2890. Unbelievers Rebuked

by Charles H. Spurgeon on December 12, 2019
Unbelievers Rebuked

No. 2890-50:313. A Sermon Delivered On Thursday Evening, June 8, 1876, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.

A Sermon Published On Thursday, June 30, 1904.

He … rebuked their unbelief. {Mr 16:14}

1. I shall not dwell so much on this particular case of the disciples’ unbelief as on the fact that the Lord Jesus rebuked them because of it. This action of his shows us the way in which unbelief is to be treated by us. Since our loving Saviour felt it to be right rather to rebuke than to console, he taught us that on some occasions, unbelief should be treated with severity rather than with condolence.

2. Beloved friends, let us never look at our own unbelief as an excusable infirmity, but let us always regard it as a sin, and as a great sin, too. Whatever excuse you may at any time make for others, — and I urge you to make excuses for them whenever you can properly do so, — never make any for yourself. In that case, be swift to condemn. I am not at all afraid that, as a general rule, we shall err on the side of harshness on ourselves. No; we are far too ready to palliate our own wrong-doing, to cover up our own faults, and to belittle our own offences. I very specially urge every believer in Jesus to deal most sternly with himself in this matter of unbelief. If he turns the back of the judicial knife towards others, let him always turn the keen edge of it towards himself. In that direction use your sharpest eye and your most severely critical judgment. If you see any fault in yourself, you may depend on it that the fault is far greater than it appears to be; therefore, deal more sternly with it. It is a very easy thing for us to get into a desponding state of heart, and to doubt the promises and faithfulness of God; and yet, all the while, to look at ourselves as the subjects of a disease which we cannot help, and even to claim pity from our fellow men, and to think that they should sympathize with us, and try to cheer us. Perhaps they should; but, at any rate, we must not think that they should. It will be far wiser for each one of us to feel, “This unbelief of mine is a great wrong in the sight of God. He has never given me any reason for it, and I am doing him a cruel injustice by doubting him like this. I must not idly sit down, and say, ‘This has happened to me like a fever, or a paralysis, which I cannot help’; but I must rather say, ‘This is a great sin, in which I must no longer indulge; but I must confess my unbelief, with shame and self-abasement, to think that there should be in me this evil heart of unbelief.’ ”

3. Notwithstanding what I said, just now, concerning our dealings with others, I must give very much the same advice with regard to them as to ourselves, though in a somewhat mitigated form. When we see any of our friends falling into sin and unbelief, we must seek to deal wisely with them, — always kindly, — never harshly. Let us reserve all our severity for ourselves, as I have already urged you. Still, I am sure that it is quite possible for us to be doing our fellow Christians serious harm by excusing their unbelief, and by pitying them for it, instead of pointing out to them, tenderly, yet faithfully, the great sin they are committing by this doubting.

4. Have you never seen a “coddled” lad? I have seen one, who ought to be outside playing, shut in a close room because his parents were fearful that he was delicate, and unable to do as other lads do. He ought to have been taking part in various healthy exercises that would have developed and strengthened every muscle in his body; but, instead of that, he was sitting down, tied to his mother’s apron-strings, and so was being made weaker than he was before. He was kept in an atmosphere which was not fit for him to breathe because his foolish parents were afraid the fresh air might be too trying for him; and long before he was ill, he was dosed and doctored until he really became ill. Many a child has been murdered by being coddled like this; or, if he has lived to grow up to manhood, he has been a poor, feeble, effeminate creature, because the abundant love, which has been lavished on him, has been linked with equally abundant folly. You can easily treat Christians, and especially young converts, in the same senseless way. If they are unbelieving, you can keep back from them the stern truth about the sinfulness of such a state of heart and mind, because you fear that they will be discouraged if you deal faithfully with them. That is quite as wrong as saying to the unconverted, over and over again, “Only believe,” without ever mentioning the need of repentance and regeneration. There is a way of misapplying even the promises of God to unbelieving hearts, and of giving the consolations of the gospel to those who are not in a condition to receive them, as one might give candies to sick children, and so do them harm. People, who are so unwisely treated, are apt to remain in the same sad state until their unbelief becomes chronic, and their unhappiness becomes a lifelong burden to them. Sometimes, when a man is in great pain, it is wise to give him something that will afford him even temporary relief; but the better course is, if possible, to strike at the root of his disease, and eradicate it once and for all. That should be our method of dealing with the unbelief of our brothers and sisters in Christ. We must make it clear to them that unbelief is no trifle, and that it is a thing for which its owner is not to be pitied, but to be blamed, and to be severely blamed, for it is a most grievous fault and sin. Our Saviour dealt like this with the eleven when he rebuked them because of their unbelief. He did not excuse them, or comfort them, but he rebuked them. Rebuking does not seem to be in harmony with the usual character of Jesus, does it? Yet, you may depend on it that it was the right thing for him to do, and the kind thing, too; otherwise, he would not have done it.

