No. 1711-29:157. A Sermon Delivered On Lord’s Day Morning, March 18, 1883, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.
I write to you, little children, because your sins are forgiven you for his name’s sake. {1Jo 2:12}
I have written to you, little children, because you know the
Father. {ERV 1Jo 2:13}
For other sermons on this text:
{See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 1711, “Sermon to the Lord’s Little Children, A” 1712}
{See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 1715, “Description of Young Men in Christ, A” 1716}
{See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 1751, “Fathers in Christ” 1752}
Exposition on 1Jo 2:1-3:2 {See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 3004, “Christian’s Manifestation, The” 3005 @@ "Exposition"}
Exposition on 1Jo 2 {See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 2943, “Restraining Prayer” 2944 @@ "Exposition"}
Exposition on 1Jo 2 {See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 3266, “Priesthood of Believers, The” 3268 @@ "Exposition"}
1. Probably you ask, “Why does John say first, ‘I write,’ and then, ‘I have written’?” There is a beautiful touch of nature in this speedy change of tense. John was an extremely old man, and therefore while he says, “I write,” he adds, “I have written,” as if he felt that it might he the last time that he should take his pen in hand. Very soon with him the present tense would change into the past, and he indicates the fact by changing his mode of speech. Perhaps he even felt that possibly before the letter reached the brethren to whom he addressed it he would be no more among the sons of men. Therefore he says, “I write,” indicating that while he was still with them, with warm and loving heart he solemnly exhorted them; and then he adds, “I have written,” as if he had recorded his dying testimony, and left it as his last legacy of love. To us, today, John’s words run altogether in the past tense, — “I have written”; but we need not therefore forget that they were the well-considered words of a venerated father in Christ, and that he wrote them as one so near to his departure that he regarded himself as already on the move, and therefore scarcely knew which tense to use. Ah, my brethren, how soon our “I speak” will change into “I have spoken”: let this invest every word with solemnity.
2. Remember also what order of man John was, — that disciple whom Jesus loved, whose head had leaned on Jesus’ bosom, whose eyes had seen the King in his beauty, and whose strengthened gaze had looked within the gates of pearl. This is he who at one time saw the pierced heart of the Well-Beloved pouring out blood and water; and at another beheld the Lion of the tribe of Judah prevail to take the book and release its seven seals. It is the apostle of love who says to us, “I write to you,” “I have written to you.” Let us carefully notice what the Spirit says to us by his servant John.
3. Observe that our text is addressed to the “little children.” It is thought by many wise interpreters that under this term John includes the whole church of God, and that afterwards he divides that church into two companies — the fathers and the young men: those who under one aspect are all “little children,” are under another regarded as young men or fathers. There is very much to support this view in several instances in this epistle John is evidently addressing all the saints when he speaks of them as “my little children,” as, for example, in the eighteenth verse of the third chapter, and also in the closing verse, “Little children, keep yourselves from idols.” Surely, all the saints are included in these exhortations. There is a sense in which every Christian is still a little child, a sense in which he ought to be so, — always dependent on the great Father, always ready to receive the word of the Father without questioning, always teachable, always restful in the Father’s care, and full of love for him who is his all in all. Of necessity we must always be children before God; for our finite capacity is so limited that we are mere babes in knowledge in the presence of Infinite wisdom, and as very sucklings in understanding when contrasted with the great Father of spirits. We know enough to make us know that we know very little. The most advanced intellects in the church are only as infants compared with the Ancient of Days. We are of yesterday, and know nothing: with all our experience, with all our study, with all our meditation, with all our illumination, we remain “little children” when measured by the boundless knowledge of the Lord. Indeed, I mean the fathers, the men who bring sinners to Jesus, the men who teach others, and are themselves taught by God, even each one of these must cry out with Jeremiah, “Ah, Lord God! behold, I cannot speak: for I am a child.” I mean the young men who have overcome the wicked one, whose holy valour sets them in the forefront of the battle, where they turn to flight the armies of the aliens. “They are strong,” says John; and yet, in the presence of the mighty God of Jacob, what are our champions and our valiant men? Are they not still only as “little children?” It may do us all good to join the nursery class this morning, or, at least, to sit with the boys in the school of grace. Even those who have made the greatest advances in divine grace may do well to “become as little children,” so that they may still more fully enter into the kingdom of heaven, and have closer fellowship with “the holy child Jesus.” It may even be an advance for some who have grown self-willed as they have advanced in knowledge if they will say with David, “Surely I have behaved and quieted myself, as a child who is weaned from his mother my soul is even as a weaned child.” Happy childhood! when it means entire submission to the Father, and sweet delight in his will.
