Sermon 943. The Spur

(No. 943)

DELIVERED ON LORD'S-DAY MORNING, JULY 31, 1870,

BY C. H. SPURGEON,

AT THE METROPOLITAN TABERNACLE, NEWINGTON.

"I must work the works of Him that sent Me, while it is day: the night comes, when no man can work." John 9:4.

IF this ninth chapter of John is intended to be a continuation of the history contained in the eighth, as we think it is,it brings before us a very extraordinary fact. You will observe in the eighth chapter that our Lord was about to be stonedby the Jews. He therefore withdrew Himself from the circle of His infuriated foes, and passed through the crowd, not, I think,in a hurried manner, but in a calm and dignified way-as one not at all disconcerted, but wholly self-possessed. His disciples,who had seen His danger, gathered round Him while He quietly retreated. The group wended their way with firm footsteps tillthey reached the outside of the Temple.

At the gate there sat a man well-known to have been blind from his birth. Our Savior was so little flurried by the dangerwhich had threatened Him that He paused and fixed His eyes upon the poor beggar, attentively surveying him. He stayed Hisonward progress to work the miracle of this man's healing. If it is so that the two chapters make up but one narrative, andI think it is, though we are not absolutely sure, then we have before us a most memorable instance of the marvelous calmnessof our Savior while under danger.

When the Jews took up stones to stone Him, He did not needlessly expose His life, but after He had withdrawn a very littlespace from the immediate danger He was struck by the sight of human misery and stood still awhile in all calmness of heartto do a deed or mercy. Oh, the Divine majesty of benevolence! How brave it makes a man! How it leads him to forget himselfand despise danger, and become so calm that He can coolly perform the work which is given him to do!

I think I see our Savior thus considerate for others, and unmindful of Himself. May I add that there is a lesson here to usnot only for imitation but for consolation! If He, while flying from His enemies, still stops to bless the blind, how muchmore will He bless us who seek His face now that He is exalted on High? Now that He is clothed with Divine power and Gloryat the right hand of the Father? There is nothing to hurry Him now, He is exposed to no danger now. Send up your prayers,breathe out your desires, and He will reply, "According to your faith, so be it unto you."

Reading this cure of the blind man, one is struck, again, with the difference between the disciples and the Master. The discipleslooked at this man, blind from his birth, as a great enigma, a strange phenomenon. And they began, like philosophers, to suggesttheories as to how it was consistent with Divine Justice that a man should be born blind. They saw that there must be a connectionbetween sin and suffering-but they could not trace the connection here. So they were all speculating upon the wonderful problembefore them, which they knew not how to solve.

This suggestively reminds us of theorists upon another difficulty which never has been explained yet, namely, the origin ofevil. They wanted to sail upon the boundless deep, and were anxious that their Master should pilot them. He had other andbetter work to do. Our Lord gave them an answer, but it was a short and curt one. He Himself was not looking at the blindman from their point of view. He was not considering how the man came to be blind, but how his eyes could be opened. He wasnot so much meditating upon the various metaphysical and moral difficulties which might arise out of the case, but upon whatwould be the best method to remove from the man his suffering, and deliver him from his piteous plight.

A lesson to us, that instead of enquiring how sin came into the world, we should ask how can we get it out of the world. Andinstead of worrying our minds about how this Providence is consistent with Justice, and how that event can tally with benevolence,we should see how both can be turned to practical account. The Judge of all the earth can take care of Himself. He is notin any such difficulties that He needs any advice of ours. Only presumptuous unbelief ever dares suppose the Lord to be perplexed.It will be much better for us to do the work of Him that sent us than to be judging Di-

vine Providence, or our fellow men. It is ours not to speculate but to perform acts of mercy and love according to the tenorof the Gospel. Let us, then, be less inquisitive and more practical-less for cracking doctrinal nuts-and more for bringingforth the Bread of Life to the starving multitudes.

