1926. Love’s Complaining

No. 1926-32:577. A Sermon Delivered On Lord’s Day Morning, October 24, 1886, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.

Nevertheless I have something against you, because you have left your first love. Remember therefore from where you are fallen, and repent, and do the first works; or else I will come to you quickly, and will remove your lampstand out of its place; unless you repent. {Re 2:4,5}

For other sermons on this text:
   {See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 217, “Declension from First Love” 210}
   {See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 1926, “Love’s Complaining” 1927}

1. It was the work of the priest to go into the holy place and to trim the seven-branched lamp of gold: see how our Great High Priest walks in the midst of the seven golden lampstands: his work is not occasional, but constant. Wearing robes which are at once royal and priestly, he is seen lighting the holy lamps, pouring in the sacred oil, and removing impurities which would dim the light.

2. Hence our Lord’s fitness to deal with the churches, which are these golden lampstands, for no one knows so much about the lamps as the person whose constant work it is to watch them and trim them. No one knows the churches as Jesus does, for the care of all the churches daily comes upon him, he continually walks among them, and holds their ministers as stars in his right hand. His eyes are perpetually upon the churches, so that he knows their works, their sufferings, and their sins; and those eyes are as a flame of fire, so that he sees with a penetration, discernment, and accuracy to which no other can attain. We sometimes judge the condition of religion too leniently, or else we err on the other side, and judge too severely. Our eyes are dim with the world’s smoke; but his eyes are as a flame of fire. He sees the churches through and through, and knows their true condition much better than they know themselves. The Lord Jesus Christ is a most careful observer of churches and of individuals; nothing is hidden from his observant eye.

3. Just as he is the most careful observer, so he is the most candid. He is always “the faithful and true witness.” He loves much, and therefore he never judges harshly. He loves much, and therefore he always judges jealously. Jealousy is the sure attendant of such love as his. He will neither speak smooth words nor bitter words; but he will speak the truth — the truth in love, the truth as he himself perceives it, and as he would have us perceive it. Well may he say, “He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches,” since his sayings are so true, so just, so weighty.

4. Certainly no observer can be so tender as the Son of God. Those lamps are very precious to him: it cost him his life to light them. “Christ loved the church, and gave himself for it.” Every church is to our Lord a more sublime thing than a constellation in the heavens: just as he is precious to his saints, so they are precious to him. He cares little for empires, kingdoms, or republics; but his heart is set on the kingdom of righteousness, of which his cross is the royal standard. He must reign until his foes are vanquished, and this is the great thought of his mind at this present time, “From henceforth waiting until his enemies are made his footstool.” He does not cease to watch over his church: his sacrifice is ended, but not his service in caring for the golden lamps. He has completed the redemption of his bride, but he continues her preservation.

5. I therefore feel at this time that we may well join in a prayer to our Lord Jesus to come into our midst and put our light in order. Oh for a visit from him such as he paid in vision to the seven churches of Asia! With him is the oil to feed the living flame, and he knows how to pour it in according to due measure; with him are those golden snuffers with which to remove every overflow of wickedness, that our lights may so shine before men, that they may see our good works, and glorify our Father who is in heaven. Oh for his presence now, to search us and to sanctify us; to cause us to shine out to his Father’s praise! We would be judged by the Lord, so that we may not be condemned with the world. We would pray this morning, “Search me, oh God, and know my heart: try me, and know my thoughts; and see if there is any wicked way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.” All things are naked and open to the eyes of him with whom we have to deal; and we delight to have it so. We invite you, oh great High Priest, to come into this sanctuary, and look after your lamp this morning.

6. In the text, as it is addressed to the church at Ephesus and to us, we notice three things. First, we note that Christ perceives: “I know your works … nevertheless I have something against you.” Secondly, Christ prescribes: “Remember, therefore, from where you are fallen, and repent,” and so forth. Thirdly, Christ persuades — persuades with a threatening: “I will remove your lampstand out of its place”; persuades, also, with a promise: “To him who overcomes I will give to eat from the tree of life, which is in the midst of the paradise of God.” If the Lord himself is here at this time, our plan of discourse will be a river of life; but if he is not among us by his Holy Spirit, it will be as the dry bed of a torrent which bears the name of “river,” but lacks the living stream. We expect our Lord’s presence; he will come to the lamps which his office calls upon him to trim; it has been his custom to be with us; some of us have met him this morning already, and we have constrained him to stay with us.

