No. 1751-29:637. A Sermon Delivered On Lord’s Day Morning, November 18, 1883, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.
I write to you, fathers, because you have known him who is from the
beginning. … I have written to you, fathers, because you have known him
who is from the beginning {1Jo 2:13,14}
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"}
{See Spurgeon_SermonTexts "1Jo 2:14"}
1. Observe the difference in the two verses: John first says, “I write,” and then, “I have written.” When in two former discourses I preached upon the beloved apostle’s address to the young men and the children, I gave you as full an interpretation of this difference as I could command, and I need not repeat it now. {See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 1711, “A Sermon to the Lord’s Little Children” 1712} {See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 1715, “A Description of Young Men in Christ” 1716} Certain additional thoughts occur to me, which I will give you, so that the matter may be even clearer. The apostle John says, “I write,” and eventually, “I have written”; this shows, I think, the importance of his subject. If he has already written upon it, he must think it to be a very necessary and valuable truth if he writes upon it yet again. A man does not discourse repeatedly upon the same subject if he is a man full of matter, as this inspired writer was, unless he feels that it is of necessity that he return again and again to his subject until he has impressed it upon the minds of his audience. Hence the apostle is not ashamed to say in effect, — “I write this, though you need not remind me that I have written it before, for I feel it to be wise as long as I am in this tabernacle to put you in remembrance of what I have said to you.” Nails which are important to a structure must be driven in with diligence. Foundation-stones should be laid with scrupulous care; and truth, which is fundamental, should be repeated by the teacher until the disciple has learned it beyond all fear of ever forgetting it.
2. This form of speech also reveals the unchanging conviction of the writer, who, having written once, is glad to write the same things again. This shows a mind made up and decided, from which proceeds consistent testimony. In these fickle times certain of our public teachers must feel unable to say of any one subject, “I write,” and “I have written”; for before the ink is dry they need to blot out what they have put upon paper, and to write an amended version of their religious ideas. Scarcely for a month at a stretch do these loose thinkers remain in one place: they are such wandering stars that no chart could ever mark their position for three weeks together. They might say, “I write, but bless you, dear people, I do not know what I wrote six months ago. Very probably my former opinion is not now true, for all things are flowing on, and my head is swimming with the rest. I am a man of progress; for ever learning, and never coming to the knowledge of the truth. Blot out what I wrote a year ago, and read with care what I write today.” To which we reply, — Dear sir, we cannot take much notice of what you write now, because in all probability in another week or two you will retract it all, or improve it from off the face of the earth. Neither shall we pay much attention to you then, for you will probably be on the move as soon as you ever have said your say. We decline to learn what we shall have to unlearn. We will wait in our present knowledge until you have reached something certain for yourself. Perhaps in twenty years’ time, when you have pitched your gipsy tent, it may be worth our while to hear where it is; but we do not commit ourselves even to that promise: for since the progress you are now making is into deeper darkness, you will probably end in sevenfold night.
3. I rejoice, dear friends, in the fixity of the Christian’s faith: I know nothing of improvements and growths in the gospel of the Lord Jesus, which is summed up in these words, “Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and today, and for ever.” I believe that God the Holy Spirit has given us in the Scriptures a perfect and entire revelation which is to be received by all Christians without addition or diminution. I do not believe that apostles, martyrs, confessors, and teachers have been living for almost two millennia upon falsehoods: I prefer the faith of saints in glory to the day-dreams of those whipper snappers who nowadays claim to lead us by their “thought.” Our mind is that of David when he said, “I hate vain thoughts.” Well says the Scripture, “The Lord knows the thoughts of man that they are vanity.” If it is a question of thinking we can think as well as they can, and our thoughts about the modern theology are full of sorrowful contempt. Perhaps the doctrine is new, though we even doubt this; but if it is new it is not true, for truth must necessarily be as old as the everlasting hills. We observe that the word “meditation” is now seldom used, and “thought” is the modern idol. Just so: we meditate on revealed truth; but this notion of thought sets aside truth, and sets up mere speculations. We refuse to be of this vagrant party of thinkers; we are of the settled race of believers. We can say — What we have written, we still write; what we have preached, we still preach: for inasmuch as we have preached what is revealed in Holy Scripture, to that truth we stand and shall stand, God helping us. If we live a thousand years, at the close of life we shall have nothing more nor less to say than the fixed, immutable, eternal truth of God. We hope to understand the truth better, but we shall never discover better truth.
