No. 2146-36:289. A Sermon Delivered On Lord’s Day Morning, May 25, 1890, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.
But let all those who put their trust in you rejoice: let them always shout for joy, because you defend them: let those also who love your name be joyful in you. {Ps 5:11}
1. “The Lord puts a difference between the Egyptians and Israel.” There is an ancient difference which he has made in his eternal purpose; and this is seen in every item of the covenant of grace. “The Lord has set apart him who is godly for himself”; but it is also written, “The foolish shall not stand in your sight: you hate all workers of iniquity.” You who have believed belong to the house of Israel, and heirs according to promise; for those who are of faith are the true seed of faithful Abraham. See that you reveal this difference by the holiness of your lives. “ ‘Come out from among them, and be separate,’ says the Lord, ‘and do not touch the unclean thing.’ ” Always display this difference by the joyfulness of your spirits. Do not let noxious cares invade you; for we read, “I will sever in that day the land of Goshen, in which my people dwell, so that no swarms of flies shall be there.” Do not fear that the wrathful judgment of God will fall indiscriminately; for we read, “Only in the land of Goshen, where the children of Israel were, was there no hail.” The servants of the Lord should wear the royal livery: that livery is made from the fine cloth of holiness, trimmed with the lace of joy. Take care that you exhibit both holiness of character and joyfulness of spirit; for where these two things are in us, and abound, they make us that we are not barren nor unfruitful. For us there should be joy, strikingly in contrast with the unrest of the unbeliever. Over all the land of Egypt there was darkness which might be felt, even thick darkness, for three days: “They did not see each other, neither did anyone rise from his place for three days: but all the children of Israel had light in their dwellings.” If it is so with you, that the Lord has given you the light of joy, let your faces shine with it. If you walk in the light as God is in the light, go out and let men see the brightness of your countenances, and take knowledge of you that you have been with Jesus, and have learned from him his gracious calm, as well as his holiness. “Rejoice in the Lord always.” Your Lord desires that your joy may be full. He gives you a joy which no man takes from you: it is his legacy. “Peace I leave with you, my peace I give to you: not as the world gives, do I give to you.”
2. The subject for this morning is joy, the joy of faith, the joy which is the fruit of the Spirit from the root of trust in God. May we not only talk about it at this hour, but enjoy it now and for evermore! It is pleasant to read, and hear, and think about joy; but to be filled with joy and peace through believing is a far more satisfying thing. I want you to see not only the sparkling fountain of joy, but to drink deep draughts of it; yes, and drink all the week, and all the month, and all the year, and all the rest of your lives, both in time and in eternity. “Let the children of Zion be joyful in their King.”
3. I. First, let us speak a little about THE KIND OF JOY WHICH IS ALLOTTED TO BELIEVERS: “Let all those who put their trust in you rejoice: let them always shout for joy, because you defend them: let those also who love your name be joyful in you.”
4. Note, first, concerning this joy, that it is to be universal to all who trust: “Let all those who put their trust in you rejoice.” This is not only for the healthy, but for the sickly; not only for the successful, but for the disappointed; not only for those who have the bird in the hand, but for those who only see it in the bush. Let all rejoice! If you only have a little faith, yet if you are trusting in the Lord, you have a right to joy. It may be, your joy will not rise so high as it might do if your faith were greater; but still, where faith is true, it gives solid ground for joy. Oh you babes in grace, you little children, you who have been newly converted, and sadly feel your feebleness, yet rejoice; for the Lord will bless those who fear him, “both small and great!” “Do not fear, you worm Jacob.” “Do not fear, little flock.” There is a joy which is as milk to nourish babes — a joy which is not as meat with bones in it; for the Lord adds no sorrow with it. The little ones of the flock need not vex themselves concerning the deep things of God; for there is joy in those shallows of simple truth where lambs may safely wade. The joy of the Lord is softened down to feeble constitutions, lest it overpowers them. The same great sea which floods the vast bays also flows into the tiny creeks. “Let all those who put their trust in you rejoice.” You, Miss Much-Afraid, over there, you are to rejoice! You, Mr. Despondency, hardly daring to look up, you must still learn to sing. As for Mr. Ready-to-Halt, he must dance on his crutches, and Feeble-Mind must play the music for him. It is the mind of the Holy Spirit that those who trust in the Lord should rejoice before him.
5. This joy, in the next place, is to be as constant concerning time as it is universal concerning people. “Let them always shout for joy.” Do not be content that a good time in the morning should be followed by dreariness in the afternoon. Do not cultivate an occasional delight, but strive for perpetual joy. To be happy at a revival meeting, and then go home to groan, is a poor business. We should “feel like singing all the time.” The believer has enduring arguments for enduring consolation. There is never a time when the saint of God does not have great reason for gladness; and if he never doubts and worries until he has a justifiable reason for doubt, he will never doubt nor worry. “Rejoice in the Lord always, and again” — what? “always,” and yet does the apostle say, “and again?” Yes, he would have us rejoice, and keep on rejoicing, and then rejoice more and more. Brethren go on piling up your delights. You are the blessed by the Lord, and his blessing reaches “to the utmost bounds of the everlasting hills.”
