1374. The Cause And Cure Of Weariness In Sunday School Teachers

Charles Spurgeon encourages teachers “not be weary in well doing.”

A Sermon Delivered On Thursday Evening, November 8, 1877, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington *8/19/2012

At A Convention Of The Sunday School Union.

Let us not be weary in well doing: for in due season we shall reap, if we do not faint. [Ga 6:9]

1. This verse occurs in the epistle to the Galatians, which so plainly presents the grand doctrine of justification by faith, and teaches us, most plainly, that salvation is not by works, but by grace. As if to confound for ever those who say that the doctrine of free grace is impractical, the apostle, before he closes his epistle, exhorts believers to labour, and in the verse before us gives us a sentence worthy to be printed in letters of gold and hung up for ever before the eyes of all Christian workers, “Do not be weary in well doing.” It is true, my brethren, that you are not to save yourselves by well doing. Your motive is not selfish, but because you are saved already you desire to display the power of gratitude, and to prove to all the world that those who receive a free salvation are the very men who most cheerfully labour to please God and to bring glory to his name. Oh you who are debtors to infinite mercy, “Do not be weary in well doing.”

2. The apostle, at the time he wrote our text, had in his mind’s eye the well doing which by its alms does good to all men, and also that kindness which leads hearers of the gospel to share in all good things to him who teaches. Truly it is easy to be weary in these matters. Almsgiving certainly is disheartening work. One is so continually being deceived that giving to the poor becomes a weary business. Impostors abound on all sides: this city of London swarms with impostors who would deceive Solomon himself. I do not wonder that men are driven to organise their charity, which frequently means bringing it to an end. The tendency is to excuse themselves because at some time or other they have been victimized. A cruel hardness is abroad which talks philosophy, and rejects almsgiving for fear of disturbing our delightful social economy. Almsgiving, if we are to believe some men, has become a crime, and the truly good man is he who never interferes with the work of the “poor law.” [a] To these people it seems odd that our Lord should have commended anything so inconsistent with political economy as giving to the poor. According to the modern school we may expect those to be blessed who see people hungry and give them no food, thirsty and give them no drink, sick and in prison and never visit them; because hungry people should go to the parish, and thirsty people to the pump. I trust, however, that the Christian spirit which is compassionate towards the poor will never die out among us, and that, notwithstanding all the difficulties under which we may have to labour, we may not be weary in well doing, for despite all deceptions and impositions, in due season we shall reap if we do not faint.

3. I am sure I shall not be wrong in taking the text from its immediate context and applying it to the work of Sunday Schools: for, first of all, I am sure, brothers and sisters, that your work is well described in the text — it is well doing. Secondly, I am equally clear that you are liable to the evils mentioned here, which are common to all Christian service — weariness and faintness: and it is equally clear that the consolation and encouragement of the text may truthfully be enjoyed by you. “In due season we shall reap, if we do not faint.”

4. I. First, then, I know you will all agree with me that YOUR WORK IS WELL DESCRIBED IN THE TEXT.

5. It may be described in so many words as well doing. You entered into it because you felt it to be so, and you continue in it for the same reason. Another description of Christian work is implied in the promise of reaping: your work is sowing. Take the two ideas of well doing and sowing, and they will both be found to be extremely well embodied in holy labour among the young.

6. Sunday School work is well doing. How can it be otherwise, for it is an act of obedience? I trust you have entered into it because you call Jesus your Master and Lord, and you wish to fulfil the great command, “Go into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature.” You find children to be creatures, fallen creatures, but still lovable little things, fall of vigour, and life, and glee. You see them to be a component part of the human race, and you conclude at once that your Master’s command applies to them. You are not like the disciples who would keep them back, for you have learned from their mistake, and you remember the words of their Master and yours, “Permit the little children to come to me, and do not forbid them.” You know, too, that “out of the mouths of babes and sucklings he has ordained strength because of the adversary”; so that you are sure that he included the little ones in the general commission when he said, “Preach the gospel to every creature.” You are doubly sure that you are obeying his will because you have certain special precepts which relate to the little ones, such as “Feed my lambs,” and “Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he shall not depart from it.” You know that it is our duty to preserve alive a testimony in the world, and therefore you are anxious to teach the word to your children so that they may teach it to their children, so that, from generation to generation, the word of the Lord may be made known. Whether the task is pleasant or irksome to you, it is not yours to hesitate but to obey. The love which has redeemed you also constrains you. You feel the touch of the sacred hand upon your shoulder, the hand which once was pierced, and you hear your Redeemer say, “As my Father has sent me, even so I send you”; and because of that sending, you go out to the little ones in obedience to his will. He who obeys is doing well, and in this sense your service among the little ones is well doing.