4. “I write,” and “I have written,” also indicate the perennial need of men: they require the same teaching from time to time. I suppose that John alludes to his Gospel when he says, “I have written,” and now, a little later, he writes his Epistle, and says “I write” — giving in each case the same teaching. Men’s natures are still the same, men’s spiritual conflicts and dangers are still the same, and hence the same truth is suitable, not only from day to day, but from century to century. There is only one food for soul-hunger, and only one help in spiritual danger. The true teacher always comes to men with the same truth, because men continue to have the same dangers, needs, sorrows, and hopes. The fathers who required that John should write to them previously, still required that he should write to them the very same thing. Though they may have grown more fatherly, they have not outgrown apostolic teaching. The former truth is good for our latter days. Many years ago, when some of us were mere boys, we listened to the gospel of Jesus, and our heart leaped as we embraced it; it was the life and joy of our spirit; and now today, after having advanced far in the divine life, if we hear one of those simple sermons that first brought us to Christ, concerning the precious blood of Jesus and childlike faith in him, it suits us quite as well as in those early days. I have noticed with regard to well-grown Christian people, that when I have given a purely evangelical discourse, meant only for sinners, and not at all intended for the edifying and comforting of full-aged saints, they have sucked it in with as much delight as if they were themselves newly converted. After all, though you and I are not now fed upon milk, yet a draught of milk is still most refreshing. Though we can now digest the solid food of the kingdom, yet the children’s food has lost none of its relish in our esteem. The elementary truths are still sweet to our hearts; indeed, sweeter than they ever were. Though we have advanced to the higher courses of the edifice of holy knowledge, yet we never cease to look with intense delight upon those foundational truths which concern our Lord Jesus. We cleave with full purpose of heart to him of whom the Lord God has said, “Behold, I lay in Zion for a foundation a stone, a tried stone, a precious corner-stone, a sure foundation.” Jesus remains to us “elect, precious,” and we know it will be so with us until life’s last hour.
5. From this text I am to preach principally to the fathers, and since the church does not have many fathers I may be supposed to have a small audience; but yet this is hardly so, since I hope and trust that the area of the sermon’s influence will include young men; for you, my brethren, aspire to reach the front rank, and to be numbered among the fathers. Even to you who are little children, the text has its word of instruction; for you will be glad to hear what the fathers know, since you hope before long to know the same. The life of God is so much the same in all stages that the word which is profitable to fathers has a use for babes, and what is spoken to little children has a voice in it for young men. May God the Holy Spirit bless this word to the hearts of all his people!
6. Concerning the fathers, I am going to enquire about three things this morning. First, who are they? — “You fathers.” Secondly, what is their particular characteristic? — “You have known him who is from the beginning.” And, thirdly, what is the message to them? — “I have written to you, fathers.” What is it that John has written to fathers in the church of God?
