2663. A Leap Year Sermon

by Charles H. Spurgeon on January 30, 2019
A Leap Year Sermon

No. 2663-46:85. A Sermon Delivered On Lord’s Day Evening, February 29, 1880, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.

A Sermon Intended For Reading On Lord’s Day, February 25, 1900.

One born out of due time. {1Co 15:8}

1. So Paul describes himself. It was necessary that Paul, as an apostle, should have seen the Lord. He was not converted at the time of Christ’s ascension; yet he was made an apostle, for the Lord Jesus appeared to him in the way, as he was going to Damascus, to persecute the saints of God. When he looked on himself as put in, as it were, at the end of the apostles, he spoke of himself in the most depreciating terms, calling himself “one born out of due time.”

2. Those who are acquainted with the Greek language know what a despicable term Paul applied here to himself, — as though he was scarcely a man at all, — at any rate, as the very last of the family, “born out of due time”; and not only the last, but also the very least, for he says, “I am the least of the apostles, who am not fit to be called an apostle, because I persecuted the church of God.” Scholars will know why I cannot exactly explain the word which Paul uses, but rather keep to the rendering of our translation, which, although it may not have the force and full meaning of the Greek expression, is perhaps none the less useful for public reading: “One born out of due time.”

3. Paul thought very humbly of himself; he considered himself less than nothing, put himself down at the very lowest estimate, and mentioned that he was brought to Christ, and made an apostle, when the time for such a work was apparently over. Out of date altogether, beyond the period when it might have been thought that another apostle would be called by God, there he was found as “one born out of due time.”

4. My subject tonight is, first, the exceptional time of Paul’s spiritual birth. There are many of God’s true children who, like the apostle, were “born out of due time.” When I have expounded on that fact, I shall speak of the sure evidences of his spiritual birth, and show you that, although “born out, of due, time,” he was born, and there were sure evidences of his spiritual birth, which evidences, I trust, may also be seen in many of us.

5. I. First, then, let us think of THE EXCEPTIONAL TIME OF PAUL’S SPIRITUAL BIRTH.

6. There are still some who like the apostle, are born to God “out of due time.” They are truly born again, regenerated, converted, at a most unlikely time. There have been multitudes brought to Christ, under earnest sermons, when the appeals of faithful men have thrilled the congregation, and the truth has been effectively carried home to the hearts of many of the hearers. But there have also been times when God’s ministers have grown faint, when the sermon has appeared to be destitute of all force, when no one has seemed to have felt the power of the discourse, and, apparently, the truth has fallen quite flat; yet, on many such occasions, there have been some sinners converted to God when we should hardly have thought it to be possible. Mr. Tennant, a famous American minister of Whitfield’s time, one of the most earnest and seraphic men who ever proclaimed the gospel of Jesus Christ, had a hearer, who remained unmoved under many a score of his most faithful sermons. Others were saved, but not this man; he seemed unmoved and immovable; but it came to pass, on a certain Sabbath, that a very unusual thing happened. Mr. Tennant had prepared his sermon with great care, it was what we are accustomed to call a laborious discourse, into which he had put all the thought and all the pains possible; but he had not been preaching for long before his memory completely failed him, his mind refused to work, and, after floundering around for a while, he was obliged to sit down in great confusion, and say that he could not preach to the people that day. The man I have mentioned, who had never before been impressed under Mr. Tennant’s ministry, was that day called by sovereign grace, as “one born out of due time,” for he was led to see that there was a spiritual and supernatural force which had usually helped the pastor to preach, and that, when this divine influence was withdrawn, he was as weak as other men, and could not speak with power: as he had been accustomed to do. This truth, somehow or other, — for human minds are strangely constituted, and things, which have no effect on certain people, very greatly affect others who are present at the same time — this truth, I say, induced the man to think; thinking, he was led to believe in God, and to trust in the Lord Jesus Christ for the salvation of his soul. He was, without a doubt, one “born out of due time.”

7. I would like to break down, as Mr. Tennant did, if some of you would be born to God by that means; I would rather be dumb, and win a soul for Jesus, than speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and yet, men’s hearts should not be impressed by the truth I proclaimed. How often I have found that, when I have gone home, and sighed, and cried, and groaned over a discourse in which I felt no liberty, but thought it was an utter failure, it has afterwards been proved that, here one, and there another, have come forward blessing and praising God for that very testimony, which seemed to me so faulty and feeble, but which the Spirit of the Lord has savingly impressed on them. So, still, there are some who, in this way, are “born out of due time,” through the Holy Spirit’s use even of the preacher’s weakness and apparent failure.

