Charles Spurgeon discusses how Jesus was largely rejected by His own, and then points out that we are often ungrateful toward Him.
A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, June 9, 1872, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington. *9/26/2011
He came to his own, and his own did not receive him. (Joh 1:11)
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1. I would very frankly confess at the outset that I am not about to preach from the words of this text, and that I have selected it solely because it contains an epitome of man’s behaviour towards the Saviour. He came to his own people, the Jews, and answered in every detail to the descriptions which their prophets had given, but since they were looking for a temporal leader who would dazzle them with an earthly kingdom, they would not acknowledge the true Messiah; and, though he continued to come to them preaching to them, and working such miracles among them as no other man did, so that their unbelief was without excuse, they still rejected him. This was a gross act of ingratitude. It was superlative kindness which brought Jesus to that nation in particular and to the sons of men in general: it was supreme ingratitude when that nation, alas, in this representing us all, would not receive him, but rejected the Lord of glory. I use our text as an illustration of the ingratitude of men towards our Lord, and it is upon that subject that I intend to preach at this time. I lay the charge against not only those who lived in Christ’s day, but against mankind in general, against this assembly in particular, against myself also in sad measure. We have treated the Lord ungratefully, and have not rendered to him according to the benefits received.
2. In beginning, we shall speak upon the fact that those among whom Jesus lived were guilty of ingratitude towards him: and then, secondly, coming to ourselves, we shall dwell more at length upon the lamentable fact that we too are guilty of ingratitude towards him; and we shall close by observing what then? What follows out of this? What lessons are we to learn from it?
3. I. First then, THE PEOPLE AMONG WHOM OUR LORD LIVED WERE GUILTY OF INGRATITUDE TOWARDS HIM.
4. They were a favoured people above all nations. It was a distinguishing mark of divine favour that the Messiah should be born among them. They ought to have received him with delight. His signs and evidence of Messiahship were clear enough. He performed among them unprecedented miracles, and he spoke as no other man spoke: yet they rejected him, treating their best friend as though he had been their worst foe. This was a high handed act of national ingratitude.
5. Special cases occurred in our Lord’s life involving still greater ingratitude. Among the people of Israel many became partakers of our Lord’s healing power. He blessed many eyes with light; he caused sound to enter into many deaf ears; many lame men leapt like a deer at his bidding, and many who were sick with palsy and all manner of diseases were suddenly restored by his word. Yet the majority of these healed ones did not become his disciples, for the number of his male disciples, after he had ascended, was about one hundred and twenty; yet our Saviour had not merely healed one hundred and twenty, but, according to the evangelists, many hundreds — I might, without exaggeration, say many thousands had been partakers of his healing benefits. They were in their own bodies testimonies to the Lord’s divine power, and yet they did not worship him. From where did this obstinacy of unbelief come? Strange ingratitude this must have been, that a man should owe to Christ his eyes, and yet refuse to see in Christ his Saviour: that he should owe to Christ the tongue with which he spoke, and yet should be silent in the great Physician’s praise. Yet so it was, many were healed, but few believed.
6.
We know, moreover, that our Lord fed thousands of hungry people. He
multiplied loaves and fishes, and fed crowds, so that they all ate
and were filled. For a time he was very popular with them, as anyone
will be who has loaves and fishes to distribute, and they would have
made him a king, for idle men much desire a monarch who will supply
their needs, and relieve them from personal labour. Yet these people
had no affection for his person or doctrine, but followed him simply
and only for what they could get from him. Many of these selfish
followers, doubtless gave their voices against him and shouted
“Crucify him, crucify him.” They ate bread with him and lifted up
their heel against him. Surely, after sitting at a table so
marvellously supplied, reason itself would have suggested to every
feaster that their host must be a prophet sent by God, if not God
himself.
’Tis strange,
’Tis passing strange,
’Tis wonderful,
that men receiving so much at his hands should still remain unbelievers in him.
