Charles Spurgeon discusses David’s looking to his God, David’s appropriating divine mercy, and David’s confidence in merciful help from God.
A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, July 12, 1874, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington. *1/30/2012
The God of my mercy shall prevent [comes before] me. [Ps 59:10]
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1. A life without trouble would be very uninteresting. Our opportunities for greatness would be few if all trials were gone. I watched a glorious sunset, marvelling at the beauty with which the evening skies were all ablaze, and adoring him who gave them their matchless colours. On the next evening I returned to the same place, hoping to be again enraptured with the gorgeous pomp of ending day, but there were no clouds, and, therefore, no glories. True, the canopy of sapphire was there, but no magnificent array of clouds to form golden masses with edges of burning crimson, or islands of loveliest hue set in a sea of emerald; there were no great conflagrations of splendour or flaming peaks of mountains of fire. The sun was as bright as before, but for lack of dark clouds on which to pour out its lustre its magnificence was unrevealed. A man who should live and die without trials would be like a setting sun without clouds; he would have little opportunity for the display of those virtues with which the grace of God had endowed him. In the case of David we have much reason for thankfulness that he did not lead a life of unbroken tranquillity. It is good for us that his was not a flowery path of continuous prosperity. Over him the waves and billows dashed very often; both within and without he was assailed daily, so that he became the epitome of all the temptations and the aspirations, the graces and the weaknesses, the joys, and the sorrows of our humanity, and hence his life became so wondrously instructive. David owed much to the Philistines, to the tracks of the wild goats, to the cave of Adullam, and to persecuting Saul; his hunted life, and a thousand trying circumstances, trained him for a grand life, and made him for us a mirror in which we see ourselves reflected in all our varying moods and passions. None of us can know what we are until we are tried, nor will the good within us increase to any degree of betterment unless it is exercised. The unused arm loses muscular force, put it to stern labour and it gathers strength; soldiers are made by war and mariners by storms; the scholar may think it is hard to be severely examined, but he becomes all the wiser by the searching test. Our trials and troubles, while they test and develop us, also by divine grace strengthen and improve us, and we always have great cause to bless God for them when grace sanctifies them to our highest good. If David had not been a man of many afflictions he would never have penned such a verse as our text, a confident utterance of unstaggering faith, full of meaning, rich with consolation, the very cream of assured hope in God.
2. There are three things in the text: the first is David’s looking to his God, for God is the theme of the verse; secondly, David’s appropriating divine mercy — “the God of my mercy”; and then, thirdly, David’s confidence in merciful help from God — “The God of my mercy will prevent me.”
3. I. First, then, let us think for awhile about David’s LOOKING TO HIS GOD. “The God of my mercy,” he says.
4. Notice that this psalm was composed by him upon the occasion of his being confined in the house of Michal, Saul’s daughter, and surrounded by his adversaries. The messengers of the bloodthirsty king watched the house all night long to kill him, and when they had not accomplished their purpose, Saul demanded that he should be brought on his bed into his presence, so that he might kill him. It was not easy for a man, when his enemies were watching the house, to escape out of their hands. David, however, does not appear to have been at all disturbed, but with perfect confidence in God he expected that a way of escape would be made for him. He could not hope that Saul would relent, nor could he expect his friends to come to the rescue, neither did he rely upon his own valour or cunning for the means of escape, but calmly prayed, “Deliver me from my enemies, oh my God; defend me from those who rise up against me.” He rested quietly, feeling sure that God had his enemies in derision, and could as readily break the line of watchers as a man can drive off a pack of prowling dogs, to whom indeed he compares his foes. Now, brethren, this looking above, this having our eye upon the Lord, is a practice which should be habitual with all believers, and needs to be learned by us all.
5.
David looked to God on this occasion because he had before this
habitually waited upon him. His faith had experienced the existence
of God, and his soul had felt the power of that truth through
experience. This is a thing unknown to the unconverted, and unfelt to
any high degree by large numbers of those who profess to know the
Lord. That there is a God is a doctrine which we all receive, but
that God really exists is not comprehended by us as it should be.
Other existences are more real to us, whereas God’s being should be
the most real of all. We look upon his existence as a mystery, a
light and airy thing, proper to be believed, but not a matter of
every day fact which can influence our lives to any great extent.