7. I. First, then, we notice that HE PERCEIVES.

8. Our Lord sorrowfully perceives the faults of his church — “Nevertheless I have something against you”; but he does not so perceive those faults as to be forgetful of what he can admire and accept; for he begins his letter with commendations, “I know your works, and your labour, and your patience, and how you cannot tolerate those who are evil.” Do not think, my brethren, that our Beloved is blind to the beauties of his church. On the contrary, he delights to observe them. He can see beauties where she herself cannot see them. Where we observe much to deplore, his loving eyes see much to admire. The graces which he himself creates he can always perceive. When we in the earnestness of self-examination overlook them, and write bitter things against ourselves, the Lord Jesus sees even in those bitter self-condemnations a life and earnestness and sincerity which he loves. Our Lord has a keen eye for all that is good. When he searches our hearts he never passes by the faintest longing, or desire, or faith, or love, of any of his people. He says, “I know your works.”

9. But this is our point at this time, that while Jesus can see all that is good, yet in very faithfulness he sees all that is evil. His love is not blind. He does not say, “As many as I love I commend”; but, “As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten.” It is more necessary for us that we should make a discovery of our faults than of our virtues. So notice in this text that Christ perceives the flaw in his church, even in the midst of her earnest service. The church at Ephesus was full of work. “I know your works and your labour, and for my name’s sake you have laboured, and have not fainted.” It was such a laborious church that it pushed on and on with diligent perseverance, and never seemed to flag in its divine mission. Oh that we could say as much of all our churches! I have lived to see many brilliant projects lit up and left to die out in smoke. I have heard of schemes which were to illuminate the world; but not a spark remains. Holy perseverance is a great desire. In these thirty-three years we thank God he has enabled us to labour and not to faint. There has been a continuance of everything attempted, and no drawing back from anything. “This is the work, this is the labour,” to hold out even to the end. Oh how I have dreaded lest we should have to give up any holy enterprise or cut short any gracious effort! So far the Lord has helped us. With men and means, liberality and zeal, he has supplied us. In this case the angel of the church has been very little of an angel from heaven, but very much of a human angel; for in the weakness of my flesh and in the heaviness of my spirit I have pursued my calling, but I have pursued it. By the help of God I continue to this day, and this church with equal footsteps is at my side; for which the whole praise is due to the Lord, who does not faint, neither is weary. Having put my hand to the plough I have not looked back, but have steadily pressed forward, making straight furrows; but it has been by the grace of God alone.

10. Alas! under all the labouring the Lord Jesus perceived that the Ephesians had left their first love; and this was a grievous fault. So it may be in this church; every wheel may continue to revolve, and the whole machinery of ministry may be kept going at its normal rate, and yet there may be a great secret evil which Jesus perceives, and this may be marring everything.

11. But this church at Ephesus was not only laborious, it was patient in suffering great persecution. He says of it: “I know your works and your patience, and how you have borne, and have patience, and have not fainted.” Persecution upon persecution visited the faithful, but they bore it all with holy courage and constancy, and still continued confessing their Lord. This was good, and the Lord highly approved of it; but yet underneath it he saw the signs of decline; they had left their first love. So there may seem to be all the patient endurance and dauntless courage that there should be, and yet just as a fair apple may have a worm at its core, so may it be with the church when it looks best to the eye of friends.