5. Jesus rebuked these disciples of his because of their unbelief on a very special point on which they ought to have been the first to believe. Many people had seen their Lord after he had risen from the dead; and the eleven disciples, who ought, by reason of their greater spiritual advantages, and their more intimate companionship with Christ, to have been the most ready to believe the good news, were not so; and, therefore, Christ “rebuked their unbelief and hardness of heart, because they did not believe those who had seen him after he had risen.” Yet these eye-witnesses — Peter and John, Cleopas and his companion, and Mary Magdalene, Joanna, the other Mary, and the rest of the holy women, — who had come to the eleven, were their own brothers and sisters in the faith; so Christ might well say to them, — and I daresay he did, — “Why did you doubt their testimony? You did them an injustice by acting in such a way. They are honest and truthful, and they have told you the truth. You have not been accustomed to doubt their word; so, since you have believed their witness concerning other matters, why did you not believe them in this case? Moreover,” our Lord might well say, “there were many of them; it was not merely one, who might have been mistaken; but a considerable number saw me, and I spoke with them; and they came and told you that it was even so, yet you did not believe them. The number of the witnesses, and their well-known character, are the best signs that you must have been in a wrong state of heart and mind, not to be able to receive such clear evidence as theirs; and, therefore, you are blameworthy for your unbelief.”

6. In the case of these disciples, unbelief was particularly sinful, for they had the promise of their Lord to back up the testimony of his witnesses. He had often told them that he would rise again from the dead, and had even foretold the very day of his resurrection, so that the unbelief of the disciples was altogether inexcusable. Yet this very fact, which was a cause of stumbling to the disciples, appears to me to give point and power to the appeal which I make to myself, and to you, against our unbelief. We all believe that Jesus Christ rose from the dead; we have no difficulty in accepting that great fundamental doctrine of the Christian faith; all of us, who are believers in the Lord Jesus Christ, fully endorse Paul’s words to the saints in Rome, and say that our Lord “was delivered for our offences, and was raised again for our justification.” Well, then, brothers and sisters in Christ, if we believe that Jesus rose from the dead, the ground is completely cut out from under the feet of unbelief, for his promise is, “Because I live, you shall live also.” If he lives, then the gospel is true, and the promises of the gospel are certain for all who believe in him. If he lives, then he lives to intercede for us; and, through his intercession, every covenant blessing is certain to come to us. Therefore, if we harbour unbelief in our hearts, we are doubly guilty; and if the Saviour were here in bodily presence, though his face would still beam with infinite love for us, I am quite sure that he would, even in sterner tones than he used towards those eleven disciples, rebuke us because of our unbelief. If Thomas will not believe that Christ is risen until he has put his finger into the print of the nails in his hands, and thrust his hand into his Saviour’s wounded side, that is bad enough; but it is worse if you, who do believe that he is risen, and who do not doubt any one of the doctrines that he has taught you, still have unbelief mixed with the faith which you do possess. Whether that supposed faith is all true, or not, is more than I can say; but, with so much faith as you profess to have, how can you still continue to doubt?

