196. A Present Religion

It is astonishing how distance blunts the keen edge of anything that is disagreeable.

A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, May 30, 1858 By Pastor C. H. Spurgeon, At The Music Hall, Royal Surrey Gardens.

Beloved, now we are the sons of God. (1Jo 3:2)

1. I shall not pretend to preach from all of my text this morning, short though it is. The word “now” is to me the most prominent word in the text, and I shall make it so this morning. “Beloved, now we are the sons of God.

2. It is astonishing how distance blunts the keen edge of anything that is disagreeable. War is at all times a most fearful scourge. The thought of slain bodies and of murdered men must always harrow up the soul; but because we hear of these things from a distance, there are few Englishmen who can truly enter into their horrors. If we could hear the booming of the cannon on the deep which surrounds this island; if we could see from our doors the marks of carnage and bloodshed; then we would more thoroughly appreciate what war means. But distance takes away the horror, and therefore we speak of war with too much levity, and even read about it with an interest not sufficiently linked with pain. As it is with war, so it is with death. Death is a frightful thing; he who is the bravest must still fear before it, for at best it is a solemn thing to die. Therefore, man adopts the expedient of putting off all thoughts of death: it may be very near to him, but he conceives it to be at a distance, and then the same effect is produced as when war is at a distance; its horror is forgotten, and we speak of it with less solemnity. So likewise with true religion; men are constrained to believe that there is truth in religion. Though there are some foolhardy enough to deny it, most of us in this enlightened land are obliged to acknowledge that there is a power in Godliness. What, then, does the worldling do? He practises the same expedient. He puts religion far away; he knows that its disagreeableness will be diminished by his believing it to be distant. Hence there has sprung up in the minds of the unregenerate world a notion that religion is a thing to be accomplished just at the close of life, and the usual prayer of an ungodly man, when in the slightest degree pricked in his conscience, is, “Oh, that I may be saved at last!” He does not feel anxious to be saved now; religion is a thing for which he has no appetite, and therefore believing it is essential to insure his eternal welfare, he adopts the alternative of saying, “I hope to have it at last.”

3. The religion, then, of the present, is not the worldling’s religion. He tolerates that which speaks of eternity; that which deals with deathbeds; that which leads him to look back with a vacuous repentance upon a life spent in sin, but not that which will enable him to look forward to a life spent in holiness. However, we act very differently with affairs of the present life; for things that are sweet to us, become the more sweet by their nearness. Was there ever a child who longed for his father’s house who did not feel that the holidays grew more sweet in his estimation the shorter the time was that he had to wait?

4. What man is there who having once set his heart on riches, did not find his delight in the thought of being rich increase with the nearness of his approach to the desired object? And are not all of us accustomed, when we think a good thing is a long time off, to try if we can shorten the time between us and it. We try anything and everything to push on the lagging hours; we chide them; we wish that Time had double wings, that he might swiftly fly and bring the expected season. When the Christian speaks of heaven, you will always hear him try to shorten the time between himself and the happy land; he says,—

A few more rolling suns at most
Will land me on fair Canaan’s coast.

There may be many years between him and paradise, but still he is prone to say,

The way may be rough,
But it cannot be long.

Thus we all delight to shorten the time between us and the things for which we hope. Now let us just apply this rule to religion. They who love religion love a present thing. The Christian who really seeks salvation, will never be happy unless he can say, “Now I am a child of God.” Because the worldling dislikes it, he puts it from him; because the Christian loves it, therefore its very fairest feature is its present existence, its present enjoyment in his heart. That word “now” which is the sinners warning, and his terror, is to the Christian, his greatest delight and joy. “There is therefore”—and then the sweetest bell of all rings—“there is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus;” to the sinner that same idea is the blackest of all, “He who does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed on the Son of God.

5. This morning, in God’s name, I shall endeavour to plead with men, and show them the importance of having a present religion. I am quite certain that this is a life style which is too much kept in the background. I am sure from mixing with mankind, that the current belief is, that religion is a future thing, perhaps the wish is father to the thought. I am certain its basis is, men do not love religion, and therefore they desire to thrust it far from them.

