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By Charles Spurgeon
It was a day to be remembered, when the
multitudes of Israel were assembled at the foot of Carmel
and when the solitary prophet of the Lord came forth to defy
the four hundred and fifty priests of the false god. We
might look upon that scene with the eye of historical
curiosity, and we should find it rich with interest. Instead
of doing so, however, we shall look upon it with the eye of
attentive consideration, and see whether we can not improve
by its teachings. We have upon that hill of Carmel, and
along the plain, three kinds of persons. We have first the
devoted servant of Jehovah, a solitary prophet; we have, on
the other hand, the decided servants of the evil one, the
four hundred and fifty prophets of Baal; but the vast mass
of that day belonged to a third class—they were those who
had not fully determined whether fully to worship Jehovah,
the God of their fathers, or Baal, the god of Jezebel. On
the one hand, their ancient traditions led them to fear
Jehovah, and on the other hand, their interest at court led
them to bow before Baal. Many of them therefore, were secret
and half-hearted followers of Jehovah, while they were the
public worshipers of Baal. The whole of them at this
juncture were halting between two opinions. Elijah does not
address his sermon to the priests of Baal; he will have
something to say to them by-and-by, he will preach them
horrible sermons in deeds of blood. Nor has he aught to say
to those who are the thorough servants of Jehovah, for they
are not there; but his discourse is alone directed to those
who are halting between two opinions.

Now, we have
these three classes here this morning. We have, I hope, a
very large
number who are
on Jehovah's side, who fear God and serve him; we have a
number who are on the side of the evil one, who make no
profession of religion, and do not observe even the outward
symptoms of it; because they are both inwardly and outwardly
the servants of the evil one. But the great mass of my
hearers belong to the third class—the waverers. Like empty
clouds they are driven hither and thither by the wind; like
painted beauties, they lack the freshness of life; they have
a name to live and are dead. Procrastinators, double-minded
men, undecided persons, to you I speak this morning—"How
long halt ye between two opinions?" May the question be
answered by God's Spirit in your hearts, and may you be led
to say, "No longer, Lord, do I halt; but this day I decide
for thee, and am thy servant for ever!"

Let us proceed
at once to the text. Instead of giving the divisions at the
commencement, I
will mention them one by one as I proceed.

I. First, you
will note that the prophet insisted upon the distinction
which existed between the worship Baal and the worship of
Jehovah. Most of the people who were before him thought
that Jehovah was God, and that Baal was God too; and that
for this reason the worship of both was quite consistent.
The great mass of them did not reject the God of their
fathers wholly, nor did they bow before Baal wholly; but as
polytheists, believing in many gods, they thought both Gods
might be worshiped, and each of them have a share in their
hearts. "No," said the prophet when he began, "this will not
do, these are two opinions; you can never make them
one, they are two contradictory things which can not be
combined. I tell you that instead of combining the two,
which is impossible, you are halting between the two, which
makes a vast difference." "I will build in my house," said
one of them, "an altar for Jehovah here, and an altar for
Baal there. I am of one opinion; I believe them both to be
God." "No, no," said Elijah, "it can not be so; they are
two, and must be two. These things are not one opinion,
but two opinions No, you can not unite them." Have I not
many here who say, "I am worldly, but I am religious too; I
can go to the Music Hall to worship God on Sunday; I went to
the Derby races the other day: I go, on the one hand, to the
place where I can serve my lusts; I am to be met with in
every dancing room of every description, and yet at the same
time I say my prayers most devoutly. May I not be a good
churchman, or a right good dissenter, and a man of the world
too? May I not, after all, hold with the hounds as well as
run with the hare? May I not love God and serve the devil
too—take the pleasure of each of them, and give my heart to
neither? We answer—Not so, they are two opinions; you can
not do it, they are distinct and separate. Mark Anthony
yoked two lions to his chariot; but there are two lions no
man ever yoked together yet—the Lion of the tribe of Judah
and the lion of the pit. These can never go together. Two
opinions you may hold in politics, perhaps, but then you
will be despised by every body, unless you are of one
opinion or the other, and act as an independent man. But two
opinions in the matter of soul-religion you can not bold. If
God be God, serve him, and do it thoroughly; but if this
world be God, serve it, and make no profession of religion.