7. I. First, WHO ARE THE FATHERS?
8. We usually associate that idea somewhat with age; but we must take care that we do not make a mistake here, because age in grace, albeit that it may run parallel with age in nature in many cases, does not always do so. In the church of God there are children who are seventy years old. Yes, little children displaying all the infirmities of declining years. It is not a pleasant sight to see grey-headed babes, yet I must confess I have seen such, and I have even been glad that I could dare to go the length of hoping that they were babes in Christ. One would not like to say of a man of eighty that he had scarcely cut his wisdom teeth, and yet there are such; scarcely out of the nurse’s arms at sixty years of age, needing just as much care and comfort as sucklings at the breast. On the other hand, there are fathers in the church of God, wise, stable, instructed, who are comparatively young men. The Lord can cause his people to grow rapidly, and far outstrip their years. David as a lad was more of a father in God than Eli in his old age. Growth in grace is not a time growth. In eternal matters years count for little. The Lord gives subtlety to the simple, to the young men knowledge and discretion. Solomon was wise while still young; in some respects wiser than when he was old. Some youths have been like Joseph, men with God before they were men among men. Joseph, we are told in our translation, was more loved by Jacob than any of his brothers, “because he was the son of his old age”; this can hardly be a correct rendering, for Benjamin, who was born sixteen years later, was far more entitled to be so called. Another interpretation, which seems to me more correct, means that he was a son of the Elders, and implies that while he was a child he was an associate of elderly people, and was himself so thoughtful, serious, and well-instructed as to be an elderly child, a child-man, full of unusual wisdom and prudence. Josephs are still sent into the church now and then, and the Lord greatly blesses his people by their means. Oh, for more of them! From their early youth they have a discernment of God’s word, and a quick apprehension wonderful to notice. More than that, I have even observed a depth of experience within a very short time granted to certain young believers, so that though they were only youths in age they were fathers in piety. Nevertheless, as a usual thing, it is to be expected that advancement in grace should be accompanied with advancement in years, and it is so often so that we are accustomed to call those who are fit to look after the souls of others “the elders of the church,” not necessarily because they are old men, but because they are instructed in the things of God. These are the fathers, then, men who have aged in grace, have come to the full development of their spiritual manhood, and have been confirmed in that development by the test of time and trials. Believers when they have in the course of years shown themselves able both to labour and to suffer, are appropriately ranked among fathers. Why do we call the early writers the fathers of the church? Not, I think, because we owe more to their teaching than to those of a later period, but because they were the first men, the pioneers, the vanguard, and so the fathers of the church. The first and earliest members of a church will become fathers in due time if they continue in the faith, grounded and settled: their years of persevering holiness entitle them to respect. Paul mentions with honour certain people, saying, “Who also were in Christ before me.” There is an honour in having been a soldier of Christ for a long time. It was great praise for his disciples when Jesus said of them, “You have been with me from the beginning.” With the idea of fathers we so far associate that of age that we hope and expect that believers who have been in Christ long have well learned their lesson, and have come to a fulness of growth in the things of God. Judge, Christian brethren, whether you can rank yourselves among the fathers; and if you are not able to do so, still press onward towards it. I am bold to say that in this church there is a larger proportion of this class of Christians than I have ever seen elsewhere, and for this I thank God with all my heart, for they are of the utmost service to our host.
9. “Fathers,” again, are people of maturity, men who are not raw and green; not fresh recruits, unaccustomed to march or fight, but old legionaries who have used their swords on others, and are themselves scarred with wounds received in conflict. These men know what they know, for they have thought over the gospel, studied it, considered it, and having so considered it have embraced it with full intensity of conviction. Usually we mean by “fathers” men who have become developed in grace, mature in character, decided in conviction, clear in statement, and accurate in judgment. These can discern between things that differ, and are not deceived by the philosophies which allure the ignorant. They know the voice of the Shepherd, and they will not follow a stranger. The younger folk may be bewitched so that they do not obey the truth; but these are not fascinated by error. New converts in their difficulties resort to these fathers; for doubts which bewilder the beginner are simplicity itself to those who are taught by the Lord. These are the watchmen on the walls who detect where insidious doubt is creeping in, where deadly error under the guise of truth slyly undermining the faith of the church: for that purpose the Lord has instructed them and given them to have their senses exercised to discern between good and evil. Among them are men who have understanding of the times to know what Israel ought to do. If you are such fathers, dear brethren, I rejoice in you: if you are not such as yet, aspire to this eminence, and pray the Lord that you may not be long before you arrive at the ripeness and sweetness which belong to mellow Christians who are prepared for the great ingathering.
10. “Fathers,” again, are men of stability and strength. If burglars are planning to attack a house they care little about the children, and make small account of the boys; but if fatherly men are around, the thieves are not eager for an encounter. Even like this the arch-deceiver has hope of injuring the church by deceiving the little children and the young men; but the stalwart men of God, who walk in the midst of the household, looked up to by everyone, are not so readily blown to and fro. Just as the Spartans pointed to their citizens as the real walls of Sparta, so do we point to these substantial men, as under God the brazen walls and bulwarks of the church. Men who are well taught, confirmed, experienced, and trained by the Spirit of God are pillars in the house of our God. It may be said of each of them, “He keeps himself so that the evil one does not touch him.” These are men-at-arms, who know how to wear the armour which God has provided, and to use the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God. These are men of strong faith and firm convictions, men of decision and courage, men of prudent action, in no hurry through fear, and under no excitement through false hope. These are not men who retract, or shuffle, or evade; but witnesses who are faithful and true, imparting confidence to the feebler kind by their calm defiance of the foe. Oh, that all Christians would grow into such solid saints. Many light, frothy, chaffy minds come into the church, and give us untold trouble to keep them right, and infinitely more trouble because they will not be kept right. Oh, for more men of such a kind that if the whole world went wrong they would still remain by the right; men who cannot be carried away by superstition, let it adorn itself with all the beauties of art; men who cannot be borne down by Scepticism either, let it flaunt all the pomp of its pretended culture and wisdom. These fathers know and are sure, and have learned to be on their own accounts determined and unyielding; for they will not stir beyond “It is written,” nor tempt eternal ruin by building upon the shifting quicksands of the hour. At this moment there is great need for a phalanx of invincibles. Be steadfast, unmovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord.
