Sermon 2472. The Best of the Best
(No. 2472)
A SERMON INTENDED FOR READING ON LORD'S-DAY, JULY 5, 1896.
DELIVERED BY C. H. SPURGEON,
AT THE METROPOLITAN TABERNACLE, NEWINGTON, ON THURSDAY EVENING, MAY 19, 1881.
"I am the rose of Sharon, and the lily of the valleys." Song of Solomon 2:1.
THE time of flowers has come and as they are in some faint degree, emblems of our Lord, it is well, when God thus calls, thatwe should seek to learn what He desires to teach us by them. If nature now spreads out her roses and her lilies, or preparesto do so, let us try not only to see them, but to see Christ as He is shadowed forth in them. "I am the rose of Sharon, andthe lily of the valleys." If these are the words of the Well-Beloved-and I have no doubt that they are-then it may be suggestedby some that here we have the Savior praising Himself-and it is true-but in no unworthy sense, for well may He praise Himselfsince no one else can do it as it should be done! There is no human language that can ever set forth His beauties as theydeserve to be told. As good John Berridge says-
"Living tongues are dumb at best,
We must die to speak of Christ"
as He should be spoken of. He will never fully be described unless He shall describe Himself. For certain, we should neverhave known God if He had not revealed Himself-and every good thing that you or I know of Him, He, Himself, has told us. Wemake no discoveries of God except as God discovers Himself to us. If, then, any quibblers were to find fault with the Christof God because He commends Himself, I would answer, Does not God commend Himself and must not His well-beloved Son do thesame? Who else is there that can possibly reveal Him to us unless He unveils His own face to our admiring gaze?
Moreover, let it always be remembered that human self-praise is evil because of the motive which underlies it. When we praiseourselves-and, alas, that we should be so foolish as to do so-we do it out of pride! But when Christ praises Himself, He doesit out of humility. "Oh," you say, "how can you prove that to be true?" Why, thus-He praises Himself that He may win our love-butwhat condescension it is on His part that He should care about the love of such insignificant and undeserving persons as weare! It is a wonderful stoop that the Christ of God should speak about having a bride and that He should come to seek Hisbride among the sons of men! If princes were to look for consorts among beggars, that would be, after all, but a small stoop,for God has made of one blood all nations of men that dwell upon the face of the earth. But for Christ to forsake the thronesand glories of Heaven, and the splendors of His Father's courts above to come down to win a well-beloved one here and, forher sake, to take upon Himself her nature-and in her nature to bear the shame of death, even the death of the Cross-this isstupendous condescension of which only God, Himself, is capable! And this praising of Himself is a part of that condescension-anecessary means of winning the love of the heart that He has chosen.
So this is a matchless instance, not of pride, but of humility, that those dear lips of the heavenly Bridegroom should haveto speak to His own commendation and that He should say, "I am the rose of Sharon, and the lily of the valleys." O human lips,why are you silent, so that Christ must speak about Himself? O human hearts, why are you so hard that you will never feeluntil Christ, Himself, shall address you? O human eyes, why are you so blind that you shall never see till Christ shows Himselfin His own superlative light and loveliness? I think I need not defend my Master, though He used these sweet emblems to setforth Himself, for this is an instance, not of His pride, but of His humility.
It is also an instance of the Master's wisdom, for as it is His design to win hearts to Himself, He uses the best means ofwinning them. How are hearts won? Very often by the exhibition of beauty. Love at first sight has been begotten by the visionof a lovely countenance. Men and women, too, are struck with affection through the eyes when they perceive some beauty whichcharms and pleases them. So the Savior lifts the corner of the veil that conceals His glories and lets us see some glimpseof His beauty in order that He may win our hearts. There are some who seem to think that they can bully men to Christ, butthat is a great mistake. It is very seldom that sinners can be driven to the Savior-His way is to draw them. He Himself said,"I, if I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to Me. This He said, signifying what death He should die." And thedrawings of Christ are not, as it were, with a cart rope, but with silken bonds, yes, with invisible chains, for His beautyis of such a character that it creates love! His beauty is so attractive that it draws the heart! So, in infinite wisdom,our Lord Jesus Christ sets forth His own beauties that He may, thereby, win our hearts.