This unreal view of God arises from a secret deep seated unbelief. We
dare not say that God is a fiction, but we act as if he were so. The
faith which David had, and which I trust we have in our measure,
makes God a fact to the heart and mind, intensely and superlatively
real. An eye anointed with faith looks upon men and women as if they
were shadows, for they are soon to dissolve and cease to be; but it
views the Lord as the only real substantial existence, and all that
concerns him as only being sure and vitally important. God is unseen,
but none the less present and energetic in our lives; he is unheard
by the ear but none the less perceived by the heart; he is certainly
at work accomplishing his purposes, although our coarse and earth
bound senses cannot discern him. Faith has a far greater perceptive
power than the senses; it is “the substance of things hoped for, the
evidence of things not seen.” While carnal men say “seeing is
believing,” we assure them that to us “believing is seeing.” We turn
their saying upside down, our faith is eye and ear, and taste and
touch to us, it is so mighty in us that we not only know that there
is a God, but we regard him as the great motive force of the
universe, and daily depend upon his mighty aid. Hence it is the
Christian’s habit to fall back upon God in all times of weakness, to
cry to God in all times of danger: he does not pray because he thinks
it to be a pious though useless exercise, but because he believes it
to be an effective transaction, the potent pleading of a child with
his parent, rewarded with loving grants of blessing. The believer
does not look up to heaven because it is a natural instinct to hope
for better days, and to cheer one’s self with a pious fiction about
providence, but he looks up to heaven because God is actually there,
truly observant, tenderly sympathetic, and ready with a mighty arm to
come to the rescue of his people. So, then, because it is our custom
to wait upon the Lord, we go to him in troublesome days as a matter
of course. We do not make him an occasional resort to be used only
when we cannot help it, but we dwell in him, and morning by morning
pour out our hearts before him; and so when adversity comes, we fly
to God as naturally as the dove to its dovecote, or the coney to the
rock, or the weary child to his mother’s bosom. The nautilus, [a]
when disturbed, folds up its sails and sinks into the depths, and
even so in every hour of storm we descend into the depths of divine
love. Blessed is that man whose spirit looks to God alone at all
times. Let each one of us ask his own heart — is this my case? And if
we can answer properly, let us sing with Madame Guyon —
Ah then! to his embrace repair;
My soul, thou art no stranger there;
There love divine shall be thy guard,
And peace and safety thy reward.
6. On this special occasion David was driven more closely to his God by the particular trouble with which he was experiencing. He could look to no other helper, he was restricted to his God. Michal, Saul’s daughter, proved faithful to him, but he could not have been sure that she would dare to incur her father’s displeasure for his sake. Outside the house there might be friendly hearts, but they were far away, and the watchful servants of the tyrant blocked every avenue: but lo, there was a broad highway upwards to the throne of the Most High, and the believing prayers of David traversed the shining road and brought him assurances of deliverance. To whom could he look except to God? Every other door was closed, except that door which is opened in heaven. See, then, how the bow of trouble shot him like an arrow towards God! It is a blessed thing when the waves of affliction wash us upon the rock of confidence in God alone, when darkness below gives us an eye to the light above. The psalmist says in the verse preceding the text, “Because of his strength” — that is, the strength of the foe — “I will wait upon you, for God is my defence.” Because the enemy is too strong for me, therefore I will turn to my God, and invoke his omnipotence as my defence. Are any of you, this morning, in trouble so deep that you know you must sink in it, so far as material help is concerned? That is a glorious position to be in if your faith proves equal to the occasion, and leads you to cast yourself upon God and swim to shore. It is nothing for a man to walk down here upon the ground, but to walk aloft upon that slender thread, which the eye can scarcely see, is a feat of skill at which men gaze with admiration; and to walk on what the eye cannot see at all, or the foot feel, needs an even greater skill: such is the walk of faith. To lean upon God’s invisible arm, which the carnal mind does not know about, and accounts as little worth, is grand work. If you can walk where there is no visible pathway, you belong to the race of the immortals, a God given faith proves your lineage to be divine. Perhaps you have a task set before you which is much too heavy for you; well, brother, you have the honour of being placed where you can, to the full, display your trust in God. What you can do you must do, but what you cannot do and yet must do, you may confidently expect the Lord to enable you to perform. He will elevate your weakness into a platform for his power. To come to the end of yourself is to get to the beginning of your God. Blessed is that extremity which is God’s opportunity. Such was David’s case.
7. As soon as David had looked alone to his God his trials grew small. In his own esteem they grew to be nothing, for he says, “You, oh Lord, shall laugh at them, you shall have all the heathen in derision”; and I think something of the laughter of God penetrated David’s spirit; and in that house where he was enclosed as a prisoner he smiled in his heart at the disappointment which awaited his foes. You may look at your troubles until your spirits sink within you; you may watch the adversaries of God until your soul within you is heavy even to despair, but if you then lift up your eye to him who works all things according to the counsel of his will, across whose serene brow no cloud can ever pass, who speaks and it is done, who commands and it stands firm, who bears up the unpillared arch of heaven, and unaided wheels the ponderous orbs along their trackless courses; then difficulties vanish, impossibilities end, and perils and dangers cease to be. To get away from man and nestle beneath the wing of God is to exchange doubt for certainty, and fear for confidence. Faith laughs at what fear weeps over; it leaps over mountains at whose feet mere mortal strength lies down to die.
