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No Compromise
By
Charles Spurgeon
“And
the servant said unto him, Peradventure the woman will not be
willing to follow me unto this land: must I needs bring thy son
again unto the land from whence thou earnest? And Abraham said
unto him, Beware thou that thou bring not my son thither again.
The Lord God of heaven, which took me from my father’s house,
and from the land of my kindred, and which spake unto me, and
that aware unto me, saying, Unto thy seed will I give this land;
he shall send his angel before thee, and thou shalt take a wife
unto my son from thence. And if the woman will not be willing to
follow thee, then thou shalt be clear from this my oath: only
bring not my son thither again.” — Genesis xxiv. 5-8.
Genesis is
both the book of beginnings and the book of dispensations. You
know what use Paul makes of Sarah and Hagar, of Esau and Jacob,
and the like. Genesis is, all through, a book instructing the
reader in the dispensations of God towards man. Paul saith, in a
certain place, “which things are an allegory,” by which he did
not mean that they were not literal facts, but that, being
literal facts, they might also be used instructively as an
allegory. So may I say of this chapter. It records what actually
was said and done; but at the same time, it bears within it
allegorical instruction with regard to heavenly things. The true
minister of Christ is like this Eleazar of Damascus; he is sent
to find a wife for his Master’s Son. His great desire is, that
many shall be presented unto Christ in the day of his appearing,
as the bride, the Lamb’s wife.
The
faithful servant of Abraham, before he started, communed with
his master; and this is a lesson to us, who go on our Lord’s
errands. Let us, before we engage in actual service, see the
Master’s face, talk with him, and tell to him any difficulties
which occur to our minds. Before we get to work, let us know
what we are at, and on what footing we stand. Let us hear from
our Lord’s own mouth what he expects us to do, and how far he
will help us in the doing of it. I charge you, my
fellow-servants, never to go forth to plead with men for God
until you have first pleaded with God for men. Do not attempt to
deliver a message which you have not first of all yourself
received by his Holy Spirit. Come out of the chamber of
fellowship with God into the pulpit of ministry among men, and
there will be a freshness and a power about you which none shall
be able to resist. Abraham’s servant spoke and acted as one who
felt bound to do exactly what his master bade him, and to say
what his master told him; hence his one anxiety was to know the
essence and measure of his commission. During his converse with
his master he mentioned one little point about which there might
be a hitch; and his master soon removed the difficulty from his
mind. It is about that hitch, which has occurred lately on a
very large scale, and has upset a good many of my Master’s
servants, that I am going to speak this morning: may God grant
that it may be to the benefit of his church at large!
I.
Beginning our sermon, we will ask you, first, to THINK OF THE
SERVANT’S JOYFUL BUT WEIGHTY ERRAND. It was a joyful errand: the
bells of marriage were ringing around him. The marriage of the
heir should be a joyful event. It was an honourable thing for
the servant to be entrusted with the finding of a wife for his
master’s son. Yet it was every way a most responsible business,
by no means easy of accomplishment. Blunders might very readily
occur before he was aware of it; and he needed to have all his
wits about him, and something more than his wits, too, for so
delicate a matter. He had to journey far, over lands without
track or road; he had to seek out a family which he did not
know, and to find out of that family a woman whom he did not
know, who nevertheless should be the right person to be the wife
of his master’s son: all this was a great service.
The work
this man undertook was a business upon which his master’s heart
was set. Isaac was now forty years old, and had shown no sign of
marrying. He was of a quiet, gentle spirit, and needed a more
active spirit to urge him on. The death of Sarah had deprived
him of the solace of his life, which he had found in his mother,
and had, no doubt, made him desire tender companionship. Abraham
himself was old, and well stricken in years; and he very
naturally wished to see the promise beginning to be fulfilled,
that in Isaac should his seed be called. Therefore, with great
anxiety, which is indicated by his making his servant swear an
oath of a most solemn kind, he gave him the commission to go to
the old family abode in Mesopotamia, and seek for Isaac a bride
from thence. Although that family was not all that could be
desired, yet it was the best he knew of; and as some heavenly
light lingered there, he hoped to find in that place the best
wife for his son. The business was, however, a serious one which
he committed to his servant. My brethren, this is nothing
compared with the weight which hangs on the true minister of
Christ. All the Great Father’s heart is set on giving to Christ
a church which shall be his beloved for ever. Jesus must not be
alone: his church must be his dear companion. The Father would
find a bride for the great Bridegroom, a recompense for the
Redeemer, a solace for the Saviour: therefore he lays it upon
all whom he calls to tell out the gospel, that we should seek
souls for Jesus, and never rest till hearts are wedded to the
Son of God. Oh, for grace to carry out this commission!