7. It is well doing, again, because it brings glory to God. We must always continue to receive from God, who is the great fountain of goodness and blessing, but yet, in infinite condescension, he permits us to make him some return. As the dewdrop reflects the beam with which the great sun adorns it, so may we, in our measure, make the light of our great Father to sparkle before the eyes of men. Our lives may be as the rivers which run into the sea from where they originally came. Whenever we attempt what will clearly promote the divine glory, we are well doing. When we make known Jehovah’s grace, when we work in accordance with his purposes of love, when we proclaim the truth which honours his beloved Son; whenever, indeed, the Holy Spirit bears witness through us to the eternal verities of the gospel, there is well doing towards God. We cannot increase his intrinsic glory, but through his Spirit we can make his glory to be more widely seen: and among the choicest ways of doing this we give a high place to the teaching of children the fear of the Lord, in order that they may be a seed to serve him, and to rejoice in his salvation.

8. And who shall doubt that Sunday School work is well doing towards man? The highest form of love is to teach our fellow man the gospel of Jesus Christ. You may give bread to your friend, but when he has eaten it is gone; if you give him the bread of life it remains with him for ever. You may give him bread in plenty, but in due time he will die as his forefathers have done before him; but if you give him the bread of heaven, and he eats it, he shall live for ever. God has enabled you to hand out to him immortal food, even Jesus, who is “that bread from heaven.” What a blessing it is to a man if you are the instrument of changing his heart, and so of emancipating him from vice and making him free to be holy? To lead a soul to Christ is to lead it to heaven. It is assuredly a noble part of benevolence to deliver the gospel to the sons of men; and, if possible, this benevolence is of a still higher kind when you deliver the truth of God to children, for just as prevention is better than a cure, so it is better to prevent a life of vice than to rescue from it; and just as the earlier a soul has light the shorter is its night of darkness, so the earlier in life salvation comes to the heart the better, and greater is the benediction. To receive the dew of grace while we are still in the dew of youth is a double blessing.

9. Brethren, your work is one of well doing, of the most thorough and radical kind, for you strike at the very root of sin in the child by seeking his regeneration. You desire, by the grace of God, to win the heart for Christ at the beginning of life, and this is the best of blessings. I hope you are not among those who only hope to see your children converted when they are grown up, and feel satisfied to let them remain in their sins while they are children. I hope that you pray for the conversion of children as children, and are working towards that goal by the Spirit’s gracious aid. If you are doing so I do not know of any service more appropriate to engage the angels of heaven, if they could be permitted to undertake it. Surely, if they could teach the gospel to mankind, and had their choice of students, they might well pass those by who are already hardened in sin, and who can only give their tottering age to Christ; and gather for him the young whose day is just dawning. We may not set up one work against another, but at any rate we may consider ourselves happy if our sphere is among the young. Let us gather the rosebuds for Jesus. Let us bring to him the virgin in her earliest beauty, and the young man in his first vigour, before sin and age have quite robbed them of their charms. Let us find for him those who can give him a whole life, and honour him from dawn until their evening. Oh, it is glorious to have such work for Jesus. Go to your youthful charges, rejoicing in your work, for it is well doing.

10. It is by no means difficult to see that Sunday School work is sowing. I will not speak much upon this, for the comparison is easily understood; your Sunday Schools are the field, the gospel is the seed, and you are the sowers. Allow me only to say that yours is a work in which there are great outgoings and apparent losings: even as the sower casts his seed into the earth, buries it, and it is lost to him, so you spend your strength, your thought, your love, your talent, your time, and at first see no return. You are sacrificing your leisure, and much of the religions privileges of your fellow Christians. You are, as some say, burying yourselves in the Sunday School — surrendering ease and repose for unremunerated work. I speak after the manner of men. You engage in these self-denials because you believe that truth, like a seed, ought to be sown, and that it is your duty to sow it. It is frequently said that “truth is mighty, and will prevail”; but this must be qualified by the reflection that truth does nothing by way of conquest until it is proclaimed by earnest men. I do not doubt that there are hundreds of great truths, in the form of social reforms, now lying on the shelf, and having little or no power because they have not yet found a brave and earnest tongue to proclaim them. When the man shall come who is ordained to be their spokesman they will ring out like a clarion, and hosts will gather to their standard, but meanwhile they lie like sleeping giants whose might sleeps with them. There is power in truth, as there is life in seed, but it will be hidden until like seed, it is sown in favourable soil. It needs a sower, and feeling that truth ought to be sown you consecrate yourselves to that work.