6. Next, let your joy be revealed. “Let them always shout for joy.” Shouting is an enthusiastic utterance, a method which men use when they have won a victory, when they divide the spoil, when they carry home the harvest, when they tread the vintage, when they drain the goblet. Believers, you may shout for joy with unreserved delight. Some religionists shout, and we would not wish to stop them; but we wish certain of them knew better what they are shouting for. Brethren, since you know whom you have believed, and what you have believed, and what the deep sources of your joy are, do not be so sobered by your knowledge as to become dumb; but rather imitate the children in the temple, who, if they knew little, loved much, and so shouted in praise of him whom they loved. “Let them shout for joy.” A touch of enthusiasm would be the salvation of many a man’s religion. Some Christians are good enough people: they are like wax candles, but they are not lit. Oh, for a touch of flame! Then they would scatter light, and so become of service to their families. “Let them shout for joy.” Why not? Do not let orderly folks object. One said to me the other day, “When I hear you preach I feel as if I must have a shout!” My friend, shout if you feel forced to do so. (Here a hearer cried, “Glory!”) Our brother cries, “Glory!” and I say so too. “Glory!” The shouting need not always be done in a public service, or it might hinder devout hearing; but there are times and places where a glorious outburst of enthusiastic joy would quicken life all around. The ungodly are not half so restrained in their blasphemy as we are in our praise. How is this? They go home making night hideous with their yells: are we never to have an outbreak of consecrated delight? Yes, we will have our high days and holy days, and we will sing and shout for joy until even the heathen say, “The Lord has done great things for them.”
7. This joy is to be repeated with variations. One likes, in music, to hear the same tune played in different ways. So here you have it. “Let them rejoice. Let them always shout for joy. Let them be joyful in you.” There is no monotony in real joy. In the pretence of mirth one grows dull; but in living joy there is exhilaration. Commend me to the springing well of heavenly joy: its waters are always fresh, clear, sparkling, springing up to everlasting life. Joy blends many colours in its one ray of light. At times it is quiet, and sits still beneath a weight of glory. I have known it to weep, not salt drops, but sweet showers. Have you never cried because of your joy in the Lord? Sometimes joy labours for expression until it is ready to faint; and immediately it sings until it rivals the angels. Singing is the natural language of joy; but often silence suits it even better. Our joy resides in Christ, whether we are quiet or shouting, whether we fall at our Lord’s feet as dead, or lean on his bosom in calm delight.
8. This joy is logical. When I was a child, and went to school, I remember learning out of a book called “Why and Because.” Things one learns as a child stick in the memory; and therefore I like a text which has a “because” in it. Here it is: “Let them always shout for joy, because you defend them.” Emotions are not fired by logic; and yet reasons furnish fuel for the flame. A man may be sad, though he cannot explain his sadness, or he may be greatly glad, though he cannot give the reasons for his joy. The joy of a believer in God has a firm foundation: it is not the baseless fabric of a vision. The joy of faith burns like coals of juniper, and yet it can be calmly explained and justified. The joyful believer is no lunatic, carried away by a delusion: he has a “because” with which to account for all his joy — a reason which he can consider on his bed in the night-watches, or defend against a scoffing world. We have a satisfactory reason for our most exuberant joy: “The Lord has done great things for us; for which we are glad.” Philosophers can be happy without music, and saints can be happy despite circumstances. With joy we draw water out of deeper and fuller wells than such as father Jacob dug. Our mirth is as soberly reasonable as the worldling’s fears.
9.
Once more, the happiness is a thing of the heart; for the text
runs like this — “Let those who love your name be joyful in you.”
We love God. I trust I am speaking to many who could say, “Lord, you
know all things; you know that I love you.” Is it not a very happy
emotion? What is sweeter than to say, with the tears in one’s
eyes, — “My God, I love you!” To sit down and have nothing to ask for,
no words to utter, but only for the soul to love — is this not
heavenly? Measureless depths of unutterable love are in the soul, and
in those depths we find the pearl of joy. When the heart is taken up
with so delightful an object as the ever-blessed God, it feels an
intensity of joy which cannot be rivalled. When our whole being is
steeped in adoring love, then heaven comes streaming down, and we
rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of glory. I feel I am talking
in a poor way about the richest things which are enjoyed by saintly
men. Many of you know as much about these matters as I do, perhaps
more. But my soul even now magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices
in God my Saviour. Although I feel unworthy and unfit to speak to
this vast throng, yet I have a great sympathy with my text, for I am
“glad in the Lord.”