6. I shall commence by endeavouring to show that religion must be a thing of the present, because the present has such intimate connection with the future; and to proceed—We are told in Scripture that this life is a seedtime, and the future is the harvest, “He who sows to the flesh, shall from the flesh reap corruption; he who sows to the spirit, shall from the spirit reap life everlasting.” The Scripture often speaks to us in words like these, “They who sow in tears, shall reap in joy.” It is always supposed in Scripture, that this life is the time of generating, if I may use such an expression, the life that is to come, as the seed generates the plant, even so does this present life generate the eternal future. We know, indeed, that heaven and hell are, after all, only the developments of our present character, for what is hell except this, “He who is filthy, let him be filthy still, and he who is unholy, let him be unholy still?” Do we not know that in the heart of every sin, damnation slumbers? Is it not a fearful truth that the germ of everlasting torment sleeps in every vile wish, every unholy thought, every unclean act, so that hell is only a great breaking out of slumbering lava, which had been so quiet, that while the mountain was covered with fair verdure, even to its summit, death comes and bids that lava rise; and down the steeps of manhood’s eternal existence, the fiery flame, and the hot scalding lava of eternal misery pours itself. Yet it was there before, for sin is hell, and to rebel against God is only the prelude of misery. So it is with heaven; I know that heaven is a reward, not of debt, but of grace; but still the Christian has that within him, which is a prelude of heaven for him. What did Christ say? “I give to my sheep eternal life.” He did not say, I will give, but, I give to them. “As soon as they believe in me, I give them eternal life,” and “he who believes, has eternal life, and shall never come to damnation.” The Christian has within him the seedbeds of a paradise; in due time the light that is sown for the righteous, and the gladness that is buried beneath the black earth for the upright in heart, shall spring up, and they shall reap the harvest. Is it not plain then that religion is a thing which we must have here? Is it not prominently revealed that religion is important for the present? for if this life is the seedtime of the future, how can I expect to reap in another world different crops than what I have been sowing here? how can I trust that I shall be saved, unless I am saved? how can I have hope that heaven shall be my eternal inheritance, unless the earnest is begun in my own soul on earth?

7. But again, this life is always said in Scripture to be a preparation for the life to come. “Prepare to meet your God, oh Israel.” “They who were ready went in with him to the supper, and the door was shut.” There is in this world a preparation for another world; to use a biblical figure, we must here put on the wedding dress, which we are to wear for ever. This life is as the vestibule of the king’s court, we must take off our shoes from our feet; we must wash our clothes and make ourselves ready to enter into the marriage supper of the Lamb. Somehow, in Scripture, the thought comes out as plain as if written with a sunbeam, this world is the beginning of the end,—it is the preparation place for the future. Supposing you have no religion now, how will you stand when now is turned into eternity? When days and years are gone, how will it fare with you, if all your days have been spent without God and without Christ? Do you hope to hurry to put on the white garment after death? Alas! you shall be covered with your shroud, but not be able to put on the wedding garment. Do you trust that you shall wash yourself and make yourself clean in the river Jordan? Alas! you shall breed corruption in your tomb, but you shall not find holiness there. Do you trust to be pardoned after you have departed?

There are no acts of pardon pass’d
In the cold grave to which we haste;
But darkness, death, and fell despair,
Reign in eternal silence there.

Or, do you think that when you near the borders of the grave, that will be the time to prepare? Do not be deceived. We read in Scripture one instance of a man saved at the eleventh hour. Remember, there is only one; and we have no reason to believe that there ever was, or ever will be another. There may have been people saved on their deathbeds, but we are not sure there ever were. Such things may have happened, but none of us can tell. Alas! facts are sadly against it; for we have been assured by those who have had the best means of judging—those who have long walked the hospital of humanity—that such as thought they were dying, and made vows of repentance, have almost invariably turned back, like “the dog to his own vomit, and the sow that was washed to her wallowing in the mire.” Oh no; “Today if you will hear his voice, do not harden your hearts;” for today is the preparation time for the dreaded tomorrow—today is the making ready for the eternal future.