4. Still, I am inclined to think that in this case John really does divide the entire church into three classes — the babes in grace, or the children, or as one of the words might properly be translated, the boys — those who have not long been born into the family: these are an interesting company. Then follow the young men: these are the second class, and they are a valued body of Christians, in the fulness of their vigour; strong in faith, giving glory to God; mighty in prayer; vehement in action, bold in testimony. May the Lord muster among our hosts a grand array of these vigorous heroes who shall earnestly contend for the faith once delivered to the saints. The fighting power of the church militant must come out of them: these are those who turn the battle to the gate. Blessed is the man who has his quiver full of them. Then there is the third class; the fathers, the mature, the experienced: these do not quite so much delight in war as the young men do, but at home they diligently care for the household of faith, watching over the feeble, strengthening and comforting them: these are able by their experience to answer critics, to edify the untaught, and to guide the ignorant. Their knowledge is deep, and they are therefore, able to become teachers of others; they are men of spiritual force, and have come to the full stature of men in Christ Jesus, therefore they are the solid strength of the church. If the young men are the church’s arm, these are the church’s backbone. We need to have many such, though alas, it is to be feared that our churches are much like the apostolic ones, of which Paul said, “You do not have many fathers.”
5. This morning I am going to say nothing at all to the young men, nor to the fathers, except so far as they are willing to include themselves under the term of “little children”; and, as we have already said, there is just reason why they should do so. Little children, it is to you I speak today: I mean you who have newly been converted, whose first cries of repentance are still in our ears. You, I mean, whose grace is feeble; who are new to everything in the house of God, and as yet need to be fed with the milk of simple elementary truth: you are the little children, dear to the whole family. You, I mean, who are only little in Israel as yet — little in knowledge, little in faith, little in strength, little in service, little in patience; you cannot as yet keep the watch of the house of the Lord, for you yourselves need to be watched over; you tremble when you try to stand, and your unaccustomed feet can scarcely bear you along the road without a helping hand; you are very apt to tumble down, and probably will do so many times before you learn to walk with the fathers, or run with the young men. You little children may by some be thought to be a burden, but the wise among us consider you a blessing: the more of you the merrier in the church of God, for you are the blessed of the Lord, and we are glad to hear your youthful voices in the streets of the New Jerusalem. To you I shall speak this morning, as the Holy Spirit shall enable me. I would say these things to you: First, observe your privilege — “I write to you, little children, because your sins are forgiven you.” Then, notice your knowledge — “I have written to you, little children, because you know, or have known, the Father.” And thirdly, consider the precepts addressed to you. When we get to that point I shall ask you to refer to your Bibles so that we may run through this entire epistle and see what John has to say to little children. May we receive the word with meekness, so that we may grow by it.
6. I. First, I want the babes in grace, the weak in faith, the lambs of the flock, to notice THEIR PRIVILEGE. “I write to you, little children, because your sins are forgiven you for his name’s sake.”
7. This is a privilege extremely desired by the little children. They have only recently felt the burden of guilt; they still smart under the lashes of conscience; the Spirit of God has only recently convinced them of sin, of righteousness, and of judgment; and, therefore, above everything, their prayer is, “Father, forgive me.” To them the remission of sins stands out as the first and most desirable of all blessings; and truly they are right in their estimate; for what possession is there which can be called a blessing at all until sin is forgiven? It does not matter how healthy a man may be; if his conscience is worried with his sin his innermost heart is sick. It is little comfort to him to have all the comforts of this life if his heart feels the gnawings of the undying worm of conscious guilt. “God be merciful to me a sinner,” comes often from his heart as he beats upon it in the deep humiliation of his soul; for there can be no joy and rest for him until he hears the word, “The Lord has put away your sin; you shall not die.” To the newly saved it is a joy worth worlds to have their sins forgiven; it is a bliss akin to the heaven of angels; and this joy belongs to all the saints by right, yes, even to the little children in the family of God. You were only born again last Sunday, but your sins are forgiven you. Perhaps it is only this morning that you have sought your Saviour’s face and have come to believe in him, but your sins are forgiven you. This assurance is as sweet to you as a seraph’s song. I could not have told you a better piece of news. The pardon of sin is like the pearl of great price to you in your present stage of spiritual life; you would have sold all that you had in order to procure it; and now that you have it, your heart is aglow with gratitude. The wound in your conscience, so recently raw and bleeding, makes you set so high a price on the healing balm of free and full forgiveness. Far be it from me to squelch your holy joy, and yet the Lord will show you greater things than these.