I believe that there is no preaching like the exaltation of Christ Crucified. There is nothing so likely to win the sons ofmen as a sight of Him and if God, the Holy Spirit, will but help all His ministers, and help all His people to set forth thebeauties of Christ, I shall not doubt that the same Spirit will incline men's hearts to love Him and to trust Him! Note, then,the condescension and also the wisdom which are perceptible in this self-commendation on the part of Christ-"I am the roseof Sharon, and the lily of the valleys."
I think that our Lord also speaks thus as an encouragement to timid souls. His tender familiarity in praising Himself to usis one of the most effectual proofs of His lowliness. Does Christ commend Himself to us? Does He say to us, for instance,"I am meek and lowly in heart"? What is His objective in speaking thus but that we may take His yoke upon us and may learnof Him and find rest to our souls? And if He says, "I am the rose of Sharon," what does He mean but that we may pluck Himand take Him for our own? If He says, "I am the lily of the valleys," why does He take the trouble to tell us that but becauseHe wants us to take Him and to have Him for our very own? I think that it is so sweet of Christ to praise Himself in orderto show that He longs for us to come to Him! He declares Himself to be a fountain of living water, but why is He a fountainbut that we may come to Him and drink? He tells us, "I am the bread which came down from Heaven," but why does He speak ofHimself as bread, except that if a man eats, he shall never hunger? Why, because He wants us to partake of Him! You need not,therefore, be afraid that He will refuse you when you come to Him. If a man praises his wares, it is that he may sell them.If a doctor advertises his cures, it is that sick folk may be induced to try his medicine. And when our Lord Jesus Christpraises Himself, it is a kind of holy advertisement by which He would tempt us to "come, buy wine and milk without money andwithout price." If He praises Himself, it is that we may fall in love with Him-and we need not be afraid to come and lay ourpoor hearts at His feet and ask Him to accept us-for He would not have wooed us by unveiling His beauties if He had meant,after all, to trample on our hearts, and say, "I care nothing for such poor love as yours."
I feel most grateful, then, that I have not, at this time, so much to praise my Master as to let Him speak His own praises,for, "never man spoke like this Man!" When He commends Himself, what would have been folly in others is wisdom in Him! Andwhereas we say to our fellow man, "Let another man praise you, and not your own mouth," I would say to Christ, "My Master,praise Yourself, for You alone can do it as it ought to be done! As for Your poor servant, he would try to be the echo ofYour voice, and that will be infinitely better than anything he, himself, can say."
I think, also, that there is good reason for our Lord to praise Himself in the fashion that He does in our text because, afterall, it is not praise. "What?" you ask, "and yet you have been talking all this while as if it were praise." Well, so it isin one sense, to us, but it is not to Christ. Suppose the sun were to compare itself with a glowworm-would that be praise?Suppose an angel were to compare himself with an ant, would that be praise? And when my Lord and Master, whose eyes outshinethe sun, and who is infinitely higher than the mightiest of the angels, compares Himself to a rose and a lily, is that praise?Well, it is to you and to me, but it certainly cannot be to Him! It is a marvelous stoop for Christ, who is "God over all,blessed forever," and the Light of the universe, to say, "I am a rose; I am a lily." O my blessed Lord, this is a sort ofIncarnation, as when the Eternal God did take upon Himself an infant's form! So here, the Everlasting God says, "I am"-andwhat comes next?-"a rose and a lily." It is an amazing stoop! I know not how to set it forth to you by human language-it isa sort of verbal rehearsal of what He did afterwards when, though He counted it not robbery to be equal with God, "He tookupon Himself the form of a Servant, and was made in the likeness of sinful flesh, and became obedient to death, even the deathof the Cross." "I am God, yet," He says, "I am the rose of Sharon, and the lily of the valleys."