8. Let me urge one other reflection here. How are we saved? All through Scripture we are told we are saved by faith, except in one passage, where it is said, we are saved by hope. Now note, how certain it is that religion must be a present thing if we are saved by faith, because faith and hope cannot live in another world. “What a man sees, why does he yet hope for?” Hope cannot exist in that world of realities where shadows are unknown. How can faith be exercised when we see a thing? for what a man perceives by faith that he does not realise by sense; and although we say “seeing is believing,” it is quite certain that seeing and believing are at opposite poles. Believing is an assurance of that which we do not see, and in confidence of faith waiting until we do see it; but seeing is sensuous, and the very reverse of faith. Now if I am to be saved by faith, it is quite certain I must be saved in a state where faith can be exercised that is in this world; and if I am to be saved by hope, I cannot be saved by hope in that world where hope cannot exist; I must be saved here, for here is the only place where hope can breathe an air that lets it live. The air of heaven is too bright and pure, too heavenly, too warm, too sweet with angels’ songs, for faith and hope to inhabit. They leave us on this side of the Jordan; if then we are saved by these, I think it follows—and every one of you must perceive the inference—we must be saved now, because faith and hope are not things of the future. Oh how pleasant, if after these remarks we can say, “Yes, it is so; it is even so, and we rejoice in it, for ‘now we are the sons of God.’”

9. In the second place, as I have briefly shown the connection between the present and the future, let me use another illustration to show the importance of a present salvation. Salvation is a thing which brings present blessings. When you read Scripture, and alas there are few who care to read it as they ought in these times, they read anything rather than their Bibles—when you read Scripture, you will be struck with the fact that every blessing is spoken about in the present tense. You remember how the apostle in one of his epistles says, “To those who are saved, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God.” (1Co 1:24) He does not say to them who shall be saved, but to them who are saved. We know too that justification is a present blessing—“there is therefore now no condemnation.” Adoption is a present blessing, for it says, “Now we are the sons of God,” and we know also that sanctification is a present blessing, for the apostle addresses himself to “the saints who are sanctified in Christ Jesus, and called.” All the blessings of the new covenant are spoken of in the present tense, because with the exception of eternal glory in heaven, they are all to be enjoyed here. I know this, that I shall be one day, if I am a believer in Christ, more sanctified than I am today—if not in the sense of consecration, yet still in the sense of purification—but at the same time I know this for a certainty, that when I stand at God’s right hand, amidst the lamps of eternal brightness, and when these fingers move with vigour across the golden strings, and when this voice is filled with the immortal songs, I shall not be one more whit a child of God than I am now. And when the white robe is on me, and the crown upon my head, I shall not be more justified than I am at the present moment, for it is the doctrine of Holy Scripture, that

The moment a sinner believes,
And trusts in his crucified God,
His pardon at once he receives,
Salvation in full through his blood.

10. But the assurance of our possession in these things is a present blessing also. I will illustrate what I mean by a circumstance which happened to me. A lady called upon me in some distress of mind, and this was her difficulty:—She had, she trusted, been converted to God, enjoyed great peace of mind, and for a little while was very full of joy; because she believed that she had been forgiven, and was accepted in the Beloved. Naturally enough, seeking her religious instructor, she went to the clergyman of the parish, who, unfortunately for her, was a blind guide, for when she began to tell him concerning her joy, he checked her, by saying, “My good woman, this is all presumption.” “No, sir,” she said, “I do not trust; my hope is fixed on nothing else than Jesus; I repose alone in him.” “That is all well and good,” said he, “but you have no authority to say you know you are saved; you have no authority to believe that you are already pardoned.” And he told her that he did not believe it was possible for any Christian to be assured of this, except a very few eminent saints; they might hope, that was all; they might trust but they could never be sure. Ah! I think he had gone only a very little way on the road to the kingdom of heaven. He must have been only a very small infant in Christ, if in Christ at all, to have told her so. For those of us who have for a few years put on the Lord Jesus, know for a certainty that there is such a thing as infallible assurance, we know that although there is such a thing as presumption, there is a distinction which every Christian can easily see between the one and the other. Presumption says, “I am a child of God, and I may live as like. I know I am saved, I do not need therefore to seek to have present communion with Christ.” But Assurance says, “I know whom I have believed; I am persuaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed to him against that day.” And then she meekly bows her head, and says, “Hold me up and I shall be safe; keep me and I shall be kept; draw me and I will run after you.” Oh! my dear hearers, never believe that falsehood of the day—that a man cannot know himself to be a child of God. For if you tell us that, we can refute you with a thousand testimonies. We have seen the poor, the humble, and the illiterate, confident of their interest in Christ. It is true, we have seen them doubt; we have heard their wailings when they could not see Christ with their heart. Yes we have known the time when the greatest of God’s people have had to tremble, and say—

