Sermon 2520. A Program Never Carried Out

(No. 2520)

INTENDED FOR READING ON LORD'S-DAY JUNE 6, 1897.

BY C. H. SPURGEON,

AT THE METROPOLITAN TABERNACLE, NEWINGTON, ON LORD'S-DAY EVENING, OCTTOBER. 25, 1885.

"And he arose, and came to his father. But when he was yet a great way off, his father saw him, and had compassion, and ran,and fell on his neck, and kissed him. And the son said unto him, Father, Ihave sinned against Heaven, and in your sight, andam no more worthy to be called your son." Luke 15:20,21.

I THOUGHT I would hardly preach a set discourse from this familiar text, but just give you some odds and ends of thought uponthese words. You know that there are many people who are in such a low state of mind-and who have such a humble opinion ofthemselves that if I bring them a loaf of bread, they will be afraid to eat it-so I have only brought a few crumbs, this time,and my hope is that they will say with the Syrophenician woman, "Truth, Lord: yet the little dogs eat of the crumbs whichfall from their masters' table." May any such persons who are here feel able to pick up a stray thought which shall be spiritualfood to them, even manna sent from Heaven and, perhaps, when they have eaten one morsel of it, they may then dare to eat more,and yet more, until their souls are satisfied and they learn to rejoice in the God of their salvation! I am going to takea roving commission and ramble about somewhat more than usual-and I shall do so because I know there are many here who are,themselves, rambling. Perhaps if I ramble, I may come across them. If I keep along the city road, some of the hedge birdsthat are out of the way may get missed, but if I go over hedge and ditch and say something unusual here and something startlingthere-it may be that they will wonder how I went just where they happened to be as much as I marvel how they have managedto go where they are!

My one thought at this time is not concerning my subject, but my objective. I have not any particular subject, but my objectiveis that some poor prodigal may return to God, that some lost child may come back to the Father's heart, that, in fact, somesinner may repent of sin and believe in Jesus and so enter into rest this very hour! I would rather be the means of savinga soul from death than be the greatest orator on earth! I would rather bring the poorest woman in the world to the feet ofJesus than I would be made Archbishop of Canterbury! There is no honor and no dignity under Heaven that can content us unlesssouls are won for Christ! And if souls are won, we shall care little how the great work was done instrumentally, for God willhave the whole of the glory of it.

I. From my text I am going, first, to make this observation, that THE COMING SINNER'S FORECASTS DIFFER VERY MUCH FROM THEFACTS.

When a sinner comes back to God, he generally has a notion of how he is coming back and what he is going to feel- and whathe is going to say, and what he is going to receive. He fashions in his mind a kind of program of what he fancies is aboutto happen. But, so far as my observation has gone, his programs are generally good for nothing and his forecasts of what willhappen are usually quite mistaken! This forlorn son said, "I will arise and go to my father, and I will ask him to make meas one of his hired servants."

Notice, dear Friends, first, that the prodigal's program was not carried out with regard to his own prayers. He did not sayin prayerwhat he had determined that he would say. He did begin to repeat it, but he never finished it. You remember thathe resolved to say, "Father, I have sinned against Heaven, and before you, and am no more worthy to be called your son: makeme as one of your hired servants." That was his intention, but the prayer he actually uttered did not contain that last sentence,he did not cry, "Make me as one of your hired servants!" I suppose that he was going to say it, but his father kissed himand so stopped it. "No, my boy," the father seemed to say, "you shall not even askto be made a hired servant. I know thathumble petition is simmering in your heart, but it shall never come out of your lips, I will not permit you to say that."

Perhaps someone here is saying, "I know what I will say tonight when I pray, I know how I will confess my sin, I know whatI will ask of God." No, dear Friend, you do not! When you come to the real praying, you will find that something very differentwill occur to your mind. Much of what now suggests itself to you will fly away and fresh thoughts will come in. Therefore,do not be particular about making up a program at all. If this son had gone back to his father without having a preconceivedprayer, it would have been just as well. And so, if you do but go back, with a strong desire, to the great Father from whomyou have wandered-even though you cannot compose a prayer in words, never mind about that! The composition would have beenof little value to you if you had been able to make it. Go with your broken heart and pour out sighs and cries and tears beforethe Lord. Wordless though the prayers may be, they shall not lack for force and energy to prevail with God.