8.
At your stage of experience pardon is the most prominent blessing
of the covenant. A newly-converted man does not know much about
sanctification or union to Christ; perhaps he does not know much
about election, calling, or sealing; but the principal point he
dwells upon is pardon. It is written in the Creed, — “I believe in the
forgiveness of sins”; and the man who has recently found peace with
God by Jesus Christ repeats that article of the Creed with solemn
emphasis. “I believe in the forgiveness of sins,” he says; for he has
just experienced it; and to him it is a blessing so great that like
the moon amid the stars it shines as a queen among the blessings of
grace. Pardon for sin seems to the “little children” to encompass the
whole work of Jesus, and the whole work of the Holy Spirit too: vast
favours lie beyond; but to him who has just crossed the Jordan this
one valley of Eshcol fills all the range of vision, and the soul
hardly dreams of any further blessings. The recently pardoned does
not yet see the innumerable other blessings which come in the train
of forgiveness; he is for the present absorbed in the hearing of that
one sentence, “Go in peace; your sins which are many are all forgiven
you.” Well, beloved child, many more blessings await you; pardon is
only an entrance blessing, a welcome at the door-step: there are
rarer joys within the house. You have become an heir to a boundless
inheritance: all things are yours; heaven, and Christ, and God are
yours; yet I do not marvel that at present all your heart is taken up
with a sense of pardoned sin. I will not disturb you, but I will
rejoice with you. I will even sit down and sing with you: let this be
our hymn: —
Now, oh joy! my sins are pardon’d,
Now I can, and do believe;
All I have, and am, and shall be,
To my precious Lord I give.
Even the full-grown child of God highly values this blessing so dear to little children, and although he has received many other mercies besides, yet still it is a chief part of his joy that he has been cleansed from sin and clothed with righteousness. Indeed, and our older brothers, who are now in the King’s country, this is a chief point even with them, that they have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb; therefore they are before the throne of God, and serve him day and night in his temple. Yes, dear little children, you have obtained a most precious favour in which you do well to rejoice; “your sins are forgiven you for his name’s sake.”
9. Here let me observe that the forgiveness of sins is assuredly the possession of the new beginner in the divine life. He is as certainly forgiven as he ever shall be. The forgiveness of sins is not a matter of degrees or of growth. It is done in an instant, and done for ever, never to be reversed. The child of God who was born only yesterday is not as completely sanctified as he will be; he is not as completely instructed as he will be; he is not as completely conformed to the image of Christ as he will be; but he is as completely pardoned as the mature saint. He who just now passed the gate of pearl, — did you not hear the shout as he entered, like a shock of grain fully ripe that comes in his season? — he, I say, was not more truly pardoned than you who only an hour ago believed in Christ to the salvation of your soul. The dying thief had not found mercy for many minutes, and yet the Lord Jesus said to him, “Today you shall be with me in paradise”: it is plain, therefore, that he had been perfectly cleansed in a moment. To wash in the fountain filled with blood is not a business of weeks and mouths and years, nor is it to be repeated many times and often; but he who is washed is then and there made whiter than snow, and there is henceforth no defilement upon him. “There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus.” “I write to you, little children, because your sins are forgiven you”: they are all gone: grace has most effectively removed them from you as far as the east is from the west. The Egyptians at the Red Sea were not destroyed little by little; they were not swallowed up in the flood a regiment at a time; the eager depths which had by miracle been divided for a time leaped together, and Pharaoh and his hosts, all of them, were covered, to be seen no more for ever. Sing to the Lord, for he has triumphed gloriously. “The depths have covered them; there is not one of them left.” The Israelites had only barely set their foot upon the other side of the Red Sea, and yet all their enemies were as completely drowned as when the people entered into the Promised Land: it is even so with you who have believed in Christ only recently, your sins are cast into the depths of the sea. Your iniquities are subdued by the Lord Jesus, who has come to save his people from their sins. Therefore, little children, praise your God, and sing to his name with all your might, — “Who forgives all our iniquities; who heals all our diseases.”