8. Another illustration may be taken from the opposite side of the same truth. Some are converted when they seem themselves to be in a state of mind in which they are the most unlikely to be impressible. I remember being in Dr. John Campbell’s house, one day, when he told me that a minister was preaching at Whitfield’s old Tabernacle in Moorfields, one evening, when there were present, under very strange circumstances, two young men who had fallen into dissipated habits, and who had made an appointment with each other for the commission of some gross sin that very night. Had they committed what they had planned, it may be that they would have plunged themselves into a career of vice from which they might never have been extricated. They were passing by the Moorfields Tabernacle, which some of you remember, and since they wanted to know the time at which they were to meet for this unholy purpose, one of them said to the other, “Go in, and see the time; there is sure to be a clock in there.” But the clock was not mounted as it is here, at the back of the preacher, but the other way; so the young man had to go some little distance further in than he intended, in order to see the clock. If I remember correctly, the preacher that night was Matthew Wilks, and he was just uttering some quaint remark, something that arrested the young man’s attention, and held him firmly in the aisle. His companion waited, outside for a time, but it was cold, so he thought he had better go in, and look at the clock himself, and bring his friend out. He went in; the arrows of the Lord pierced the heart of both of them, and the second of those young men was John Williams, the famous missionary, and at last the martyr of Erromanga. {a} So, they also were “born out of due time.” You would not have thought it possible that those men should become, as they did, preachers of the gospel, when they were, at that very time, desperately set on the commission of a great sin against God, and their hearts were totally given up to the pleasures and follies of this world; but so it happened, and our Lord still knows how to stop men as he stopped Saul of Tarsus on the road to Damascus. He is the man who says that he was “born out of due time”; and he is an amazing example of this method of divine intervention. He has in his possession, the letters from the high priest which will enable him to bind the saints, and carry them off to Jerusalem; he is riding towards Damascus, and is within sight of the city when, in the very midst of his high-handed course of persecution, the Lord Jesus Christ himself intervenes, and strikes him down to the ground. Presently, he rises to pray, and, in his three days’ blindness and fasting, to seek the Lord, and then to find him, to the salvation of his soul and the joy of his spirit, and so to become an apostle of that very Saviour whom, in his ignorance, he had been persecuting. After such a triumph of divine grace, let us never despair of any sinner, however far he may have gone into sin. You know how Paul, writing to Timothy, said of himself, “For this reason I obtained mercy, that in me first Jesus Christ might demonstrate all longsuffering, for a pattern to those who should subsequently believe in him to everlasting life.” The God who blessed the broken sermon of Mr. Tennant can bless our imperfect work in the pulpit, the Sunday School, or anywhere else; and the God who saved such men as John Williams and his companion, when they least thought of such a thing happening, can also save some who have strayed in here tonight, little dreaming what intentions of love God has towards them in bringing them at this time under the sound of the Word.

9. I consider, next, that a convert may be described as one “born out of due time” when he is brought to Christ after some great revival or notable religious movement has come to an end. There are some of you who attended the recent special services conducted here by Messrs. Fullerton and Smith. What power there was in those hallowed gatherings! Some of your neighbours wept under conviction of sin; but you did not. Some of them came to Christ, and are now rejoicing in him; but you did not come to him. You were not even impressed during the meetings, though possibly you wished to be; or it may be that you began with a desire after better things, but you ended in indifference. And now the special services are all over, and the good men who came among us to preach and sing the gospel are gone, and you have been saying to yourselves, “The harvest is past, the summer is ended, and we are not saved.” Ah! but our Lord has a blessed way of picking up the stragglers behind the army. When the main body has marched on, with sound of trumpet, praising God, there are a few left behind; and the Lord Jesus sometimes comes, and picks them up. I do earnestly pray that some of you may be picked up like this by him just now, so that you may be able to say, “We were not born by God when many others were; like Saul of Tarsus, we were ‘born out of due time’; but, blessed be God, we were born again by the effective working of his Spirit, we were brought to Christ, to the praise of the glory of his grace, and now we also have become children of God by faith in Jesus Christ.” Pray that it may be so dear friends. Oh you Christian people, bow your hearts before God, and ask that it may be so! Perhaps the very fact that those services are over, and that a gracious opportunity has gone, may be impressed on the minds of some who were present during the meetings, but who were not converted, and they may now seek the Saviour, and find him to their everlasting salvation and happiness.

