THIS TEXT CALLS to my recollection the opening of my ministry. It is
about eight years since as a lad of sixteen, I stood up for the first time
in my life to preach the gospel in a cottage to a handful of poor people,
who had come together for worship. I felt my own inability to preach, but
I ventured to take this text, "Unto you therefore which believe he is precious."
I do not think I could have said anything upon any other text, but Christ
was precious to my soul and I was in the flush of my youthful love, and
I could not be silent when a precious Jesus was the subject. I had but
just escaped from the bondage of Egypt, I had not forgotten the broken
fetter; still did I recollect those flames which seemed to burn about my
path, and that devouring gulf which opened its mouth as if ready to devour
me. With all these things fresh in my youthful heart, I could speak of
his preciousness who had been my Saviour, and had plucked me as a brand
from the burning, and set me upon a rock, and put a new song in my mouth,
and established my goings. And now, at this time what shall I say? "What
hath God wrought?" How hath the little one become a thousand, and the small
one a great people? And what shall I say concerning this text, but that
if the Lord Jesus was precious then, he is as precious now? And if I could
declare then, that Jesus was the object of my soul's desire, that for him
I hoped to live, and for him I would be prepared to die, can I not say,
God being my witness, that he is more precious to me this day than ever
he was? In the recollection of his unparalleled mercy towards the chief
of sinners, I must anew devote myself to him, and afresh surrender my heart
to him who is Lord and King.
This remark is uttered by way of introduction,
it may seem egotistical, but that I cannot help. I must give glory to God
in the midst of the great congregation, and pay my vows to the Lord now
in the midst of all his saints, in the midst of thee, O Jerusalem.
My text states a positive fact, namely, that
Christ is precious to believers. This shall be the first part of our discourse;
then in the second we will try to answer the question, why is Jesus Christ
so precious to his believing people? And conclude by declaring the test
whereby you may try yourselves whether you are believers or not; for if
you be believers in Christ, then Christ is precious to you, and if you
think little of him, then rest assured you have not a true and saving faith
in him.
I. First, this is a positive fact, that UNTO
BELIEVERS JESUS CHRIST IS PRECIOUS. In himself he is of inestimable preciousness,
for he is the very God of very God. He is moreover, perfect man without
sin. The precious gopher wood of his humanity is overlaid with the pure
gold of his divinity. He is a mine of jewels, and a mountain of gems. He
is altogether lovely, but, alas! this blind world seeth not his beauty.
The painted harlotries of that which, Madam Bubble, the world can see,
and all men wonder after her. This life, its joy, its lust, its gains,
its honours,—these have beauty in the eye of the unregenerate man, but
in Christ he sees nothing which he can admire. He hears his name as a common
word, and looks upon his cross as a thing in which he has no interest,
neglects his gospel, despises his Word, and, perhaps, vents fierce spite
upon his people. But not so the believer. The man who has been brought
to know that Christ is the only foundation upon which the soul can build
its eternal home, he who has been taught that Jesus Christ is the first
and the last, the Alpha and the Omega, the author and the finisher of faith,
thinks not lightly of Christ. He calls him all his salvation and all his
desire; the only glorious and lovely one.
Now, this is a fact which has been proved
in all ages of the world. Look at the beginning of Christ's appearance
upon earth. Nay, we might go farther back and mark how Christ was precious
in prospect to those who lived before his incarnation; but, I say, since
he has come into the world, what abundant proofs have we that he is precious
to his people! There were men found who were not unwilling to part with
houses, and lands, and wife, and children, and country, and reputation,
and honour, and wealth, nay, with life itself, for Christ's sake. Such
was the charm that Christ had for ancient Christians, that if they must
renounce their patrimony and their earthly wealth for his sake, they did
it cheerfully and without a murmur. Nay, they could say, that what things
were gain they counted but loss for Christ's sake, and did esteem them
but as dross and dung if they could win Christ and be found in him.
We talk lightly of these things, but these
were no mean sacrifices. For a man to leave the partner of his bosom, to
be despised by her who ought to honour him, to be spit upon by his own
children, to be driven out by his countrymen, and have his name mentioned
as a hissing, and a reproach, and a bye-word; this is no easy matter to
bear; and yet the Christians in the first ages took up this cross, and
not only carried it patiently, but carried it joyfully; rejoicing in tribulations,
if those tribulations fell upon them for Christ's sake and the gospel.