Once again, as a prefatory remark, our Lord tells us the right way of looking at sorrow and at sin. It was a dreadful thingto see a man shut out from the light of the sun from his very birth. But our Savior took a very encouraging view of it-Hisview of it was nothing at all desponding, nothing that could suggest complaining. It was most encouraging and stimulating.He explained the man's blindness thus-"Neither has this man sinned, nor his parents: but that the works of God should be mademanifest in him."

The man's calamity was God's opportunity. His distress was an occasion for displaying Divine goodness, wisdom, and power.I see sin everywhere-in myself, in others, in this great city, in the nations of the earth-and very conspicuously sin andsuffering in this thrice accursed war. But what shall I say of it? Sit down and wring my hands in utter despair? If so, Ishall be incapable of service. No, if I would do good, as Jesus did, I must take His bravely hopeful view of things, and sokeep my heart whole, and my loins girt ready for work.

The Master's view of it is that all this mischief furnishes, through the infinite benevolence of God, a platform for the displayof Divine Love. I remember in the life of Dr. Lyman Beecher, he tells us of a young convert who, after finding peace withGod, was heard by him to say, "I rejoice that I was a lost sinner." Strange matter to be glad about, you will say, for ofall things it is most to be deplored. But here was her reason-"Because God's infinite Grace, and mercy, and wisdom, and allHis attributes are glorified in me as they never could have been had I not been a sinner and had I not been

lost."

Is not that the best light in which to see the saddest things? Sin, somehow or other, desperate evil as it is, will be overruledto display God's goodness. Just as the goldsmith sets a foil around a sparkling diamond, even so the Lord has allowed moraland physical evil to come into this world to cause His infinite wisdom, Grace, power, and all His other attributes to be thebetter seen by the whole intelligent universe. Let us look at it in this light, and the next time we see suffering we shallsay, "Here is our opportunity of showing what the love of God can do for these sufferers."

The next time we witness abounding sin let us say, "Here is an opportunity for a great achievement of mercy." I suppose greatengineers have been very glad of Niagara, that they might span it. Very glad of the Mont Cenis that they might bore it. Veryglad of the Suez Isthmus that they might cut a canal through it-glad that there were difficulties that there might be roomfor engineering skill.

Were there no sin there had been no Savior. If no death, no Resurrection. If no Fall, no new Covenant. If no rebellious race,no Incarnation, no Calvary, no Ascension, no second advent. That is a grand way of looking at evil, and mar-velously stimulating.Though we do not know, and perhaps shall never know the deepest reason why an infinitely gracious God permitted sin and sufferingto enter the universe, yet we may at least encourage this practical thought-God will be glorified in the overcoming of eviland its consequences. Therefore let us gird up our loins in God's name for our part of the conflict.

Thus much by way of preface. Now I shall invite you, this morning, and may God assist you while I invite, to consider firstof all, the Master Worker. And, secondly, ourselves as workers under Him.

I. The text is a portrait Of THE GREAT MASTER WORKER. We will read it again-"I must work the works of Him that sent Me, whileit is day: the night comes, when no man can work." And first observe, this Master Worker takes His own share in the work-"/must work"-/, Jesus, the Son of Man, for two or three years working here on earth in public ministry, I, I must work.

There is a sense in which all Gospel work is Christ's. As the atoning Sacrifice, He treads the winepress alone. As the greatHead of the Church, all that is done is to be ascribed to Him. But only in the sense in which He used these words- speakingof His human nature, speaking of Himself as living among the sons of men-there was a portion of the work of relieving thisworld's woe, and scattering Gospel Truth among men that He must do, and nobody else could do. "I must work."

"I must preach, and pray, and heal, even I, the Christ of God." In salvation, Jesus stands alone. In life-giving He has nohuman co-worker. But in light-giving, which He refers to in the fifth verse-"As long as I am in the world, I am the Lightof the world"-in light-giving He has many companions. Though anointed with the oil of gladness above His fel-

lows in this respect, yet is it true that all His saints are the light of the world, even as Jesus Christ, while in the worldwas the world's light.

