No. 2013-34:145. A Sermon Delivered On Lord’s Day Morning, March 11, 1888, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.
The mouth of the Lord has spoken it. {Isa 1:20}
1. What Isaiah said was, therefore, spoken by Jehovah. It was audibly the utterance of a man; but, really, it was the utterance of the Lord himself. The lips which delivered the words were those of Isaiah, but yet it was the very truth that “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it.” All Scripture, being inspired by the Spirit, is spoken by the mouth of God. However this sacred Book may be treated nowadays, it was not treated contemptuously, nor negligently, nor questioningly by the Lord Jesus Christ, our Master and Lord. It is noteworthy how he reverenced the written Word. The Spirit of God rested upon him personally, without measure, and he could speak out of his own mind the revelation of God, and yet he continually quoted the law and the prophets, and the Psalms; and always he treated the sacred writings with intense reverence, strongly in contrast with the irreverence of “modern thought.” I am sure, brethren, we cannot be wrong in imitating the example of our divine Lord in our reverence for that Scripture, which cannot be broken. I say, if he, the anointed of the Spirit, and able to speak himself as God’s mouth, yet quoted the sacred writings, and used the holy Book in his teachings, how much more should we, who have no spirit of prophecy resting upon us, and are not able to speak new revelations, come back to the law and to the testimony, and value every single word which “The mouth of the Lord has spoken?” The same esteem for the Word of the Lord is seen in our Lord’s apostles; for they treated the ancient Scriptures as supreme in authority, and supported their statements with passages from Holy Writ. The utmost degree of deference and homage is paid to the Old Testament by the writers of the New. We never find an apostle raising a question about the degree of inspiration in this book or that. No disciple of Jesus questions the authority of the books of Moses, or of the prophets. If you want to criticize or suspect, you find no sympathy in the teaching of Jesus, or any one of his apostles. The New Testament writers sit reverently down before the Old Testament and receive God’s words as such, without any question whatever. You and I belong to a school which will continue to do the same, let others adopt whatever behaviour they please. As for us and for our house, this priceless Book shall remain the standard of our faith and the basis for our hope as long as we live. Others may choose whatever gods they wish, and follow whatever authorities they prefer; but, as for us, the glorious Jehovah is our God, and we believe concerning each doctrine of the entire Bible, that “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it.”
2. I. Coming closely, then, to our text, “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it,” our first point shall be — THIS IS OUR WARRANT FOR TEACHING SCRIPTURAL TRUTH.
3. We preach because “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it.” It would not be worth our while to speak what Isaiah had spoken, if there was nothing more in it than Isaiah’s thought; neither should we care to meditate hour after hour upon the writings of Paul, if there was nothing more than Paul in them. We feel no imperative call to expound and to enforce what has been spoken by men; but, since “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it,” it is woe to us if we do not preach the gospel! We come to you with, “Thus says the Lord,” and we should have no justifiable motive for preaching our lives away, if we do not have this message.
4. The true preacher, the man whom God has commissioned, delivers his message with awe and trembling, because “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it.” He bears the burden of the Lord and bows under it. Ours is no trifling theme, but one which moves our whole soul. They called George Fox a Quaker, because when he spoke he would quake extremely through the force of the truth which he so thoroughly apprehended. Perhaps, if you and I had a clearer sight of and a closer grip on God’s Word, and felt more of its majesty, we should quake also. Martin Luther, who never feared the face of man, yet declared that when he stood up to preach he often felt his knees knock together under a sense of his great responsibility. Woe to us if we dare to speak the Word of the Lord with less than our whole heart, and soul, and strength! Woe to us if we handle the Word as if it were an occasion for display! If it were our own word, we might be studious in the graces of oratory; but if it is God’s Word, we cannot afford to think of ourselves: we are bound to speak it, “not with wisdom of words, lest the cross of Christ should be made of no effect.” If we reverence the Word, it will not occur to us that we can improve on it by our own skill in language. Oh, it would be far better to break stones on the road than to be a preacher, unless one had God’s Holy Spirit to sustain him; for our charge is solemn and our burden is heavy. The heart and soul of the man who speaks for God will know no ease, for he hears in his ears that warning admonition: “If the watchman does not warn them they shall perish; but I will require their blood from the watchman’s hands.” If we were commissioned to repeat the language of a king, we should be bound to do it decorously lest the king suffers damage; but if we rehearse the revelation of God, a profound awe should take hold upon us, and a godly fear lest we mar the message of God in the telling of it. No work is so important or honourable as the proclamation of the gospel of our Lord Jesus, and for that very reason it is weighted with a responsibility so solemn that no one may venture on it lightly, nor proceed in it without an overwhelming sense of his need of great grace to perform his office properly. We live under intense pressure who preach a gospel of which we can assuredly say, “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it.” We live rather in eternity than in time: we speak to you as though we saw the great white throne and the divine Judge before whom we must turn in our account, not only for what we say, but for how we say it.