Nay, more than this, Satan has been permitted to put forth his hand and
touch Christ's people, not only in their goods and in their families, but
in their bone and in their flesh. And mark how Christ's disciples have
reckoned nothing to be a loss, so that they might win Christ. Stretched
upon the rack, their strained nerves have only made them sing the louder,
as though they were harp strings, only put in tune when they were drawn
out to their extreme length. They have been tortured with hot irons and
with the pincers; their backs have been ploughed with scourges, but when
have you found any of the true followers of Christ flinch in the hour of
pain? They have borne all this, and challenged their persecutors to do
more, and invent fresh arts and devices, fresh cruelties, and try them.
Christ was so precious, that all the pain of the body could not make them
deny him, and when at last they have been taken forth to a shameful death—let
the axe and the block, let the cross of crucifixion, let the spear, let
the fire and the stake, let the wild horse and the desert testify that
the believer has always been a man, who would suffer all this, and vastly
more, but who would never renounce his confidence in Christ. Look at Polycarp
before the lions, when he is brought into the midst of the assembly, and
it is demanded of him that he will deny his God. Thousands of savage eyes
look down upon him, and there he stands, a feeble man, alone in the arena,
but he tells them that "he has known his Lord these many years and he never
did him a displeasure, and he will not deny him at the last." "To the lions!"
they cry, "To the lions!" and the lions rush upon him, and he is speedily
devoured; but all this he would have borne at the mouths of a thousand
lions, if he had a thousand lives, rather than he would have thought anything
amiss against the Majesty of Jesus of Nazareth. The whole history of the
ancient church of Christ, proves that Jesus has been an object of his peoples'
highest veneration; that they set nothing in rivalry with him, but cheerfully
and readily, without a murmur, or a thought, gave up all for Jesus Christ,
and rejoiced to do so.
And this is just as true to-day as it was
then. If to-morrow the stake could be set in Smithfield, Christian people
are prepared to be fuel for the flame. If once more the block fixed on
Tower hill, and the axe were brought forth from its hiding place, the heads
of Christ's people would be cheerfully given, if they might but crown the
head of Jesus and vindicate his cause. Those who declare that the ancient
valour of the church is departed, know not what they say. The professing
church may have lost its masculine vigour; the professors of this day may
be but effeminate dwarfs, the offspring of glorious fathers; but the true
church, the elect out of the professing church, the remnant whom God hath
chosen, are as much in love with Jesus as his saints of yore, and are as
ready to suffer and to die. We challenge hell and its incarnate representative,
old Rome herself; let her build her dungeons, let her revive her inquisitions,
let her once more get power in the state to cut, and mangle, and burn;
we are still able to possess our souls in patience. We sometimes feel it
were a good thing if persecuting days should come again, to try the church
once more, and drive away the chaff, and make her like a goodly heap of
wheat, all pure and clean. The rotten branches of the forest may tremble
at the hurricane, for they shall be swept away, but those that have sap
within them tremble not. Our roots are intertwisted with the Rock of Ages,
and the sap of Christ flows within us and we are branches of the living
vine, and nothing shall sever us from him. We know that not persecution,
nor famine, nor nakedness, nor peril, nor sword, shall divide us from the
love of Christ, for in all these things we shall be as the church has been,
more than conquerors through him that loved us.
Does any one think that I exaggerate? Mark,
then, if what I have said be not true, then Christ has no church at all;
for the church that is not prepared to suffer, and bleed and die for Christ,
is not Christ's church. For what does he say? "He that loveth father and
mother more than me is not worthy of me; and he that taketh not his cross,
and followeth after me, is not worthy of me."—Matthew, 10:37-38. Albeit
that Christ may not put us fully to the test, yet, if we be true, we must
be ready for the ordeal; and if we be sincere, though we may tremble at
the thought of it, we shall not tremble in the endurance of it. Many a
man who says in his heart, "I have not a martyr's faith," has really that
noble virtue; and let him but once come to the push, and the world shall
see the grace that has been hidden, rising a giant from his slumbers. The
faith which endures the relaxing of the world's sunshine, would endure
the cutting frost of the world's persecution. We need not fear; if we be
true to-day, we shall be true always.