10. The Lord can bless strange methods to the awakening of the ungodly. When Puritanism seemed to be trodden underfoot, in the reign of James I, and the king issued the Book of Sports, and gave commandment that every clergyman was to read from the pulpit, on Sunday, that, it was the royal will and pleasure that the young people should play at football, cricket, and other games and pastimes on the Lord’s day afternoon, godly ministers, who really loved the Lord, did not know what to do. One of them thought, perhaps, it would be good to do as the king ordered, and to say something besides, so, when the Sunday came for reading the Book of Sports to the people, he said, “I am commanded by the king and the authorities to read to you the following document; but it grieves my heart and conscience to have to read it. I know it is wicked, and wrong, and shameful, and abominable to desecrate the Sabbath as you are invited to do, and I wonder what will become of my country when even from the church itself Sabbath breaking is recommended.” So, the good man spoke, to the relief of his own conscience, and in hope of arousing the consciences of others. It happened that there was in the congregation that day, a young man who had always been a ringleader in the Sabbath sports; he was no sooner out of church, in the morning, than he was on the village green, fast and furious in all the amusements of the time; but, when he heard that Book of Sports read, he said to himself, “Well, I acted in that way on my own account, and it was wrong enough for me to do so; but now I say, with the minister, ‘What is to become of all the country if everyone is to be as bad as I have been? What will happen to the nation if this kind of thing is to go on?’ ” The thought struck him so forcibly that he became first a serious character, and then a true seeker after God, and afterwards a genuine believer in the Lord Jesus Christ. So it came to pass that, when the devil thought he was going to have everything his own way, that very day, this young man was born to God, — truly, “born out of due time.”

11. I remember reading a very striking saying of Mr. Bunyan’s. He said he had good reason to believe that, in the generation after him, there would be many more saints than in the one of which he formed a part, and his belief was based on the fact that, wherever he went, he found that there were so many great sinners that he hoped they would be converted, and become eminent servants of the Lord Jesus Christ. Well, there was a blessed truth behind that hope of his; for, very often, where sin has abounded, grace much more abounds; and when the Word of God seems to grow scarce, and the candle of the gospel burns only dimly, we may pray and expect that even then, some may be “born out of due time” to the praise of the glory of that grace which saves as it wills, and often selects the very chief of sinners to be the subjects of it’s almighty power.

12. There have been some dear friends, who may be said to have been “born out of due time,” for they have been converted to God after it seemed impossible that they ever should be. I remember well reading of one who imbibed sceptical notions, and became extremely furious against the preaching of the Word. One day, in Edinburgh, he heard it said that, a certain eminent minister of the gospel intended, if he met him, to speak with him about his soul; whereupon the man uttered some very strong expressions, and, among other wicked things, he said, “I shall never be converted unless I lose my senses”: All who were acquainted with him, and who knew how desperately he was set against the gospel, thought that his was indeed a hopeless case; but, in the infinite mercy of God, it turned out to be quite the opposite. He began to suffer from great incoherence of thought, his mind gradually wandered, when he was trying to speak, he often spoke utter nonsense. He became unfit for business, and had to be put into the custody of someone who watched him as his keeper. Reason was not actually gone, but it was reeling on its throne; and while he was in that sad state, the case of Nebuchadnezzar came to his mind, and he wondered whether God had given him up, altogether, on account of what he had said, — that he would never be converted while he was in his senses. He turned his mind, all shipwrecked and battered as it was, towards God and out of the depths of his half-bewildered spirit, he cried to the Lord as Nebuchadnezzar did, and his mind returned to him, and he became a humble, gentle, holy believer in the Lord Jesus Christ. Do you not think, dear friends, that he also was “one born out of due time?” The time of salvation seemed utterly past as far as he was concerned. He had made a covenant with death, and a league with hell; he had cast off those ordinary beliefs which many men hold even though they do not obey them; yet, notwithstanding all that, the surprising grace of God dealt with him after its own sovereign manner, and laid him low, so that it might bring him up again. I do not pray that such a thing may happen to anyone here; but I do pray that God may bring you to Christ somehow, and in anyway; and if, in order to attain that purpose, you have to be driven to the very gates of hell, — as long as you do not actually pass through them, — I will rejoice if, afterwards, you are led to flee to Christ for refuge.