7. I want, in this discourse, to rebuke myself, and you also, for any unbelief that we may have harboured, by noticing, first, the evil of unbelief in itself; and, then, the evils that surely flow out of unbelief.

8. I. First, then, I have to say to any of God’s children who have given way to unbelief in any degree, — YOUR UNBELIEF IS AN EVIL THING IN ITSELF.

9. This truth will come very closely home to you if you will just think how you would feel if others did not believe you. If anyone were to question your veracity, you would be very vexed; and if you made a promise to any man, and he expressed a doubt concerning the fulfilment of it, you would feel hurt; but if those, with whom you are most closely connected, refused to believe you, you would feel still more grieved, for you expect absolute confidence from them. If mutual trust were taken away from any family, how unhappy the members of that family would be; — the children suspecting the sincerity of their parents’ love, — the wife doubting the reality of her husband’s affection, — the husband dubious of his wife’s faithfulness! Try to conceive, if you can, what it would be if those, who now call you friend, or child, or husband, or wife, or brother, or sister, should no longer accept what you say as being true. Suppose, also, that you were perfectly conscious that you had never broken your word to them, — that you had faithfully kept every promise that you had made to them, and had been in all things honest, and true, and sincere, would you not feel their doubts and suspicions most acutely? I am sure you would; they would touch the very apple of your eye, and cut you to the quick; you could not endure such treatment from them. Then, how can you mete out to the Lord Jesus Christ such treatment as would be so painful to you? And, further, how can you expect your child to trust you when you doubt your Saviour? How can you look even to your wife for confidence in you when, if there is some little trouble, or things go somewhat awkwardly, you immediately begin to doubt your God and Saviour?

10. Remember, too, that the sin of your unbelief may be measured by the excellency of the person whom you doubt. I said, just now, that, if you were conscious of your absolute sincerity, you would be all the more deeply wounded by the suspicion of those who doubted you. What do you think then, of the sin of doubting Christ, who cannot lie, who is “the Truth” itself? I know, beloved, that you have a very high opinion of your Lord and Saviour; do you not worship him as divine? Do you not also feel his truly human sympathy? You know that there is no clause in his everlasting covenant, ordered in all things and sure, which he has not already fulfilled or which he will not fulfil at the appointed time. His incarnation, his life here below, his shameful sufferings, his vicarious death; — all these he promised to undergo, and all these he performed in due season, and he will go right through, to the end, with the great work of your eternal salvation. By the mouth of his servant Jeremiah, the Lord asked, long ago, “Have I been a wilderness to Israel? a land of darkness?” And the Lord Jesus might well say to his professed followers, “Have I been as the barren fig tree was to me when I found on it nothing but leaves?” As he points to the long list of his favours to us, he may well ask, “For which of them do you misjudge and doubt me?” And when he spreads out the whole roll of his life and work before you, he may well enquire, “On which part of my life or work do you base your suspicions? What is there in my nature, as divine and human, — what is there in my character, — what is there in my life below, or in my life above, — that should lead you to question my faithfulness to you, my power to help you, my readiness to sympathize with you, my willingness to bless you?” Why, you are doubting him whom the angels adore and worship! You have felt, sometimes, as if you would like to wash his feet with your tears. How, then, can you ever insult him with your doubts? You have even said that you could die for him; and it has been your great ambition to live for him; yet you cannot trust him! If you have run with the footmen in the matter of these minor trials of your faith, and they have wearied you, what would you do if you had to contend with horsemen, as many others have had to do in the day of martyrdom? And if, in the favourable circumstances in which you have been placed, you have doubted your Saviour, what are you likely to do when you are in the swelling of Jordan? Ah, my brethren, when you think of unbelief as aiming her arrows at Jesus Christ, the Well-Beloved of our soul, surely you will say that it is a shameful sin, and a disgraceful crime against infinite love!