Oh, what immortal joys I feel,
And raptures all divine;
For Jesus tells me I am his,
And my Beloved mine!
If you sit before the Lord at this time, and indulge your souls with an outflow of love for God and his Son Jesus Christ, and at the same time perceive an inflowing of heavenly joy, it will not much matter how the poor preacher speaks to your ear, for the Lord himself will be heard in your soul, and heaven will flood your being.
10. II. Now I come to the second point, where we will consider THE BASIS AND REASON OF HOLY JOY. I am bound to speak upon this matter; for I have told you that the joy of the believer is logical, and can be defended by facts; and so indeed it is.
11. For, first, the believer’s joy arises from the God in whom he trusts. “Let all those who put their trust in you rejoice.” When, after many a weary wandering, the dove of your soul has at last come back to the ark, and Noah has put out his hand and “pulled her in to him,” the poor, weary creature is happy. Taken into Noah’s hand and made to nestle in his bosom, she feels so safe, so peaceful! The weary leagues of the wild waste of waters are all forgotten, or only remembered to give zest to the repose. So, when you trust in God, your soul has found a quiet resting-place, a pavilion of repose! The little chick runs to and fro in fear. The mother hen calls it home. She spreads her soft wings over the brood. Have you never seen the little chicks when they are housed under the hen, how they poke out their little heads through the feathers and peep and twitter so prettily? It is a chick’s heaven to hide under its mother’s bosom. It is perfectly happy; it could not be more content; its little chick nature is brimful of delight. May this be your joy also, “He shall cover you with his feathers, and you shall trust under his wings: his truth shall be your shield and buckler.” My nature gets all its needs supplied, all its desires gratified, when it rests in God. Oh, you who have never trusted God in Christ Jesus, you do not know what real happiness means! You may search all the theatres in London, and ransack all the music halls, and clubs, and public houses, but you will find no happiness in any of their mirth, or show, or wine. True joy dwells where the living God dwells, and nowhere else. In your own home with God, even though that home is only a single room, and your meal is very scanty, you will see more of heaven than in the palaces of kings! Have God for your sole trust, and you shall never lack for joy.
12. Our joy arises next from what the Lord does for us. “Let them shout for joy, because you defended them.” God always guards his people, whoever may attack them. “The Lord is your keeper.” Angels are our guardians, providence is our protector; but God himself is the preserver of his chosen. “You shall not be afraid for the terror by night; nor for the arrow that flies by day; nor for the pestilence that walks in darkness; nor for the destruction that wastes at noonday.” No fortress guards the soldier so well as God guards his redeemed. The God of our salvation will defend us from all evil, he will defend our souls. “Though a host should encamp against me, my heart shall not fear: though war should rise against me, in this I will be confident.”
13. Further, our joy arises out of the love we have towards our God. “Let those who love your name be joyful in you.” The more you love God, the more you will delight in him. It is the profusion of a mother’s love for her child which makes her take such delight in him. Her boy is her joy because of her love. If we loved Jesus better, we should be happier in him. You do not, perhaps, see the connection between the two things; but there is a connection so intimate, that little love for Christ brings little joy in Christ, and great love for Christ brings great joy in Christ. May God grant that in a full Christ we may have a full joy! Do you see what I mean? When a man comes to God in Christ and says, “This Saviour is my Saviour, this Father is my Father, this God is my God for ever and ever”; then he has everything, and he must be joyful. He has no fear about the past — God has forgiven him; he has no distress about the present — the Lord is with him; he is not afraid about the future — for the Lord has said, “I will never leave you, nor forsake you.” If you understand my text, and put it into practice, you possess the quintessence of happiness, the essential oil of joy. He who has joy in his barn-floor may see it bare; he who has joy in his wine-vats may see them dry; he who has joy in his children may bury that joy in the grave; he who has joy in himself will find his beauty consume away; but he who has joy in God drinks from “the deep which lies under”; his springs shall always flow, “in summer and in winter it shall be.”