7. The same treatment was dealt out to our Lord when he acted as the teacher of the people. He taught them pure truth in the best conceivable manner, and small indeed was his reward. They could not complain about his sermons that they were dull and unattractive, or that they were austere and devoid of sympathy. We never read that a hearer ever fell asleep under Christ’s preaching, as Eutychus did under the lengthy discourse of Paul; neither were any terrified by his looks, as men have been by fierce fanatic leaders; his ministry was pleasing, and charmed the ear, yet it was ill requited. When his sermon at Nazareth was finished, what was his reward? They took him to the brow of the hill and they would have thrown him down headlong had he not escaped. When he taught the Jews in the temple, “they took up stones again to stone him.” In return for his arguments of mercy, they assailed him with the weapons of malice. Although, by declaring the glad tidings of salvation, he rendered to his hearers the most precious service, some of them in return sought to entrap him in his speech, and others gnashed their teeth in rage against him. He brought light into the darkness, and the darkness did not comprehend it.
8. Sometimes, when he found around him a more select audience than usual, the great Teacher would not merely preach the elements of the gospel, but would go more deeply into its mysteries, but he had no thanks for doing so. On one occasion he spoke to them concerning eating his flesh and drinking his blood, but he had cast his pearls before swine; they turned again to attack him, and many of those who had followed him up to that point forsook him, and did not walk with him any more. Even the disciples who were true at heart to him did not always prize his sayings well enough to keep them in their minds; and they were not influenced by his teaching and example as much as they should have been. How often must the tender bosom of our Lord have been wrung with anguish over human unkindness. The adder’s tooth of unthankfulness left its print upon him. Men returned to him evil for good, and for the heaped up measure of his benevolence they filled up equally high the measure of their hate. What a plaintiveness is there in that question which he asked after he had healed ten lepers, and only one of them returned to thank him, — “Were there not ten cleansed, but where are the nine?” as if he had expected at least that they would thank him; it was the least they could do in return for so matchless a blessing as deliverance from a deadly disease. Surely, whenever our Lord looked upon the handful of his followers he must have remembered the hosts upon whom he had conferred benefits, and said within himself, “Where are the nine?”
9. From that thankless generation the meek and lowly One received no reward of love for his temporal and spiritual bounties. Here and there a grateful woman ministered to him from her substance, and now and then a thankful soul became his disciple; but, for the most part, there was no response to his love, except as what Jerusalem heard when for his tearful cries of compassion he received shouts of murderous hate, demanding that he should be crucified.
10. Dear brethren, the further our Lord Jesus Christ went on in life the more he knew by experience the base ingratitude of mankind. He lived for them; in obedience to his Father he spent his whole life for men. He lived first for God’s glory, and next for love for men. It was his food and drink to do men good. He forgot himself, he utterly renounced all ambitious purposes, and gave himself away so that he might seek and save the lost. Just as a mother devotes herself to her babe so Jesus laid himself out for men; indeed, no mother ever loved her babe as Jesus loved his own who were in the world; and yet, continually, in every way, men tried to take his life, which was more valuable to them than it was to him; for it was for their sakes only that he still continued to live on earth. How often had he to escape their cruel hands, and, when his hour was come, how eagerly they conspired to hound him to his death. One would have thought when the mob stood in the street of Jerusalem howling out, “Crucify him, crucify him!” that he must have been a common informer, who had betrayed men for filthy lucre; or a poisoner who had secretly tainted the food of the people with a deadly drug, or a blasphemer who had profaned every holy thing; or a wretch whose character was doubly dyed in infamy. Instead of which, there stood before that furious crowd the meekest among men, the most inoffensive, and, at the same time, the most generous, the most self-denying, the most tender man of all born of woman. Yet, how lustily they cry, “Crucify him! crucify him!” and, when the question is asked by the Roman Governor, “Why, what evil has he done?” they can give no answer to it, and, therefore, they drown the question with their shouts, “Crucify him! crucify him!” Oh, the base ingratitude of men to reward such a life as his with a cruel death.