11. But there is something more than this in Christian fatherhood. The fathers of the church are men of heart, who naturally care for the souls of others. It is upon the father that the weight of the household falls: he goes out in the morning to his daily labour, and he returns at night with the fruit of his toil for the support of the household. It is not for himself that he lives, but for that dear family which is gathered around him. He is not entirely comprised within his own personal self, for he lives in all the house: he lives especially in his children. Their suffering or their depravation would be his suffering and his depravation. His heart has grown larger than when he was a child or a young man; for now his heart beats in all that household, of which he is the life. It is a grand thing when Christian men and Christian women come to this, that they are not perpetually thinking of their own salvation, and of their own souls being fed under the ministry, but they care most of all for those who are weak and feeble in the church. During a service their thoughts go out for those assembled. They are anxious about how that stranger may be impressed by the sermon; how that anxious spirit may be comforted, how a backsliding brother may be restored, how one who is growing somewhat cool may be revived. This paternal care indicates a true father in the church. May the Lord multiply among us those who feel it to be their life-work to feed the flock of Christ.
12. Having this care upon him the father comes to be tender; he partakes somewhat of the tenderness of a mother, and thus is called a nursing-father. A true father, such as fathers should be, has a tender love for all the little ones. He would not harm them; nothing would be more painful to him than to grieve them; on the contrary, he studies to give them pleasure, and lays himself out for their good. It is a great blessing to the church when the leading spirits are loving; not rough and uncouth, domineering or insolent, but gentle and Christ-like. Oh, my brothers, who take the lead, let us bear and forbear, and put up with a thousand trying things from our Master’s children whom he has committed to our care. Let us make ourselves the servants of all. Is not the father the labourer for the children? Does he not lay up for them? Is not his superiority best seen by his doing more for the family than anyone else? This is how Christians grow great, by making themselves greatly useful to others. If you are the slave of all, willing to do anything so that you can only help them, and make them happy and holy, this is to be a father in the church of God. Sympathetic care and hearty tenderness are gifts of the Holy Spirit, and will bring you a happiness which will richly compensate you for your pains.
13. I have not yet quite reached the full meaning of a father; for the father is the author, under God, of the being of his children; and happy is a church that has many in it who are spiritual parents in Zion, through having brought sinners to Christ. Happy are the men by whose words, and acts, and spirit, and prayers, and tears, men have been begotten to God through Jesus Christ our Lord. What an honour it is to be such a father! Some of us have been filled with this joy until it has almost broken our hearts even to think of it; for the Lord has fulfilled for us the promise which he made to Abraham when he told him to lift up his eyes to the stars, and said, “So shall your seed be.” This cannot fall to the lot of all; but in the church of God every man should pray that he may not be barren or unfruitful. May we all be soul winners; not the minister alone, not the Sunday School teachers alone; but each one without exception! Why should not each saint bring someone to the Lord Jesus? At least, by our united prayers and godly living, by our united testimony and fidelity, let us labour for the increase of Messiah’s kingdom. I hardly think we can put any one among the fathers until he has won some heart for Jesus.
