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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. C. H. Spurgeon preached this
message on August 28, 1859, in the music hall of the Royal Surrey
Gardens. It is entitled, Limiting God. The text is found in Psalm 77
and verse 41. They limited the Holy One of
Israel. Man is always altering what God
has ordained. Although God's order is ever
the best, yet man will never agree therewith. When God gave
forth a law, it was engraved upon two stones. The first table
contained the commandments concerning man and God. The second dealt
with man and man. Sins against God are sins against
the first table. Sins against man are offenses
against the second table. Man, to prove constantly his
perversity, will put the second table before the first, nay,
upon the first, so as to cover and conceal it. There are few
men who will not allow the enormity of adultery. Few are still who
will dispute the wickedness of murder. Men are willing enough
to acknowledge that there is sin in an offence against man.
that which endangers the human commonwealth, that which would
disturb the order of earthly governments, all this is wrong
enough even in man's esteem. But when you come to deal with
the First Table, it is hard indeed to extort a confession from mankind. They will scarce acknowledge
that there is any such thing as an offence against God, or,
if they do acknowledge it, yet they think it but a light matter.
What man is there among you that hath not in his heart often lamented
sins against man rather than sins against God? And which of
you hath not felt a greater compunction for sins against your neighbor
or against the nation than for sins committed against God and
done in his sight? I say that such is the perversity
of man that he will think more of the less than the greater.
An offence against the majesty of heaven is thought to be far
more venial than an offence against his fellow-creature. There are
many transgressions of the first table of which we think so little
that perhaps we scarcely ever confess them at all, or, if we
acknowledge them, it is only because the grace of God has
taught us to estimate them aright. One offence against the First
Table which seldom agitates the mind of an unconvicted sinner
is that of unbelief. And with it I may put the want
of love to God. The sinner does not believe in
God, does not trust in Him, does not love Him. He gives his heart
to the things of earth and denies it to his Creator. Of this high
treason and rebellion he thinks nothing. If you could take him
in the act of theft, a blush would mantle his cheek. But you
detect him in a daily omission of love to God and faith in his
son Jesus Christ, and you cannot make him feel that he is guilty
of any evil in this. O strange contortion of human
judgment! O blindness of moral conscience,
that this greatest of iniquities, a want of love to the all-lovely,
and a want of faith in him who is deserving of the highest trust,
should be thought of to be nothing, and reckoned among things that
need not to be repented of. Among such sins of the first
table is that described in our text. It is consequently one
of the masterpieces of iniquity, and we shall do well to purge
ourselves of it. It is full of evil to ourselves,
and it is calculated to dishonor both God and man. Therefore let
us be in earnest to cut it up both root and branch. I think
we have all been guilty of this in our measure, and we are not
free from it even to this day. Whether we be saints or sinners,
we may stand here and make our humble confession that we have
all tempted the Lord our God and limited the Holy One of Israel.
What, then, is meant by limiting the Holy One of Israel? Three
words will set forth the meaning. We limit the Holy One of Israel
sometimes by dictation to Him, at other times by distrust of
Him, and some push this sin to its farthest extreme by an utter
and entire despair of His goodness and His mercy. These three classes,
all in their degree, limit the Holy One of Israel. In the first
place, I say we limit the Holy One of Israel by dictating to
Him. Shall mortal dare to dictate
to his Creator? Shall it be possible that man
shall lay down his commands, and expect the King of heaven
to pay homage to his arrogance? Will a mortal impiously say,
Not thy will, but mine be done? Is it conceivable that a handful
of dust, a creature of a day that knoweth nothing, should
set its judgment in comparison with the wisdom of the only wise? Can it be possible that we should
have the impertinence to map out the path of boundless wisdom,
or should decree the footsteps which infinite grace should take,
and dictate the designs which omnipotence shall attempt? Startle,
startle at your own sin. Let each of us be amazed at our
own iniquity. We have had the impudence to
do this in our own thoughts. We have climbed to the throne
of the highest. We have sought to take him from
his throne that we might sit there. We have grasped his scepter
and his rod. We have weighed his judgments
and the balances, and tried his ways and the scales. We have
been impious enough to exalt ourselves above all that is called
God. I will address myself first to
the saint, and with the candle of the Lord attempt to show to
Israel her secret iniquity, and to Jerusalem her grievous sin.
