Sermon 1713. Other Sheep and One Flock

(No. 1713)

DELIVERED ON LORD'S-DAY MORNING, MARCH 25, 1883,

BY C. H. SPURGEON,

AT THE METROPOLITAN TABERNACLE, NEWINGTON.

"And other sheep I ha ve which are not of this fold; them also I must bring, and they shall hear My voice and they shall beone fold and one shepherd (or more correctly one flock; one shepherd)." John 10:16.

THIS verse is guarded before and behind by two notable statements. Before it we hear the Master say, "I lay down My life forthe sheep," and immediately after it we meet with another grand sentence, "I lay down My life, that I might take it again."The first statement, "I lay down My life for the sheep" is the sheet anchor of our confidence when storms assail the vesselof the Church. The Lord Jesus has, by His death, proved His love to His people and His determination to save them is madeclear by His laying down His life for them. Therefore doubt and fear should be banished and the very name of despair shouldbe unknown among the Israel of God! Now are we sure of the love of the Son of God to His chosen flock, for we have an Infallibleproof of it in the laying down of His life for them.

Now, also, are we absolutely certain that Christ's purpose is perpetual-it cannot alter. The Lord Jesus has committed Himselfto that purpose beyond recall, for the price is paid and the deed is done by which the purpose is to be effected. Beyond thiswe are hereby assured beyond a shadow of a doubt that the Divine purpose will be carried out, for it cannot be that Christshould die in vain. We think it a kind of blasphemy to suppose that His blood should be spilt for nothing. Whatever was proposedto be accomplished by the laying down of the life of the Son of God, we feel absolutely certain that it will be fully performedin the teeth of all adversaries, for we are not, now, speaking of man's design, but of the purpose of God to which He devotedthe heart's blood of His only-begotten Son!

We both patiently hope and quietly wait to see the salvation of God and the performance of all His designs of love, for thatdeath upon the Cross is a cause which will surely produce its effect. Christ did not die at a gamble. The supposition of aSavior disappointed in the results of His blood-shedding is not to be tolerated for a moment! In darkest times that gloriousCross flames with light! No evil event can prevent its efficacy. Still in that sign we conquer! If Jesus has laid down Hislife for the sheep, then all is well. Rest assured of the Father's love to those sheep! Rest assured of the immutability ofthe Divine purpose concerning them and rest assured of its ultimate achievement! It must not, shall not be that God's ownSon shall lay down His life in vain! Though Heaven and earth should pass away, the precious heart's blood of the Son of Godshall accomplish the end for which it was so freely poured forth. Jesus says, "I lay down My life for the sheep," thereforethe sheep must live who have been redeemed at such a price as this and the Shepherd in them shall see of the travail of Hissoul and shall be satisfied!

So far we are cheered by the vanguard which marches in advance of our text. But as if the poor, timid people of God would,nevertheless, at times fancy that the purpose of Christ would not be achieved, behold, in the rear another sentence, "I laydown My life that I might take it again." He that died and so redeemed His people by price, lives that He may, Himself, personallysee that they are also redeemed by power! If a man dies to achieve a purpose, you feel sure that his very soul must have beenin it. But if that man should rise again from the dead and still pursue his purpose, you would see how resolutely he was seton his design. If he rose with greater power, clothed with higher rank and elevated to a more eminent position-and if he stillpursued his great objective, you would, then, be more than certain of his never-ending determination to perform his design.

In the risen life of Jesus, assurance is made doubly sure-now are we sure that His design must be carried out, nothing canhinder it! We dare not dream that the Son of God can be disappointed of the objective for which He died and for which He livesagain! If Jesus died for a purpose, He will accomplish it. If Jesus rose for a purpose, He will accomplish it. If Jesus livesforever for a purpose, He will accomplish it. To me this conclusion seems to be past question-and if it is so-it puts thedestiny of the sheep beyond all hazard. Did not Paul argue much in the same way when he said, "For if,

when we were enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of His Son, much more, being reconciled, we shall be saved byHis life"?