There were some to be cured by Him who could not be cured by Peter, or James, or John. Some to have the Good News broughtto them who must not receive it from any lips but His own. Our Lord, when He became the Servant of servants, took His sharein the common labors of the elect brotherhood. How this ought to encourage us! It is enough for the general if he stands inthe place of observation and directs the battle. We do not usually expect that the commander shall take a personal share inthe work of the conflict.

But with Jesus it is not so! He fought in the ranks as a common soldier. While as God-Man, Mediator, He rules and governsall the economy of Grace, yet as partaker of our flesh and blood He once bore the burden and heat of the day. As the greatArchitect and Master Builder He supervises all. Yet there is a portion of His spiritual temple which He condescended to buildwith His own hands. Jesus Christ has seen actual service, and actually resisted unto blood, amid the dust and turmoil of thestrife.

This made Alexander's soldiers valiant, it is said, because if they were wearied by long marches Alexander did not ride, butmarched side by side with them. And if a river had to be crossed in the teeth of opposition, foremost amidst all the riskwas Alexander himself. Let this be our encouragement-Jesus Christ has taken a personal share in the evangelization of theworld. He has taken not only His own part as Head, and Prophet, and High Priest, and Apostle, in which He stands alone, butHe has taken His part among the common builders in the erection of the New Jerusalem. "I must work the work of Him that sentMe."

Note, next, that our Lord laid great stress upon the gracious work which was laid upon Him. "I must work the work of Him thatsent Me" "Whatever else is not done I must do that. The work allotted me of God, I must, as His servant, faithfully do. TheJews may be close at My heels, their stones may be ready to fall upon Me, but I must fulfill My lifework. I must open blindeyes, and spread the light around me. I can forget to eat bread, I can forget to find for Myself a shelter from the dews thatfall so heavily at night, but this work I must do."

Beyond all things the Redeemer felt a constraint upon Him to do His Father's will. "Know you not that I must be about My Father'sbusiness?" "The zeal of Your house has eaten Me up." Everything in life yielded in the Savior's case to His master passion.There were some works our Savior would not do. When one asked Him to speak to his brother to divide the inheritance, thoughthat might have been a useful thing, yet Christ did not feel a call to it, and he said, "Who made Me a judge and a dividerover you?"

But when it came to the work of giving light, that He must do. This was the specialty of His life. To this He bent all Hisstrength. He was like an arrow shot from a bow, speeding not towards two targets, but with undivided force hurrying towardsone single end. The unity of His purpose was never for a moment broken-no second object ever eclipsed the first. Certain worksof Grace, works of benevolence, works of light-giving, works of healing, works of saving-these He must do. He must do them,His own part of them He must perform.

He rightly describes this work as the "work of God." Note that. If ever there lived a man who as man might have taken a partof the honor of the work to himself, it was the Lord Jesus. And yet over and over again He says, "The Father that dwells inMe, He does the works." As Man He is particularly careful to set us the example of acknowledging constantly that if any workis done by us it is the work of God through us. And so, though He says, "I must work," notice the next words, "the works ofHim that sent Me." They are still my Father's works when most they are mine. Though I must work them, yet shall they stillbe ascribed to Him, and He shall derive honor from them. My Brethren, if I do not say much about this in respect to Christ,it is because it seems so much more easy to apply this to us than to Him, and if so easily applied, let it be humbly and practicallyremembered by us today. My Brother, if you shall win a soul by your work, it is God's work. If you shall instruct the ignorant,you do it, but it is God that does it by you if it is rightly done.

Learn to acknowledge the hand of God, and yet do not draw back your own. Learn to put out your own hand, and yet to feel thatit is powerless unless God makes bare His arm. Combine in your thoughts the need of the all-working God and the duty of yourown exertion. Do not make the work of God an excuse for your idleness, neither let your earnest activity ever tempt you toforget that power belongs unto Him. The Savior is a model to us in putting this just in the right form. It is God's work toopen the blind eye. If the eye has been sealed in darkness from birth no man can open it,

God must do it. But yet the clay and the spittle must be used, and Siloam's pool must be resorted to, or the light will neverenter the sightless eyes.