But the prodigal's program also broke down, very sweetly and blessedly, with regard to his father's action. He had, in hismind's eye, a vision of what his father would do. Possibly he feared that his father would spurn him altogether but, dismissingthat fear, he may have thought, "If my father is very kind, indeed, to me, he will at least severely chide me and then putme into some low position in the household and bid me seek to retrieve my lost character and work my way up till, at last,I may be permitted to sit somewhere at the bottom of the table." He had some such notion as that, but his program went allto pieces because his father suddenly manifested his intense love to him. He was a great way off, his tears were flowing andhis heart was trembling, yet, in a moment, before he knew where he was, his father's arms were around his neck and the kissof love was on his cheek!

So, when a sinner is coming to Christ, he tries to fancy what will happen. He says, "I must be in distress of mind, I mustbe in deep anguish, I must be pleading and crying to God for forgiveness and so, perhaps, the Light of God will graduallycome to me." Then it often happens that, in a single moment, the soul finds perfect peace with God. I should not wonder if,while I am speaking, the Spirit of God should come rushing into some dry and thirsty soul and fill it up to the brim withheavenly delight! Multitudes of persons find peace with God all of a sudden. It is not so with all, for God has many waysof working. "The wind blows where it will," but have you not sometimes noticed that when everything has been very quiet andstill, suddenly you have heard the moaning of the wind and then, almost before you were aware of it, the clouds were flyingbefore the breeze, like winged chariots? Have you never been on the Thames, in a yacht, when there has come a sudden squallthat seemed as if it would upset everything? Well the Spirit of God can come upon a man just as swiftly as that! The poorsoul is dreaming of the way in which he thinks the blessing may come to him, but when it is bestowed by God, it surprises,astonishes, astounds him! Before he expects such gifts, sin is forgiven, Divine Grace is received, joy fills the heart andthe man is glad with exceedingly great joy. May it be so with some of you who are now here! May your program be broken inthat respect by the sudden incoming of unexpected Grace!

There is no doubt whatever that this prodigal son expected that he would have to undergo a probation-that his father wouldput him in quarantine for a time. He felt that he was not fit to be received back just as he was, that his father could notlet him sit at the table the first day he came home, but that he would say to him, "Remember how badly you have behaved, youngman-you have acted so wildly that it will be long before I can think of trusting you again." Instead of speaking thus, thefather said, "Bring forth the best robe and put it on him, and put a ring on his hand, and shoes on his feet. And bring herethe fatted calf, and kill it, and let us eat and be merry." This was done at once, the very first day the prodigal returned!"What?" asks someone, "can I be introduced to the highest privileges of Christian communion as soon as I come to Christ?"Yes, that is God's way of welcoming sinners! Look at the dying thief. The very day he repented, he went to Paradise! Thoughhe had been a great sinner until then, Jesus said to him, "Today shall you be with Me in Paradise." Only think of a childof the devil in the morning being changed to a child of God at night-and made to rejoice in Christ Jesus with the happiestof the saints in Glory!

It was after a similar fashion in the case of this younger son. He was to be in no inferior position, he was to be in allways equal to his elder brother and, in some respects, there was even a higher joy concerning him. I wish it might happento some of you as it happened to me one Sunday morning, long ago. I went into the little House of Prayer as burdened as everthis forlorn young man could be, but I came out as full of joy as ever that household was when "they began to be merry." Whyshould it not be so with you, also? I have seen my Master give His most charming feasts to newcomers and make a festival forraw recruits-yes, and set upon the tables all the delights of His dearest love to be food for sinners who, but a day or twobefore, were feeding the swine of their lusts and indulging in every kind of sin! Oh, the splendor of Almighty Love, the InfiniteMajesty of the Grace of God to deal thus with the guilty! Your poor program is no guide at all! You think that God will treatyou as men deal with men, but, lo, He deals with you after the manner of God! "Who is a God like unto You, that pardons iniquity,and passes by the transgression of the remnant of His heritage? He retains not His anger forever, because He delights in mercy."