This is not mere fiction, many are the proofs that
Christ is still precious. Shall I tell you of the silent sufferers for
Christ, who at this day suffer a martyrdom of which we hear not, but which
is true and real? How many a young girl there is who follows Christ in
the midst of an ungodly family; her father upbraids her, laughs at her,
makes a scoff of her holiness, and pierces her through the heart with his
sarcasm! Her brothers and her sisters call her "Puritan," "Methodist,"
and the like, and she is annoyed day by day with what the apostle calls,
"Trial of cruel mockings." But she bears all this, and though the tear
is sometimes forced by it from her eye, yet though she should weep blood
she would "resist unto blood, striving against sin." These sufferers are
unrecorded, they are not put into a Book of Martyrs. We have no Fox to
write their martyrology, they have not the flesh-contenting knowledge that
they shall be publicly honoured; but they suffer alone and unheard of,
still praying for those who laugh at them: bowing themselves before God
on their knees in agony, not on account of the persecution, but in agony
of soul for the persecutors themselves, that they may be saved. How many
there are of such young men in workshops, employed in large establishments,
who bend their knee at night by the bed-side, in a large room where there
are many scoffers. Some of us have known this in our youthful days, and
have had to endure it; but Christ is precious to the silent sufferings
of his people; these unhonoured martyrdoms prove that his church has not
ceased to love him, nor to esteem him precious.
How many there are, too—how many thousands
of unseen and unknown labourers for Christ, whose names cannot be here
declared. They toil from morning till night all through the week, and the
Sabbath day should be a day of rest to them; but they work more on the
Sabbath day than on any other day. They are visiting the beds of the sick;
their feet are weary, and nature says rest, but they go into the lowest
dens and haunts of the city to speak to the ignorant, and endeavour to
spread the name and honour of Jesus where it has not been known. There
are many such who are working hard for Christ, though the church scarce
knows of it. And how many, too, there are who prove that they love Christ
by the continual liberality of their offerings. Many are the poor people
I have discovered, who have denied themselves of this and that, because
they would serve Christ's cause. And many there are, too—every now and
then we find them out—in the middle ranks of society, who give a hundred
times as much to the cause of Christ as many of the rich and wealthy; and
if you knew to what little trials they are put, to what shifts they are
driven in order to serve Christ, you would say, "The man that can do this
proves clearly that Christ is precious to him." And mark this, the reason
why the church is not more laborious, not more generous in its gifts to
the offertory of the Saviour, is just this, because the church of the day
is not the church of Christ in its mass and bulk. There is a church of
Christ within it, but the visible church, as it stands before you, is not
to be considered the church of Christ; we must pass it through the fire,
and bring the third part through the flame; for this is the day when the
dross is mingled with gold. How hath the much fine gold become dim; how
hath the glory departed. Zion is under a cloud. But mark, though you see
it not, there is a church, a hidden church; an unmoving centre amidst the
growing of profession, there is a life within this outward fungus of a
growing Christianity; there is a life that is within, and to that hidden
host, that chosen company, Christ is precious—they are proving it every
day by their patient sufferings, by their laborious efforts, by their constant
offerings to the church of Christ. "Unto you therefore which believe he
is precious."
I will tell you one thing that proves—proves
to a demonstration, that Christ is still precious to his people, and it
is this:—send one of Christ's people to hear the most noted preacher of
the age, whoever that may be; he preaches a very learned sermon, very fine
and magnificent, but there is not a word about Christ in that sermon. Suppose
that to be the case, and the Christian man will go out and say, "I did
not care a farthing for that man's discourse." Why? "Because they have
taken away my Lord, and I know not where they have laid him. I heard nothing
about Christ." Send that man on the Sabbath morning to hear some hedge
and ditch preacher, some one who cuts the king's English about never so
badly, but who preaches Jesus Christ—you will see the tears rolling down
that man's face, and when he comes out he will say, "I do not like that
man's bad grammar; I do not like the many mistakes he has made, but oh!
it has done my heart good, for he spoke about Christ." That, after all,
is the main thing for the Christian; he wants to hear about his Lord, and
if he hears him magnified he will overlook a hundred faults. In fact, you
will find that Christians are all agreed, that the best sermon is that
which is fullest of Christ. They never like to hear a sermon unless there
is something of Christ in it. A Welsh minister who was preaching last Sabbath
at the chapel of my dear brother, Jonathan George, was saying, that Christ
was the sum and substance of the gospel, and he broke out into this story:—A
young man had been preaching in the presence of a venerable divine, and
after he had done he went to the old minister, and said, "What do you think
of my sermon?" "A very poor sermon indeed," said he. "A poor sermon?" said
the young man, "it took me a long time to study it." "Ay, no doubt of it."