8. Reliance upon God, dear friends, is a virtue to which I would urge every believer; may the Holy Spirit work it in you. We have fallen upon evil times, this is the age of little men and cowards; but in what does our littleness lie? From where comes our cowardice? I believe that both are caused by our faith. If the Son of Man should come at this hour, would he find faith on the earth? If anyone could find it he could, for he is its author, and wherever there is any faith his eye quickly discerns it; but yet if he were to come would he find it? Alas! it is sadly rare. Yet, my brethren, faith is the food on which heroes feed, the air which gives breath to great souls. Believe in God and all things are possible for you. Whenever there has been a revival of faith in the saints of God, they have been potent against all adverse forces. Why, even a wrong faith is mighty when thoroughly received. Have you not been astonished to hear recently that Mohammedanism has made great headway in the world, that in India especially Mohammedan proselytes have been vastly more numerous than Christian converts? What has been the reason? Why, because you never saw or heard of a Mohammedan teacher who did not believe every word of the Koran. The teachers of the book believe in the book and believe in their prophet; hence their success, false though their faith is. On the other hand, nowadays it is easy to find a Christian teacher who believes next door to nothing of the very thing that he is set to teach, and who in his secret heart does not reverence the doctrine which he officially declares. The worm of unbelief, the cursed dryrot of infidelity and scepticism among professional teachers is eating out the heart and force of Christianity. He can never be strong for God who does not believe, indeed, and believe with all his heart, and soul, and strength, in the very marrow of his being. Christianity can never be strong until her disciples have strong convictions, until those who believe in revealed truth believe in it as assuredly as they believe in their own existence.
9. As it is on the large scale, so it is with each one of us: we can bear any burden when we believe in God; we are crushed like moths when unbelief betrays us. We can attempt any labour, and make any sacrifice when we have confidence in the Lord, but if we doubt whether we are his children, and whether his gospel is indeed the victorious gospel of the olden times, our strength evaporates, and we are like Samson when his hair was lost. We must possess strong faith in God, or we shall be unstable as water. Oh brothers and sisters, if in this church we shall have men and women who habitually live as seeing him who is invisible, relying never upon mere opinion, either their own or that of others, but ascribing to the word of God sovereign authority, and accepting it as infallibly true, knowing it to be divine; if we have among us men of principle because there are men of experience, men of forceful lives because those lives have sunk their roots into eternal verities; if we have men and women who take trials, difficulties, everything in fact, to the one and only God, and wait only upon him, we shall have heroes among us again, who will be pillars in the church which cannot be moved, bulwarks for our Israel against which the assaults of the enemy shall never avail. May God make each one of us like this! I long in my own soul to get right away from everything except the Lord, and to do his will and preach his truth as in his sight only. Policy, let it be abhorred! The pleasing of men, let it be scorned! The attempt to gratify the tendencies of the age, let it be loathed! All striving for our own personal interests, may God deliver us from it! But for the truth as it is in Jesus may we live, and if needs be die; for God’s honour may we feel that we could sacrifice everything; and in his strength may we be sure that the battle is not doubtful, but the triumph must come to God and to the right. “My soul, wait upon God.” That is our first point; oh that we had learned its lesson.
10. II. The second part of the text is to notice DAVID’S APPROPRIATION OF THE DIVINE MERCY. “The God of my mercy.” This is quite a unique expression; it occurs only in this Psalm. God is the God of mercy, and is frequently called so; he is also called “The God of all grace,” but you will find no one except David calling him “The God of my mercy.”
