No. 1916-32:457. A Sermon Delivered On Thursday Evening, August 5, 1886, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.
But if you will not do so, behold, you have sinned against the Lord: and be sure your sin will find you out. {Nu 32:23}
1. There are many dear friends engaged in business who can only reach the Tabernacle in time for the middle of the service, and therefore they lose the reading of the Scriptures and the exposition, which make up a whole with the sermon. This is a great loss to them, but since it is not their fault we must not let them suffer for it, so far as we can remedy the evil. With this intention let me explain to them that, according to the chapter which we have read and expounded, the Israelites had conquered the country possessed by Og, king of Bashan, and Sihon, king of the Amorites; and the tribes of Reuben and Gad, having great quantities of cattle, thought that so rich a pasture country would be eminently suitable for them and for their flocks. They were no poor judges, for the country was especially suited for sheep farming. They therefore asked Moses that they might have that country to be theirs. But Moses objected. Did they intend to sit still and enjoy that country, and then leave the rest of the tribes to cross the Jordan, and to fight for their possessions? If so, he declared that it was a very evil course to take — that they were selfish in seeking their own ease, and that they would be discouraging God’s people, and doing all kinds of mischief. He therefore proposed to them that, if they were to have that conquered country for their own, they should at least cross the river with their brethren, and fight and continue fighting until the land on the other side of Jordan had been cleared of its old inhabitants, and the all Israel could take the entire country, and each tribe could possess its portion. He put it to them as a matter of honour, and as a matter of right, that they ought to help in conquering the rest of the land. Why should they receive their lot without fighting, and leave the other tribes to bear the toil and danger of war? Had not God told all of them to go up and drive out the condemned Canaanites? How could they evade their duty without great sin? He would have them take their full share in the war, and on that condition they might have the rich meadows of Bashan, but not otherwise. This was clearly just and equitable, and commended itself to those concerned. They at once agreed to the proposal, and Moses, to enforce the agreement, told them in the words of the text that, if they did not keep their covenant, and give all due aid to their brethren, then they would sin against God; and they might be sure that their sin would find them out.
2. I remarked in reading the chapter that Moses spoke very wisely, very forcibly, very honestly; and the people were very compliant. They yielded to his persuasions, and the difficulty which threatened to divide the nation was readily surmounted. It is good to have a wise leader. It is good for him when he leads a reasonable people. Oh, that I may be able tonight to speak a word in season, and may your ears be ready to hear it! May the Lord bring as gracious an issue out of this service as he did out of the discourse of his servant Moses! To his Holy Spirit shall be all the praise.
3. We shall speak at this time, first, of what was this sin? Secondly, what would be the chief sin of that sin? “If you will not do so, behold, you have sinned against the Lord.” This would be the particular atrocity of their sin, that it would be levelled at God himself. And then there is a third point: What would the consequence of such sin? “Be sure your sin will find you out.” They would be guilty, and would not go unpunished for long.
4. I. First, then, WHAT WAS THIS SIN? What is this sin about which the Spirit of God says by Moses, “Be sure your sin will find you out?”
5. A learned divine has delivered a sermon upon the sin of murder from this text, another upon theft, another upon falsehood. Now they are very good sermons, but they have nothing to do with this text, if it is read as Moses uttered it. If you take the text as it stands, there is nothing in it about murder, or theft, or anything of the kind. In fact, it is not about what men do, but it is about what men do not do. The iniquity of doing nothing is a sin which is not so often spoken of as it should be. A sin of omission is clearly aimed at in this warning, — “If you will not do so, be sure your sin will find you out.”
6. What, then, was this sin? Remember that it is the sin of God’s own people. It is not the sin of Egyptians and Philistines, but the sin of God’s chosen nation; and therefore this text is for you who belong to any of the tribes of Israel — you to whom God has given a portion among his beloved ones. It is to you, professed Christians and church members, that the text comes, “Be sure your sin will find you out.” And what is that sin? Very sadly common it is among professed Christians, and needs to be dealt with: it is the sin which leads any to forget their share in the holy war which is to be carried out for God and for his church. A great many wrongs are tangled together in this crime, and we must try to separate them, and set them in order before your eyes.
