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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 June 26, 1859 at the Music Hall of the Royal Surrey
Gardens. It is entitled, A Home Mission
Sermon. The text is found in Ecclesiastes
chapter 9 and verse 10. Whatsoever thy hand findeth to
do, do it with thy might, for there is no work, nor device,
nor knowledge, nor wisdom in the grave whither thou goest.
If God had willed it, we might each one of us have entered heaven
at the moment of our conversion. It was not absolutely necessary
for our preparation for immortality that we should tarry here. It
is possible for a man to be taken to heaven, and to be found meet
to be a partaker of the inheritance of the saints in light, though
he hath but believed in Christ a solitary moment. The thief
upon the cross had no long time for the process of sanctification.
or thus spake the Saviour, Verily I say unto thee, This day shalt
thou be with me in Paradise. It is true that in our case sanctification
is a long and continued process, and we shall not be perfected,
the being of sin shall not be cast out, till we lay aside our
bodies and enter within the veil. But nevertheless it is quite
certain that if God had so willed it, He might have sanctified
us in a moment, He might have changed us from imperfection
to perfection, He might have cut out the very roots of sin,
and have destroyed the very being of corruption, and have taken
us to heaven instanter if He had so willed it. Notwithstanding
that, we are here. And why are we here? Would God
keep His children out of Paradise a single moment longer than was
necessary? Yet it is not absolutely necessary
for them. Then why are they here? Does
God delight to tantalize His people by keeping them in a wilderness
when they might be in Canaan? Will He shut them up in prison
when He might give them instant liberty? lest there be some overwhelming
reason for his delay in giving them the fullness of their life
and bliss, why are they here? Why is the army of the living
God still on the battlefield? One charge might give them the
victory. Why are God's ships still at sea? One breath of his
wind might waft them to the haven. Why are his children still wandering
hither and thither through a maze, when a solitary word from his
lips would bring them into the center of their hopes in heaven?
The answer is, they are here that they may glorify God, and
that they may bring others to know his love. We are not here
in vain, dear brethren. We are here upon earth like sowers
scattering good seed, like plowmen plowing up the fallow ground.
We are here as heralds, telling to sinners around what a dear
Savior we have found, and heralding the coming of our Master. We
are here as the salt to preserve a world which would else become
putrid and destroyed. We are here as the very pillars
of this world's happiness. For when God shall take away
His saints, the universal moral fabric shall tumble to its fall. and great shall be the crash
when the righteous shall be removed and the foundations shall be
shaken. Taking it therefore as granted that the people of God
are here to do something to bless their fellow men, our text comes
in very pertinently as the rule of our life. May God help us
to practice it by giving us much of His powerful Spirit. Whatsoever
thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might. This is what
thou art here for. Thou art here for a certain purpose. That purpose will soon be ended,
and whether it be accomplished or unaccomplished, there shall
never be a second opportunity for attempting it, For there
is no work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom in the grave, whither
thou goest. So far as this world is concerned,
the grave is the end of our doing. So far as this time and state
are concerned, the grave shall be the burial of our wisdom,
our knowledge, and our devices. Now I shall this morning first
endeavor to explain the preacher's exhortation, and then endeavor
to enforce it by evangelical arguments. First I shall explain
the preacher's exhortation. I shall do so by dividing it
into three parts. What shall I do? Whatsoever thy
hand findeth. How shall I do it? Do it with
thy might. And then, why shall I do it?
For there is no work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom in
the grave whither thou goest. First then, are there not some
here who are saying, I hope I love Christ, I desire to serve him,
for I have been saved by his work upon the cross, what then
can I do? The answer is, whatsoever thy
hand findeth to do. Here we will observe first that
this refers us to the works that are near at hand. You are not
called upon today, the most of you, to do works which your eye
sees far away in Hindustan or China. The most of you are called
especially to do the work which is near at hand. People are always
desiring to be doing something miles off. If they could but
be somewhere else, what wonders they would accomplish! Many a
young man thinks if he could stand up under a banyan tree
and discourse to the black faces in India how eloquent he might
be. My dear fellow, why don't you
try the streets of London first? See whether you are eloquent
there. Many a lady imagines that if she could move in a high circle,
she would no doubt become another Lady Huntington and do wonders.