What does our text mean? I think it means that our Lord Jesus Christ is exceedingly delightful, so, let us speak, first, ofthe exceeding delightfulness of our Lord. And then, inasmuch as He uses two emblems-first the rose, and then the lily-surelythis is to express the sweet variety of His delightfulness. And, inasmuch as He speaks of Himself as the rose of Sharon, andthe lily of the valleys, I shall have to show you, in the last place, that this hints to us the exceedingfreeness of His delightfulness.
I. First, then, the text sets forth THE EXCEEDING DELIGHTFULNESS OF OUR LORD.
He compares Himself, here, not as in other places, to necessary bread and refreshing water, but to lovely flowers, to rosesand lilies. What is the use of roses and lilies? I know what the use of corn is-I must eat it-it is necessary to me for food.I know why barley and rye and all sorts of roots and fruits are created-they are the necessary food of man or beast. But whatdo we need with roses? What do we need with lilies? They are of no use at all except for joy and delight. With their sweetform, their charming color and their delicious fragrance, we are comforted and pleased and delighted, but they are not necessariesof life. A man can live without roses-there are millions of people, I have no doubt-who live without possessing lilies ofthe valley. There are all too few roses and lilies in this smoky Babylon of ours, but, when we do get them, what are theiruses? Why, they are things of beauty, if not "a joy forever!"
Jesus is all that and more! He is far more than "a thing of beauty" and, to all who trust Him, He will be "a joy forever."To you who are Christ's people, He is your bread, for you feed on Him and He makes you live! You could not do without Himas the sustenance of your soul. He is the Living Water and your soul would pine and perish of a burning thirst if you didnot drink of Him! But that is not all that Jesus is to you-God has never intended to save His people on the scale of the workhouse-togive you just as much as you absolutely need, and nothing more. No, no, no! He means you to have joy as well as to have life,to look upon beauty as well as to be in safety and to have not only a healthy atmosphere, but an atmosphere that is ladenwith the odor of sweet flowers! You are to find in Christ roses and lilies, as well as bread and water! You have not yet seenall His beauties and you do not yet know all His excellence!
The exceeding delightfulness of Christ is suggested to our mind by His declaration, "I am the rose, and I am the lily." Andfirst, He is, in Himself, the delight of men. He speaks not of offices, gifts, works, possessions-but of Himself-"I Am." OurLord Jesus is the best of all beings! The dearest, sweetest, fairest and most charming of all beings that we can think ofis the Son of God, our Savior! Come here, you poets who dream of beauty, and then try to sing its praises-but your imaginationcould never reach up to the matchless perfection of His Person-neither could your sweetest music ever attain to the full measureof His praise! Think of Him as the God-Man, God Incarnate in human nature and absolutely perfect! I was going to say somethingmore than that, for there is not only in Him all that there ought to be, but there is more than your thoughts or wishes haveever compassed! Eyes need to be trained to see beauty. No man sees half or a thousandth part of the beauty, even, of thispoor, natural world. But the painter's eyes-the eyes of Turner, for instance-can see much more than you or I ever saw.
"Oh," said one, when he looked on one of Turner's landscapes, "I have seen that view every day, but I never saw as much asthat in it." "No," replied Turner, "don't you wish you could?" And, when the Spirit of God trains and tutors the eyes, theysee in Christ what they never saw before. But, even then, as Turner's eyes were not able to see all the mystery of God's beautyin nature, so neither is the most trained and educated Christian able to perceive all the matchless beauty that there is inChrist!
I do not think, Brothers and Sisters, that there is anything about Christ but what should make His people glad. There aredark Truths of God concerning Him, such as His bearing our sin, but what a joy it is to us that He did bear it and put itaway forever! It makes us weep to look at Jesus dying on the Cross, but there is more real joy in the tears of repentancethan there is in the smiles of worldly mirth. I would choose my Heaven to be a Heaven of everlasting weeping for sin soonerthan have a Heaven-if such a Heaven could be-consisting of perpetual laughing at the mirth of fools! There is more true pleasurein mourning before God than in dancing before the devil! Christ is, then, all beauty-even the dark parts in Him are the Lightof God-and the bitter parts are sweet. He has only to be seen by you and you must perceive that, whether it is His Godheador His Manhood. Whether it is His priesthood, His royalty, or His prophetic office. Whether it is on the Cross or on the Throne.Whether it is on earth, or in Heaven, or in the Glory of His Second Coming, every way-
"All over glorious is my Lord,
Must be beloved, and yet adored.