11. You have, moreover, looked at the children, and you have felt that the soil of their minds ought to be sown. You hope to find good soil at least in some cases, and it strikes you that to delay to sow will be culpable neglect. You are sure that if you do not sow the devil will, and that weeds will spring up if wheat is not sown; and you wish, if you can, to get a head start on some at least of the devil’s servants, and drop in the seeds of divine truth before the grosser vices have come to development. You know that abundance of the seed of noxious plants lies hidden in that plot of ground by nature, as the result of the Fall, but still before they have grown into rank luxuriance you desire to choke the weeds with the rapid growth of heaven’s own grain. Your present occupation is to sow the children’s minds. You are delighted when you see the seed spring up immediately, but where it tries your patience you still sow. When I had a little garden of my own, and put in mustard and cress, I went the next morning to see if it was sprouting, and was not satisfied to wait for the due season. I turned over the ground, and I dare say I stopped the growth of the seed by my excess haste. It is quite possible for teachers to commit the same folly by an unbelieving hurry, expecting to reap tomorrow what they have sown today. Immediate fruit may come, for God works marvellously, but whether it does or not, your plain duty is to sow. You shall reap, but meanwhile you must be satisfied to go on sowing, sowing, sowing, even to the end. Reaping is your reward, but sowing is your work. Sowing, sowing, always sowing, until the hand is palsied in death, and the seed basket is carried on another arm. Well doing by sowing the seed is your work.

12. II. Now, secondly, it appears from the text that in your service YOU WILL ENCOUNTER EVILS, common to Christian workers of all descriptions: especially you will be liable to weariness and faintness.

13. Take the first word as it stands in our version; you will be tempted to grow weary. It is hard work, this teaching children. Some good souls seem born to it, do it splendidly, and enjoy it; for others it is a stern labour. Some are by constitution extremely inapt at it, but I do not think that they should excuse themselves by that fact, but should educate themselves into loving the work: many people around us are very inapt at anything which would cause them a perspiration, but we call them lazy, and goad them on. It is no new thing for men to attempt to escape the army by pretending to be in bad health, but we must have none of this cowardly malingering in Christ’s army; we must be ready for anything and everything. We must compel ourselves to duty when it goes against the grain. When it is a clear duty, obedience must master our aversion. I have no doubt whatever that teaching is, to some, very toilsome work, but then it has to be done all the same. I delight to hear you speak, dear brethren, with holy enthusiasm of the privilege of teaching children, and I fully believe in it; but I know also that it requires no small degree of self-denial on your part, self-denial for which the church does not always give you due credit. To continue from Sunday to Sunday drilling some little biblical knowledge into those noisy boys, and trying to sober down those giddy girls, is no light amusement or pretty pastime. It must be tedious, and therefore it is not difficult to become weary.

14. Teachers may all the more readily tire because the work lasts on year after year. If you are all Sunday School teachers I am very happy to perceive so many grey and bald heads among you. It looks well. I admire the veterans of your army. There ought to be an “Old Guard” as well as new regiments. Why leave this work to young beginners? Did not David say, “Come, you children, listen to me, and I will teach you the fear of the Lord,” when he was in the prime of life? Why, then, do so many cease to teach when they are best qualified to do so? Do not many aged people have a gentleness and an impressiveness which particularly qualify them to arrest the attention of the young? Since they know more by experience than most of us, should they not be all the more ready to impart instruction? It was always my delight to sit at my grandfather’s feet when he related his experience of the grace of God. When he was eighty years old or more his witness to the faithfulness of God was worth going many miles to hear. There are scores of aged men and women whose life story ought to be often told among children; with their loving ways and cheerful manners they would be an acquisition to any Sunday School for the children’s sake, while to the teachers their weight and wisdom would be an incalculable benefit. Die in harness, my brethren, if your mental and physical vigour will permit. Still, the long round of many years of labour must tend to make the worker weary; and the more so if the work is allowed to become monotonous, as in some Sunday Schools it certainly is. You go to the same dingy room and sit on the same chair before the same class of boys. It is true the boys are not the same boys, for though the proverb says “Boys will be boys,” I find that they will not be boys, but that they will be men; but still one boy is so much like another boy that the class is always the same. The lessons vary but the truth is the same, and the work of teaching is like the sowing of seed — very much the same thing over and over again. Lovers of change will hardly find in regular Sunday School work a field for their fickleness. The text says, “Do not be weary.” Come, brother, are you tired out? How long have you been teaching? A thousand years? You smile, and I smile too, and say — do not be weary with any period of service short of that. Our Lord deserves a whole eternity to be spent in his praise, and we hope to spend it like that; and, therefore, let us not be weary with the few years which constitute the ordinary life of man.