5. Dear brethren, because the mouth of the Lord has spoken the truth of God, we therefore endeavour to preach it with absolute fidelity. We repeat the Word as a child repeats his lesson. It is not ours to correct the divine revelation, but simply to echo it. I do not take it to be my responsibility to bring you new and original thoughts of my own; but rather to say, “The word which you hear is not mine, but the Father’s who sent me.” Believing that “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it,” it is my duty to repeat it to you as correctly as I can after having heard it and felt it in my own soul. It is not mine to amend or adapt the gospel. What! Shall we attempt to improve upon what God has revealed? The Infinitely Wise — is he to be corrected by creatures of a day? Is the infallible revelation of the infallible Jehovah to be moulded, moderated, and toned down to the fashions and fancies of the hour? May God forgive us if we have ever altered his Word unwittingly; wittingly we have not done so, nor will we. His children sit at his feet and receive his words, and then they rise up in the power of his Spirit to proclaim far and near the Word which the Lord has given. “He who has my word, let him speak my word faithfully,” is the Lord’s injunction to us. If we could reside with the Father, according to our measure, after the manner of the Lord Jesus, and then come out from communion with him to tell what he has taught us in his Word, we should be accepted by the Lord as preachers, and accepted also by his living people far more than if we were to dive into the profound depths of science, or rise to the loftiest flights of rhetoric. What is the chaff to the wheat! What are man’s discoveries compared to the teachings of the Lord! “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it”; therefore, oh man of God, do not add to his words lest he adds to you the plagues which are written in his Book, and do not take from them, lest he takes your name out of the Book of Life!
6. Again, dear friends, since “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it,” we speak the divine truth with courage and full assurance. Modesty is a virtue; but hesitancy when we are speaking for the Lord is a great fault. If an ambassador sent by a great king to represent his majesty at a foreign court, should forget his office and only think of himself, he might be so humble as to lower the dignity of his prince, so timid as to betray his country’s honour. He is bound to remember not so much what he is in himself, but whom he represents; therefore, he must speak boldly and with the dignity which attends his office and the court he represents. It was the custom with certain Oriental despots to require ambassadors of foreign powers to lie in the dust before them. Some Europeans, for the sake of business interests, submitted to the degrading ceremony; but when it was demanded of the representative of England, he scorned to degrade his country like this. God forbid that he who speaks for God should dishonour the King of kings by a compliant subservience. We do not preach the gospel with your permission; we do not ask for tolerance, nor court applause. We preach Christ crucified, and we speak boldly as we ought to speak, because it is God’s Word, and not our own. We are accused of dogmatism; but we are bound to dogmatize when we repeat what the mouth of the Lord has spoken. We cannot use “ifs” and “buts” for we are dealing with God’s “shalls” and “wills.” If he says it is so, it is so; and that is the end of it. Controversy ceases when Jehovah speaks.
7. Those who fling aside our Master’s authority may very well reject our testimony: we are content they should do so. But, if we speak what the mouth of the Lord has spoken, those who hear his word and refuse it, do so at their own peril. The wrong is done, not to the ambassador, but to the King; not to our mouth, but to the mouth of God, from whom the truth has proceeded.
8. We are urged to be charitable. We are charitable; but it is with our own money. We have no right to give away what is put into our trust and is not at our disposal. When we have to deal with the truth of God we are stewards, and must deal with our Lord’s treasury, not on the rules of charity according to human opinions, but by the rule of fidelity according to the God of truth. We are bold to declare with full assurance what the Lord reveals. That memorable word of the Lord to Jeremiah is needed by the servants of the Lord in these days: “ ‘You therefore gird up your loins, and arise, and speak to them all what I command you: do not be dismayed by their faces, lest I confound you before them. For, behold, I have made you today a defenced city, and an iron pillar, and bronze walls against the whole land, against the kings of Judah, against its princes, against its priests, and against the people of the land. And they shall fight against you; but they shall not prevail against you; for I am with you,’ says the Lord, ‘to deliver you.’ ” When we speak for the Lord against error, we do not soften our tones; but we speak thunderbolts. When we come across false science, we do not lower our flag: we give place by subjection — no, not for an hour. One word of God is worth more than libraries of human lore. “It is written” is the great gun which silences all the batteries of man’s thought. They should speak courageously who speak in the name of Jehovah, the God of Israel.