‘Tis a point I long to know,
Oft it causes anxious thought—
‘Do I love the Lord, or no?
Am I his, or am I not?’

But still, God’s people may be assured; they may know, by the witness of the Spirit within, that they are born of God; for does not the apostle say, “We know we have passed from death to life, because we love the brethren?” “The Spirit bears witness with our spirits that we are born of God.” I wish that we had more Christians who lived in the enjoyment of full assurance. How precious it is when the milk of faith settles down, and the thick cream of full assurance can be skimmed from the surface as marrow and fatness to the children of God. Religion, then, is a thing of present assurance. A man may know in this life, beyond the shadow of a doubt, that he is accepted in Christ Jesus.

11. Yet I am inclined to think, that the worldly man most of all objects to present religion, because he does not like its duties. Most men would be very religious if religion did not entail obligations. Many a libertine would be a very pious man, if he could keep a few of his bottles of wine. Many a loose character would have no objection to go up to the temple and pray, and subscribe his name to the God of Jacob, if the gospel did not forbid all uncleanness, and everything that is lascivious. Many a tradesman would put on the Lord Jesus Christ, if there were no necessity to put off the old man; if he could keep his sins and have Christ too—oh, how willing would he be. Indeed, there are a great many who are so fond of it, that they have tried it. We know people who are like the Roman Emperor, who believed that Jesus Christ was God, but thought that all the other strange gods were likewise to be worshipped; so these people think religion a very good thing, but think sin a very good thing too, so they set up the two together, and their whole life is like Janus,1 two faced. They appear as most comely Christians in the synagogue, but they look as most unmistakable hypocrites if you see them in the market. Men will not direct a single eye to religion, because it curtails licence and entails duties. And this, I think, proves that religion is a present thing, because the duties of religion cannot be practised in another world, they must be practised here.

12. Now, what are the duties of religion? In the first place, here are its active duties, which a man should do between man and man, to walk soberly and righteously, and uprightly in the midst of an evil generation. Lightly as some people speak about morality, or against morality, there is no true religion where there is no morality. Do not tell me about your orthodoxy, do not come and tell me about your private prayers and secret piety, if your life is bad, you are bad altogether. A good tree cannot bring forth anything but good fruit, and a corrupt tree will bring forth corrupt fruit. There is no question about that; what your life is, that you are—for as out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks, so out of the abundance of the heart the man lives. It is all in vain for you to deprecate so strong a sentiment as this, and to say, “The best of saints are fallible.” I know they are; I know that even the best of men will sin, but they will not sin willingly; if they sin publicly, it will be only an exception, their lives, under the power of Divine grace, will be holy, and pure, and upright. I believe the devil likes Antinomianism, and he says to the Romanist, “Preach on, you Priest; I do not mind what you preach, for you will enter my dominions. You tell people that they may live in sin, and then procure absolution for a shilling! Fine doctrine that!” And he pats the priest on the back, and gives him all the assistance he can. Then there comes an Antinomian minister into the pulpit. The devil says, “Ah, though he rails against the Pope of Rome, I like them both, the one as much as the other.” Then how he preaches! he begins preaching justification by faith alone, and he carries his argument one step too far, for he begins railing at good works, calls them legalists, who think it their duty to lead a holy life, and hints with a smirk and a smile, that the excellent conduct of a man is of little importance, as long as he believes the truth and goes to his chapel. “Ah,” says the devil, “preach away; I love the two things, Antinomianism and Popery, for they are two of the finest sedatives for hypocritical souls.” Again, I say, “Do not be deceived, God is not mocked; for whatever a man sows that shall he also reap.” By our works we are not to be justified, but still by our works we shall be judged, and by our works we shall be condemned. So says the Scriptures, and this we must receive. Religion, therefore, must be a present thing; we do not need to talk about walking righteously, and soberly, in the world to come—

There all is pure, and all is clear,
There all is joy and love.