"Why, did you not think my explanation of the text a very good one?" "Oh,
yes," said the old preacher, "very good indeed." "Well, then, why do you
say it is a poor sermon? Didn't you think the metaphors were appropriate
and the arguments conclusive?" "Yes, they were very good as far as that
goes, but still it was a very poor sermon." "Will you tell me why you think
it a poor sermon?" "Because," said he, "there was no Christ in it." "Well,"
said the young man, "Christ was not in the text; we are not to be preaching
Christ always, we must preach what is in the text." So the old man said,
"Don't you know young man that from every town, and every village, and
every little hamlet in England, wherever it may be, there is a road to
London?" "Yes," said the young man. "Ah!" said the old divine "and so form
every text in Scripture, there is a road to the metropolis of the Scriptures,
that is Christ. And my dear brother, your business in when you get to a
text, to say, 'Now what is the road to Christ?' and then preach a sermon,
running along the road towards the great metropolis—Christ. And," said
he, "I have never yet found a text that had not got a road to Christ in
it, and if I ever do find one that has not a road to Christ in it, I will
make one; I will go over hedge and ditch but I would get at my Master,
for the sermon cannot do any good unless there is a savour of Christ in
it." Now since you say amen to that, and declare that what you want to
hear is Jesus Christ, the text is proved—"Unto you therefore which believe
he is precious."
But if you want to try this again and
prove it, go and see some of our sick and dying friends; go and talk to
them about the Reform Bill, and they will look you in the face and say,
"Oh, I am going from this time-state: it is a very small matter to me whether
the Reform Bill will be carried or not." You will not find them much interested
in that matter. Well, then, sit down and talk to them about the weather,
and how the crops are getting on—"Well, it is a good prospect for wheat
this year." They will say, "Ah, my harvest is ripening in glory." Introduce
the most interesting topic you can, and a believer, who is lying on the
verge of eternity, will find nothing precious in it; but sit down by the
bedside of this man, and he may be very near gone, almost unconscious,
and begin to talk about Jesus—mention that precious soul-reviving, soul-strengthening
name Jesus, and you will see his eye glisten, and the blanched cheek will
be flushed once more—"Ah," he will say, "Precious Jesus, that is the name
which calms my fears, and bids my sorrows cease." You will see that you
have given the man a strong tonic, and that his whole frame is braced up
for the moment. Even when he dies, the thought of Jesus Christ and the
prospect of seeing him shall make him living in the midst of death, strong
in the midst of weakness, and fearless in the midst of trembling. And this
proves, by the experience of God's people, that with those who believe
in him, Christ is and ever must be a precious Christ.
II. The second thing is, WHY IS CHRIST
PRECIOUS TO THE BELIEVER? I observe—and I shall run over those particulars
very briefly, though they would be worthy of a long, long sermon—Jesus
Christ is precious to the believer, because he is intrinsically precious.
But here let me take you through an exercise in grammar; here is an adjective,
let us go through it. He is precious positively; he is more precious than
anything comparatively; he is most precious of all things, and most precious
even if all things were rolled into one and put into competition with him;
he is thus precious superlatively. Now, there are few things you can thus
deal with. You say, a man is a good man, he is good positively, and you
say he is a great deal better than many other people; he is good comparatively:
but you can never truly say to any man that he is good superlatively, because
there he would still be found short of perfection. But Christ is good positively,
comparatively, and superlatively.
Is he good positively? Election is a good thing; to be chosen
of God, and precious; but we are elect in Christ Jesus. Adoption is a good
thing; to be adopted into the family of God is a good thing—ah, but we
are adopted in Christ Jesus and made joint-heirs with him. Pardon is a
good thing—who will not say so?—ay, but we are pardoned through the precious
blood of Jesus. Justification—is not that a noble thing, to be robed about
with a perfect righteousness?—ay, but we are justified in Jesus. To be
preserved—is not that a precious thing?—ay; but we are preserved in Christ
Jesus, and kept by his power even to the end. Perfection—who shall say
that this is not precious? Well, but we are perfect in Christ Jesus. Resurrection,
is not that glorious? We are risen with him. To ascend up on high, is not
that precious? But he hath raised us up and made us sit together with him
in heavenly places in Jesus Christ—so that Christ must be good positively,
for he is all the best things in one. And if all these be good, surely
he must be good in whom, and by whom, and to whom, and through are all
these precious things.