13. Another example of “one born out of due time” occurs in the case of one converted after the spiritual father is dead. We sometimes see posthumous children, that is, those who are born after the father is deceased; and there is generally much sorrow mingled with the thought of such births, for the poor widow’s heart is doubly troubled by the extra care needed for the little stranger who arrives after the bread-winner of the family is taken away. But if a man is the means of bringing another to Christ after he himself is dead, there should be no sorrow about that matter. There have been many, many examples in which earnest Christian people have sought the conversion of their relatives or friends; they have prayed for them, and wept over them, and pleaded with them, but all their efforts have been unsuccessful; yet, after their death, the memory of their holy zeal has touched the conscience of the one who would not yield before, and brought him to Christ. I wish, dear friends, that your godly mother, who is in heaven, and who died leaving her son unsaved, might seem to come to you just now. I ask for no apparition, but that she may be consciously present to your mind, and that her dying words may ring in your ear, for perhaps the memory of what she said may be blessed to you even now. When I am taken away, I can only wish that any true and faithful word that I have spoken may still continue to speak to you from my grave. When good Mr. Payson died, he begged that his people might come and see him, if they wished, before he was interred; and those who did so read these words on his bosom, “Remember the word which I have spoken to you being yet present with you.” So it was his desire, you see, that he should have posthumous spiritual children, that they should be born to God even though they should seem to be “born out of due time.” Ah! you wives, who have been praying for your husbands these many years, never give them up, because they may be brought to Christ when you yourselves will be in heaven. Mothers and fathers, never cease pleading for your children, for they, too, may be brought to Jesus when you are among the angels. Up in one of the northern counties of England, there was a woman, a believer in the Lord Jesus Christ, whose prayer went up continually for her husband; but he never entered the house of God, and despised her for doing so. She was accustomed to go to her usual place of worship alone, as far as any human companions were concerned, yet she was not quite alone, for there was a dog that always went with her. This dog curled himself up under the seat, and lay quite still during the service, and then walked home with his mistress. The first Sunday after she was dead, the poor dog went off to the meeting-house as usual, and curled himself up in his old place. He did the same the next Sunday, and the husband, noticing the dog start out so regularly, was struck by its action, and wondered where the dog went now that his mistress was gone; so he thought he would go and see. The dog went before him to his mistress’s old seat, and curled himself up; the man went in after the dog, and sat down in his wife’s place, and God helped the minister, that day, to show him that his good works and self-righteousness, in which he had always trusted, would not be sufficient for his salvation, and he preached to him the full salvation of Christ Jesus, and the man believed and lived. Was he not also “born out of due time,” for his wife’s prayers for him were all over, and she was gone? Yet he was brought to Christ.

14. The subject is one on which I might enlarge indefinitely, but I would rather have you to supply further examples of similar blessing, by urging you to persevere in prayer, you who are seeking the salvation of others.

15. Some have been “born out of due time” because they have been converted to God in extreme old age. I should like to encourage any very aged person who is here, and still unsaved, and to drive away altogether the notion that it is too late to seek the Lord. It never is too late as long as life lasts, and there is the power to repent of sin and to turn to the Lord.

    While the lamp holds out to burn,
    The vilest sinner may return.

I will not quote cases, but I have a vivid memory of a good many people who have been saved at the age of seventy or eighty. We have had people, past both of those periods, baptized on profession of their newly-found faith. The world’s proverb says, “It is never too late to mend”: but Christ would tell you, if he were here in bodily presence, that it is never too late for him to mend you, or rather, for him to make you anew, for that is the work he undertakes to do. It is never too late for him to stretch out his pierced hand, and help the man, who is tottering on his staff, to become a babe in Christ. Yet, surely when very old men are born again, they seem to be “born out of due time.”