12. The Ephesian church excelled in something else, namely, in its discipline, its soundness in the faith, and fidelity towards heretics; for the Lord says of it, “how you cannot tolerate those who are evil.” They would not have it: they would not tolerate false doctrine, they would not put up with unclean living. They fought against evil, not only in the common people, but in prominent individuals. “You have tried those who say they are apostles, and are not, and have found them liars.” They had dealt with the great ones; they had not flinched from the unmasking of falsehood. Those who seemed to be apostles they had dragged to the light and discovered to be deceivers. This church was not honeycombed with doubt; it laid no claim to breadth of thought and liberality of view; it was honest to its Lord. He says of it, “This you have, that you hate the deeds of the Nicolaitans, which I also hate.” This was grand of them: it showed a backbone of truth. I wish some of the churches of this age had a little of this holy decisiveness about them; for nowadays, if a man is clever; he may preach the vilest lie that was ever vomited from the mouth of hell, and it will go down with some. He may assail every doctrine of the gospel, he may blaspheme the Holy Trinity, he may trample on the blood of the Son of God, and yet nothing shall be said about it if he is held in repute as a man of advanced thought and liberal ideas. The church at Ephesus was not of this mind. She was strong in her convictions; she could not yield the faith, nor play the traitor to her Lord. For this her Lord commended her: and yet he says, “I have something against you, because you have left your first love.” When love dies orthodox doctrine becomes a corpse, a powerless formalism. Adhesion to the truth sours into bigotry when the sweetness and light of love for Jesus depart. Love Jesus, and, then it is good to hate the deeds of the Nicolaitans; but mere hate of evil will tend to evil if love for Jesus is not there to sanctify it. I need not make a personal application; but what is spoken to Ephesus may be spoken at this hour to ourselves. Just as we hope that we may appropriate the commendation, so let us see whether the expostulation may not also apply to us. “I have something against you, because you have left your first love.” So I have shown you that Jesus sees the evil beneath all the good: he does not ignore the good, but he will not pass over the evil.

13. So, next, this evil was a very serious one; it was love declining: “You have left your first love.” “Is that serious?” one says. It is the most serious evil of all; for the church is the bride of Christ, and for a bride to fail in love is to fail in all things. It is idle for the wife to say that she is obedient, and so forth: if love for her husband has evaporated, her wifely duty cannot be fulfilled, she has lost the very life and soul of the marriage state. So, my brethren, this is a most important matter, our love for Christ, because it touches the very heart of that communion with him which is the crown and essence of our spiritual life. As a church we must love Jesus, or else we have lost our reason for existence. A church has no reason for being a church when she has no love within her heart, or when that love grows cold. Have I not often reminded you that almost any disease may be hopefully endured except disease of the heart? But when our sickness is a disease of the heart, it is full of danger; and it was so in this case: “You have left your first love.” It is a disease of the heart, a central, fatal disease, unless the great Physician shall intervene to stop its progress, and to deliver us from it. Oh, in any man, in any woman, any child of God here, let alone in the church as a whole, if there is a leaving of the first love, it is a woeful thing! Lord have mercy upon us; Christ have mercy upon us: this should be our solemn litany at once. No peril can be greater than this. Lose love, lose all. Leave our first love, we have left strength, and peace, and joy, and holiness.

14. I call your attention, however, to this point, that it was he who found it out. “I have something against you, because you have left your first love.” Jesus himself found it out! I do not know how it strikes you; but as I thought it over, this fact brought the tears to my eyes. When I begin to stop loving Christ, or love him less than I do, I would like to find it out myself; and if I did so, there would soon be a cure for it. But for him to find it out, oh, it seems so hard, so sad a thing! That we should keep on growing cold, and cold, and cold, and never care about it until the Beloved points it out to us. Why even the angel of the church did not find it out; the minister did not know it; but he saw it who loves us so well, that he delights in our love, and pines when it begins to fail. To him we are unutterably dear; he loved us up out of the pit into his bosom, loved us up from the dunghill among beggars to sit at his right hand upon his throne; and it is sorrowful that he should have to complain of our cooling love while we are utterly indifferent to the matter. Does Jesus care more about our love than we do? He loves us better than we love ourselves. How good of him to care one jot about our love! This is no complaint of an enemy, but of a dear wounded friend.

15. I notice that Jesus found it out with great pain. I can hardly conceive of a greater grief to him as the husband of his church than to look her in the face and say, “You have left your first love.” What can she give him except love? Will she deny him this? A poor thing is the church by herself: her Lord married her when she was in penury; and if she does not give him love, what does she have to give him? If she begins to be unfaithful in heart to him, what is she worth? Why, an unloving wife is a foul fountain of discomfort and dishonour to her husband. Oh beloved, shall it be so with you? Will you grieve Emmanuel? Will you wound your Well-Beloved? Church of God, will you grieve him whose heart was pierced for your redemption? Brother, sister, can you and I let Jesus find out that our love is departing, that we are ceasing to be zealous for his name? Can we wound him so? Is this not to crucify the Lord afresh? Might he not hold up his hands this morning with fresh blood on them, and say, “These are the wounds which I received in the house of my friends. It was nothing that I died for them, but it is bad that, after having died for them, they have failed to give me their hearts?” Jesus is not so sick of our sin as of our lukewarmness. It is a sad business to my heart; I hope it will be sad to all whom it concerns, that our Lord should be the first to find out our declines in love.