This
message was the more weighty because of the person for whom the
spouse was sought. Isaac was an extraordinary personage; indeed,
to the servant he was unique. He was a man born according to
promise, not after the flesh, but by the power of God; and you
know how in Christ, and in all that are one with Christ, the
life comes by the promise and the power of God, and springeth
not of man. Isaac was himself the fulfilment of promise, and the
heir of the promise. Infinitely glorious is our Lord. Jesus as
the Son of man! Who shall declare his generation? Where shall be
found a helpmeet for him? a soul fit to be espoused unto him?
Isaac had been sacrificed; he had been laid upon the altar, and
although he did not actually die, his father’s hand had
unsheathed the knife wherewith to slay him. Abraham in spirit
had offered up his son; and you know who he is of whom we
preach, and for whom we preach, even Jesus, who has laid down
his life a sacrifice for sinners. He has been presented as a
whole burnt-offering unto God. Oh! by the wounds, and by the
bloody sweat, I ask you where shall we find a heart fit to be
wedded to him? How shall we find men and women who can worthily
recompense love so amazing, so divine, as that of him who died
the death of the cross? Isaac had also been, in a figure, raised
from the dead. To his father he was “as good as dead,” as said
the apostle; and he was given back to him from the dead. But our
blessed Lord has actually risen from an actual death, and stands
before us this day as the Conqueror of death, and the Spoiler of
the grave. Who shall be joined to this Conqueror? Who is fit to
dwell in glory with this glorious One? One would have thought
that every heart would aspire to such happiness, and leap in
prospect of such peerless honour, and that none would shrink
back except through a sense of great unworthiness. Alas! it is
not so, though so it ought to be.
What a
weighty errand have we to fulfil to find those who shall be
linked for ever in holy union with the Heir of the promise, even
the sacrificed and risen One! Isaac was everything to Abraham.
Abraham would have said to Isaac, “All that I have is thine.” So
is it true of our blessed Lord, whom he hath made heir of all
things; by whom also he made the worlds, that “it pleased the
Father that in him should all fulness dwell.” What a dignity
will be put upon any of you who are married to Christ! To what a
height of eminence will you be uplifted by becoming one with
Jesus! O preacher, what a work hast thou to do to-day, to find
out those to whom thou shalt give the bracelet, and upon whose
face thou shalt hang the jewel! To whom shall I say, “Wilt thou
give thy heart to my Lord! Wilt thou have Jesus to be thy
confidence, thy salvation, thine all in all? Art thou willing to
become his that he may be thine?”
Said I not
truly that it was a joyful, but a weighty errand, when you think
what she must be to whom hie master’s son should be espoused?
She must, at least, be willing and beautiful. In the day of
God’s power hearts are made willing. There can be no marriage to
Jesus without a heart of love. Where shall we find this willing
heart? Only where the grace of God has wrought it. Ah, then, I
see how I may find beauty, too, among the sons of men! Marred as
our nature is by sin, only the Holy Spirit can impart that
beauty of holiness which will enable the Lord Jesus to see
comeliness in his chosen. Alas! in our hearts there is an
aversion to Christ, and an unwillingness to accept of him, and
at the same time a terrible unfitness and unworthiness! The
Spirit of God implants a love which is of heavenly origin, and
renews the heart by a regeneration from above; and then we seek
to be one with Jesus, but not till then. See, then, how our
errand calls for the help of God himself.