But why can you not do wonders in the circle in which God has
placed you? He does not call you to do that
which is leagues away, and which is beyond your power. It is that
which your hand findeth to do. I am persuaded that our home
duties, the duties which come near to us in our own streets,
in our own lanes and alleys, are the duties in which we ought
most of us mainly to glorify Christ. Why will you be stretching
out your hands to that which you cannot reach? Do that which
is near, which is at your hand. People sometimes come to their
minister and say, What shall I do for Christ? In nine cases
out of ten, it is evidence of a lazy, idle spirit when men
ask what they shall do. For if they were really in earnest,
wanted to do something, they would find themselves placed
in the midst of such oppressive work, that the question would
not be what can I do, but which out of all these shall I do first,
for here is enough to fill an angel's hand, and occupy more
than all a mortal's time. Very often I find men ambitious
to serve God in an orbit in which they will never move. Many say,
I wish I could become a preacher. Yes, but you are not called to
be a preacher, it may be. Serve God in that which your
hand findeth present. Serve him in your immediate situation,
where you now are. you not distribute tracts?" "—'Oh,
yes,' you say.—'But I was thinking of doing something else.' '—'Yes,
but God put you there to do that.' '—'Could you not teach an infant
class in the Sunday school?' '—'Oh, I was thinking of being
the superintendent of the Sunday school.' '—'Were you indeed?'
But your hand has not found out how to get there. Do what thy
hand has found. It has found an infant class
to teach. Could you not endeavour to instruct
your family, and teach your servants in the way of God, God helping?"
"—'Oh, yes,' says one.—'But I was thinking about organising a Dorcas
society, or a ladies' visiting or tract-distributing society.'
Yes, but your hand has not found that out yet. Just do that first
which is nearest to you. Begin at home. When Jerusalem
was built, every man built before his own house. Do you the same? There was a wise provision by
our rulers that every man should cleanse the street in front of
his own house. Why will you, who live here in
Southwark, walk all the way to Islington to cleanse the street
in front of somebody else's door? Stop and attend to your own work! And if everybody will do that
which comes immediately under his eyes, and is found out by
his own hand, then how much may be accomplished! depend upon
it, there is more wisdom in that than some of us dream. Whatsoever
thy hand findeth to do, do it. Do not be prowling about for
work, but do it where it is when thy hand findeth it. Again, Whatsoever
thy hand findeth to do, refers to works that are not possible.
There are many things which our heart findeth to do that we never
shall do. It is well, it is in our heart.
God accepts the will for the deed. But if we would be eminently
useful, we must not be content with forming schemes in our heart
and talking of them with our lips. We must get plans that
are tangible, schemes that we can really manage, ideas that
we can really carry out. And so we shall fulfill the exhortation
of Solomon, whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it. I will
give you an illustration. Not many months ago, in a certain
magazine, which I will not mention, there was a supplement given
upon China, in which supplement the churches represented by that
magazine were exhorted to raise enough money to send a hundred
missionaries to China. There was a very earnest appeal
made to the churches, a glorious blast of trumpets, as if something
very great was coming. The mountain was in labor, and
labor it did. Now I have been told that the
secretary of the Chinese mission called upon the editor of the
aforesaid magazine and said, I see you have a proposal to
send a hundred missionaries to China. Will you strike the two
knots off and find money enough to send one? It is said that
they who aim at the moon will shoot higher than those who shoot
at a bush. It may be correct, they may shoot
higher, but I do not think they are so likely to hit their mark.
Shooting high is not the thing, it is hitting what you shoot
at. Now if they had said, we will
do our utmost to send one missionary to China, they might have effected
it. But they were talking about a
hundred, and they have not succeeded, nor are they likely to do so.
The exhortation of our preacher would come home to such people.