11. Then, remember, beloved in the Lord, the relationship in which Jesus Christ stands to you. You know that, the more closely we are related to a person, the more painful any suspicion on the part of that person becomes. I have repeatedly used, in this connection, the example of a child’s trust in a parent, a husband’s trust in his wife, and the wife’s trust in her husband; and you have readily accepted the comparisons because you have felt that the nearness of the relationship would involve a corresponding degree of trust. How near — how very near — we are in kinship to Christ! Are we not married to him? Has he not espoused us to himself for ever? There is a conjugal union between Christ and his Church of which the marriage bond on earth is only a feeble type. Then, can you who have been renewed in heart by the Holy Spirit, and washed in the blood of the Lamb, doubt him whom your soul loves? Can you doubt him to whom you are so closely related? Oh, shame, shame, shame, that lack of confidence should come in to mar such a wonderful union as that!

12. But we are even more closely knit to Christ than the marriage union implies, for “we are members of his body, of his flesh, and of his bones.” I cannot explain that secret, mystical union of which the Scripture speaks; but it is a true union, whatever mystery there may be about it. Then, shall there be such disunity among the members of the body that the eye shall begin to doubt the heart, and the hand to doubt the foot? It would be pitiful if such a state of things could prevail in our bodies; then, what must it be if such a state of things prevails among the members of the mystical body of Christ? Beloved, may God render this unbelief impossible by sending such life-floods of grace through all the members of Christ’s body so that never more shall a single thought of doubt of our glorious Covenant-Head enter our minds even for a single moment!

13. Please consider next, dear friends, how many times some of us have doubted our Lord. The sin of unbelief becomes all the greater because it is so frequently committed. God be thanked that it is not so with all Christians: for there are some who walk in faith and dwell in faith. I suppose that, just as birds fly over everyone’s head, so doubts fly around all good men’s minds; but our old proverb says, “You do not need to let birds build a nest in your hair,” although there are some people, who let doubts come and lodge in their minds, and even dwell in their hearts. We know some people of this kind, who seem to be very easily led into despondency, and doubt, and mistrust of Christ. Well now, if a man has done this only once, I think he might well say to himself, “I did once question everlasting truth. I did once stain the spotless robe of infinite veracity with a dark blot of suspicion”; and I think that he might find it difficult to forgive himself for having done a thing so vile even once. But when it comes to many times, and when it comes to long periods of doubt and mistrust, it is still worse. I want to press this point home on all whom it concerns, and I want your consciences to be wide awake, so that, as you recall the many times in which you have sinned like this against your Heavenly Father, and against his blessed Spirit, and against his divine Son you may remember that each distinct act of unbelief is a sin, — each act of doubt is another wounding of the Lord. May God grant that we may truly repent as we think of the many times in which we have been so guilty!

14. Then there is this further point, — some of these actions have been repetitions of former ones. For example, a man is in trouble, and he has doubts concerning the providence of God; but he is delivered, God is gracious to him, and helps him out of his difficulty. Well, now if he falls into a similar trouble, and if he is again guilty of harbouring doubt, this is far worse. If a man should doubt your word the first time you speak to him, you might say, “Well, he does not know me.” The second time, you might say, “When he has proved me more, he will trust me.” But what shall I say of those, whose hair has a sprinkling of grey in it, and whose Christian experience extends to a score of years, or more, — perhaps, two score, — possibly, three score? Oh, if you doubt the Lord now, it will be a crying shame! It will not be surprising if some of us act like this, for Israel did so for forty years in the wilderness; but that does not mitigate the evil in our case. It is a desperately evil thing that God should be doubted over and over again, and that he should have to say, “How long will it be before you believe me?”

15. I scarcely like to linger on such a sad theme; yet it does our hearts good to be rebuked like this; so, remember that, often our unbelief has come in the teeth of our own assurance to the contrary. Do you not sometimes catch yourself saying, after a very great mercy, “Well, I never can doubt the Lord again?” When you have had an answer to prayer of a very memorable kind, you have said, “Oh, I must believe in the power of prayer now! For me ever to think that the Lord will deny me, must be impossible.” Yes, in that respect also, we are just like the Israelites, who promised to keep the covenant, yet speedily broke it.