16. The Saviour, having thus seen this with pain, now points it out. As I read this passage over to myself, I noticed that the Saviour had nothing to say about the sins of the heathen among whom the Ephesians lived: they are alluded to because it must have been the heathen who persecuted the church, and caused it to endure, and exhibit patience. The Saviour, however, has nothing to say against the heathen; and he does not say much more than a word about those who were evil. These had been cast out, and he merely says: “You cannot tolerate those who are evil.” He denounced no judgment upon the Nicolaitans, except that he hated them; and even the apostles who were found to be liars the Master dismisses with that word. He leaves the ungodly in their own condemnation. But what he has to say is against his own beloved: “I have something against you.” It seems as if the Master might pass over sin in a thousand others, but he cannot wink at failure of love in his own espoused one. “The Lord your God is a jealous God.” The Saviour loves, so that his love is cruel as the grave against cold-heartedness. He said of the church of Laodicea, “I will spue you out of my mouth.” This was one of his own churches, too, and yet she made him sick with her lukewarmness. May God grant that we may not be guilty of such a crime as that!

17. The Saviour pointed out the failure of love; and when he pointed it out he called it by a lamentable name. “Remember therefore from where you are fallen.” He calls it a fall to leave our first love. Brothers, sisters, this church had not been licentious, it had not gone aside to false doctrine, it had not become idle, it had not been cowardly in the hour of persecution; but this one sin summed up the whole — she did not love Christ as she once loved him, and he calls this a fall. A fall indeed it is. “Oh, I thought,” one says, “that if a member of the church got drunk that was a fall.” That is a grievous fall, but it is a fall if we become intoxicated with the world, and lose the freshness of our devotion to Jesus. It is a fall from a high estate of fellowship to the dust of worldliness. “You are fallen.” The word sounds very harshly in my ears — no, not harshly, for his love speaks it in so pathetic a manner; but it thunders deep down in my soul. I cannot bear it. It is so sadly true. “You are fallen.” “Remember from where you are fallen.” Indeed, oh Lord, we have fallen when we have left our first love for you.

18. The Master evidently thinks this decline of love to be a personal wrong done to himself. “I have something against you.” It is not an offence against the king, nor against the judge, but against the Lord Jesus as the husband of the church: an offence against the very heart of Christ himself. “I have something against you.” He does not say, “Your neighbour has something against you, your child has something against you, your God has something against you,” but “I, I your hope, your joy, your delight, your Saviour, I have this against you.” The word something is an intruder here. Our translators put it in italics, and well they might, for it is a bad word, since it seems to make a small thing of a very grave change. The Lord has this against us, and it is no mere “something.” Come, brothers and sisters, if we have not broken any law, nor offended in any way so as to grieve anyone else, this is sorrow enough, if our love has grown in the least degree chilly towards him; for we have done a terrible wrong to our best friend. This is the bitterness of our offence: Against you, you only, have I sinned, and done this evil in your sight, that I have left my first love. The Saviour tells us this most lovingly. I wish I knew how to speak as tenderly as he does; and yet I feel at this moment that I can and must be tender in this matter, for I am speaking about myself as much as about anyone else. I am grieving, grieving over some here present, grieving for all of us, but grieving most of all for myself, that our Well-Beloved should have reason to say, “I have something against you, because you have left your first love.”

19. So much for what our Lord perceives. Holy Spirit, bless it to us!

20. II. And now, secondly, let us notice what THE SAVIOUR PRESCRIBES. The Saviour’s prescription is couched in these three words: “Remember,” “Repent,” “Return.”

21. The first word is Remember. “You have left your first love.” Remember, then, what your first love was, and compare your present condition with it. At first nothing diverted you from your Lord. He was your life, your love, your joy. Now you look for recreation somewhere else, and other charms and other beauties win your heart. Are you not ashamed of this? Once you were never wearied with hearing about him and serving him. You have never done too much for Christ and his gospel: many sermons, many prayer meetings, many Bible-readings, and yet not too many. Now sermons are long, and services are dull, and you must have your jaded appetite aroused with novelties. How is this? Once you were never displeased with Jesus whatever he did with you. If you had been sick, or poor, or dying, you would still have loved and blessed his name for all things. He remembers this fondness, and regrets its departure. He says to you today, “I remember you, the kindness of your youth, the love of your espousals, when you went after me in the wilderness.” You would have gone after your Lord anywhere in those days: across the sea, or through the fire, you would have pursued him; nothing would have been too hot or too heavy for you then. Is it so now? Remember! Remember from where you are fallen. Remember the vows, the tears, the communings, the happy raptures of those days; remember and compare with them your present state.