Think what
she will become who is to be married to Isaac? She is to be his
delight; his loving friend and companion. She is to be partner
of all his wealth; and specially is she to be a partaker in the
great covenant promise, which was peculiarly entailed upon
Abraham and his family. When a sinner comes to Christ, what does
Christ make of him? His delight is in him: he communes with him;
he hears his prayer, he accepts his praise; he works in him and
with him, and glorifies himself in him. He makes the believing
man joint-heir with himself of all that he has, and introduces
him into the covenant treasure-house, wherein the riches and
glory of God are stored up for his chosen. Ah, dear friends! it
is a very small business in the esteem of some to preach the
gospel; and yet, if God is with us, ours is more than angels’
service. In a humble way you are telling of Jesus to your boys
and girls in your classes; and some will despise you as “only
Sunday-school teachers”; but your work has a spiritual weight
about it unknown to conclaves of senators, and absent from the
counsels of emperors. Upon what you say, death, and hell, and
worlds unknown are hanging. You are working out the destinies of
immortal spirits, turning souls from ruin to glory, from sin to
holiness.
“‘Tis not
a work of small import Your loving care demands; But what might
fill an angel’s heart, And filled the Saviour’s hands.”
In
carrying out his commission, this servant must spare no
exertion. It would be required of him to journey to a great
distance, having a general indication of direction, but not
knowing the way. He must have divine guidance and protection.
When he reached the place, he must exercise great common-sense,
and at the same time a trustful dependence upon the goodness and
wisdom of God. It would be a wonder of wonders if he ever met
the chosen woman, and only the Lord could bring it to pass. He
had all the care and the faith required. We have read the story
of how he journeyed, and prayed, and pleaded. We should have
cried, “Who is sufficient for these things? “ but we see that
the Lord Jehovah made him sufficient, and his mission was
happily carried out. How can we put ourselves into the right
position to get at sinners, and win them for Jesus? How can we
learn to speak the right words? How shall we suit our teaching
to the condition of their hearts? How shall we adapt ourselves
to their feelings, their prejudices, their sorrows, and their
temptations? Brethren, we who preach the gospel continually may
well cry, “If thy presence go not with me, carry us not up
hence.” To seek for pearls at the bottom of the sea is child’s
play compared with seeking for souls in this wicked London. If
God be not with us, we may look our eyes out, and wear our
tongues away in vain. Only as the Almighty God shall lead, and
guide, and influence, and inspire, can we perform our solemn
trust; only by divine help shall we joyfully come back, bringing
with us the chosen of the Lord. We are the Bridegroom’s friends,
and we rejoice greatly in his joy, but we sigh and cry till we
have found the chosen hearts in whom he will delight, whom he
shall raise to sit with him upon his throne.
II.
Secondly, I would have you CONSIDER THE REASONABLE FEAR WHICH IS
MENTIONED. Abraham’s servant said, “Peradventure the woman will
not be willing to follow me unto this land.” This is a very
serious, grave, and common difficulty. If the woman be not
willing, nothing can be done; force and fraud are out of the
question; there must be a true will, or there can be no marriage
in this instance. Here was the difficulty: here was a will to be
dealt with. Ah, my brethren! this is our difficulty still. Let
me describe this difficulty in detail as it appeared to the
servant, and appears to us.
She may
not believe my report, or be impressed by it. When I come to
her, and tell her that I am sent by Abraham, she may look me in
the face, and say, “There be many deceivers nowadays.” If I tell
her that my master’s son is surpassingly beautiful and rich, and
that he would fain take her to himself, she may answer, “Strange
tales and romances are common in these days; but the prudent do
not quit their homes.” Brethren, in our case this is a sad fact.
The great evangelical prophet cried of old, “Who hath believed
our report?” We also cry in the same words. Men care not for the
report of God’s great love to the rebellious sons of men. They
do not believe that the infinitely glorious Lord is seeking the
love of poor, insignificant man, and to win it has laid down his
life. Calvary, with its wealth of mercy, grief, love, and merit,
is disregarded. Indeed, we tell a wonderful story, and it may
well seem too good to be true; but it is sad indeed that the
multitude of men go their ways after trifles, and count these
grand realities to be but dreams. I am bowed down with dismay
that my Lord’s great love, which led him even to die for men,
should hardly be thought worthy of your hearing, much less of
your believing. Here is a heavenly marriage, and right royal
nuptials placed within your reach; but with a sneer you turn
aside, and prefer the witcheries of sin.
