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Today are for the church and
the education fund. And Mr. and Mrs. A. Klein were
blessed with a baby boy on Monday. They named him Jared Theodore. Let us pray. Our hope and only expectation
is in the name of the Lord, who has made heaven and earth, who
keepeth truth forever, and never forsaketh the works of his own
hands. Amen. Let us sing Psalter 398,
the first and the second stanza. Psalter 398, verse 1 and 2. The Lord upholds the faltering
feet and makes the weak securely stand. The burdened ones bow
down with grief are helped by his most gracious hand. Psalter
398 verse 1 and 2. you I'll be there for a long, long
time I'll be there for a long, long time I'll be there for a long, long time ♪ Behold his face ♪ ♪ Behold his
hand ♪ ♪ Behold his body ♪ ♪ And those that know not his name ♪ You are the earth of love and
peace. The reading of the scriptures
this morning will be found in Numbers chapter 21, the first
11 verses. Numbers 21 verse 1 through 11. But first we will read the Holy
Law of the Lord. And God spake all these words,
saying, I am the Lord thy God, which hath brought thee out of
the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage. Thou shalt
have no other gods before me, and thou shalt not make unto
thee any graven image, or any likeness of anything that is
in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is
in the water under the earth. Thou shalt not bow down thyself
to them, nor serve them, for I, the Lord thy God, am a jealous
God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children,
unto the third and fourth generation of them that hate me, and showing
mercy unto thousands of them that love me and keep my commandments. Thou shalt not take the name
of the Lord thy God in vain, for the Lord will not hold him
guiltless that taketh his name in vain. Remember the Sabbath
day to keep it holy. Six days shalt thou labor and
do all thy work. But the seventh day is the Sabbath
of the Lord thy God. In it thou shalt not do any work,
thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, thy manservant, nor thy maidservant,
nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger that is within thy gates. For
in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that
in them is, and rested the seventh day. Wherefore the Lord blessed
the Sabbath day and hallowed it. Honor thy father and thy
mother, that thy days may be long upon the land which the
Lord thy God giveth thee. Thou shalt not kill. Thou shalt
not commit adultery. Thou shalt not steal. Thou shalt
not bear false witness against thy neighbor. Thou shalt not
covet thy neighbor's house. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's
wife, nor his manservant, nor his maidservant, nor his ox,
nor his ass, nor anything that is thy neighbor's. Numbers chapter 21, starting
at verse 1. And when King Arad the Canaanite,
which dwelt in the south, heard tell that Israel came by the
way of the spies, then he fought against Israel and took some
of them prisoners. And Israel vowed a vow unto the
Lord, and said, If thou wilt indeed deliver this people into
my hand, then I will utterly destroy their cities. And the
Lord hearkened to the voice of Israel, and delivered up the
Canaanites, and they utterly destroyed them and their cities. And he called the name of the
place Hormah, And they journeyed from Mount Hor by the way of
the Red Sea to come past the land of Edom. And the soul of
the people was much discouraged because of the way. And the people
spake against God and against Moses, Wherefore have ye brought
us up out of Egypt to die in the wilderness? For there is
no bread, neither is there any water, and our soul loatheth
this light bread. And the Lord sent fiery serpents
among the people, and they bit the people, and much people of
Israel died. Therefore the people came to
Moses and said, We have sinned, for we have spoken against the
Lord and against thee. Pray unto the Lord that he take
away the serpents from us. And Moses prayed for the people.