His worth, if all the nations knew,
Sure the whole earth would love Him too."
But, next, our Lord is exceedingly delightful to the eyes of faith. He not only tells us of what delight is in Himself-"Iam the rose, and I am the lily"-but He thereby tells us that there is something to see in Him, for the rose is very pleasingto look upon. Is there a more beautiful sight than a rose that is in bud, or even one that is full blown? And the lily- whata charming thing it is! It seems to be more a flower of Heaven than of earth! Well now, Christ is delightful to the eyes offaith. I remember the first time I ever saw Him-I shall never forget that sight-and, by His Grace, I have seen Him many timessince, but my grief is that I ever take my eyes off Him, for it is to look away from the sun into blackness! It is to lookaway from bliss into misery! To you who look at Christ by faith, a sight of Him brings such peace, such rest, such hope, asno other sight can ever afford-it so sweetens everything, so entirely takes away the bitterness of life and brings us to anticipatethe glory of the life that is to come, that I am sure you say-"Yes, yes, the figure in the text is quite correct, there isa beauty in Jesus to the eyes of faith! He is, indeed, red as the rose and white as the lily."
And, next, the Lord Jesus Christ is delightful in the savor which comes from Him to us. In Him is a delicious, varied, abidingfragrance which is very delightful to the spiritual nostril. Smell is, I suppose, a kind of delicate feeling-minute particlesof certain substances touch sensitive membranes-and we call the sensation that is produced, smelling. It is a mysterious sense.You can understand sight and hearing better than you can understand smelling. There is a spiritual way of perceiving the savorof Christ-I cannot explain it to you, but there is an ineffable mysterious sweetness that proceeds from Him which touchesthe spiritual senses and affords supreme delight-and as the body has its nose, and its tender nerves that can appreciate sweetodors, so the soul has its spiritual nostril by which, though Christ is at a distance, it yet can perceive the fragrant emanationsthat come from Him and is delighted therewith!
What is there that comes from Christ, from day to day, but His Truth, His Spirit, His influence, His promises, His doctrines,His words of cheer? All these have a heavenly sweetness and make us, with the Psalmist, say to our Lord, "All Your garmentssmell of myrrh, and aloes, and cassia out of the ivory palaces, whereby they have made You glad." Whenever these sweet odorsare wafted down to us, they also make us glad-anything that has the savor of Christ in it is sweet to a Christian! If Christhas touched it, let me put it in my bosom and keep it there as a sweet forget-me-not until I see His face in Glory! Yes, thevery stones He sat on-I was about to say the very mountains at which He looked-have become dear to us! We have no idolatrousor superstitious reverence for Palestine, or even for the garden in which He sweat great drops of blood, but for spiritualthings with which He has to do, we have a never-ceasing reverence and affection. Everything that comes from Him is wondrousas the songs of the angels must have been to the shepherds of Bethlehem-and sweet to the taste as the manna that dropped fromthe skies around Israel's desert camp. Yes, Brothers and Sisters, there is a sweet savor about the Lord Jesus Christ! Do youall perceive it?
Once more, in all that He is, Christ is the choicest of the choice. You notice the Bridegroom says, "I am the rose." Yes,but there were some particularly beautiful roses that grew in the valley of Sharon. "I am that rose," He said. And there weresome delightful lilies in Palestine-it is a land of lilies! There are so many of them that nobody knows which lily Christmeant and it does not at all tell us, for almost all lilies are wondrously beautiful. "But," He said, "I am the lily of thevalleys." The choicest kind of lily grew where the soil was fat and damp with the overflow of mountain streams. "I am thelily of the valleys," that is to say, Christ is not only good, but He is the best! And He is not only the best, but He isthe best of the best! He is a flower-yes, but He is a rose, the queen of flowers-yes, but then He is the best rose there is,He is the rose of Sharon! He is a Savior, and a great one. Yes, the only Savior. He is a Husband, but what a Husband! Wasthere ever such a Bridegroom as Christ Jesus the Lord? He is the Head, but Father Adam was a poor head compared with Him!He is inexpressibly, unutterably, indescribably lovely! I might as well leave off talking about Him, for I cannot hope toset Him forth as He deserves! If you could but see Him, I would leave off, for I am sure I should be only hanging a veil beforeHim with the choicest words that I could possibly use!