If any of you have been cast down by reason of present difficulties, let these two grand texts sound their silver trumpetsin your ears! If you have been looking forth from the windows and the outlook has seemed to be exceedingly dark, take courage,I pray you, from what your Lord has done! His death and Resurrection are prophetic of good things to come! You dare not thinkthat Christ will miss the objective of His death-you dare not think that He will miss the purpose of His glory-life! Why,then, are you cast down? His will shall be done on earth as it is in Heaven, as surely as He came from Heaven to earth andhas returned from earth to Heaven! His purpose shall be carried out as surely as He died and lives again!

Is not this the secret reason why, when the Lord appeared to His sorrowing servant John, He said to him, "I am He that livesand was dead and am alive forevermore, amen, and have the keys of death and of Hell"? Is not the dying and then living Shepherdthe safety and the glory of the flock? Well, then, comfort one another with these words of your Lord, "I lay down My lifefor the sheep." "I lay down My life, that I might take it again."

I. There are four things in the text, itself, which deserve your attention, for they are full of consolation to minds troubledby the evil of those perilous times. The first is this-OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST HAD A PEOPLE UNDER THE WORST CIRCUMSTANCES. WhenHe speaks of "other sheep," it is implied that He had certain sheep at the time. And when He says, "other sheep have I whichare not of this fold," it is manifest that even then, the Good Shepherd had a fold! The times were grievously dark and evil,but a few true hearts clustered about the Savior and, by His Divine power, were protected as in a "fold."

It has been supposed that our Lord, here, alludes to the Jews as, "this fold," but the Jews, as such, were never Christ'sfold. He could not have meant to call the Jews around Him, His fold, for a little farther on He exclaims, "You believe notbecause you are not of My sheep, as I said unto you." His fold was that little handful of disciples whom, by His personalministry, He had gathered, and who stood folded, as it were, about their Good Shepherd. They might be sneered at as a littlecompany, but He says to His enemies who are standing outside the fold foaming with wrath, "Other sheep I have that are notof this little fold: these you cannot see, but I have them, none the less, for that these, I must, in due time, lead, andthen there shall be one flock and one Shepherd." See, then, that the Lord Jesus had a people in the worst times!

Doubtless these days are exceedingly dangerous and I have certain Brethren round me who never allow me to forget it, for theyplay well in the minor key and dwell most judiciously upon the necessary topic of the general declension of the Church andthe growing depravity of the world! I would not stop them from their faithful warnings, although I can assure them that, withslight variations, I have heard the same tune for years! Many a time have they afflicted me, from my youth up, and it hasbeen good for me. I remember hearing some 30 years ago that we lived in awful times and, as nearly as I can recollect, thetimes have been awful ever since and I suppose they always will be! The watchmen of the night see everything except the comingof the morning. Our pilots perceive dangers ahead and steer with caution. Perhaps this is as it should be. At any rate, itis better than sleeping in a fool's paradise!

Be this as it may, it is clear that the days of our Lord Jesus Christ were emphatically terrible times. No age can be worsethan that age which literally crucified the Son of God, crying, "Away with Him! Away with Him!" Whether the present days arebetter than those, I will not determine, but they cannot be worse. The day of our Lord's first advent was the culminationand the crisis of the world's career of sin-and yet the Good Shepherd had a fold among men in the midnight of history! Therewas a sad lack of vital godliness in those days. A few godly ones watched for the coming of the Messiah, but they were veryfew, such as good old Simeon and Anna. A small remnant sighed and cried for the abounding sin of the nation, but the saltwas almost gone. Israel was becoming like Sodom and Gomorrah!

The choice band of mourners in Zion had not quite died out, but their number was so few that a child might write the numberdown. Speaking generally, when the Savior came to His own, His own received Him not. The mass of professing people in thatday was rotten throughout! The life of God was gone-it could not dwell with the Pharisees nor the Sadducees, nor any of thesects of the times, for they were altogether gone out of the way. The Lord looked and there was no man to help or to upholdHis righteous cause-those who professed to be its champions had altogether become un-

profitable. As for the religious teachers, their mouth had become an open sepulcher and the poison of asps was under theirtongues. And yet the Lord had a people in Judea even then!