14. So I have described the fathers. They are never very numerous — they are never so numerous as they ought to be. Paul says, “Yet you do not have many fathers”; but wherever they are, they are the strength of the church. I have seen in the army a number of veterans marching in front, an ornament and an honour to the whole company. Your short-service men come and go, but these tried men stick to the colours, and are the backbone of the regiment. If a tough bit of fighting has to be done, you must rely on such as these. Like Napoleon’s Old Guard, they cannot be shaken or driven back; the smell of powder does not alarm them, nor even the whistling of the shot, nor the roar of the artillery: they have seen such things before. They can also bide their time and wait, which is a great thing in a soldier; and when at last they are ordered to charge, they leap like lions on their prey, and the enemy is driven before them. We have such men in the church of God, and we need such; men who are not flustered by opposition, nor made to lose their heads by excitement. They believe in God, and if others doubt, they are not infected by their folly. They know; they are certain; they have put their feet down, and will not move from their persuasion. When the time comes for action, they are ready for it; and throw their whole weight so heartily into the war that every charge is powerful. God send us more of these regiments in this evil day and preserve for us such as we have!
15. II. Secondly, WHAT IS THE PROMINENT CHARACTERISTIC OF A FATHER IN CHRIST? Read the text. “I write to you, fathers, because you have known him who is from the beginning.” He repeats the expression without alteration.
16. Observe here the concentration of their knowledge. Twice he says “You have known him who is from the beginning.” Now, a babe in grace knows twenty things: a young man in Christ knows ten things; but a father in Christ knows one thing, and that one thing he knows thoroughly. It is very natural for us at first to divide our little stream into many rivulets; but as we grow grey in grace we pour it all into one channel, and then it runs with a force efficient for our life-work. I trust I know many doctrines, many precepts and many teachings; but more and more my knowledge gathers around my Lord, even as the bees swarm around their queen. May it come to this with us all, — “I determined not to know anything among you, except Jesus Christ, and him crucified.” May all our knowledge be focused as with a magnifying glass upon this one point. May the adorable person of him who was from the beginning fill the entire horizon of our thought. Oh, to have one heart, one eye, for our one Lord, and for him alone.
17. Notice next, the particularity of their knowledge as to its object: they know “him who was from the beginning.” Do not the babes in Christ know the Lord Jesus? Yes, they do; but they do not know him in his full character. They know him as having forgiven their sins, and that is much, but it is not all. There is the blessed Christ, and I, a poor sinner, look to him just as he comes to me, and I am enlightened, and become one of his little children. Yes, and as I grow and become a young man, I approach nearer to Jesus, and get another view of him; for I overcome the Wicked One even as he did, and so I stand side by side with him in the conflict. But if I come to be a father I enter into fellowship with the great Father himself; for it is union with God the Father that makes a man a father in God. Then we, as it were, not only look towards Jesus as coming to save, but we look on Christ from the Father’s point of view. The sinner sees Jesus coming to him, but the Father sees Jesus as sent from him. When we grow in grace we, in our measure, see Jesus from God’s point of view; that is to say, we see him as “him who was from the beginning,” and in due time was revealed to take away sin. “These are ancient things,” one says. Just so; but fathers are also ancient men, and the deep things of God are suitable for them. Believers see Christ in a manner similar to their own. I scarcely need to allude to what I have often mentioned to you, that every man in the Old Testament who saw the Lord saw him in a character like his own. Abraham, the pilgrim, saw Christ as a pilgrim. Jacob, the struggler, saw the covenant angel wrestling with him through the night. Moses, the representative of a people tried as by fire and yet continuing, saw the Lord as a burning bush. Joshua, the valiant warrior, saw the captain of the Lord’s host as a man with a sword drawn in his hand. The three holy children saw the Son of God in the burning, fiery, furnace, even as they were themselves. When you become a father in Christ you see Christ from the Father’s point of view; not as newly come to save, but as “from the beginning” the Saviour of men.
18. The father in grace rejoices to behold the Lord Jesus as God: he beholds the glory of his adorable person as for ever with the Father even before the earth was. He knows that without him nothing was made that was made, and therefore he beholds him as fashioning everything upon the anvil of his power. He knows that, “His goings forth were of old, from everlasting,” and he delights to see him planning the salvation of his chosen in the beginning. It is a glorious sight. The grown believer meditates upon the covenant, — the settlements of grace in the old eternity. Poor babes in Christ are frequently stumbled by the mysterious truth of God — high doctrine they call it: but when a man grows to be a father he loves covenant truth, and feeds on it. It is one sign of advanced grace that the sublime truths which concern eternity are increasingly valued. In gracious maturity the Christian sees the blessed persons of the Divine Trinity entering into a compact for the salvation of men, and he sees the Son of God himself from the beginning acting as the representative of his elect, and taking upon himself to answer on their behalf to the Father. He sees the Eternal Son then and there becoming the sponsor and the surety for his chosen, engaging to pay their debt and make compensation to the injured justice of God on account of their sins. He sees that covenant even from of old ordered in all things and sure in the hand of him who was from the beginning.