7. First, it was the sin of idleness and of self-indulgence. “We have cattle: here is a land that yields much pasture: let us have this for our cattle, and we will build folds for our sheep with the abundant stones that lie around, and we will repair these cities of the Amorites, and we will dwell in them. They are nearly ready for us, and there shall our little ones dwell in comfort. We do not care about fighting: we have seen enough of it already in the wars with Sihon and Og. Reuben would rather reside by the sheepfolds. Gad has more delight in the bleating of the sheep and in the folding of the lambs in his bosom than in going out to battle.” Alas, the tribe of Reuben is not dead, and the tribe of Gad has not passed away! Many who are of the household of faith are equally indisposed to exertion, equally fond of ease. Hear them say, “Thank God we are safe! We have passed from death to life. We have named the name of Christ; we are washed in his precious blood, and therefore we are secure.” Then, with a strange inconsistency, they permit the evil of the flesh to crave carnal ease, and they cry, “Soul, you have many goods laid up for many years; take your ease, eat, drink, and be merry.” Spiritual self-indulgence is a monstrous evil; yet we see it all around. On Sunday these loafers must be well fed. They look out for such sermons as will feed their souls. The thought does not occur to these people that there is something else to be done besides feeding. Soul-saving is pushed into the background. The crowds are perishing at their gates; the multitudes with their sins defile the air; the age is getting worse and worse, and man, by a process of evolution, is evolving a devil; and yet these people want pleasant things preached to them. They eat the fat and drink the sweet, and they crowd to the feast of fat things full of marrow, and of wines on the lees well refined — spiritual festivals are their delight: sermons, conferences, Bible-readings, and so forth, are sought after, but regular service in ordinary ways is neglected. Not a hand’s turn will they do. They gird on no armour, they grasp no sword, they wield no sling, they throw no stone. No, they have gotten their possession; they know they have, and they sit down in carnal security, satisfied to do nothing. They neither work for life, nor from life: they are arrant sluggards, as lazy as they are long. Nowhere are they at home except where they can enjoy themselves, and take things easy. They love their beds, but the Lord’s fields they will neither plough nor reap. This is the sin pointed out in the text — “If you do not go out to the battles of the Lord, and contend for the Lord God and for his people, you sin against the Lord: and be sure your sin will find you out.” The sin of doing nothing is about the biggest of all sins, for it involves most of the others. The sin of sitting still while your brethren go out to war breaks both tables of the law, and has in it a huge idolatry of self, which neither allows love for God or man. Horrible idleness! May God save us from it!
8. This sin may be viewed under another aspect, as selfishness and unbrotherliness. Gad and Reuben ask to have their inheritance at once, and to make themselves comfortable in Bashan, on this side Jordan. What about Judah, Levi, Simeon, Benjamin, and all the rest of the tribes? How are they to get their inheritance? They do not care, but it is evident that Bashan is suitable for themselves with their multitude of cattle. Some of them reply, “You see, they must look after themselves, as the proverb has it, ‘Every man for himself, and God for us all.’ ” Did I not hear someone in the company say, “Am I my brother’s keeper?” I know that gentleman. I heard his voice years ago. His name is Cain, and I have this to say to him: it is true that he is not his brother’s keeper, but he is his brother’s killer. Every man is either the keeper of his brother, or the destroyer of his brother. Soul murder can be accomplished without an act or even a will; it can be, and is constantly, accomplished by neglect. Those perishing heathen — does not the Lord enquire, “Who killed all these?” The millions of this city unevangelised — who is guilty of their blood? Are not idle Christians starving the multitude by refusing to hand out the bread of life? Is this not a grievous sin?
9. “But oh,” another says, “they can conquer the land themselves. God is with them, and he can do his own work, and therefore I do not see that I need trouble myself about other people.” That is selfishness; and selfishness is never worse than when it puts on the garb of religion. The boy at school, who selfishly feeds himself upon his luxuries, and gives nothing to his young companions, is generally their ridicule. He is the greedy boy whom all despise. A man with large supplies, who, in time of famine, would feed himself but never think of the poor, is despised among men. But what shall I say of the man who, concerning the things of the soul — concerning heaven, and hell, and Christ, and eternity — is so selfish that, being saved himself, he does not care one jot for others? He is so unbrotherly that I am half afraid he is no brother. He is so inhuman that I can scarcely think a touch of the life of Christ can ever have quickened him. How is he a Christian who is not like Christ, but who just feels, “Well, I am all right; and if I look after myself other people must look after themselves. God will see to them all, no doubt! I have nothing to do with it?” Now unless we shake off that horrible selfishness, and feel that the very essence of our religion lies in love, and that one of the first-fruits of it is to make us care about the salvation of our fellow men — unless, I say, we shake that off and go out to fight the Lord’s battles — then this text threatens us very solemnly, — “If you will not do so, behold, you have sinned against the Lord: and be sure your sin will find you out.” Oh my brothers, hear this text, and let it operate with salutary influence to produce in you constant effort for the salvation of those around you!