But Christ is good comparatively. Bring
anything here and compare with him. One of the brightest jewels we can
have is liberty. If I be not free, let me die. Put the halter to my neck
but put not the fetter to my wrist—a free man I must be while I live. Will
not the patriot say that he would give his blood to buy liberty, and think
it a cheap price? Ay, but put liberty side by side with Christ, and I would
wear the fetter for Christ and rejoice in the chain. The apostle Paul himself
could say, "I would that ye were altogether such I am,"—and he might add,
"except these bonds," but though he excepted bonds for others, he did not
except them for himself, for he rejoiced in the chain and counted it as
a mark of honor. Besides liberty, what a precious thing is life! "Skin
for skin, yea, all that a man hath, will he give for his life." But let
a Christian—a true Christian, once have the choice between life and Christ,—"No,"
says he, "I can die, but I cannot deny; I can burn, but I cannot turn.
I confess Christ and perish in the flame; but I cannot deny Christ, even
though you exalt me to a throne." There would be no choice between the
two. And then whatever earthly good there may be in comparison with Christ,
the believer's testimony goes to prove that Christ is precious comparatively,
for there is nothing that can match with him.
And then to go higher still—Christ is good
superlatively. The superlative of all things is heaven, and if it could
be possible to put Christ in competition with heaven, the Christian would
not stop a moment in his choice; he would sooner be on earth with Christ
than be in heaven without him. Nay, I do not know whether he would not
go almost as far as Rutherford, who said, "Lord, I would sooner be in hell
with thee than in heaven without thee; for if I were in heaven without
thee it would be a hell to me, and if I were in hell with thee it would
be a heaven to me." We may put it so, and every Christian will subscribe
to it. Now, come ye messengers of the world and take on your shoulders
all its treasures. C‘sar, pour out thy gold in one glittering pile; C‘sar,
lay down thine honours here in one gaudy heap; here, Tiberius, bring all
the joys of Capri's lust and vice; Solomon, bring here all the treasures
of wisdom; Alexander, bring all thy triumphs; Napoleon, bring thy wide-spread
empire and thy fame, put them all here, all that earth calls good; and
now come, thou bleeding Lamb of God, thou marred and matchless Saviour,
come here and tread these beneath thy feet, for what are all these compared
with thee? I pour contempt on them all. Now am I dead to all the world,
and all the world is dead to me. The whole realm of nature is small in
comparison with thee, as a drop in the bucket when compared with a boundless
ocean. Jesus Christ, then, is precious superlatively.
2. What more can we say? Still to answer this
question again: Why is Christ precious to the believer more than to any
other man? Why it is the believer's want that makes Christ precious to
him. That is one answer. We have been having a small shower of rain lately,
and I dare say there are very few of you who felt grateful for it; since
it gave you a little wetting coming here. But suppose that shower of rain
could have fallen on the desert of Arabia, what a precious thing it would
have been. Yea, every rain drop would have been worth a pearl; and as for
the shower, though it had rained gold dust, the rich deposit would not
have been comparable to the flood when it descended from on high. But what
is the reason that water is so precious there? Simply because it is so
rare. Suppose I am in England; there is abundance of water and I cannot
sell it; water is so common, and therefore so cheap. But put a man in the
desert and let the water-skin be dried up, let him come to the well wherein
he expected to find water, and it has failed him; can you not conceive
that that small drop of water might be worth a king's ransom? Nay, that
a man might hoard it up, and conceal it from all his comrades, because
on that small drop of water depended his life? The way to prize water is
to value it with a tongue like a firebrand, and with a mouth like an oven.
Then can I estimate its value when I know its want. So with Christ. The
worldling does not care for Christ, because he has never hungered and thirsted
after him; but the Christian is athirst for Christ; he is in a dry and
thirsty land, where not water is, and his heart and his flesh pant after
God, yea for the living God; and as the thirsty soul dying, cries out water,
water, water, so the Christian cries out Christ, Christ, Christ! This is
the one thing needful for me, and if I have it not, this thirst must destroy
me.