11. At last that evil generation had its way with the Man of Sorrows and they took him after he had been scourged, and led him away to be crucified. We know well that he did not need to have died even then. One thought of his could have averted the arrows of death; he had only to will it and the nails would have sprung from their places, and from the cross the Lord would have leapt into the midst of his foes, to their horror and dismay. He was dying for men; he suffered for men each pang, for men the thorn crown, for men the nailed hands, for men the pierced side, for men the bleeding feet, for men the cup of gall, for men the pain, and for men the thirst. “He saved others, he could not save himself.” It was the greatest sacrifice that man had ever made for man, and yet how was it requited? The cruel crowd stood around him, and scoffed at his pains, they made jests upon his person, they insulted his faith, they mocked his prayers. Oh you dear Christ of God, gladly would we have covered your sacred body from those lewd and brutal eyes, and sheltered your tender spirit from those inhuman taunts, but it could not be so. Man is allowed to be infamous so that you may suffer to the uttermost, and, in so doing, redeem your people. See the contrast, Jesus loves and man hates. He dies for sinners, and sinners insult him in his agonies.
12. When our Lord had died and had lain in the grave for three days, and had risen again, his rising was for men. He might have gone into his glory if he had pleased, but he waited for forty days to minister blessings to his people. The requital which he received from the Jewish people was of the same evil character. They doubted whether he had risen from the dead at all, and there were those who were base enough to invent that idle tale concerning the stealing of his body at night by his disciples. They laid imposture to the door of the Son of God, and charged the Perfect One with acting a lie. Oh man, how mad you must be! What strange insanity of iniquity is this that you requite your loving Lord so!
13. I think I hear a murmur among you, as though you said, “Ah, but this was the guilt of the Jews; the crime of unbelievers. All were not so cruel.” But, surely, you have forgotten that in this ingratitude even those who were nearest to him had a share. Those who were his immediate companions were ungrateful to him. What do you think of him who said when his Lord had been anointed by a loving, woman’s hand for his burial, that it was a waste? That what was given to anoint the King of glory might have been sold for much, begrudging an offering to that divinely generous One, who had given up all for us? One would have thought that those who lived with him would have unanimously delighted in every honour shown to him, and one is apt to imagine that they should more frequently have interposed to protect him, if they might, from the ills of poverty, weariness, and want. Among them all was there not one who should have pressed hospitality upon him again and again, so that he might no longer cry, “Foxes have holes and the birds of the air have nests, but I, the Son of Man, have nowhere to lay my head?” At any rate, when it came at last to the dying struggle, should not his bosom friends have watched with him one hour? Might they not have guarded Gethsemane’s gates when he left them outside the wall? And the three who came within a stone’s throw of his grief, and could hear his groans, could they not have postponed their slumber? Must they sleep while the Lord is in agony? He excused them, but could they excuse themselves?
14. The case of Judas was particularly afflicting to our Redeemer’s sensitive soul. In him treason reached its climax and base ingratitude outdid itself. Yet Judas was an apostle, the keeper of his Master’s purse, the friend who ate food with him and lifted up his heel against him. Shame on you, Judas! But, alas! you are not alone; others follow your hideous example, and some such may be among us. “Lord, is it I?”
15. But, where were the rest of the disciples? Did they not accompany their Lord to the judgment seat and come forward and boldly bear witness to the righteousness of his character? Not one of them was there to do him service. “All the disciples forsook him and fled.” One ventured where he saw his Master’s ill treatment, but he denied him three times, and added oaths and curses, saying, “I do not know the man.” So this is how those whom he had carried in his bosom and loved even to the end behaved. Those to whom he had opened up his innermost soul, who had eaten with him his last solemn meal before his passion, untrue to all their protestations of affection, each sought their own safety, and left him to his fate. Do you not call this ingratitude? What is worse than the ingratitude of bosom friends and brethren? The indictment lies against all who were of his day with whom he came in contact, from the worst even to the best. Where is the advocate who will plead their cause? There was no one faithful, no, not one. Ingratitude stained them all.
16. II. Yet, let us not think severely of them and forget ourselves, for we, too, are in the same condemnation. This is our second point, WE ALSO HAVE BEEN UNGRATEFUL TO OUR LORD.