There was
another difficulty: she was expected to feel a love to one she
had never seen. She had only newly heard that there was such a
person as Isaac, but yet she must love him enough to leave her
kindred, and go to a distant land. This could only be because
she recognized the will of Jehovah in the matter. Ah, my dear
hearers! all that we tell you is concerning things not seen as
yet; and here is our difficulty. You have eyes, and you want to
see everything; you have hands, and you want to handle
everything; but there is one whom you cannot see as yet, who has
won our love because of what we believe concerning him. We can
truly say of him, “Whom having not seen, we love: in whom,
though now we see him not, yet believing, we rejoice with joy
unspeakable and full of glory.” I know that you answer our
request thus: “You demand too much of us when you ask us to love
a Christ we have never seen.” I can only answer, “It is even so:
we do ask more of you than we expect to receive.” Unless God the
Holy Ghost shall work a miracle of grace upon your hearts, you
will not be persuaded by us to quit your old associations, and
join yourselves to our beloved Lord. And yet, if you did come to
him, and love him, he would more than content you; for you would
find in him rest unto your souls, and a peace which passeth all
understanding.
Abraham’s
servant may have thought: She may refuse to make so great a
change as to quit Mesopotamia for Canaan. She had been born and
bred away there in a settled country, and all her associations
were with her father’s house; and to marry Isaac she must tear
her self away. So, too, you cannot have Jesus, and have the
world too: you must break with sin to be joined to Jesus. You
must come away from the licentious world, the fashionable world,
the scientific world, and from the (so-called) religious world.
If you become a Christian, you must quit old habits, old
motives, old ambitions, old pleasures, old boasts, old modes of
thought. All things must become new. You must leave the things
you have loved, and seek many of those things which you have
hitherto despised. There must come to you as great a change as
if you had died, and were made over again. You answer, “Must I
endure all this for One whom I have never seen, and for an
inheritance on which I have never set my foot?” It is even so.
Although I am grieved that you turn away, I am not in the least
surprised, for it is not given to many to see him who is
invisible, or to choose the strait and narrow way which leadeth
unto life. The man or woman who will follow God’s messenger to
be married to so strange a Bridegroom is a rare bird.
Moreover,
it might be a great difficulty to Rebekah, if she had had any
difficulties at all, to think that she must henceforth lead a
pilgrim life. She would quit house and farm for tent and gipsy
life. Abraham and Isaac found no city to dwell in, but wandered
from place to place, dwelling alone, sojourners with God. Their
outward mode of life was typical of the way of faith, by which
men live in the world, and are not of it. To all intents and
purposes Abraham and Isaac were out of the world, and lived on
its surface without lasting connection with it. They were the
Lord’s men, and the Lord was their possession. He set himself
apart for them, and they were set apart for him. Rebekah might
well have said, “That will never do for me. I cannot outlaw
myself. I cannot quit the comforts of a settled abode to ramble
over the fields wherever the flocks may require me to roam.” It
does not strike the most of mankind that it would be a good
thing to be in the world, and yet not to be of it. They are no
strangers in the world, they long to be admitted more fully into
its “society.” They are not aliens here with their treasures in
heaven, they long to have a good round sum on earth, and find
their heaven in enjoying it themselves, and enriching their
families. Earthworms as they are, the earth contents them. If
any man becomes unworldly, and makes spiritual things his one
object, they despise him as a dreamy enthusiast. Many men think
that the things of religion are merely meant to be read of, and
to be preached about; but that to live for them would be to
spend a dreamy, unpractical existence. Yet the spiritual is,
after all, the only real: the material is in deepest truth the
visionary and unsubstantial. Still, when people turn away
because of the hardness of holy warfare, and the spirituality of
the believing life, we are not astonished, for we hardly hoped
it could be otherwise. Unless the Lord renews the heart, men
will always prefer the bird-in-the-hand of this life to the
bird-in-the-bush of the life to come.