15. I find the Greek word contains the idea of being “disheartened”: “Let us not lose heart.” This is a soul-weariness against which we must resolutely fight. It comes to many good workers and shows itself in different ways. Some think the work to be less important than they did at the first; others fear that their part of it will prove an utter failure. This is heart weariness. When a Sunday School is going down, when there are not so many children as in former years, or, what is equally bad, when there are not enough teachers, the poor superintendent falls into great anxiety, and the teachers at the teachers’ meetings are not in the best of spirits. By the way, I am not sure that you teachers always edify each other at those meetings, or that you always have the Spirit of God among you. I have heard otherwise sometimes; and yet I cannot blame you, for I have heard of church meetings too which have not been “like a little heaven below,” nor would I say of them, “I have been there and still would go.” When the condition of the Sunday School is disorder and decline the best of teachers become discouraged and weary. At such times good teachers hardly know how to go to their work at all, for there is not that loving spirit in the Sunday School which renders it a happy family, neither is there that power in prayer which secures the great Father’s presence, and therefore many become distressed and tire of the service. Now comes in my text, “Do not be weary in well doing.” Pluck up courage. Do not be a coward. Hope on, hope always. Work on, even though the task becomes more and more trying to you. Do not despise your vocation, nor withdraw your hand, do not be weary in well doing.

16. Our text next speaks of our fainting. The original word has at its root the idea of being loosened. You know, there is a girding up of the loins which means work, and there is a loosening, not merely of garments, but of sinews, which means that the man will do no more. Some Sunday School teachers get, as the saying is, upon the loose. They display an utter lack of energy: they are unstrung. They do not teach their classes with all their heart, and soul, and strength, but they get through in a “slipshod” fashion, like a man trudging along with loosened sandals. They teach, but put no honest work into it: their heart is no longer bound to the altar. The Sunday School work is performed in routine fashion, and it might almost as well have been left alone. I have seen a man at work in such a sleepy style that I have been ready to cry out, “Dear me! dear me! I cannot endure to see such crawling and creeping! Stand back! Give me your tool, and let me have a crack at it”; and even so one might feel the same about certain teachers. A chapter is read, and remarks made upon it which cost neither thought nor reading; hymns sung without the slightest sign of life, and prayer offered without heart. A living Sunday School teacher standing by has been ready to weep to see how the children become indifferent because the teacher is trifling. There must be life, force, fire, heart, energy, intensity, put into your service, or it will be worthless. Dear friends, do not fall into a loose state. You shall bind your sheaves soon if you do not become loose in your own minds. You shall reap if you do not become languid and lethargic.

17. How is it that we ever fall into that state? What are the excuses that we make for ourselves when we faint? At times we are tempted to give it all up. We feel that there is no good being done, and therefore we cannot hold on any longer. What makes us talk like that? Is it not the old Adam — our carnal nature? Should we not mortify him, and say, “Now, old Adam, you want me to give up the Sunday School, and I shall refuse to do so for that very reason?” My idle flesh is saying to me, “Take things a little more leisurely. Do not take extra work upon yourself.” Ah, flesh, proud flesh, if I sow to you I shall reap corruption. What a horrible thing it is, that reaping of corruption. The very word seems to swarm with living and moving abominations; its meaning is intensely abhorrent to the pure mind. We must at once reply, “No, flesh, I cannot sow to you and reap corruption, and therefore you must be denied. I shall mortify you, and continue with my class at the Sunday School. I had thought of giving it up, but I will not indulge you so much, but by God’s grace I will persevere.”

18. Do you not think that at times our getting lax in Christian work arises from our being very low in grace? As a rule, you cannot get out of a man what is not in him. You cannot go out yourself to your class and do your work vigorously if you have lost inward vigour. You cannot minister before the Lord with the unction of the Holy One if that unction is not upon you. If you are not living near to God and in the power of God, then the power of God will not go out through you to the children of your care; so that I think we should judge, when we become discontented and downhearted, that we are spiritually out of sorts. Let us say to ourselves, “Come! my soul! What ails you? This faint heart is a sign that you are sick. Go to the great Physician, and obtain from him a tonic which shall brace you. Come, play the man. Have none of these whims! Away with your idleness! The reaping time will come, therefore thrust in the plough.”