And the Lord said unto Moses, Make thee a fiery serpent and
set it upon a pole. And it shall come to pass that
every one that is bitten, when he looketh upon it, shall live. And Moses made a serpent of brass
and put it upon a pole, and it came to pass that if a serpent
had bitten any man, when he beheld the serpent of brass, he lived. And the children of Israel set
forward and pitched in Oboth. And they journeyed from Oboth
and pitched at I.J. Abraham in the wilderness which
is before Moab toward the sun rising. Till so far. Let us pray. O Lord, it is in Thy goodness
that we again gather here together in Thy house of prayer to hear
Thy word, and we pray that Thou would teach us to pray, for we
know not what to pray for. We know not what our needs are,
and Thou art the one that knoweth all of our needs. Lord, we pray
that that would be with those that are sick or those that are
in institutions that could not be here this day. O Lord, that
Thou would also dare dispense Thy blessing. Lord, also with
the weak and the sick, Lord, Thou art that great physician
for souls, but also for our bodies. O Lord, there is many needs among
us, also as we hear of one that travelled to Holland where a
nephew has passed away. Lord, we pray that thou would
be with Mrs. Orozco, that thou would strengthen
her and also the rest of the family. Lord, we also have many
reasons to give thee thanks, for also in our midst again this
week new life has been born. We pray that thou would be with
the family kind, then that would be a guide unto them as well as their children. Lord
that they and all the other children of the congregation that they
could be born to be born again. Lord we also give thee thanks
for Mr. Vandenberg as he turned 98 this
week. Lord We pray then that when we reveal
Thyself unto him as well as his wife, that Thou would be near
to them, that also in their old age they could still be a witness
among us. We also give Thee thanks for
the family's encumbrance as they have arrived safely here. We
pray that Thou wouldst make him a blessing and bless him and
his family Lord, there's many things to ask, but Thou knowest
them all. We pray that Thou would be with
us this morning, that Thou would open Thy own word. For Thou art
a God of revelation, and we pray that Thou would reveal that grace
unto us for the first time or by renewal. Lord, it is for Thy
own glory and we plead upon Thy sovereign grace to work mightily
among us. Lord, we do not deserve even
the least of Thy mercies, but we ask it in Jesus' name. Amen. The sermon this morning is called
Man's Ruin and God's Remedy. And it's from Numbers 21 verse
8 where we read, And the Lord said unto Moses, Make thee a
fiery serpent, and set it upon a pole, and it shall come to
pass that every one that is bitten, when he looketh upon it, shall
live. I do not propose this morning
to explain again the mystery of the brazen serpent. I have
a somewhat similar object at the present time. The details
may indeed be different, but after all, the moral will be
the same. There are many things which the
soul wants. It needs instruction, it needs
comfort, it needs knowledge of doctrine and enlightenment and
its experience. But there is one grand need of
the soul which far surmounts every other. It is the want of
salvation, the want of Christ. And I do feel that I am right
in repeating again and again and again the simple announcement
of the gospel of Christ for poor perishing sinners. At any rate,
I know I seldom feel happier than when I am preaching a full
Christ to empty sinners. My tongue becomes something like
Anna Creon's harp. It is said of it that it resounded
love alone. And so my tongue fangs to resound
Christ alone and give forth no other strain but Christ and His
cross. Christ uplifted the salvation
of a dying world. Christ crucified the life of
poor dead sinners. I pray that this morning many
here present who have no clear views of the plan of salvation
may now see for the first time how men are saved through the
lifting up of Christ, just as the poor Israelites in the wilderness
were saved from the fiery serpents by lifting up the brazen serpent
on the pole. Solemnly addressing you this
morning, I shall need your attention to two things. First, and here
remember, I'm about to speak to sinners dead in trespasses
and sins. I want your attention to your
ruin. And next, I shall want your faithful consideration of
your remedy. But first, we would sing Psalter
232. All the stanzas, 232, stanzas
1, 2, and 3. O Lord, to us thy mercy show,
and thy salvation now bestow. We wait to hear what God will
say. Peace to his people he will speak,
and to his saints, but let them seek no more in folly's path
to stray. Psalter 232 verse 1, 2, and 3. Amen. Amen. Thank you. Amen. you. I miss you. We know how true He has been. I love you First of all, O unregenerate
men, thou who hast heard the word, but hast never felt its
power, let me entreat thee, lend me thine ears, while I talk to
thee of the solemn subject that much concerns thee. Men, thou
art ruined. The children of Israel in the
wilderness were bitten with fiery serpents, whose venom soon tainted
their blood, and after intolerable pain at last brought on death. Thou art much in the same condition. Thou standest here healthy in
body and comfortable in mind, and I come not here to play the
part of a mere alarmist. But I do beseech thee, listen
to me while I tell thee neither more nor less than the simple
but dreadful truth concerning thy present estate, if thou art
not a believer in Christ. O sinner, there are four things
that stare thee in the face, and should alarm thee. The first
thing is thy sin. I hear thee say, yes, I know,
I am a sinner as well as the rest of mankind, but I am not
content with that confession, nor is God content with it either. There are multitudes of men who
make the bare confession of sinnership, the general confession that all
men are fallen. But there are few men who know
how to take that confession home and acknowledge it as being applicable
to them. My hearers, ye that are without
God and without Christ, remember, not only is the world lost, but
you are lost yourself. Not only has sin defiled the
race, but you yourself are stained by sin. Come, now take the universal
charge home to yourself. How many have your sins been?
