00:00
00:00
00:01
Transcript
1/0
the prince of preachers Charles Haddon Spurgeon has been
called England's greatest contribution to the spread of the gospel in
the 19th century. One of his contemporaries said
that the chief secret of Spurgeon's attractiveness was the fact that
in every sermon, no matter what the text or the occasion, he
explained the way of salvation in simple terms. Spurgeon's messages
remain one of the great treasure houses of Christian literature,
still bringing the light of the Gospel and the comfort of the
Scriptures to hungry souls long after the preacher has passed
into glory. This is Charles Kelsch inviting you to listen to a message
from the Prince of Preachers. CH Spurgeon preached this message
on November 21, 1858, at the Music Hall of the Royal Surrey
Gardens. It is entitled, Samson Conquered. The text is found in the Book
of Judges, chapters 16, verses 20 and 21. And she said, The
Philistines be upon thee, Samson. And he awoke out of his sleep,
and said, I will go out as at other times before, and shake
myself. And he wist not that the Lord
was departed from him. But the Philistines took him,
and put out his eyes, and brought him down to Gaza, and bound him
with fetters of brass, and he did grind in the prison-house.
Samson is, in many respects, one of the most remarkable men
whose history is recorded in the Pages of Inspiration. He
enjoyed a singular privilege only accorded to one other person
in the Old Testament. His birth was foretold to his
parents by an angel. Isaac was promised to Abraham
and Sarah by angels whom they entertained unawares, but save
Isaac, Samson was the only one whose birth was foretold by an
angelic messenger before the opening of the gospel dispensation.
Before his birth he was dedicated to God and set apart as a Nazarite. Now a Nazarite was a person who
was entirely consecrated to God, and in token of his consecration
he drank no wine and allowed his hair to grow untouched by
the razor. Samson, you may therefore understand,
was entirely consecrated to God, and when any saw him they would
say, That man is God's man, a Nazarite set apart. God endowed Samson
with supernatural strength, a strength which never could have been the
result of mere muscle and sinews. It was not the fashioning of
Samson's body that made him strong, it was not the arm or the fist
with which he smote the Philistines. It was a miracle that dwelt within
him, a continued going forth of the omnipotence of God which
made him mightier than thousands of his enemies. Samson appears
very early to have discovered in himself this great strength,
for the Spirit of the Lord began to move him at times in the camp
of Dan. He judged Israel for thirty years,
and gloriously did he deliver them. What a noble being he must
have been! See him, when he steps into the
vineyard for a moment from his parents, A lion that has been
crouching there springs upon him, but he meets him all unarmed
and receives him upon his brawny arms and rends him like a kid.
See him afterwards, when his countrymen have bound him and
taken him down from the top of the rock and delivered him up
to the thousands of the Philistines. He has scarcely come near them
when, without a weapon, with his own foot he begins to spurn
them. and seeing there the jawbone of an ass, he takes that ignoble
weapon and sweeps away the men that had helmets about their
heads and were girded with greaves of brass. Nor did his vigor fail
him in his later life, for he died in the very prime of his
days. One of the greatest of his exploits
was performed at this very season. He is entrapped in the city of
Gaza. He remains there until midnight, so confident is he
in his strength that he is in no hurry to depart, and instead
of assailing the guard and making them draw the bolts, he wrenches
up the two posts and takes away gate, bar, and all, and carries
his mighty burden for miles to the top of a hill that is before
Hebron. Every way it must have been a great thing to see this
man, especially if one had him for a friend. Had one been his
foe, the more distant the sight the better, for none could escape
from him but those who fled. But to have him for a friend,
and to stand with him in the day of battle, was to feel that
you had an army in a single man, and had in one frame that which
would strike thousands with terror. Samson, however, though he had
great physical strength, had but little mental force and even
less spiritual power. His whole life is a scene of
miracles and follies. He had but little grace, and
was easily overcome by temptation. He is enticed and led astray.
Often corrected, still he sins again. At last he falls into
the hands of Delilah. She is bribed with an enormous
sum, and she endeavors to get from him the secret of his strength.
He foolishly toys with the danger and plays with his own destruction.