On earth there was still a fold for sheep whom He had chosen who knew the Shepherd's voice and gathered to His call and followedHim faithfully. But it was a time when will-worship abounded. Men had given up worshipping God according to the Scriptures.They worshipped according to their own fancies. Then you might hear a trumpet at every corner of the street, for Phariseeswere distributing their alms! You could see fathers and mothers neglected, families broken up because the scribes had taughtthe people that if they said, "Corban," they were free from all obligation to help father or mother. They taught for doctrines,the commandments of men-the Commandments of God were laid aside. To wear broad-bordered garments and phylacteries was exaltedinto a matter of first importance, while to lie and cheat were mere trifles. To eat with unwashed hands was thought to bea crime, but to devour widow's houses was a thing which, to the most self-righteous Pharisee, caused no qualm of conscience.The land was filled with will-worship and that is one great and growing hindrance nowadays! But for all that, Christ had afold of His own and there were those who knew His voice-and these, following at His heels-were enabled to go in and out andfind pasture.

It was a day when there was the most fierce opposition to the real Truths of God. Our Lord Jesus could hardly open His mouthbut they took up stones to stone Him! It was said that He had a devil and was mad; that He was a "gluttonous Man and a winebibber,the friend of publicans and sinners." The rage of men against Christ was, then, boiling at its greatest heat, till at lastthey took Him and nailed Him to the Cross because they could not endure that He should live among them. And yet He had Hisown in those dreadful times! Even then He had His chosen company for whom He laid down His life, of whom He said to the Father,"Yours they were and You gave them to Me; and they have kept Your Word." To those He spoke, saying, "You are they that havecontinued with Me in My temptations. And I appoint unto you a kingdom, as My Father has appointed unto Me."

Why, Beloved, I gather that though, at this time, there is a sad decline in vital godliness, and though will-worship sweepsover the land with its tumultuous waves; and though opposition to the pure Truth of Christ is more fierce than ever; nevertheless,even at this present time, there is a remnant according to the election of Grace! Even today the answer of God to the complainingProphet is, "Yet have I left Me seven thousand in Israel, all the knees of which have not bowed unto Baal." Why, my Brothersand Sisters, in confidence you possess your souls!

Now, it is to be noticed that this little company of Christ's people He calls a "fold." Afterwards they were to be a "flock,"but while His bodily Presence was with them, they were pre-eminently a "fold." They were few in number, all of one race, mostlyin one place and so compact that they could fitly be said to be a fold. One glance of the Shepherd's bodily eyes saw themall. Happily, also, they were so thoroughly distinct from the rest of the world that they were eminently and evidently folded.Our Lord said of them, "You are not of the world, even as I am not of the world." He had shut them in to Himself and shutthe world out. Within this blessed seclusion they were perfectly safe, so that their Lord said to the Father, "While I waswith them in the world, I kept them in Your name: those that You gave Me, I have kept and none of them is lost, but the sonof perdition; that the Scripture might be fulfilled."

Whatever their mistakes and faults, and they were many, yet they did not conform themselves to the generation among whichthey dwelt-they were kept apart as in a fold while Jesus was with them. In that fold they were protected from all ill weathers,from the wolf and the thief. The Lord's Presence with them was like a wall of fire round about them-they had only to run toHim and He answered all their adversaries and defended them from reproach. Like another David, the Lord Jesus guarded Hisflock from all the ravenous lions that sought to devour them. True, even in that little fold there were goats, for He, Himself,said, "I have chosen you twelve, and one of you is a devil." Even then, they were not absolutely pure, but they were wonderfullyso-and they were marvelously separated from the world, preserved from false doctrine and kept from dividing and scattering.

Within that fold they were being strengthened for the future following of their great Shepherd. They were learning a thousandthings which would be useful to them when, afterwards, He sent them forth as lambs among wolves, so that they would be "wiseas serpents and harmless as doves" because of what they had learned of their Lord. Thus you see that in the worst times theLord had a Church! I might almost say the best Church! May I not call it so? For that Apostolic Church, upon which the HolySpirit descended, was not a whit behind the Church of any era that succeeded it! It was the

choice flock of all the flocks of the ages, even that feeble company of which Jesus said, "Fear not, little flock, for itis your Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom."