10. Notice, also, that your sins are forgiven you on the same terms as those of the Apostle, and the greatest of the saints: “Your sins are forgiven you for his name’s sake”; that is, for the sake of Jesus, for the sake of his glorious person, for the sake of his honourable offices, for the sake of his bloodshedding and atoning death, for the sake of his glorious resurrection, for the sake of his perpetual intercession before the throne of God. Your sins are not forgiven you because of anything you are or hope to be, nor because of anything that you have done or have suffered; you are forgiven for Christ’s name’s sake, and all the saints of God can say the same. This is a sure ground of hope. There is no quicksand, but a solid rock is under our feet. Had the pardon been granted for our own work’s sake, it might have been reversed upon our disobedience; but since sin is pardoned for Christ’s sake, the pardon is irreversible, since there is no change in Christ. Is this not a dainty sweet for the little children? How gladly do I come and sit at the children’s table when I see such food placed on it.
11. Now notice that this is the reason why John wrote to you, little children. People do not generally write letters to little children; but John does, because of these special little ones it can be said, their sins are forgiven them. The moment, then, that a man has his sins forgiven, he is old enough to begin to understand what is written, and he should become a Bible reader and a Bible searcher: the moment that his sins are forgiven him for Christ’s name’s sake, he becomes capable of exhortation, and it is his business to attend to what is written to him. If pardoned as criminals we are enlisted as workers. Why, I think if my sins have been forgiven me, my heaven-born instincts make me ask, “Lord, what will you have me to do? Have you done so much for me? Then set me about doing something for yourself. Give me as a privilege the opportunity of serving you.” Therefore, John, knowing that the little children would be eager to obey, has written to them in this epistle certain commands, of which I will speak to you further on. Only, little children, be on the alert to begin at once your work of faith and labour of love.
12. II. Secondly, I have to speak of THE KNOWLEDGE of these little children. “I have written to you, little children, because you have known, or know, the Father.”
13. The tiniest babe in the family of God knows the Father. For, first, as we have seen, his sins are forgiven him. By whom is that pardon given? Why, by the Father; and, therefore, he who has had his sins forgiven him necessarily knows the Father. When the poor prodigal felt the kisses of his father’s love, and saw the best robe adorning his person, then he knew the Father. All the philosophers in the world do not know so much of the Father God as a forgiven sinner knows. I go a little further: if there are any who have never fallen into sin, but are like the ninety and nine just people who need no repentance, or like the elder brother who had never at any time transgressed his father’s commandment, I say that these do not know and cannot know the Father as the forgiven child does; for the Father’s heart comes out most fully and expressly when he says, “Bring out the best robe, and put it on him; and put a ring on his hand, and shoes on his feet. For my son was dead, and is alive again; he was lost and is found.” Then, as he looks up through his tears and sees the ineffable smile of the Father’s affection, the forgiven child knows the Father. The very least child of grace, having received the forgiveness of sin, knows the Father in this most important sense.