At last, goaded by her importunity, he lets out the secret which
he ought to have confided to no one but himself. The secret
of his strength lay in his locks. Not that his hair made him strong.
but that his hair was the symbol of his consecration and was the
pledge of God's favour to him. While his hair was untouched,
he was a consecrated man. As soon as that was cut away,
he was no longer perfectly consecrated, and then his strength departed
from him. His hair is cut away, the locks
that covered him once are taken from him, and there he stands
a shaveling, weak as other men. Now the Philistines begin to
oppress him, and his eyes are burned out with a hot iron. How
are the mighty fallen! How are the great ones taken
in the net! Samson, the great hero of Israel, is seen with
a shuffling gait walking towards Gaza. A shuffling gait, I said,
because he had just received blindness, which was a new thing
to him. Therefore he had not as yet learned
to walk as well as those who, having been blind for years,
at last learned to set their feet firmly upon the earth. with
his feet bound together with brazen fetters, an unusual mode
of binding a prisoner, but adopted in this case because Samson was
supposed to be still so strong that any other kind of fetter
would have been insufficient. You see him walking along in
the midst of a small escort towards Gaza. And now he comes to the
very city out of which he had walked in all his pride with
the gates and bolts upon his shoulders, and the little children
come out The lower orders of the people come round about him
and point at him. Samson, the great hero, hath
fallen! Let us make sport of him. What
a spectacle! The hot sun is beating upon his
bare head, which had once been protected by those luxuriant
locks. Look at the escort who guard
him, a mere handful of men! How they would have fled before
him in his brighter days! But now a child might overcome
him. They take him to a place where
an ass is grinding at the mill, and Samson must do the same ignoble
work. Why, he must be the sport and
jest of every passer-by, and of every fool who shall step
in to see this great wonder, the destroyer of the Philistines,
made to toil at the mill. Ah, what a fall was there, my
brethren! We might indeed stand and weep
over poor blind Samson. That he should have lost his
eyes was terrible, that he should have lost his strength was But
that he should have lost the favor of God for a while, that
he should become the sport of God's enemies, was the worst
of all. Over this, indeed, we might weep. Now, why have I narrated this
story? Why should I direct your attention
to Samson? For this reason, every child
of God is a consecrated man. His consecration is not typified
by any outward symbol. We are not commanded to let our
hair grow forever, nor to abstain from meats and drinks. The Christian
is a consecrated man, but his consecration is unseen by his
fellows except in the outward deeds which are the result thereof.
And now I want to speak to you, my dear friends, as consecrated
men, as Nazarites, and I think I shall find a lesson for you
in the history of Samson. My first point shall be the strength
of the consecrated, for they are strong men, secondly, the
secret of their strength, thirdly, the danger to which they are
exposed, and fourthly, the disgrace which will come upon them if
they fall into this danger. First, then, the strength of
the consecrated man. Do you know that the strongest
man in all the world is a consecrated man? Even though he may consecrate
himself to a wrong object, yet if it be a thorough consecration
he will have strength—strength for evil, it may be, but still
strength. In the old Roman wars with Pyrrhus
you remember an ancient story of self-devotion. There was an
oracle which said that victory would attend that army whose
leader should give himself up to death. Decius, the Roman consul,
knowing this, rushed into the thickest of the battle that his
army might overcome by his dying. The prodigies of valor which
he performed are proofs of the power of consecration. The Romans
at that time seemed to be every man a hero, because every man
was a consecrated man. They went to battle with this
thought, I will conquer or die. The name of Rome is written on
my heart, for my country I am prepared to live or for that
to shed my blood. And no enemies could ever stand
against them. If a Roman fell, there were no
wounds in his back, but all in his breast. His face, even in
cold death, was like the face of a lion, and when looked upon
it was of a terrible aspect. They were men consecrated to
their country. They were ambitious to make the
name of Rome the noblest word in human language, and consequently
the Roman became a giant, and to this day let a man get a purpose
within him. I care not what his purpose is.
and let his whole soul be absorbed by it, and what will he not do? You that are everything by turns
and nothing long, that have nothing to live for, soulless carcasses
that walk this earth and waste its air, what can you do? Why,
nothing. But the man who knows what he
is at, and has his mark, speeds to it like an arrow from a bow
shot by an archer strong. Nought can turn him aside from
his design. How much more is this true if
I limit the description to that which is peculiar to the Christian—consecration
to God? Oh, what strength that man has
who is dedicated to God! Is there such an one here? I
know there is. I know that there be many who
have consecrated themselves to the Lord God of Israel in the
secret of their chamber. and who can say in their hearts,
"'Tis done! The great transaction's done!