If you are a worldling, and think the things of the world
the best, serve them; devote yourself to them, do not be
kept back by conscience; spite your conscience, and run into
sin. But remember, if the Lord be your God, you can not have
Baal too; you must have one thing or else the other. "No man
can serve two masters." If God be served, he will be
a master; and if the devil be served he will not be long
before he will be a master; and "ye can not serve two
masters." O! be wise, and think not that the two can be
mingled together. How many a respectable deacon thinks that
he can be covetous, and grasping in business, and grind the
faces of the poor, and yet be a saint! O! liar to God and to
man! He is no saint; he is the very chief of sinners! How
many a very excellent woman, who is received into church
fellowship among the people of God, and thinks herself one
of the elect, is to be found full of wrath and bitterness, a
slave of mischief and of sin, a tattler, a slanderer, a
busybody; entering into other people's houses, and turning
every thing like comfort out of the minds of those with whom
she comes in contact—and yet she is the servant of God and
of the devil too! Nay, my lady this will never answer; the
two never can be served thoroughly. Serve your master,
whoever he be. If you do profess to be religious, be so
thoroughly; if you make any profession to be a Christian, be
one; but if you are no Christian, do not pretend to
be. If you love the world, then love it; but cast off the
mask, and do not be a hypocrite. The double-minded man is of
all men the most despicable; the follower of Janus, who
wears two faces, and who can look with one eye upon the
(so-called) Christian world with great delight, and give his
subscription to the Tract Society, the Bible Society, and
the Missionary Society, but who has another eye over there,
with which he looks at the Casino, the Coal-hole, and other
pleasures, which I do not care to mention, but which some of
you may know more of than I wish to know. Such a man, I say,
is worse than the most reprobate of men, in the opinion of
any one who knows how to judge. Not worse in his open
character, but worse really, because he is not honest enough
to go through with that he professes. And how many such are
there in London, in England; everywhere else! They try to
serve both masters; but it can not be; the two things can
not be reconciled; God and Mammon, Christ and Belial, these
never can meet; there never can be an agreement between
them, they never can be brought into unity, and why should
you seek to do it? "Two opinions," said the prophet.
He would not allow any of his hearers to profess to worship
both. "No," said he, "these are two opinions, and you are
halting between the two."

II. In the
second place, the prophet calls these waverers to an
account for the amount of time which they had consumed in
making their choice. Some of them might have replied,
"We have not had yet an opportunity of judging between God
and Baal; we have not yet had time enough to make up our
minds;" but the prophet puts away that objection, and he
says, "How long halt ye between two opinions? How
long? For three years and a half not a drop of rain has
fallen at the command of Jehovah; is not that proof enough?
Ye have been all this time, three years and a half
expecting, till I should come, Jehovah's servant, and give
you rain; and yet, though you yourselves are starving, your
cattle dead, your fields parched, and your meadows covered
with dust, like the very deserts, yet all this time of
judgment, and trial and affliction, has not been enough for
you to make up your minds. "How long then," said he,
"halt ye between two opinions?"

I speak not,
this morning, to the thoroughly worldly; with them I have
now nothing
to do; another
time I may address them. But I am now speaking to you who
are seeking to serve God and to serve Satan; you who are
trying to be Christian worldlings, trying to be members of
that extraordinary corporation, called the "religious
world," which is a thing that never had an existence except
in title. You are endeavoring, if you can, to make up your
mind which it shall be; you know you can not serve both, and
you are coming now to the period when yon are saying, "Which
shall it be? Shall I go thoroughly into sin, and revel in
the pleasures of the earth, or become a servant of God?"
Now, I say to you this morning, as the prophet did, "How
long halt ye?" Some of you have been halting until your
hair has grown gray; the sixtieth year of some of you is
drawing nigh. Is not sixty years long enough to make up your
choice? "How long halt ye?" Perhaps one of you may
have tottered into this place, leaning on his staff, and you
have been undecided up till now. Your eightieth year has
come; you have been a religious character outwardly, but a
worldling truly; you are still up to this date halting,
saying, "I know not on which side to be." How long, sirs, in
the name of reason, in the name of mortality, in the name of
death, in the name of eternity, "How long halt ye
between two opinions?" Ye middle-aged men, ye said when ye
were youths, "When we are out of our apprenticeship we will
become religious; let us sow our wild oats in our youth, and
let us then begin to be diligent servants of the Lord." Lo!
ye have come to middle age, and are waiting till that quiet
villa shall be built, and ye shall retire from business, and
then ye think ye will serve God. Sirs, ye said that same
when ye came of age, and when your business began to
increase. I therefore solemnly demand of you, "How long halt
ye between two opinions?" How much time do you want? O!