11. Notice that the pith of the title lies in the appropriating word “my.” Luther used to say that the very soul of divinity lay in the possessive pronouns; another divine said that all the stir there ever has been in the world has been caused by meum and tuum, mine and yours. “It is mine,” one man says; “It in mine,” cries another man, and then comes a conflict. “It is mine,” one king says; “No,” another says, “it is not yours,” and then fierce war begins. Nothing influences a man so much as what he calls his own. “The God of my mercy.” Now it is clear that David appropriated to himself a portion of divine mercy as being particularly his; and we shall never advance in the divine life unless we do the same, for the mercy which is in common to all men, of what avail is it to any man? But the mercy which any one man by faith grasps for himself, this is the mercy which will bless him and which he will prize above all things. When Gideon’s men went out to fight they did not have a whole row of pitchers between them, but every man held a pitcher in his own hand, and a trumpet too, and so the Midianites were routed. Solomon represents his armed men as each man having his sword upon his thigh, because of fear in the night; a thousand swords hung up in the armoury of David had been of little value, they only availed when each man had his own sword ready at hand. In heavenly things it is always so: we may pray in the plural, but we must believe in the singular. Notice how the Lord’s prayer runs: “Our Father who is in heaven,” but if we would repeat the apostles’ creed we must not say “we believe in God the Father,” but “I believe.” Believing must be in the first person singular; praying should have a width and compass about it to embrace all the saints, but believing must be by each one for himself — “The God of my mercy.” What do you know about this, my dear hearers? Is a portion of the divine mercy really yours, so that another cannot seize it? Is there a lot in which you must stand in the end of the days, even as by faith you stand in it now, and call it all your own? Happy David, to be able to make this appropriation! Happy Christian, if God’s grace has taught you to do the same!
12. I think he meant, too, that there was a portion of mercy which he had already received, which was, therefore, altogether his own. The “God of my mercy” — he meant the God of the mercy he had already experienced. Look at this for a minute. Well may it bring the tears into your eyes to think of it. The mercy which nursed you in your infancy, when you were dandled upon the knee of kindness; the mercy which watched over you in your youth and kept you when you were apt to stray; the mercy which restrained you from many a deadly sin; the mercy which guided you into that road where happy and holy teachings were waiting for you; the mercy which influenced you for the right; the mercy, above all, which made you decide for Christ, and cleansed you in his blood; the mercy which has followed you to this day, and still follows you. Oh, bless the Lord that it has all come from himself, and think of him as the God of your mercy. Too little do we prize our mercies until they are removed from us. I have heard of a person who at fifty years of age was murmuring that he had suffered two long years of sickness, but one reminded him that he had enjoyed forty-eight years of perfect health, in which he had never spent a single hour in bed through illness; and then he said to himself, “I will bless God, who might have given me forty-eight years of sickness and only two of health; that he has been pleased to reverse that allotment. My mercies have been very great — far larger is the number of his favours than the sum of my sufferings.” Bless, then, the Lord this moment, beloved, and take him to yourselves under that sweet name, “The God of my mercy.”
13.
And, remember, that all the mercy you have had is little compared
with the mercy you have yet to receive. There is a portion of
mercy laid up and labelled for you. As the rich father thinks, “This
I will give to my oldest son, and that to the second, and that to the
third,” and so he sets aside a portion for each of his children; so
God has mapped out and allotted for each one of us some choice and
special mercy suited for our particular case, which no one can
receive except ourselves, but which we must and shall obtain. Is not
our hymn delightfully suggestive where it sings —
And a new song is in my mouth,
To long loved music set;
Glory to thee for all the grace
I have not tasted yet.
I have a heritage of joy
That yet I must not see:
The hand that bled to make it mine,
Is keeping it for me.
Blessed be God for his reserves of mercy, for the blessing yet to be revealed, which is as sure as if we had it, kept in a better hand than ours, preserved by him who bought it until the time appointed shall arrive. “The God of my mercy,” that is, of the mercy I have had, and also of what is treasured up for me in the covenant purpose and decree, among the sure mercies of David.
14. But I think David meant much more than this, for when he said, “The God of my mercy,” he felt as if all the mercy in the heart of God belonged to him. Let me utter a great saying, worth your treasuring up — if any one saint should have all the needs of all the saints in the world put upon him, and if his necessities should be so great that nothing would supply them except all of the infinite mercy which fills the heart of God, that child of God should have all the mercy which the Lord himself can dispense. Great as your necessities may be, my dear brethren, all the mercy that is in God belongs to you, and is engaged to meet your need. Let me put it in another light; if there were no other person in the world except you, and God loved you infinitely and alone, would he not be able to do much for you if all his omnipotence was devoted to your good, and if all the thoughts of his grace centred upon you, and you were the focus of all his wise and loving purposes? “Oh, yes,” you say, “I should be favoured indeed.” You are just as favoured as that, for the multiplicity of the objects of divine love necessitates no diminution to anyone. God can love a million and love each one as intensely as if there were only one to be favoured. Our little minds are distracted with many objects. We cannot concentrate upon many, we are therefore constrained; but the full concentrated love of the eternal God is set upon each one of his dear children. God is entirely yours, and not half of God; the Saviour is yours, not a part of the Saviour; God is all, and that all belongs to you in Jesus Christ. Is there not comfort here? “The God of my mercy.”