Yet you see one thing is not able here, that when Jesus had thus shut them all in, He would not allow them to become exclusiveand glide into a state of selfish satisfaction. No, He opens wide the door of the sheepfold and cries to them, "Other sheepI have." Thus He checks a tendency so common in the Church to be forgetful of those outside the fold and to make one's ownpersonal salvation the sum and substance of religion! I do not think it wrong to sing-

"We are a garden walled around,

Chosen and made peculiar ground.

A little spot, enclosed by Grace

Out of the world's wide wilderness." On the contrary, I judge that the verse is true and sweet, and ought to be sung. Butthen there are other truths besides this one. To us, also, the Shepherd opens the door of the enclosed garden and says, "Thewilderness and the solitary place shall be glad for them, and the desert shall rejoice and blossom as the rose." The foldis our abode, but it is not our sole sphere of action, for we are to go forth from it into all the world seeking our Brothersand Sisters!

Seeing that our Lord has other sheep which are not of this fold, and these are to be found by Him through His faithful people,let us awaken ourselves to the holy enterprise-

"O, come, let us go and find them!

In the paths of death they roam.

At the close of the day

It will be sweet to say,

'I have brought some lost one home.'" Beloved, I shall leave this point when I have said to you-never despair! The Lord ofHosts is with His people! They may be few and poor, but they are Christ's and that makes them precious. A common sheepfoldis not a thing of glory and beauty-four rough walls compose it and it is but a hovel for sheep-even so, the Church may appearmean and base in men's eyes, but then it is the sheepfold of our Shepherd-King and the sheep belong to the Lord God Almighty!There is a glory about this which angels do not fail to see! Here is human weakness and also Divine power!

We do not, I fear, estimate the strength of the Church aright. I read of three Brothers who had to carry on a college whenfunds were running short. One of them complained that they had no helpers and could not hope to succeed. But another, whohad more faith, said to his Brother, "Do you ask what we can do? Do you say that we are so few? I do not see that we are few,for we are a thousand at the least." "A thousand of us," said the other, "how is that?" "Why," replied the first, "I am acipher, you are a cipher and our Brother is a cipher-so we have three nothings to begin with. Then I am sure the Lord Jesusis ONE-put Him down before the three ciphers and we have a thousand, directly." Was not this bravely spoken? What power wehave when we do but set the great ONE in the front!

You are nothing, Brother. You are nothing, Sister. I am nothing-we are all nothing when we are put together without our Lord!But, oh, if He stands in front of us, then we are thousands! And again, it is true on earth as in Heaven- the chariots ofthe Lord are 20,000, even thousands of messengers-the Lord is among them as in the Holy Place. Why, my Friends, be not castdown at any time, but say to yourselves-We are not even, now, come to so dark a night as once fell on this world. We are not,at this painful moment, in such a desperate condition as the Church of Christ was in His own day!

And if the Lord is spiritually in the midst of us, we need not fear though the earth is removed and the mountains are carriedinto the midst of the sea, for there is a city which abides forever, and there is a river, the streams of which shall, forever,make her glad! God is in the midst of her and she shall not be moved! God shall help her and that right early. Why, my fellowBelievers, be strong and of good courage!

II. But now, secondly, it is clear, for the text teaches it in so many words, that OUR LORD HAS OTHER SHEEP NOT YET KNOWNTO US. He says, "Other sheep I have." I want you to notice that strong expression, "Other sheep I have"-not, "I shall have,"but, "I have other sheep." Many of these sheep were not even in the thoughts of the Apostles. I do not think it had crossedthe mind of Peter, James, or John that their Lord had any sheep in this poor savage island, then scarcely regarded as beingwithin the borders of the earth. I do not suppose the Apostles, at that time, even dreamed that their Lord Jesus had sheepin Rome.

No, their most liberal notion was that the Hebrew nation might be converted and the scattered of the seed of Abraham gatheredtogether in one. Our Shepherd-King has greater thoughts than the most large-hearted of His servants. He delights to enlargethe area of our love. "Other sheep have I." You do not know them, but the Shepherd does. Unknown to ministers, unknown tothe warmest-hearted Christians, there are many in the world whom Jesus claims for His own through the Covenant of Grace. Whoare these? Well, these "other sheep" were, first, His chosen, for He has a people whom He has chosen out of the world andordained unto eternal life. "You have not chosen Me," He said, "but I have chosen you"-there is a people upon whom His sovereigntyhas fixed its loving choice from before the foundation of the world! And of these elect ones, He says, "I have them."