So in Grace, it is God's to illuminate the understanding by His Spirit. It is His to move the affections, His to influencethe will, His to convert the entire nature. It is His to sanctify, and His to save. Yet you, O Believer, are to work thismiracle-the Truths of God you shall spread will illuminate the intellect. The arguments you shall use will influence the affections.The reasons you shall give will move the will, the precious Gospel you shall teach will purify the heart. But it is God whodoes it-God indwelling in the Gospel.

See you to this, for only as you see these two Truths of God will you go to your work aright. I must work personally, andthis holy work must be my special business, but I must do it in a right spirit, humbly feeling all the while that it is God'swork in and through me. Our Lord, in this portrait of Himself, as the Master Worker, is clearly seen as owning His true position.He says, "I must work the work of Him that sent Me." He had not come forth from the Father on His own account. He was nothere as a principal, but as a subordinate, as an ambassador sent by His King. His own witness was, "I can of My own self donothing: as I hear I judge: and My judgment is just because I seek not My own will, but the will of the Father which has sentMe."

He often reminded His hearers in His preaching that He was speaking in His Father's name, and not in His own name. As, forinstance, when He said, "The words that I speak unto you I speak not of Myself." He took upon Himself the form of a servant."The Spirit of the Lord," says He, "is upon Me. For He has anointed Me." God gave Him a commission and gave Him the Graceto carry out that commission-and He was not ashamed to confess His condition of service to the Father.

Though in His Divine Nature, God over all, blessed forever, whose praises ten thousand times ten thousand harpers are rejoicedto sound upon that glassy sea, yet as the Mediator He stooped to be sent-sent a commissioned Agent from God, a Servant todo Jehovah's bidding. Because He was such, it behooved Him, as a Servant, to be faithful to Him that sent Him. And Jesus feltthis as a part of the Divine constraint, which impelled Him to say, "I must work." "I am a sent Man. I have to give an accountto Him that sent Me."

O Brothers and Sisters, I wish we all felt this! For as the Father sent Christ, even so has Christ sent us-and we are actingunder Divine authority as Divine representatives, and must, if we would give our account with joy, be faithful to the communionwith which God has honored us by putting us in trust with the Gospel of Christ. No man shall serve God aright if he thinkshe stands upon an independent footing. It is recognizing your true position that will help to drive you onward in incessantdiligence in the cause of your God.

But, dwelling very briefly on each of these points, I must remind you that our Lord did not regard Himself merely as an official,but He threw a hearty earnestness into the work He undertook. I see indomitable zeal glowing like a subdued flame in the verycenter of the live coal of the text. "I must work the work of Him that sent Me." Not, "I will," "I intend," "I ought," but"I must." Though sent, yet the commission was so congenial to His Nature that He worked with all the alacrity of a volunteer.

He was commissioned, but His own will was His main compulsion. Not of constraint, but willingly the Lord Jesus became a Savior.He could not help it. It was within His very Nature a sacred necessity that He must be doing good. Was He not God, and isnot God the fountain of benevolence? Does not Deity, perpetually like the sun, send forth beams to gladden His creatures?Jesus Christ, the God Incarnate, by irresistible instinct must be found bestowing good. Besides, He was so tender, so compassionate,that He must be blessing those that sorrowed.

He felt for that blind man. If the blind man lamented his darkness, yet not more than the Savior lamented it for the poorsufferer's sake. The eyes which Christ fixed on that man were eyes brimming with tears of pity. He felt the miseries of humanity.He was not flinty-hearted, but tender, and full of compassion towards all suffering sons of men. Our Savior, therefore, wasself-impelled to His gracious labors. His love propelled Him. He must do the work that He was sent to work.

It is a right thing when a man's business and inclinations run together. You put your son apprentice to a trade which is notcongenial to his tastes and he will never make much of it. But when his duty and his own desires run in the same channel,then surely he is likely to prosper. So with Jesus-sent of God, but not an unwilling ambassador-coming as

cheerfully and joyously as if there had been no impetus but His own voluntary wish. He cries in gracious enthusiasm, "I must,I must."