14. I have pointed to the deep sources from which the joy of the believer wells up; but I must also add, it is by faith that this joy comes to us. Faith makes joyful discoveries. I speak to those of you who have faith. When you first believed in Christ you found that you were saved, and knew that you were forgiven. Some little while after, you discovered that you were chosen by God from before the foundation of the world. Oh, the rapture of your soul, when the Lord appeared of old to you, saying, “Yes, I have loved you with an everlasting love: therefore with lovingkindness I have drawn you!” The glorious doctrine of election is as wines on the lees well refined to those who by faith receive it; and it brings with it a new, intense, and refined joy, such as the world knows nothing about. Having discovered your election by God, you looked further into your justification; “for whom he called, those he also justified.” What a pearl justification is! In Christ the believer is as just in the sight of God as if he had never sinned: he is covered with a perfect righteousness, and is accepted in the Beloved. What a joy is justification by faith, when it is well understood! What bliss also to learn our union to Christ! Believers are members of his body, of his flesh, and of his bones. Because he lives, we shall live also. One with Jesus! Wonderful discovery this! Equally full of joy is our adoption! “Beloved, now we are the sons of God”; “And if children, then heirs; heirs of God, and joint-heirs with Christ.” So faith heaps fuel on the fire of our joy; for it keeps on making discoveries out of the Word of the Lord. The more you search the Scriptures, and the nearer you live to God, the more you will enjoy of that great goodness which the Lord has laid up in store for those who fear him. Though “eye has not seen, nor ear heard, the things which God has prepared for those who love him”; yet “he has revealed them to us by his Spirit”; and by it he puts gladness into our hearts more than increasing grain and wine could bring.
15. Furthermore, faith gives cheering interpretations. Faith is a prophet who can charmingly interpret a distressing dream. Faith sees a gain in every loss a joy in every grief. Read properly, and you will see that a child of God in trouble is on the way to greater blessing. Faith views affliction hopefully. Sorrow may come to us, as it did to David, as a chastisement for sin. Faith reads — “Whom the Lord loves he chastens, and scourges every son whom he receives.” Better to be chastened with God’s children here than to be condemned with the world hereafter. Faith also sees that affliction may be sent by way of discovery, to make the man know himself, his God, and the promises better. Faith perceives that affliction may be most precious as a test, acting, as the fire does, when it shows what is pure gold and what is base metal. Faith rejoices in a test so valuable. Faith understands the truth, that affliction is sent to develop and mature the Christian life. “Ah, well!” says Faith, “then, thank God for it. No trial for the present seems to be joyful, but grievous; nevertheless, afterwards it works out the peaceable fruit of righteousness in those who are exercised by it.” Faith sees sweet love in every bitter cup. Faith knows that whenever she gets a black envelope from the heavenly post office, there is treasure in it. When the Lord’s black horses call at our door, they bring us double loads of blessing. Up to this moment I, God’s servant, wish to bear my unreserved testimony to the fact that it is good for me to have been afflicted. In spiritual life and knowledge and power, I have grown very little except when under the hand of trouble. I leave my door open, and am half inclined to say to pain and sickness and sadness, “Turn in here; for I know that you will leave a blessing behind. Come, crosses, if you will; for you always turn to crowns.” So faith glories in tribulations also, and in the lion of adversity finds the honey of joy. I have said that trial comes to us as chastisement, as we see in the case of David; as a discoverer of grace, as we see in Abraham; or as a test, as we see in Job; or as a preventive, as in the case of Paul, who wrote, “Lest I should be exalted above measure through the abundance of the revelations, there was given to me a thorn in the flesh, the messenger of Satan to buffet me.” In every tribulation God is moved by love for his people, and by nothing else. If he cuts the vine with a sharp knife, it is because he would have fruit from it. If he whips his child until he cries like David, “All the day long I have been plagued, and chastened every morning,” it is for his profit, so that he may learn obedience by the things which he suffers. All things work together for the believer’s good, and so faith interprets sorrow itself into joy.
16. Moreover, faith believes great promises. This opens other wells of joy. I cannot stop to quote them to you this morning: the Book of the Lord is full of them. What more can the Lord say than he has said? The promises of God are full, and as varied as they are full, and as sure as they are varied, and as rich as they are sure. “Very great and precious promises.” When I wrote “The Cheque Book of the Bank of Faith” I was at no loss to find a promise for every day in the year; the difficulty was which to leave out. The promises are like the bells on the garments of our Great High Priest for ever ringing out holy melodies. When a man gets a promise fairly into the hand of faith, and goes to God with it, he must rejoice. All of the children of the promise are worthy to be called Isaac, that is, “Laughter”; for God has made him to laugh who lives according to promise. To live on the promises of man would be starvation; but to live on the promises of God is to feed on fat things full of marrow.
17.
Above all, faith has an eye to the eternal reward. She rejoices
in her prospects. She takes into her hand the birds which for others
are in the bush. To be with Christ in the glory-land is the joy of
hope, the hope which does not make ashamed. Our hope is no dream: as
sure as we are here today, we who are trusting in Christ will be in
heaven before long; for he prays that we may be with him where he is,
and may behold his glory. Let us not wish to postpone the happy day.
Shall our bridal day be delayed? No, let the Bridegroom speedily
come, and take us to himself. What a joy to know that this head shall
wear a crown of glory, and these hands shall wave the palm branch of
victory! I do not speak of myself alone, my brethren, but of you
also, and of all those who love his appearing. There is a crown of
life laid up for you, which the righteous Judge will give you.