His election of them is the basis of His property in them. These are, also, those whom His Father gave Him, of whom He saysin another place, "All that the Father gives Me shall come to Me." And again, "Of those whom You have given Me I have lostnone." His Father's eternal donation of them seals His title to them! These are the people for whom He peculiarly and especiallylaid down His life that they might be the redeemed of the Lord. "Christ loved His Church and gave Himself for it." These arethey that are redeemed from among men, of whom we read, "You are not your own, you are bought with a price."

The Lord Jesus laid down His life for His sheep-He tells us so, Himself, and none can question His own statement. These arethose of whom Jesus says, "I have them." For these He entered into suretyship engagements, even as Jacob undertook the flockof Laban and watched day and night that he should not lose them. And if one had been lost, he would have had to make it good.These sheep represent a people for whom Christ has entered into suretyship engagements with His Father that He will delivereach one of them safely at the last day of account, not one of them being absent when the sheep shall pass, again, under thehand of Him that counts them as they will at the last great day. "Other sheep I have," says Christ. How wonderful that Heshould say, "I have them," though as yet they were far off by wicked works. What was their state? They were a people withoutshepherd, without fold, without pasture, lost on the mountains, wandering in the woods, lying down to die, ready to be devouredby the wolf-yet Jesus says, "Other sheep I have, which are not of this fold."

They were sheep that had wandered exceedingly far, even into the most shameful iniquity-and yet He says, "I have them." Badas this world is, today, it must have been far worse in the cruel Roman age as to open vices and unmentionable abominations.And yet these wanderers were the sheep of Christ and, in due time, they were delivered from their sins and fetched away fromall the superstition, idolatry and filthiness into which they had wandered! They were Christ's even while they were afar off-Hehad chosen them, the Father had given them to Him, He had bought them-and He determined to have them. No, He says, "I havethem"-and He calls them His own even while they are transgressing and running headlong to destruction!

It seems to me that these were as well known to Christ as those that were in His fold. I think I see Him, the Divine Man,standing there confronting His adversaries. And when He has cast His glance upon His foes, I see His eyes going to and frothroughout the whole earth to gaze upon a sight far more pleasant to Him. While He speaks, His eyes flash with joyous fireas they light upon thousands out of every kindred and people and tongue! And as He quotes, to Himself, the words of the 22ndPsalm-"All the ends of the world shall remember and turn unto the Lord: and all the kindreds of the nations shall worshipbefore You. For the kingdom is the Lord's and He is the Governor among the nations. A seed shall serve Him; it shall be accountedto the Lord for a generation"-He spies out the myriads that are His and He rejoices before His scornful foes as He sees Hisgrowing kingdom which they are powerless to overthrow!

Proud, self-righteous men may blindly refuse the leadership of the Lord's anointed Shepherd, but He shall not be without aflock to be His honor and reward! Did not the Lord, at that time, rejoice in His inmost heart and soliloquize within Himselfthus-"Though Israel is not gathered, yet shall I be glorious in the eyes of the Lord, and My God shall be My strength"? Thisled Him to say, "Other sheep I have." In this there is great comfort for God's people who love the souls of their fellow men.The Lord has a people in London and He knows them. "I have much people in this city," was said to the Apostle when, as yet,nobody was converted there! "I have them," says Christ though as yet they had not sought Him.

Our Lord Jesus has an elect redeemed people all over the world at this time, though as yet they are not called by Grace. Iknow not where they are, nor where they are not-but for certain He has them somewhere since it still stands

true-"Other sheep I have which are not of this fold." This is a part of our authority for going out to find the lost sheep,for we, Brothers and Sisters, have a right to go anywhere to enquire about our Master's sheep. I have no business to go huntingafter other people's sheep. But if they are my Master's sheep, who shall stop me over hill or dale enquiring, "Have you seenmy Master's sheep?" If any say, "You intrude in this land," let the answer be, "We are after our Master's sheep which havestrayed here! Excuse our pushing further than politeness might allow, but we are in haste to find a lost sheep."