17. While I have been thinking over this subject in my own mind it has deeply affected me; but I feel quite powerless to produce it before you so that you shall be affected in the same manner, unless God the Holy Spirit shall now be pleased to melt your hearts. Remember, that to bring a charge of ingratitude against a man is a very strong thing to do. I would not like to be called untruthful, I would grievously feel it, but to be called ungrateful is equally as degrading. Can any accusation be more dishonouring? Ingratitude is a base and despicable vice; he who is guilty of it is unworthy of the name of man. A soldier who had been kindly rescued from shipwreck, and hospitably entertained, was base enough to endeavour to obtain from Philip of Macedon the house and farm of his generous host. Philip, in just anger, commanded that his forehead should be branded with the words, “The ungrateful guest.” That man must have felt like Cain when the mark of God was upon him; he must have desired to hide himself for ever from the gaze of man. Prove a man ungrateful, and you have placed him below the beasts, for even the brutes frequently exhibit the most touching gratitude to their benefactors. The old classic story of Androcles and the lion rises before us; the man healed the lion, and years after, the lion, being let loose upon him, crouched at his feet and acknowledged him as a friend. Only the most despised creatures are used as metaphors of ingratitude; for example, we speak of the donkey which drinks, and then kicks the bucket it has emptied, but we never speak like this about nobler animals. An ungrateful man is thus lower than the animals; inasmuch as he returns evil for good, he is worse than bestial, he is devilish. Ingratitude is essentially infernal. Ingratitude towards friends is vile, towards parents it is worse, towards the Saviour it is worst of all. Therefore, what I shall have to say must not be received with coolness, as though the charge were a trivial one; it is a very serious matter that we should be open to an indictment of ingratitude towards the Lord Jesus Christ. Hear, then, and sorrow as you hear, for I also mourn as I speak.
18. I lay the charge first against believers — against those of us who are Christians, and are therefore most indebted to Christ’s love and grace.
19. And we will observe at the outset that every sin of the believer has in it a measure of ingratitude; for, since our Saviour has suffered by reason of our sins, we are ungrateful when we wander into sin; since he came to destroy the works of the devil, it is ungrateful to build again what he has destroyed. Shall that very sin which was the murderer of our Beloved be harboured by us? The very thought is treason. Since these sins of mine were my best friend’s worst enemies, and more to be blamed than the Jews or the Romans, would it not be a shameless lack of love to make them my bosom companions? Our sins were the nails and our unbelief the spear; away, then, with them all! Brethren, if we do not watch most carefully against our besetting sins we shall be false to our Redeemer. If a woman saw her husband’s murderer before her, and gave her heart to him, what would we think of her? May the Lord by his grace prevent us from being equally shameless. May grace enable us to take vengeance on our sins, because they drew down vengeance on our Saviour.
20. Saints are especially ungrateful to the Lord Jesus when they allow any rival to set up his throne in their hearts. He, “the chief among ten thousand and the altogether lovely,” deserves to be admired and adored by our souls, not only beyond all others, but to the exclusion of all others. If your hearts were large enough to hold a thousand times more affection than they now contain, the Lord Jesus would deserve it all; if our hearts were as wide as heaven, yes, as vast as seven heavens in one, Jesus having bled and died for us ought to monopolise all our love. Yet we must confess that a wife, a child, a friend will steal away our hearts. Ambition for position, love of pleasure, desire to please, joy in wealth, will invade and conquer a province of our hearts. Oh, base ingratitude, which allows us to set up Dagon in the temple where the Crucified One alone should reign! (1Sa 5:2,3) Oh, wretched unfaithfulness, which pines after these fleeting things in preference to the eternal lover of souls! How common is this ingratitude! Do I address a single child of God who must also acknowledge, “I am indeed guilty?” I sorrowfully confess my own offences against the infinite love of Jesus in this respect, and will do so before God far more in detail than would be either fit or profitable here.