15. One other word about it, and it is this: when God is called “the God of my mercy,” we may read it as being the guarantor of mercy to me. If we say such a person is the guardian of a child, that child is then particularly under his care. If God is the God of my mercy, then he stands in a particular relationship to my mercy, and binds himself to secure it for me. The constable of the Tower of London stands in relationship to it, and is concerned for its preservation. Now the Lord is not only the keeper and guarantor of my mercy, but the God of it, and therefore he is particularly interested in my mercy, and will see that it comes to me, and is by no means allowed to fail. He is more than its trustee, the security for it, its guarantee, its giver, its source, its security, he is the God of my mercy. What condescension this is! He is the God of heaven, Is that not his grand title? Indeed, but he is “the God of my mercy,” as surely as he is the God of heaven and earth. He is the Most High God, possessor of heaven and earth, the God of angels, and “God over all, blessed for ever.” He is all this, but he is also with equal truth “the God of my mercy.” There is a command which says, “You shall not take the name of the Lord your God in vain,” and if he would not have us take it in vain, we may rest assured he will not make it vain himself; and if he calls himself, as he does here, “the God of my mercy,” he cannot allow it to be an empty title, he will surely make it good. What is an offence in the creature will not be performed by the Creator, he will not make vain any one of those august titles which he has been pleased to take to himself. Your mercy is sure, oh Christian, for God is the God of your mercy.
16. Now I want you all to pause for a moment, and ask whether you really have appropriated by faith the mercy of God, and the God of the mercy. Why did not that unhappy artiste fly the other day? Why did he fall to the ground a mangled mass? Because his wings were not his own, or a part of himself. The smallest bat which ventures out in the evening twilight can fly, because it has its own wings, and the tiniest hummingbird which dives into a flower bell can fly, because its wings belong to it; but this man had only a borrowed contrivance, a mechanical invention, which he could not appropriate to his own being; another might use it as well as he, if indeed it could be used at all. If you wish to fly, you must have wings of your own. Many religious professors have a mechanical religion; they have the baptism of babyhood, and the priestly efficacy of sacraments — a mere flying machine! It will not serve their purpose, they must have faith and grace of their own; personal faith in a personal God. Those who have such appropriating faith shall mount up with wings as eagles, but no one else can. Wings which are not your own wings will be of no use to you, but ensure your destruction; but if you are the humblest, weakest, and most obscure of all God’s children, if you have a real faith of your own, so that you can say, “My God, my Saviour!” and can cry, “Abba, Father!” you shall mount aloft to his abode, and make your nest for ever close by the throne of love. May God grant us power to appropriate his precious things, and call him — “the God of my mercy.”
17. III. The last and practical point is, we see in the text, thirdly, David CONFIDING IN GOD. “The God of my mercy shall prevent me.”
18. Prevent is an old English word, and it has changed its original meaning, so that the uninstructed reader is apt to be misled by it. Its old meaning is to go before, and that is indeed the root meaning of the word. Here it means to anticipate, to be before, to go before as a guide to make a way easy, to be beforehand. “The God of my mercy will prevent me,” or anticipate me by his mercy. Now, it so happens that the Hebrew word may be read in all three tenses, and some have said it should be understood, “The God of my mercy has prevented me”; others “does prevent me”; and a third party, like our translators, read it, “shall prevent me.” Whichever tense you choose is true, and the whole three put together may be viewed as the full meaning of the passage.
19. “The Lord has prevented me.” Brethren, this is one of the grand doctrines of the gospel, the doctrine of eternal love, spontaneous, self-generated, having no cause but itself. God loved us before we loved him — he prevented us with love. Before his people were born God had elected and redeemed them, and prepared the gospel, by which in due time they are called. He is before us in all good things. Loving before our first parent had broken the covenant of works, the covenant of grace had been “ordered in all things and sure.” In the eternal purpose the Lamb was slain from before the foundations of the world: the provision for atonement was made before sin actually existed. Before there was any defilement, there was an arrangement for cleansing us from all iniquity; in the volume of the Book it had been written that Christ would come and do the Father’s will, by whose will we are sanctified. Sin is a thing of time, but mercy is from everlasting. Transgression is only of yesterday, but mercy was ever of old. Before you and I sought the Lord, the Lord sought us. The first thought of reconciliation was not with man, but with his God. Some theologians dream that the sinner takes the first step, but I never met a child of God who would say that he himself did so; they all, speaking from experience, declare “we loved him because he first loved us.” The grace of God is preventing grace, unsought, undesired, unmerited, preceding all good impressions and emotions, and coming to us when we are still ungodly, and dead in trespasses and in sins. Before we thirsted the living water gushed from the struck rock; before we hungered the oxen and the fatlings were killed; before we were wounded the oil and wine were ready to be poured into the gashes; our Father knew that we would have need of these things, and he prevented us with the blessings of goodness by laying them up in store for us from of old. Oh Lord, you have the first hand with your people; they seek you early, but you are up before them, you have outdistanced them in the race of affection: you are Alpha indeed!