19. There is one point that the father in Christ delights to think upon, namely, that the coming of Christ into the world was not an expedient adopted after an unavoidable and unforeseen disaster in order to retrieve the honour of God; but he understands that the whole scheme of events was planned in the purpose of divine wisdom for the glorifying of Christ, so that from the beginning it was part of Jehovah’s plan that Jesus should take upon himself human nature, and should reveal in that nature all the attributes of the Father. It was the original plan that the incarnate God should reveal infinite grace and boundless love by laying down his life for sinners, “the just for the unjust, so that he might bring us to God.” The only-begotten Son is not introduced into the divine economy as an afterthought; but the whole arrangement is formed with an eye to him who was before all things, and for whom all things were created. It pleased the Father that he should lift up creation by uniting the creature and the Creator in one person; and that he should ennoble our nature, which is a combination of the spiritual and the material, by assuming a body, and bearing that body to the throne of God. Oh matchless plan, by which the redeemed are ennobled, and God himself is glorified! Oh, fathers, if you have ever seen this, I know that you will say: “The preacher does not half describe it.” No, he does not: he wishes that he could; but neither time nor ability are present with him. Still, I delight in the everlasting glories of the Lord Jesus, who was from the beginning. Greatly dear to my own heart are the “chief things of the ancient mountains, and for the precious things of the lasting hills.” I believe in my Lord Jesus Christ as second to none, but as the King and Lord from the beginning, who, though he was despised and rejected by men, yet still is God over all blessed for ever, and will be so for ever and ever. Though “the heathen rage, and the people imagine a vain thing,” Jehovah has set his Son as King upon his holy hill of Zion, and God’s decree shall stand. He who is Alpha shall be Omega: he who is from the beginning shall be to the end King of kings and Lord of lords. My heart cries, “Hallelujah.” Oh, you fathers, cry “Hallelujah” with me!
20. Yes, but I want to notice again, that this knowledge is in itself special: the knowledge itself is remarkable as well us the object of the knowledge. “You have known him.” A dear servant of Christ on this platform the other evening sat beside me: he belonged to quite another part of the church of Christ, but he said to me of such and such a person, “You know, dear brother, he is one who knows the Lord; he is not merely a Christian, but he knows our Lord: you and I know what that means, do we not?” I could only look at him with a deep look of loving appreciation. Yes, we do know the Lord as a living, bright reality, a daily friend, councillor, and companion. True fathers in grace meditate upon Christ; they feed upon Scripture, press its juice, and inwardly enjoy its flavour. People say they have a sweet tooth. It is a good thing to have a sweet tooth for the Lord Jesus Christ. They not only know the Lord by much meditation upon him, but they know him by actual fellowship: they walk with him, they talk with him. Such saints are more with Christ than with anyone else; to no one do they tell so much as they have told to him; and no one has ever told them so much as Jesus tells them; for “the secret of the Lord is with those who fear him; and he will show them his covenant.” Ask them, “Who is your nearest friend?” and they will reply, “The Well-Beloved is my next of kin, my dearest companion.” They know the Lord by fellowship, and they have come to know him now by having an intense sympathy with him. They feel as Jesus does about matters, and so they know him; his tender pity for sinners stirs their hearts, not in the same degree, but yet in the same way according to their measure. They often feel as if they could die for sinners. One of these fathers said, “I could wish myself accursed from Christ, for my brethren, my kinsmen according to the flesh.” They look upon matters not from man’s standpoint, but from Christ’s point of view, and hence they understand much of the Lord’s ways which previously were dark to them. He who very deeply sympathises with a man knows him well. Learning by faith to sit still and believingly await the event, these fathers calmly expect that all things will work together for good to them; and hence they understand the unbroken serenity of the heart of Jesus, and know him in his joys as well as in his sorrows. Such saints know what it is to weep over the city with Jesus, and to rejoice over returning sinners with the good Shepherd; yes, they know what it is to sit down with him on his throne waiting until his enemies are made his footstool. They are calm with Jesus, for they have drunk in the meaning of the text, “He must reign.” Yes: he must reign; he must reign; until all his enemies shall be under his feet. This knowing him who is from the beginning is the chief characteristic of the father in Christ.