Count them if you can. Stand here and wonder at them.
Like the stars of midnight, or as the sands by the seashore,
innumerable are thine iniquities. twenty, thirty, forty, fifty,
or perhaps more than fifty years have rolled over thy head, and
in any one of these years thy sins might out-count the drops
of the sea. How innumerable then have they
become in all thy life! O call, ye great sinners, call
to your recollection the enormities you have committed against God.
Let your chambers speak, let your beds bear witness against
you, and let the days of your feasting and your hours of midnight
rioting, let these things rise up to your remembrance. Let your
oaths roll back from the sky against which they have smitten,
and let them return into your bosom to awake your conscience
and bestir you to repentance. But what am I saying? I've been
talking of some men who have committed great iniquity. Ah,
sinner, be thou whatsoever thou mayest, I charge thee with great
sin. Brought up in the midst of holy
influences, nurtured in God's house, it may be that some of
my unregenerate hearers this morning may not be able to remember
a single instance of blasphemy against God. It may be that you
have never outwardly done despite to any sacred thing. Ah, my hearer,
bethink thee, thy sin may be even greater than that of the
profligate or the debauchess, for thou hast sinned against
light and against knowledge. Thou hast sinned against the
mother's prayers and against the father's tears. Thou rebelled
against God's law, knowing the law. When thou wast sinning,
conscience pricked thee, and yet thou didst sin. Thou knewest
that hell was the portion of the ungodly, and yet thou art
ungodly still. Thou knowest the gospel of Christ,
thou art not ignorant. Thy mother took thee in her arms
to the house of God, and here thou art even now. Every sin
thou hast committed receives a greater aggravation on account
of the light thou hast received and the privileges thou hast
enjoyed. O my hearer, think not that thou
can escape in this thing. Thy sin hath bitten thee with
a terrible bite. Tis no flesh wound as thou dreamest,
but the venom has entered into thy veins. Tis no mere scarp
on the surface, but the leprosy lies deep within. Thou hast sinned. Thou hast sinned continually. Thou hast sinned with many aggravations. O may good God convict thee of
this charge and help thee to plead guilty to it. Can you not,
some of you, if you are honest to yourselves, call to remembrance
peculiar sins that you have committed? You recollect your sickbed and
your vow you made to God. Where is it now? You have returned
like the dog to its vomit in the sow that was washed to her
wallowing in the mire. You remember that prayer that
you offered in the time of your distress. You remember too that
God graciously delivered you. But where is the thanksgiving
that you promised to him? You said you would give him your
heart, but where is it? In the black hand of the devil
still. You have been a liar to God,
you have deceived him, or you have pretended at least that
you would give him your soul and you have not done so. And
think too of certain special sins you have committed after
receiving special warning Do you not remember going out from
the house of God with a tender conscience and then running into
sin to harden it again? Do you not remember, some of
you, how after being alarmed and startled you have gone your
way and gone to your evil companions and laughed away the impressions
that you have received? This is no mean sin to strive
against the striving spirit and to resist the influence that
was drawing you to the right path. I beseech you, call to
recollection your sins. Come, don't be cowards. Don't
shut up the book. Open it. Look and see what you
have been. And if you have been that which
you are ashamed of, I beseech you, look it in the face and
make acknowledgement and confess it. There is nothing to be gotten
by hiding your sins. They'll spring up, man. If you
dig deep as hell to hide them, they'll spring up. Why not now
be honest and look at them today? For they will look at you by
and by when Christ shall come in the clouds of judgment. If
you look not at them, they'll stare you in the face with a
look that will wither your soul and blast it into infinite torment. and unutterable woe. Your sin,
your sin should make you tremble and feel alarmed. But I go further. Sinner, thou hast not only thy
sin to trouble thee, but there is a second thing. There is the
sentence of condemnation gone out against you. I have heard
some ministers talk of men being in a state of probation. No such
thing. No man has a state of probation
at all. You are condemned already. You
are not today, my unregenerate heroes, prisoners at the bar
about to be tried for your lies. No. Your trial is over. Your sentence is passed already.