20. The Lord has prevented us, but the meaning of the passage is that he still prevents us. Is he not daily doing so? You have many needs, but they are anticipated. Before you can feel the pinch of poverty the mercy is given. God goes before you day by day, and his paths drop fatness. You have been often fretting about what is to happen in a month’s time, when you expect to be in distress when the month has come there has been no distress because the supply has been provided. You have gone to the sepulchre, saying, “Who will roll away the stone for us?” but when you have come to the place the stone has been already removed; your troubles have been ended before they began. So, also, the Lord has prevented your sins. How often when you have sinned has the pardon for the sin, and the deliverance from its consequences, come upon you then and there, and restored you at once? while even yet more frequently the blessed God of your mercy has forestalled the temptation and prevented the sin altogether. Look at David with his heart angry, and his naked sword in his hand, attended by his furious followers. “I will go,” he says, “and kill this fellow Nabal, and not leave a man of his house alive by the morning light. How does he dare to say, ‘There are many servants who run away from their masters nowadays?’ I will let him know that if a man cannot be generous towards David he shall at least be civil, or his head shall answer for it.” David marches in hot passion, but at the moment when David puts his foot outside his tent God leads out from Nabal’s house a wise and gentle woman to be an angel of mercy towards him. Abigail meets him half way, and turns him back from his purpose by telling him that if he would restrain his wrath, in later days it would be no grief to him that he had not avenged himself. Truly, David might say “The God of my mercy has prevented me. Blessed be the Lord God of Israel, who sent you today to meet me.” Even in the common acceptance of the word “prevent” God has often so gone before us that he has prevented us from the commission of many sins, into which otherwise we would have fallen to our sorrow and harm.
21. Again, how often has he prevented our prayers? Before we have asked we have had; while we were still calling we have received. I have asked the Lord sometimes for blessings, which have been on the road while I was asking, and I did not know it, and they have come almost before the words escaped my lips. Have you not known it to be so? “Before they call I will answer, and while they are still speaking I will hear.” The desire of the righteous is frequently granted as soon as it takes shape, and before it is expressed.
22. Brethren, it will always be so. God will prevent us. A good captain, when he is marching an army through a country, takes care to make provision for every emergency. It is time for the soldiers to camp, and they need tents. Bring up the baggage wagons, here are the tents which you ask for! The men must have their rations. Here they are! Serve them out! The food needs to be cooked. See, there are the portable kitchens and the fuel! The army comes to a river by and by, how will they cross it? Why, the engineers are ready, and pontoons are very soon thrown across. It is wonderful how the well skilled commander foresees every possible emergency, and has everything ready just at the nick of time. Much more is it so with our God. If any child of God is placed in a position where a child of God never was before, he shall receive new light upon another part of God’s character, and the world and the church shall be all the wiser because of the man’s particular difficulties. “The God of my mercy shall prevent me.” March on, child of God, for God goes before you. Be assured of this, his angels fly around you, and you may hear the rustling of their wings if you only have faith enough, since the eternal God himself leads the vanguard, march where he clears the course and your path shall be one of happiness and peace.
23. The Lord will prevent us if we seek more grace and higher attainments. Let us go from strength to strength, for at each halting place our table shall be spread. Let us climb the hill, for grace sufficient for the day awaits us at each stage of progress. Let us rise into spiritual manhood, for the blessings particular to that state are waiting for us. Let us endeavour to do more for Jesus than we have ever done, let us exert greater effort, for God’s Spirit will go before us to prepare the way. There is a sound of marching in the tops of the mulberry trees at the very time when we begin to bestir ourselves. When we preach, Jesus is with us, according to his promise. If we lift our hand in holy service, an unseen hand but omnipotent is lifted at the same instant. Strike, then, feeble one, for God strikes too. Advance, for God is with you, and he will give you the victory.
