3. Yet again we may say of the blood of Christ, it is
all-sufficient. There is no case which the blood of Christ
cannot met; there is no sin which it cannot wash away. There is no
multiplicity of sin which it cannot cleanse, no aggravation of guilt
which it cannot remove. Ye may be double-dyed like scarlet, ye may
have lain in the lye of your sins these seventy years, but the blood
of Christ can take out the stain. You may have blasphemed him almost
as many times as you have breathed, you may have rejected him as
often as you have heard his name; you may have broken his Sabbath,
you may have denied his existence, you may have doubted his Godhead,
you may have persecuted his servants, you may have trampled on his
blood; but all this the blood can wash away. You may have committed
whoredoms without number, nay, murder itself may have defiled your
hands, but this fountain filled with blood can wash all the stains
away. The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin.
There is no sort of a man, there is no abortion of mankind, no demon
in human shape that this blood cannot wash. Hell may have sought to
make a paragon of iniquity, it may have striven to put sin, and sin,
and sin together, till it has made a monster in the shape of man, a
monster abhorred of mankind, but the blood of Christ can transform
that monster. Magdalen's seven devils it can cast out, the madness
of the demoniac it can ease, the deep-seated leprosy it can cure,
the wound of the maimed, yea, the lost limb it can restore. There is
no spiritual disease which the great Physician cannot heal. This is
the great Catholicon, the medicine for all diseases. No case can
exceed its virtue, be it never so black or vile; all-sufficient,
all-sufficient blood.
4. But go further. The blood of Christ saves surely. Many
people say, "Well, I hope I shall be saved through the blood of
Christ;" and perhaps, says one here, who is believing in Christ,
"Well, I hope it will save." My dear friend, that is a slur upon the
honour of God. If any man gives you a promise, and you say, "Well, I
hope he will fulfil it;" is it not implied that you have at least
some small doubt as to whether he will or not. Now, I do not hope
that the blood of Christ will wash away my sin. I know it is washed
away by his blood; and that is true faith which does not hope about
Christ's blood, but says, "I know it is so; that blood does cleanse.
The moment it was applied to my conscience it did cleanse, and it
does cleanse still." The Israelite, if he was true to his faith, did
not go inside, and say, I hope the destroying angel will pass by
me;" but he said, "I know he will; I know God cannot smite me; I
know he will not. There is the blood-mark there, I am secure beyond
a doubt; there is not the shadow of a risk of my perishing. I am, I
must be saved." And so I preach a sure gospel this morning:
"Whosoever believeth on the Lord Jesus Christ shall not perish but
have everlasting life." "I give unto my sheep eternal life," said
he, "and they shall never perish, neither shall any pluck them out
of my hand." O, sinner, I have not the shadow of a doubt as to
whether Christ will save you if you trust in his blood. O no, I know
he will. I am certain his blood can save; and I beg you, in Christ's
name, believe the same; believe that that blood is sure to
cleanse, not only that it may cleanse, but that it must
cleanse, "whereby we must be saved," says the Scripture. If
we have that blood upon us we must be saved, or else we are to
suppose a God unfaithful and a God unkind; in fact, a God
transformed from everything that is God-like into everything that is
base.
5. And yet again, he that hath this blood sprinkled upon him is
saved completely. Not the hair of the head of an Israelite
was disturbed by the destroying angel. They were completely saved;
so he that believeth in the blood is saved from all things. I like
the old translation of the chapter in the Romans. There was a martyr
once summoned before Bonner; and after he had expressed his faith in
Christ, Bonner said "You are a heretic and will be damned." "Nay"
said he, quoting the old version, "There is therefore now no
damnation to them that believe in Christ Jesus." And that brings a
sweet thought before us; there is no damnation to the man who has
the blood of Christ upon him; he cannot be condemned of God anyhow.
It were impossible. There is no such a thing; there can be no
such thing. There is no damnation. He cannot be damned; for there is
no damnation to him that is in Christ Jesus. Let the blood be
applied to the lintel, and to the door-post, there is no
destruction. There is a destroying angel for Egypt, but there is
none for Israel. There is a hell for the wicked, but none for the
righteous. And if there is none, they cannot be put there. If there
is no damnation they cannot suffer it. Christ saves completely;
every sin is washed, every blessing ensured, perfection is provided,
and glory everlasting is the sure result.
I think then, I have dwelt sufficiently long upon the efficacy of
his blood; but no tongue of seraph can ever speak its worth. I must
go home to my chamber, and weep because I am powerless to tell this
story, and yet I have laboured to tell it simply, so that all can
understand; and I pray, therefore, that God the Spirit may lead some
of you to put your trust simply, wholly, and entirely, on the blood
of Jesus Christ.