16. There is also this aggravation of your sin; although you do not trust the Lord as you should, you do trust your fellow creatures. You can believe that lie of the old serpent, —

    The Lord hath forsaken thee quite;
    Thy God will be gracious no more; —

yet you cannot so readily believe the oath and promise of God. If an earthly friend were to say to you, “I will help you,” how readily you would jump at his offer! If there is an arm of flesh near, how cheerfully you lean on it; and, though, perhaps, there is nothing for you to lean on but a broken reed, you think it is a strong staff, and throw all your weight on it. It is quite true that ungodly men, who have no faith, generally have any amount of credulity. They cannot believe the truth, but they can believe lies to any extent. So it is, alas! with God’s own people when they get off the track of faith. They seem to become credulous concerning the things seen, which are temporal, in proportion as they become dubious of the things unseen, which are eternal. Is this not a sin of the greatest blackness? You cannot trust your husband, but you can trust a flatterer who deceives you! You cannot trust your God, but you make idol-gods for yourself, and trust in them. You cannot rely on Jehovah, but you can rely on Egypt. You can rely on the promise of a man who is only like a moth which is soon crushed; but as for him who made the heavens and the earth, and all things that exist, you cannot rely on him. I feel as if I could sit down and cover my face for shame, when I think of those occasions when I have been guilty of this sin. Perhaps the best thing we could all do would be to go home, and fall on our knees, and ask our blessed Saviour to wash away all this unbelief, and not to believe us when we talk about doubting, but only to believe that, since he knows all things, he knows that, after all, we do trust him.

17. II. Now, with great brevity, I have to speak on the second point, which is, THE MANY EVILS WHICH COME OUT OF UNBELIEF TO THOSE OF US WHO LOVE THE LORD.

18. Brothers and sisters, it is enough of evil — if there were no more, — that unbelief is so cruel to Christ, and grieves his Holy Spirit so much. I should only repeat myself if I reminded you how doubt grieves you; and, speaking after the manner of men, in the same way it grieves the Holy Spirit. He dwells in you; shall he dwell in you to be grieved by you? He assuages your grief; will you cause him grief? Your vexations vanish because he is the Comforter; will you vex the Comforter? And what can vex him more than suspecting the ever-faithful heart of Christ? That is evil enough, — to wound Christ and the Holy Spirit.

19. Next, remember, — though this is a more selfish argument, — how much unrest and misery unbelief has caused you. You have never had half as many trials from God as you have manufactured for yourself. Death, which you so much dread, is nothing compared with the thousand deaths that you have died through the fear of death. You make a whip for yourself, and you mix bitter cups for yourself, by your unbelief. There is quite enough trial for you to bear, and God will help you to bear it; but you put away the helping hand when you are unbelieving, and then you increase your own burden. Oh, you can sing, even by the rivers of Babylon, if you only have faith! You may lie on your sick-bed, and feel great pain; yet your spirit shall not smart, but shall dance away your pangs, if your heart is only looking in simple confidence to Christ; and you shall die, as the man said his master died, — “full of life,” — if you have true faith in Jesus. But if faith shall fail you, oh then you are distressed when there is no reason for distress, and full of fear where no fear is!

20. And, then, how much you lose, in other things, besides happiness! A thousand promises are missed because there is no faith to claim them. There are the treasure chests, and you have the keys; yet you do not put the keys into the locks to open them. There are Joseph’s granaries, and you are hungry; but you do not go to Joseph, and show your confidence in him by asking for what you need. You are not constrained in God, but in yourselves. If you do not believe, you shall not be established, neither shall your prayers prevail, nor shall you grow in grace. If you do not believe, your experience shall not be of that high and lofty kind that otherwise it might have been. We live down here in the marsh and the mist, when, if we had faith, we might live in the everlasting sunshine. We are down below in the dungeons, fretting under imaginary chains, when the key of promise is in our bosom, which will open every door in Doubting Castle. If we will only use it, we may get away to the tops of the mountains, and see the New Jerusalem, and the land which is very far off.