16. Many of you have not yet come to old age, yet, if God should save you tonight, you would be as those who are “born out of due time,” because you are on the very brink of the grave. Consumption has laid its cruel hand on you, and pulled down all your strength. In all probability, you will not be long in this world. You have come out tonight, but you are half-afraid that you have done wrong in coming in the state you are in, with that terrible cough that you have; yet you have not found the Saviour. Oh my dear young friend, wherever you may be, it is a sad, sad thing to be carrying about with you your death-warrant, as you certainly are doing, and yet to have no warrant to believe that, when you die, it will be well with you! Oh, please, do not let Satan tempt you with the idea that, now, when sickness is on you, there is no hope for you! Come to Jesus, however consumptive you look. Come to Jesus, young man, with that chest that scarcely allows you to breathe. Come to him, for he will not cast you away. I remember one, whom I met at Mentone, who had gone there in the hope of lengthening his life; but that was quite out of the question, for he was too far gone when he came. He had two sisters, who were sent for to come to him, for it was certain that he could not live long. He himself was under deep concern of soul, earnestly seeking the Lord, but he could not find him. Day after day, week after week, he had been getting worse and worse, and showing all the signs of his approaching departure; but he could not find peace with God. At last, his sisters came from England. They arrived just in time. They found him very anxious about his soul; that night, they spoke with him of Jesus, and in the morning, early, when they awoke, they went to him and he was sitting up in bed, all pale and ghostlike, he said, “Sisters, Christ has forgiven me”; and he fell back on his pillow, and he was gone home. There was an end of his suffering and weakness here below; but the consolation of that last word to them, and of the joy that beamed from his poor eyes, was enough to make them gladly commit his body to the tomb. “Sisters, Christ has forgiven me.” Ah! he was indeed “born out of due time,” born between the very jaws of death; but death’s jaws could not close on him until he had received forgiveness from his Saviour. I beseech any of you, who are in a similar condition to his, do not put off seeking the Lord, but, hurry to find him even now.

17. Once more, there are some who are “born out of due time” because they are born all of a sudden. They suddenly come to Christ; they suddenly find peace; they are suddenly saved. I wish that might happen to some here tonight. There is no need of any set period for this all-important matter; time is no element in the case. God can work conviction and conversion in a single instant. You know that, sometimes, you see a flash of lightning, and then you wait several seconds before you hear the thunder; but when a storm is right overhead, the flash and the slap are simultaneous, and down comes the pouring rain at the same time. And, in the same way, the Lord knows how to send the flash of conviction, and, at the same instant, to make his deep voice of mercy to be heard in the soul, and to send the flood waters of grace on the spirit then and there. Why should he not do so tonight for any of you who need these blessings?

18. Now I will tell you the special reason why I chose this text; that is because this is the 29th of February, and it is a Sunday. There is a large number of you who never saw a 29th of February on Sunday before, and there is an even larger number who will never see the 29th of February on a Sunday again. I suppose it will be twenty-eight years before that will occur again. So, this is a Sunday thrown in, as it were; it is an odd kind of day, an extra day in the calendar. If you ask our friends of the Greek Church, the Russians, they will tell you that there is no such a day at all, for they keep to the old system of reckoning time. This plan of putting in an odd day, every four years, to make our days square with the sun, is a very good and proper one; still, it is a kind of a day thrown in; and it seemed to me that, if the Lord would convert some souls on this odd day in this leap year, it would make the 29th of February, that came on a Sunday, to be especially memorable. You will not forget it if it is the day of your conversion; you will say to your children, it may be, twenty-eight years hence, if you are alive, “Ah! I remember when the 29th of February last came on a Sunday, and that was the day when I sought and found the Lord. Mr. Spurgeon said that I was like the apostle Paul, ‘one born out of due time,’ and so I was; yet I was born in due time, I know, according to the covenant of grace.” Oh that the Lord, of his infinite mercy, having given us this special day, would now give us a special blessing, and bring many to himself this leap year! Oh, that all of you, who are still unsaved, would make a leap right out of the kingdom of darkness into the kingdom of his dear Son, his Holy Spirit enabling you to do so by a simple act of faith in Jesus Christ! And you Christian people, pray for a special and unusual blessing, a 29th of February blessing. Ask God to give it to us, in his infinite mercy, so that many, many souls may be “born out of due time” this very night.