And you are now, this day, condemned. What, though no officer has arrested
you, though death has not laid its cold hand upon you, yet the
scripture says, He that believeth not is condemned already, because
he believeth not on the Son of God. When the black cap is on
the judge's head, he even now declares thee lost. Nay, more
than this, if thou wouldst rightly know thine own estate, thou art
standing under the gallows with the rope on thy neck, and thou
hast but to be cast off from the ladder by the hand of death,
and thou art swinging in eternity, lost and ruined. Oh, if you only
knew your position, you would discover that you are criminals
with your necks on the block this morning, and the bright
axe of justice is gleaming in this morning's sunlight. And
God alone knows how long it is before it shall fall, or rather,
how soon you shall feel its keen edge, and its edge shall be stained
with thy blood. Thou art condemned already, take
that home. Thy sentence is signed in heaven
and sealed and stamped, and the only reason why it is not carried
out is because God in mercy respites thee. But thou art condemned,
and this world is thy condemned cell, from which thou shalt soon
be taken to a terrible execution. Now let me ask you one question
ere I leave this point. Sinner, you are condemned today. I ask you this, whether you do
not deserve it. If you are what you should be
and what I hope the Lord will make you, you will say, deserve
it? Yes, that I do. If I never committed
another sin, my past sins would fully justify the Lord in permitting
me to go down the fire into the pit. The first sin you ever committed
condemned you beyond all hope of self-salvation. But all the
sins you have committed since then have aggravated your guilt,
and surely now the sentence is not only just, but more than
just. You will have one day, if you
repent not to put your finger on your lips and stand in solemn
silence, when God shall ask you whether you have anything to
plead, why the sentence should not be carried out into execution,
You will be compelled to feel that God condemns you to nothing
more than you deserve, that his sentence is just, a proper one
on such a sinner as thou hast been. Now these things are enough to
make any man tremble, but if he did but feel them, his sin
and his condemnation. But I have a third to mention.
Sinner, there is this to aggravate thy ease and increase thine alarm. Thy helplessness, thy utter inability
to do anything to save thyself, even if God should offer thee
the chance. Thou art today, sinner, not only
condemned, but thou art dead in trespasses and sins. Thought
of performing good works? Why, man, thou canst not. It
is as impossible for thee to do a good work whilst thou art
what thou art, as it would be for a horse to fly up to the
stars. But thou sayest, I will repent.
Nay, thou canst not. Repentance is not possible to
thee as thou art, unless God gives it to thee. Thou mightest
force a few tears, but what are those? Judas might do that and
yet go out and hang himself and go to his own place. You cannot
repent of yourself. Nay, if I had to preach this
morning salvation by faith apart from Christ, you would be in
as bad a condition as if there were no gospel whatsoever. Recollect,
sinner, thou art so lost, so ruined, so undone, that thou
canst do nothing to save thyself. Thine inability is so great that
unless God pull thee up out of the pit into which thou hast
fallen, Thou must lie there and rot to all eternity. Thou art
so undone that thou canst neither stir hand nor foot, nor lip nor
heart, unless grace help thee. Oh, what a fearful thing it is
to be charged, tried, condemned, and then moreover to be bereft
of all power. You are today as much in the
hand of God's justice as a little moth beneath your own finger.
He can save you if he will. He can destroy you if he pleases.