I am my Lord's, and He is mine!" He drew me, and I followed on,
glad to obey the voice divine. Now the man that can say that,
and is thoroughly consecrated to God, be he who he may or what
he may, he is a strong man and will work marvels. Need I tell
you of the wonders that have been done by consecrated men?
You have read the stories of olden times when our religion
was hunted like a partridge on the mountains. Did you never
hear how consecrated men and women endured unheard of pangs
and agonies? Have you not read how they were
cast to the lions, how they were sawn in sunder, how they languished
in prisons, or met with the swifter death of the sword? Have you
not heard how they wandered about in sheepskins and goatskins,
destitute, afflicted, tormented, of whom the world was not worthy?
Have you not heard how they defied tyrants to their face, how when
they were threatened they dared most boldly to laugh at all the
threats of the foe, how at the stake they clapped their hands
in the fire and sang psalms of triumph, when men worse than
fiends were jeering at their miseries? How was this? What made women stronger than
men and men stronger than angels? Why this? They were consecrated
to God. They felt that every pang which
rent their heart was giving glory to God, that all the pains they
endured in their bodies were but the marks of the Lord Jesus,
whereby they were proven to be wholly dedicated unto Him. Nor
in this alone has the power of the consecrated ones been proved.
Have you never read how the sanctified ones have done wonders? Read
the stories of those who counted not their lives dear unto them,
that they might honor their Lord and Master by preaching His word,
by telling forth the gospel in foreign lands. Have you not heard
how men have left their kindred and their friends and all that
life held dear, have crossed the stormy sea, and have gone
into the lands of the heathen where men were devouring one
another? Have you not known how they have put their foot upon
that country, and have seen the ship that conveyed them there
fading away in the distance, and yet without a fear have dwelt
amongst the wild savages of the woods, have walked into the midst
of them, and told them the simple story of the God that loved and
died for man? You must know how those men have
conquered how those who seem to be fiercer than lions have
crouched before them, have listened to their words, and have been
converted by the majesty of the gospel which they preached. What
made these men heroes? What enabled them to rend themselves
away from all their kith and kin and banish themselves into
the land of the stranger? It was because they were consecrated,
thoroughly consecrated to the Lord Jesus Christ. What is there
in the world which the consecrated man cannot do? Tempt him, offer
him gold and silver, carry him to the mountaintop, and show
him all the kingdoms of the world, and tell him he shall have all
these, if he will bow down and worship the God of this world.
What says the consecrated man? Get thee behind me, Satan! I
have more than all this which thou dost offer me. This world
is mine, and worlds to come. I despise the temptation. I will
not bow before thee. Let men threaten a consecrated
man. What does he say? I fear God,
and therefore I cannot fear you. If it be right in your sight
to obey man rather than God, judge ye. But as for me, I will
serve none but God. You may perhaps have seen in
your life a consecrated man. Is he a public character? What
cannot he do? He preaches the gospel, and at
once a thousand enemies assail him. They attack him on every
side, some for this thing and some for that. His very virtues
are distorted in devices, and his slightest faults are magnified
into the greatest crimes. He has scarce a friend. The very
ministers of the gospel shun him. He is reckoned to be so
strange that everyone must avoid him. What does he do? Within
the chamber of his own heart he holds conference with his
God and asks himself this question, Am I right? Conscience gives
the verdict, Yes, and the spirit bears witness with his spirit
that conscience is impartial. Then says he, Come fair, come
foul. If I am right, neither to the
right hand nor to the left will I turn. Perhaps he feels in secret
what he will not express in public. He feels the pang of desertion,
shame, and rebuke. He cries, If on my face, for
thy dear name, shame and reproach shall be, I'll hail reproach,
and welcome shame, if thou'lt remember me. As for himself in
public, none can tell that he careth for any of these things,
for he can say with Paul, None of these things move me, neither
count I my life dear unto myself. that I may win Christ and finish
my course with joy. What cannot a consecrated man
do? I believe if he had the whole
world against him he would prove more than a match for them all.