21. How often, too, might we be charged with ingratitude when we lose large measures of the grace which we have already received. We have power given to us at times by the Holy Spirit to rise above the dead level of man’s ordinary life, and we climb the mountain, and stand upon a higher platform altogether. There are times with us when we love the Lord with all our hearts, when our faith mounts to assurance, and all our graces are bright and strong: but we come down from that mountain almost immediately, our feet slide from the glorious elevation. It seems far easier to mount than it does to stay aloft upon the wing. The Holy Spirit admits us into particular nearness to the heavenly Father, and then we act inconsistently and lose our communion, and come to follow afar off as so many do. We have the sweet flavour of divine love in our mouths, and yet desert the banqueting table — what is this but ingratitude? Is it not a slighting of the precious gifts of Jesus’ grace? He permits us to lean our heads on his bosom, and we will not do so. He stands at our door and knocks, and we refuse to open to him. He calls us to take our fill of loves, and we turn to the poor husks of earth. Have we not grievously provoked him? Would he not long ago have divorced his unfaithful spouse, if it had not been true that he hates divorce? Strike your hearts, beloved, and confess your bad manners towards your best Beloved.
22. Could any of us plead innocence if the charge were brought in another way, namely, that we render him very little service, and give him only lukewarm love? How much have we done for Jesus after all? How much have we ever loved him? How much do we love him now? I ought to have said how little, I must correct myself. If we hear of the death of Christ upon the cross, we listen to it as coldly as though it were a thrice told tale with which we had no concern. How is this? Are our hearts like an adamant stone? A silly story of a lovesick maid will bring tears to our eyes far sooner than the tragedy of the cross. If we saw one of our fellow creatures suffer only a millionth part of what the Lord of Glory bore for us, we would be moved infinitely more than we are now when Calvary is before us. Why is this? Is this not black ingratitude? Who can extenuate such lack of tenderness? Our love for Jesus, is it love at all? When I read of some of the saints giving up all that they have, crossing the sea, penetrating into barbarous regions, bearing their lives in their hands, sacrificing comforts, and living day by day on the verge of death, amid fever and wild beasts, and all so that they might honour Christ, I am utterly ashamed. What are we, my brethren? To what shall we compare ourselves? Like a Colossus such men bestride their age, while we, base things, hide our dishonourable heads for shame at our spiritual littleness. The love of Christ for us is like that ancient furnace which was heated seven times hotter, while our love is like a solitary spark which wonders within itself that it is still alive. May the Holy Spirit change this, and give us yet to glow and burn with sacred fire like the bush in Horeb when it was aglow with deity.
23. The same humiliating reflections arise when we meditate upon the consecration, or rather non-consecration, of our substance to the Redeemer’s cause. What a small proportion do most of us give to his work, or to his poor! If you were to take the numbers of church members, and the contributions to missions, you would hardly dare to say how little per head is given. It is so trifling, that it is rather an insult to the Saviour than an offering to him. Some hearers even try to cheat the minister whom they flock to hear, and evade every claim even from the church to which they belong. For the most part, when Christians take stock of what they have, and then calculate what they have given, they have great cause for shame. If our estimate of Christ’s worth is according to our gifts to him, there are some who would not give twenty pieces of silver for him. To some these remarks are more applicable than to others; to many congregations more necessary than to you, for, thank God, there are those among you who delight to honour the Lord with their substance; but these are the last people to think that they have done enough — in fact, those who do most for Christ are the first to feel that they do far too little.
24. Furthermore, brethren, how often is ingratitude shown to our Lord Jesus by neglect of his commands. Some professors need to be driven to obedience. If you tell the man who earnestly loves Christ his duty, he is charmed to know it, and to attend to it at once; but love to Christ is so low in some professors’ hearts that you must hammer the precept into them again and again, and again, and again; and yet they will linger long before they will fulfil their Master’s will. They must be persuaded and threatened before they will yield. Fervent gratitude runs with winged feet wherever Jesus asks it to go. If we were more jealously obedient to our Lord, it would be evidence that we were more grateful to him.