But you yourself are unable to escape from him. There is no
door of mercy left for you by the law. And even by the gospel
there is no door of mercy which you have power to enter, apart
from the help which Christ affords you. If you think you can do
anything, you have yet to unlearn that foolish conceit. If you
fancy that you have some strength left, you have not yet come where
the spirit will bring you, for he will empty you of all creature
pretension, and lay you low, and dash you in pieces, and bring
you in a mortar, and pound you till you feel that you are weak
and without strength, and can do nothing. Now, have I not indeed described
a horrible position for a sinner to be in? But there is something
more remaining, a fourth thing. Sinner, thou art not only guilty
of past sin and condemned for it, thou art not only unable,
but if thou art able, thou art so bad that thou would never
be willing to do anything that could save thyself. And even
if thou hadst no sin in the past, yet art thou lost, man, for thou
wouldst go on to commit sin for the future. For this know, thy
nature is totally depraved. Thou lovest that which is evil,
and not that which is good. Nay, saith one, I love that which
is good. Then thou lovest it for a bad
motive. I love honesty, says one. Yes,
because it is the best policy. But does thou love God? Does
thou love thy neighbor as thyself? No, and thou canst not do this,
for thy nature is too vile. Why, thou wouldst be as bad as
the devil, if God were to do with it. Draw all restraint,
and let thee alone. Were he but to take the bit out
of thy mouth, and the bridle from thy jaws, there is no sin
that thou would not commit. Dost thou deny this? Dost thou
say, I am willing, I am willing to be holy and to be saved? Then
God has thee sold, for if not, thou wouldst never be sold by
thy nature. If thou should go out of this
hall and say, I hate such preaching as that, I should but reply,
I knew you did. Though one should say, I will
never believe that I am as lost as that, I should say, I didn't
think you ever would. You are too bad to believe the
truth. And if you should say, I will
never be saved by Christ, I will never bow so low as to sue for
mercy and accept grace through him. I should not be surprised,
for I know thy nature. Thou art so desperately evil
that thou hatest thy own mercy. Thou dost despise the grace that
is offered to thee. Thou dost hate the Savior that
died for thee, for if not, why dost not thou turn now? If thou
art not so bad as I say thou art, why not now down on thy
knees and cry for pardon? Why not now believe in Christ?
Why not now surrender thyself to him? But if thou should do
this, then I would say this is God's work. He has made thee
to do it. For if he had not done it, thou
wouldst not have been humble enough to bow thyself to Christ.
Let Arminianism go to the winds. Let it be scattered forever from
off the face of the earth. Man is totally unable to feel
his misery or seek relief. And if he were able, he is totally
unwilling. The sinner could not help the
Holy Ghost, even if the Holy Ghost wanted the help of man
to perfect his own operation. What? Can it be possible that
any man will say the creature is to help the creator? That
an insect of an hour is to be yoked with the ancient of days,
the eternal? That the clay is to help the
potter in its own formation? Why, even if we grant the power,
where would be the sympathy or the willing hand? Man hates to
be saved. He loves darkness, and if he
has the light, it is because the light thrusts itself upon
him. He loves death with a fatal infatuation,
and if he be made alive, it is because the Spirit of God quickens
him, converts his wicked heart, makes him willing in the day
of his power, and turns him unto God. Have I not now this morning
read a most awful indictment against you? Mark, I mean it
for every living man, woman, and child in this hall who hath
not faith in Christ. You may be fine gentlemen or
grand ladies. You may be respectable tradesmen
and very upright in your business. But I charge you before Almighty
God with being sinners, condemned sinners, sinners that cannot
save yourselves, and sinners, moreover, that would not save
yourselves if you could. Unless grace made you willing,
you are sinners unwilling to be saved. What a fearful indictment
is this. read in the face of high heaven.
May some sinners, as he hears it, be compelled to say, It is
true, it is true of me, O Lord, have mercy upon me. Having thus
set before you the higher part of the subject, the sinner's
ruin, I now come to preach of his remedy. But before we will
sing of Psalter 140, stanzas 1 and 4. God be merciful to me, on thy
grace I rest my plea. Plenteous in compassion thou,
blot out my transgressions now. Wash me, make me pure within,
cleanse, oh cleanse me from my sin. Psalter 140, verses 1 and
4. ♪ God incarnate ♪ The second point is God's remedy. A certain school of physicians
tell us that like cures like. Whether it be true or not in
medicine, I know it is true enough in theology. Like cures like. When the Israelites were bitten
with the fiery serpents, it was a serpent that made them whole.