No man does a really good and great work till he feels he must. No man preaches well but he who must preach. The man sentof God must come under irresistible pressure, even like the Apostle of old, who said, "Though I preach the Gospel, I havenothing to glory of: for necessity is laid upon me, yes, woe is unto me if I preach not the Gospel." Or like the eloquentEliphaz in the book of Job, who spoke last but best-and only spoke at all because he felt like a vessel wanting vent.

Our Savior became so grand a Worker because within His spirit desire kindled and burned and flamed till His Nature was allaglow. He was like a volcano in full action which must pour forth its fiery flood, though in His case the lava was not thatwhich destroys, but that which blesses and makes rich!

Once again, another point in the Savior as a Worker-He clearly saw that there was a fitting time to work, and that this timewould have its end. In a certain sense Christ always works. For Zion's sake He does not rest, and for Jerusalem's sake Hedoes not hold His peace in His intercessions before the Eternal Throne. But, my Brethren, as a Man, preaching, and healing,and relieving the sick on earth, Jesus had His day, as every other man, and that day ended at the set time. He used a commonEastern Proverb which says that men can only work by day, and when the day is over it is too late to work.

And He meant that. He Himself had an earthly lifetime in which to labor, and when that was over He would no more perform thekind of labor He was then doing. He called His lifetime a day. To show us that He was impressed with the shortness of it.We, too, often reckon life as a matter of years, and we even think of the years as though they were of extreme length, thoughevery year seems to spin round more swiftly than before. And men who are growing gray will tell you that life seems to themto travel at a much faster rate than in their younger days.

To a child a year appears a lengthened period. To a man even ten years is but a short space of time. To God the Eternal athousand years are but as one day. Our Lord here sets us an example of estimating our time at a high rate on account of itsbrevity. It is but a day you have at the longest. That day, how short! Young man, is it your morning? Are you just converted?Is the dew of penitence still trembling upon the green blade? Have you just seen the first radiance which streams from theeyelids of the morning? Have you heard the joyous singing of birds?

Up with you, Man! And serve your God with the love of your espousals! Serve Him with all your heart! Or have you known yourLord now so long that it is noon with you, and the burden and heat of the day are on you? Use all diligence, make good speed,for your sun will soon decline. And have you long been a Christian? Then the shadows lengthen, and your sun is almost down.Quick with you, Man, let both your hands be used! Strain every nerve, put every sinew to the stretch. Do all at all times,and in all places, what your ingenuity can devise, or your zeal can suggest to you, for the night comes wherein no man canwork.

I love to think of the Master with these furious Jews behind Him, yet stopping because He must do the work of healing! BecauseHis day was still not ended. He cannot die, He feels, till His day is over. His time is not yet come, and if it were, He wouldclose His life by doing one more act of mercy. And so He stops to bless the wretched, and afterwards passes on His way. Beyou swift to do good at all times. "Be you steadfast, unmovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord."

Knowing that the time is short, redeem the time, because the days are evil. Press much into little by continuous diligence.Glorify your God greatly while the short taper of your life burns on, and God accept you as He accepted His Son. Thus muchupon Christ, the Master Worker.

II. Now I shall want your earnestness while I try to speak of OURSELVES AS WORKERS UNDER HIM. Here I must go over much thesame ground, for first I must call to your remembrance that on us there rests personal obligation. Singular, distinct, personalobligation. "I must work." "I," "I must work the works of Him that sent me." We are in danger nowadays of losing ourselvesin societies and associations. We had need labor to maintain the personality of our consecration to Christ Jesus.

The old histories are very rich in records of deeds of personal daring. We cannot expect modern warfare to exhibit much ofthe same because the fighting is done so much by masses and so much by machinery. Even thus, nowadays, I am

afraid our mode of doing Christian work is getting to be so mechanical, so much en masse, that there is barely room in ordinarycases for personal deeds of daring and singular acts of valor.