24. We shall arrive at old age before long, and perhaps with old age will come decrepitude or sickness, but the God of mercy will go before us to prepare the land of Beulah, in which we shall rest until he shall call us across the stream. Concerning death, when that shall come, I know, beloved, that the Lord will prevent you, for Jesus has gone before for the very purpose of preparing a place for you. When we expect friends we open the gate, so that when they come they may know that they are welcome. Christ has opened heaven’s gate for us, and no one can shut it. He awaits the coming of his people, and when they enter heaven they shall not be unexpected guests, but each one shall find his mansion furnished and ready for him. Our forerunner is in the place where we soon shall be; we shall cause no bustle of preparation when we arrive, but we shall be welcomed home as our children are when they return to us on a set day. The God of my mercy will precede me through the trackless ether, and he will beckon me into the glory, and he will conduct me up to his throne.
25. So let us close with these three practical reflections. If he prevents us with mercy let us not hesitate to come to him. Do not loiter, oh soul, if you would have the mercy of God. Is God so quick? Will you be slow? Does he go first, and will you not follow? If any man or woman, or child in this place this morning desires salvation and eternal life, do not let him hesitate to believe in Jesus, for the God of mercy has gone before him. Come, and welcome; all things are ready, come to the gospel supper!
26. The next reflection is, is God so quick in mercy? Let us who are his people be very quick in service. Do not let us wait to have suggested to us by others what we should do. That is true love for Christ which does not need reminding, forcing, or arousing. When a man says to himself, “God has given me these unasked for mercies, what shall I render to him? I will not turn to the law and say, ‘This is what I ought to do,’ neither will I require some good and earnest brother to stir me up to an unwilling duty, but I am eager to serve God — what can I do? What will he permit me to bring?” Some saints have thought of one offering, and some of another, and the Lord has been pleased with each one. Imitate the readiness of love which shone in the woman who had only one costly possession in the world, an alabaster box of very precious ointment. No one expected or advised her to take it and pour its contents upon the head of Jesus; indeed, there were those who thought such a gift was an idle waste, but her own love constrained her to do it, and she did not consult with flesh and blood, she brought it out and broke it, and filled the house with perfume, while she poured the sacred nard upon the head of him whom she loved so well. Does no special act of consecration occur to you? Have you not some sacrifice to present? Can you not think of something which shall be a memorial of your gratitude? Say in your heart, “My God, since you do prevent me, I cannot hope to keep pace with your mercy, but at any rate I will not lag further behind you than I must. When I have done all I can for you, how little it is, but that little shall be done.” George Herbert once described the good man as resolved “to build a spittle, [b] or repair common roads,” and in his day these were acts of charity which piety delighted in; other good deeds are more fitting for these days. Houses for worship are needed in many a populous district, and orphan children need to be fed. He who can buy no sweet cane with money, can bring time and zeal and effort, and these are precious. What then, my brother, will you do?
27.
And now finally, believer, cast yourself into your Lord’s arms. Stop
fretting, worrying and doubting. If you came in here this morning
burdened, go out happy as the birds of the air. Mount like the lark
to your God, and sing as you mount. Shower down your song among the
grovelling sons of men while your eye is upon your Father’s home, and
your wings of faith bear you heavenward. May God bless you for Jesus’
sake. Amen.
[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon — Ps 62]
[See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Spirit of the Psalms — Psalm 63” 63]
[See Spurgeon_Hymnal “The Christian, Peaceful Trust — Confidence In God” 690]
[See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Spirit of the Psalms — Psalm 46” 46]
[a] Nautilus: A sea creature found in the Indian and Pacific
Oceans, having a beautiful chambered shell with nacreous septa.
OED.
[b] Spittle: A house or place for the reception of the indigent
or diseased; a charitable foundation for this purpose, esp. one
chiefly occupied by persons of a low class or afflicted with foul
diseases. OED.
Spirit of the Psalms
Psalm 63 (Song 1)
1 Early, my God, without delay,
I haste to seek thy face;
My thirsty spirit faints away
Without thy cheering grace.
2 So pilgrims on the scorching sand,
Beneath a burning sky,
Long for a cooling stream at hand,
And they must drink or die.
3 I’ve seen thy glory and thy power
Through all thy temple shine;
My God, repeat that heavenly hour,
That vision so divine.
4 Not all the blessings of a feast
Can please my soul so well,
As when thy richer grace I taste,
And in thy presence dwell.
5 Not life itself, with all her joys,
Can my best passions move;
Or raise so high my cheerful voice,
As thy forgiving love.
6 Thus, till my last expiring day,
I’ll bless my God and King;
Thus will I lift my hands to pray,
And tune my lips to sing.
Isaac Watts, 1719.
Psalm 63 (Song 2)
1 Oh God of love, my God thou art;
To thee I early cry;
Refresh with grace my thirsty heart,
For earthly springs are dry.