21. III. Thirdly, dear friends, WHAT IS THE MESSAGE TO THE FATHERS?
22. I would indicate that message very briefly, by referring you to the context. John has been saying to you, dear fathers, and indeed to all of us who are in Christ, that we should love each other. If you are truly fathers you cannot help loving all the family: the fatherly instinct is love, and fathers in Christ should be full to the brim with it. Little ones should be induced by our loving spirit to come around us, feeling that if no one else loves them we do, if no one else cares for them we do. I have known a father in Christ to whom a convert would speak much more readily than he would to his own earthly father or mother. I suppose they see an invitation in the faces of these fathers. I do not quite know how they find it out, but somehow converts feel that such a one is a man whom they could address, or a woman whom they could talk with. These fathers and mothers in Israel are full of love, and their speech betrays the fact. I know some men who are like great harbours for ships: a soul tossed with tempest makes for them as for a harbour. Breaking hearts say, “Oh, that I could tell him my trouble, and get his prayers.” May you and I be just such people, and may the Holy Spirit use us for the good of our fellows.
23. The next message immediately succeeds the text: “Do not love the world, neither the things that are in the world.” Oh, dear fathers, you must not love the world, for it passes away, and this is especially true of you. If any Christian man might love the world, and I hope no one will do so, certainly the fathers may not. You know so much of Christ that you may well despise the world; and you are so soon going home that you ought to set little value on these fleeting things. You have all the marks of what they call declining years — I call them ascending years: you will soon be gone from the world and its changing vanities, therefore do not set your love on earthly treasures. Hold wealth with a loose hand, be ready to depart, for you soon will depart. Before the morning watch you may be gone to your Father’s house on high. “Do not love the world.”
24. Another duty of fathers is also mentioned here. While they are not to love the world they must take care that they do not fall victims to any of the lusts of this present evil world, such as the lust of the flesh. Can fathers ever fall that way? Ah me; we have to speak very solemnly and admit that the most advanced saint still needs to be warned against the lust of the flesh, the indulgence of appetites which so readily lead men to sin. Then there is the lust of the eye. David fell into that when he repined because of the prosperity of the wicked, and was obliged to confess, “I was so foolish and ignorant.” He looked at the prosperous wicked until he began to fret about them. That lust of the eye, in desiring more for yourself and envying those who have more — never let it happen to a father. And the pride of life — that thirsting to be thought respectable, that envy of others, that struggling after honour and such-like — this must not be in a father. You are men, and must put away childish things. My dear and honoured brethren, do not fall a prey to vanities: these toys are for the children of the world, not for you who are so near to the glory of the Lord. You are grown mature in grace, and will soon enter heaven, live accordingly. Let all earthly things lie like babies’ baubles beneath your feet, while you rise to the manhood of your soul.
25. The next exhortation for the fathers is that they should watch, for, says the apostle, “You have heard that antichrist shall come, even now there are many antichrists.” Oh, valiant fathers, keep watch and ward. I marvel much that members of churches agree to the choice of ministers who are not sound in the faith, indeed, who do not seem to have any faith at all. How does this come about? We used to have in our Baptist churches substantial men who would as soon have brooked Satan at their own table as an unsound preacher in the pulpit. There used to be a company in the north of Scotland called “The Men.” Why, if heresy had been preached before them, they would have been as provoked as Janet Geddes when she threw her cutty-stool {a} at the head of the preacher. They would not have endured these modern heresies as the present effeminate generation is enduring them. Let the new theologians have liberty to preach what they like on their own ground, but not in our pulpits. Alas! the leading members in many churches are Christians without backbones, molluscoid, spongy; snails I would call them, only they do not have the consistency of a snail’s shell. They are ready to swallow any mortal thing if the preacher seems clever and eloquent. Cleverness and eloquence — away with them for ever! If it is not the truth of God, the more cleverly and eloquently it is preached the more damnable it is. We must have the truth and nothing but the truth, and I charge the fathers in Christ all over England and America to see to this. Get to your watch-tower and guard the flock, lest the sheep are destroyed while they are asleep.