10. But with this there was mingled ingratitude of a very dark order. These children of Gad and Reuben would appropriate for themselves lands for which all the Israelites had laboured. God had led them out to battle, and they had conquered Sihon and Og, and now these men would take possession of what others have struggled for, but they are not to fight themselves. This is vile ingratitude; and I fear it is common among us at this very day. How did we become Christians at all? Instrumentally, it is through those holy missionaries who won our forefathers from the cruel worship of the Druids, and afterwards from the fierce dominion of Woden and Thor. We must also trace our gospel light to those stakes at Smithfield, {a} where men of God did not count their lives dear to them, but willingly gave up all they had, and their lives also by a painful death, so that they might keep truth alive in the land. Some of you came to be Christian men through the earnest labours of men who preached by the roadside, or by the loving entreaties of tender mothers who wept you to the Saviour, or by the faithful ministry of some brother from the pulpit, or the equally faithful teaching of an earnest Sunday School teacher. We owe under God much to past ages, and much to present labourers. There is no man among us who does not stand immensely indebted to the church of God. Though God is our Father, yet the church is our mother, and through her various agencies we have been born to God. Do we acknowledge all this debt, and are we not going to pay it? Are we to receive all, and then give out nothing at all? Are we to be like candles burning under bushels? Are we to waste our life by much receiving and little distributing? This will never do. This will not be life, but death. I do not charge this against anyone personally; but if this shoe fits anyone, please let him wear it. If any man must acknowledge his obligation to the church of God, and yet he is not repaying it, let him cover his face for very shame. Will you not pass on the light you have received? Truly you deserve to perish in darkness. Are you fed, and will you not break your bread to the hungry, or pass a cup of cold water to the thirsty? What are you doing, strange ingrate! that you should simply be a stagnant reservoir into which streams of mercy fall never to run out of you again, but to stand and putrefy in selfishness? Remember the Dead Sea, and tremble lest you be like it, a pool accursed and cursing all around you! Oh God, have mercy upon the great majority of your professing people to whom this must be solemnly applied: that they receive, but give to you and to your cause so little either of time, substance, talent, prayer, or anything else!
11. The text, when spiritually interpreted, says concerning our personal service in the conquest of the world for Christ, — “If you do not do so, behold you have sinned against the Lord: and be sure your sin will find you out.”
12.
Again, we may see this from another point of view. It is the sin of
untruthfulness. These people pledged themselves that they would
go out with the other tribes, and that they would not return to their
own homes until the entire campaign was ended. Now, if after that
they did not go to the war, and did not fight to the conclusion of
it, then they would be guilty of a barefaced lie. It is a wretched
thing for a man to be a covenant-breaker. It is sacrilege for any man
to lie, not only to man, but to God. I would speak very tenderly, but
if any man has been converted from the error of his ways, by that
very conversion he is bound to serve the Lord. If he has been
baptized as a believer, by that baptism he declared that he was dead
to the world, and buried to it, that henceforth he might live in
newness of life. Now, if he lives only to make money and hoard it,
and he does nothing for God’s church and for poor sinners, is not his
baptism a lie? Such a baptized person was buried, but he was never
dead: is this not to turn baptism into a farce? He gave himself up to
the church of God, he became a member of it; and by that act and deed
he pledged himself to do all he could for its growth and its
prosperity; and if he does nothing, he is a deceiver. If his joining
a church meant anything, it meant that he would take part in the
common service of God. A do-nothing professor is a merely nominal
member, and a nominal member is a real hindrance. He neither
contributes, nor prays, nor works, nor agonizes for souls, nor takes
any part in Christian service, and yet he partakes in all the
privileges of the church. Is this fair? What is the use of him? He
sits and hears, and sometimes sleeps under the sermon. That is all.