O Heir of heaven, be ashamed and be confounded while I remind
thee that thou hast dared to dictate to God. How often have
we in our prayers not simply wrestled with God for a blessing,
for that was allowable, but we have imperiously demanded it.
We have not said, Deny this to me, O my God, if so thou pleasest. We have not been ready to say,
as the Redeemer did, Nevertheless, not as I will, but as thou wilt. But we have asked and would take
no denial, not with all humble deference to our Lord's superior
wisdom and grace, but we have asked and declared that we would
not be content unless we had that particular blessing upon
which we had set our hearts. Now, whenever we come to God
and ask for anything which we consider to be a real good, we
have a right to plead earnestly. But we err when we go beyond
the bounds of earnestness and come to impudent demand. It is
ours to ask for a blessing, but not to define what that blessing
shall be. It is ours to place our head
beneath the mighty hands of divine benediction, but it is not ours
to uplift the hands, as Joseph did those of Jacob, and say,
Not so, my father. We must be content if he gives
the blessing cross-handed, quite as content that he should put
his left hand on our head as the right. We must not intrude
into God's almonery. Let him do as seemeth him good.
Prayer was never meant to be a fetter upon the sovereignty
of God, much less a licensed channel for blasphemy. We must
always subjoin at the bottom of the prayer this heavenly postscript,
Father, deny this if it be most for thy glory. Christ will have
nothing to do with dictatorial prayers. He will not be a partaker
with us in the sin of limiting the Holy One of Israel. Oftentimes,
too, I think, we dictate to God with regard to the measure of
our blessing. We ask the Lord that we might
grow in the enjoyment of His presence. Instead of that, He
gives us to see the hidden depravity of our heart. The blessing comes
to us, but it is in another shape from what we expected. We go
again to our knees, and we complain of God that He has not answered
us, whereas the fact has been that He has answered the spirit
of our prayer. but not the letter of it. He
has given us the blessing itself, but not in the shape we asked
for it. We prayed him to give us silver. He has given us gold. But we blind creatures cannot
understand the value of this new-shaped blessing, and therefore
we go grumbling to him as if he had never heard us at all.
If ye ask especially for temporal mercies, always take care to
leave the degree of those mercies with God. You may say, Lord,
give me food convenient for me, but it is not yours to stipulate
how many shillings you shall have per week, or how many pounds
in the year. You may ask that your bread may
be given you, and that your water may be sure, But it is not yours
to lay down to God out of what kind of vessels you shall drink,
or on what kind of table your bread shall be served up to you.
You must leave the measuring of your mercies with Him who
measures the rain and weighs the clouds of heaven. Beggars
must not be choosers, and especially they must not be choosers when
they have to deal with infinite wisdom and sovereignty. And yet
further, I fear that we have often dictated to God with regard
to the time. As a church, we meet together,
and we pray God to send us a blessing. We expect to have it next week.
It does not come. We wonder that the ministry is
not blessed on the very next Sabbath day, so that hundreds
are pricked in the heart. We pray again, and again, and
again, and at last we begin to faint. And why is this? simply
because that in our hearts we have been setting a date and
a time to God. We have made up our minds that
the blessing must come within a certain period, and as it does
not come, we do as it were spite our God by declaring we will
stop no longer, that we have waited time enough, we will have
no more patience, we will be gone. It is clear the blessing
will not come. We waste our words, we imagine,
by seeking it. Oh, how wrong is this! What,
is God to be tied to hours or months or years? Do his promises
bear dates? Has he not himself said, Though
the vision tarry, wait for it, It shall come, it shall not tarry? And yet we cannot wait God's
time, but we must have our time. Let us always remember it is
God's part to limit a certain day to Israel, saying, Today,
if ye will hear my voice. But it is not our part to say
to God, Today, if thou wilt hear my voice. Let us leave time to
him, resting assured that when the ships of our prayers are
long at sea, they bring home all the richer cargo, and if
the seeds of supplication are long buried, they shall produce
the richer harvest. For God, honouring our faith
which he has exercised by waiting, shall multiply his favours and
enlarge his bounty. your prayers are out of interest
at a great percentage. Let them alone. They shall come
back, not only the capital, but with compound interest, if ye
will but wait till the time runs out, and God's promise becomes
due. Brethren, in these matters we
cannot acquit ourselves, and I fear that much more than this
will be necessary before our sin is fully unveiled. We have
limited the Holy One in other ways, and I may remark that we
have done this with regard to our prayers and efforts for others.