This is your excuse for going into a house where you are not wanted, to try and leave your tracts and speak a word for Christ!Say, "I think my Master has one of His sheep here and I have come after it." You have received a search-warrant from the Kingof Kings and, therefore, you have a right to enter and search after your Lord's stolen property! If men belonged to the devil,we would not rob the enemy, himself, but they do not belong to him! He neither made them nor bought them and, therefore, weseize them in the King's name whenever we can lay hands on them. I doubt not but what there are some here, this morning, whoneither know nor love the Savior as yet, who, nevertheless, belong to the Redeemer-and He will yet bring them to Himself andto His flock. Therefore it is that we preach with confidence!

I do not come into this pulpit hoping that, perhaps, somebody will, of His own free will, return to Christ-that may be soor not-but my hope lies in another quarter. I hope that my Master will lay hold of some of them and say, "You are Mine andyou shall be Mine. I claim you for Myself." My hope arises from the freeness of Grace-not from the freedom of the will! Apoor haul of fish will any Gospel fisherman make if he takes none but those who are eager to leap into the net! Oh, for anhour of Jesus among this crowd! Oh, for five minutes of the great Shepherd's handiwork! When the good Shepherd overtakes Hislost sheep, He has not much to say to it.

According to the parable, He says nothing. But He lays hold of it, lays it on His shoulders and carries it home-and that iswhat I want the Lord to do, this morning, with some of you whose will is all the other way, whose wishes and desires are allcontrary to Him. I want Him to come with sacred violence and mighty love to restore you to your Father and your God! Not thatyou will be saved against your will, but your consent will be sweetly gained. Oh, that the Lord Jesus would take you in handand never let you go again! May He sweetly say to you, "Yes, I have loved you with an everlasting love, therefore with lovingkindnesshave I drawn you."

III. Our third head contains in it much delight. Our LORD MUST BRING OR LEAD THOSE OTHER SHEEP.

"Them also I must bring"-read it, and it will be more accurate-"them also I must lead." Christ must be at the head of theseother sheep and they must follow His lead-"them also I must lead, and they shall hear My voice," Those who belong to Christ,secretly, must be openly led to follow Him. First, it is Christ that has to do it, even as He has done it up to now. The textsays, "Them also I must bring," and this language implies that those who have already come, He has brought. All that werein the fold, Christ had brought there-and all that are to be in the fold-He must lead there.

All of us who are saved have been saved by the mighty power of God in Christ Jesus. Is it not so? Is there anyone among usthat came to Jesus without Jesus first coming to Him? Surely, no! Without exception, we all admit that it was His love thatsought us out and brought us to be the sheep of His pasture. Now, as the Lord Jesus has done this for us, He must do it forothers, for they will never come unless He fetches them. Here comes in that emphatic, imperious, "must." The proverb is that,"must," is for the king-and the king may say, "must," to all of us. But did you ever hear of a "must" that bound the king,himself, and constrained him?

Kings generally do not care to have it said to them, you "must," but there is a King, the likes of which King there neverwas nor shall be for glory and for dominion-and yet He is bound by a "must"-the Prince Immanuel says, "Them also I must bring."Whenever Jesus says, "must," something comes of it! Who can resist the Omnipotent "must"? Clear out, devils! Clear out, wickedmen! Flee, darkness! Die, O death! If Jesus says, "must," we know what is going to happen-difficulties vanish, impossibilitiesare achieved! Glory, glory, the Lord shall get the victory! Jesus says of His chosen, His redeemed, His espoused, His covenantedones, "Them also I must bring" and, therefore, it must be done!

Furthermore, He tells us how He must do it. He says, "They shall hear My voice." So that our Lord is going to save people,still, by the Gospel! I do not look for any other means of converting men beyond the simple preaching of the Gospel and theopening of men's ears to hear it-"They shall hear My voice." The old methods are to be followed to the end of the chapter.Our standing orders are-"Go you into all the world and preach the Gospel to every creature." We are not commissioned to doanything else but continue to preach the Gospel, the same Gospel which saved us and which was

delivered to us at the beginning! We know of no alterations, enlargements, or amendments to the Gospel! We obey and followone Voice, not many voices. One Gospel of salvation is to be proclaimed everywhere! And no other work is in our commission.