Is not his union with the church a practical falsehood? I will not
say so, but I will ask the question. It does seem to me that if I
belong to the Israelites, and they are sent by God to conquer a
country, and I do not go out to the war with them, and take my part
in the conflict, I am not a true Israelite. I am unworthy of my
nation; I am disloyal to the standard; I am false to my fellow
soldiers. I think it is so: do not you? Having entered the Christian
ministry, if I did nothing in it, I should feel that I disgraced it.
If I simply tried to enjoy religion without an effort to spread it, I
ought to be drummed out of the army of preachers. If there are any in
the church who have talent that they do not use for God, or money
which they do not lay out for Christ, or time which they do not use
for holy purposes, they are sinning, and their sin will find them
out. Your buried talent, will it not rust, and rusting, will it not
create within your spirits a most horrible disease, and be a peril to
you? Must it not be so? Are they not guilty of an acted lie before
high heaven who call themselves servants of God, and yet do not serve
him? You often sing —
’Tis done! the great transaction’s done;
I am my Lord’s, and he is mine:
He drew me, and I follow’d on,
Charm’d to confess the voice divine.
High heaven, that heard the solemn vow,
That vow renew’d shall daily hear:
Till in life’s latest hour I bow,
And bless in death a bond so dear.
13. Is that hymn true? Do you mean those verses, or do you mock God? You have all sung the hymn many times, and made, “Happy day! Happy day!” the chorus; but is your singing true or false? If any man or woman among you shall after such a song sink back into himself, and do nothing for his Lord, what truth is there in him? May God save us from using our lips to mock his holy name! It can be little short of blasphemy to sing such words and yet live a selfish, indolent life. Will a man so insult his God? Oh sirs, I beseech you make such language true, or else be done with it, lest the record of it destroy your souls!
14. Once more, and I will be finished with this painful subject. What would their sin be? According to Moses it would be a grave injury to others. Do you not notice how he put it to them? “Moses said to the children of Gad and to the children of Reuben, ‘Shall your brethren go to war, and shall you sit here?’ ” What an example to set! If one Christian man is right in never joining a Christian church, then all other Christian men would be right in not doing so, and there would be no visible Christian church. Do you not see, you non-professing believers, that your example is destructive of all church life? What are you doing? If one Christian man, with the talent to preach, is right in not preaching, then other Christian men have a right to trifle in the same way, and then there would be no ministry left. An idler is a great waster, and makes others wasters too: his example is likely to make all around him as indolent as himself. I notice in our churches that a few earnest men and women lead the way, and others are sweetly drawn to follow them. How precious are the earnest few in a Christian community. David knew the value of the first three in his band. But if the leading spirits are dead, cold, indifferent, what happens? Why, lethargy spreads over the whole. I am sorry to say that I hear of examples in which a minister laments, “I labour with all my might, but I am persuaded that nothing will ever be done while Mr. So-and-so is there.” He is often a cold-blooded deacon, or a purse-proud member. When you come to know him, you feel, “While there is such a great big iceberg floating close to the shore, the garden by the sea must be frost-bitten: nothing can grow.” It would be a pity that any of us should freeze others. May God save us from it! “Oh,” one says, “no one knows me, and therefore I cannot have much influence either for good or for evil.” Not over your own child — your daughter, your son? That influence which you have over even one or two little ones may spread far further than you imagine. We cannot calculate the range of moral influence: it is immeasurable. I suppose that there is not a single moving atom of matter which does not influence in some measure the entire universe. One atom impinges upon another, and that upon another, and so it reaches the most remote star. Whether we do or do not do, what we do or do not do, will have an influence upon all who are all around us, perhaps to all eternity. Perhaps the word I speak tonight shall ring out when that sun has burned out like a coal, and the moon has become black as sackcloth of hair. I am not sure but that our thoughts upon our bed may throb throughout the ages in their incessant results. “None of us lives to himself, and no man dies to himself”: for good or for evil we are yoked with the universe, and there is no possibility of severance. There is much influence for evil in an idle example: possibly such an example would not be set by certain people if they would only think of the consequences. To such consideration of consequences I invite all whose gravest fault is forbearing to do good. Oh barren tree, do not excuse yourself because you do not drip with poison like the upas! {b} It is crime enough that you encumber the ground!