25. Now, I feel, brethren, in my heart as if I would be glad to be finished preaching, for I need to get alone, and sigh and weep this sermon over by myself. I need to confess and mourn privately over my own conscious ingratitude to my ever blessed Lord, whom I love nevertheless. I do remember well the time when I imagined that if the Lord would only give me pardon through the atoning blood, nothing would be too difficult for me to attempt for his dear sake; and yet, though I have been cleansed from sins and accepted in Christ Jesus, I am too often sluggish in my Master’s errands. Well do I remember when I first began to preach his word, I thought if I might only have opportunities of pleading with men for Jesus I would pour out my very soul while I urged them to flee from the wrath to come. Alas, although I am not altogether without zeal for God, my zeal falls far short of what it should be. Gladly I would speak fire, fire which should melt your hearts, and then set them aflame with ardent love towards Jesus. I cannot reach my own ideal and I do not doubt that if I could I would be still faulty. I do not charge you, my brethren, with ingratitude without confessing and acknowledging it in myself. Come, my brethren, let us not confess with our lips only, but with inward penitential grief; let us seek godly sorrow which works practical repentance. May we, in the power of the Holy Spirit, resolve that we will love our Lord better for the future, and yield to the sweet constraints of his love.
26. Now, I have a heavy task, indeed, and that is to speak of some whose ingratitude to Christ is even greater, if greater can be, for they utterly refuse to trust him. I desire to speak with you to whom I have preached in vain these many years. The one topic of every Sunday in this place is Jesus Christ crucified. I have other things to say to you, but this is repeated over and over again; and you are told without ceasing that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners, and that “whoever believes in him shall not perish, but have everlasting life.” Notwithstanding all this, up to this moment many of you refuse to trust him, you “stumble at the word being disobedient,” and so you make the rock of salvation to be a rock of offence to you. If you deny it I will ask you, why then have you not accepted him for your Saviour? Why are you still alienated in your hearts from him? Perhaps your reply is that you do not think of these things. Is this, then, your conduct towards the dying Saviour, that you will not even think of him? Is he nothing to you? Do you despise his blood? Perhaps it is that you do not understand; then surely in your case it must be a wilful blindness of understanding, for the truth has been put before you as plainly as words could utter it, neither do I know how I could have spoken more clearly. You have rejected up to this moment the Christ who died for sinners. Do you know what you have done? I wish he would stand here upon this pulpit at this moment, so that you might see who it is whom you have despised. See him with the ruby drops still glistening upon his crown of thorns, his face bruised, his countenance lined with grief, his eyes red with tears, his shoulders furrowed with the lash, his hands and feet wounded with the nails, and his side gashed with the lance — this is the man of sorrows whom you have refused! Look now upon him whom you have pierced! Can you in his presence continue your rejection? Will you still bar your hearts against him? Will you now say to him to his face, “Son of God, bleeding for human sin, we will not trust you. Son of man, dying in the place of sinners, we will not yield to you?” Yet you have said that in his presence, which is real everywhere, though undiscerned by eye or ear. With those eyes of fire which take in from heaven everything that is done on earth, he has seen you impudently refusing to be saved by him.
27. Alas, I now have to go further. Some have not been content with rejecting the Lord, but have gone the length of opposing him, have made his gospel the theme for jest, and treated his people with indignity. It always staggers me that men should treat the meek and lowly Jesus and his gracious gospel so roughly. There is something so tender and so meek about the Saviour, that I pity from my soul the wretch who had the heart to strike him in the face, or was so base as to insult with spittle that dear and sorrowful visage. Once in the sack of a city, when the fierce soldiers had begun a general massacre, a little child was seized by a rough warrior, who was about to kill him, but restrained his hand when the little one said, piteously, “Please, sir, do not kill me, I am so little.” I think the Saviour’s meek and gentle manners might be a similar argument for restraining the hand of wrath. Who can harm the harmless Lamb of God? Persecutor, what evil has Jesus done to you? Reviler, what has he ever said to injure you? When has he given you a bad word or look? Ah, it is to his silence that you owe your life; should he accuse you, you would be undone for ever, yet he has not accused you to the Father, but has pleaded for your reprieve. Sometimes in our police courts you may have seen an inhuman husband brought before the magistrate for having maltreated the poor unhappy woman who is linked to him for life. The policeman has taken him in the very act of assaulting her; her poor sickly face bears evidence of his brutality; she can scarcely stand, for his cruelty has put her life in jeopardy. Watch her closely. The magistrate asks her to give evidence against the creature who has so cruelly injured her. She weeps and shakes her head, but does not say a word. She is asked, “Did he not mistreat you yesterday?” She waits long before she speaks, and then not a word is uttered against the husband whom she still loves, though there is nothing lovable about him. She declares that she cannot bear to appear against her husband, and she will not. What a stone must that man’s heart be if he does not love her henceforth all her days. But, see a nobler counterpart. There is the Lord whom you have injured by your harsh speeches and cruel mockeries. Do you not see his face all marred with your bruises, yet he does not accuse you to the Father but when he opens his mouth to speak for sinners, he cries, “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they do.” He must be ingratitude incarnate who can continue to use him or his cause despitefully. There is no chivalry, indeed, there is no manhood, in the heart which treats despitefully one who neither provokes nor retaliates.