19. Who shall it be? And where shall the work of repentance begin? Does not someone over there say, “Lord, let it be me?” There is said to be a special opportunity of making proposals in leap year; but I can tell you, if you make a proposal to come to Christ, that he has long ago set his heart on you. You would never have thought of proposing to him if he had not first of all ordained to bring you to himself. If you come to him, he will receive you; and oh! in his great mercy, may the Holy Spirit incline you to come to him this 29th of February that falls on a Sunday.

20. II. Now I have only two or three minutes left for the second part of my subject, — THE SURE EVIDENCES OF PAUL’S SPIRITUAL BIRTH.

21. Though Paul was in a spiritual sense, “born out of due time,” he was truly born again; and those people, who have been converted at exceptional times, and under strange circumstances, have been really converted. How do we know that Paul was born again, and that he was called to be an apostle of Jesus Christ?

22. I answer, first, because he had seen the Lord. After mentioning those who saw the risen Christ, he says, “Last of all he was seen by me also, as of one born out of due time.” The first evidence that he was an apostle was that he had actually beheld the Lord. Now, in a spiritual sense, one of the characteristics of a true believer is that he has seen the Lord. My dear friend, if you have looked to Christ for forgiveness, even though you have only looked to him tonight, and this is an odd night, — the 29th of February, yet, if you have by faith seen Jesus on the cross, and truly trusted him, you are as much saved as the man is who believed in Christ fifty years ago. Looking to Jesus is the evidence that we are born again; and happy is everyone who can truthfully say, concerning Christ. “He was seen by me also.”

    I saw One hanging on a tree,
       In agonies and blood.

I looked to him; he looked at me; and we were one for ever. I trusted in him, and therefore I am saved. If you can say that from your heart and the Holy Spirit bears witness that what you say is true, you need not raise any question about your new birth. If you are trusting in Jesus, it is well with your soul in time and for eternity.

23. The next evidence of his spiritual birth, which Paul gave, was that he confessed his sin. Read the verse following our text: “For I am the least of the apostles, who am not fit to be called an apostle, because I persecuted the church of God.” See how he confessed his sin and forsook it. He who covers his sins shall not prosper; but “whoever confesses and forsakes them shall have mercy.” Are you, dear friend; willing now to confess your sin? Do you turn from it with loathing. Do you desire, henceforth, to be delivered entirely from it? Well, then, your repentance is another sure evidence that you are born again. If you have seen Jesus taking your sin on himself, and suffering its dread penalty; if you have confessed your sin, and by faith laid it on him as your Sacrifice and Substitute, you are born again, though you may have been, in a certain sense, “born out of due time.”

24. Next, we are sure that Paul was really born again because he was thoroughly converted. Never was there a greater change in any man than there was in him; he never went back to his former life, and he had no hankering to return to it. With him, old things had passed away, and all things had become new; he was, indeed, a new creature in Christ Jesus.

25. I am sure he was converted, also, because he praised the grace of God. Read the 10th verse: “By the grace of God I am what I am.” Even when he truthfully says, “I laboured more abundantly than they all”; he humbly adds, “yet not I, but the grace of God which was with me.” It is a sure sign of conversion when a man knows that he is saved by grace alone, and does not attribute it to his own merit, or his own work, but praises and adores the sovereign mercy and grace of God. Do you have that evidence, dear friend? Then you are born properly, even though “born out of due time.”

26. And, lastly, Paul proved that he was a true citizen of the New Jerusalem because he became, of all men, most zealous for Christ, zealous for the gospel, zealous for the winning of souls. He seemed to try to do all he could to undo the mischief he had done in the days of his unregeneracy, and to work with both his hands and all his heart to establish and extend the kingdom which he once tried to overthrow. Oh God, by your great mercy, cause another Paul to be born in this house of prayer tonight! You can do it; will you not bring to yourself, by the power of the Eternal Spirit, some wild, threatening, blustering, blaspheming hater of Christ, lay him at the dear feet of the Crucified, and cause him to look up and live? Pray for this, dear Christian people. Pray for it tonight, when you reach your homes as well as now; and then we shall have special reason to remember this 29th of February. Possibly, someone, who will in days to come stand on this very spot preaching the gospel of Jesus Christ, will say to you, “Do you remember the 29th of February, 1880? Do you remember the text, ‘One born out of due time’?” I trust that some of you will be here to hear him say, “I remember it better than any of you do, for that was the night when I was born to God, glory be to his holy name!” Now pray for it with all your hearts, for our Lord Jesus Christ’s sake. Amen.