Therefore, have patience for a little while. Still bear your cross.
Put up with the difficulties of the way, for the end is almost within
sight.
The way may be rough,
But it cannot be long:
So we’ll smooth it with hope,
And cheer it with song.
May the Lord give us the ears of faith with which to hear the bells of heaven ringing out from afar over the waters of time!
18. Faith always has reason for joy, since God is always the same, his promises are the same, and his power and will to fulfil are the same. In an unchanging God we find unchanging reasons for joy. If we draw water from the well of God, we may draw one day as well as another, and never find the water abated; but if we make our joy to depend in part upon creatures and circumstances, we may find our joy leak out through the cracks in the cistern. Last Sunday morning I cried out to you, “Both feet on the rock! Both feet on the rock!” and the words led one poor heart to try the power of undivided faith in God. {See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 2145, “Scriptural Salvation” 2146} This is the road to joy, and there is no other. Drink waters from your own fountain, and do not gad about after others. Is not the Lord enough for you? Is it not sufficient to say, “All my fresh springs are in you?” Neither life, nor death, nor poverty, nor sickness, nor bereavement, nor slander, nor death itself, shall quench your joy if it is founded in God alone.
19. III. We will look, for a minute or two, into a third matter, which is THE FAILURES REPORTED CONCERNING THIS JOY. I think I hear someone say, “It is all very well for you to tell us that believers are joyful, and have logical reasons for gladness; but some of them are about as dull as can be, and create dulness in others.” I am obliged to speak very carefully here, for I am afraid that certain Christians give good reason for this objection.
20. Let me say to some of you who love to raise objections, What do you know about this joy? Are you unbelievers? Well, then, you are out of court: you are not competent to judge. The griefs of believers you do not know, and with their joy you cannot intermeddle. You have no spiritual taste or discernment, and what judgment can you form? A genuine believer may be as happy as the angels, and yet you may not know his joy, because you are not in on the secret. You do not have a spiritual mind, and the carnal mind cannot discern spiritual things. I would have you speak with bated breath when you talk about this matter. When a blind man goes to the Royal Academy, his criticisms on the pictures are not worth much; but they are quite equal in value to yours when you speak of spiritual things. You cannot know what joy in the Lord may mean; for, alas! you a stranger to such heavenly things.
21. Alas! some professors of religion are mere pretenders, these have no joy of the Lord. To carry out their pretence, these people even imagine that it is necessary to put on a long face and to talk very solemnly, not to say dismally. Their idea of religion is, that black is the colour of heaven. But, dear friends, we cannot prevent hypocrites arising; it is only a proof that true religion is worth having. You took a bad half-sovereign the other night, did you? Did you say, “All half-sovereigns are worthless, I will never take another?” Not so: you became more careful, but you were quite sure that there were good half sovereigns in circulation; for otherwise people would not make counterfeit ones. It would not pay anyone to be a hypocrite unless there were enough genuine Christians to make the hypocrites pass for real. Therefore, do not say too much about hypocritical weepers, lest you slander true men.
22. Next, remember that some people are constitutionally sad. They cried as soon as they were born; they cried when they cut their teeth; and they have cried ever since. Their spirits are very low down, and when the grace of God gets into their hearts it lifts them a great deal to bring them up to a decent level of joy. Think of what they would have been without it. Many would have died in despair, if it had not been for faith. The grace of God has kept them up, or they would have lost their reason. I am sorry there should be people who have bad constitutions, feeble digestions, or irritated brains; but there are such. Pity them, even if you blame them. They must not so pity themselves as to make an excuse for their unbelief; but we must remember that often the spirit truly is willing, but the flesh is weak.
23. When you have met Christians who are not happy, did it never strike you that their depression might only be for a time under very severe trial? You may go to the south of France, where the days are so sunny, and you may happen to be there for only a couple of days, and it may rain all the time: it would be unfair on that account to say that it is a gloomy place. So it may be that the Christian is under extreme pressure for the time, and when that is moderated he will be very joyful. I do not excuse his loss of joy; but, still, there is a November of fogs in the year of most men. Judge no man by the day, but watch his spirit on a larger scale, and see whether he does not usually delight himself in God.
24. Moreover, I would like to say a very pointed thing to some people who charge the saints with undue sadness. May you not be guilty of making them so? There is an unkind, morose, wicked, drinking husband, and he says, “My wife’s religion makes her miserable.” No. It is not her religion, but her husband. You are enough to make twenty people unhappy: you know you are; and therefore do not blame the poor woman, if, when she sees you, the tear is in her eye. Alas! when she thinks of your going down to hell, and knows that she will be parted from you for ever, the more she loves you the more sad she is to think of you. “Oh,” says some wild boy here, “my mother is wretched!” I do not wonder; I should be wretched too, if you were my son. If any of you are living ungodly lives, it makes your parents’ hearts ache to see you going headlong to perdition. Is it not abominable that a man should make another miserable, and then blame him for being so? If only you were saved, how your mother’s face would brighten up! If your father saw his boy turn to the Lord, he would be as happy as the birds in spring. Speak tenderly on this matter lest you accuse yourself.