There will be no duty to discharge between the tradesman and the customer, between the debtor and the creditor, between the father and the child, between the husband and the wife, in heaven, for all these relationships shall have passed away. Religion must be intended for this life; the duties of it cannot be practised, unless they are practised here.

13. But besides these, there are other duties required from the Christian. Though it is every man’s duty to be honest and sober, the Christian has another code of law. It is the Christian’s duty to love his enemies, to be at peace with all men, to forgive as he hopes to be forgiven; and it is his duty not to resist evil, when smitten on the one cheek to turn the other also; it is his duty to give to him who asks of him, and not to turn away from him who wishes to borrow from him—he is to be a liberal soul, devising liberal things. It is the Christian’s duty to visit his Master’s children when they are sick, so that it may be said to him at last, “I was sick, and naked, and in prison, and you visited me, and ministered to my necessities.” Now, if religion is not a thing for this world, I ask you how is it possible to perform its duties at all? There are no poor in heaven whom we can comfort and visit; there are no enemies in heaven whom we can graciously forgive; and there are no injuries inflicted, or wrongs endured, which we can bear with patience. Religion must have been intended in the very first place for this world, it must have been meant that now we should be the sons of God. For again I repeat it, that the major part of the duties of religion cannot be practised in heaven, and therefore religion must be a present thing.

14. But, coming near to our conclusion, I believe there are many more people who do not like religion for today, but who want to have it at the last, for this reason: they think religion is not a happy thing; they believe it makes men miserable. They have met with people with long faces; they have seen some who were born in stormy weather, and who seem to have lived all their lives long with a hurricane inside their hearts, never having one flash of sunlight, nor one pleasant rainbow across their brow. Many young people imbibe this idea. They think that surely religion must be a thing that will make men go moping and melancholy all through this world. In fact, they enter the chapel sometimes, and they hear the saints singing—and what a sweet hymn it is—a sorry sweetness in truth!—

Lord, what a wretched land is this;

and they go out and say, “No doubt it is; we will have nothing to do with it.” Looking upon religion as medicine which is extremely nauseous,—if they must drink it, they will put it off to the last; they will gulp it down with a “Lord, have mercy on me!” and before its bitterness is barely in their mouth, they expect to begin to enjoy its sweetness in heaven. What a mistake! Religion has its present enjoyments. I do solemnly affirm today, in the presence of this congregation, and before Almighty God, if I were certain that I were to die like a dog, and when I was buried that would be an end of me, had I my choice of the happiest life a man could lead, I would say, “Let me be a Christian;” for if, as some say, it is a delusion, it is one of the most magnificent delusions that ever was devised. If any man could prove the religion of Christ to be a delusion, the next thing he should do would be to hang himself, because there is nothing worth living for. He might as well sit down and weep to think he had made a ruin of so goodly a structure, and dissolved such a pleasant dream.