21. Further, unbelief weakens us for all practical purposes. What can the man who is unbelieving do? Oh brothers and sisters in Christ, it is a terrible thing to think how much work there is that falls flat because it is not done in faith. You saw the trees when they were covered with bloom; there seemed to be a promise of much fruit; but there were chilling winds, and sharp frosts, and so, perhaps, only one in a hundred of the blossoms ever turned into fruit. The tree of the Church seems, at times, covered with beautiful blossoms; what can be more lovely to the sight? But the blossoms do not produce fruit, — faith is the bee that carries the pollen, it is faith that fructifies the whole, and makes it truly fruitful to God. What might my sermons not have done if I had believed my Master more? You, Sunday School teacher, may say, “If I had taught in greater faith, I might have won my pupils.” Or you may say, “If I had gone to my visitings of the poor and the sick in the strength of the Lord, who knows what I might have done for him?” Faith is the Nazarite lock of Samson; if it is shorn away, Samson is as weak as other men. Then, as for suffering, amazing is the power of faith there. If you are trusting your Heavenly Father, believing that all is right that seems most wrong, that everything that happens is ordered or permitted by him, and that his grace will sweeten every bitter cup, you can suffer patiently; and, just as your tribulations abound, so will your consolations abound in Christ Jesus. Like the ark of Noah, as the waters deepen, you will rise on them, and get nearer to heaven in proportion as the great floods increase.

22. Unbelief, in any Christian, no doubt has a very injurious effect on other Christians. There are some, who are like sickly sheep, which —

       Infect the flock,
    And poison all the rest.

It is especially so, dear brethren, if you happen to hold an office in the church, or to be doing any prominent work for Christ. If the commander-in-chief trembles, the army is already conquered; if the captain begins to fear, fear will take possession of every soldier’s heart in his company. Was it not grand of Paul, in the shipwreck, when all others were dismayed, and thought they would go to the bottom, but he said, “Have no fear, sirs,” and he encouraged them to eat, as he ate, — calmly giving thanks to God before them all? Why, Paul saved them all by his calm confidence in God. If we only have faith, we shall strengthen our brethren; and if we do not have it, we shall weaken them.

23. I am sure, too, that the influence of unbelief in Christians, on the unconverted, is very serious indeed. If we do not play the man in times of trial, — if we do not show them what faith in God can do, — they will think that there is nothing in it. And suppose, brethren, you should make anyone think there is nothing in religion, how sad that would be! When the devil wants a friend, surely he could not find one more able to do him service than a child of God who is full of doubt. The children say, “Our father only trusts God for food when there is plenty in the cupboard.” And the servants say, “The master is only happy in the Lord when he is in good health.” And those who know our business affairs say, “Oh, yes! So-and-so is a great believer; but, then, he has a big balance at his bank; you should see him when business is bad; you should see him when there are bad debts; and you will find that he is not a bit more a believer in Jesus Christ than any of the rest of us. He is a fair-weather Christian; he is like the flowers that open when the sun shines; but take away the summer prosperity, and you will see very little of his religion.” Let it not be so with any of us, but may God deliver us from this tremendous evil of unbelief!

Exposition By C. H. Spurgeon {Heb 11:1-13,32-40}

1, 2. Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen. For by it the elders obtained a good report.

So it was written, in the olden times, that believers “obtained a good report”; and this second verse shows that they obtained it by their faith. The best part of the report about them is, that they believed their God, and believed all that was revealed to them by his Word and his Spirit.

3. Through faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God, so that things which are seen were not made from things which are visible.

The facts about creation must be the subject of faith. It is true that they can be substantiated, by the argument from design, and in other ways; still, for a wise purpose as I believe, God has not made even that matter of the creation of the universe perfectly clear to human reason, so there is room for the exercise of faith. Men like to have everything laid down according to the rules of mathematical precision, but God desires them to exercise faith; and, therefore, he has not acted according to their wishes.