2 Thy power, thy glory let me see,
As seen by saints above;
‘Tis sweeter, Lord, than life to me,
To share and sing thy love.
3 I freely yield thee all my powers,
Yet ne’er my debt can pay;
The thought of thee at midnight hours
Turns darkness into day.
4 Lord, thou hast been my help, and thou
My refuge still shalt be;
I follow hard thy footsteps now; —
Oh! when thy face to see?
Henry Francis Lyte, 1834.
Psalm 63 (Song 3)
1 Oh God, thou art my God alone:
Early to thee my soul shall cry:
A pilgrim in a land unknown,
A thirsty land, whose springs are dry.
2 Oh that it were as it hath been,
When praying in the holy place,
Thy power and glory I have seen,
And mark’d the footsteps of thy grace.
3 Yet through this rough and thorny maze,
I follow hard on thee, my God:
Thy hand unseen upholds my ways;
I safely tread where thou hast trod.
4 Thee, in the watches of the night,
When I remember on my bed,
Thy presence makes the darkness light,
Thy guardian wings are round my head.
5 Better than life itself thy love,
Dearer than all beside to me;
For whom have I in heaven above,
Or what on earth compared with thee?
6 Praise with my heart, my mind, my voice,
For all thy mercy I will give;
My soul shall still in God rejoice;
My tongue shall bless thee while I live.
James Montgomery, 1822.
The Christian, Peaceful Trust
690 — Confidence In God
1 My spirit looks to God alone;
My rock and refuge is his throne;
In all my fears, in all my straits,
My soul on his salvation waits.
2 Trust him, ye saints, in all your ways,
Pour out your hearts before his face;
When helpers fail, and foes invade,
God is our all-sufficient aid.
Isaac Watts, 1719.
Spirit of the Psalms
Psalm 46 (Version 1)
1 God is the refuge of his saints,
When storms of sharp distress invade;
Ere we can offer our complaints,
Behold him present with his aid.
2 Let mountains from their seats be hurl’d
Down to the deep, and buried there;
Convulsions shake the solid world,
Our faith shall never yield to fear.
3 Loud my the troubled ocean roar,
In sacred peace our souls abide;
While every nation, every shore,
Trembles, and dreads the swelling tide.
4 There is a stream whose gentle flow
Supplies the city of our God:
Life, love, and joy, still gliding through,
And watering our divine abode.
5 That sacred stream, thine holy Word,
That all our raging fears controls:
Sweet peace thy promises afford,
And give new strength to fainting souls.
6 Sion enjoys her Monarch’s love,
Secure against a threat’ning hour;
Nor can her firm foundations move,
Built on his truth, and arm’d with power.
Isaac Watts, 1719.
Psalm 46 (Version 2.)
1 God is our refuge and our strength,
In straits a present aid:
Therefore, although the earth remove,
We will not be afraid.
2 Though hills amidst the seas be cast;
Though waters roaring make,
And troubled be; yea, though the hills
By swelling seas do shake.
3 A river is, whose streams do glad
The city of our God;
The holy place, wherein the Lord
Most high hath his abode.
4 God in the midst of her doth dwell;
Nothing shall her remove:
The lord to her an helper will,
And that right early, prove.
5 Our God, who is the lord of hosts,
Is still upon our side;
The God of Jacob, our defence
For ever will abide.
Scotch Version, 1641, a.
Psalm 46 (Version 3)
1 God is our refuge, tried and proved,
Amid a stormy world:
We will not fear though earth be moved,
And hills in ocean hurl’d.
2 The waves may roar, the mountains shake,
Our comforts shall not cease;
The Lord his saints will not forsake;
The Lord will give us peace.
3 A gentle stream of hope and love
To us shall ever flow;
It issues from his throne above,
It cheers his church below.
4 When earth and hell against us came,
He spake, and quell’d their powers;
The Lord of hosts is still the same,
The God of grace is ours.
Henry Francis Lyte, 1834.
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).
Modernized Edition of Spurgeon’s Sermons. Copyright © 2010, Larry and Marion Pierce, Winterbourne, Ontario, Canada. Used by Answers in Genesis by permission of the copyright owner. The modernized edition of the material published in these sermons may not be reproduced or distributed by any electronic means without express written permission of the copyright owner. A limited license is hereby granted for the non-commercial printing and distribution of the material in hard copy form, provided this is done without charge to the recipient and the copyright information remains intact. Any charge or cost for distribution of the material is expressly forbidden under the terms of this limited license and automatically voids such permission. You may not prepare, manufacture, copy, use, promote, distribute, or sell a derivative work of the copyrighted work without the express written permission of the copyright owner.
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