15. Ah! beloved, there are present enjoyments in religion. Speak, you who know them, for you can tell; yet you cannot recount them all. Oh! would you give up your religion for all the joys that earth calls good or great? Say, if your immortal life could be extinguished, would you give it up, even for all the kingdoms of this world? Oh: you sons of poverty, has not this been a candle to you in the darkness? Has not this enlightened you through the dark shades of your tribulation? Oh! you callous handed sons of toil, has not this been your rest, your sweet repose? Have not the testimonies of God been your song in the house of your pilgrimage? Oh! you daughters of sorrow, you who spend the most of your time upon your beds—and your couch to you is a rack of pain—has not religion been to you a sweet quietus? When your bones were sorely vexed, could you not even then praise him on your beds? Speak from your couches today, you invalids, though your cheeks are blanched; speak this day from your beds of agony, you who are troubled with innumerable diseases, and are drawing near to your last home? Is not religion worth having in the sick room, on the bed of pain and anguish? “Ah!” they heartily say, “we can praise him on our beds; we can sing his high praises in the fires.” And you men of business, speak for yourselves! You have hard struggles to pass through life. Sometimes you have been driven to a great extremity, and whether you would succeed or not seemed to hang upon a thread. Has not your religion been a joy to you in your difficulties? Has it not calmed your minds? When you have been fretting and troubled about worldly things, have you not found it a pleasant thing to enter your closet, and shut the door, and tell your Father in secret all your cares? And oh you who are rich, can you not bear the same testimony, if you have loved the Master? What had all your riches been to you without a Saviour? Can you not say, that your religion gilded your gold, and make your silver shine more brightly? for all things that you have are sweetened by this thought, that you have all these and Christ too! Was there ever a child of God who could deny this? We have heard of many infidels who grieved over their infidelity when they came to die. Did you ever hear of a Christian acting in the same way? Did you ever hear of anyone on his deathbed looking back on a life of holiness with sorrow? We have seen the letcherous rake, with a wasted constitution, shrivel into a corpse through his iniquities, and we have heard him bemoan the day when he went astray. We have seen the poor debauched child of sin rotting with disease, and listened to her shriek, and heard her miserably curse herself that she ever turned aside, to what was called the path of gaiety, but what was really the path to hell. We have seen the miser too, who has gripped his bags of gold, and on his deathbed we have found him curse himself, that when he came to die, his gold, though laid upon his heart, could not still its achings and give him joy. Never, never did we know a Christian who repented of his Christianity. We have seen Christians so sick, that we wondered that they lived—so poor, that we wondered at their misery; we have seen them so full of doubts, that we pitied their unbelief; but we never heard them say, even then, “I regret that I gave myself to Christ.” No; with the dying clasp, when heart and flesh were failing, we have seen them hug this treasure to their breast and press it to their heart, still feeling that this was their life, their joy, their all. Oh! if you wish to be happy, if you wish to be saved, if you wish to strew your path with sunshine, and dig out the nettles and blunt the thorns, “seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things shall be added to you.” Do not seek happiness first; seek Christ first, and happiness shall come after. Seek first the Lord, and then he will provide for you everything that is profitable for you in this life, and he will crown it with everything that is glorious in the life to come. “Beloved, now we are the sons of God.”

16. Before closing this sermon, I fear that there are a great many of you who will say, “Well, I care nothing at all about religion; it is of no value to me;” No, my friends, and it is very probable that you will not care about it, until it shall be too late to care. Maybe you will go on putting off these thoughts, until the day shall come, when they will come so thick upon you, that you will not be able to procrastinate any longer, and then you will very earnestly set about seeking Christ; but at that hour he will say to you, “Inasmuch as Moab has wearied himself upon the high places, and he now resorts to my sanctuary, I will not hear him, says the Lord.” “Strive to enter in at the narrow gate” now, “for many shall seek to enter in, but shall not be able.” Let us fear, lest, having the gospel preached in our ears, we should neglect and put it off until the last hour has struck, and we find ourselves without hope, when there is no time to seek a Saviour.

17. I know where this morning’s sermon will be found profitable. It will be in the case of those who are seeking Christ. Old Flockhart, who used to preach until within the last few months in the streets of Edinburgh, a much despised, but a very godly man, used to say, “When I begin my sermon, I begin by preaching the law, and then I bring the gospel in afterwards; for,” he said, “it is like a woman who is sewing—she cannot sew with thread alone; she first sticks a sharp needle through, and then draws the thread afterwards; so,” he says, “does the Lord with us; he sends the sharp needle of conviction, the needle of the law, into our hearts, and pricks us in the heart, and he draws through the long silken thread of consolation afterwards.” Oh! I wish that some of you were pricked in the heart today. Remember, there are thunders in this book; though they are sleeping now, they will awaken by and by. There are in this Bible curses too horrible for the heart to know their full extent of meaning; they are slumbering now, but they shall awaken and when they leap from between the folded leaves, and the seven seals are broken, where will you flee, and where shall you hide yourselves, in that last great day of anger? If, then, you are pricked to the heart, I preach to you the gospel now. “Today, if you will hear his voice, do not harden your hearts, as in the provocation.” This day look to him who hung upon the cross. This day believe and live.