28. I must add, before I close this point, that some are ungrateful to Christ, from whom, above all others, such conduct ought never to have proceeded. The text says — “He came to his own, and his own did not receive him.” In this very place the Lord Jesus has come to those who appeared to be his own. You, sir, were your mother’s own boy, and she, now in glory, was an ardent lover of the Saviour, and when Jesus came to you he might have said, “This is the son of one of my dearest friends, the son of a woman whose whole heart was mine; surely her son will love me too.” Yet you did not respond to him. Jesus has come to your house, and found there a wife who ardently loves him, and he might well have said, “Surely the husband of my handmaiden will receive his wife’s friend.” Yet, you have slammed the door upon him. Possibly, I address an unconverted person who is not only the son of a Christian father, but the child of one of God’s own ambassadors, yet he himself is an enemy to God. Surely a minister’s children should be the Lord’s, and yet ministers’ sons and daughters have been seen among reprobates. I do not know why it is, but sadly this often has been the case. Do I address one such? I pray that you may no longer be ungrateful to your father’s God.
29. Indeed, and there are some here who years ago were severely sick, and on the borders of the grave, and they said, “Please God if we ever get up again, we will seek the Lord.” You were thus in a sense, “his own” by your own voluntary vow; but you have not received him. Again today the Lord Jesus comes to you, and shows his hands and side, and asks you why it is that you break your promises to him? Why it is you do not love your mother’s Saviour? Why it is you do not care for your father’s God? What it is that has turned you against him? He has shown you many good works, and for which of these do you stone him? He is full of love, and compassion, and mercy, and power to save — for what reasons do you reject him? May the Lord grant that these appeals may have power with you, by the voice of the Holy Spirit.
30. III. I close by answering the question WHAT THEN? What comes out of all this?
31. Why, first, let us appreciate the sufferings of our Lord Jesus Christ. We must never lower our estimate of the bodily pains of Jesus; they were undoubtedly very great, but after all, his mental sufferings were far greater, and among the most acute of them must have been this, to be always treated with ingratitude by those whom he loved so well. Do I address here a tender heart which has bled from the stabs of ingratitude, a mother with an ungrateful son, a friend with a treacherous friend? You know that nothing stings more than unthankfulness, yet your Lord had to feel it day by day. He was always occupied in doing everything for men, and men on the other hand were doing everything against him. He was from day to day like Sebastian the martyr, (a) who was bound to a tree and made the target for a thousand arrows. The archers shot and severely wounded him, but his love abode in strength, and so remains to this day.
32. Next, admire the Saviour’s love. When a man is kind and loving he will continue so until he meets with base returns, and then he is very apt to become indignant and withholds his benevolence. When we try to bring men together who have fallen out with each other, where ingratitude has been its cause, we use strong arguments. We have to say to the injured person, “You have been badly used, but labour to rise superior to it all. It is true that such ingratitude does deserve to forfeit your kindness, but do more than ordinary men would do, heap coals of fire on the ungrateful head.” The Saviour knew that men would be unkind to him, he knew it all beforehand, and when men were ungrateful he did not merely hear their words, but he read their hearts, and he knew that their hearts were even more opposed to him, yet he never turned aside from his course of love, he still pressed on through reproaches and shame and derision and every form of human evil until he had finished the redemption of his people. Admire his love and let it kindle in you love in return.