Mark, too, that the believer may be found
in many aspects, and you will always find that his needs will endear Christ
to him. Here is a man about to be tried for his life. Before he had committed
the wrong, he used to say, "Lawyers, attornies, pleaders, away with them,
what is the good of them?" Now he has got into prison he thinks very differently.
He says, "I wish I could get a good special pleader to plead my cause;"
and he runs over the roll to see the best man to plead for him. At last
he says, "Here is a man, if he could plead my cause I might hope to escape,
but I have no money with which to engage him;" and he says to his wife—"Wife,
we must sell our house;" or, "We must get money somehow, for I am on trial
for my life, and I must have an advocate." And what will not a woman do
to get an advocate for her husband? Why, she will pledge the last rag she
has to get one. Now, does not the believer feel himself to be in just such
a position? He is a poor sinner on trial for his life, and he wants an
advocate; and every time he looks on Christ pleading his cause before the
Father's throne, he says, "O what a precious Christ he is to a poor sin-destroyed
sinner, for he pleads his cause before the throne."
But suppose another case; that of a man drawn
for a soldier. In such times men always look out for substitutes. I remember
when the ballot was coming for the militia, how every man joined a substitute
club in order that if he were drawn he might not go himself. Now suppose
a man had been drawn, how valuable would a substitute have been—for no
man in his senses likes to be food for powder—he would rather a man without
brains go and do such work as that, but as for him he estimates himself
at too high a price. But suppose he is not only drawn for a soldier, but
condemned to die. See yon poor wretch coming up the gallows stairs; some
one whispers to him, "What would you give for a substitute now? What would
you give for some one to come and bear this punishment?" See his eye rolls
madness at the thought. "A substitute," says he, "I could not buy one for
the whole world. Who would be a substitute for me, to swing into eternity
amidst the yellings of a crowd?" But suppose—and we are only supposing
what has actually occurred—suppose this man saw not only the gallows and
the drop, but hell fire before him, and it were said to him, "You must
burn in that for everunless you find a substitute," would not that be a
precious one? Now, mark, that is just our position. The Christian feels
that hell is before him, if it were not that he has a glorious substitute.
Jesus came forward, and said, "I will bear that punishment; pour hell on
me, my Father let me drink damnation dry;" and he did it; he endured all
those pains, or an equivalent for them; he suffered in the rebel's stead;
and now, through him the substitute, we are absolved and free. Oh, must
not he be a precious Christ? But think of Christ again, and then think
of the believer's wants. I will try and run over a number of them. The
believer is a silly sheep. What a precious thing is a shepherd, and how
precious are green pastures and still waters. The believer is like a desolate
woman. What a precious thing is a husband who shall provide for her, and
shall console and cherish her. The believer is a pilgrim, and the hot sun
beats on him. What a precious thing is the shadow of a great rock in a
weary land. The believer is a bond-slave by nature. What a precious thing
is the trump of jubilee, and the ransom-price that sets him free. The believer,
by nature, is a sinking, drowning man. How precious to him is that plank
of free-grace, the cross of Christ, on which he puts his poor trembling
hand and secures glory. But what more shall I say? Time would fail me to
tell of all the wants of the believer, and of the all-abounding and ever-flowing
streams of love that flow from Christ, the fountain that fills the believer
to the brim. O say, ye children of God, is he not while ye are in these
lowlands of want and suffering, inconceivably, unutterably, superlatively
precious to you?
3. But once more. Look at the believer not
only in his wants, but in his highest earthly state. The believer is a
man that was once blind and now sees. And what a precious thing is light
to a man that sees. If I, as a believer, have an eye, how much I need the
sun to shine. If I have no light my eye becomes a torture, and I might
as well have been blind. And when Christ gives sight to the blind he makes
his people a seeing people. It is then that they find what a precious thing
is the sight, and how pleasant a thing it is for a man to behold the sun.
The believer is a man that is quickened. A dead corpse wants no clothing,
for it feels no cold. Let a man once be quickened and he finds himself
naked, and wants clothing. From the very fact that the Christian is a quickened
man, he values the robe of righteousness that is put about him. Christ
touches his people's ears and opens them; but it were better for man to
be deaf than to hear for ever doleful groans and hissings. But such must
he have been, ever hearing it if it were not for Christ playing sweet music
to him every day, and pouring streams of melody into his ears through his
promises. Yes, I say, the very new-born powers of the Christian would be
very channels for misery if it were not for Christ. Even in his highest
estate the Christian must feel that Christ is necessary unto him, and then
he must conclude that Christ is precious to him.