Then it is added, "They shall hear My voice." It is promised that they shall first lend an attentive ear and then that theyshall yield a willing heart to the voice of Divine love and follow Jesus where He leads! "What then?" Asks one. "Suppose Ispeak in Christ's name and they will not hear?" "Do not suppose what cannot be! The Scripture says of the chosen sheep-"theyshall hear My voice." The rest remain in their blindness, but the redeemed will hear and see! Do not again say, "Suppose theywill not!" You must not suppose anything that is contrary to what Jesus promises when He says, "They shall hear My voice."The graceless may stop up their ears if they will-and perish with Christ's voice as a witness against them-but His own redeemedshall hear the heavenly voice and obey it! There is no resisting this Divine necessity! Jesus says-"I must bring them, andthey shall hear My voice."

It was with this that Paul turned to the Gentiles and said to the Jews, "Be it known, therefore, unto you, that the salvationof God is sent unto the Gentiles and that they will hear it." He had no fear about the reception the Word of God would meetwith-neither ought we to entertain any, since Christ has a people who must be led-and shall hear the voice of the Bishop andShepherd of souls! We have heard it said that, "If Christ must have His people, what is the good of preaching?" What wouldbe the good of preaching if it were otherwise? Why, dear Sir, this fact is one great reason why we preach! That which yousuppose to be a motive for inaction is the strongest motive for energetic action! Because the Lord has a people that mustbe saved, we feel an imperious necessity laid upon us to join with Him in bringing this people to Himself. They must comeand we must fetch them! Christian Brothers, do you not feel that you must help in compelling them to come to the wedding feast?Is it not laid upon you that you must go after lost souls, that you must speak to them, seeing that you must have a hand inbringing these blood-bought ones to Christ by His Holy Spirit?

And again, are there not some in this place who feel a necessity laid upon them, also, that they must come? Do I not hearsome of you saying, "I have stood out a long while, but I must come. I have resisted Divine Grace long enough. And now Christhas laid His hands on me-I must come"? How I wish that a heavenly, "must," a blessed necessity of Omnipotent decree may overshadowyou and bear you as a sheep to the fold! Oh that you may now yield yourselves unto God because the love of Christ constrainsyou! Submit yourselves unto God! Acknowledge the supreme authority of His Grace which shall lead every thought into captivity,that from this day on Christ may reign in your hearts and put every enemy under His feet!

He says, "Him that comes to Me I will in nowise cast out." "I will trust Him," says one. "I feel I must." Just so and thattrust is a mark of your election of God, for, "He that believes in Him has everlasting life." "Whom He did predestinate, themHe also called." If He is calling you, it is because He did predestinate you-and you may rest quite sure of it-and yield toHim with holy joy and delight! As for me, I feel so happy in preaching the Gospel because I am not fishing with a, "chance,"or a, "perhaps," that some may come. The Lord knows them that are His and they will come! Every congregation is, in this sense,a picked assembly.

I felt, this morning, when I came here, that there were so many Friends out in the country for the holidays that we shouldvery likely have a thin house. I rejoice that I was altogether wrong in my reckoning, but even then I thought, God has a peoplethat He will bring whom He means to bless. Here they are! And now, while standing here, I know that God's Word "shall notreturn to Him void, but it shall accomplish that which He pleases, and shall prosper in the thing to which He has sent it."

IV. But now, lastly, OUR LORD GUARANTEES THE UNITY OF HIS CHURCH. "Them also I must bring, and they shall hear My voice andthere shall be one fold and one shepherd." We hear a great deal about the unity of the Church and notions upon this subjectare rather wild. We are to have the Roman and the Greek and the Anglican Church all joined together in one-if they were so,the result would not be worth two-pence-and much evil would come of it! God has, I doubt not, a chosen people among all thesethree great corporations, but the union of such questionable organizations would be a dire omen of mischief to the world!