33. Dear brethren, see next the mighty power of the pardoning blood of Jesus. Jesus can take away even this scarlet sin of ingratitude. Though he came to his own, and his own did not receive him, yet to as many as received him to those he gave power to become the sons of God, even to as many as believed in his name. Have you rejected Jesus for fifty years? Come to him even now, and he will blot out your sins in a moment. Have seventy years rolled over your guilty head, and have you remained deaf to all the appeals of mercy? Still come and be welcomed, come and be welcomed. The gentle Saviour has not exhausted his compassion. May his Spirit draw you now, and you shall find him as ready to receive you as he would have been fifty years ago. Admire the grace which continues to invite, and the efficacy of the blood which is still able to cleanse.
34. Another practical lesson is, let us see how we ought to forgive. If another man has injured me it is no reason why I should injure myself. Perhaps you do not see the application of that utterance. Well, here is its explanation. If I have loved a man and his only return is unkindness, shall I injure myself by stop loving him? After all, it will be a great injury to my heart to become unkind. If I have sought a man’s good and he has only returned evil to me, do not let me bring myself down to his level. Let me rather seek to rise higher; and because of his evil seek to do more good for him, then I shall be like Christ, for he did so; when our sin abounded, his grace much more abounded. In our Lord’s life sin and love contested to see which would win the day. Man sinned even more and more, and Christ loved still more and more. On the cross he loved to the death and won the battle, and today human ingratitude is beneath the feet of the conquering Saviour; love has won the day, and sin is crushed beneath its feet. Oh Christian, do battle in the same spirit, and may the Lord help you to be more than conqueror through him who loved you.
35. Dear brothers and sisters, lastly, let us judge how we ought to live in the light of this subject. If we have been ungrateful up until now, shall we be so any longer? Indeed, let us now on bended knee, with an earnest soul cry to God to inflame us with something of the fire which set the Saviour ablaze with sacred ardour for our good. Let us devote ourselves wholly to him. Let us cry, “Bind the sacrifice with cords, even with cords to the horns of the altar.” What manner of people ought we to be who owe so much to the grace of God.
36.
And, there is this mournful reflection, what will become of those who
shall die after having lived a life of constant ingratitude towards
Christ? There is a limit even to his mercy, for death shuts the
golden gate of love. Justice takes the place of mercy as soon as the
impenitent man has closed his dying eyes. An excellent writer has
well said that “Divine justice is love in flames,” and so it is. When
once love turns to jealousy, it is cruel as the grave, its coals are
of juniper that have a most vehement flame. You may despise him
whose feet were pierced, and reject the Saviour whose heart was
opened with the spear, but he will come again, I do not know when,
but his word is, “Behold, I come quickly.” Beware, I urge you, for in
that day this shall be the word, “Behold, you despisers, and wonder,
and perish.” In that pierced hand shall be a rod of iron, and he
shall break his enemies in pieces like potters’ vessels; his pierced
feet shall be sandalled with light, and out of the mouth which now
speaks promises shall come out a twoedged sword with which to strike
his adversaries. “Kiss the son lest he is angry and you perish from
the way while his wrath is kindled only a little.” He will forgive
you now, he waits to be gracious to you now. Mercy now rules the day.
But, let the sun of mercy go down, and the blackness of darkness
shall abide for ever. Oh do not provoke the Lord! May his mercy turn
your hearts by the power of his ever blessed Spirit, and to him shall
be the glory for ever and ever. Amen.
[Portion of Scripture Read Before Sermon — Ps 22]
(a) Sebastian the martyr: … having sent so many martyrs to heaven
before him, was himself impeached before the Emperor Diocletian,
who, having grievously reproached him with ingratitude, delivered
him over to certain archers of Mauritania, to be shot to death.
His body was covered with arrows, and he left for dead … See
Explorer "http://www.ewtn.com/library/MARY/SEBASTN.htm"
These sermons from Charles Spurgeon are a series that is for reference and not necessarily a position of Answers in Genesis. Spurgeon did not entirely agree with six days of creation and dives into subjects that are beyond the AiG focus (e.g., Calvinism vs. Arminianism, modes of baptism, and so on).
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