14. Moreover, this is a piece of knowledge, dear friends, which the child of God obtains very early in his spiritual life; for, whatever a child does not know, he knows his father. Think of your dear little one at home: he cannot as yet read a letter in the book; he knows nothing of the things which his older brother studies; but he knows his father. He may not know very much about his father; he could not certainly speak to others about his father’s business or his father’s wealth, but yet he knows him. The child cannot help his father, or understand what his father does; but he knows his father, and would choose him out from among a thousand. See how his eyes twinkle now that father has come home: see him stretch out his little hands: see how eager he is to get into these dear arms! He knows his father, and never forgets that knowledge. Dear child of God, this is a piece of knowledge which you also have; and in this you will yield to none of all the sacred family. Benjamin knows his father with an absolute certainty: he is as sure of it as Reuben the first-born. We go to school and college, but long before that we know our father: the fear is lest we overlay that precious knowledge with something not worth half as much. Little children, you know God now in your spiritual childhood. You could not preach about him; you could not write a treatise upon his attributes; you could not describe his mighty acts; but you know him with the instinct of a child; and in you is the promise fulfilled, “Israel shall cry to me, ‘My God, we know you.’ ”
15. Little children, the result of your knowing God as your Father is that when he is away from you, you are in the habit of crying after him. If you cannot feel your Father’s love shed abroad in your heart by the Holy Spirit you are miserable, and you hurry to your closet and begin to pray, “Come to me, my Father; reveal yourself to me, for I cannot live without you.” On the other hand, when you do get to your Father you show that you love him by the perfect restfulness of your spirit. In God you are at home. Once get into your Father’s arms, you feel quite safe, quite peaceful, quite happy. The presence of God is the paradise of the believer. God is the ultimatum of our desires: we speak of him as “our very great joy.” If in my Father’s love I share a filial part, I ask no more than to know and enjoy it. We say, “Our Father who is in heaven”; we might as truly say, “Our Father, you are our heaven.” Hence we seek after him. “Oh God, you are my God; I will seek you early.” Here, then, we have a sign that we know the Father, when we weep because he is absent, or rejoice because he is present.
16. We know the Father, brothers, even we who are only little in Israel, for we love him. Do you not feel that you love God this morning? You might not dare to say so in public, and yet you would die for him. Sooner than renounce your God would you not give up all that you possess? It may be you will never be tried as the martyrs have been; but if you were, can you suppose it to be possible that you could part with your God? No, your innermost heart loves him; you know it does; and loving him, you are united to him by bonds which cannot be severed. Moreover, we know the Father, for we trust him. Is it not written, “Those who know your name will put their trust in you?” Can you not trust God with everything? A child has no cares: his father cares for him. A child knows no anxiety: his father bears all the anxiety on his behalf. Is it not so with you? Though you are babes in grace, do you not trust? — trust for time, trust for eternity, trust for your bodies, and trust for your souls? I am sure you do. If you are what you should be, you know the Father, for your faith rests upon him.
17. This also is true, that you seek to imitate him. It is wonderful how little children imitate their father, perhaps more than grown-up children do, though the influence of example is seen upon them also. The very little ones will try to do everything exactly like father. It must be right, it must be perfect, if father does it; they make us smile as we see in them ourselves in miniature. Is this not the very thing which you try to do? Though you were converted only a very little while ago, yet you wish to be like Jesus; you long to be like the Father. Would you not be perfect if you could? If you could, would you not be rid of every sin? If some painful surgical operation could take away from you the black drops of indwelling sin, would you not cheerfully bare your breast to the keenest knife? I know you would. You would die to be rid of sin for that is the thing you hate. This proves that you know your Father in heaven, for you are trying to be like him.
18.
And do you not glory in him? Little children when they begin to talk,
and go to school, how proud they are of their father! Their father is
the greatest man who ever lived: there never was his like. You may
talk to them of great statesmen, or great warriors, or great princes,
but these are all nobodies: their father fills the whole horizon of
their being. Well, so it certainly is with us and our Father God.
Since no works are like unto thine,
None so glorious, so divine,
Since whatever gods there be,
None, oh Lord, are like unto thee;
Let me bow before thy throne,
And exalt thy name alone.
We cannot make enough of our God. We extol him with all our might. With the blessed virgin we sing, “My soul magnifies the Lord.” What does “magnify” mean? Why, to make great. We feel as if we would make God’s name great, and would make him great in the minds of men, and make them think what a blessed Father we have.
19.
Now, listen! This is the reason why John has written to you, little
children, because he says, “They know enough to understand my letter,
for they know the Father.” We do not think of writing a letter to a
little child. “Ah,” says John, “but the Lord’s children know their
Father”; and he who knows God is capable of any kind of knowledge. He
who knows God is a fit person to be accepted as a disciple of the
beloved apostle. I cannot desire a better congregation than a
congregation of men who know the Father. What, if they are even
little children? Well, they can understand anything that I, another
child, can have to say, for they know the Father; and therefore they
have an unction from the Holy One, and are able to know spiritual
things. To know God is the centre and the circumference of all
knowledge. If you know the Father, do you not see the reason why
John writes to you? Because, now that you know him, you are bound to
love him, to trust him, and to serve him. Having received such
knowledge as this, you are bound to impart it as far as you can; you
are bound to live up to it, and to show to all around you what a
child of God is, and how different he is from the children of
darkness. So, then, out of your privilege, and out of your knowledge,
there arises an obligation which I trust you will be not slow to
acknowledge. Here is a prayer for you: —
If I’ve the honour, Lord, to be
One of thy happy family,
On me the gracious gift bestow
To call thee “Abba, Father” too.