And so you lost and ruined creatures are bidden now to look to Christ,
suffering and dying, and you will see in Him the counterpart
of what you see in yourselves. While you are looking to Him,
may God fulfill His promise and give you life. A remedy to be
worth anything must reach the entire disease. Now Christ on
the cross comes to man as man is, not as he may be made, but
as he is. And he does this in the four
several respects which I have already described. I charged
you with sin. Now in Christ Jesus behold the
sinner's substitute, the sin offering. Do you see yonder man
hanging on the cross? He dies an awful death. In him
prophecy receives a terrible accomplishment of him, almighty
vengeance. makes a tremendous example. Jehovah,
sorry I'll read that again. In him prophecy receives a terrible
accomplishment. Of him almighty vengeance makes
a tremendous example. Jehovah has cast off an abhorred. He has been lost with his anointed. The terrors of the Lord are heavy
on his soul. And why does that man Christ
Jesus die? Not as himself a sinner, but
as numbered with transgressors. O soul, if thou wouldst know
the terrors of the law, Behold him who has made the curse of
the law. If thou wouldst see the venom
of the fiery serpent's bite, Look to yonder brazen serpent,
And if thou wouldst see sin in all its deadliness, look to a
dying Savior. What makes Christ die? Sin, though
not his own. What makes his body sweat drops
of blood? Sin. What nails his hands? What rends his side? Sin. Sin does it all. And if you are
saved, it must be through yonder sin offering. your dying, bleeding
lamb. But, saith one, my sins are too
many to be forgiven. Stop a while, turn thine eye
to Christ. Sometimes, when I think of my
sin, I think it is too great to be washed away. But when I
think of Christ's blood, oh, I think there can be no sin great
enough for that to fail in cleansing it every whit. I seem to think
when I see the costly price, Christ paid a very heavy ransom. When I look at myself, I think
it would need much to redeem me. But when I see Christ dying,
I think he could redeem me if I were a million times as bad
as I am. Now remember, Christ not only
paid barely enough for us, he paid more than enough. The Apostle
Paul says his grace abounded. The Greek says superabounded. It ran over. There was enough
to fill the empty vessel and there was enough to flood the
world besides. Christ's redemption was so plenteous
that had God willed it, if all the stars of heaven had been
peoples with sinners, Christ would not have suffered another
pain to redeem them all. there was a boundless value in
his precious blood. Consider, if there were so much
as this, surely there is enough for thee. And then again, if
thou art not satisfied with Christ's sin offering, just think a moment.
God is satisfied. God the Father is content. And
must not thou be? The judge says, I am satisfied. Let the sinner go free, for I
have punished the surety in his stead. And if the judge is satisfied,
surely the criminal may be. O come, poor sinner, come and
see. If there is enough to appease
the wrath of God, there must be enough to answer all the requirements
of men. Nay, nay, saith one, but my sin
is such a terrible one that I cannot see in the substitution of Christ
that which is like to meet it. What is thy sin? Blasphemy. Why, Christ died for blasphemy. This was the very charge which
man imputed to him, and therefore you may be quite sure that God
laid it on him if men did. Nay, nay, saith one, but I have
been worse than that. I have been a liar. It is just
what men said of him. They declared that he lied when
he said, if this temple be destroyed, I will build it in three days. See in Christ a liar Savior as
well as a blasphemer Savior. Ah, crieth another, but sir,
I acted ever with such a bad heart. My heart was worse than
my actions. If I could have been worse, I
would. Among all my companions, there was not one who was so
greedy of it and blackened it as I. Yes, but my dear hearer,
if thou hast sinned in thy heart, remember, Christ suffered in
his heart. His heart sufferings were the
heart and soul of his sufferings. Look and see that heart all pierced,
and the blood and water flowing therefrom. And believe that he
is able to take away even thine heart of sin, however black it
may be. Yes, I hear another self-condemned
one exclaim, that I sinned without any temptation. I did it deliberately
in cold blood. I had become such a wicked, beastly
sinner that I used to sit down and gloat over my sin before
I committed it. Ah, but sinner, remember, before
Christ died he thought of it. From all eternity he meditated
on becoming thy substitute. It was a matter of premeditation
with him, and therefore let his forethought put aside thy forethought. Let the greatness of his previous
thought upon his sacrifice put away the grievousness of thy
sin, on account of its having been committed in cold blood.
Does there yet come up some sobbing voice? I have been worse than
all the rest, for I did my sin by reason of a covenant which
I made with Satan. I said if I could have a short
life and a merry one, I would be content. I made a covenant
with death, and I made a league with hell. And what if I am commissioned
to tell you that even this bite is not incurable? Remember, Jesus,
the Son of God, made a covenant on thine account. It was a greater
covenant than yours, not made with death and hell, but made
with his Father on the behalf of sinners. I want, if I can,
to bring out the fact that Whatever there is in thy sins, there is
its counterpart in Christ. Just as when the serpent bit
the people, it was a serpent that healed them. So if you are
bitten by sin, it is, as it were, thy sin's substitute. It is thy sin laid on Christ
that heals you. Oh, turn your eyes then to Calvary
and see the guilt of sin laid upon Christ's shoulders, and
say, Surely he hath borne our griefs and carried our sorrows,
and looking to him thou shalt live. Secondly, there is the
remedy for the condemnation. I said you were not only sinners,
but condemned sinners. Yes, and Christ is not only thy
substitute for sin, but he is thy condemned substitute too.