They have got it in their hearts to do it. They say when they
grow big enough they mean to accomplish great things. Who
art thou, O great mountain? Before Zerubbabel thou shalt
become a plain. Now, instead of meddling with
that great mountain, suppose you try your faith upon a fig
tree first, and then, if you move that first, you might have
confidence to move a mountain. John Bunyan was a very wise man
when he thought once he would try to work miracles. Instead
of ordering the sun and moon to go back several degrees, as
he rode along he thought he would tell the puddles in the road
to become dry. It was a miracle that would not
interfere with anybody, and therefore a proper one to begin with. But
in the beginning the thought came into his mind, Pray first. And when he prayed, he could
not find any promise that he could dry up the puddles, and
so he determined to leave them alone. I hope those men who come
with some splendid vision in their heads would only try to
do what they can and no more. When they become giants, let
them do a giant's work, but as long as they are dwarfs, let
them do a dwarf's work. Remember, the exhortation of
the great man is, to do not great things, but to do the things
that thy hand findeth to do, present things, possible things. Do not be scheming and speculating
about what you would do if your old aunt were to leave you twenty
thousand pounds, or what you would do if you were to become
Prime Minister, and so forth. Do what you can in your workshop,
or shed, or with a needle in your hand. And if ever you have
a scepter, which is not likely, and you use your needle well,
you would be the most likely person to use your scepter well
also. There is another word of exhortation
which seems to strike me as being very necessary when addressing
God's people. It is this, Whatsoever thy hand
findeth to do. Suppose now the duty which lies
at our door to be a very disagreeable one. A sad thing that any duty
should be disagreeable to the man who has been saved by Christ,
but so it is. There are some duties which,
while we are nothing but poor flesh and blood, will always
be less agreeable than certain others. yet mark you. Though
the duties seem to you to be degrading and disagreeable, contrary
to your taste, yet the exhortation hath it, Whatsoever thy hand
findeth to do, do it with thy might. whether it be the visitation
of the poorest of the poor, or teaching of the most ignorant,
whether hewing of wood, or the drawing of water, the very lowest
work in the Lord's house, if thy hand findeth it to do, do
it. You will remark in many Christians, and possibly, if you are wise,
you will remark in yourself, how we all have a preference
to do those duties which we regard as being honorable, as coming
strictly within the range of our own office, those which probably
will be rewarded with the praise of men. But if there is any duty
that shall never be heard of till the day of judgment, if
there is any work that never shall be seen until the blaze
of the last day shall manifest it to a purblind world, then
we generally slur such a duty and seek another. Oh, if we did
but understand the true majesty of humility, and how great a
thing it is for a Christian to do little things, to bow himself
and to stoop! We should rather envy the meanest
of the flock than the greatest, and each of us try to wash the
saints' feet and perform the most menial service for the Master. Often, I think, when you and
I are standing back for some humbling duty, if Christ Jesus
should come by that way and do it, how we should blush! Let me give you Christ's own
picture. There was a poor wounded Samaritan
who was left half dead. There was a priest coming to
Jerusalem. He was busy with his sermon, looking over his notes
and thinking of what he should have to say to the people when
he addressed them. Well, there was a poor fellow
the other side of the road, wounded. Oh, it was no business of his. He was a preacher. If he went
to interfere with that poor man's wounds, he was quite sure it
would be such a ghastly sight that he would not be able to
preach half so well. So he passed by. Well, then there
came a Levite, a good respectable deacon in the sanctuary. Well,
he says, I must make haste and catch the minister, or else I
shall not be in time to read the hymns. It was no business
of his to go and see after the poor man who was wounded. At
last the master himself came that way, and he, the head of
the church, the prince of preachers, the great deacon, the great servant
of servants, He did not disdain to bind up the broken hearts
and to heal the poor man's wounds. There is a story told in the
old American war that once upon a time George Washington, the
commander-in-chief, was going around among his soldiers. They
were hard at work lifting a heavy piece of timber at some fortification.
There stood the corporal of the regiment, calling out to his
men, Heave there! Heave ahoy! and giving them all
kinds of directions. As large as possible the good
corporal was. So Washington, alighting from
his horse, said to him, What is the good of your calling out
to those men? Why don't you help them yourself
and do part of the work? The corporal drew himself up
and said, Perhaps you are not aware to whom you are speaking,
sir. I am a corporal. I beg your pardon," said Washington.
You are a corporal, are you? I am sorry I should have insulted
you." So he took off his own coat and waistcoat, and set to
work to help the men build the fortification. When he had done,
he said, Mr. Corporal, I am sorry I insulted
you, but when you have any more fortifications to get up, and
your men won't help you, send for George Washington, the Commander-in-Chief,
and I will come and help them. The Corporal slunk away, perfectly
ashamed of himself. And so Christ Jesus might say
to us, Oh, you don't like teaching the poor. It is beneath your
dignity. Then let your commander-in-chief
do it. He can teach the poor. He can wash the feet of the saints.