Yet, mark you, the success of the Church will lie in this last-it is in each man's feeling, "I have something to do for Christwhich an angel could not do for me, that the strength of a Church must lie under God. God has committed to me a certain workwhich, if it is not done by me, will never be done. A certain number of souls will enter Heaven through my agency. They willnever enter there in any other way. God has given His Son power over all flesh to give eternal life to as many as He has givenHim, and Christ has given me power over some part of the flesh. By my instrumentality they will get eternal life, and by noother agency. I have a work to do, and I must do it."

Dear Brothers and Sisters, our Church will be grandly equipped for service when you all have this impression, when there isno casting the work on the minister, nor on the more gifted Brethren, nor leaving all to be done by distinguished sisters.But when each one feels, "I have my work, and to my work I will dedicate my whole strength to do it in my Master's name."

Now observe, secondly, the personal obligation in the text compels us to just such work as Christ did. I explained to youwhat it was. We are not called meritoriously to save souls, for alone He is the Savior, but we are called to enlighten thesons of men. That is to say, sin is not known to be sin by many. Our teaching and example must make sin to appear sin to them.The way of salvation by the substitutionary Sacrifice of Christ is quite unknown to a large part of mankind. It is ours simplyand incessantly to be telling out that soul-saving story. This work must be done whatever we leave undone.

Some men are spending their time in making money, that is the main object of their lives. They would be as usefully employedprobably if they spent all their lives in collecting pins or cherrystones. Whether a man lives to accumulate gold coins orbrass nails, his life will be equally groveling and end in the same disappointment. Money-making, fame-making, and power-gettingare mere pieces of play, mere sports and games for children.

The work of Him that sent us is a far nobler thing. It is permanent gain if I gain a soul. It is lasting treasure if I winthe Lord's approval. I am forever richer if I give a man one better thought of God, if I bring to a darkened soul the lightfrom Heaven, or lead one erring heart to peace. If one spirit hastening downward to Hell is by my means directed to a blissfulHeaven, I have done some work worth doing.

And such work, Brethren, we must do, whatever else we leave undone. Let us make all else in this world subservient to thiswhich is our life work. We have our callings, we ought to have them-the man who will not work, neither let him eat. But ourearthly calling is not our lifework. We have a high calling of God in Christ Jesus, and this must have the preeminence. Pooror rich, healthy or sick, honored or disgraced, we must glorify God. This is a necessity. All else may be, this must be.

We resolve, sternly resolve, and desperately determine that we will not throw away our lives on trifling objects, but by usGod's work must and shall be done. Each man will do his own share, God helping him. May the ever blessed Holy Spirit giveus power and Grace to turn our resolves into acts. Let us not forget the Truth which I declared to you before, namely, thatit is God's work which we are called upon to do. Let us look to the text again. "I must work the work of Him that sent Me."

I can discover no greater motive for earnestness in all the world than this-that the work I have to do is God's work. Thereis Samson-the strength which lies in Samson is not his own-it is God's strength. Is that, therefore, a cause why Samson shouldlie still and be idle? No, but it is a mighty sound of a trumpet to stir the blood of the hero to fight for the people ofGod. If the strength of Samson is not the mere force of sinew and muscle, but force given him of the Almighty One, then upwith you, Samson, and smite the Philistines! Slay again your thousands!

What? Dare you sleep with God's Spirit upon you? Up, man! To sleep if you were but a common Israelite were treason to yourcountry, but when God is in you and with you, how can you be idle? No, put forth your strength and rout your foes! When Paulwas in Corinth, and God worked special miracles by his hands, so that handkerchiefs which were taken from his body healedthe sick, was that a reason why Paul should withdraw himself to some quiet retreat and do nothing?

To my mind there appears to be no more potent argument why Paul should go from house to house and lay his hands on all around,and heal the sick. So with you-you have the power to work miracles, my Brother. The telling out of the Gospel, accompaniedby the spirit of God, works moral and spiritual miracles. Because you can work these miracles,

should you say, "God will do His own work"? No, Man, but right and left, at all times and in all places, go and tell out thesoul-saving story, and God speed you! Because God works by you, therefore work!