See him, he stands at Pilate's bar, is condemned before Herod
and Caiaphas, and is found guilty. Nay, he stands before the awful
bar of God, and though there is no sign of his own put upon
him, yet, inasmuch as his people's sin were laid on him, justice
views him as a sinner, and it cries, Let the sword be bated
in his blood. Christ was condemned for sinners
that they might not be condemned. Look up. Look away from the sentence
that has gone out against you to the sentence that went out
against Him. Are you cursed? So was He. Cursed is everyone that hangeth
on a tree. Are you condemned? So was He. And there was one
point in which He excelled you. He was executed. and that you
never shall be if you look to him now and believe that he is
able to save you and put your trust in him. Then in regards
to the third particular, our utter helplessness is such that
as I told you, we are unable to do anything. Yes, and I want
you to look at Christ. Was not he unable to? You and
your father Adam were once strong, but you lost your strength. Christ
too was strong, but he laid aside all his omnipotence. See him,
the hand that poises the world hangs on a nail. See him, the
shoulders that supported the skies are drooping over the cross. Look at him. The eyes whose glances
light up the sun are sealed in darkness. Look at him again. The feet that trod the billows
and that shaped the spheres are nailed with red iron to the accursed
tree. Look away from your own weakness
to His weakness, and remember that in His weakness He is strong,
and in His weakness you are strong too. Go, see His hands. They are weak, but in their weakness
they are stretched out to save you. Come, view His hurt. It is rent, but in its cleft
you may hide yourselves. Look at his eyes, they are closing
in death, but from them comes the ray of light that shall kindle
your dark spirit. Unable though thou art, go to
him who himself was crucified through weakness, and remember
that now he is able to save them to the uttermost that come unto
God by him. I told you you could not repent.
But if you go to Christ, He can melt your heart into contrition,
though it be hard as iron. I said you could not believe,
but if you sit down and look at Christ, the sight of Christ
will make you believe, for He is exalted on high to give repentance
and remission of sins. And then the fourth thing, O
Christ One, you said we were too estranged to be even willing
to come to Christ. I know you were, and therefore
it is He came down to you. You would not come to Him, but
He comes to you this morning. And though you are very evil,
He comes with sacred magic in His arm to change your heart.
Sinner, thou unwilling but guilty sinner, Christ stands before
thee this morning, he that was made in the likeness of sinful
flesh, a man and a brother born for adversity. and he puts his
hand today in thy hand, and he says, Sinner, wilt thou be saved? Then trust in me. Ah, if I preach
the gospel, you will reject it, but if he preaches it, you cannot. He thinks I see the crucified
one finding his way in this thick crowd and going between the ranks
seated here and there and everywhere. And as he goes along he stops
at each broken-hearted sinner and says, Sinner, will you trust
me? See, here I am, the Son of God,
yet I am men. Look at my wounds. See still
the nail marks and the prints of the thorn crown. Sinner, will
you trust me? And while he says it, he graciously
works in you the grace of faith. But are there any who, looking
him in the face, can reply, Thou crucified one, we cannot trust
thee. Our sins are too great to be
forgiven. Oh, nothing can grieve him so much as to tell him that.