So may my conduct ever prove
My filial piety and love!
Whilst all my brethren clearly trace
Their Father’s likeness in my face.
20. III. Now we come to our third division. Will you kindly follow me with your Bibles, especially you who are “little children,” while I commend to you THE PRECEPTS, which John has written for your guidance.
21. First, look at chapter 2. “My little children, these things I write to you, so that you do not sin.” {1Jo 2:1} That is the first precept, — Little children, do not sin. Children are very apt to get into the mud. Most mothers will tell you, I think, that if there is a pool of mud anywhere within a mile, her first-born joy and comfort will discover it and get into it if he possibly can; and no matter how often a child is washed he seems always to need washing again: if there is a method by which he can foul his hands and his face, your pretty cherub is most ingenious to discover it. I am afraid this is too much the case with the children of God. There is so much of carnality about us, so much of the old Adam, that the question is not into which sin we fall, but into which sin we do not fall. Alas! we are apt to be proud, though we have nothing to be proud of; we are prone to despondency and to doubt our Father, though he never gave us any reason to do so: we are inclined to be worldly, though there is nothing in the world worth loving; and we have a tendency to grow cold and chilly towards God, though he is altogether lovely, and ought to win our warmest affection. We are apt to speak unadvisedly with our lips; we are apt to be full of foolish thoughts; we are apt to be self-willed. We find an angry temper rising against some brother of ours whom we ought to love; and we have not long gotten over that before we are half afraid to utter a word of rebuke lest we should incur the laughter of the ungodly. So we glide from one sin to another, even as a waterfall descends from rock to rock. Just as weeds multiply in the soil so do sins spring up in our hearts. We are a mass of faults. Like the pendulum, we swing to the right hand and then to the left: we err first in one way and then in another; we are always inclined to evil, and hence the apostle sweetly puts it, “My little children, I write to you, so that you do not sin.” Avoid every sin: forsake it altogether. Ask for the grace of God to sanctify you entirely, spirit, soul, and body. Though you are only newly-born, yet, my little children, do not sin. You will soon lose your comfort if you do. Little children, sin will harm you, damage you, grieve you, and displease your heavenly Father: it will raise a cloud, behind which his presence will be hidden from you: it will stunt your heavenly growth: it will prevent your usefulness. My little children, I earnestly entreat you that you do not sin. Burnt child, dread the fire! You have just been plucked out of it, do not go back to it. Do not play with sparks; keep clear of every kind of match that might create a flame. Seek after holiness with all your might. Though born only yesterday do not sin today. May God help you to fulfil this holy precept.
22. Further on in this second chapter the apostle writes to them again, and tells them {1Jo 2:18} that it is the last time, and that there are many antichrists abroad. You will have to run your eye right down the chapter until you come to verse 24, for that is what he says to little children, because there are many antichrists in the world that would seduce them; “Let that therefore remain in you, which you have heard from the beginning.” {1Jo 2:24} Little children are very fickle. The toys which they cry for one day they break the next: young minds change with the wind. So, little children, there are many evil ones who will endeavour to seduce you from the truth of God, and since you have a natural instability of mind as yet, for you are only newly converted, it is good to be on your guard against those who would mislead you. Until we are rooted and grounded in the truth, new things have great charms for us, especially if they have about them a great show of holiness and zeal for God. Listen, then, dear children only newly-born into the Saviour’s family: “Let that therefore remain in you, which you have heard from the beginning.” Alas, even those who are older in grace than you are have shown a sad readiness to be duped by plausible people who have invented fresh notions and methods. I have lived long enough to have seen a considerable variety of follies and manias in the religious world. They have sprung up, grown great, declined, and vanished. One day it has been one thing, another another. I have lived to see those things justly ridiculed which a few years before were extolled as the wonders of the age. I thank God I have not been moved by any of these periodical fits of frenzy, but have been content to keep to the one old truth which I have gathered from the Scriptures and made my own by experience, and by the teaching of the Holy Spirit. I have not had to tack about, for I have been enabled to steam ahead; and I hope I shall do so to the end. I have no respect for these upstart inventions; but I regard them as so many phases of human delusion. One never knows what will come next; but of this we are pretty sure, that every now and then a new doctrine is brought out which turns out to be an old heresy with a fresh coat of varnish on it; or else some new method of saving souls is found out, and the work blazes away like a house on fire until it dies out in smoke. Let us not be carried off our feet by every wind of doctrine. We may live to see the present craze ended and another or two after it; only may it be ours to be steadfast and immovable. “Little children, let that therefore remain in you, which you have heard from the beginning”: leave to others the soon-exhausted novelties and keep to the eternal unchangeable truth which is taught to you in God’s word and in your own soul’s experience.