22. Remember and consider, that when you were in your first love, that love was none too warm. Even then, when you lived to him, and for him, and with him, you were none too holy, none too consecrated, none too zealous. If you were not too forward then, what are you now — now that you have come down even from that poor attainment? Remember the past with sad forebodings of the future. If you have come down from where you were, who is to tell you where you will cease your declining? He who has sunk so far may fall much farther. Is it not so? Though you say in your heart like Hazael, “Is your servant a dog?” you may turn out worse than a dog yet, yes, prove a very wolf. Who knows? you may even now be a devil! You may turn out a Judas, a son of perdition, and deny your Master, selling him for thirty pieces of silver. When a stone begins to fall it falls with an ever-increasing rate; and when a soul begins to leave its first love, it leaves it more and more, and more and more, until at last it falls terribly. Remember!

23. The next word of the prescription is “Repent.” Repent as you did at first. The word so suitable to sinners is suitable to you, for you have grievously sinned. Repent of the wrong you have done your Lord by leaving your first love of him. Could you have lived a seraphic life, only breathing his love, only existing for him, you would have done little enough; but to leave your first love, how grievously have you wronged him! That love was well deserved, was it not? Why, then, have you left it? Is Jesus less fair than he was? Does he love you less than he did? Has he been less kind and tender to you than he used to be? Say, have you outgrown him? Can you do without him? Do you have a hope of salvation apart from him? I charge you, repent of your wrong doing towards one who has a greater claim upon your love than ever he had. He ought to be today loved more than you loved him at your very best! Oh my heart, is not all this most surely true? How badly you are behaving! What an ingrate you are! Repent! Repent!

24. Repent of much good that you have left undone through lack of love. Oh, if you had always loved your Lord at your best, what might you not have known about him by this time! What good deeds you might have done by force of his love! How many hearts might you have won for your Lord if your own heart had been more full of love, if your own soul had been more on fire! You have lived a poor beggarly life because you have allowed such poverty of love.

25. Repent! Repent! To my mind, as I thought this text over, the call for repentance grew louder and louder, because of the occasion of its utterance. Here is the glorious Lord, coming to his church and speaking to her angel in tones of tender kindness. He condescends to visit his people in all his majesty and glory, intending nothing but to reveal himself in love to his own elect as he does not do to the world. And yet he is compelled even then to take to chiding, and to say, “I have this against you, because you have left your first love.” Here is a love-visit clouded with upbraiding — necessary upbraiding. What mischief sin has done! It is a dreadful thing that when Jesus comes to his own dear bride he should have to speak in grief, and not in joy. Must holy communion, which is the wine of heaven, be embittered with the tonic of expostulation? I see the upper springs of nearest fellowship where the waters of life leap from their first source in the heart of God. Are not these streams most pure and precious? If a man drinks from it he lives for ever. Shall it be that even at the fountain-head they shall be dashed with bitterness? Even when Christ communes personally with us must he say, “I have something against you?” Break, my heart, that it should be so! Well may we repent with a deep repentance when our choicest joys are flavoured with the bitter herbs of regret, that our best Beloved should have something against us.

26. But then he says in effect, Return. The third word is this — “Repent, and do the first works.” Notice, that he does not say, “Repent, and get back your first love.” This seems rather unusual; but then love is the chief of the first works, and, moreover, the first works can only come from the first love. There must be in every declining Christian a practical repentance. Do not be satisfied with regrets and resolves. Do the first works; do not strain after the first emotions, but do the first works. No renewal is so valuable as the practical cleansing of our way. If the life is made right, it will prove that the love is so. In doing the first works you will prove that you have come back to your first love. The prescription is complete, because the doing of the first works is meant to include the feeling of the first feelings, the sighing of the first sighs, the enjoying of the first joys: these are all supposed to accompany returning obedience and activity.