A mother has been anxious for her children's conversion. Her
eldest son has been the object of her fervent prayer. Never
a morning has passed without earnest cries to God for his
salvation. She has spoken to him with all
a mother's eloquence. She has prayed in private with
him. She has used every means which love could suggest to make
him think of a better world. All her efforts at present seem
to be wasted. She appears to be plowing upon
a rock and casting her bread upon the waters. Year after year
has rolled on. Her son has left her house. He
has commenced business for himself. He begins now to betray worldliness.
He forsakes the house of prayer, which his mother frequents. She
looks round every Sabbath morning, but John is not there. The tear
is in her eye. Every allusion in the minister's
sermon to God's answering prayer makes her heart beat again. And
at last she says, Lo, these many years have I sought God for this
one blessing. I will seek no longer. I will,
however, pray another month, and then, if ye hear me not,
I think I can never pray again. Mother, retract the words. Blot out such a thought from
thy soul, for in this thou art limiting the Holy One of Israel.
He is trying thy faith. Persevere, persevere while life
lasts, and if thy prayers be not answered in thy lifetime,
perhaps from the windows of heaven thou shalt look down and see
the blessing of thy prayers descend on the head of thy child. This
has been the case, too, when we have sought to do good to
our fellow men. You know a certain man in whose
welfare you take an extraordinary interest. You have availed yourself
occasionally of an opportunity of addressing him. You have pressed
him to attend the house of God. You have mentioned him in your
private devotions, and often at your family altar. You have
spoken to others that they might pray with you, for you believed
the promise, if two of you shall agree on earth, as touching anything
that they shall ask, it shall be done for them of my Father
which is in heaven. But now months have rolled on,
and your friend seems to be in a more hopeless condition than
ever. Now he will not go to the house of God at all. Perhaps
some ungodly acquaintance has such power over him that your
efforts are counteracted by his evil influence. All the good
you can do is soon undone, and you are ready to say, I will
never use another effort. I will turn my attention to someone
else. In this man's case, at least, my prayers will never
be heard. I will withdraw my hand. I will
not use unprofitable labor. And what is this but limiting
the Holy One of Israel? What is this but saying to God,
Because Thou hast not heard me when I wish to be heard, Because
Thou hast not exactly blessed my efforts as I would have them
blessed? Therefore I will try this no
more. O impudence! O impertinence to the majesty
of heaven! Christian, cast out this demon,
and say, Get thee behind me, Satan, for thou savourest not
the things that be of God. Once again attempt, and not once,
but though a thousand times thou failest, try again, for God is
not unfaithful to forget your work of faith and your labour
of love. only continue to exercise your
patience and your diligence. In the morning sow your seed,
and in the evening withhold not your hand, for either this or
that shall surely prosper in its appointed season. While thus
charging the people of God with sin, I have been solemnly condemning
myself, and if a like conviction shall abide upon all my believing
hearers, my errand is accomplished. I will address myself now to
those who cannot call themselves the children of God, but who
have been lately stirred up to seek salvation. There are many
of you who are not hardened and careless now. There was a time
when you were callous and indifferent, but it is not so with you at
the present. You are anxiously saying, What must I do to be
saved? and have been, perhaps, very
earnestly in prayer during the last two or three months. Every
Sunday morning service sends you home to your knees, and you
cannot refrain from sighs and tears, even in your daily business,
for you cry as one that cannot be silenced, Lord, save, or I
perish. Perhaps Satan has been putting
it into your heart, and since your prayers have not been heard,
It is now of no avail. Oh, said the evil one, these
many months hast thou prayed to God to put away thy sin, and
he has not heard thee. Give it up. Never bend thy knees
again. Heaven is not for thee. Therefore
make the best of this world. Go and drink its pleasures. Suck
its joys. Lose not the happiness of both
worlds. Make thyself gay here, for God
will never bless thee and save thee hereafter. And is this what
he has said? Oh, listen not to him. He designs
thy destruction. Hearken not to his voice. There
is nothing he desires so much as that thou shouldst be his
prey. Therefore be thou on thy watchtower against him, and listen
not to his cajoling. Hearken to me for a season, and
God bless thee in the hearing, that thou mayest no longer limit
the Holy One of Israel. Sinner, what hast thou been doing
while thou hast said, I will restrain prayer, because God
has not as yet answered me? I say, what hast thou been doing?