9. I will also add, under this point, that, because “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it,” therefore we feel bound to speak his Word with diligence, as often as we ever can, and with perseverance, as long as we ever live. Surely, it would be a blessed thing to die in the pulpit; spending one’s last breath in acting as the Lord’s mouth. Dumb Sabbaths are fierce trials to true preachers. Remember how John Newton, when he was quite unfit to preach, and even wandered a bit by reason of his infirmities and age, yet still persisted in preaching; and when they dissuaded him, he answered with warmth, “What! Shall the old African blasphemer stop preaching Jesus Christ while there is breath in his body?” So they helped the old man into the pulpit again, so that he might once more speak of free grace and dying love. If we had common themes to speak about, we might leave the pulpit as a weary pleader leaves the forum; but since “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it,” we feel his Word to be as fire in our bones, and we grow more weary with refraining than with testifying. Oh my brethren, the Word of the Lord is so precious that we must in the morning sow this blessed seed, and in the evening we must not withhold our hands. It is a living seed and the seed of life, and therefore we must diligently scatter it.
10.
Brethren, if we get a proper apprehension concerning gospel
truth — that “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it” — it will move us to
proclaim it with great ardour and zeal. We shall not drone the
gospel to a slumbering handful. Many of you are not preachers, but
you are teachers of the young, or in some other way you try to
proclaim the Word of the Lord — please do it with much fervour of
Spirit. Enthusiasm should be conspicuous in every servant of the
Lord. Let those who hear you know that you are all there; that you
are not merely speaking from the lips outwardly; but that from the
depths of your soul, your very heart is welling up with a good matter
when you speak of things which you have read, touching the King.
The everlasting gospel is worth preaching, even if one stood on a
burning faggot and addressed the crowd from a pulpit of flames. The
truths revealed in Scripture are worth living for and dying for. I
consider myself thrice-happy to bear reproach for the sake of the old
faith. It is an honour of which I feel myself to be unworthy; and yet
most truly I can use the words of our hymn —
Shall I, to soothe th’ unholy throng,
Soften thy truths and smooth my tongue?
To gain earth’s gilded toys, or flee
The cross endured, my God, by thee?
The love of Christ doth me constrain
To seek the wandering souls of men;
With cries, entreaties, tears, to save,
To snatch them from the fiery wave.
My life, my blood I here present,
If for thy truth they may be spent:
Fulfil thy sovereign counsel, Lord!
Thy will be done, thy name adored!
I cannot speak out my whole heart upon this theme which is so dear to
me, but I would stir you all up to be instant in season and out of
season in proclaiming the gospel message. Especially repeat such a
word as this — “God so loved the world, that he gave his only-begotten
Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish, but have
everlasting life.” And this: “He who comes to me I will in no wise
cast out.” Proclaim it boldly, proclaim it in every place, proclaim
it to every creature, “For the mouth of the Lord has spoken it.” How
can you withhold the heavenly news? “The mouth of the Lord has spoken
it” — shall not your mouth rejoice to repeat it? Whisper it in the ear
of the sick; shout it in the corner of the streets; write it on your
tablets; send it out from the press: but everywhere let this be your
great motive and warrant — you preach the gospel because “The mouth of
the Lord has spoken it.” Let nothing be silent that has a voice when
the Lord has given the Word by his own dear Son.
Waft, waft, ye winds his story,
And you, ye waters, roll,
Till like a sea of glory
It spreads from pole to pole.
11. II. Let us now row in another direction for a moment or two. In the second place, “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it.” THIS WORD OF GOD CLAIMS YOUR ATTENTION.
12. Every word which God has given us in this Book claims our attention, because of the infinite majesty of him who spoke it. I see before me a Parliament of kings and princes, sages and senators. I hear one after another of the gifted Chrysostoms pour out eloquence like the “Golden-mouthed.” They speak, and they speak well. Suddenly, there is a solemn hush. What a stillness! Who is now to speak? They are silent because God the Lord is about to lift up his voice. Is it not right that they should do so? Does he not say, “Keep silence before me, oh islands?” What voice is like his voice? “The voice of the Lord is powerful; the voice of the Lord is full of majesty. The voice of the Lord breaks the cedars; yes, the Lord breaks the cedars of Lebanon. The voice of the Lord shakes the wilderness; the Lord shakes the wilderness of Kadesh.” See that you do not refuse him who speaks. Oh my hearer, let it not be said of you that you went though this life, God speaking to you in his Book, and you refusing to hear! It matters very little whether you listen to me or not; but it matters a very great deal whether you listen to God or not. It is he who made you; your breath is in his hands; and if he speaks, I implore you, open your ear, and do not be rebellious. There is an infinite majesty about every line of Scripture, but especially about that part of Scripture in which the Lord reveals himself and his glorious plan of saving grace, in the person of his dear Son Jesus Christ. The cross of Christ has a great claim on you. Hear what Jesus preaches from the tree. He says, “Incline your ear, and come to me: hear, and your soul shall live.”