23. Little children, here is a third precept for you, and I want you to put it into your heart, and carry it home. “And now, little children, remain in him.” {1Jo 2:28} There is a Sabbath portion for you: “Remain in him.” Let the truth remain in you, and remain in Christ, who is the truth. Little children are very apt to stray: I have known them tempted away from home, to play the truant: they have gone into the fields after pretty flowers, or down by the brook to fish for minnows, and then they have fallen into all kinds of trouble. The best place for a child is at home; and for a babe in grace the best shelter is the Saviour’s bosom. “Little children, remain in him.” If you forget everything else I say this morning, lay this up in your hearts, and let no one tempt you away from simply trusting your Saviour, sweetly resting in his love, and humbly following on to know more and more about him. “And now, little children, remain in him.”
24. What next? Read on — “Little children, let no man deceive you.” {1Jo 3:7} Children are very credulous: they will believe any idle tale if it is told to them by a clever and attractive person. Little children, believe your Saviour, but do not be ready to believe anyone else. Believe God’s word, and stand firm on that; but if sinners entice you, do not consent to them; and if antichrist would teach you false doctrine, close your ears to it. Be as the sheep of whom Jesus said, — “They will not follow a stranger, for they do not know the voice of strangers.”
25.
Further on we read: “My little children, let us not love in word,
neither in tongue; but in deed and in truth.” {1Jo 3:18}
Little children are apt to let their angry passions rise until they
have to be told by Dr. Watts that their —
Little hands were never made
To tear each other’s eyes.
And truly we have some Christian children who have been all too quick about this tearing of each other’s eyes. They have seen a truth, and some friend whom they meet does not see it; therefore they have tried to knock his eyes out to make him see it. That is a faithful description of many Christian controversies. It is idle to attempt to compel another to think as I think by scolding him, and heaping wrath upon him. Let us never do that. Let us love. If you cannot expect anything else of a child you do expect love; and love never seems to be more suitably enshrined than in the heart and mind of a little child. Come, you who are newly brought to Christ, love with all your might. If you cannot fight as soldiers, or work as labourers, yet love the brotherhood; love Christ; love God; love the souls of men; and by love seek to win them to the Saviour who has saved you. Do not love in word only, but in deed and in truth.
26.
You have the next word in chapter 4 — “You are from God, little
children, and have overcome them: because greater is he who is in
you, than he who is in the world.” {1Jo 4:4} Little children are
frequently timid: they are sometimes terrified when left alone: they
are generally afraid of strangers. Hear, then, you little children,
you are very weak and feeble, but do not be dismayed because of that,
for there is a power residing in you which is mightier than the power
which is in the world. Satan dwells in the world, and he is mighty;
but God dwells in you, and he is almighty; therefore do not be
afraid.
A feeble saint shall win the day,
Though death and hell obstruct the way.
Hold on to faith in the eternal Lord who dwells in you, and you shall never perish, neither shall anyone pluck you out of his hand.
27.
The last precept to little children is at the end of the epistle.
Carefully read the last verse — “Little children, keep yourselves
from idols.” {1Jo 5:21} Little children are naturally fond of
toys and pretty pictures. Anything like pomp and show is sure to
please children. How fond they are of soldiers, and banners, and
processions, and bands of music, and all that is grand: these are
their idols. That is the tendency of many grown-up children that I
know of. They admire a fine religion, tasteful, striking, artistic.