He would say, heaps upon heaps, with the jawbone of an ass have
I slain my thousand men. I care not how violent may be
his foe, nor how great may be the advantage which that foe
may get on him. Though the lion may have crouched
for the spring and may be leaping upon him, yet will he rend him
as a kid, for he is far more than a conqueror through him
that loved him. He alone is such who is wholly
consecrated unto the Lord Jesus Christ. But, says someone, can
we be consecrated to Christ? I thought that was for ministers
only. Oh no, my brethren, all God's children must be consecrated
men. What are you? Are you engaged
in business? If you are what you profess to
be, your business must be consecrated to God. Perhaps you have no family
whatever, and you are engaged in trade, and are saving some
considerable sum a year. Let me tell you the example of
a man thoroughly consecrated to God. There lives in Bristol
a man whose income is large. And what does he do with it?
He labors in business continually, that this income may come to
him, but of it Every farthing every year is expended in the
Lord's cause, except that which He requires for the necessities
of life. He makes these necessities as
few as possible, that He may have the more to give away. He
is God's man in His business. I do not exhort you to do the
same. You may be in a different position. But a man who has a
family and is in business should be able to say, Now I make so
much from my business. my family must be provided for,
but I seek not to amass riches. I will make money for God, and
I will spend it in His cause. Did I not say, when I joined
the Church, All that I am and all that I have shall be for
ever Thine? Whatever my duty bids me give,
my cheerful hands resign. And if I said it, I meant it.
I do not understand some Christian people who sing that hymn, and
then pinch, screw, and nip anything when it comes to God's cause.
If I sing that, I mean it. I would not sing it unless I
did. If I join the Church, I understand that I give myself and all that
I have up to that Church. I would not make a lying profession.
I would not make an avowal of a consecration which I did not
mean. If I have said, I am Christ's, by His grace I will be Christ's. Brethren, you in business may
be as much consecrated to Christ as the minister in his pulpit.
You may make your ordinary transactions in life a solemn service of God. Many a man has disgraced a cassock,
and many another has consecrated a smock-frock. Many a man has
defiled his pulpit cushions. And many another has made a cobbler's
lapstone holiness unto the Lord. Happy the man who is consecrated
unto the Lord! Where'er he is, he is a consecrated
man, and he shall do wonders. It has often been remarked that
in this age we are all little men. A hundred years ago or more,
if we had gone through the churches, we might have readily found a
number of ministers of great note. But now we are all little
men, the driveling sons of nobodies. Our name shall never be remembered,
for we do nothing to deserve it. There is scarce a man alive
now upon this earth. Oh, there are plenty to be found
who call themselves men, but they are the husks of men. The
life has gone from them. The precious kernel seems to
have departed. The littleness of Christians
of this age results from the littleness of their consecration
to Christ. The age of John Owen was the
day of great preachers, but let me tell you that that was the
age of great consecration. Those great preachers whose names
we remember were men who counted nothing their own. They were
driven out from their benefices because they could not conform
to the established church, and they gave up all they had willingly
to the Lord. They were hunted from place to
place. The disgraceful Five Mile Act would not permit them to
come within five miles of any market town. They wandered here
and there to preach the gospel to a few poor sheep, being fully
given up to their Lord. Those were foul times, but they
promised they would walk the road, fair or foul, and they
did walk it, knee-deep in mud, and they would have walked it
if it had been knee-deep in blood, too. They became great men, and
if we were, as they were, wholly given up to God, if we could
say of ourselves, from the crown of my head to the sole of my
foot, there is not a drop of blood that is not holy God's.
All my time, all my talents, everything I have is God's. If
we could say that, we should be strong like Samson, for the
consecrated must be strong." Now, in the second place, the
secret of their strength. What makes the consecrated man
strong? Ah, beloved, there is no strength
in man of himself. Samson without his God was but
a poor fool indeed. The secret of Samson's strength
was this. As long as he was consecrated,
he should be strong. So long as he was thoroughly
devoted to his God and had no object but to serve God, and
that was to be indicated by the growing of his hair, so long
and no longer would God be with him to help him. And now you
see, dear friends, that if you have any strength to serve God,
the secret of your strength lies in the same place. What strength
have you save in God? I have heard some men talk as
if the strength of free will of human nature was sufficient
to carry men to heaven. Free will has carried many souls
to hell, but never a soul to heaven yet. No strength of nature
can suffice to serve the Lord aright. No man can say that Jesus
is the Christ but by the Holy Ghost. No man can come to Christ
except the Father that hath sent Christ doth draw him. If then
the first act of Christian life is beyond all human strength,
how much more are those higher steps far beyond any one of us? Do we not utter a certain truth
when we say in the words of Scripture, not that we are sufficient of
ourselves to think anything of ourselves, but our sufficiency
is of God? I think everyone who has a really
quickened soul will sooner or later be made to feel this. I
question whether a man can be converted a day without finding
out his own weakness. It is but a little space before
the child finds that he can stand alone so long as God his father
takes him by the arms and teaches him to go, but that if his father's
hand be taken away, he has no power to stand, but down he falls
at once. See Samson without his guard,
going out against a thousand men. Would they not laugh at
him? And with scarcely time to express his terror he would flee
or be rent in pieces. Imagine him without his guard,
locked up in Gaza, the gates fast closed. He goes out into
the streets to escape. But how can he clear a passage?