15. Moses goes on to remark that if these people did not go out to war they would discourage all the rest. “Why do you discourage the heart of the children of Israel from going over into the land which the Lord has given them?” It is no slight sin to discourage holy zeal and perseverance in others. May we never be guilty of killing holy desires even in children! How often has a burning desire in a boy’s heart been quenched by his own father, who has thought him too impulsive, or too ardent! How frequently the conversation of a friend, so-called, has dried up the springs of holy desire in the person with whom he has conversed! Let it not be so. Yet without cold words our chill neglects may freeze. I know a terrace where the shutting up of one or two shops has a deadening effect upon the trade of the other shops. Somehow, the closed shutters give a gloomy look to the place, and customers are repelled. Does not the same thing happen to groups of workers when one grows idle? Does not the one dull brother deaden the rest? We cannot neglect our own gardens without injuring our neighbours. Do you live anywhere near a house that is not rented, which has a back garden left to run to waste? All manner of seeds are blown over upon your ground; and, though you keep the hoe going, yet the weeds baffle you, for there is such a nursery for them just over the wall. One mechanic coming late among a set of workmen may throw the whole company out of order for the day. One railway coach off the rails may block the entire system. Depend on it, if we are not serving the Lord our God, we are committing the sin of discouraging our fellow men. They are more likely to imitate our lethargy than our energy. Why should we wish to hinder others from being earnest? How dare we rob God of the services of others by our own neglect? Oh God, deliver us from this sin!
16. If I had preached a sermon about murder or theft, you would all have escaped the lash; but few of us will be without rebuke now that I have kept the text in the setting in which God originally put it, and in which he meant it to be presented for our rebuke and exhortation.
17. II. Secondly, let us carefully notice WHAT WAS THE CHIEF SIN IN THIS SIN?
18. Of course, if the Reubenites did not keep their solemn agreement to go over Jordan, and help their brethren, they would sin against their brethren; but this is not the offence which rises first to the mind of Moses. Moses overlooks the lesser, because he knows it to be included in the greater; and he says, “Behold, you have sinned against the Lord.” In this he anticipated the confession of David, “Against you, you only I have sinned, and done this evil in your sight.” To refuse to help their brethren would be disobedience to the Lord. Did he not command all Israel to drive out the Canaanites? In the same way, neglect of holy work is positive sin against the Lord. It is disobedience against the Lord not to be preaching his truth if we are able to do so. Did not our Lord say, “Go into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature?” This command was not confined to a dozen or so, but was meant for all his people, as they have opportunity and ability. We who hear the gospel are told to proclaim it, for it is written, “Let him who hears say, ‘Come.’ ” The hearer of the gospel is bound to be a repeater of the gospel. We are all called upon, as we know the Lord, to tell to others what the Lord has told to us; and if we do not do so, we are guilty of disobedience to a great gospel precept.
19. We are certainly guilty, dear friends, of ingratitude, if, as I have already said, we owe so much to other men, and yet do not seek to bless mankind; but chiefly we owe everything to the grace of God, and, if God has given us grace in our own hearts, and saved us with the precious blood of the Only-Begotten, how can we sit still, and allow others to perish? As we value salvation we are under bonds to make it known. We rejoice to be in the kingdom of God — should we not spend and be spent for the growth of that kingdom? He who does not bear arms in this war is a traitor to his sovereign Lord.
20. There would be sin against God in the conduct of these people, if they did not aid in the conquest of Canaan for they would be dividing God’s Israel. Shall the Lord’s inheritance be torn in two? God meant them all to keep together. They all came out of Egypt together; they all marched through the wilderness together, and now he intended for them to fight his battles together. Were these to take their inheritance, and remain among the sheepcotes, and leave the other ten and a half tribes to go over Jordan and wage the war alone? This would be scattering the family of God. Can it be that any of us are dividing the church of God; that is, dividing it into drones and workers? This would be a terrible division: and I fear that it exists already. It is apparent to those who are able to observe; and it is mourned over by those who are jealous for the God of Israel. Half the schisms in churches arise out of the real division which exists between idlers and workers. Note this. Do not be sowers of division by being busybodies, working not at all.
21. If you are not serving the Lord, you are sinning against the sacred Trinity. You sin against our Father, who would have you do good, and be imitators of him as dear children. You sin against the Son of God, who has bought you with a price so that you might be zealous for his glory. You sin against the Holy Spirit, whose impulses are not to sleep and idleness, but to quickening and to holiness. May we no longer sin against the Lord by refusing to perform his will!