He can visit the sick and afflicted. He came from heaven to do this,
and he will set you the example. Surely we should each be ashamed
of ourselves, and declare from this time forward whatever it
is, be it great or little, if it comes to our hand, and if
God will but give us help and give us grace, we will do it
with all our might. I have thus explained what we
are to do. And now, how are we to do it? Whatsoever thy hand
findeth to do, do it with thy might. first. Do it. That is, do it promptly. Not
fritter away your lives in setting down what you intend to do to-morrow
as being a recompense for the idleness of to-day. No man ever
served God by doing things to-morrow. If we have honoured Christ and
are blessed, it is by the things which we do to-day. For after
all, the ticking of the clock says to-day, to-day, to-day.
We have no other time in which to live. The past is gone. The future has not come. We have,
we never shall have anything but the present. This is our
all. Let us do what our hand findeth
to do. Young Christian, are you just
converted? Do not wait until your experience
has ripened into maturity before you attempt to serve God. Endeavor
now to bring forth fruit. This very day, if it be the first
day of your conversion, bring forth fruits meet for repentance,
even now. Thou who art now in middle age,
say not, I will begin to serve Christ when my hair shall be
frosty with age. No, now do it, do it, do it with
thy might. Oh, that God would keep us to
this, that we would always do our day's work in our day, and
serve him now. I have heard of a certain divine
who was a preacher at Newgate. He preached a sermon divided
into two parts. The first was to the saint, the
second was to the sinner. When he had finished the first
part, to the saint, in the morning, he said he would preach to the
sinner the next Sunday morning, and then finish his sermon. There
was a poor man who was hanged on the Monday, and who therefore
never heard that part of the discourse which was best adapted
to his case. How often may we be found in
the like light! We may be saying, I will do him
good by and by, but he may be dead then, and our opportunity
will be gone. or what is just as likely, we
may be dead also. And then all our opportunities
will be passed, and it will be totally out of our power to do
anything. Do it! Do it! Do it! This is what the Church of Christ
wants to have proclaimed as with the sound of a trumpet in all
her ranks. Whatsoever thy hand findeth to
do, do it! Put it not off one hour. Do it. Procrastinate not a day. Procrastination
is the thief of time. Let him not steal thy time. Do
it at once. Serve thy God now, for now is
all the time thou canst reckon on. Then the next words. Do it with thy might. Whatever
you do for Christ, throw your whole soul into it. Christ wants
none to serve Him with their fingers. He must have their hands,
their arms, their hearts. We must not give Christ a little
slurred labor, which is done as a matter of course now and
then. But when we do serve Him, we must do it with all our heart
and soul and strength and might. Among the old Roman pagans, they
were accustomed to slay beasts and cut them open in order to
discover future events. If ever they cut open a bullock
and could not find the heart, it was always considered by the
people to be an ill omen. And depend upon it. If you cut
your works open and cannot find your hearts in them, it is an
ill omen for your works. They are good for nothing, and
their object shall never be accomplished. The worst part of the Christian
church at this time is that it seems as if many of our ministers
and their churches have lost their hearts. Step into your
churches and chapels. Everything is so orderly and
precise. But where is the life? Where
is the power? I confess that I would rather
address a congregation of ignorant men who are alive and enthusiastic
than a congregation of the most learned and orderly who are dead
and blank, upon whose ears all the preaching in the world falls
as but a dull monotony. About three weeks ago I was addressing
Methodist congregation. They leaped on their feet now
and then and cried, Hallelujah! Glory to God! My soul was stirred
within me, and I felt that I could preach and preach again and never
grow weary while these people drink in the Word with real life. I am persuaded that real good
was done and that they did not forget what was said. But then
our people take things so orderly. They come and take their seats
so quietly. till it often seems that one
might preach to a set of statues or wooden blocks with just as
much hope of effect as to preach to them. We want life, we want
heart, heart in the ministry, heart in the deacons, heart in
all the offices of the church. Until we have this, we cannot
expect the Master's blessing. You are going to teach in the
Sunday school this afternoon, are you? How are you going to
teach? I am going to do as I have often done. Stand back. If you
are going to serve Christ, stand back till you have got your heart
with you and take with you all your strength and all your might.