He is caught like a wild bull in a net. He may go round and
round the walls, but where shall be his deliverance? Without his
God, he is but as other men. The secret of his strength lies
in his consecration and in the strength which is its result.
Remember, then, the secret of your strength. Never think that
you have any power of your own. Rely wholly upon the God of Israel,
and remember that the channel through which that strength must
come to you must be your entire consecration to God. What is the peculiar danger of
a consecrated man? His danger is that his locks
may be shorn, that is to say, that his consecration may be
broken. As long as he is consecrated, he is strong. Break that, he
is weak as water. Now there are a thousand razors
with which the devil can shave off the locks of a consecrated
man without his knowing it. Samson is sound asleep. So clever
is the barber that he even lulls him to sleep as his fingers move
across the pate, the fool's pate, which he is making bare. The
devil is cleverer far than even the skillful barber. He can shave
the believer's locks while he scarcely knows it. Shall I tell
you with what razors he can accomplish this work? Sometimes he takes
the sharp razor fried, and when the Christian falls asleep and
is not vigilant, he comes with its begins to run his fingers
upon the Christian's locks, and says, What a fine fellow you
are! What wonders you have done! Didn't
you rend that lion finely? Wasn't it a great feat to smite
those Philistines hip and thigh? Ah, you will be talked of as
long as time endures for carrying those gates of Gaza away. You
need not be afraid of anybody. And so on goes the razor, lock
after lock falling off, and Samson knows it not. He is just thinking
within himself, how brave I am, how great I am. Thus works the
razor of pride, cut, cut, cut away, and he wakes to find himself
bald and all his strength gone. Have you never had that razor
upon your head? I confess I have on mine. Have you never, after you have
been able to endure afflictions, heard a voice saying to you how
patient you were? After you have cast aside some
temptation and have been able to keep the unswerving course
of integrity, has not Satan said to you, that is a fine thing
you have done, that was bravely done, and all the while you little
knew that it was the cunning hand of the evil one taking away
your locks with the sharp razor of pride? For, Mark, pride is
a breach of our consecration. As soon as I begin to get proud
of what I do or what I am, What am I proud of? Why, there is
in that pride the act of taking away from God His glory. For
I promised that God should have all the glory, and is not that
part of my consecration? And I am taking it to myself.
I have broken my consecration. My locks are gone, and I am become
weak. Mark this, Christian. God will
never give thee strength to glorify thyself with. God will give thee
a crown, but not to put on thine own head. As sure as ever a Christian
begins to write his feats and his triumphs upon his own escutcheon
and take to himself the glory, God will lay him level with the
dust. Another razor he also uses is
self-sufficiency. Ah, saith the devil, as he is
shaving away your locks, you have done a very great deal.
You see they bound you with green widths, and you snapped them
in sunder. They merely smelt the fire, and they burst. Then
they took new ropes to bind you. Ah, you overcame even them, for
you snapped the ropes in sunder as if they had been a thread.