13. God’s claim to be heard lies, also, in the condescension which has led him to speak to us. It was something for God to have made the world and ask us to look at the work of his hands. Creation is a picture-book for children. But for God to speak in the language of mortal men is still more marvellous, if you come to think of it. I marvel that God spoke by the prophets; but I admire still more that he should have written down his word in black and white, in unmistakable language, which can be translated into all tongues, so that we may all see and read for ourselves what God the Lord has spoken to us; and what, indeed, he continues to speak; for what he has spoken he still speaks to us, as freshly as if he spoke it for the first time. Oh glorious Jehovah; do you speak to mortal man? Can there be anyone who neglects to hear you? If you are so full of lovingkindness and tenderness that you will stoop out of heaven to speak with your sinful creatures, no one except those who are more brutish than the ox and the donkey will turn a deaf ear to you!
14. God’s Word has a claim, then, on your attention because of its majesty and its condescension; but yet, further, it should win your ear because of its intrinsic importance. “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it” — then it is no trifle. God never speaks vanity. No line of his writing deals with the frivolous themes of a day. What may be forgotten in an hour is for mortal man, and not for the eternal God. When the Lord speaks, his speech is Godlike, and its themes are worthy of one whose dwelling is infinity and eternity. God does not play with you, man: will you trifle with him? Will you treat him as if he were altogether such a one as yourself? God is in earnest when he speaks to you: will you not listen in earnest? He speaks to you of great things, which have to do with your soul and its destiny. “It is not a vain thing for you; because it is your life.” Your eternal existence, your happiness or your misery, hang on your treatment of what the mouth of the Lord has spoken. He speaks to you concerning eternal realities. I urge you, not to be so unwise as to turn away your ear. Do not act as if the Lord and his truth were nothing to you. Do not treat the Word of the Lord as a secondary thing, which might await your leisure and receive attention when no other work was before you: put everything else aside, but listen to your God.
15. Depend on it, if “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it,” there is an urgent, pressing necessity. God does not break silence to say what might as well have remained unsaid. His voice indicates great urgency. Today, if you will hear his voice, hear it; for he demands immediate attention. God does not speak without abundant reason; and, oh my hearer, if he speaks to you by his Word, I beseech you, believe that there must be an overwhelming reason for it! I know what Satan says: he tells you that you can do very well without listening to God’s Word. I know what your carnal heart whispers: it says, “Listen to the voice of business, and of pleasure; but do not listen to God.” But, oh! if the Holy Spirit shall teach your reason to be reasonable, and put your mind in mind of true wisdom, you will acknowledge that the first thing you have to do is to heed your Maker. You can hear the voices of others another time; but your ear must hear God first, since he is first, and what he speaks must be of first importance. Without delay hurry to keep his commandments. Without reserve answer his call, and say, “Speak, Lord; for your servant hears.” When I stand in this pulpit to preach the Gospel, I never feel that I may calmly invite you to attend to a subject which is one among many, and may very properly be left alone for a time should your minds be already occupied. No; you may be dead before I speak with you again, and so I ask for immediate attention. I do not fear that I may be taking you away from other important business by entreating you to attend to what the mouth of the Lord has spoken; for no business has any importance in it compared with this: this is the master theme of all. It is your soul, your own soul, your ever existing soul which is concerned, and it is your God who is speaking to you. Do hear him, I beseech you. I am not asking a favour from you when I request you to hear the Word of the Lord: it is a debt to your Maker which you are bound to pay. Yes, it is, moreover, kindness to yourself. Even from a selfish point of view, I urge you to hear what the mouth of the Lord has spoken, for in his Word lies salvation. Listen diligently to what your Maker, your Saviour, your best friend, has to say to you. “Do not harden your hearts, as in the provocation,” but “Incline your ear, and come to me: hear, and your soul shall live.” “Faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God.”
16. So I have handled my text in two ways: it is warrant and motive for the preacher; it is a demand on the attention of the hearer.
17. III. And now, thirdly, THIS GIVES TO GOD’S WORD A VERY SPECIAL CHARACTER. When we open this sacred Book, and say of what is recorded here, “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it,” then it gives a special character to the teaching.