25. If you say that some Christians are unhappy, must you not also admit that many of them are very happy? I was once called on by an enthusiast who had a new religion to proclaim. Numbers of people have a crack which lets in new light, and this man was going to convert me to his new ideas. After I had heard him, I said, “I have heard your story, will you hear mine?” When I talked to him of my lot and portion in the love of a covenant God, and the safety of the believer in Christ, he said, “Now, sir, if you believe all this, you ought to be the happiest man in the world.” I admitted that his inference was true; but then I said to him, what rather surprised him, “So I am; and I am going to be more so all the rest of my life.” If a man is chosen by God from before the foundation of the world, is redeemed by the precious blood of Christ, is quickened by the Holy Spirit, and renewed in the spirit of his mind, is one with Christ, and on his way to heaven; if he is not happy, he ought to be. Surely, we ought to rejoice abundantly, dear friends, for ours is a happy lot. “Happy are the people whose God is the Lord.”
26. If God’s people are not happy at times, it is not their faith which makes them unhappy — ask them. It is not what you believe that makes you unhappy, it is your lack of faith, is it not? If a man begins to doubt, he begins to sorrow: as far as his faith goes, he has joy. Oh, for more faith! Faith does create joy. We can answer all objections by the fact that “we who have believed do enter into rest.”
27. IV. I close by mentioning THE ARGUMENTS FOR ABOUNDING IN JOY. You cannot argue a man into gladness, but you may possibly stir him up to see what will make him happy.
28. First, you see in my text a permit to be glad: “Let all those that put their trust in you rejoice.” You have a ticket here to the banquets of joy. You may be as happy as you ever like. You have divine permission to shout for joy. Over there is the inner sanctuary of happiness. You cry, “May I come in?” Yes, if by faith you can grasp the text, “Let all those who put their trust in you rejoice.” “But may I be happy?” one says. “May I be glad? May I? Is there joy for me?” Do you trust in the Lord? Then you have your passport; travel in the land of light.
29. But the text is not only a permit, it is a precept. When it says, “Let them shout for joy,” it means that they are commanded to do so. Blessed is that religion in which it is a duty to be happy. Come, you mournful ones, be glad. You discontented grumblers, come out of that dog house! Enter the palace of the King! Leave your dunghills; ascend your thrones. The precept commands it: “Rejoice in the Lord always: and again I say, ‘Rejoice.’ ”
30. We have here more than a permit and a precept, it is a prayer. David prays it, the Lord Jesus prays it by David. Let them rejoice, let them be joyful in you! Will he not grant the prayer which he has inspired by causing us to rejoice through lifting the light of his countenance upon us? Pray for joy yourself, saying with David, “Restore to me the joy of your salvation.”
31. The text might be read as a promise: “All those who put their trust in you shall rejoice.” God promises joy and gladness to believers. Light is sown for them in the promises: the Lord will turn their night into day.
32. Listen to the following line of argument, which shall be very brief. You only act reasonably when you rejoice. If you are chosen by God, and redeemed by blood, and have been made an heir of heaven, you ought to rejoice. Please, do not act contrary to nature and reason. Do not fly in the face of great and precious truths. From what you profess, you are bound to be joyful.
33. You will best baffle your adversaries by being happy. David talks about them in both these psalms; but he does not fret, he simply goes on rejoicing in God. “They say; they say”: let them say! “Rest in the Lord, and wait patiently for him.” But the attack is cruel. No doubt it is, but the Lord knows all about it. Do not cease to rest in him. If your heart is full of God’s love, you can easily bear all that the enemy may throw at you.
34. Abound in joy, for then you will behave best towards those who are all around you. When a man is unhappy, he usually makes other people so; and a person that is miserable is generally unkind, and frequently unjust. It is often indigestion that makes a man find fault with his servants and wife and children. If a man is at peace with himself, he is peaceful with others. Get right within, and you will be right without. One of the best medicines for good a temperament is communion with God, and subsequent joy of heart.
35. You yourself also, if you are happy, will be strong: “The joy of the Lord is your strength.” If you lose your joy in your religion, you will be a poor worker: you cannot bear strong testimony, you cannot bear stern trial, you cannot lead a powerful life. In proportion as you maintain your joy, you will be strong in the Lord, and for the Lord.