Then they weaved the seven locks of your head, but you walked
away with loom and web too, beam and all. You can do anything. Don't be afraid. You have strength
enough to do anything. You can accomplish any feat you
set your will upon. How softly the devil will do
all that! How will he be rubbing the pole,
while the razor is moving softly along and the locks are dropping
off, and he is treading them in the dust? You have done all
this, and You can do anything else. Every drop of grace distills
from heaven. O my brethren, what have we that
we have not received? Let us not imagine that we can
create might wherewith to gird ourselves. All my springs are
in Thee. The moment we begin to think
that it is our own arm that has gotten us to victory, it will
be all over with us, our locks of strength shall be taken away,
and the glory shall depart from us. So, you see, self-sufficiency
as well as pride may be the razor with which the enemy may shave
away our strength. There is yet another and a more
palpable danger still. When a consecrated man begins
to change his purpose in life and live for himself, that razor
shaves clean indeed. There is a minister. When he
first began his ministry, he could say, God is my witness,
I have but one object, that I may free my skirts from the blood
of every one of my hearers, that I may preach the gospel faithfully
and honor my master. In a little time, tempted by
Satan, he changes his tone and talks like this. I must keep
my congregation up. If I preach such hard doctrine,
they won't come. Did not one of the newspapers
criticize me, and did not some of my people go away from me
because of it? I must mind what I am at. I must
keep this thing going. I must look out a little sharper
and prune my speech down. I must adopt a little gentler
style or preach a new-fashioned doctrine. For I must keep my
popularity up, what is to become of me if I go down? People will
say, up like a rocket, down like the stick, and then shall all
my enemies laugh. Ah, when once a man begins to
care so much as the snap of a finger about the world, it is all over
with him. If he can go to his pulpit and
say, I have got a message to deliver, and whether they will
hear or whether they will not hear, I will deliver it as God
puts it into my mouth. I will not change the dot of
an eye or the cross of a tee for the biggest man that lives,
or to bring in the mightiest congregation that ever sat at
ministers' feet. That man is mighty. He does not
let human judgments move him, and he will move the world. But
let him turn aside and think about his congregation, and how
that shall be kept up. Ah, Samson, how are thy locks
shorn? What canst thou do now?" That
false Delilah has destroyed thee. Thine eyes are put out, thy comfort
is taken away, and thy future ministry shall be like the grinding
of an ass around the continually revolving mill. Thou shalt have
no rest or peace ever afterwards. Or let him turn aside another
way. Suppose he should say, I must get preferment or wealth. I must
look well to myself. I must see my nest feathered.
That must be the object of my life. I am not now speaking of
the ministry merely, but of all the consecrated. And as sure
as ever we begin to make self the primary object of our existence,
our locks are shorn. Now, says the Lord, I gave that
man strength, but not to use it for himself. Then I put him
in a high position, but not that he might clothe himself about
with glory. I put him there that he might
look to my cause, to my interests, and if he does not do that first,
down shall he go. You remember Queen Esther. She
is exalted from being a simple humble maiden to become the wife
of the great monarch Ahasuerus. Well, Haman gets a decree against
her nation, that it shall be destroyed. Poor Mordecai comes
to Esther and says, You must go in to the king and speak to
him. Well, says she, but if I do, I shall die. Ah, says he, if
thou altogether holdest thy peace at this time, then shall their
enlargement and deliverance arise to the Jews from another place.
But thou and thy father's house shall be destroyed. And who knoweth
whether thou art come to the kingdom for such a time as this?
Esther was not made queen Esther, that she might make herself glorious,
but that she might be in a position to save the Jews. And now if
she prefers herself before her country, then it is all over
with her. Vashti's fate shall be as nothing
compared with her destruction. And so if you live in this world,
and God prospers you, You get perhaps into some position, and
you say, Here I am. I will look out for myself. I
have been serving the church before, but now I will look to
myself a little. Come, come, says human nature.
You must look after your family, which means you must look after
yourself. Very well, do it, sir, as your main object, and you
are a ruined man. Seek first the kingdom of God
and His righteousness, and all these shall be added unto you.
If you keep your eye single, your whole body shall be full
of light. Though you seemed as if you had
shut out half the light by having that single eye, yet your body
shall be full of light. But begin to have two masters
and two objects to serve, and you shall serve neither. You
shall neither prosper for this world nor for that which is to
come. O Christian! Above all things
take care of thy consecration. Ever feel that thou art wholly
given up to God and to God alone. And now, lastly, there is the
Christian's disgrace. His locks are cut off. I have
seen him young as I am, and you, with gray hairs upon your brows,
have seen him oftener than I. I have seen him in the ministry.