18. In the Word of God the teaching has unique dignity. This Book is inspired as no other book is inspired, and it is time that all Christians affirmed this conviction. I do not know whether you have seen Mr. Smiles’ life of our late friend, George Moore; but in it we read that, at a certain dinner party, a learned man remarked that it would not be easy to find a person of intelligence who believed in the inspiration of the Bible. In an instant George Moore’s voice was heard across the table, saying boldly, “I do, for one.” Nothing more was said. My dear friend had a strong way of speaking, as I well remember; for we have on occasions vied with each other in shouting when we were together at his Cumberland home. I think I can hear his emphatic way of putting it — “I do, for one.” Let us not be backward to take the old-fashioned and unpopular side, and say outright, “I do, for one.” Where are we if our Bibles are gone? Where are we if we are taught to doubt them? If we are left in doubt as to which part is inspired and which is not, we are as badly off as if we had no Bible at all. I hold no theory of inspiration; I accept the inspiration of the Scriptures as a fact. Those who so view the Scriptures need not be ashamed of their company; for some of the best and most learned of men have been of the same mind. Locke, the great philosopher, spent the last fourteen years of his life in the study of the Bible, and when asked what was the shortest way for a young gentleman to understand the Christian religion, he told him read the Bible, remarking: “In it are contained the words of eternal life. It has God for its author, salvation for its purpose, and truth, without any mixture of error, for its matter.” There are those on the side of God’s Word whom you need not be ashamed of in the matter of intelligence and learning; and if it were not so, it should not discourage you when you remember that the Lord has hidden these things from the wise and prudent, and has revealed them to babes. We believe with the apostle that “the foolishness of God is wiser than men.” It is better to believe what comes out of God’s mouth, and be called a fool, than to believe what comes out of the mouth of philosophers, and be, therefore, esteemed a wise man.
19. There is also about what the mouth of the Lord has spoken an absolute certainty. What man has said is unsubstantial, even when true. It is like grasping fog, there is nothing to it. But with God’s Word you have something to grip, something to have, and to hold. This is substance and reality; but of human opinions we may say, “Vanity of vanities, all is vanity.” Though heaven and earth should pass away, yet not one jot or tittle of what God has spoken shall fail. We know that, and feel at rest. God cannot be mistaken. God cannot lie. These are postulates which no one can dispute. If “The mouth of God has spoken it,” this is the judge that ends the strife where wit and reason fail; and henceforth we question no more.
20.
Again: if “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it,” we have in this
utterance the special character of immutable fixedness. Once
spoken by God, not only is it so now, but it always must be so. The
Lord of hosts has spoken, and who shall disannul it? The rock of
God’s Word does not shift, like the quicksand of modern scientific
theology. One said to his minister, “My dear sir, surely you ought to
adjust your beliefs to the progress of science.” “Yes,” he said, “but
I have not had time to do it today, for I have not yet read the
morning papers.” One would have need to read the morning papers and
take in every new edition to know whereabout scientific theology now
stands; for it is always chopping and changing. The only thing that
is certain about the false science of this age is that it will soon
be disproved. Theories, vaunted today, will be scorned tomorrow. The
great scientists live by killing those who went before them. They
know nothing for certain, except that their predecessors were
wrong. Even in one short life we have seen system after system — the
mushrooms, or rather the toadstools, of thought — rise and perish. We
cannot adapt our religious belief to what is more variable than the
moon. Try it who wish: as for me, if “The mouth of the Lord has
spoken it,” it is truth to me in this year of grace; and if I stand
among you a grey-headed old man twenty years hence, you will find me
making no advance upon the divine ultimatum. If “The mouth of the
Lord has spoken it,” we behold in his revelation a gospel which is
without variableness, revealing “Jesus Christ, the same yesterday,
today, and for ever.” Brothers and sisters, we hope to be together
for ever before the eternal throne, where the blazing Seraphim bow,
and even then we shall not be ashamed to affirm that same truth which
today we feed on from the hand of our God.
For he’s the Lord, supremely good,
His mercy is for ever sure;
His truth, which always firmly stood,
To endless ages shall endure.
21. Here let me add that there is something unique about God’s Word, because of the almighty power which accompanies it. “Where the word of a king is, there is power”; where the word of a God is, there is omnipotence. If we dealt more largely in God’s own Word as “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it,” we should see far greater results from our preaching. It is God’s Word, not our comment on God’s Word, that saves souls. Souls are slain by the sword, not by the scabbard, nor by the tassels which adorn its hilt. If God’s Word is brought forward in its native simplicity, no one can stand against it. The adversaries of God must fall before the Word as chaff perishes in the fire. Oh, for wisdom to keep closer and closer to what the mouth of the Lord has spoken!
22. I will say no more on this point, although the theme is a very large and tempting one; especially if I were to dwell upon the depth, the height, the adaptation, the insight and the self-proving power of what “The mouth of the Lord has spoken.”