19. Is not another reason why we become downhearted to be found in the coldness and indifference of our fellow Christians? We see others doing the Lord’s work carelessly: and when we are all on fire ourselves we find them to be cold as ice: we get among people in the church who do not seem to care whether the souls of the children are saved or not, and so we are apt to be discouraged. The idleness of others should be an argument for our being more diligent ourselves. If our Master’s work is suffering at the hands of our fellow servants, should we not try to do twice as much ourselves to make up for their deficiencies? Ought not the laggards to be warnings to us lest we also come into the same lukewarm condition? To argue that I ought to be a sluggard because others loiter is poor logic.

20. Sometimes, too — I am ashamed to mention it — I have heard of teachers becoming weary from lack of being appreciated. Their work has not been sufficiently noticed by the pastor, and praised by the superintendent, and sufficient notice has not been taken of them and their class by their fellow teachers. I will not say much about this cause of faintness, because it is so small an affair that it is quite beneath a Christian. Appreciation! Do we expect it in this world? The Jewish nation despised and rejected their King, and even if we were as holy as the Lord Jesus we might still fail to be rightly judged and properly esteemed. What does it matter? If God accepts us we need not be dismayed, though all should pass us by.

21. Perhaps, however, the work itself may suggest to us a little more excuse for being weary. It is hard work to sow on the highway, and amid the thorns — hard work to be casting good seed upon the rock year after year. Well, if I had done so for many years, and was enabled by the Holy Spirit, I would say to myself, “I shall not give up my work because I have not yet received a reward in it, for I perceive that in the Lord’s parable three sowings did not succeed, and yet the one piece of good ground paid for it all. Perhaps I have gone through my three unsuccessful sowings, and now is my time to enjoy my fourth, in which the seed will fall upon good ground.” It is a pity, dear brother, when you have had some years of rough work, to give it all up now. Why, now you are going to enjoy the sweets of your former labour. It would be a pity, my dear sister, just when you have mastered your class, and prepared the way for a blessing, for you to run away from it. There is so much less of difficulty for you to overcome by as much as you have already overcome. He who has passed so many miles of a rough voyage will not have to go over those miles again: do not let him think of going back. To go back, indeed, in this pilgrimage would be shameful: and since we have no armour for our back, it would be dangerous. Putting our hand to this plough and looking back will prove that we were unworthy of the kingdom. If there are a hundred reasons for giving up your work of faith, there are fifty thousand for going on with it. Though there are many arguments for fainting, there are far more arguments for persevering. Though we might be weary, and do sometimes feel so, let us wait upon the Lord and renew our strength, and we shall mount up with wings as eagles, forget our weariness, and be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might.

22. III. That observation brings me to the last part of my subject which is that WE HAVE ABUNDANT ENCOURAGEMENT in the prospect of reward which is afforded in the text, “In due season we shall reap, if we do not faint.”

23. The first remark, upon that promise shall be — that reaping time will come. Our chief business is to glorify God by teaching the truth whether souls are saved or not; but still I demur to the statement that we may go on preaching the gospel for years and years and even all our lifetime, and yet no result may follow. They say, “Paul may preach and Apollos may water, but God gives the increase.” I should like them to find that passage in the Bible. In my English Bible it runs like this — “I (Paul) have planted, Apollos watered; but God gave the increase.” There is not the slightest intention to teach us that when Paul planted and Apollos watered God would arbitrarily refuse the increase. All the glory is claimed for the Lord, but honest labour is not despised. I do not say that there is the same relationship between teaching the truth and conversion as there is between cause and effect, so that they are invariably connected; but I will maintain that it is the rule of the kingdom that they should be connected, through the power of the Holy Spirit. Some causes will not produce effects because certain obstacles intervene to prevent. A person may teach the gospel in a bad spirit: that must spoil it. A person may teach only part of the gospel, and he may put that the wrong way up. God may bless it somewhat, but yet the good man may greatly retard the blessing by the mistaken manner in which he delivers the truth. Take it as a rule that the truth of God prayed over, spoken in the fear of the Lord, with the Holy Spirit dwelling in the man who speaks it, will produce the effect which is natural for it. Just as the rain does not climb up to the skies, and the snowflakes never take to themselves wings to rise to heaven, so neither shall the word of God return to him void, but it shall accomplish what he pleases. We have not spent our strength in vain. Not a verse taught to a little girl, nor a text dropped into the ear of a careless boy, nor an earnest warning given to an obdurate young sinner, nor a loving farewell to one of the senior girls, shall be without some result or other for the glory of God. And, taking it all together as a mass, though this handful of seed may be eaten by the birds, and that other seed may die on the hard rock, yet, as a whole, the seed shall spring up in sufficient abundance to plentifully reward the sower and the giver of the seed. We know that our labour is not in vain in the Lord.