“Little children, keep yourselves from idols.” I would like this text
printed over the altars of our Ritualistic neighbours. I scarcely
need to mention others who have no taste or care for the beautiful,
but their toys are all for noise-making, and glitter and flash, a
kind of fifth of November {a} all the days of the year. Do not become
fascinated with their playthings. Do not be led away from the church
of God by armies or navies. Alas, the children must now have their
play toys in the church, and their toys in the chapel, and some must
have their toys in the streets, until one would think with their
trumpets and drums that they had just come home from the fair.
“Little children, keep yourselves from idols,” I do not think you are
likely to fall in love with the idols of the heathen and bow down to
them; but there are plenty of other gods which are the idols of one
period and the derision of the next. Stay with Christ. Do not ask
for pomp and show; do not ask for noise and bluster: ask for nothing
except that your sins may be forgiven you, that you may know the
Father, and then that you may remain in Christ, and be full of love
for all the family of God. Little children, may the Lord Jesus Christ
be with you, and may you grow in grace until you come to the fulness
of the stature of men in him. May his grace be upon all those who
love him, and wait for his appearing.
[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon — 1Jo 2]
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “The Lord’s Day — Hosannah” 909}
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “The Christian, Privileges, Adoption — Adoption” 728}
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “The Work of Grace as a Whole — Grace Causing Love” 248}
{a} Guy: An effigy of Guy Fawkes traditionally burnt on the
evening of November the Fifth, usually with a display of
fireworks. Guys were formerly paraded about in the streets on the
anniversary of the “Gunpowder Plot” (November 5, 1605). They are
now more frequently exhibited by children collecting money for
fireworks during the days preceding November 5; A person of
grotesque appearance, esp. with reference to dress. OED. See
Spurgeon_MorningEvening "November 5, Morning" 619
Public Worship, The Lord’s Day
909 — Hosanna
1 This is the day the Lord hath made,
He calls the hours his own;
Let heaven rejoice, let earth be glad,
And praise surround the throne.
2 Today he rose and left the dead;
And Satan’s empire fell;
Today the saints his triumphs spread,
And all his wonders tell.
3 Hosanna to th’ anointhewyd King,
To David’s holy Son!
Help us, oh Lord! descend and bring
Salvation from thy throne.
4 Blest be the Lord, who comes to men,
With messages of grace;
Who comes in god his Father’s name,
To save our sinful race.
5 Hosanna in the highest strains
The church on earth can raise;
The highest heavens, in which he reigns,
Shall give him nobler praise.
Isaac Watts, 1719.
The Christian, Privileges, Adoption
728 — Adoption
1 Behold what wondrous grace
The Father hath bestow’d
On sinners of a mortal race,
To call them sons of God!
2 ‘Tis no surprising thing,
That we should be unknown:
The Jewish world knew not their King,
God’s everlasting Son.
3 Nor doth it yet appear
How great we must be made,
But when we see our saviour here,
We shall be like our Head.
4 A hope so much divine
May trials well endure,
May purge our souls from sense and sin,
As Christ the Lord is pure.
5 If in my Father’s love,
I share a filial part,
Send down thy Spirit, like a dove.
To rest upon my heart.
6 We would no longer lie
Like slaves beneath the throne;
My faith shall Abba Father cry,
And thou the kindred own.
Isaac Watts, 1709.
The Work of Grace as a Whole
248 — Grace Causing Love
1 We love thee, Lord, because when we
Had err’d and gone astray,
Thou didst recall our wandering souls
Into the heavenward way.
2 When helpless, hopeless, we were lost
In sin and sorrow’s night,
Thou didst send forth a guiding ray
Of thy benignant light.
3 Because when we forsook thy ways,
Nor kept thy holy will,
Thou wert not the avenging Judge,
But gracious Father still:
4 Because we have forgot thee, Lord,
But thou hast not forgot;
Because we have forsaken thee,
But thou forsakest not:
5 Because, oh Lord, thou lovedst us
With everlasting love;
Because thou send’st thy Son to die,
That we might live above:
6 Because, when we were heirs of wrath,
Thou gav’st us hope of heaven;
We love because we much have sinn’d,
And much have been forgiven.
Julia Anne Elliott, 1835.
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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