36. Do you not know that if you are full of joy you will be turning the charming side of religion where men can see it? I should not like to wear my coat with the inside out: some religionists always do that. It was said of one great professor, that he looked as if his religion did not agree with him. Godliness is not a rack or a thumbscrew. Do not behave towards religion as if you felt that you must take it, like so much medicine, but you would rather not. If it tastes like nauseous medicine to you, I should fear you have gotten the wrong kind, and are poisoning yourself. Do not believe that true godliness is akin to sourness. Cheerfulness is next to godliness. “When you fast, anoint your head, and wash your face, so that you do not appear to men to fast.” Weed out levity, but cultivate joy. So you will win other hearts to follow Jesus.
37.
Remember, that if you are always joyful, you are rehearsing the music
of the skies. We are going there very soon, let us not be ignorant of
the music of its choirs. I should not like to crowd into my seat, and
hear the choirmaster say, “Do you know your part?” and then have to
answer, “Oh, no, I have never sung while I was on earth; for I had no
joy in the Lord.” I think I shall answer to the choirmaster, and say,
“Yes; I have long since sung, ‘Worthy is the Lamb,’ ”
I would begin the music here,
And so my soul shall rise:
Oh, for some heavenly notes, to bear
My passions to the skies!
With joy we rehearse the song of songs. We pay glad homage now before Jehovah’s throne. We sing to the Lord our joyful harmonies, and we will do so as long as we have any being. Pass me that score, oh chief musician of the skies, for I can take it up and sing my part in bass, or tenor, or treble, or alto, or soprano, as my voice may be. The key is joy in God. Whatever the part assigned to us, the music is all for Jesus.
38.
May some of you who have never rejoiced in Jesus Christ learn how to
praise him today by being washed in his precious blood! You who have
praised him long, may you learn your score even more fully, and sing
in better tune henceforth, and for evermore. Amen.
[Portions Of Scripture Read Before Sermon — Ps 4; 5]
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Spirit of the Psalms — Psalm 136” 136 @@ "(Song 1)"}
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Spirit of the Psalms — Psalm 4” 4}
{See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Spirit of the Psalms — Psalm 103” 103 @@ "(Version 2)"}
The Sword And The Trowel. Edited by C. H. Spurgeon.
Contents for June, 1890.
The Minister in these Times. By C. H. Spurgeon.
The Missionary a Man-of-all-Work.
“Standing Without.”
Timbertoes.
In Memoriam Pastor W. H. Burton.
Moseback Correspondence. No. 2.
Ebenezer Richard.
Noble is that Noble does.
A Minister’s Impressions of the Conference of 1890.
“Too Busy to Look Up.”
Notices of Books.
Notes.
Pastors’ College, Metropolitan Tabernacle.
Pastors’ College Missionary Association.
Stockwell Orphanage.
Colportage Association.
Society of Evangelists.
For General Use in the Lord’s Work.
Report of the Pastors’ College.
Price 3d. Post free, 4 Stamps.
Passmore & Alabaster, Paternoster Buildings; and all Booksellers.
Spirit of the Psalms
Psalm 136 (Song 1) <7s.>
1 Let us, with a gladsome mind,
Praise the Lord, for he is kind:
For his mercies shall endure,
Ever faithful, ever sure.
2 Let us sound his name abroad,
For of gods he is the God:
For his mercies shall endure,
Ever faithful, ever sure.
3 He, with all commanding might,
Fill’d the new made world with light;
For his mercies shall endure,
Ever faithful, ever sure.
4 All things living he doth feed;
His full hand supplies their need:
For his mercies shall endure,
Ever faithful, ever sure.
5 He his chosen race did bless
In the wasteful wilderness:
For his mercies shall endure,
Ever faithful, ever sure.
6 He hath, with a piteous eye,
Look’d upon our misery:
For his mercies shall endure,
Ever faithful, ever sure.
7 Let us then, with gladsome mind,
Praise the Lord, for he is kind,
For his mercies shall endure,
Ever faithful, ever sure.
John Milton, 1645
Psalm 136 (Song 2) L.M.
1 Give to our God immortal praise;
Mercy and truth are all his ways:
Wonders of grace to God belong,
Repeat his mercies in your song.
2 Give to the Lord of lords renown,
The King of kings with glory crown;
His mercies ever shall endure,
When lords and kings are known no more.
3 He built the earth, he spread the sky,
And fix’d the starry lights on high:
Wonders of grace to God belong,
Repeat his mercies in your song.
4 He fills the sun with morning light,
He bids the moon direct the night:
His mercies ever shall endure,
When suns and moons shall shine no more.
5 The Jews he freed from Pharaoh’s hand,
And brought them to the promised land:
Wonders of grace to God belong,
Repeat his mercies in your song.
6 He saw the Gentiles dead in sin,
And felt his pity work within:
His mercies ever shall endure,
When death and sin shall reign no more.
7 He sent his Son with power to save
From guilt, and darkness, and the grave
Wonders of grace to God belong,
Repeat his mercies in your song.