22. III. We have now reached the last point, and the point that is most serious: WHAT WILL COME OF THIS SIN OF DOING NOTHING? What will come of it? “Be sure your sin will find you out.” Now, since the time is nearly gone, I will not do more than show that these Gadites and Reubenites would be sure to be found out by their own neglect. Their sin would find them out to their shame and sorrow if they did not lend all their strength to their brethren according to their promise.
23. It would find them out like this: they would be ill at ease. One of these days their sin would leap upon their consciences as a lion on its prey. They would wake up and say, “We were wrong. We were bound to have taken our share in that war”; and every man among them who was good for anything would be troubled in heart because he had failed to do his duty in the hour of need. He would feel uneasy: he would not need anyone to point him out with the finger, but he would point himself out and he would say to himself, “I failed in that case. I know I did. I acted very wrongly. I ought to have been with Joshua chasing out those Canaanites: I received my own portion of the land, and ought therefore to have helped others to win their portions.”
24. When conscience was aroused like this, they would also feel themselves to be base and despicable. As king after king was conquered, and the notes of victory were heard all over Canaan, they would think themselves mice rather than men to have shunned so glorious a conflict. They would feel disgraced by their own inaction. Their manhood would be held cheap by the other tribes: in fact, they would become a byword and a proverb, as men do who are notoriously greedy and selfish. Surely it is an intolerable disgrace for anyone to profess to be a man of God, and to have no care about the souls of others, while they are perishing by millions.
25. More than that, the tribes who did not go to the war would be enfeebled by their own inaction. God would have his people learn war; but if these men did not go to the fight they would not be soldiers, and they would not be able to take care of themselves when their land was invaded. How much of sacred education we miss when we turn away from the service of God! I believe that no man understands salvation so well as the man who, having tasted it for himself, has also preached it to those around him. If you want to know the evil of the human heart, try to do good to the unconverted, and endeavour to guide the unbeliever to Jesus. Get a dozen girls around you, my sister, and watch the workings of their hearts as you seek to lead them to Christ, and you will learn much more than you knew before. My dear brother, gather a number of youths around you, and observe their feeling and conduct while you seek their conversion. You will soon know the depravity of human nature if you watch for souls for a little while; and if you get souls converted, and act as a spiritual father to them, you will soon see how much they need the Holy Spirit to keep them; and how much you need him to keep you also, for your patience will be tried. You will learn both the sweet and the bitter of the things of God by being engaged in Christ’s service. Jesus says, “Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me”: service is a yoke we must bear in order to learn from Christ. The only way to learn to swim is to get into the water. To be a soldier and never know the smell of gunpowder is impossible: at least, such soldiers are little to be relied on in case of war. No, no; our sin, if we do nothing, will find us out in our being enfeebled, in our being disgraced, in our feeling that we are base, and in the accusation of our conscience. Let us find this sin out, and shake ourselves free from it before it finds us out.
26. Their sin would also have found them out, had they fallen into it, because they would have been divided from the rest of God’s Israel. If they had not gone across the Jordan to fight, the ten and a half tribes would always have said, “What have we to do with you? The Jordan rolls between us, and so let it do. We do not want any connection with those who acted so basely to us in our hour of need.” They would practically have cut themselves off from union with the Israel of God, and they would have secured to themselves the loss of all fellowship with earnest men. Those who are non-workers lose much by not keeping pace with those who are running the heavenly race. The active are happy: the hand of the diligent makes rich in a spiritual sense. There are those who withhold more than is fitting, and it tends to poverty: I am sure it is so in a spiritual sense.
27. To come more practically home, beloved brethren, if you and I are not serving the Lord, our sin will find us out. It will find us out perhaps in this way. There will be many added to the church and God will prosper it, and we shall hear of it: but we shall feel no joy in it. We had no hand in the work, and we shall find no comfort in the result. We did not point out the way to troubled consciences; we never went to early morning prayer meetings, nor to any prayer meetings, to pray for a blessing; we never spoke a word or even gave a tract away; and therefore we shall see the blessing with our eyes, but we shall not eat of it. While God’s people lift up their loud hallelujahs of joy we shall only mourn, “My leanness, my leanness, woe to me!” It is no joy to see a harvest reaped from fields which we refused to plough.