18. And now to illustrate the manner in which rebellious sinners are reconciled to God, I will relate to you an interesting anecdote from the life of a soldier. It may illustrate in your minds the majesty of God in showing grace, and the humbling experience of the sinner in receiving it, and help us to answer that solemn question—“What must I do to be saved?” My author says, that himself and his comrades of a certain regiment serving in India, had been without pay for about six months, and there was a strong suspicion throughout the ranks that their commanding officer had embezzled the money: he was a great gambler, and they thought it most likely that he had gambled away their pay. They were determined to seek redress; so all the private soldiers (with the exception of non-commissioned officers,) agreed that on a particular morning, when on parade, they would not obey the word of command. The day arrived, and they carried their design into execution. The regiment was assembled; the men in companies, headed by their respective officers, proceeded to the parade ground, and formed into open column. The commanding officer took his station in front and gave the word of command. However, not one of the privates obeyed. This being the conduct of the regiment, the commanding officer, with great self-possession, ordered every tenth man to be confined in the guardhouse. It was done without a show of resistance. After which, all the privates fixed bayonets, shouldered arms, and marched off—the band playing and the drums beating alternately—all the way to the residence of the general, about a mile away. There they halted, and formed in line in front of the house, in a most orderly manner. One man from each of the ten companies then stepped forward, and they proceeded to lodge a written complaint against the colonel. Having thus fulfilled their purpose, they marched back, and dismissed; but the next thing was to release the prisoners, and this they did without any resistance from the guard. Whatever extenuations we may conceive for such conduct, according to military law it was a heinous crime. The soldier’s duty is to obey; he must not think for himself, but he must be as a tool in the hands of his superior officers, to do as he is told, and not to complain. Shortly after this, to the surprise of these soldiers, the general was seen approaching with a large army of Sepoys, infantry and cavalry, with field pieces in front. The regiment went out and respectfully saluted him, forming in line. But this was not what the general came for. They saw the storm brewing and prepared to fight. After the two lines had been formed, facing each other, the General moved out on horseback, and said, “Twenty-second, take the command from me.” They obeyed. He then said, “Order arms.” Next—“Handle arms;”—and last, which was most disgraceful to them—“Ground arms.” Having thus disarmed, he ordered his black cavalry to charge upon them, and drive them from their arms. One more order he gave to those disaffected men, that they should strip off their accoutrements and lay them on the ground, and be off to their quarters. When he had thus disarmed and dishonoured the men, he forgave them.

19. And now will not this incident fitly represent the manner of God with sinners, when according to the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ, he brings terms of peace and reconciliation to us who are in revolt against him? He says, “Ground arms, give up your sins, take off your self-righteousness.” He disarms us, dishonours us, and strips off all our comely array, and then says, “Now I will forgive you.” If there is anyone here who has thrown down his weapons of rebellion, and whose fine ornaments of beauty are stained with shame, let him believe that God will now forgive him; he forgives those who cannot forgive themselves. The great Captain of our salvation will pardon those whom he has humbled. He will have you submit to his will, and though that will may at first seem imperious to drive you from your quarters, and visit you with punishment, you shall presently find that his sovereign will is gracious, and he delights in mercy. “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you shall be saved,” for thus says the Word, “He who believes and is baptized shall be saved, but he who does not believe shall be damned.”

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).

Terms of Use

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.

Footnotes

  1. Janus: The name of an ancient Italian deity, regarded as the doorkeeper of heaven, as guardian of doors and gates, and as presiding over the entrance upon or beginning of things; represented with a face on the front and another on the back of his head; the doors of his temple in the Roman Forum were always open in time of war, and shut in time of peace. OED.

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