4. By faith Abel offered to God a more excellent sacrifice than Cain, by which he obtained witness that he was righteous, God testifying of his gifts: and by it he being dead yet speaks.

The first of the long line of martyrs triumphed by faith; and if you are to be strong to bear witness for God, you must be made strong by the same power which worked so effectively in Abel. If, like his, your life is to be a speaking life, — a life which shall speak even out of the grave, — its voice must be the voice of faith.

5. By faith Enoch was translated so that he should not see death, and was not found, because God had translated him: for before his translation he had this testimony, that he pleased God.

It is faith that muzzles the mouth of death, and takes away the power of the sepulchre. If any man, who had not been a believer, had been translated as Enoch was, we should have been able to point to a great feat accomplished apart from faith. It has never been so; for this, which was one of the greatest things that was ever done, — to leap from this life into another, and to leap over the grave altogether, — was only achieved “by faith.”

6, 7. But without faith it is impossible to please him: for he who comes to God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of those who diligently seek him. By faith Noah, being warned by God of things not seen as yet,

These are the things with which faith always deals; — not with the things that are seen or are comprehended by the senses or the feelings.

7. Moved with fear, prepared an ark to the saving of his household; by which he condemned the world, and became heir of the righteousness which is by faith.

So you see that faith has a condemning power towards an ungodly world. You do not need to be constantly telling worldlings that they are doing wrong; let them see clearly the evidence of your faith, for that will bear the strongest conceivable witness against their unbelief and sin, even as Noah, by his faith, “condemned the world, and became heir of the righteousness which is by faith.”

8. By faith Abraham, when he was called to go out into a place which he should later receive for an inheritance, obeyed; and he went out, not knowing where he was going.

That is, surely, the very masterpiece of faith. God told Abraham to go out from his native land; he believed that God knew where he was to go, though he himself did not know; so he left the direction of his wanderings entirely in the Lord’s hands, and obeyed, and “went out, not knowing where he was going.” We are not to ask for full knowledge before we will be obedient to the will of the Lord; but we are to obey God in the dark, even as Abraham did.

9. By faith he sojourned in the land of promise, as in a strange country, dwelling in tents with Isaac and Jacob, the heirs with him of the same promise:

It is one of the great evidences of true faith for her to keep on, to continue, to endure, without any visible signs or tokens of what she knows is hers. The life of faith is wonderful, but so also is the walk of faith. Her walk has much about it that is mysterious; she knows that the land she treads on belongs to her; and yet, in another sense, she cannot claim a solitary foot of it. She knows that she is at home, even as Abraham was in his own land; yet like him, she knows herself to be a sojourner in a strange land, and is quite content to be so.

10. For he looked for a city which has foundations, whose Builder and Maker is God.

What a depth of meaning there is in those five words, “a city which has foundations,” — as if all other cities had none! They come, and they go, as if they were molehills raised on the surface of the earth, or little mounds of sand made by the children’s wooden spades on the sea-shore, which the next tide will wash away. What vast numbers of cities have been destroyed already! We are constantly picking up the relics of them; but there is, blessed be the name of the Lord, “a city which has foundations,” a city founded on eternal power, and we are on our way to that city, I hope.

11, 12. Through faith also Sarah herself received strength to conceive seed, and gave birth to a child when she was past age, because she judged him faithful who had promised. Therefore sprang from one man, and him as good as dead, so many as the stars of the sky in multitude, and as the sand which is by the sea-shore innumerable.

Perhaps the reference is to Abraham, who was as good as dead, being so old; or to Isaac, who was as good as dead, for he was laid on the altar, and was practically “offered up” as a sacrifice to the Lord. There were many deaths to work against the life of faith; yet life triumphed over death after all.

13. These all died in faith,

That is the epitaph which God has carved over the resting-place of his faithful ones: “These all died in faith.” Will this be the record concerning all of us, “These all died in faith?”

13. Not having received the promises, but having seen them afar off and were persuaded of them, and embraced them, and confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth.