Moreover,
it might be that the woman might not care for the covenant of
promise. If she had no regard for Jehovah and his revealed will,
she was not likely to go with the man, and enter upon marriage
with Isaac. He was the heir of the promises, the inheritor of
the covenant privileges which the Lord by oath had promised. His
chosen would become the mother of that chosen seed in whom God
had ordained to bless the world throughout all the ages, even
the Messiah, the seed of the woman, who should bruise the
serpent’s head.
Peradventure the woman might not see the value of the covenant,
nor appreciate the glory of the promise. The things we have to
preach of, such as life everlasting, union with Christ,
resurrection from the dead, reigning with him for ever and ever,
seem to the dull hearts of men to be as idle tales. Tell them of
a high interest for their money, of large estates to be had for
a venture, or of honours to be readily gained, and inventions to
be found out, they open all their eyes and their ears, for here
is something worth knowing; but the things of God, eternal,
immortal, boundless — these are of no importance to them. They
could not be induced to go from Ur to Canaan for such trifles as
eternal life, and heaven, and God.
So you see
our difficulty. Many disbelieve altogether, and others cavil and
object. A greater number will not even listen to our story; and
of those who do listen, most are careless, and others daily with
it, and postpone the serious consideration. Alas? we speak to
unwilling ears.
III. In
the third place, I would ENLARGE UPON HIS VERY NATURAL
SUGGESTION. This prudent steward said, “Peradventure the woman
will not be willing to follow me unto this land: Must I needs
bring thy son again unto the land from whence thou camest?” If
she will not come to Isaac, shall Isaac go down to her? This is
the suggestion of the present hour: if the world will not come
to Jesus, shall Jesus tone down his teachings to the world? In
other words, if the world will not rise to the church, shall not
the church go down to the world? Instead of bidding men to be
converted, and come out from among sinners, and be separate from
them, let us join with the ungodly world, enter into union with
it, and so pervade it with our influence by allowing it to
influence us. Let us have a Christian world.
To this
end let us revise our doctrines. Some are old-fashioned, grim,
severe, unpopular; let us drop them out. Use the old phrases so
as to please the obstinately orthodox, but give them new
meanings so as to win philosophical infidels, who are prowling
around. Pare off the edges of unpleasant truths, and moderate
the dogmatic tone of infallible revelation: say that Abraham and
Moses made mistakes, and that the books which have been so long
had in reverence are full of errors. Undermine the old faith,
and bring in the new doubt; for the times are altered, and the
spirit of the age suggests the abandonment of everything that is
too severely righteous, and too surely of God.
The
deceitful adulteration of doctrine is attended by a
falsification of experience. Men are now told that they were
born good, or were made so by their infant baptism, and so that
great sentence, “Ye must be born again,” is deprived of its
force. Repentance is ignored, faith is a drug in the market as
compared with “honest doubt,” and mourning for sin and communion
with God are dispensed with, to make way for entertainments, and
Socialism, and politics of varying shades. A new creature in
Christ Jesus is looked upon as a sour invention of bigoted
Puritans. It is true, with the same breath they extol Oliver
Cromwell; but then 1888 is not 1648. What was good and great
three hundred years ago is mere cant to-day. That is what
“modern thought” is telling us; and under its guidance all
religion is being toned down. Spiritual religion is despised,
and a fashionable morality is set up in its place. Do yourself
up tidily on Sunday; behave yourself; and above all, believe
everything except what you read in the Bible, and you will be
all right. Be fashionable, and think with those who profess to
be scientific — this is the first and great commandment of the
modern school; and the second is like unto it — do not be
singular, but be as worldly as your neighbours. Thus is Isaac
going down into Padan-aram: thus is the church going down to the
world.