young man, thou saidst in thine early childhood, when a
mother's prayer followed thee, "I will seek God when I come
to manhood;" and thou hast passed that day; thou art a man,
and more than that, and yet thou art halting still. "How
long halt ye between two opinions?" How many of you have
been churchgoers and chapel-goers for years! Ye have been
impressed, too, many a time, but ye have wiped the tears
from your eyes, and have said, "I will seek God and turn to
him with full purpose of heart;" and you are now just where
you were. How many sermons do you want? How many more
Sundays must roll away wasted? How many warnings, how many
sicknesses, how many tollings of the bell to warn you that
you must die? How many graves must be dug for your family
before you will be impressed? How many plagues and
pestilences must ravage this city before you will turn to
God in truth? "How long halt ye between two opinions?" Would
God ye could answer this question, and not allow the sands
of life to drop, drop, drop from the glass saying, "When the
next goes I will repent," and yet that next one findeth you
impenitent. You say, "When the glass is just so low, I will
turn to God." No, sir, no; it will not answer for you to
talk so; for thou mayest find thy glass empty before thou
tboughtest it bad begun to run low, and thou mayest find
thyself in eternity when thou didst but think of repenting
and turning to God. How long, ye gray heads, how long, ye
men of ripe years, how long, ye youths and maidens, how long
will ye be in this undecided, unhappy state? "How long halt
ye between two opinions?"

Thus we have
brought you so far. We have noted that there are two
opinions, and
we have asked
the question, How long time you want to decide? One would
think the question would require very little time, if time
were all; if the will were not biassed to evil and contrary
to good, it would require no more time than the decision of
a man who has to choose a halter or life, wealth or poverty;
and if we were wise, it would take no time at all; if we
understood the things of God, we should not hesitate, but
say at once, "Now God is my God, and that for ever."

III. But the
prophet charges these people with the absurdity of their
position. Some of them said, "What! prophet, may we not
continue to halt between two opinions? We are not
desperately irreligious, so we are better than the profane,
certainly we are not thoroughly pious; but, at any rate, a
little piety is better than none, and the mere profession of
it keeps us decent, let us try both!" "Now," says the
prophet, "how long halt ye?" or, if you like to read it so,
"how long limp ye between two opinions?" (How long
wriggle ye between two opinions? would be a good word,
if I might employ it.) He represents them as like a man
whose legs are entirely out of joint; he first goes on one
side, and then on the other, and can not go far either way.
I could not describe it without putting myself into a most
ludicrous posture. "How long limp ye between two
opinions?" The prophet laughs at them, as it were. And is it
not true, that a man who is neither one thing or another is
in a most absurd position? Let him go among the worldlings;
they laugh under their sleeve, and say, "This is one of the
Exeter Hall saints," or, "That is one of the elect." Let him
go among the Christian people, those that are saints, and
they say, "How a man can be so inconsistent, how he can come
into our midst one day, and the next be found in such and
such society, we can not tell." Methinks even the devil
himself must laugh at such a man in scorn. "There," says he,
"I am every thing that is bad; I do sometimes pretend to be
an angel of light, and put on that garb; but you do really
excell me in every respect, for I do it to get something by
it, but you do not get any thing by it. You do not have the
pleasures of this world, and you do not have the pleasures
of religion either; you have the fears of religion without
its hopes; you are afraid to do wrong, and yet you have no
hope of heaven; you have the duties of religion without the
joys; you have to do just as religious people do, and yet
there is no heart in the matter; you have to sit down, and
see the table all spread before you, and then you have not
power to eat a single morsel of the precious dainties of the
gospel." It is just the same with the world; you dare not go
into this or that mischief that brings joy to the wicked
man's heart; you think of what society would say. We do not
know what to make of you. I might describe you, if I might
speak as the Americans do but I will not. Ye are half one
thing, and half the other. You come into the society of the
saints, and try to talk as they talk; but you are like a man
who has been taught French in some day-school in England; he
makes a queer sort of Frenchified English, and Englishized
French, and every one laughs at him. The English laugh at
him for trying to do it, and the French laugh at him for
failing in it. If you spoke your own language, if you just
spoke out as a sinner, if you professed to be what you are,
you would at least get the respect of one side; but now you
are rejected by one class, and equally rejected by the
other. You come into our midst, we can not receive you; you