The chapter is a very long one so I must condense it, as the apostle himself did when he came to the thirty-second verse; there was so much to be said that he added, —

32. And what more shall I say? For the time would fail me to tell of Gideon, and of Barak, and of Samson, and of Jephthah; of David also, and Samuel, and of the prophets:

There are some names, in this chapter, which we should hardly have expected to see there, the characters mentioned having been so disfigured by serious faults, and flaws, and failings; but the distinguishing feature of faith was there in every case, and especially in the case of Samson.

Perhaps there was no more childlike faith, in any man, than there was in him; who but a man full of faith would have hurled himself on a thousand men with no weapon in his hand but the jawbone of a donkey? There was an amazing confidence in God in that weak, strong man, which though it does not excuse his faults, yet nevertheless puts him in the ranks of the believers. Happy is the man or woman who believes in God. There were multitudes of others, besides those whom the apostle named, —

33. Who through faith subdued kingdoms, worked righteousness,

Is that as great an exploit as subduing kingdoms? Yes, that it is; to have, by faith, preserved a holy character, in such a world of temptation as this, is a far grander achievement than to have conquered any number of kingdoms by force of arms.

33, 34. Obtained promises, stopped the mouths of lions, quenched the violence of fire, escaped the edge of the sword, out of weakness were made strong,

Do you notice how, every now and then, there is the mention of a feat which seems altogether beyond you; but then there follows one, in which you can be a partaker with these heroes and heroines of faith? It may be that you have never “quenched the violence of fire”; yet, often enough, it has been true of you that, by faith, “out of weakness” you have been “made strong.” Others —

34, 35. Became valiant in battle, turned to flight the armies of the aliens. Women received their dead raised to life again: and others were tortured, not accepting deliverance: so that they might obtain a better resurrection:

What amazing faith it was which sustained the saints under the awful tortures to which they were subjected! The story harrows one’s heart even to read it; what must it have been to actually endure?

36-39. And others had trial of cruel mockings and scourgings, yes, moreover of bonds and imprisonment: they were stoned, they were sawn asunder, were tempted, were slain with the sword: they wandered around in sheepskins and goatskins; being destitute, afflicted, tormented; (of whom the world was not worthy:) they wandered in deserts, and in mountains, and in dens and caves of the earth. And all these, having obtained a good report through faith, did not receive the promise:

These worthies lived before Christ came; but, since then, equally noble exploits have been performed by the heroes and heroines of faith. The Christian martyrs have shown the extremity of human endurance when they have been sustained by faith; and the honour roll of Christian heroes, since their Lord ascended to heaven, is longer and even brighter than that of the faithful ones who came before them in the earlier times.

40. God having provided some better thing for us, so that they without us should not be made perfect.

The new gospel age is necessary to complete the old, the New Testament is the complement of the Old Testament, and New Testament saints join hands with Old Testament elders. Let us all be worthy of our high pedigree; and may God grant that, if the saints of these latter days are to perfect the history of the Church of Christ, the end may not be less heroic than the beginning was! A true poem should gather force as it grows, and its waves of thought should roll in with greater power as it nears its climax; so should the mighty poem of faith’s glorious history increase in depth and power, as it gets nearer to its grand consummation, so that God may be glorified even more and more, through all his believing children. So may it be! Amen.

Spurgeon Sermons

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

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Modernized Edition of Spurgeon’s Sermons. Copyright © 2010, Larry and Marion Pierce, Winterbourne, Ontario, Canada. Used by Answers in Genesis by permission of the copyright owner. The modernized edition of the material published in these sermons may not be reproduced or distributed by any electronic means without express written permission of the copyright owner. A limited license is hereby granted for the non-commercial printing and distribution of the material in hard copy form, provided this is done without charge to the recipient and the copyright information remains intact. Any charge or cost for distribution of the material is expressly forbidden under the terms of this limited license and automatically voids such permission. You may not prepare, manufacture, copy, use, promote, distribute, or sell a derivative work of the copyrighted work without the express written permission of the copyright owner.

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