But believer, how precious is Christ to thee
in the hour of conviction of sin, when he says, "Thy sins which are many,
are all forgiven thee." How precious to thee in the hour of sickness, when
he comes to thee and says, "I will make all thy bed in thy sickness." How
precious to thee in the day of trial, when he says, "All things work together
for thy good." How precious when friends are buried, for he says, "I am
the resurrection and the life." How precious in thy grey old age, "even
in old age I am with thee, and to hoary hairs will I carry you." How precious
in the lone chamber of death, for "I will fear no evil, thou art with me,
thy rod and thy staff comfort me." But, last of all, how precious will
Christ be when we see him as he is. All we know of Christ here is as nothing
compared with what we shall know hereafter. Believer, when thou seest Christ's
face now, thou only seest if through a veil—Christ is so glorious, that
like Moses he is compelled to put a veil upon his face, for his poor people
while they are here are so feeble that they could not behold him face to
face. And if he be lovely here, when he is marred and spit upon, how lovely
must he be when he is adored and worshipped. If he is precious on his cross,
how much more precious when he sits on his throne. If I can weep before
him, and love him, and live to him, when I see him as the despised man
of Nazareth; Oh, how shall my spirit be knit to him, how shall my heart
be absorbed with love to him, when I see his face and behold his crown
of glory, when I mark the harpings of the never-ceasing harpers who harp
his praise. Wait awhile, Christian. If he is precious to the believer now,
when faith is turned to sight he will be more precious still. Go out of
this hall, and cry, "O Lord Jesus, I must love thee, I must serve thee
better, I must live for thee; I must be ready to die for thee—for
'Thou art precious to my soul,
My transport and my trust.'"
This brings me to conclude—and here I want your solemn and earnest attention while each one for himself shall answer this question—my hearer, is Christ precious to you? My young brother, you of the same age as myself, is Jesus precious to you in your youth? Wherewithal shall a young man cleanse his way? only by taking heed thereto according to Christ's word, and by walking in his footsteps. Ye men and women of middle age, is Christ precious to you? Remember that this world is but a dream, and if you have not something more satisfactory than that, you will be disappointed, even though you succeed beyond your highest wishes. And ye grey headed men, who are going tottering to your graves, whose life is like a candle-snuff, almost expiring, like a lamp whose oil is spent. Is Christ precious to you, ye with the bald head, and with the hoary lock, is Jesus precious to your soul? Remember, on your answer to this question depends your condition. You believe, if he is precious to you, but if he is not precious, then you are not believers, and you are condemned already because you believe not on the Son of God. Now, which is it? Oh, methinks some of you feel as if you could spring from your seats, and say, "Yes, he is precious to me, I cannot deny it." Once there was a good minister who was catechising his class, and he said to the young people, "The question which I am about to ask is such that I want none of you to answer but those who can answer from your heart." The congregation was gathered together, and he put this question to them concerning Christ—"Suppose Christ was here, and should say, 'Lovest thou me?' what would be your reply?" He looked around, and glanced upon all the young men and the young women, and said, "Jesus speaks to you the first time, and says, 'Lovest thou me?' He speaks a second time, and he says, 'Lovest thou me?'" There was a solemn pause and no one answered; and the congregation looked at the class, and at last the minister said once more, "Jesus speaks by me a third time, and says, 'Lovest thou me?'" Up rose a young woman, who could keep her seat no longer, and, bursting into tears, said, "Yea, Lord, thou knowest all things, thou knowest that I love thee." Now, how many are there here who could say that? Could not you now, if this were the time—although you might be bashful in the midst of so many—could you not, if Christ asked you the question, boldly say, though in the midst of enemies—"Yea, Lord, thou knowest all things, thou knowest that I love thee." Well, if you can give such an answer as that, go home and pray that others may be brought to love him, for you yourselves are saved; but if you are compelled to be silent to such a question as that, O may God lead you to seek Christ, may you too be driven to the cross, may you there see his dear bleeding wounds, may you behold his open side, and falling at his feet, may you say, "I trust thee, I rely upon thee, I depend upon thee," and he will say, "I have saved thee;" and then will you spring to your feet, and say, "Lord I love thee, because thou hast first loved me." May such be the end of this sermon, and to God be all the glory.
This sermon is reproduced from Spurgeon
Archive
|
|
|