23. IV. Fourthly, and very briefly, THIS MAKES GOD’S WORD A BASIS FOR GREAT ALARM TO MANY.
24. Shall I read the whole verse to you? “But if you refuse and rebel, you shall be devoured with the sword: for the mouth of the Lord has spoken it.” Every threatening that God has spoken, because he has spoken it, has a tremendous dread about it. Whether God threatens a man or a nation, or the whole class of the ungodly, if they are wise they will feel a trembling take hold on them, because “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it.” God has never yet spoken a threatening that has fallen to the ground. When he told Pharaoh what he would do, he did it; the plagues came thick and fast on him. When the Lord at any time sent his prophets to denounce judgments on the nations, he carried out those judgments. Ask travellers concerning Babylon, and Nineveh, and Edom, and Moab, and Bashan; and they will tell you about the heaps of ruins, which prove how the Lord carried out his warnings to the letter. One of the most awful things recorded in history is the siege of Jerusalem. You have read it, I do not doubt, in Josephus, or elsewhere. It makes one’s blood run cold to think of it. Yet it was all foretold by the prophets, and their prophecies were fulfilled to the bitter end. You talk about God as being “love,” and, if you mean by this that he is not severe in the punishment of sin, I ask you what you make of the destruction of Jerusalem. Remember that the Jews were his chosen nation, and that the city of Jerusalem was the place where his temple had been glorified with his presence. Brethren, if you roam from Edom to Zion, and from Zion to Sidon, and from Sidon to Moab, you will find, amid ruined cities, the signs that God’s words of judgment are certain. Depend on it, then, that when Jesus says, “These shall go away into everlasting punishment,” it will be so. When he says, “If you do not believe that I am he, you shall die in your sins,” it will be so. The Lord never plays at frightening men. His Word is not an exaggeration to scare men with imaginary bugbears. There is emphatic truth in what the Lord says. He has always carried out his threatenings to the letter, and to the moment; and, depend on it, he will continue to do so, “For the mouth of the Lord has spoken it.”
25. It is of no avail to sit down, and draw inferences from the nature of God, and to argue, “God is love, and therefore he will not execute the sentence upon the impenitent.” He knows what he will do better than you can infer; he has not left us to inferences, for he has spoken pointedly and plainly. He says, “He who does not believe shall be damned,” and it will be so, “For the mouth of the Lord has spoken it.” Infer what you like from his nature; but if you draw an inference contrary to what he has spoken, you have inferred a lie, and you will find it so.
26. “Alas,” one says, “I shudder at the severity of the divine sentence.” Do you? It is good! I can heartily sympathize with you. What must he be who does not tremble when he sees the great Jehovah taking vengeance upon iniquity! The terrors of the Lord might well turn steel to wax. Let us remember that the gauge of truth is not our pleasure nor our terror. It is not my shuddering which can disprove what the mouth of the Lord has spoken. It may even be a proof of its truth. Did not all the prophets tremble at revelations from God? Remember how one of them cried. “When I heard, my belly trembled; my lips quivered at the voice; rottenness entered into my bones.” One of the last of the anointed seers fell at the Lord’s feet as dead. Yet all the shrinking of their nature was not used by them as an argument for doubt.
27. Oh my unconverted and unbelieving hearers, remember that if you refuse Christ, and rush upon the keen edge of Jehovah’s sword, your unbelief of eternal judgment will not alter it, nor save you from it. I know why you do not believe in the terrible threatenings. It is because you want to rest easy in your sins. A certain sceptical writer, when in prison, was visited by a Christian man, who wished him well, but he refused to hear a word about religion. Seeing a Bible in the hand of his visitor, he made this remark, “You do not expect me to believe in that book, do you? Why, if that book is true, I am lost for ever.” Just so. In this lies the reason for half the infidelity in the world, and all the infidelity in our congregations. How can you believe what condemns you? Ah! my friends, if you would believe it to be true and act accordingly, you would also find in what the mouth of the Lord has spoken a way of escape from the wrath to come; for the Book is far more full of hope than of dread. This inspired volume flows with the milk of mercy, and the honey of grace. It is not a Doomsday Book of wrath, but a Testament of grace. Yet, if you do not believe its loving warnings, nor regard its just sentences, they are true all the same. If you dare its thunders, if you trample on its promises, and even if you burn it in your rage, the holy Book still stands unaltered and unalterable; for “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it.” Therefore, I urge you, treat the sacred Scriptures with respect, and remember that “These are written, so that you might believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that believing you might have life through his name.”
28. V. And so I must finish, for time fails, when I notice, in the fifth place, that THIS MAKES THE WORD OF THE LORD THE REASON AND REST OF OUR FAITH. “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it,” is the foundation of our confidence.
29. There is forgiveness; for God has said it. Look, friend; you are saying, “I cannot believe that my sins can be washed away, I feel so unworthy.” Yes, but “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it.” Believe in spite of your unworthiness. “Ah,” one says, “I feel so weak I can neither think, nor pray, nor anything else, as I should.” Is it not written, “When we were still without strength, in due time Christ died for the ungodly?” “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it”; therefore, in spite of your inability still believe it, for it must be so.