Hast thou not been stipulating with God as to the day when He
shall save thee? Suppose it is written in the
book of God's decree, I will save that man and give him peace,
after he has prayed seven years. Would that be hard upon thee?
Is not the blessing of divine mercy worth waiting for? If he
keep thee tarrying at his gate day after day, though thou shouldst
wait fifty years, if that gate opens at the last, will it not
well repay thy waiting? Knock, man, knock again, and
go not away. Who art thou that thou shouldst
say to God, I will have peace on such a day, or else I will
cease to supplicate? This is a common offence with
all poor, trembling, seeking souls. Confess it now, and say
unto God, Lord, I leave the time with thee, but I will not cease
to supplicate, for if I perish, I will pray and perish only there. And do you not think again that
perhaps the cause of your present distress is that you have been
dictating to God as to the way in which he shall save you? You
have a pious acquaintance who was converted in a very remarkable
manner. He was suddenly convicted and
as suddenly justified in the sight of God. He knows the very
day and hour in which he obtained mercy. And you have foolishly
made up your mind that you will never lay hold upon Christ unless
you feel the same. You have laid it down as in a
decree, that God is to save you, as it were, by an electric shock,
that you must be consciously smitten and vividly illumined,
or else you will never lay hold on Christ. You want a vision. You dictate to God that he must
send one of his angels down to tell you that he has forgiven
you. Now rest assured, God will have nothing to do with your
dictation. With your desire to be saved
he will have to do, but with your planning as to how he should
save you he will have not to do. Oh, be content to get salvation
anyhow, if thou dost but get it. If thou canst not have it,
like the prodigal son, who felt his father's arms about him,
and knew his father's kiss, and had music and dancing in the
moment that he was restored, if thou canst not come in by
the front door, be content to enter at the back. If mercy comes
on foot, do not despise her, for she is just as fair as when
she rides in her chariot. Be content to go and sackcloth
before God, and there to bemoan thy guilt, and to lay hold on
him who taketh away the sin of the world. Sinner, believe in
Christ. That is God's command, and thy
privilege. Cast thyself flat on his atonement. Trust thou him and him alone.
And if God choose not to comfort thee in the way in which thou
hast expected, yet be content to get the blessing anyhow, so
long as thou receivest it at all. Limit not, I beseech thee,
the Holy One of Israel. Upon this point of dictation
I might tarry very long and give many instances, but I choose
rather to close up this first head of my discourse by observing
once again what a heinous offence, what an unreasonable iniquity
it is for any of us to attempt to dictate to God. O man, know
that He is sovereign. He everywhere hath sway, and
all things serve His might. Wilt thou, a beggar, dictate
to the King of Kings, the Lord of Lords, when the angels veil
their faces before him, and scarcely dare to look upon his brightness?
Wilt thou dare to lord it over him, and command thy Maker? Shall
infinite wisdom stoop to obey thy folly, and shall divine goodness
be cooped and caged and imprisoned within the bars of thy frantic
desires? What? Dost thou dare to mount
the steps of his throne, and affront him with thy haughty
speeches, when cherubim dare not to look upon his brightness,
when the pillars of heaven's starry roof tremble and start
at his reproof? Wilt thou seek to be greater
than he is? Shall mortal man be greater than
his God? Shall he dictate to the everlasting,
he who is born of a woman in a few days and full of folly?
Go thou to his throne. Bow thyself reverently before
him. Give up thy will. Let it be bound
in gold and fetters a bondslave to God. Cry thou this day, Lord,
have mercy on me, a sinner, and let it not be as I will, but
as thou wilt. Thus, then, I have discoursed
on the first part of the subject. In the second place, we limit
the Holy One of Israel by distrust. And here again I will divide
my congregation into the two grand classes of saints and sinners. Children of God, purchased by
blood and regenerated by the Spirit, you are guilty here. For by your distrust and fear
you have often limited the Holy One of Israel, and have said,
in effect, that His ear is heavy, that it cannot hear, and that
His arm is shortened, that it cannot save. In your trials you
have done this. You have looked upon your troubles.