27. We are to get back to these first works at once. Most men come to Christ with a leap; and I have observed that many who come back to him usually do so at a bound. The slow revival of one’s love is almost an impossibility; you might as well expect the dead to rise by degrees. Love for Christ is often love at first sight: we see him, and are conquered by him. If we grow cold, the best thing we can do is to fasten our eyes on him until we cry, “My soul melted while my Beloved spoke.” It is a happy circumstance if I can cry, “Even before I was aware, my soul made me like the chariots of Amminadib.” How sweet for the Lord to put us back again at once into the old place, back again in a moment! My prayer is that it may be so this morning with any declining one. May you so repent as not merely to feel the old feelings, but instantly to do the first works, and be once more as eager, as zealous, as generous, as prayerful, as you used to be! If we should again see you breaking the alabaster box, we should know that the old love had returned. May the good Master help us to do as well as ever, yes, much better than before!

28. Notice, however, that this will require much of effort and warfare; for the promise which is made is “to him who overcomes.” Overcoming implies conflict. Depend on it, if you conquer a wandering heart, you will have to fight for it. “To him who overcomes,” he says, “I will give to eat from the tree of life.” You must fight your way back to the garden of the Lord. You will have to fight against lethargy, against an evil heart of unbelief, against the benumbing influence of the world. In the name and power of him who tells you to repent, you must wrestle and struggle until you get the mastery over self, and yield your whole nature to your Lord.

29. So I have shown you how Christ prescribes, and I greatly need a few minutes for the last part, because I wish to dwell with solemn earnestness on it. I have no desire to say a word by which I should show myself off as an orator, but I long to speak a word by which I may prove myself a true brother pleading with you in deep sympathy, because in all the ill which I rebuke I mourn my own personal share. Bless us, oh Spirit of the Lord!

30. III. Now see, brethren, HE PERSUADES. This is the third point: the Lord Jesus persuades his erring one to repent.

31. First, he persuades with a warning: “I will come to you”; “quickly” is not in the original: the 1881 English Revised Version has left it out. Our Lord is generally very slow at the work of judgment: “I will come to you, and will remove your lampstand out of its place, unless you repent.” This he must do: he cannot allow his light to be apart from love, and if the first love is left, the church shall be left in darkness. The truth must always shine, but not always in the same place. The place must be made fit by love, or the light shall be removed.

32. Our Lord means, first, I will take away the comfort of the Word. He raises up certain ministers, and makes them burning and shining lights in the midst of his church, and when the people gather together they are cheered and enlightened by their shining. A ministry blessed by the Lord is an exceptional comfort to the church of God. The Lord can easily take away that light which has brought comfort to so many: he can move the good man to another sphere, or he can call him home to his rest. The extinguisher of death can put out the light which now gladdens the house. The church which has lost a ministry by which the Lord’s glory has shone out has lost a good deal; and if this loss has been sent in chastisement for decline of love it is all the harder to bear. I can point you to places where once was a man of God, and all went well; but the people grew cold, and the Lord took away their leader, and the place is now a desolation: those who now attend those courts and listen to a modern ministry cry out because of the famine of the word of the Lord. Oh friends, let us value the light while we have it, and prove that we do so by profiting by it; but how can we profit if we leave our first love? The Lord may take away our comfort as a church if our first zeal shall die down.

33. But the lampstand also symbolizes usefulness: it is that by which a church shines. The use of a church is to preserve the truth, by which to illuminate the neighbourhood, to illuminate the world. God can soon cut short our usefulness, and he will do so if we cut short our love. If the Lord is withdrawn, we can go on with our work as we used to do, but nothing will come of it: we can go on with Sunday Schools, mission stations, branch churches, and yet accomplish nothing. Brethren, we can go on with the Orphanage, the College, the Colportage, the Evangelistic Society, the Book Fund, and everything else, and yet nothing will be accomplished if the arm of the Lord is not made bare.