28. It may be that you will begin to lose all the sweetness of public services. By doing nothing you lose your appetite. Many a person who has no appetite needs a wise doctor to say to him, “Of course you cannot eat, for you do not work. Exercise yourself; and your appetite will return.” He who earns his breakfast enjoys his breakfast; and he who labours for Christ finds that the services of the sanctuary are extremely sweet to him. I know some dear brethren here who cannot get to a Sunday sermon because they have something to do for their Lord throughout the Sabbath; therefore they drop in to this Thursday evening sermon. So they gain a Sabbath in the middle of the week, which is extremely sweet to them. They can only attend one service on the Sunday, but that is doubly refreshing to them. They are engaged at the Ragged School, {c} or at the street corner, where they are accustomed to preach: and the Lord makes up to them their lost opportunities. Believe me, when they do get a meal they heartily appreciate it; for they come with an appetite which they have gathered in the service of their Master. If you do not work, your sin will find you out in the loss of enjoyment when present at the means of grace.
29. I have known this sin to find people out in their families. There is a Christian man: we honour and love him, but he has a son who is a drunkard. Did his good father ever bear any protest against strong drink in all his life? No; he did not like the blue ribbon, {d} of course. I will not dispute about total abstinence, but I do not feel much astonished at a boy drinking much when he sees his godly father drink a little regularly. Every man should labour by precept and example to put down intemperance, and he who does not do so may be sure that his sin will find him out.
30. Here is another. His children have all grown up thoughtless, careless, giddy. He took them to his place of worship, and he now enquires, “Why are they not converted?” Did he ever take them one by one and pray with them? Did he ever speak earnestly to each boy and each girl, and labour for the conversion of each one? I am afraid that in many cases nothing of the kind has been attempted. Certain mistaken individuals almost think it is wrong to seek the conversion of their children while they are children, and their sin finds them out when they see them growing up in ungodliness.
31. Besides, if we do not look after God’s children, it may be that he will not look after ours. “No,” says God, “there were other people’s children in the streets, and you had no concern about them, why should your children fare better? You never opened a Ragged School for the poor, why should I bless you? There were men in your employment by whom you gained your living, but you never spoke to them about their souls, nor cared whether they were saved or damned, and I am not going to look after your family when you have no concern for mine.” “Be sure your sin will find you out.”
32. I do not know how this warning may come home to any brother or sister here who has been idling: but it is better that my warning should find him out than that his sin should find him out. I do not know whether there are any idlers here, though I have a pretty shrewd guess that there are. Friends, neglect of the Lord’s work will come home to you, and I will tell you when it will come to you, if it does not do so before long. When you are sick and ill, your faith in Christ will bring you great comfort, but you will be sorrowful if you have to say to yourself, “Oh, that I had served God while I was young!” A friend said to me not long ago, “My dear sir, you are often laid aside, and no doubt the reason is the imprudent manner in which you worked away in your youth. You preached ten times in a week almost all the year round, year after year, and of course you wore yourself out.” “Oh, yes,” I said, “it may be so, but I do not regret it in the least. Thank God, I preached with all my might all over the land when I could do so; and I would again if I could only get renewed strength!” If I cannot work so much as in earlier days, I do not have the misery of saying, “I wasted my opportunities, and spent my best days in ease.” I do say to myself, “Oh that I had done more, or had done it better; but I am thankful to be able to exonerate myself from all charge of sloth.” If those of us who do much have to whip ourselves a bit, what should those do who practically do nothing at all, and discourage others? What can idlers do except fear that their sin will find them out?
33.
So far I have spoken to God’s people, and if you think that this is
rather rough on them, what shall I say to you who do not love the
Lord at all? Oh sirs, if the fan that is in Christ’s hand purges his
own floor in this stern way, what will that fan do with you who are
as chaff to the wheat! If he sits here as a refiner, and purifies the
sons of Levi, and puts even the gold into the fire, what will become
of the dross? “If the righteous scarcely are saved, where shall the
ungodly and the sinner appear?” If the language of God is sharp even
to his own beloved, because he says, “As many as I love, I rebuke and
chasten: be zealous therefore, and repent,” what will his language be
to those who are not his children, but are living in open rebellion
against him? Tremble, you who forget God. Hear his own words, they
are not mine: “Now consider this, you who forget God, lest I tear you
in pieces, and there is no one to deliver.” May God help you to flee
from the sin of doing nothing! May the Lord Jesus Christ himself lead
you into the Father’s service! Amen.