And say, as David did, bless the Lord and serve the Lord,
O my soul, and all that is within me. Serve the Master and spend
yourself in your strength. I would rather have no sermon
than a dull sermon, no teaching than sleepy teaching, no prayers
than lifeless prayers. A cold religion is tasteless.
Let us have a hot religion that will burn its way into the heart.
This is the religion that will make its way in the world and
make itself respected, even though some may pretend to despise it.
Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might. But where is the might of a Christian? Let us not forget that. The might
of a Christian is not in himself, for he is perfect weakness. His
might lieth in the Lord of hosts. It will be well for us if all
we attempt to do is done in God's strength, or else it will not
be done with might. It will be feebly and badly done. Whenever we attempt to serve
God in the winning of souls, let us first begin with prayer. Let us seek His help. Let us
go on with prayer mixed with faith. And when we have concluded
the work, let us commend it again to God with renewed faith and
fresh prayer. What we do thus will be well
done, and will not fail in its effect. But what we do merely
with creature strength, with the mere influence of carnal
zeal, will come to nothing at all. Whatsoever thy hand findeth
to do, do it with that real might which God has promised to them
that ask it, with that real wisdom which he giveth liberally, which
he bestows on all who seek it meekly and reverently at his
feet. God help us then to carry out
this exhortation. Whatsoever thy hand findeth to
do, do it with thy might. And now, the third part of the
exhortation was, why? We are to do it with all our
might, because death is near. And when death comes, there will
be an end to all our serving God on earth, an end to our preaching,
an end to our praying, an end to our doing aught for God's
glory among the perishing souls of men. If we all lived in the
light of our funerals, how well should we live? Some of the old
Romish monks always read their Bibles with a candle stuck in
a skull. A light from a death's head may
be an awful one, but it is a very profitable one. There is no way
of living like that. There is an old monkish legend
told of a great painter who had begun a painting but did not
finish it. And as the legend went, he prayed that he might
come back on earth, that he might finish that painting. There is
a picture now extant, representing him after he had come back to
finish his picture. There is a solemnity about that
man's look as he paints away with all his might, for he had
but little time allowed him, and a ghastliness, as if he knew
that he must soon go back again, and wanted his labor to be finished.
If you were quite sure of the time of your death, if you knew
you had but a week or two to live, with what haste would you
go round and bid farewell to all your friends? With what haste
would you begin to set all matters right on earth, supposing matters
are all right for eternity? But Christian men, like other
men, forget that they are mortal. And even we who profess to see
into the future, declaring that we are looking for a city that
hath foundations, whose builder and maker is God, even we seem
to think that we shall live here forever. It is well that God
puts a thorn into our nest, or else often his own birds of paradise
would build their nests here and never mount higher. Let us
pause a moment and think that in a short time we must die. The hour is not to be staved
off. When Yong Winged Arrow shall have ended its hasty journey
and found its target in this heart, then all is over. I may preach to you today and
exhort you to flee from the wrath to come, but when this tongue
is sealed in silence, I can no more warn you. If I have been
unfaithful and have not discharged my master's message and faithfully
told it, I cannot come back and tell it over again. Mother, you
can pray for your children now, but when death shall have sealed
your eyes in darkness, there can be no more prayers lifted
up forever. You can teach them now in God's
word and labor that they may be brought to know their mother's
God, but it shall be all over then. You may now, O Sunday-school
teacher, instruct those children, and God blessing you, you may
be their spiritual father and bring them to Christ. But it
shall one day be whispered in your class, Teacher is dead,
and there is the end of your labor. Your children may come
to your grave and sit down there and weep, but from the clay-cold
sod no voice of warning can come up. There, your warning and your
love is lost, alike unknowing and unknown. And you, the servant
of Christ, with great stores of wealth, you have this day
money with which God's cause might be greatly helped. You
have talent, too, which might fit you well to stand in the
midst of the church and serve it. You are going the way of
all flesh. Gray hairs are scattered here
and there. You know that your end is approaching. When once
death shall have come, your hand cannot devise liberal things.
Your brain cannot form new devices for the spread of your master's
kingdom. Neither can your heart then bend and weep over sinners
perishing, or your tongue address them with earnest exhortation.