Suppose you had a dear son, or husband, or friend, far away, and that I was a painter who could carry pictures in my mind'seye, and then draw them to the very life. If I stood here, trying to paint your well-beloved friend, laying on my colors withall the skill I possessed and doing my best to reproduce his features, suppose, while I was at work, that the door at theback was opened and he came in? I would cry out, "Oh, stop, stop, stop! Let me put away my canvas, let me pack up my brushesand my paints. Here is the loved one, himself-look at him! Look at him, not at my portrait of him!" And you would rise fromyour seat and say, "It is he! It is he! You may talk as long as you like, dear Sir, when he is away, but when he is, himself,here, your talk seems but mere chatter." Well, I shall be quite content that you should think so, I shall be even glad ifyou do, provided that the reason shall be that you can say, "We have seen the Lord. He has manifested Himself to us as Hedoes not to the world." "I am the rose of Sharon, and the lily of the valleys." The best of the best, the fairest of the fair,the sweetest of the sweet is Jesus Christ to you and to me if we are, indeed, His people. I cannot say more about the exceedingdelightfulness of my Lord. I wish I could.
II. I must pass on, next, to notice THE SWEET VARIETY OF CHRIST'S DELIGHTFULNESS.
He is not only full ofjoy, pleasure and delight to our hearts, but He is full of all sorts ofjoy, and all sorts of pleasure,and all sorts of delights to us-
"Nature, to make her beauties known, Must mingle colors not her own." The rose is not enough. You must also have the lily,and the two together fall far short of the glories of Christ, the true, "Plant of renown."
"I am the rose." That is the emblem of majesty. The rose is the very queen of flowers. In the judgment of all who know whatto admire, it is enthroned above all the rest of the beauties of the garden. But the lily-what is that? That is the emblemof love. The Psalmist hints at this in the title of the 45th Psalm. "Upon Shoshannim, a Song of love." Sho-shannim signifieslilies, so the Lily Psalm is the love song, for the lilies, with their beauty, their purity, their delicacy, are a very choiceemblem of love! Are you not delighted when you put these two things together, majesty and love? A King upon a throne of love!A Prince, whose very eyes beam with love to those who put their trust in Him, a real Head, united by living bonds of loveto all His members-such is our dear Lord and Savior! A rose and yet a lily. I do not know in which of the two I take the greaterdelight-I prefer to have the two together. When I think that my Savior is King of Kings and Lord of Lords, I shout, "Hallelujah!"But when I remember that He loved me and gave Himself for me and that He still loves me, and that He will keep on loving meforever and ever, there is such a charm in this thought that nothing can excel it! Look at the lily and sing-
"Jesus, lover of my soul,
Let me to Your bosom fly,
While the nearer waters roll,
While the tempest still is high!
Hide me, O my Savior, hide,
Till the storm of life are past.
Safe into the ha ven guide
Oh receive my soul at last!"
Then look at the rose and sing-
"All hail the po wer of Jesus 'name! Let angels prostrate fall. Bring forth the royal diadem, And crown Him Lord of All!"
Then put the rose and the lily together and let them remind you of Christ's majesty and love. The combination of these sweetflowers also suggests our Lord's suffering and purity-
"White is His soul, from blemish free.
Red with the blood He shed for me." The rose, with its thorn, reminds us of His suffering, His bleeding love to us, His deathon our behalf, His bearing of the thorns which our sin created. Christ is a royal rose beset with thorns, but the lily showsthat-
"For sins not His own
He died to atone."