You think that you are humble, you are proud, despising Christ
while you think you are despising yourself. And is there one in
all this great assembly who says, this is all twaddle, I care not
to hear such preaching as this. Nay, I do not ask thee to care
for what I speak. But Jesus, the crucified one,
is standing by thy side, and he asks thee, Sinner, have I
ever done anything to offend thee? Have I ever done thee a
displeasure? What hurt hast thou ever suffered
at my hands? And why dost thou persecute thy
wife for loving me? Then why hate your child for
loving one that did thee no hurt? Besides, saith he, and he takes
the veil from his face, did you ever see a face like this? It
was marred by suffering for men, for men that hate me too, but
whom I love. I need not have suffered. I was
in my father's house, happy and glorious. Love made me come down
and die. Love nailed me to the tree, and
now will you spit in my face after that? No, said a young
man to me this last week. I found it hard to love Christ,
but, said he, once upon a time I thought, well, if Christ never
died for me and never loved me, yet I must love him for his goodness
in dying for other people. And me thinks, if you did but
know Christ, you must love him. Thou wouldst say to him, Thou
dear, Thou suffering man, didst Thou endure all this for those
that hate Thee? Didst Thou die for those that
murdered Thee? Didst Thou shed Thy blood for
those that drew it from Thy veins with the cursed iron? Didst Thou
dive into the depths of the grave that Thou mightest lift out rebellious
ones who scorned Thee and would have none of Thee? Then, dissolved
by thy goodness, I fall before thy feet, and I weep. My soul
repents of sin, I weep. Lord, accept me. Lord, have mercy
upon me. Did you think I have run away
from my point? So I had, but I have brought
you back to it. You know I was to show that Christ
could overcome our depravity, and he has done it. In some of you, while I have
been speaking, you hated him, but you do not hate him now.
It may be you said you would never trust him, but you do trust
him now. And if God has done this in your
heart, this is the true end of preaching. The best way of keeping
to the subject is for the subject to be brought home to the heart. Ah, dear hearers, I wish I had
a better voice this morning. I wish I had more earnest tones
and a more loving heart, for I do feel when I am preaching
about Christ that I am a poor dauber. When I grant to paint
Him so beautiful, I am afraid you will say of Him, He is not
lovely. No, no, it is my bad picture
of Him, but He is lovely. Oh, he is a loving God. He has
bowels of compassion. He has a heart brimful of tenderest
affection. And he bids me tell you, and
I do tell you that, he bids me say, this is a faithful saying,
and worthy of all acceptation. that Jesus Christ came into the
world to save sinners, of whom I am chief. And he bids me add
his kind invitation. Come unto me, all ye that are
weary and heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon
you and learn of me, for I am meek and lowly and hurt, and
ye shall find rest to your souls. Do not believe what the devil
tells you. He says that Christ is not ready
to forgive. Oh, he is more willing to forgive
than you are to be forgiven. Do not believe your heart when
it says that Christ will shut you out and will not pardon you. Come and try him. Come and try
him. And the first one that is shut
out, I will agree to be shut out with him. The first soul
that Christ rejects after it has put its trust in him, I risk
my soul's salvation with that man. It cannot be. He never was hard-hearted yet,
and he never will be. Only believe, and may he himself
help thee to believe. Only look to Him, and may He
Himself open thine eyes, and enable thee to look, and this
shall be a happy morning. For though I may have spoken
feebly, as I am too conscious, too conscious I have, God will
have worked powerfully, and unto Him shall be the glory forever
and ever. Amen. Let us pray. Oh Lord, we come unto Thee at
the end of this service and we confess then. So often we think
of our way of life as a road where we have to turn left or
right, one way or the other. With all we pray that thou wouldst
yet open eyes in this morning, that we may see that the road
we walk on leads to eternal damnation. Lord, also that thou wouldst
reveal thy beloved Son and his glorious work unto our souls, It is thy sovereign grace, then,
sinners, may be yet plucked out of thy broad way into eternity. O Lord, it is thy own word, and
we pray that thou would apply it. For it is also to thy own
glory if sinners are saved. Extend thy kingdom among us. We ask it in Jesus' name. Amen. We will sing now Psalter 424.
The stains of 1 and 2. 424. Sing, sing a new song to Jehovah,
for all the wonders he hath wrought. His right hand and his arm most
holy, the victory to him has brought. Stanza 1 and 2 of 424. you. you Sanctifico. Visco Sanctifico.
Visco Sanctifico. from His throne. He has prepared us for eternity. you you Let us go home with a prayer
of benediction. May the grace of Christ the Savior,
and the Father's boundless love, with the Holy Spirit's favor,
rest upon us from above. Amen.
"Man's ruin and God's remedy"
Series Charles H. Spurgeon
| Sermon ID | 1718950400 |
| Duration | 1:18:37 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - AM |
| Bible Text | Numbers 21 |
| Language | English |
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