24. I do not come into this pulpit myself with any fear that I shall preach in vain. It does not occur to me that such a thing can happen. I thought so once, when I thought more of myself than now; but now I am assured that if I proclaim God’s message in the best way I can, and with much prayer leave it all with God, he will take care of it. I expect to see people converted; not because there is any good in them, but because the Lord works as he pleases, and will call whom he pleases, and will give to his own truth victory and honour. Go to your classes with this persuasion, “I shall not labour in vain, or spend my strength for nothing.” “According to your faith, so be it to you.” Take a little measure, and you shall have it filled with the manna of success, but take a great omer, and in its fulness you shall have abundance. Believe in the power of the truth you preach. Believe in the power of Christ about whom you speak. Believe in the omnipotence of the Holy Spirit, whose help you have invoked in earnest prayer. Go to your sowing, and count upon reaping.

25. I want to call your particular attention to a word in the text which is very full of encouragement. “Let us not be weary, for we shall reap.” We shall reap. Dear brothers and sisters, we shall reap. It is not, “We shall do the work, and our successors shall reap after we are gone.” We ought to be very pleased even with that, and no doubt such is often the case. But we shall reap too. Yes, I shall have my sheaves, and you will have yours. The plot which I have toiled and wept over shall yield me my sheaves of harvest, and I shall personally gather them. I shall reap. “I never thought much of myself as a teacher,” one says, “I always fear that I am barely competent, and I notice that the superintendent has only entrusted me with the little children; but I am so glad to hear that I shall reap. I shall reap. I shall have a dear little one, saved in the Lord, to be my portion.” I urge you, dear friends, if you have never reaped yet, begin to hope. You teachers who are always punctual, I mean: of course, if you do not come in time, you do not care whether you reap or not; but I speak to punctual teachers, I speak also to earnest teachers — for if you are not earnest you will never reap: you punctual, earnest, prayerful teachers shall reap. Some teachers do not go in for reaping, and they will not enjoy it. But I am speaking now to real, hard working, earnest Sunday School teachers who give their hearts to it, and yet have seen no results. According to the text, you shall reap. Come, my persevering comrades, let us not be discouraged: “In due season we shall reap,” even we. You shall have your share with others. Though you feel as though you must give it up, you shall yet reap. After sowing all this while, do not cease from labour when reaping time is so near. If I were a farmer, if I gave up my farm, it should be before I sowed my wheat, but if I had done all the ploughing and the sowing, I should not say to my landlord, “There are six weeks and then comes harvest, and I desire to let another tenant come in.” No, no. I should want to stay and see the harvest gathered and the wheat taken to market. I should want to have my reward. So, dear brothers, wait for your reward, especially you who have been discouraged, — “In due time we shall reap, if we do not faint.” We who have thought least of our service, and perhaps have exercised least faith, and endured most searchings of heart and most groaning and crying before the Lord, we also “in due season shall reap, if we do not faint.”

26. This harvest will come “in due season.” There is even among men a due season for a reward. They say, “He is a bad paymaster who pays beforehand.” So he is. You must always keep a little in hand for Saturday night, or you may miss your man before the week is ended. Sometimes our Lord keeps back his people’s reward so that they may have something cheerful to look forward to, something also to try their mettle, and to bring out all their powers. I like to see a brave man driven into a corner, baffled and defeated, and yet resolved to overcome: then his true heroism comes out. Hear him say, “I have been working that Ragged School [b] for months, but I make no impression upon the young roughs. There is a disturbance and disorder almost every night. I do not know what to do, I am at my wit’s end; but there is one thing I know — if it is to be done it shall be done. In the name of God I will continue at work until a change is accomplished.” There you see the man strengthened by the Holy Spirit to labour. That is the man who will find out how to tame the street urchins. He is the man who will draw teachers around him, and build up a noble Sunday School. Our true manhood often lies deep, and needs to be pursued into its den and stirred into action. When once it is thoroughly aroused it is grand to see it leap out in passionate earnestness to achieve its purpose. I love to hear a man say, “This is impossible for men, but God will enable me.” This is the triumph of faith, and blessed is he who believes, for the due season of reaping is near for him.