34. He can, if he wills, even take away from the church her very existence as a church. Ephesus is gone: nothing but ruins can be found. Rome once held a noble church of Christ, but has her name not become the symbol of antichrist? The Lord can soon take away lampstands out of their places if the church uses her light for her own glory, and is not filled with his love. God forbid that we should fall under this condemnation! By your mercy, oh Lord, forbid it! Let it not so happen to any one of us. Yet this may occur to us as individuals. You, dear brother or sister, if you lose your first love, may soon lose your joy, your peace, your usefulness. You, who are now so bright, may grow dull. You, who are now so useful, may become useless. You were once an instructor of the foolish, and a teacher of babes; but if the Lord is withdrawn you will instruct no one, you will be in the dark yourself: Alas! you may come to lose the very name of Christians, as some have done who once seemed to be burning and shining lights. They were foolish virgins, and before long they were heard to cry, “Our lamps are gone out!” The Lord can and will take away the lampstand out of its place if we put him out of his place by a failure in our love for him.

35. How can I persuade you, then, better than with the warning words of my Master? My beloved, I persuade you from my very soul not to encounter these dangers, not to run these terrible risks; for as you would not wish to see either the church or yourself left without the light of God, to pine in darkness, it is necessary that you remain in Christ, and go on to love him more and more.

36. The Saviour holds out a promise as his other incentive. Upon this I can only dwell for a minute. It seems a very wonderful promise to me: “To him who overcomes I will give to eat from the tree of life, which is in the midst of the paradise of God.” Observe, those who lose their first love fall, but those who remain in love are made to stand. In contrast to the fall which took place in the paradise of God, we have man eating from the tree of life, and so living for ever. If we, through grace, overcome the common tendency to decline in love, then we shall be confirmed and settled in the favour of the Lord. By eating from the tree of knowledge of good and evil we fell; by eating from the fruit of a better tree we live and stand firm for ever. Life proved true by love shall be nourished on the best of food: it shall be sustained by fruit from the garden of the Lord himself, gathered by the Saviour’s own hand.

37. Notice again, those who lose their first love wander far, they depart from God. “But,” says the Lord, “if you keep your first love you shall not wander, but you shall come into closer fellowship. I will bring you nearer to the centre. I will bring you to eat from the tree of life which is in the midst of the paradise of God.” The inner ring is for those who grow in love; the centre of all joy is only to be reached by much love. We know God as we love God. We enter into his paradise as we remain in his love. What joy is here! What a reward love has!

38. Then notice the mystical blessing which lies here, waiting for your meditation. Do you know how we fell? The woman took from the fruit of the forbidden tree, and gave to Adam, and Adam ate and fell. The opposite is the case in the promise before us: the Second Adam takes from the divine fruit from the tree of promise, and hands it to his spouse; she eats and lives for ever. He who is the Father of the age of grace hands down to us immortal joys, which he has picked from an unwithering tree. The reward of love is to eat the fruit of life. “We are getting into mysteries,” one says. Yes, I am intentionally lifting a corner of the veil, and no more. I only intend to give you a glimpse at the promised blessing. Into his innermost joys our Lord will bring us if we keep up our first love, and go from strength to strength in it. Marvellous things are locked up in the chests of which love holds the key. Sin set the angel with a flaming sword between us and the tree of life in the midst of the garden; but love has quenched that sword, and now the angel beckons us to come into the innermost secrets of paradise. We shall know as we are known when we love as we are loved. We shall live the life of God when we are entirely taken up with the love of God. The love of Jesus answered by our love for Jesus makes the sweetest music the heart can know. No joy on earth is equal to the bliss of being all taken up with love for Christ. If I had my choice of all the lives that I could live, I certainly would not choose to be an emperor, nor to be a millionaire, nor to be a philosopher; for power, and wealth, and knowledge bring with them sorrow and travail; but I would choose to have nothing to do except to love my Lord Jesus — nothing, I mean, except to do all things for his sake, and out of love for him. Then I know that I should be in paradise, yes, in the midst of the paradise of God, and I should have food to eat which is all unknown to men of the world.

39. Heaven on earth is abounding love for Jesus. This is the first and last of true delight — to love him who is the first and the last. To love Jesus is another name for paradise. Lord, let me know this by continual experience. “You are soaring aloft,” one cries. Yes, I admit it. Oh that I could allure you to a heavenward flight upon wings of love! There is bitterness in declining love: it is a very consumption of the soul, and makes us weak, and faint, and low. But true love is the foretaste of glory. See the heights, the glittering heights, the glorious heights, the everlasting hills to which the Lord of life will conduct all those who are faithful to him through the power of his Holy Spirit. See, oh love, your ultimate abode! I pray that what I have said may be blessed by the Holy Spirit to the bringing of us all nearer to the Bridegroom of our souls. Amen.