A small vessel, lying idle in dock, without a freight, is a loss to its owner. But a great steamship, of many hundred horsepower,cannot be suffered to remain unemployed. The greater the power at command, the more urgently are we bound to use it. The indwellingpower of God is put forth in reply to faith and prayer-shall we not labor to obtain it? The fact that the Church's work isGod's work rather than hers is no cause why she should indulge in sloth. If she had only her own strength, she might wasteit with less of crime. But having God's strength about her, she dares not loiter.

God's message to her this morning is, "Awake, awake! Put on your strength, O Zion. Put on your beautiful garments, O Jerusalem,the holy city." Would God that this message might come to every heart so that all of us would arise, because God is in ourmidst.

Brethren, notice in the text our obligation resulting from our position. We are all sent as Jesus was if we are Believersin Christ. Let us feel our obligation pressing upon us. What would you think of an angel who was sent from the Throne of Godto bear a message and who lingered on the way or refused to go? It was midnight, and the message came to Gabriel and his fellowsongsters, "Go and sing over the plains of Bethlehem, where shepherds keep their flocks. Here is your sonnet, 'Glory to Godin the highest, on earth peace, good will towards men.' "

Could you conceive that they halted, that they wished to decline the task? Impossible with such music, and with such a commissiongiven from such a Lord! They sped joyously on their way. Your mission is not less honorable than that of the angels. You aresent to speak of good things which bring peace and good will to men, and glory to God. Will you loiter? Can you any longerbe dumb? No, as the Lord Jesus sends you, go forth, I pray you, go at once, and with joy tell out the story of His love.

I could conceive an angel being almost tempted to linger, if sent to execute vengeance, and to deluge fields with blood forthe iniquity of nations. I dare not think that he would hesitate even then, for these holy spirits do the Lord's bidding mostunquestioningly. But if the mission is of mercy, the loving spirit of an angel would leap for joy and be quickened by thesweetness of the errand as well as by the commission of his Lord. We, too, sent of God, if sent on hard service, are boundto go. But if sent on so sweet a service as the proclaiming of the Gospel, how can we tarry?

What? To tell the poor criminal shut up in the dungeon of despair that there is liberty! To tell the condemned that thereis pardon! To tell the dying that there is life in a look at the crucified One-do you find this hard? Do you call this toil?Should it not be the sweetest feature of your life that you have such blessed work as this to do?

If tonight, when the day is over, when you are in your chamber alone, you should suddenly behold a vision of angels who shouldspeak to you in celestial accents and nominate you to holy service in the Church, you would surely feel impressed by sucha visit. But Jesus Christ Himself has come to you, has bought you with His blood, and has set you apart by His redemption.You have confessed His coming to you, for you have been baptized into His death, and declared yourself to be His. And areyou less impressed by Christ's coming than you would have been by an angel's visit?

Stir yourself up, my Brother! The hand of the Crucified has touched you, and He has said, "Go in this your might." The eyesthat wept over Jerusalem have looked into your eyes and they have said with all their ancient tenderness, "My servant, goand snatch dying sinners like brands from the burning by publishing My Gospel." Will you be disobedient to the heavenly vision,and despise Him that speaks to you from His Cross on earth and from His Throne in Heaven? Blood-washed as you are, blood-boughtas you are, give yourself up more fully than ever you have done to the delightful service which your Redeemer allots you.Bestir yourself and say, "I, even I, must work the work of Him that sent me while it is

day."

You little know what good you may do, my Brethren, if you always feel the burden of the Lord as you ought to do. I was ledto think of that fact from a letter which I have here, which did my heart good as I read it. I daresay the dear friend whowrote it is present-he will not mind my reading an extract. He had fallen into very great sin, and though often attendingat this Tabernacle, and being frequently stirred in heart, his conversion was not brought about till one day riding by railwayto a certain town.