Jesus, when on earth, could say, "The prince of this world comes, and has nothing on Me." The devil himself could not seea spot or speck in that lovely lily! Jesus Christ is perfection, itself! He is all purity, so you must put the two together,the rose and the lily, to show Christ's suffering and perfection, the infinitely pure, infinitely suffering. In which of thetwo do you take the greater delight? Surely, in neither, but in the combination of both! What would be the value of
Christ's sufferings if He were not perfect? And of what use would His perfections be if He had not died, the Just for theunjust, to bring us to God? But the two together, the rose and the lily, suffering and purity, fill us with delight!
Of both of these there is a great variety. I wonder how many different sorts of roses there are? I would not like to haveto tell you! They vary exceedingly-perhaps there are as many kinds as there are days in the year. How many varieties of liliesare there? Possibly, there are as many sorts of lilies as there are of roses, for both of them are wonderfully diversified,but the joys that flow from our Lord Jesus Christ are as abundant and as varied as the roses and the lilies together! Bringme which rose you please and I will tell you that it smells sweet. Bring which lily you choose, and I will say, "Yes, that,also, has a delicate perfume. That will do, with the rose, to serve as an emblem of Christ." Our Lord Jesus possesses everykind of beauty and fragrance. "He is all my salvation and all my desire." All good things meet in Christ-in Him all the linesof beauty are focused! Blessed are they who truly know Him.
Further, Christ is the very essence of the sweetness, both of the rose and of the lily. When He says, "I am the rose," Hemeans not only that He is like the rose, but that He made all the sweetness there is in the rose-and it is still in Him! Andall the sweetness there is in any creature comes to us from Christ, or else it is not sweetness such as we ought to love.I like to look upon the bread I eat as His gift to me and to bless His Providential hand that bestows it. I like to look uponall the landscape on such a fair day as this has been, and say, "Christ is in all this, giving this charming view to sucha poor, unworthy creature as I am." He is in all there is that is good! He is the goodness of all the good there is! He isthe very soul of the universe, whatever there is in the universe that is worthy of our soul's love! All good for our soulcomes from Him, whether it is pardon of sin, or justification, or the sanctification that makes us fit for Glory hereafter,Christ is the Source of it all and in the infinite variety of delights that we get from Him, He is, Himself, the essence ofit all.
We can become tired of most things. I suppose that we can become tired of everything earthly. But we shall never tire of Christ!I remember one who, when near his death hour, forgot even his wife, and she was greatly grieved that he did not recognizeher. They whispered in his ear the name of his favorite child, but he shook his head. His oldest friend, who had known himfrom his boyhood, was not recognized. At last they asked him, "Do you know Jesus Christ?" Then he said, "Ah, yes, and by HisGrace I am going to Him!" The ruling passion was strong in death-Christ was nearer and dearer to him than those he loved beston earth! All flowers will fade, even roses and lilies among them, but not this blessed Rose of Sharon and Lily of the valleys!
Christ does not say, "I was a rose and I was a lily," but, "I am the rose, and I am the lily." He is now all that He everwas! And He will be-in life, in death and throughout all eternity to the soul that knows Him-an infinite variety of everythingthat is delightful!
III. I must now, very briefly, take up the last head of my discourse which is THE EXCEEDING FREENESS OF OUR LORD'S DELIGHTFULNESS.
It is not very pleasant or satisfying for hungry people to stand in the street and hear someone praising a good meal of whichthey cannot even get a taste. I have often noticed boys standing outside a shop window in which there have been all sortsof dainties-they have flattened their noses against the window-but they have not been able to get anything to eat.
I have been talking about my Master and I want to show you that He is accessible, He is meant to be plucked and enjoyed asroses and lilies are! He says in the text, "I am the rose of Sharon." What was Sharon? It was an open plain where anybodymight wander and where even cattle roamed at their own sweet will. Jesus is not like a rose in Solomon's garden, shut up withinhigh walls with broken glass all along the top. Oh, no! He says, "I am the rose of Sharon," everybody's rose, the flower forthe common people to come and gather. "I am the lily." What lily? The lily of the palace of Shushan, enclosed and guardedfrom all approach? No. but, "I am the lily of the valleys," found in this glen, or the other ravine, growing here, there andeverywhere! "I am the lily of the valleys."