III. This brings us to the third point, upon which I must be very
brief, and the third point is—THE ONE CONDITION. What says one "Do
you preach a conditional salvation?" Yes I do, there is the one
condition "Where I see the blood I will pass over you." What
a blessed condition! it does not say, when you see the blood, but
when I see it. Thine eye of faith may be so dim, that thou
canst not see the blood of Christ. Ay, but God's eye is not dim: He
can see it, yea he must see it; for Christ in heaven is always
presenting his blood before his Father's face. The Israelite could
not see the blood; he was inside the house; he could not see what
was on the lintel and the doorpost; but God could see it; and this
is the only condition of the sinner's salvation—God's seeing the
blood; not your seeing it. O how safe, then, is every one that
trusts in the Lord Jesus Christ. It is not his faith that is the
condition, not his assurance; it is the simple fact, that Calvary is
set perpetually before the eyes of God in a risen and ascended
Saviour. "When I see the blood, I will pass over you." Fall on your
knees then in prayer, ye doubting souls, and let this be your
plea:—"Lord, have mercy upon me for the blood's sake. I
cannot see it as I could desire, but Lord thou seest it, and
thou hast said, 'When I see it, I will pass over you.' Lord, thou
seest it this day, pass over my sin, and forgive me for its dear
sake alone."
IV. And now, lastly, WHAT IS THE LESSON. The lesson of the text is
to the Christian this. Christian, take care that thou dost always
remember, that nothing but the blood of Christ can save thee. I
preach to myself to-day what I preach to you. I often find myself
like this:—I have been praying that the Holy Spirit might rest in my
heart and cleanse out an evil passion, and presently I find myself
full of doubts and fears, and when I ask the reason, I find it is
this:—I have been looking to the Spirit's work until I put the
Spirit's work where Christ's work ought to be. Now, it is a sin to
put your own works where Christ's should be; but it is just as much
a sin to put the Holy Spirit's work there. You must never make the
Spirit of God an anti-Christ, and you virtually do that when you put
the Spirit's work as the groundwork of your faith. Do you not often
hear Christian men say, "I cannot believe in Christ to-day as I
could yesterday, for yesterday I felt such sweet and blessed
enjoyments." Now, what is that but putting your frames and feelings
where Christ ought to be. Remember, Christ's blood is no more able
to save you in a good frame than in a bad frame. Christ's blood must
be your trust, as much when you are full of joy as when you are full
of doubt. And here it is that your happiness will be in danger, by
beginning to put your good frames and good feelings in the room of
the blood of Christ. O, brethren, if we could always live with a
single eye fixed on the Cross, we should always be happy; but when
we get a little peace, and a little joy, we begin to prize the joy
and peace so much, that we forget the source whence they come. As
Mr. Brooks says, "A husband that loves his wife will, perhaps, often
give her jewels and rings; but suppose she should sit down and begin
to think of her jewels and rings so much that she should forget her
husband, it would be a kind husband's business to take them away
from her so that she might fix her affections entirely on him." And
it is so with us. Jesus gives us jewels of faith and love, and we
get trusting to them, and he takes them away in order that we may
come again as guilty, helpless sinners, and put our trust in Christ.
To quote a verse I often repeat—I believe the spirit of a Christian
should be, from his first hour to his last, the spirit of these two
lines:—
"Nothing in my hand I bring,
Simply to thy cross I cling."
That is the lesson to the saint.
But another minute; there is a lesson here to the sinner. Poor,
trembling, guilty self-condemned sinner, I have a word from the Lord
for thee. "The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us," that is you and
me, "cleanseth us from all sin." That "us" includes you, if
now you are feeling your need of a Saviour. Now that blood is able
to save you, and you are bidden simply to trust that blood, and you
shall be saved. But I hear you say, "Sir," you said, "If I feel my
need. Now I feel that I do not feel, I only wish I did feel my need
enough." Well do not bring your feelings then, but trust only in the
blood. If you can rely simply on the blood of Christ, whatever your
feelings may be, or may not be, that blood is able to save. But you
are saying, "How am I to be saved? What mush I do?" Well there is
nothing that you can do. You must leave off doing altogether, in
order to be saved. There must be a denial of all your doings. You
must get Christ first, and then you may do as much as you like. But
you must not trust in your doings. Your business is now to lift up
your heart in prayer like this:—"Lord, thou hast shown me something
of myself, show me something of my Saviour." See the Saviour hanging
on the cross, turn your eye to him, and say, "Lord, I trust thee I
have nothing else to trust to, but I rely on thee; sink or swim, my
Saviour, I trust thee." And as surely sinner, as thou canst put thy
trust in Christ, thou art as safe as an apostle or prophet. Not
death nor hell can slay that man whose firm reliance is at the foot
of the cross. "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be
saved." "He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; he that
believeth not shall be damned." He that believeth shall be saved, be
his sins never so many; he that believeth not shall be damned, be
his sins never so few, and be his virtues never so many. Trust in
Jesus now! Sinner, trust in Jesus only.
"Not all the blood of beasts
On Jewish altars slain
Could give the guilty conscience peace,
Or wash away the stain.
But Christ, the heavenly Lamb,
Takes all our sins away;
A sacrifice of nobler name
And richer blood than they."
|