27. The due season often occurs when you yourself are in a right state; when your faith has been tried, when your resolve has become fixed, when you are down on your face before God in prayer, when you are emptied out and have no strength of your own, when you go to God and cry to him alone for help, then your due season will come. The due season for harvest is not the day after the sowing of the seed, but we must wait for a while and not be weary. The harvest will come as the Lord appoints. Just as all fruits are the sweeter for being in season, so is the reward of Christian service when it comes in God’s time.

28. Now, lastly, when this reward comes, it will abundantly repay us.

29. What is the reward of Sunday School teachers? Taking you, beloved brethren, on a broad scale, I would say that your reward lies chiefly in seeing the conversion of your children. There are a great many very excellent manuals upon the management of Sunday Schools, and I hope you will read them all, and dwell with special attention upon the prize essays; until your Sunday School is order itself. Still I have heard of beautifully managed Sunday Schools from which there are very few conversions. Order may be heaven’s first law, but it is not heaven’s first object. Order is very desirable in a garden, but fruit is the main purpose. I know a Sunday School which is generally in a muddle, but yet children are saved in it continually. I wish it were more orderly, but yet I do not fret much about it as long as the grand result is gained. You may form so many rules and orders that you may rule your hearts out of your work: be careful that do not fall into that error. Your great business is to have those children saved — systematically if you can, but saved anyway. You must have those children convicted of sin by the Holy Spirit and led to Christ. You must not be satisfied to trim off your Sunday School in the neatest style, unless there is real fruit for the Lord. And what shall I say? What reward can equal the conversion of these young immortals? Is it not the highest felicity that we can enjoy on earth, next to communion with our Lord, to see these little ones saved?

30. Taking the Sunday School, however, on a broad scale, I think your reward partly lies in raising up a generation of worship-loving people. We cannot get at the great masses of London, do what we may. We shall open this house next Sunday night to all comers, but who will come? The great majority of them will be people who have always gone to the house of prayer, but only a few of the outsiders will enter. Go into what evangelistic assembly you may, you will soon detect from the manner of the singing that the majority of the people have been accustomed to sacred song. We do not know how to get at the great tens of thousands; but you do. You reach them while they are little, and you send them home to sing their hymns to their fathers, who will not come and sing them here. They go and tell their mothers all about Jesus, so that the children of London are the missionaries of our city. They are Christ’s heralds to the families where ministers would be totally shut out. You are training them up, and if you do this work well (and I charge you to look well to the connecting link between your senior classes and the church), if you do this work well, we shall require more places of worship, and more earnest ministers, for the people of London will be attracted to the house of prayer. When that day arrives there will be a grand time for the preachers of the word. In some villages of England, and especially in Scotland, you will scarcely find a single person absent when the house of God is open! They all go to the kirk, [church] or to the meeting-house. Alas, it is not so in London. We have hundreds of thousands who forget the Sabbath. We have, I fear, more than a million of our fellow citizens who go so seldom to a place of worship that they may be said to be habitually absent. It will be a grand thing if you can change all this, and give us church-going millions.

31. And then, I believe, brothers and sisters, that to you there will be another reward, namely, that of saturating the whole population with religious truth. All children are now to be taught to read. Shall they read in order to grow up highwaymen and thieves, or shall they read in order to become servants of the living God? Very much of that must depend upon you. You will, in due subordination to all other objects, take care to introduce your children to interesting but sound literature. Your boys must read, and if you are the teacher of a boy who reads “Jack Sheppard” [c] you will be sadly to blame if he continues to delight in such an abomination. I trust that your leaven will leaven the whole lump of our country; that you will be the means of improving the moral tone of society, and as generation follows generation I trust we shall see a nation bright with religious knowledge, devout with religious thought, and in all things exalted by justice and truth. What an army you are here tonight! May your Captain come into the midst of you, and, as he reviews you, may he cast a look of love into the heart of every one of you, and cheer you and send you away invigorated.