{a} Although 1900 is not observed as a Leap Year, the last Sabbath in February is the nearest corresponding date to the Leap Year Sunday in 1880, when the accompanying discourse was delivered. It is therefore issued for reading on that day with the earnest prayer that it may be as profitable to those who read it as it was to those who were privileged to hear it.

Exposition By C. H. Spurgeon {Joh 3:1-18}

If you were sent for to visit a dying man, and you wished to select a chapter which would set the truth before him very briefly and very clearly, you could not make a better choice than this 3rd chapter of the Gospel according to John. So, since we are all dying men and women, let us read it with that same desire, and may the Holy Spirit apply it to our hearts as we read it!

1, 2. There was a man of the Pharisees, named Nicodemus, a ruler of the Jews: the same came to Jesus by night, —

That was better than not coming at all. “Better late than never.” Better come to Christ in the dark than not come to him at all.

2. And said to him, “Rabbi, we know that you are a teacher come from God: for no man can do these miracles that you do, unless God is with him.”

This was good reasoning on the part of Nicodemus. If he did not at first go as far as he afterwards did, it argued well for him that he went as far as he could. Oh you who are troubled with unbelief, believe as much as you can; and then cry, “Lord, I believe, help my unbelief; and, especially, help me to get rid of it.” Confess to Christ what you do believe, and he will add more to your belief.

3. Jesus answered and said to him, “Truly, truly, I say to you, ‘Unless a man is born again he cannot see the kingdom of God.’ ”

He cannot understand what it is; he cannot know anything about it; he cannot see it.

4, 5. Nicodemus says to him, “How can a man be born when he is old? Can he enter the second time into his mother’s womb, and be born?” Jesus answered, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless a man is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God.

If the “water” mentioned here relates to baptism, — which I greatly question, — then, certainly, it shows the way of entrance for a believer, publicly, into the kingdom of God. But if it relates to the purifying power of the Spirit of God, — as I believe it does, — then it teaches us that no man enters into the kingdom of God, and becomes a partaker of its privileges, — which is something more than merely seeing it, — unless the Spirit of God shall be to him as water purifying him from sin. This is the reason why a man cannot enter into the spiritual kingdom until he is born again, born from above.

6. What is born of the flesh is flesh;

And “flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God.”

6. And what is born of the Spirit is spirit.

And only the new creature, which is born like this, can, by any possibility, understand or enter into the possession of the spiritual things which belong to the kingdom of God.

7, 8. Do not marvel that I said to you, ‘You must be born again.’ The wind blows where it wishes, and you hear its sound, but cannot tell where it comes from, and where it goes: so is everyone who is born of the Spirit.”

The Holy Spirit is mysterious, like the wind, and so is the creature that is “born of the Spirit.” The spiritual man often cannot understand himself, — he is so mysterious a being; — how then shall he be able fully to comprehend how that wondrous new life is created within him? All we know is, that he is a new creation, as much the work of eternal power as our first creation.

9, 10. Nicodemus answered and said to him, “How can these things be?” Jesus answered and said to him, “Are you a master of Israel, and do not know these things?

“These things” that lie at the very root of everything. “Are you a Rabbi and do you not know this?” Alas, good Master, there are still many Rabbis who do not understand this; many, who have taken the highest degree the University can give them, yet do not know in their own souls what it is to be born again!

11. Truly, truly, I say to you, we speak what we know, and testify what we have seen; and you do not receive our witness.

Spiritual men declare that there are spiritual things. They know them, and have seen them; and they have a right to be believed, for they are not liars. They are honest men, and speak what they know; yet, often, their witness is not received. They need not be surprised at this, for it was the same with their Master.

12. If I have told you earthly things, and you do not believe, how shall you believe, if I tell you about heavenly things?

If these elementary truths about the new birth stagger you, what is the use of my going on to anything higher? You would not understand it, or receive it.

13. And no man has ascended up to heaven, but he who came down from heaven, even the Son of man who is in heaven.

He alone knows the secrets of God who has been with God, who has come from God, and who is still with God.

14-18. And just as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up: so that whoever, believes in him should not perish, but have eternal life. For God so loved the world, that he gave his only-begotten Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved. He who believes in him is not condemned: but he who does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only-begotten Son of God.