Then Christ is as abundant as a common flower. Whatever kind of rose it was, it was a common rose. Whatever kind of lily itwas, it was a well-known lily that grew freely in the valleys of that land. Oh, blessed be my Master's name, He has broughtus a common salvation and He is the common people's Christ! Men in general do not love Him enough, or else they would havehedged Him in with all sorts of restrictions-they would have made a franchise for Him and nobody would have been able to besaved except those who paid, I know not how much a year in taxes! But they do not love our Lord enough to shut Him in andI am glad they have never tried to do so. There He stands, at the four Cross roads, so that everybody who comes by and wantsHim, may have Him! He is a Fountain bearing this inscription, "Let him that is thirsty, come. And whoever will, let him oftake the Water of Life freely."
"I am the rose of Sharon, and the lily of the valleys." Why do roses grow in Sharon? Why do lilies grow in the valleys? Why,to be plucked, of course! I like to see the children go down into the meadow when it is decked in grass and adorned with flowers-gildedwith buttercups, or white with the day's-eyes! I love to see the children pluck the flowers and fill their aprons with them,or make garlands and twist them round their necks, or put them on their heads. "O children, children!" somebody might cry,"do not spoil those beautiful flowers, do not go and pick them." Oh, but they may! Nobody says they may not-they may not gointo our gardens and steal the geraniums and the fuchsias-but they may get away into the meadows, or into the open fieldsand pluck these common flowers to their heart's content! And now, poor Soul, if you would like an apron full of roses, comeand have them! If you would like to carry away a big handful of the lilies of the valleys, come and take them-as many as youwill! May the Lord give you the will! That is, after all, what is needed. If there is that Grace-given will, the Rose of Sharonand the Lily of the valleys will soon be yours! They are common flowers, growing in a common place, and there are plenty ofthem-will you not take them?
Even to those who do not pluck any, there is one strange thing that must not be forgotten. A man passes by a rose bush, andsays, "I cannot stop to think about roses," but as he goes along, he exclaims, "Dear, dear, what a delicious perfume!" A manjourneying in the East goes through a field that is full of lilies. He is in a great hurry, but, for all that, he cannot helpseeing and smelling the lilies as he rushes through the field. And, do you know, the perfume of Christ has life in it? Heis "a savor of life to life." What does that mean but that the smell of Him will save? Ah, if you do but glance at Him, thoughyou were so busy that you could not come in till the sermon had begun, yet a glance at this Lily will bring you joy and peace,for He is so free that, often, even when men are not asking for Him, He comes to them!
"What?" you say, "is it really so?" Yes, that it is! Such is the freeness of Christ's Grace that it is written, "I am foundof them that sought Me not." He sends His sweet perfume into nostrils that never sniffed after it. He puts Himself in theway of eyes that never looked for Him! How I wish that some man who has never sought for Christ might find Him even now! Youremember the story that Christ tells of the man that was plowing the field? He was only thinking of the field and how muchcorn it would take to sow it. He was plowing up and down, when suddenly his plowshare hit upon something hard. He stoppedthe oxen and took his spade, and dug, and there was an old crock full of gold! Somebody had hidden it away and left it. Thisman had never looked for it, for he did not even know it was there, but he had stumbled on it, as men say, by accident. Whatdid he do? He did not tell anybody, but he went off to the man who was the owner of the field and he said, "What will youtake for that field?" "Can you buy it?" "Yes, I want it. What will you take for it?"
The price was so high that he had to sell the house he lived in, his oxen and his very clothes off his back, but he did notcare about that! He bought the field and he bought the treasure. And then he was able to buy back his clothes, his house,his oxen and everything else. If you find Christ and if you have to sell the coat off your back in order to get Him! If youhave to give up everything you have that you may find Him, you will have such a treasure in Him that, for the joy of findingHim, you would count all the riches of Egypt to be less than nothing and vanity!
But you need not sell the coat off your back-Christ is to be had for nothing-only you must give Him yourself. If He givesHimself to you and He becomes your Savior, you must give yourself to Him and become His servant. Trust Him, I beseech you!The Lord help you to do so, for Jesus' sake! Amen.