go amongst worldlings, they reject you too; you are too good
for them, and too bad for us. Where are you to be put? If
there were a purgatory, that would be the place for you;
where you might be tossed on the one side into ice, and on
the other into the burning fire, and that for ever. But as
there is no such place as purgatory, and as you really are a
servant of Satan, and not a child of God, take heed, take
heed, how long you stay in a position so absurdly
ridiculous. At the day of judgment, wavering men will be the
scoff and the laughter even of hell. The angels will look
down in scorn upon the man who was ashamed to own his Master
thoroughly, while hell itself will ring with laughter. When
that grand hypocrite shall come there—that undecided man,
they will say, "Aha! we have to drink the dregs, but above
them there were sweets; you have only the dregs. You dare
not go into the riotous and boisterous mirth of our youthful
days, and now you have come here with us to drink the same
dregs; you have the punishment without the pleasure." O! how
foolish will even the damned call you, to think that you
halted between two opinions! "How long limp ye, wriggle ye,
walk ye in an absurd manner, between two opinions?" In
adopting either opinion, you would at least be consistent;
but in trying to hold both, to seek to be both one and the
other, and not knowing which to decide upon, you are limping
between two opinions. I think a good translation is a very
different one from that of the authorized version—"How long
hop ye upon two sprays?" So the Hebrew has it. Like a bird,
which perpetually flies from bough to bough, and is never
still. If it keeps on doing this, it will never have a nest.
And so with you: you keep leaping between two boughs, from
one opinion to the other; and so between the two, you get no
rest for the sole of your foot, no peace, no joy, no
comfort, but are just a poor miserable thing all your life
long.

IV. We have
brought you thus far, then; we have shown you the absurdity
of this
halting. Now,
very briefly, the next point in my text is this. The
multitude who had worshiped Jehovah and Baal, and who were
now undecided, might reply, "But how do you know that we
do not believe that Jehovah is God? How do you know we are
not decided in opinion?" The prophet meets this
objection by saying, "I know you are not decided in opinion,
because you are not decided in practice. If God be
God, follow him; if Baal, follow him. You are
not decided in practice." Men's opinions are not such things
as we imagine. It is generally said now-a-days, that all
opinions are right, and if a man shall honestly hold his
convictions, he is, without doubt, right. Not so; truth is
not changed by our opinions; a thing is either true or false
of itself, and it is neither made true nor false by our
views of it. It is for us, therefore, to judge carefully,
and not to think that any opinion will do. Besides, opinions
have influence upon the conduct, and if a man have a wrong
opinion, he will, most likely, in some way or other, have
wrong conduct, for the two usually go together. "Now," said
Elijah, "that you are not the servants of God, is quite
evident, for you do not follow him; that you are not
thoroughly servants of Baal either, is quite evident, for
you do not follow him." Now I address myself to you again.
Many of you are not the servants of God; you do not follow
him; you follow him a certain distance in the form, but not
in the spirit; you follow him on Sundays; but what do you do
on Mondays? You follow him in religious company, in
evangelical drawing-rooms, and so on; but what do you do in
other society? You do not follow him. And, on the other
hand, you do not follow Baal; you go a little way with the
world, but there is a place to which you dare not go; you
are too respectable to sin as others sin or to go the whole
way of the world. Ye dare not go to the utmost lengths of
evil. "Now," says the prophet, twitting them upon this—"if
the Lord be God, follow him. Let your conduct be consistent
with your opinions; if you believe the Lord to be God, carry
it out in your daily life; be holy, be prayerful, trust in
Christ, be faithful, be upright, be loving; give your heart
to God, and follow him. If Baal be God, then follow him; but
do not pretend to follow the other." Let your conduct back
up your opinion; if you really think that the follies of
this world are the best, and believe that a fine fashionable
life, a life of frivolity and gayety, flying from flower to
flower, getting honey from none, is the most desirable,
carry it out. If you think the life of the debauchee is so
very desirable, if you think his end is to be much wished
for, if you think his pleasures are right, follow them. Go
the whole way with them. If you believe that to cheat in
business is right, put it up over your door—"I sell trickery
goods here;" or if you do not say it to the public, tell
your conscience so; but do not deceive the public; do not
call the people to prayers when you are opening a "British
Bank." If you mean to be religious, follow out your
determination thoroughly; but if you mean to be worldly, go
the whole way with the world. Let your conduct follow out
your opinions. Make your life tally with your profession.