Men seem
to say — It is of no use going on in the old way, fetching out
one here and another there from the great mass. We want a
quicker way. To wait till people are born again, and become
followers of Christ, is a long process: let us abolish the
separation between the regenerate and unregenerate. Come into
the church, all of you, converted or unconverted. You have good
wishes and good resolutions; that will do: don’t trouble about
more. It is true you do not believe the gospel, but neither do
we. You believe something or other. Come along; if you do not
believe anything, no matter; your “honest doubt” is better by
far than faith. “But,” say you, “nobody talks so.” Possibly they
do not use the same words, but this is the real meaning of the
present-day religion; this is the drift of the times. I can
justify the broadest statement I have made by the action or by
the speech of certain ministers, who are treacherously betraying
our holy religion under pretence of adapting it to this
progressive age. The new plan is to assimilate the church to the
world, and so include a larger area within it bounds. By
semi-dramatic performances they make houses of prayer to
approximate to the theatre; they turn their services into
musical displays, and their sermons into political harangues or
philosophical essays — in fact, they exchange the temple for the
theatre, and turn the ministers of God into actors, whose
business it is to amuse men. Is it not so, that the Lord’s-day
is becoming more and more a day of recreation or of idleness,
and the Lord’s house either a joss-house full of idols, or a
political club, where there is more enthusiasm for a party than
zeal for God? Ah me! the hedges are broken down, the walls are
levelled, and to many there is, henceforth, no church except as
a portion of the world, no God except as an unknowable force by
which the laws of nature work.
This,
then, is the proposal. In order to win the world, the Lord Jesus
must conform himself, his people, and his Word to the world. I
will not dwell any longer on so loathsome a proposal.
IV. In the
fourth place, NOTICE HIS MASTER’S OUTSPOKEN, BELIEVING
REPUDIATION OF THE PROPOSAL. He says, shortly and sharply,
“Beware thou that thou bring not my on thither again.” The Lord
Jesus Christ heads that grand emigration party which has come
right out from the world. Addressing his disciples, he says, “Ye
are not of the world, even as I am not of the world.” We are not
of the world by birth, not of the world in life, not of the
world in object, not of the world in spirit, not of the world in
any respect whatever. Jesus, and those who are in him,
constitute a new race. The proposal to go back to the world is
abhorrent to our best instincts; yea, deadly to our noblest
life. A voice from heaven cries, “Bring not my son thither
again.” Let not the people whom the Lord brought up out of Egypt
return to the house of bondage; but let their children come out,
and be separate, and the Lord Jehovah will be a Father unto
them.
Notice how
Abraham states the question. In effect, he argues it thus: this
would be to forego the divine order. “For,” says Abraham, “the
Lord God of heaven took me from my father’s house, and from the
land of my kindred.” What, then, if he brought Abraham out, is
Isaac to return? This cannot be. Hitherto the way of God with
his church has been to sever a people from the world to be his
elect — a people formed for himself, who shall show forth his
praise. Beloved, God’s plan is not altered. He will still go on
calling those whom he did predestinate. Do not let us fly in the
teeth of that fact, and suppose that we can save men on a more
wholesale scale by ignoring the distinction between the dead in
sin and the living in Zion. If God had meant to bless the family
at Padan-aram by letting his chosen ones dwell among them, why
did he call Abraham out at all? If Isaac may do good by dwelling
there, why did Abraham leave? If there is no need of a separate
church now, what have we been at throughout all these ages? Has
the martyr’s blood been shed out of mere folly? Have confessors
and reformers been mad when contending for doctrines which, it
would seem, are of no great account? Brethren, there are two
seeds — the seed of the woman, and the seed of the serpent — and
the difference will be maintained even to the end; neither must
we ignore the distinction to please men.
For Isaac
to go down to Nahor’s house for a wife would be placing God
second to a wife. Abraham begins at once with a reference to
Jehovah, “the God of heaven”; for Jehovah was everything to him,
and to Isaac also. Isaac would never renounce his walk with the
living God that he might find a wife. Yet this apostasy is
common enough nowadays. Men and women who profess godliness will
quit what they profess to believe in order to get richer wives
or husbands for themselves or their children. This mercenary
conduct is without excuse. “Better society” is the cry — meaning
more wealth and fashion. To the true man God is first — yea, all
in all; but God is placed at the fag-end, and everything else is
put before him by the base professor. In the name of God I call
upon you who are faithful to God and to his truth, to stand
fast, whatever you lose, and turn not aside, whatever you might
gain. Count the reproach of Christ greater riches than all the
treasures of Egypt. We want Abraham’s spirit within us, and we
shall have that when we have Abraham’s faith.