You have seen them roll like mountain waves. You have hearkened
to your fears, and they have howled in your ears like tempestuous
winds, and you have said, My bark is but a feeble one, and
it will soon be shipwrecked. It is true that God has said
that through tempests and tossings he will bring me to my desired
haven, but, alas, such a state as this was never contemplated
in his promise. I shall sink at last and never
see his face with joy. What hast thou done, fearful
one? O thou of little faith, dost
thou know what sin thou hast committed? Thou hast judged the
omnipotence of God to be finite. Thou hast said that thy troubles
are greater than his power, that thy woes are more terrible than
his might. I say, retract that thought,
drown it, and thou shalt not be drowned thyself. Give it to
the winds, and rest thou assured that out of all thy troubles
he will surely bring thee, and in thy deepest distress he will
not forsake thee. But, says one, I did believe
this once, and I had hoped for an escape from my present predicament,
but that escape has failed me. I did think that some friend
would have assisted me, and thus I imagined I should have come
out from the furnace. Ha, and thou art distrusting
God, because He does not choose to use the means which thou hast
chosen? Because His election and thy
election are not the same, therefore thou doubtest Him? Why, man,
he is not limited to means, to any means, much less to one of
thy choosing. If he deliver thee not by calming
the tempest, he hath a better way in store. He will send from
above and deliver thee. He will snatch thee out of the
deep waters, lest the floods overflow thee. What might Shadrach,
Meshach, and Abednego have said? Suppose they had got it into
their heads that God would deliver them in some particular way.
They did have some such idea, but they said as if to prove
that they trusted not really to their thought about the deliverance.
Nevertheless, be it known unto thee, O King, we will not worship
thy gods, nor bow before the image which thou hast set up.
They were prepared to let God have his will, even though he
used no means of deliverance. But suppose, I say, they had
conferred with flesh and blood, and Shadrach had said, God will
strike Nebuchadnezzar dead. Just at the moment when the men
are about to put us into the furnace, the king will turn pale
and die, and so we shall escape. Oh, my friends, they would have
trembled indeed when they went into the furnace if they had
chosen their own means of deliverance, and the King had remained alive.
But instead of this, they gave themselves up to God, though
He did not deliver them. and though he did not prevent
their going into the furnace, yet he kept them alive in it,
so that not so much as the smell of fire had passed upon them.
It shall be even so with you. Repose in God. When thou seest
him not, believe him. When everything seems to contradict
thy faith, Still stagger not at the promise. If he hath said
it, he can find ways and means to do it. Rest assured, sinner,
he would come from his throne to do it himself in person, rather
than suffer his promises to be unfulfilled. The harps of heaven
would sooner lament an absent God than thou shouldst have to
mourn a broken promise. trust in him, repose constantly
on him, and limit not the Holy One of Israel. Do you not think
that the Church as a great body has done this? We do not any
of us expect to hear that a nation is born in a day. If it should
be said that in a certain chapel in London this morning some thousand
souls had been converted under one sermon, we should shake our
heads incredulously and say it cannot be. We have a notion that
because we have only had drops of mercy of late, we are never
to have showers of it. Because mercy seems only to have
come in little rills and trickling streamlets, we have conceived
the idea that it can never roll its mighty floods like the huge
rivers of the Western world. No, we have limited the mighty
one of Israel, especially as preachers have we done it. We
do not expect our ministry to be blessed, and therefore it
is not blessed. If we had learned to expect great
things, we should have them. If we had made up our minds to
this, that the promise was great, that the promiser was great,
that his faithfulness was great, and that his power was great,
and if with this for our strength we set to work expecting a great
blessing, I think we should not be disappointed. But the universal
Church of Christ hath limited the Holy One of Israel. Why,
my friends, if God should will it, ye need not ask where are
to come the successors of such and such a man. Ye need not sit
down and ask, when such and one is gone, where shall be another
who shall preach the word with power. When God gives the word,
great shall be the multitude of them that publish it. And
when the multitude shall begin to publish, believe me, God can
move thousands as easily as he can move tens. And where our
baptismal pool hath been stirred by ones and twos, he can bid
millions descend to be baptized into our holy faith. Limit not,
O limit not, thou Church of the living God! Limit not the Holy
One of Israel!" And now I turn to the poor troubled heart, and
although I accuse of sin, yet I doubt not that the spirit shall
bear witness with the conscience, and leading to Christ, shall
this morning deliver from its galling yoke. Poor troubled one,
thou hast said in thine heart, My sins are too many to be forgiven. What hast thou done? Repent thee,
and let the tear roll down thy cheek. Thou hast limited the
Holy One of Israel. Thou hast put thy sins above
His grace. Thou hast considered that thy
guilt is more omnipotent than omnipotence itself. He is able
to save unto the uttermost them that come unto God by Christ?