Think, dear friends, that all we can do for our fellows we
must do now. for the ceremony shall soon enwrap
us. The hands must soon hang down, and the eyes be shut, and
the tongue be still. While we live, let us live. There are no two lives accorded
us on earth. If we build not now, the fabric
can never be built. If now we spin not, the garment
will never be woven. Work while ye live, and live
while ye work. God grant to each of us that
we may discharge in this life all the desires of our hearts
in magnifying God and bringing sinners to the cross. Now, having
thus explained and opened the exhortation, I shall pray that
God's Holy Spirit may be solemnly with me, while very briefly,
and very vehemently, I endeavor to stir up all professors of
religion here, to do whatsoever their hands findeth to do, to
do it now, and with all their might. If Christ Jesus should
leave the upper world and come into the midst of this hall this
morning, what answer could you give if, after showing you his
wounded hands and feet and his rent side, he should put this
question, I have done all this for thee, what hast thou done
for me? Let me put that question for
him and in his behalf. You have known his love, some
of you, fifty years, some of you thirty, twenty, ten, three,
one. He has done all this for you,
has bled away his precious life, has died in agonies most exquisite
upon the cross. What have you done for him? Turn
over your diary now. Can you remember the contributions
you have given out of your wealth, and what do they amount to? Add
them up. Think of what you have done for
him, how much of your time you have spent in his service. Add
that up. Turn over another leaf, and then
observe how much time you have spent in praying for the progress
of his kingdom. What have you done there? Add
that up. I will do so for myself. And
I can say without a boast I have labored to serve God and have
been in labors more abundant But when I come to add all up,
and set what I have done side by side with what I owe to Christ,
it is less than nothing and vanity. I pour contempt upon it all.
It is but dust of vanity. And though from this day forward
I should preach every hour in the day, though I could spend
myself and be spent, though night should know no rest, and day
should never cease from toil, and year should succeed a year,
till this hair was hoary and this frame exhausted, When I
come to render up my account, he might say, Well done. But I should not feel it was
so, but should rather say, I am still an unprofitable servant.
I have not done that which was even my bare duty to do. much
less have I done all to show the love I owe. Now will you
think what you have done, dear brother and sister, and surely
your account must fall short equally with mine. But as for
some of you, you have done positively nothing. You have joined the
church and have been baptized, and that is about all. You have
sometimes doled out a little from your abundance to the cause
of Christ, but oh, how little when you think He gave His all
for you. Others there are of you who out
of your little have given much. out of your weakness have been
strong, in your poverty you have never been poor towards Christ's
cause. You shall not lack your reward
at last, but even you will come with the rest of us and say,
Lord, help us to love the poor, and by thy amazing love to us,
constrain us to devote ourselves wholly, unreservedly to thee. Another argument let me give
you, why you should serve Christ with all your might now. You
believe, my dear hearers, that if men die unconverted, their
doom is fearful beyond all expression. You and I are compelled to believe
from the testimony of the Spirit that the punishment of those
who die impenitent is beyond all that words can describe.
They sink into a pit that is bottomless, into a fire that
never can be quenched, where they are fed on by a worm that
dieth not. You know, sometimes your hair
has almost stood on end with the thought that the wrath to
come is more than soul can conceive. And is it possible? Can it be
possible with this belief in your mind that many of your fellow
creatures are going post-haste to this awful, this fearful hell,
that you are idle and doing nothing? May God forgive you, if such
is your unfeeling state of heart, that you can contemplate a fellow-creature
perishing in the fires of hell, and yet permit your hand to hang
down in listless idleness. O children of the living God,
I beseech you by the fires of hell, by the agony that knows
no abatement, by the thirst that is not to be mitigated by a drop
of water, by the eternity which knows no end. I beseech you by
the wrath to come, be ye up and doing, earnestly striving together
to be the means in God's hand of awakening poor souls and bringing
them to the mercy of Christ. Be ye earnest. If ye do not believe
this Bible, I care not what you are, earnest or dull. But if
ye do believe it, act as ye believe. If ye think men are perishing,
if the Lord's right hand is dashing in pieces his enemy, then I beseech
you, be strengthened by the same right hand to endeavor to bring
those enemies to Christ, that they may be reconciled by the
blood of the cross. And now, last of all, let me
just appeal to you in this way. Possibly, in my explanation,
I have led you to form in your heart some great scheme of what
you would do. Let me knock that all to pieces,
because that is not my text. It is not a great scheme, but
it is whatsoever your hand findeth to do that I want you to do.