Abraham
felt that this would be to renounce the covenant promise. See
how he puts it: “The God that took me from my father’s house
aware unto me, saying, Unto thy seed will I give this land.” Are
they, then, to leave the land, and go back to the place from
which the Lord had called them? Brethren, we also are heirs of
the promise of things not seen as yet. For the sake of this we
walk by faith, and hence we become separate from those around
us. We dwell among men as Abraham dwelt among the Canaanites;
but we are of a distinct race: we are born with a new birth,
live under different laws, and act from different motives. If we
go back to the ways of worldlings, and are numbered with them,
we have renounced the covenant of our God, the promise is no
longer ours, and the eternal heritage is in other hands. Do you
not know this? The moment the church says, “I will be as the
world,” she has doomed herself with the world. When the sons of
God saw the daughters of men that they were fair, and took them
wives of all which they chose, then the flood came, and swept
them all away. So will it again happen should the world take the
church into its arms: then shall come some overwhelming
judgment, and, it may be, a deluge of devouring fire. The
covenant promise and the covenant heritage are no longer ours if
we go down to the world and quit our sojourning with the Lord.
Besides,
dear friends, no good can come of trying to conform to the
world. Suppose the servant’s policy could have been adopted, and
Isaac had gone down to Nahor’s house, what would have been the
motive? To spare Rebekah the pain of separating from her
friends, and the trouble of travelling. If those things could
have kept her back, what would she have been worth to Isaac? The
test of separation was wholesome, and by no means ought it to be
omitted. She is a poor wife who would not take a journey to
reach her husband. And all the converts that the church will
ever make by softening down its doctrine, and by becoming
worldly, will not be worth one bad farthing a gross. When we get
them, the next question will be, “How can we get rid of them?”
They would be of no earthly use to us. It swelled the number of
Israelites when they came out of Egypt that a great number of
the lower order of Egyptians came out with them. Yes, but that
mixed multitude became the plague of Israel in the wilderness,
and we read that “the mat multitude fell a lusting.” The
Israelites were bad enough, but it was the mixed multitude that
always led the way in murmuring. Why is there such spiritual
death to-day? Why is false doctrine so rampant in the churches?
It is because we have ungodly people in the church and in the
ministry. Eagerness for numbers, and especially eagerness to
include respectable people, has adulterated many churches, and
made them lax in doctrine and practice, and fond of silly
amusements. These are the people who despise a prayer-meeting,
but rush to see “living waxworks” in their schoolrooms. God save
us from converts who are made by lowering the standard, and
tarnishing the spiritual glory of the church! No, no; if Isaac
is to have a wife worthy of him, she will come away from Laban
and the rest, and she will not mind a journey on camel-back.
True converts are never daunted by truth or holiness — these, in
fact, are the things which charm them.
Besides,
Abraham felt that there could be no reason for taking Isaac down
there, for the Lord would assuredly find him a wife. Abraham
said, “He shall send his angel before thee, and thou shalt take
a wife unto my son from thence.” Are you afraid that preaching
the gospel will not win souls? Are you despondent as to success
in God’s way? Is this why you pine for clever oratory? Is this
why you must have music, and architecture, and flowers, and
millinery? After all, is it by might and by power, and not by
the Spirit of God? It is even so in the opinion of many.
Brethren beloved, there are many things which I might allow to
other worshippers which I have denied myself in conducting the
worship of this congregation. I have long worked out before your
very eyes the experiment of the unaided attractiveness of the
gospel of Jesus. Our service is severely plain. No man ever
comes hither to gratify his eye with art, or his ear with music.