He spake like an angel of God. Many there were that regarded
him and did hang upon his lips. He seemed to be sound in doctrine
and earnest in manner. I have seen him turn aside. It
was but a little thing, some slight deviation from the ancient
orthodoxy of his father's, some slight violation of the law of
his church. I have seen him, till he has
given up doctrine after doctrine, until at last the very place
wherein he preached has become a byword and a proverb, and the
man is pointed out by the gray-headed sire to his child as a man who
is to be looked upon with suspicion. who, if he lectures, is to be
heard with caution, and if he preaches, is not to be listened
to at all. Have you not seen him? What disgrace
was there! What a fall! The man who came
out in the camps of Dan, and seemed to be moved by the spirit
of the Lord, has become the slave of error. He has gone into the
very camps of the enemy, and there he is now, grinding in
the mill for the Philistine, whom he ought to have been striking
with his arm. Now there are two ways of accounting
for this. Such a man is either a thorough
hypocrite or a fallen believer. Sometimes people say of persons
who turn aside to sin, There now, look, there is a Christian
fallen, a child of God fallen. It is something like the vulgar
when at night they see a bright light in the sky and say, Ah,
there is a star fallen. It was not a star. The stars
are all right. Take a telescope. They are every
one there. The great bear has not lost a
star out of its tail. And if you look, there is the
belt of Orion, all safe, and the dagger has not dropped out
of it. What is it, then? We do not know exactly what it
is. Perhaps it may be a few gases up there for a little while that
have burst, and that is all, or some wandering substance cast
down, and quite time that it should be. But the stars are
all right. So depend upon it. The children
of God are always safe. Now these men who have turned
aside and broken their consecration vow are pointed at as a disgrace
to themselves and dishonor to the church. And you who are members
of Christ's church, you have seen men who stood in your ranks
as firm soldiers of the cross, and you have noticed them go
out from us, because they were not of us. Or, like poor Samson,
you have seen them go to their graves with the eyes of their
comfort put out, with the feet of their usefulness bound with
brazen fetters, and with the strength of their arms entirely
departed from them. Now do any of you wish to be
backsliders? Do you wish to betray the holy
profession of your religion? My brethren, is there one among
you who this day makes a profession of love to Christ, who desires
to be an apostate? Is there one of you who desires
like Samson to have his eyes put out and to be made to grind
in the mill? Would you, like David, commit
a great sin and go with broken bones to the grave? Would you,
like Lot, be drunken and fall into lust? No, I know what you
say. Lord, let my path be like the
eagle's flight. Let me fly upwards to the sun
and never stay and never turn aside. O give me grace that I
may serve Thee, like Caleb, with a perfect heart, and that from
the beginning, even to the end of my days, my course may be
as the shining light which shineth more and more unto the perfect
day. Ay, I know what is Your desire. How then shall it be accomplished?
Look well to Your consecration. See that it is sincere. See that
You mean it. and then look up to the Holy
Spirit after you have looked to your consecration, and beg
of Him to give you daily grace. For as day by day the manna fell,
so must you receive daily food from on high. And remember, it
is not by any grace you have in you, but by the grace that
is in Christ, and that must be given to you hour by hour, that
you are to stand and having done all, to be crowned at last as
a faithful one who has endured unto the end. I ask your prayers
that I may be kept faithful to my Lord, and on the other hand
I will offer my earnest prayers that you may serve Him while
He lends you breath, that when your voice is lost in death you
may, throughout a never-ending immortality, praise Him in louder
and sweeter strains. And as for you that have not
given yourselves to God, and are not consecrated to Him, I
can only speak to you as to Philistines, and warn you that the day shall
come when Israel shall be avenged upon the Philistines. You may
be one day assembled upon the roof of your pleasures, enjoying
yourselves in health and strength, but there is a Samson called
Death. who shall pull down the pillars
of your tabernacle, and you must fall and be destroyed, and great
shall be the ruin. May God give you grace that you
may be consecrated to Christ, so that living or dying you may
rejoice in Him, and may share with Him the glory of His Father. This message, Samson Conquered,
was preached by Charles Haddon Spurgeon on November 21st 1858. This is Charles Kelsch inviting
you to join me again for another message from the Prince of Preachers.
Samson Conquered
| Sermon ID | 21401151053 |
| Duration | 41:34 |
| Date | |
| Category | Radio Broadcast |
| Bible Text | Judges 16:20; Judges 16:21 |
| Language | English |
© Copyright
2025 SermonAudio.