Thou canst not have exceeded the boundlessness of His grace.
Be thy sins ever so many, the blood of Christ can put them
all away. And if thou doubtest this, thou
art limiting the Holy One of Israel. Another says, I do not
doubt His power to save, but what I doubt is His willingness.
What hast thou done in this? Thou hast limited the love, the
boundless love, of the Holy One of Israel. What, dost thou stand
on the shore of a love which ever must be shoreless? Was it
deep enough and broad enough to cover the iniquities of Paul,
and doth it stop just where thou art? Why, thou art the limit
then. Thou standest as the limiting
landmark of the grace of the Holy One of Israel. out upon
thy folly. Get rid of this thy mistrust.
He whose love has embraced the chief of sinners is willing to
embrace thee. If now, hating thy sin and leaving
thy iniquity, thou art ready to put thy trust in Jesus, I
beseech thee, limit not the Holy One of Israel by thinking He
is unwilling to forgive. Are you really conscious of the
sin you are committing when you think God unwilling to save?
Why, you are accusing God of being a liar. Does not that alarm
you? You have done worse than this.
You have even accused him of being perjured, for you doubt
his oath. As I live, saith the Lord, I
have no pleasure in the death of him that dieth, but had rather
that he should turn unto me and live. If you do not believe that,
then you make God to be perjured. O, tremble at such guilt as this! No, but you say I would not accuse
him, but he would be quite just if he were unwilling to save
me. I am glad thou sayest that. That proves thou dost not accuse
his justice. But I still say thou art limiting
his love. What doth he himself say? Hath
he limited it? Hath he not himself said, Ho,
every one that thirsteth, Come ye to the waters? and he that
hath no money, Come ye, buy, and eat. Yea, come, buy wine
and milk without money and without price. And thou art thirsty,
and yet thou thinkest that his love cannot reach to thee. O,
while God assures thee that thou art welcome, be not wicked enough
to throw the lie in the teeth of mercy. Limit not the Holy
One of Israel. But, sir, I am such an old sinner. Yes, but limit not God. But I am such a black sinner.
Limit not the efficacy of the cleansing blood. But I have aggravated
Him so much. Limit not His infinite longsuffering. But my heart is so hard. Limit
not the melting power of His grace. But I am so sinful. Limit not the potency of the
atonement. But, sir, I am so hard-hearted,
and I feel so little my need of him. Limit not the influences
of the Spirit by thy folly or thy stubbornness. But come as
thou art, and put thy trust in Christ, and so honor God, and
he will not dishonor thy faith. If you will but now for half
a moment consider how faithful God has been to His children
and how true He has been to all His promises, I think that saint
and sinner may stand together and make a common confession
and utter a common prayer. Lord, we have been guilty of
doubting Thee. We pray that we may limit Thee
no longer. Oh, remember, remember more and
more God's love and goodness to His ancient people. Remember
how He delivered them many a time, how He brought them out of Egypt
with a high hand and an outstretched arm. Think how He fed them in
the wilderness, how He carried them all the days of old. Remember
His faithfulness to His covenant and to His servant Abraham. And
say, will he leave you? Will he forget his covenant sealed
with blood? Will he be unmindful of his promise?