EXPOSITION BY C. H. SPURGEON: GENESIS 8:15-22; JEREMIAH33:15-26. Genesis 8:15-21. And God spoke to Noah, saying, Go out of the ark, you, and your wife, and your sons, and your sons' wives with you. Bringforth with you every living thing that is with you, of all flesh, both of fowl, and of cattle, and of every creeping thingthat creeps upon the earth; that they may breed abundantly in the earth, and be fruitful, and multiply upon the earth. AndNoah went out and his sons, and his wife, and his sons' wives with him: every beast, every creeping thing, and every fowl,and whatever creeps upon the earth, after their kinds, went forth out of the ark. And Noah built an altar to the LORD, andtook of every clean beast, and of every clean fowl, and offered burnt offerings on the altar. And the LORD smelled a sweetsavor. Until then the earth had been obnoxious to Jehovah. He had put it away from Him as a foul thing, drowned beneath theflood. But after the offering of Noah's sacrifice, the Lord smelled "a savor of rest."
21, 22. And the LORD said in His heart, I will not again curse the ground. And any more for man's sake, for the imaginationof man's heart is evil from his youth; neither will I again strike any more every thing living, as I have done. While theearth remains, seedtime and harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and winter, and day and night shall not cease. Thus wesee what we may expect so long as the earth remains, for the mouth of the Lord has spoken it. Now let us read a few versesfrom Jeremiah's prophecy.
Jeremiah 33:15. In those days, and at that time, will I cause the Branch of Righteousness to grow up to David; and He shall execute judgmentand righteousness in the land. In the latter days, at the glorious appointed time, Jesus Christ will grow up like a Branchout of the stem of Jesse. The dynasty of David now seems like a tree cut down, whose stock is buried under the ground, but,"the Branch of Righteousness" shall appear in due time, and Jesus, the Son of David, "shall execute judgment and righteousnessin the land."
16. In those days shall Judah be saved, and Jerusalem shall dwell safely: and this is the name wherewith she shall be called,The LORD Our Righteousness. What a wonderful unity there is between Christ and His Church! She actually takes His name-"TheLord Our Righteousness."
17, 18. For thus says the LORD; David shall never lack a man to sit upon the throne of the house of Israel, neither shallthe priests, the Levites lack a man before Me to offer burnt offerings, and to kindle meat offerings, and to do sacrificecontinually. This shows that the Covenant was not a literal and fleshly one, made with David and his seed according to theflesh, or with the priests and their seed according to the flesh. There is a Kingdom that can never be moved-and our Lordsits on that Throne. There is a Priesthood which is everlasting, it is held by that great High Priest who has offered oneSacrifice for sins, forever, and who abides a Priest forever after the order of Melchisedec.
19, 22. And the word of the LORD came to Jeremiah, saying, Thus says the LORD; If you can break My covenant with the day,and My covenant with the night, and that there should not be day and night in their season, then may also My Covenant be brokenwith David, My servant, that he should not have a son to reign upon his throne, and with the Levites the priests, My ministers.As the host of Heaven cannot be numbered, neither the sand of the sea measured: so will I multiply the seed of David, My servant,and the Levites that minister to Me. So that they are, at this day, the seed of Jesus, the Son of David, who shall count them!And the company of those whom He has made to be kings and priests to God, who but He can number them!
23-26. Moreover the word of the LORD came to Jeremiah, saying, Consider you not what this people have spoken, saying, Thetwo families which the LORD has chosen, He has even cast them off? Thus they have despised My people, that they should beno more a nation before them. Thus says the LORD, If My Covenant is not with day and night, and if I have not appointed theordinances of Heaven and earth; then will I cast away the seed of Jacob, and David, My servant, so that I will not take anyof his seed to be rulers over the seed of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob: for I will cause their captivity to return, and havemercy on them. This shall be literally fulfilled in the latter days, I doubt not, but it is even now being fulfilled to thespiritual seed of Jacob and David! The Covenant of Grace is made sure to all the seed, even to as many as have believed onChrist's name.