32. I am delighted to have had the opportunity of speaking this word to you, feeble though it is, for God may make it powerful by his Spirit. Go, beloved, and train these children well. You have undertaken the work, be faithful in the discharge of it. It is worth doing well, for so much depends upon it. If you do it badly, the results will accuse you throughout eternity. Go, and teach with all your heart, and soul, and might. Do not be weary. Do not be slack. Your reaping time is coming. The next generation will even more than the present show what you have been doing, and the next, and the next will each more fully declare it, until this blessed island, first gem of the sea, shall shine as a very Koh-i-noor [d] in the diadem of Christ.

[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon — Mt 13:1-23]
[See Spurgeon_Hymnal “The Christian, Courage and Confidence — God Is All Sufficient” 676]
[See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Spirit of the Psalms — Psalm 126” 126]
[See Spurgeon_Hymnal “The Christian, Courage and Confidence — Stand Up For Jesus” 674]


[a] Poor Law: The law, or system of laws, relating to the support of paupers at the public expense. OED.
[b] Ragged School: A free school for children of the poorest class. OED.
[c] Jack Sheppard: (March 4, 1702-November 16, 1724) was a notorious English robber, burglar and thief of early eighteenth-century London. Born into a poor family, he was apprenticed as a carpenter but took to theft and burglary in 1723, with little more than a year of his training to complete. He was arrested and imprisoned five times in 1724 but escaped four times, making him a notorious public figure, and wildly popular with the poorer classes. Ultimately, he was caught, convicted, and hanged at Tyburn, ending his brief criminal career after less than two years. See Explorer "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Sheppard"
[d] Koh-i-noor: An Indian diamond, famous for its size and history, which became one of the British Crown jewels on the annexation of the Punjaub in 1849. OED.

The Christian, Courage and Confidence
676 — God Is All Sufficient
1 Awake our souls, away our fears,
   Let every trembling thought begone
   Awake, and run the heavenly race,
   And put a cheerful courage on.
2 True, ‘tis a strait and thorny road,
   And mortal spirits tire and faint;
   But they forget the mighty God
   That feeds the strength of every saint.
3 Thee, mighty God, whose matchless power
   Is ever new and ever young,
   And firm endures, while endless years
   Their everlasting circles run.
4 From thee, the overflowing spring,
   Our souls shall drink a fresh supply,
   While such as trust their native strength,
   Shall melt away, and droop, and die.
5 Swift as an eagle cuts the air,
   We’ll mount aloft to thine abode;
   On wings of love our souls shall fly,
   Nor tire amidst the heavenly road.
                           Isaac Watts, 1709.


Spirit of the Psalms
Psalm 126
1 When God reveal’d his gracious name
   And changed my mournful state,
   My rapture seem’d a pleasing dream,
   The grace appear’d so great.
2 The world beheld the glorious change,
   And did thy hand confess:
   My tongue broke out in unknown strains,
   And sung surprising grace.
3 “Great is the work,” my neighbours cried,
   And own’d the power divine;
   “Great is the work,” my heart replied,
   “And be the glory thine.”
4 The Lord can clear the darkest skies,
   Can give us day for night;
   Make drops of sacred sorrow rise
   To rivers of delight.
5 Let them that sow in sadness wait
   Till the fair harvest come;
   They shall confess their sheaves are great,
   And shout the blessings home.
6 Though seed lie buried long in dust,
   It shan’t deceive their hope:
   The precious grain can ne’er be lost,
   For grace insures the crop.
                           Isaac Watts, 1719.


The Christian, Courage and Confidence
674 — Stand Up For Jesus <7.6.>
1 Stand up! Stand up for Jesus!
      Ye soldiers of the cross!
   Lift high his royal banner;
      It must not suffer loss:
   From victory unto victory
      His army shall he lead,
   Till every foe is vanquish’d,
      And Christ is Lord indeed.
2 Stand up! Stand up for Jesus!
      The trumpet call obey;
   Forth to the mighty conflict,
      In this his glorious day;
   Ye that are men, now serve him,
      Against unnumber’d foes;
   Your courage rise with danger,
      And strength to strength oppose.
3 Stand up! Stand up for Jesus!
      Stand in his strength alone:
   The arm of flesh will fail you;
      Ye dare not trust your own:
   Put on the gospel armour,
      And watching unto prayer,
   Where duty calls, or danger,
      Be never wanting there.
4 Stand up! Stand up for Jesus!
      The strife will not be long;
   This day the noise of battle,
      The next the victor’s song.
   To him that overcometh
      A crown of life shall be;
   He with the King of Glory
      Shall reign eternally.
                        George Duffield, 1858.

Spurgeon Sermons

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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