26.
Lastly, it is the duty of the fathers to prepare for the coming of
the Lord. How beautifully it is put in the twenty-eighth verse,
“Remain in him; so that, when he shall appear, we may have
confidence, and not be ashamed before him at his coming.” It is
addressed to you all, for you are all little children, but it is
especially incumbent upon those of you who are fathers. Arouse all
your faculties! Watch for the coming of the Lord, and keep your loins
well girded. Jesus may come today; this Lord’s day may be the last
Lord’s day of this age of grace: yet he may not come for ten
thousand years for all I know; therefore do not be weary if you wait
through a long night. Do not say that he delays his coming, for he
will return at the appointed day. Only let us hold firm to what we have
received, and stand waiting for the midnight cry, he will come, he
will not delay; therefore go out to meet him.
Hold the fort, for I am coming,
Jesus signals still:
Wave the answer back to heaven,
By thy grace we will.
Amen.
[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon — 1Jo 2]
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Jesus Christ, Deity and Incarnation — Deity And Humanity Of Our Lord” 249}
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “The Work of Grace as a Whole — Grace Acknowledged” 247}
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Jesus Christ, His Praise — A New Song To The Lamb” 412}
{a} Cutty-stool: Formerly, in Scotland, a particular seat in a
church, where offenders against chastity, or other delinquents,
had to sit during the time of divine service and receive a public
rebuke from the minister. OED.
Jesus Christ, Deity and Incarnation
249 — Deity And Humanity Of Our Lord
1 Ere the blue heavens were stretch’d abroad,
From everlasting was the Word:
With God he was; the Word was God,
And must divinely be adored.
2 By his own power were all things made;
By him supported all things stand;
He is the whole creation’s head,
And angels fly at his command.
3 Ere sin was born, or Satan fell,
He led the host of morning stars;
(Thy generation who can tell,
Or count the number of thy years?)
4 But lo! he leaved those heavenly forms,
The Word descends and dwells in clay,
That he may hold converse with worms,
Dress’d in such feeble flesh as they.
5 Mortals with joy beheld his face,
Th’ eternal Father’s only Son;
How full of truth! how full of grace!
When through his eyes the Godhead shone!
6 Archangels leave their high abode
To learn new mysteries here, and tell
The love of our descending God,
The glories of Immanuel.
Isaac Watts, 1709.
The Work of Grace as a Whole
247 — Grace Acknowledged <7s., 6 lines.>
1 When I stand before the throne
Dress’d in beauty not my own,
When I see thee as thou art,
Love thee with unsinning heart,
Then, Lord, shall I fully know —
Not till then — how much I owe.
2 Chosen not for good in me,
Waken’d up from wrath to flee,
Hidden in the Saviour’s side,
By the Spirit sanctified,
Teach me, Lord, on earth so show,
By my love, how much I owe.
3 Oft I walk beneath the cloud,
Dark as midnight’s gloomy shroud;
But, when fear is at the height,
Jesus comes, and all is light;
Blessed Jesus! bid me show
Doubting saints how much I owe.
Robert Murray M’Cheyne, 1837.
Jesus Christ, His Praise
412 — A New Song To The Lamb
1 Behold the glories of the Lamb
Amidst his Father’s throne;
Prepare new honours for his name
And songs before unknown.
2 Let elders worship at his feet,
The church adore around,
With vials full of odours sweet,
And harps of sweeter sound.
3 Those are the prayers of the saints,
And these the hymns they raise;
Jesus is kind to our complaints,
He loves to hear our praise.
4 Eternal Father, who shall look
Into thy secret will?
Who but the Son shall take that book,
And open every seal?
5 He shall fulfil thy great decrees,
The Son deserves it well;
Lo! in his hand the sovereign keys
Of heaven, and death, and hell.
6 Now to the Lamb that once was slain,
Be endless blessings paid;
Salvation, glory, joy, remain
For ever on thy head.
7 Thou hast redeem’d our souls with blood,
Hast set the prisoners free;
Hast made us kings and priests to God,
And we shall reign with thee.
8 The words of nature and of grace
Are put beneath thy power;
Then shorten these delaying days,
And bring the promised hour.
Isaac Watts, 1709.
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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