My dear friends, many of you are parents of children. It is
quite certain, whatever else may be your duty, that your duty
as parents is first. As their parents, you owe them
a duty. You have responsibilities towards
them, and it is your duty to bring them up in the fear and
nurture of God. May I earnestly beg and beseech
of you not to neglect this, for remember, you will soon be gone. And will not this be a thorn
in your dying pillow? If, when your children stand
around your bed, to bid farewell to their dying father or their
dying mother, they shall have to say to you, You are going
from us, but we shall not miss you. Oh, we shall miss you as
far as temporal things are concerned. But when you are dead, we shall
be as well off in spiritual things as we were before, for you neglected
us." They will not say so. But do you suppose they will
not think so, if such be the truth? Children are always quick,
and if they say it not, they would feel it. Will it not be
far better, if God shall so bless you, that when you lay sick and
dying, there shall be a daughter wiping the hot sweat from your
brow, and saying, Fear not, mother. Though you walk through the valley
of the shadow of death, God is with you, and you need fear no
evil. Will it not be a satisfaction
to you, father, when you die? If glancing at the foot of the
bed, you can say to your son, Farewell, my son. I bless God
that I leave you in this world to carry on the work which I
have begun, for you are walking in your father's steps. I know
of no greater joy than for some aged patriarch, and I know of
one, God bless him, he is preaching the word, I doubt not, this morning,
to be able to look to sons and daughters converted to Christ,
and then to look to another generation and see grandchildren converted
to Christ. It must be a noble thing to die
and leave behind three generations, and many of these already able
to call the Redeemer blessed. Oh, neglect not your present
work, I beseech you, or otherwise you shall lose the present blessing.
And by neglecting this present duty which concerns your own
household, you shall incur a household curse, and make your death-bed
uneasy, so that you shall toss there with those eyes looking
on you, and silently charging you with having neglected their
souls. Sunday School Teachers, I give
you the same exhortation. I pray God that when you die,
it may not be said in your schools, Well, we do not miss so-and-so
at all. She was not a teacher we could
desire. She filled up a gap, and that is all we can say. I
hope it may be said of you, brothers and sisters, in the holy work
of Sunday School teaching, they are gone to their grave, and
there is a vacancy made which will not soon be filled. But
still your children shall gather round your coffin and say, God
be blessed that we ever had such a teacher. And though they are
not converted, yet shall their little eyes weep when they think,
Teacher will never weep over us again. Teacher will never
pray for us any more. Teacher will never tell us of
Christ again. And that very thought may be
more powerful in their minds than all you ever said to them,
and may, perhaps, effect the work which was not accomplished
when your soul left the body. And now I charge myself most
solemnly in this conclusion to be more earnest than ever in
preaching the word to you, to preach it in season and out of
season, to preach it with all my might, for I shall soon be
gone. life lasts not long, and when
we have all departed, may not others have to think of us that
we went before our work was fully accomplished? Once, when George
Whitefield was very sick and ill, he was laid down by his
friends by the fireside, and he lay there as if he were dying.
Presently he opened his eyes, and a poor old negro woman, who
had watched over him when others had given him up, spoke to him
and said, Massa George Whitfield, are you still alive? He looked
and said, Yes, I am, but I was in hopes I should have been in
heaven. Then the old woman made this pretty speech. Ah, Massa
George," she said, you went to the very gates of heaven. And
Christ said, Go back, Massa George. There are many poor negroes down
on the earth that I mean to have saved. Go back and tell them
I love them, and mind you do not come back any more till you
bring them all with you. So Whitfield recovered strength
and even found, as the old woman said, a desire not to go home
till he could take these poor negroes with him. So may it be
with us. May we live till we shall bring
many souls home with us to glory. Then may it be said, Servant
of Christ, well done. Rest from thy loved employ. the
battles fought, the victories won, enter thy rest with joy. Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ,
and thou shalt be saved. For he that believeth and is
baptized shall be saved, and he that believeth not shall be
damned." This message, a home mission sermon, was preached
by Charles Haddon Spurgeon on June 26, 1859.
A Home Mission Sermon
| Sermon ID | 825039231 |
| Duration | 46:18 |
| Date | |
| Category | Radio Broadcast |
| Bible Text | Ecclesiastes 9:10 |
| Language | English |
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