[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon — Re 1:1-2:7]
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Jesus Christ, His Praise — Christ’s Glorious Person” 425}
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “The Christian, Privileges, Communion with Jesus — ‘Who Loved Me, And Gave Himself For Me’ ” 797}
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “The Christian, Privileges, Communion with Jesus — My Jesus, I Love Thee” 804}
The Sword And The Trowel. Edited by C. H. Spurgeon.
Contents for November, 1886.
The Portrait. By C. H. Spurgeon.
Anne Jones; or, Put the Kettle On.
Tell no Untruth.
“All of Grace.”
Did not Succeed.
Calvinism.
Water Sails.
William Prynne and the “Histrio-Mastrix.”
Huntington and his “Bank of Faith.”
Never “Negro” your Brethren.
Our Spiritual Life — its Influence upon our Preaching.
Homes for Working Girls in London.
The Obligations of Church Members.
Notices of Books.
Notes.
Pastors’ College.
Stockwell Orphanage.
Colportage Association.
Society of Evangelists.

Price 3d. Post-free, 4 Stamps.
Passmore & Alabaster, 4 Paternoster Buildings; and all Booksellers.


Jesus Christ, His Praise
425 — Christ’s Glorious Person
1 Now to the Lord a noble song!
   Awake, my soul, awake, my tongue;
   Hosanna to th’ Eternal Name,
   And all his boundless love proclaim.
2 See where it shines in Jesus’ face,
   The brightest image of his grace;
   God, in the person of his Son,
   Has all his mightest works outdone.
3 The spacious earth and spreading flood
   Proclaim the wise and powerful God,
   And thy rich glories from afar
   Sparkle in every rolling star.
4 But in his looks a glory stands,
   The noblest labour of thine hands;
   The pleasing lustre of his eyes
   Outshines the wonders of the skies.
5 Grace! ‘tis a sweet, a charming theme;
   My thoughts rejoice at Jesus’ name:
   Ye angels dwell upon the sound,
   Ye heavens reflect it to the ground!
                           Isaac Watts, 1709.


The Christian, Privileges, Communion with Jesus
797 — “Who Loved Me, And Gave Himself For Me” <8.8.6.>
1 Oh Love divine, how sweet thou art!
   When shall I find my willing heart
      All taken up by thee?
   I thirst, I faint, I die to prove
   The greatness of redeeming love,
      The love of Christ to me!
2 Stronger his love than death or hell;
   Its riches are unsearchable:
      The first-born sons of light
   Desire in vain its depths to see;
   They cannot reach the mystery,
      The length, and breadth, and height.
3 God only knows the love of God:
   Oh that it now were shed abroad
      In this poor stony heart;
   For love I sigh, for love I pine:
   This only portion, Lord, be mine,
      Be mine this better part.
4 Oh that I could for ever sit
   With Mary at the Master’s feet;
      Be this my happy choice:
   My only care, delight, and bliss,
   My joy, my heaven on earth, be this,
      To hear the Bridegroom’s voice.
                        Charles Wesley, 1746.


The Christian, Privileges, Communion with Jesus
804 — My Jesus, I Love Thee <11s.>
1 My Jesus, I love thee, I know thou art mine,
   For thee all the follies of sin I resign;
   My gracious Redeemer, amy Saviour art thou,
   If ever I loved thee, my Jesus, ‘tis now.
2 I love thee because thou hast first loved me,
   And purchased my pardon on Calvary’s tree;
   I love thee for wearing the thorns on thy brow,
   If ever I loved thee, my Jesus, ‘tis now.
3 I will love thee in life, I will love thee in death,
   And praise thee as long as thou lendest me breath;
   And say when the death dew lies cold on my brow,
   If ever I loved thee, my Jesus, ‘tis now.
4 In mansions of glory and endless delight,
   I’ll ever adore thee in heaven so bright;
   I’ll sing with the glittering crown on my brow;
   If ever I loved thee, my Jesus, ‘tis now.
                  London Hymn Book, 1864.

Spurgeon Sermons

These sermons from Charles Spurgeon are a series that is for reference and not necessarily a position of Answers in Genesis. Spurgeon did not entirely agree with six days of creation and dives into subjects that are beyond the AiG focus (e.g., Calvinism vs. Arminianism, modes of baptism, and so on).

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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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