Will he be slow to answer or slack to deliver? Scorn the thought. Drive it far away. And now come,
and at the foot of the cross renew your faith. In the sight
of the flowing wounds, renew your confidence and say, Jesus,
we put our trust in Thee. Thy Father's grace can never
fail. Thou hast loved us, and Thou
wilt love us despite our sins. Thou wilt present us at last
before Thy Father's face in glory everlasting. And now, to conclude,
I want your solemn attention while I address myself to a very
small number of persons here present, for whose sorrowful
state I feel the greatest pity. It has been my mournful duty
as pastor of so large a congregation to have to deal with desperate
cases. Here and there, there are men
and women who have come into a state which, without meaning
to wound them, I am free to confess I think is sullen despair. They feel that they are guilty.
They know that Christ is able to save. They also doctrinally
understand the duty of faith and its power to bring peace.
But they persevere in the Declaration that there is no mercy for them.
In vain you find out a parallel case. They soon discover some
little discrepancy and so escape you. The most mighty promises
lose all their force because they turn their edge by the Declaration. That does not mean me. They read
in the Word of God that Jesus Christ came into the world to
save sinners. They are sinners, but they cannot
think He came to save them. They know right well that He
is able to save them to the uttermost. They would not say they had gone
beyond the uttermost, but still they think so. They cannot imagine
that free grace and sovereign love can ever come to them. They
have, it is true, their gleams of sunshine. Sometimes they believe,
but when the comfortable presence of God is gone, they relapse
into their old despair. Let me speak very tenderly, and
oh, that the Spirit of God would speak also. My dear brother and
sister, what art thou doing? I ask thee, what art thou doing? If thou art not limiting the
Holy One of Israel, wouldst thou dishonor God? No, sayest thou,
I would not. But thou art doing it. Thou art
saying that God cannot save thee. Or if not saying that, thou art
implying that all the torture thou hast felt in thy conscience,
and all the anxiety thou hast in thy heart, have never yet
moved God to look on thee. Why, thou makest God to be the
most hard-hearted of all beings. If thou shouldst hear another
groan as thou art groaning, thou wouldst weep over him. But thou
thinkest God looks on thee with cold indifference, and will never
hear thy prayer. This is not only limiting. It
is slandering the Holy One of Israel. O come forth, I beseech
you, and dare to believe a good thing of thy God. Dare to believe
this, that He is willing now to save thee, that now He will
put away thy sins. But suppose, sir, I should believe
something too good. Nay, that thou canst not do. Think of God as being the most
loving, the most tender-hearted being that can be, and thou hast
thought just rightly of Him. Think of Him as having a mother's
heart that mourns over its sick babe. Think of Him as having
a father's heart, pitying his children. Think of Him as having
a husband's heart, loving his spouse and cherishing her, and
thou hast just thought rightly of Him. Think of him as being
one who will not look on thy sins, but who casts them behind
his back. Dare for once to give God a little
honor. Come, put the crown on his head. Say, Lord, I am the vilest rebel
out of hell, the most hard-hearted, the most full of blasphemous
thoughts. I am the most wicked, the most abandoned. Lord, let
me have the honor now of being able to say, thou art able to
save even me. And on thy boundless love, thy
great, thine infinite grace, do I rely. One of Charles Wesley's
hymns, which I forget just now, has in it an expression something
like this. Lord, if there be a sinner in the world more needy
than I am, then refuse me. If there be one more undeserving
than I am, then cast me away. If there be one that needs grace
and mercy, pity and compassion more than I, then pass me by. But Lord, says he in his song,
thou knowest I the chief of sinners am, the vilest of the vile, the
most hardened, and the most senseless. Then, Lord, glorify thyself by
showing to men, to angels, and to devils what thy right hand
can do. May the Holy Ghost enable thee
now to come forth from the dungeon of despair and no longer limit
the Holy One of Israel. I shall add no more, but leave
the effect of this sermon with my God. May every one of us believe
him better and have greater thoughts of him, and never let us be guilty
henceforth of confining, as it were, within iron bonds, the
limitless one of Israel. This message, Limiting God, was
preached by Charles Haddon Spurgeon on August 28th, 1859. This is Charles Kelsch inviting
you to join me again for another message from the Prince of Preachers.
Limiting God
| Sermon ID | 719019128 |
| Duration | 42:54 |
| Date | |
| Category | Radio Broadcast |
| Bible Text | Psalm 78:41 |
| Language | English |
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