30. I think I hear some child of God saying, “God has said, ‘I will never leave you, nor forsake you,’ but I am in great trouble; all the circumstances of my life seem to contradict the promise”: yet, “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it,” and the promise must stand. “Trust in the Lord, and do good; so shall you dwell in the land, and truly you shall be fed.” Believe God in the teeth of circumstances. If you cannot see a way of escape or a means of help, yet still believe in the unseen God, and in the truth of his presence; “For the mouth of the Lord has spoken it.” I think I have come to this impasse with myself, at any rate for the present time, that when circumstances deny the promise, I believe it none the less. When friends forsake me, and foes slander me, and my own spirit goes down below zero, and I am depressed almost to despair, I am resolved to hang onto the bare word of the Lord, and prove it to be in itself an all-sufficient stay and support. I will believe God against all the demons in hell, God against Ahithophel, and Judas, and Demas, and all the rest of the turncoats; yes, and God against my own evil heart. His purpose shall stand, “For the mouth of the Lord has spoken it.” Away with you who contradict it: ours is a well-grounded confidence, “For the mouth of the Lord has spoken it.”
31. Eventually we shall come to die. The death sweat shall gather on our brow, and perhaps our tongue will scarcely serve us. Oh that then, like the grand old German Emperor, we may say, “My eyes have seen your salvation,” and, “He has helped me with his name.” When we pass through the rivers he will be with us, the floods shall not overflow us; “For the mouth of the Lord has spoken it.” When we walk through the valley of the shadow of death we shall fear no evil, for he will be with us; his rod and his staff shall comfort us. “The mouth of the Lord has spoken it.” Ah! what will it be to break free from these bonds and rise into glory? We shall soon see the King in his beauty, and be ourselves glorified in his glory; for “the mouth of the Lord has spoken it.” “He who believes has everlasting life”; therefore a glad eternity is ours.
32.
Brethren, we have not followed cunningly devised fables. We are not
“wanton {unruly} boys who swim on bladders,” {inflatable tubes}
which will soon burst under us; but we are resting on firm ground. We
reside where heaven and earth are resting; where the whole universe
depends; where even eternal things have their foundation: we rest on
God himself. If God shall fail us, we gloriously fail with the whole
universe. But there is no fear; therefore let us trust and not be
afraid. His promise must stand; for “The mouth of the Lord has spoken
it.” Oh Lord, it is enough. Glory be to your name, through Christ
Jesus! Amen.
[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon — Isa 1:1-20]
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “God the Father, Attributes of God — The Truth Of God The Promiser” 191}
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Gospel, Its Excellencies — The Different Success Of The Gospel” 483}
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Spirit of the Psalms — Psalm 119” 119}
God the Father, Attributes of God
191 — The Truth Of God The Promiser
1 Praise, everlasting praise, be paid
To him that earth’s foundation laid;
Praise to the God, whose strong decrees,
Sway the creation as he please.
2 Praise to the goodness of the Lord,
Who rules his people by his word;
And there, as strong as his decrees,
He sets his kindest promises.
3 Firm are the words his prophets give,
Sweet words, on which his children live:
Each of them is the voice of God,
Who spoke, and spread the skies abroad.
4 Each of them powerful as that sound
That bid the new made world go round;
And stronger than the solid poles
On which the wheel of nature rolls.
5 Oh, for a strong, a lasting faith,
To credit what th’ Almighty saith!
T’ embrace the message of his Son,
And call the joys of heaven our own.
6 Then should the earth’s old pillars shake,
And all the wheels of nature break,
Our steady souls should fear no more
Than solid rocks when billows roar.
7 Our everlasting hopes arise
Above the ruinable skies,
Where th’ eternal Builder reigns,
And his own courts his power sustains.
Isaac Watts, 1709.
Gospel, Its Excellencies
483 — The Different Success Of The Gospel
1 Christ and his cross is all our theme;
The mysteries that we speak
Are scandal in the Jew’s esteem,
And folly to the Greek.
2 But souls enlighten’d from above
With joy receive the Word;
They see what wisdom, power, and love,
Shine in their dying Lord.
3 The vital savour of his name
Restores their fainting breath;
But unbelief perverts the same
To guilt, despair, and death.
4 Till God diffuse His graces down,
Like showers of heavenly rain,
In vain Apollos sows the ground,
And Paul may plant in vain.
Isaac Watts, 1709.
Spirit of the Psalms
Psalm 119 (Song 1)
1 Oh how I love thy holy law!
‘Tis daily my delight;
And thence my meditations draw
Divine advice by night.
2 How doth thy word my heart engage!
How well employ my tongue!
And in my tiresome pilgrimage
Yields me a heavenly song.
3 Am I a stranger, or at home,
‘Tis my perpetual feast:
Not honey dropping from the comb,
So much allures the taste.
4 No treasures so enrich the mind,
Nor shall thy word be sold
For loads of silver well refined,
Nor heaps of choicest gold.