I have set before you, these many years, nothing but Christ
crucified, and the simplicity of the gospel; yet where will you
find such a crowd as this gathered together this morning? Where
will you find such a multitude as this meeting, Sabbath after
Sabbath, for five-and-thirty years? I have shown you nothing but
the cross, the cross without the flowers of oratory, the cross
without the blue lights of superstition or excitement, the cross
without diamonds of ecclesiastical rank, the cross without the
buttresses of a boastful science. It is abundantly sufficient to
attract men first to itself, and afterwards to eternal life! In
this house we have proved successfully, these many years, this
great truth, that the gospel plainly preached will gain an
audience, convert sinners, and build up and sustain a church. We
beseech the people of God to mark that there is no need to try
doubtful expedients and questionable methods. God will save by
the gospel still: only let it be the gospel in its purity. This
grand old sword will cleave a man’s chine, and split a rock in
halves. How is it that it does so little of its old conquering
work? I will tell you. Do you see this scabbard of artistic
work, so wonderfully elaborated? Full many keep the sword in
this scabbard, and therefore its edge never gets to its work.
Pull off that scabbard. Fling that fine sheath to Hades, and
then see how, in the Lord’s hands, that glorious two-handed
sword will mow down fields of men as mowers level the grass with
their scythes. There is no need to go down to Egypt for help. To
invite the devil to help Christ is shameful. Please God, we
shall see prosperity yet, when the church of God is resolved
never to seek it except in God’s own way.
V. And
now, fifthly, observe HIS RIGHTEOUS ABSOLUTION OF HIS SERVANT.
“If the woman will not be willing to follow thee, then thou
shalt be clear from this my oath: only bring not my son thither
again.”
When we
lie a-dying, if we have faithfully preached the gospel, our
conscience will not accuse us for having kept closely to it: we
shall not mourn that we did not play the fool or the politician
in order to increase our congregation. Oh, no! our Master will
give us full absolution, even if few be gathered in, so long as
we have been true to him. “If the woman will not be willing to
follow thee, then thou shalt be clear from this my oath; only
bring not my son thither again.” Do not try the dodges which
debase religion. Keep to the simple gospel; and if the people
are not converted by it, you will be clear. My dear hearers, how
much I long to see you saved! But I would not belie my Lord,
even to win your souls, if they could be so won The true servant
of God is responsible for diligence and faithfulness, but he is
not responsible for success or non-success. Results are in God’s
hands. If that dear child in your class is not converted, yet if
you have set before him the gospel of Jesus Christ with loving,
prayerful earnestness, you shall not be without your reward. If
I preach from my very soul the grand truth that faith in the
Lord Jesus Christ will save my hearers, and if I persuade and
entreat them to believe in Jesus unto eternal life; if they will
not do so, their blood will lie upon their own heads. When I go
back to my Master, if I have faithfully told out his message of
free grace and dying love, I shall be clear. I have often prayed
that I might be able to say at the last what George Fox could so
truly say: “I am clear, I am clear! “ It is my highest ambition
to be clear of the blood of all men. I have preached God’s
truth, so far as I know it, and I have not been ashamed of its
peculiarities. That I might not stultify my testimony I have cut
myself clear of those who err from the faith, and even from
those who associate with them. What more can I do to be honest
with you? If, after all, men will not have Christ, and his
gospel, and his rule, it is their own concern. If Rebekah had
not come to Isaac she would have lost her place in the holy
line. My beloved hearer, will you have Jesus Christ or not? He
has come into the world to save sinners, and he casts out none.
Will you accept him? Will you trust him? “He that believeth and
is baptized shall be saved.” Will you believe him? Will you be
baptized into his name? If so, salvation is yours; but if not,
he himself hath said it, “He that believeth not shall be
damned.” Oh, do not expose yourselves to that damnation! Or, if
you are set upon it; then, when the great white throne shall be
seen in yonder skies, and the day of wrath has come, do me the
justice to acknowledge that I bade you flee to Jesus, and that I
did not amuse you with novel theories. I have brought neither
flute, harp, sackbut, psaltery, dulcimer, nor any other kind of
music to please your ears, but I have set Christ crucified
before you, and bidden you believe and live. If you refuse to
accept the substitution of Christ, you have refused your own
mercies. Clear me in that day of all complicity with the novel
inventions of deluded men. As for my Lord, I pray of him grace
to be faithful to the end, both to his truth, and to your souls.
Amen
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