8 Through this vain world he guides our feet,
And leads us to his heavenly seat;
His mercies ever shall endure,
When this vain world shall be no more.
Isaac Watts, 1719.
Spirit of the Psalms
Psalm 4
1 Lord of my life, my hopes, my joys,
My never-failing Friend,
Thou hast been all my help till now,
Oh! help me to the end!
2 While worldly minds impatient grow,
More prosperous times to see,
Oh! let the glories of thy face
Shine brighter, Lord, on me!
3 So shall my heart o’reflow with joy
More lasting and more true
Than theirs, possess’d of all that they
So eagerly pursue.
4 Then down in peace I’ll lay my head,
And take my needful rest:
No other guard I ask or need,
Of thee, Oh Lord, possess’d.
Tate and Brady, 1696.
Spirit of the Psalms
Psalm 103 (Version 1)
1 My soul, repeat his praise,
Whose mercies are so great;
Whose anger is so slow to rise,
So ready to abate.
2 God will not always chide;
And when his strokes are felt,
His strokes are fewer than our crimes,
And lighter than our guilt.
3 High as the heavens are raised
Above the ground we tread,
So far the riches of his grace
Our highest thought exceed.
4 His power subdues our sins;
And his forgiving love,
Far as the east is from the west,
Doth all our guilt remove.
5 The pity of the Lord,
To those that fear his name,
Far as the east is from the west,
He knows our feeble frame.
6 He knows we but dust,
Scatter’d with every breath;
His anger, like a rising wind,
Can send us swift to death.
7 Our days are as the grass,
Or like the morning flower;
If one sharp blast sweep o’er the field,
It withers in an hour.
8 But thy compassions, Lord,
To endless years endure;
And children’s children ever find,
Thy words of promise sure.
Isaac Watts, 1719.
Psalm 103 (Version 2)
1 Oh bless the Lord, my soul!
Let all within me join,
And aid my tongue to bless his name,
Whose favours are divine.
2 Oh, bless the Lord, my soul,
Nor let his mercies lie
Forgotten in unthankfulness,
And without praises die.
3 ‘Tis he forgives thy sins;
‘Tis he relieves thy pain;
‘Tis he that heals thy sicknesses,
And makes thee young again.
4 He crowns thy life with love,
When ransom’d from the grave;
He that redeem’d my soul from hell
Hath sovereign power to save.
5 He fills the poor with good,
He gives the sufferers rest;
The Lord hath judgments for the proud,
And justice for the oppress’d
6 His wondrous works and ways
He made by Moses known;
But sent the world his truth and grace
By his beloved Son.
Isaac Watts, 1719.
Psalm 103 (Version 3) <8.7.4.>
1 Praise, my soul, the King of heaven;
To his feet thy tribute bring!
Ransom’d, heal’d, restored, forgiven,
Who like me his praise should sing!
Praise him! praise him,
Praise him! praise him,
Praise the everlasting King!
2 Praise him for his grace and favour
To our fathers in distress!
Praise him still the same as ever,
Slow to chide and swift to bless!
Praise him! praise him,
Praise him! praise him
Glorious in his faithfulness!
3 Father-like he tends and spares us,
Well our feeble frame he knows;
In his hands he gently bears us,
Rescues us from all our foes.
Praise him! praise him,
Praise him! praise him,
Widely as his mercy flows.
4 Frail as summer’s flower we flourish;
Blows the wind, and it is gone;
But while mortals rise and perish,
God endures unchanging on.
Praise him! praise him,
Praise him! praise him,
Praise the High Eternal One.
5 Angels, help us to adore him;
Ye behold him face to face;
Sun and moon bow down before him,
Dwellers all in time and space.
Praise him! praise him,
Praise him! praise him,
Praise with us the God of grace!
Henry Francis Lyte, 1834.
These sermons from Charles Spurgeon are a series that is for reference and not necessarily a position of Answers in Genesis. Spurgeon did not entirely agree with six days of creation and dives into subjects that are beyond the AiG focus (e.g., Calvinism vs. Arminianism, modes of baptism, and so on).
Modernized Edition of Spurgeon’s Sermons. Copyright © 2010, Larry and Marion Pierce, Winterbourne, Ontario, Canada. Used by Answers in Genesis by permission of the copyright owner. The modernized edition of the material published in these sermons may not be reproduced or distributed by any electronic means without express written permission of the copyright owner. A limited license is hereby granted for the non-commercial printing and distribution of the material in hard copy form, provided this is done without charge to the recipient and the copyright information remains intact. Any charge or cost for distribution of the material is expressly forbidden under the terms of this limited license and automatically voids such permission. You may not prepare, manufacture, copy, use, promote, distribute, or sell a derivative work of the copyrighted work without the express written permission of the copyright owner.
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