Carry out your opinions whatever they be. But you dare not;
you are too cowardly to sin as others do, honestly before
God's sun; your conscience will not let you do it—and yet
you are just so fond of Satan, that you dare not leave him
wholly and become thoroughly the servants of God. O do not
let your character be like your profession; either keep up
your profession, or give it up: do be one thing or the
other.

V. And now the
prophet cries, "If the Lord be God, follow him; if Baal,
then follow
him," and in so
doing, he states the ground of his practical claim.
Let your conduct be consistent with your opinions. There is
another objection raised by the crowd. "Prophet," says one,
"then comest to demand a practical proof of our affection;
then sayest, Follow God. Now, if I believe God to be God,
and that is my opinion, yet I do not see what claim he has
to my opinions." Now, mark how the prophet puts it: he says,
"If God be God, follow him." The reason why I claim
that you should follow out your opinion concerning God is,
that God is God; God has a claim upon you, as creatures, for
your devout obedience. One person replies, "What profit
should I have, if I served God thoroughly? Should I be more
happy? Should I get on better in this world? Should I have
more peace of mind?" Nay, nay, that is a secondary
consideration. The only question for you is, "If God be God
follow him." Not if it be more advantageous to you; but, "if
God be God, follow him." The secularist would plead
for religion on the ground that religion might be the best
for this world, and best for the world to come. Not so with
the prophet; he says, "I do not put it on that ground, I
insist that it is your bounden duty, if you believe in God,
simply because he is God, to serve him and obey him. I do
not tell you it is for your advantage—it may be, I believe
it is—but that I put aside from the question; I demand of
you that you follow God, if you believe him to be God.
If you do not think he is God; if you really think that the
devil is God, then follow him; his pretended godhead shall
be your plea, and you shall be consistent; but if God be
God, if he made you, I demand that you serve him; if it is
he who puts the breath into your nostrils, I demand that you
obey him. If God be really worthy of your worship, and you
really think so, I demand that you either follow him, or
else deny that he is God at all." Now, professor, if thou
sayest that Christ's gospel is the gospel, if thou believest
in the divinity of the gospel, and puttest thy trust in
Christ, I demand of thee to follow out the gospel, not
merely because it will be to thy advantage, but because the
gospel is divine. If thou makest a profession of being a
child of God, if thou art a believer, and thinkest and
believest religion is the best, the service of God the most
desirable, I do not come to plead with thee because of any
advantage thou wouldst get by being holy; it is on this
ground that I put it, that the Lord is God; and if he be
God, it is thy business to serve him. If his gospel be true,
and thou believest it to be true, it is thy duty to carry it
out. If thou sayest Christ is not the Son of God, carry out
thy Jewish or thy infidel convictions, and see whether it
will end well. If thou dost not believe Christ to be the Son
of God, if thou art a Mohammedan, be consistent, carry out
thy Mohammedan convictions, and see whether it will end
well. But, take heed, take heed! If, however, thou sayest
God is God, and Christ the Saviour, and the gospel true; I
demand of thee, only on this account, that thou carry it
out. What a strong plea some would think the prophet might
have had, if he had said, "God is your fathers, God,
therefore follow him!" But no, he did not come down to that;
he said, "If God be God—I do not care whether he be your
fathers' God or not—follow him." "Why do you go to chapel?"