He says, "I entered into a compartment in which were three of the students of the Tabernacle College. Although I did not knowthem at first, the subject of temperance was introduced by myself. I found two of them were total abstainers, and one wasnot. We had a nice friendly chat and one of the abstainers asked me if I enjoyed the pardon of my sins and

peace with God. I told him I regularly attended the Tabernacle, but I could not give up all my sins. He then told me how,in his own case, he had found it very desirable to be much in prayer and communion with God, and how he was thus kept frommany besetting sins.

"I concluded my business in the town, and was returning homeward. I was rather dull, as I had no money with me to pay formy ride home, and consequently had to walk all the way. I heard song-singing at a little Chapel. I entered, and

was invited to a seat. It was H_Baptist Chapel. It turned out that these three students with whom I had come in the

train some few hours before were there, and it was an occasion of deep concern to many, as one of the students, who was theirpastor, was taking his farewell of his flock that evening, and many were in tears, himself also.

"I asked one of the students to pray for me. He did so, and I tried to lift up my whole heart to God, and, as it were, leaveall my sins outside. But I found them a ponderous weight. At last I believed in Jesus and exercised a simple faith such asI never knew before. I became quite contrite and humiliated. I found the Lord there. He is sweet to my soul. God has, forChrist's sake, forgiven me all my sins. I am happy now. I shall ever pray for the students at the Pastors' College, and never,I hope, begrudge my mite for the support of the same. God be praised for the students!"

See you thus that a casual word about Christ and the soul will have its reward. I heard once of a clergyman who used to gohunting and when he was reproved by his bishop, he replied that he never went hunting when he was on duty. But he was asked,"When is a clergyman off-duty?" And so with the Christian, when is he off duty? He ought to be always about his Father's business,ready for anything and everything that may glorify God. He feels that he is not sent on Sunday only, but sent always, notcalled now and then to do good, but sent throughout his whole life to work for Christ.

But I must finish. The greatest obligations seem to me, to lie upon each one of us to be serving Christ, because of the desperatecase of our ungodly neighbors. Many of them are dying without Christ, and we know what their end must be-an end that has noend-a misery that has no bounds. Oh, the woe which sin causes on earth! But what is that to the never-ending misery of theworld to come!

Our time in which to serve the Lord on earth is very short. If we would glorify God as dwellers on earth, we must do it now.We shall soon, ourselves, be committed to the grave, or they whom we would gladly bless may go there before us. Let us, then,bestir ourselves! I felt much weight on my mind yesterday, from the consideration that we, as a nation, are enjoying peace,an unspeakable blessing-the value of which none of us can rightly estimate. Now, if we do not make, as a Christian Church,the most earnest endeavors to spread abroad the Gospel in these times of peace, before long this nation may also be plungedin war. War is the most unmitigated of curses, and among its other mischiefs, it turns the mind of the people away from allreligious thoughts.

Now while we have peace, and God spares this land the horrors of war, ought not the Church of God to be intensely eager touse her opportunities? The night comes. I know not how dark that night may be. The political atmosphere seems heavily chargedwith evil elements. The result of the present conflict between France and Prussia may not be what some would hope, for itmay again crush Europe beneath a despot's heel. Now, while we have liberty-a liberty which our sires bought at the stake,and sealed with their blood, let us use it. While it is day let us work the works of Him that sent us. And let each man takefor his motto the succeeding verse to my text, "As long as I am in the world I am the light of the world."

Take heed that your light be not darkness. Take heed you conceal it not. If it is light, take heed that you despise it not,for if it is ever so little a light, it is what God has given you, and as much as you will be able to give God a joyful accountof. If you have any light, though it is but a spark, it is for the world you have it. For the sons of men it is lent you.Use it, use it now, and God help you.

O that our light as a Church would shine upon this congregation! How I desire to see all my congregation saved! Let Believersbe more in prayer, more in service, more in holiness, and God will send us His abundant blessing, for Jesus' sake. Amen.