5 When nature sinks, and spirits droop,
Thy promises of grace
Are pillars to support my hope,
And there I write thy praise.
Isaac Watts, 1719.
Psalm 119 (Song 2)
1 Oh that the Lord would guide my ways
To keep his statutes still!
Oh that my God would grant me grace
To know and do his will!
2 Oh send thy Spirit down, to write
Thy law upon my heart!
Nor let my tongue indulge deceit,
Nor act the liar’s part.
3 From vanity turn off my eyes;
Let no corrupt design,
Nor covetous desires arise
Within this soul of mine.
4 Order my footsteps by thy word,
And make my heart sincere;
Let sin have no dominion, Lord,
But keep my conscience clear.
5 My soul hath gone too far astray,
My feet too often slip;
Yet since I’ve not forgot thy way
Restore thy wandering sheep.
6 Make me to walk in thy commands,
‘Tis a delightful road;
Nor let my head, or heart, or hands,
Offend against my God.
Isaac Watts, 1719
Psalm 119 (Song 3)
1 My soul lies cleaving to the dust;
Lord, give me life divine;
From vain desires and every lust,
Turn off these eyes of mine.
2 I need the influence of thy grace
To speed me in thy way,
Lest I should loiter in my race
Or turn my feet astray.
3 When sore afflictions press me down,
I need thy quickening powers;
Thy word that I have rested on
Shall help my heaviest hours.
4 Are not thy mercies sovereign still,
And thou a faithful God?
Wilt thou not grant me warmer zeal
To run the heavenly road?
5 Does not my heart thy precepts love,
And long to see thy face?
And yet how slow my spirits move
Without enlivening grace!
6 Then shall I love thy gospel more,
And ne’er forget thy word,
When I have felt its quickening power
To draw me near the Lord.
Isaac Watts, 1719.
Psalm 119 (Song 4)
1 My soul lies grovelling low,
Still cleaving to the dust:
Thy quickening grace, oh Lord, bestow,
For in thy word I trust.
2 Make me to understand
Thy precepts and thy will;
Thy wondrous works on every hand,
I’ll sing and talk of still.
3 My soul, oppress’d with grief,
In heaviness melts down;
Oh strengthen me and send relief,
And thou shalt wear the crown.
4 Remove from me the voice
Of falsehood and deceit;
The way of truth is now my choice,
Thy word to me is sweet.
5 Thy testimony stands,
And never can depart;
I’ll run the way of thy commands
If thou enlarge my heart.
Joseph Irons, 1847
Psalm 119 (Song 5)
1 Consider all my sorrows, Lord,
And thy deliverance send;
My soul for thy salvation faints;
When will my troubles end?
2 Yet I have found ‘tis good for me
To bear my Father’s rod;
Afflictions make me learn thy law,
And live upon my God.
3 This is the comfort I enjoy
When new distress begins:
I read thy word, I run thy way,
And hate my former sins.
4 Had not thy word been my delight
When earthly joys were fled,
My soul oppress’d with sorrow’s weight,
Had sunk amongst the dead.
5 I know thy judgments, Lord, are right,
Though they may seem severe;
The sharpest sufferings I endure
Flow from thy faithful care.
6 Before I knew thy chastening rod
My feet were apt to stray;
But now I learn to keep thy word,
Nor wander from thy way.
Isaac Watts, 1719.
Psalm 119 (Song 6)
1 Oh that thy statutes every hour
Might dwell upon my mind!
Thence I derive a quickening power,
And daily peace I find.
2 To meditate thy precepts, Lord,
Shall be my sweet employ;
My soul shall ne’er forget thy word;
Thy word is all my joy.
3 How would I run in thy commands,
If thou my heart discharge
From sin and Satan’s hateful chains,
And set my feet at large!
4 My lips with courage shall declare
Thy statutes and thy name;
I’ll speak thy words though kings should hear,
Nor yield to sinful shame.
Isaac Watts, 1719
Psalm 119 (Song 7)
1 Father, I bless thy gentle hand;
How kind was thy chastising rod;
That forced my conscience to a stand,
And brought my wandering soul to God!
2 Foolish and vain, I went astray
Ere I had felt thy scourges, Lord;
I left my guide, and lost my way;
But now I love and keep thy word.
3 ‘Tis good for me to wear the yoke,
For pride is apt to rise and swell;
‘Tis good to bear my Father’s stroke,
That I might learn his statutes well.
4 Thy hands have made my mortal frame,
Thy Spirit form’d my soul within;
Teach me to know thy wondrous name,
And guard me safe from death and sin.
5 Then all that love and fear the Lord,
At my salvation shall rejoice;
For I have hoped in thy word,
And made thy grace my only choice.
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.
Answers in Genesis is an apologetics ministry, dedicated to helping Christians defend their faith and proclaim the good news of Jesus Christ.