says one, "and not to church?" "Because my father and
grandfather were dissenters." Ask a churchman, very often,
why he attends the establishment. "Well, our family were
always brought up to it; that is why I go." Now, I do think
that the worst of all reasons for a particular religion, is
that of our being brought up to it. I never could see that
at all. I have attended the house of God with my father and
my grandfather; but I thought, when I read the Scriptures,
that it was my business to judge for myself. I knew that my
father and my grandfather took little children in their
arms, and put drops of water on their faces, and they were
baptized. I took up my Bible, and I could not see any thing
about babes being baptized. I picked up a little Greek; and
I could not discover that the word "baptized" meant to
sprinkle; so I said to myself, "Suppose they are good men,
they may be wrong; and though I love and revere them, yet it
is no reason why I should imitate them." And therefore I
left them, and became what I am to-day, a Baptist minister,
so called, but I hope a great deal more a Christian than a
Baptist. It is seldom I mention it; I only do so by way of
illustration here. Many a one will go to chapel, because his
grandmother did. Well, she was a good old soul, but I do not
see that she ought to influence your judgment. "That does
not signify," says one, "I do not like to leave the church
of my fathers." No more do I; I would rather belong to the
same denomination with my father; I would not willfully
differ from any of my friends, or leave their sect and
denomination, but let God be above our parents; though our
parents are at the very top of our hearts, and we love them
and reverence them, and in all other matters pay them strict
obedience, yet, with regard to religion, to our own Master
we stand or fall, and we claim to have the right of judging
for ourselves as men, and then we think it our duty, having
judged, to carry out our convictions. Now I am not going to
Say, "If God be your mother's God, serve him;" though that
would be a very good argument with some of you; but with you
waverers, the only plea I use is, "If God be God, serve
him;" if the gospel be right, believe it; if a religious
life be right, carry it out; if not, give it up. I only put
my argument on Elijah's plea—"If God be God, follow him; but
if Baal, then follow him." VI. And now I make my appeal to
the halters and waverers, with some questions, which I pray
the Lord to apply. Now I will put this question to them:
"How long halt ye?" I will tell them; ye will halt
between two opinions, all of you who are undecided, until
God shall answer by fire. Fire was not what these poor
people wanted that were assembled there. When Elijah says,
that "the God that answereth by fire let him be God," I
fancy I hear some of them saying, "No; the God that
answereth by water let him be God; we want rain badly
enough." "No," said Elijah," if rain should come, you would
say that it was the common course of providence; and that
would not decide you." I tell you, all the providences that
befall you undecided ones will not decide you. God may
surround you with providences; he may surround you with
frequent warnings from the death-bed of your fellows; but
providences will never decide you. It is not the God of
rain, but the God of fire that will do it. There are two
ways in which you undecided ones will be decided by-and-by.
You that are decided for God will want no decision; you that
are decided for Satan will want no decision; you are on
Satan's side, and must dwell for ever in eternal burning.
But these undecided ones want something to decide them, and
will have either one of the two things; they will either
have the fire of God's Spirit to decide them, or else the
fire of eternal judgment, and that will decide them. I may
preach to you, my hearers; and all the ministers in the
world may preach to you that are wavering, but you will
never decide for God through the force of your own will.
None of you, if left to your natural judgment, to the use of
your own reason, will ever decide for God. You may decide
for him merely as an outward form, but not as an inward
spiritual thing, which should possess your heart as a
Christian, as a believer in the doctrine of effectual grace.
I know that none of you will ever decide for God's gospel,
unless God decide you; and I tell you that you must either
be decided by the descent of the fire of his Spirit into
your hearts now, or else in the day of judgment. O! which
shall it be? O! that the prayer might be put up by the
thousand lips that are here: "Lord, decide me now by the
fire of thy Spirit; O! let thy Spirit descend into my heart,
to burn up the bullock, that I may be a whole burnt offering
to God; to burn up the wood and the stones of my sin; to
burn up the very dust of worldliness; ah, and to lick up the
water of my impiety, which now lieth in the trenches, and my
cold indifference, that seek to put out the sacrifice."
"O make this
heart rejoice or ache!
Decide this doubt for me;
And if it be not broken, break,
And heal it, if it be."
"O sovereign
grace, my heart subdue;
I would be led in triumph too,
A willing captive to my Lord,
To sing the triumphs of his word."
And it may be, that whilst I speak, the mighty fire, unseen
by men, and unfelt by the vast majority of you, shall
descend into some heart which has of old been dedicated to
God by his divine election, which is now like an altar
broken down, but which God, by his free grace, will this day
build up. O! I pray that that influence may enter into some
hearts, that there may be some go out of this place, saying,
"Tis done, the
great transaction's done,
I am my Lord's, and he is mine;
He drew me, and I followed on,
Glad to obey the voice divine."
Now rest my undivided heart, fixed on this stable center,
rest." O! that many may say that! But remember, if it be not
so, the day is coming—dies irae, the day of wrath and
anger—when ye shall be decided of God; when the firmament
shall be lit up with lightnings, when the earth shall roll
with drunken terror, when the pillars of the universe shall
shake, and God shall sit, in the person of his Son, to judge
the world in righteousness. You will not be undecided then,
when, "Depart ye cursed," or "Come, ye blessed," shall be
your doom. There will be no indecision then, when you shall
meet him with joy or else with terror—when, "rocks hide me,
mountains on me fall," shall be your doleful shriek; or else
your joyful song shall be, "The Lord is come." In that day
you will be decided; but till then, unless the living fire
of the Holy Spirit decide you, you will go on halting
between two opinions. May God grant you his Holy Spirit that
you may turn unto him and be saved!
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