May God give us, even now, deliverance from condemnation through faith in his dear Son, and prevent our being condemned through our unbelief, for our Lord Jesus Christ’s sake! Amen.

 {See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Jesus Christ, His Praise — ‘Worthy Is The Lamb’ ” 416}
 {See Spurgeon_Hymnal “God the Father, Acts, Predestinating Grace — Electing Love Adored” 222}
 {See Spurgeon_Hymnal “Gospel, Invitations — Wanderers Invited” 511}

{a} Erromanga, an island in the southern region of Vanuatu (formerly the New Hebrides) is only 40 kilometres long and 25 kilometres wide, at its widest point. The famous explorer, Captain James Cook, who visited the island in 1774 and ended up having a military skirmish with the islanders, commented afterwards that "no one would ever venture to introduce Christianity into Erromanga because neither fame nor profit would offer the necessary inducement." In November 1839, John Williams, a British missionary who had worked in the eastern Pacific for over twenty years, did attempt to make contact with the people of Erromanga. Williams, who was scouting out potential new mission sites for the London Missionary Society, visited Erromanga on board the Camden. He received what he thought was a cordial reception. On his second excursion on the island further than the beach at Dillon’s Bay, the sheltered anchorage on the north-west part of the island, he and his companion James Harris, a sailor who was seriously considering entering the ministry, were attacked and killed. The news of their deaths shook the missionary community in the southern Pacific and back in Great Britain and in Canada as well. See Explorer "http://renewalfellowship.presbyterian.ca/channels/r01171-7.html"



Jesus Christ, His Praise
416 — “Worthy Is The Lamb” <6.6.4.6.6.6.4.>
1 Glory to God on high!
      Let earth and skies reply,
      Praise ye his name:
   His love and grace adore,
   Who all our sorrows bore,
   Sing aloud evermore,
      Worthy the Lamb!
2 Jesus, our Lord and God,
   Bore sin’s tremendous load,
      Praise ye his name:
   Tell what his arm hath done,
   What spoils from death he won:
   Sing his great name alone:
      Worthy the Lamb!
3 While they around the throne
   Cheerfully join in one,
      Praising his name:
   Those who have felt his blood
   Sealing their peace with God,
   Sound his dear fame abroad:
      Worthy the Lamb!
4 Join all ye ransomed race,
   Our holy Lord to bless;
      Praise ye his name:
   In him we will rejoice,
   And make a joyful noise,
   Shouting with heart and voice,
      Worthy the Lamb!
5 What though we change our place,
   Yet we shall never cease
      Praise his dear name;
   To him our songs we bring,
   Hail him our gracious, King.
   And, without ceasing sing,
      Worthy the Lamb!
6 Then let the hosts above,
   In realms of endless love,
      Praise his dear name;
   To him ascribed be
   Honour and majesty;
   Through all eternity:
      Worthy the Lamb!
                  James Allen, 1761, a.


God the Father, Acts, Predestinating Grace
222 — Electing Love Adored
1 Oh, gift of gifts! Oh, grace of faith!
   My God, how can it be
   That thou, who hast discerning love,
   Shouldest give that gift to me!
2 How many hearts thou might’st have had
   More innocent than mine!
   How many souls more worthy far
   Of that pure touch of thine!
3 Ah, Grace! into unlikeliest hearts
   It is thy boast to come;
   The flory of thy light to find
   In darkest spots a home.
4 Thy choice, oh God of goodness! then
   I lovingly adore;
   Oh, give me grace to keep thy grace,
   And grace to long for more!
            Frederick William Faber, 1849.


Gospel, Invitations
511 — Wanderers Invited <7s., 6 lines.>
1 Weary souls, who wander wide
   From the central point of bliss,
   Turn to Jesus crucified,
   Fly to those dear wounds of his:
   Sink into the purple flood,
   Rise into the life of God.
2 Find in Christ the way of peace,
   Peace, unspeakable, unknown;
   By his pain he gives you ease,
   Life by his expiring groan:
   Rise, exalted by his fall;
   Find in Christ your all in all.
3 Oh believe the record true,
   God to you his Son has given:
   Ye may now be happy too,
   Find on earth the life of heaven:
   Live the life of heaven above,
   All the life of glorious love.
                        Charles Wesley, 1747.

Spurgeon Sermons

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

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