[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon — Nu 32]
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Public Worship, Revivals and Missions — Prayer To The Captain Of The Host” 968}
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “The Christian, Dedication To God — ‘My Beloved Is Mine And I Am His’ ” 660}
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Spirit of the Psalms — Psalm 34” 34 @@ "(Version 1)"}
{a} Smithfield: The place where the fires that Queen Mary
(1553-1558) ordered to be lit to put to death such Protestant
leaders and men of influence as Cranmer, Ridley, Latimer and
Hooper, but also hundreds of lesser men who refused to adopt the
Catholic faith. See Explorer
"http://www.britannia.com/history/narrefhist3.html"
{b} Upas Tree: is an evergreen tree native to south-eastern
Asia, from India and Sri Lanka east to southern China, the
Philippines and Fiji; closely related species also occur in
eastern Africa. It produces a highly poisonous latex, known in
Java as "Upas," from the Javanese word for "poison." See
Explorer "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upas"
{c} Ragged School: A free school for children of the poorest
class. OED.
{d} Blue Ribbon: A small strip of blue ribbon worn by certain
abstainers from alcoholic beverages, as a means of mutual
recognition, and as a public indication of their principles;
hence to take the blue ribbon. Blue Ribbon Army: the
association of such Total Abstainers. OED.
Public Worship, Revivals and Missions
968 — Prayer To The Captain Of The Host
1 Captain of thine enlisted host,
Display thy glorious banner high;
The summons send from coast to coast,
And call a numerous army nigh.
2 A solemn jubilee proclaim,
Proclaim the great sabbatic day;
Assert the glories of thy name:
Spoil Satan of his wish’d-for prey.
3 Bid, bid thy heralds publish loud
The peaceful blessings of thy reign;
And when they speak of sprinkled blood,
The mystery to the heart explain.
4 Chase the usurper from his throne,
Oh! chase him to his destined hell;
Stout-hearted sinners overcome;
And glorious in thy temple dwell.
5 Fight for thyself, oh Jesus, fight,
The travail of thy soul regain;
To each blind soul make darkness light,
To all let crooked paths be plain.
Christopher Batty, 1757, a.
The Christian, Dedication To God
660 — “My Beloved Is Mine And I Am His”
1 When I had wander’d from his fold,
His love the wanderer sought;
When slave like into bondage sold,
His blood my freedom bought.
2 Therefore that life, by him redeem’d,
Is his through all its days;
And as with blessings it hath teem’d,
So let it teem with praise.
3 For I am his, and he is mine,
The God whom I adore!
My Father, Saviour, Comforter,
Now and for evermore.
4 When sunk in sorrow, I despair’d,
And changed my hopes for fears,
He bore my griefs, my burden shared,
And wiped away my tears.
5 Therefore the joy by him restored,
To him by right belongs:
And to my gracious loving Lord,
I’ll sing through life my songs:
6 For I am his, and his is mine,
The God whom I adore!
My Father, Saviour, Comforter,
Now and for evermore!
John S. B. Monsell, 1863.
Spirit of the Psalms
Psalm 34 (Version 1)
1 Through all the changing scenes of life,
In trouble and in joy,
The praises of my God shall still
My heart and tongue employ.
2 Of his deliverance I will boast,
Till all that are distress’d
From my example comfort take,
And charm their griefs to rest.
3 Come magnify the lord with me;
With me exalt his name;
When in distress to him I call’d
He to my rescue came.
4 Oh make but trial of his love;
Experience will decide
How blest are they, and only they,
Who in his truth confide!
5 Fear him, ye saints, and you will then
Have nothing else to fear;
Make you his service your delight,
He’ll make your wants his care.
Tate and Brady, 1696.
Psalm 34 (Version 2)
1 Lord, I will bless thee all my days,
Thy praise shall dwell upon my tongue
My soul shall glory in thy grace,
While saints rejoice to hear the song.
2 Come, magnify the Lord with me;
Come, let us all exalt his name:
I sought the eternal God, and he
Has not exposed my hope to shame.
3 I told him all my secret grief,
My secret groaning reach’d his ears;
He gave my inward pains relief,
And calm’d the tumult of my fears.
4 To him the poor lift up their eyes,
Their faces feel the heavenly shine;
A beam of mercy from the skies
Fills them with light and joy divine.
5 His holy angels pitch their tents
Around the men that serve the Lord;
Oh hear and love him, all his saints;
Taste of his grace, and trust his word.
Isaac Watts, 1719.
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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