The dark ages and a worse Popedom than ever would soon be upon us! The more those three quarrel with each other, the betterfor truth and righteousness! I should like to see the Anglican Church standing at drawn daggers with the Ro-man-and cominginto a more and more open opposition to its superstitions. I would to God that the national Church

would, in all things, be delivered from the Pope of Rome and his Anti-Christian enormities! Truly, this has been carried outas a matter of fact-there never was but one Shepherd of the sheep yet-even Christ Jesus! And there never was but one flockof God yet, and there never will be! There is one spiritual Church of God-there never were two! All the visible Churches,up and down the world contain within themselves parts of the one Church of Jesus Christ, but there were never two bodies ofChrist and there cannot be!

There is one Church and there is one Head of the Church! The motto of Christianity is-one flock and one Shepherd. As a matterof experience this is carried out in Believers. I do not care who the man is, if he is a truly spiritually-minded man, heis one with all other spiritually-minded men. Those people in any visible Church who have no Grace are usually the greateststicklers for every point of difference and every particle of rite and form. Nominal professors are soon at war. QuickenedBelievers follow after peace! Of course, when a man has nothing else but the outside, he fights for it tooth and nail. Buta man who loves the Lord and lives near Him, perceives the inner life in others and has fellowship with them! That inner lifeis one in all the quickened family and compels them to be one in heart.

Set two Brothers at prayer, the one a Calvinist and the other an Arminian, and they pray alike! Get a real work of the Spiritin a district and see how Baptists and Paedo-Baptists pull together! Tell of your inward experience and speak of the Spirit'swork in the soul, and see how we are all moved thereby! Here is a Brother, a member of the Society of Friends, and he likessilent worship. And here is another who enjoys hearty singing! But when they get near to God, they do not quarrel over this,but agree to differ-the one says, "The Lord be with you in your holy silence"-and the other prays that the Lord may accepthis brother's Psalm. All who are one with Christ have a certain family feeling, a higher form of clannishness and they cannotshake it off.

I have found myself reading a gracious book which has drawn me near to God. And though I have known that it was written bya man with whose opinions I had little agreement, I have not, therefore, refused to be edified by him in points which areunquestionably revealed. No, but I have blessed the Lord that, within all his blunders, he knew so much of the precious, vitalTruth of God and lived so near his Lord! What Protestant can refuse to love the holy Bernard? Was there ever a more consecratedservant of God or a dearer lover of Christ than he? Yet he was most sorrowfully in bondage to the superstitions of his ageand of the Roman Church! Are you not all one with him who sang-

"Jesus, the very thought of Thee With sweetness fills my breast But sweeter, far, Your face to see, And in Your Presence rest"?

The external Church is necessary, but it is not the one and indivisible Church of Christ. Jesus, as the Life, binds His Churchtogether, and that Life flows through all the regenerate, even as the blood flows through all the veins of the body. Dropthe external and look by faith into the spiritual realm, and you will see one flock and one Shepherd. The practical lessonis, let us belong to that one flock! How are they known? Answer-they are a hearing flock-they hear the Lord and follow Hislead. Be you one of those who listen to Christ's voice-and to none besides. Keep to the one Shepherd! How do you know Him?It is Jesus-in His feet and hands are nail-prints-and His side bears the scar. He it is who leads the one only flock!

Follow Jesus and you are right. Follow Him everywhere and you are happy. The best way to promote the unity of the Church isfor all the sheep to follow the Shepherd. If they all follow the Shepherd, they will all keep together. Let us go forth andtry and do that-and let us long for that happy day when all disputed points shall be settled by all obeying the Lord. Compromiseswould only mean an agreement to disobey the Lord! Let no man yield a principle under pretense of charity-it is not charityto call any Truth of God a lie! We must follow Jesus fully and we shall come together. First pure, then peaceable, is therule.

Oh, when shall the triple banner again float over all-"One Lord, one Faith, one Baptism!"? Oh God, the Holy Spirit, forgiveus our errors and bring us to Your Truth! Oh God, the Son, forgive us our need of holiness and renew us in Your own image!Oh God the Father, forgive us our lack of love and melt us into one family! To the one God be glory in the one Church foreverand ever! Amen.