So, you see, this prodigal's program was erroneous, both as to his own prayers and as to his father's action. In like mannerGod deals with His returning prodigals exceeding abundantly above all they ask or even think. This fact ought to induce manyto come to Christ who are, at present, afraid to come. You do not know, dear Friends, how gracious my Lord is! You would neverstand outside His door if you knew what accommodation He has for the poorest beggar who does but knock. Did you but know thereadiness of Christ's heart to move towards the chief of sinners, you would not linger away from Him. If you could only imaginehow near you are to a heavenly bliss, the likes of which you have never tasted, you would cross the borderline at once! Ifother prodigals could only know what music and what dancing of a celestial kind might soon be all around them, they wouldnot stay with the citizens of this barren country feeding the swine of this world-they would hasten home to the Father's houseand the Father's love! Do not stay away, Brothers and Sisters, because of that foolish program of yours which makes you fancythat you must feel this and must feel that! God does not save us according to our programs-He has a far better way of Hisown! He does not act according to our prejudices or suppositions, but according to His riches in Glory by Christ Jesus!

So much for the first observation, that the coming sinner's forecasts differ very much from the facts.

II. My second remark is that THAT WHICH PREVAILS WITH GOD IS NOT THE COMING SINNER'S

PRAYER TO GOD, BUT GOD'S SIGHT OF HIM.

Notice, when the prodigal resolved to return, he promised to himself what he would say to his father. But his father fellon his neck and kissed him before he could utter his petition-"When he was yet a great way off, his father saw him, and hadcompassion, and ran, and fell on his neck, and kissed him. And the son said unto him, Father, I have sinned." The utteranceof the prayer of the son followed the display of love on the part of the father! The reason why the father acted with suchwondrous favor to his son was not because the prodigal had prayed, for he had not done so. He had resolved to pray, but hehad not actually prayed. His prayer followed the deed of mercy done by his father-and the cause of that mercy was that hisfather saw him! Do notice that his father saw him and, therefore, had compassion on him. His father saw him and, therefore,ran to him. His father saw him and, therefore, fell on his neck. His father saw him and, therefore, kissed him!

What did the father see? Long before the prodigal saw his father, his father saw him and, first, he saw his misery. Supposethat it were your boy, you who have children. Suppose that somewhere in this crowd, perhaps near the door, you should seethat son of yours who long ago ran away from you? Possibly he has been far away at sea-that might not be to his discredit,but, alas, he has also been living a very loose and sinful life. You have enquired for him. You have advertised for him, butyou have not been able to find him. Suppose that you should, tonight, stumble on him all in rags, lean, cadaverous, consumptive,ready to die? I am sure that you would not begin enquiring what he had done, or where he had been, or anything of the sort!It would be the very sight of his awful misery, the lines of his sorrow and sickness that would at once touch your heart!As you would look at him, you would see his misery and you would also see his relationship to you. You would ask, "Is thatreally my boy? Is that my son?" When you had reckoned him up and, perhaps, his mother at your side had said, "Yes, that isour John, I am sure it is," there would be no further delay-your heart would have compassion and you would be ready to fallupon his neck and kiss him in the Tabernacle just as he is!

I knew a good minister whose name happened to be a Jewish one. We will say, "Benjamin." However, he was not a Jew, but oneday there called upon him a venerable Israelite who fell at once upon the minister's neck and said, "O my son, my dear lostson!" The good man looked at him and said, "I do not understand what you mean, Sir." The Jew replied, "Years ago, I had ason who became a Christian and I disowned him. And I have always lamented for him ever since. I have hunted the world forhim. I have advertised for him and now, at last, I thank the God of Abraham that I have found him." The good minister hadto say, "My dear Sir, I am very sorry for you, but I am obliged to rob you of your comfort. I am not a Jew, I am a Gentile.My father long since went to be with God. You have made a mistake." So the poor old Jew went down the stairs broken-heartedbecause he had not found his son. It does not matter whether a man is a Jew or a Gentile-he loves his boy, does he not? Why,because we are men, we cannot bear to see our offspring in sickness and sorrow and poverty! And though they may have brokenour hearts by their sin, yet they have not broken our hearts off from love to them.

It is just thus that God looks towards you, O penitent Sinner! It is not because you pray. It is not because of anything inyou, but it is because He sees your sin and your misery-and sees in you, as a returning penitent, a child of His heart, onewhom He has loved with an everlasting love, one for whom He gave His Son to die! And because He sees this in you, thereforeHe falls upon your neck and manifests Himself in Infinite Love to you. I have put this Truth of God, I hope, very plainly.But to any poor soul who says, "I cannot pray," I would answer, "Suppose you cannot? That is no reason why the Father shouldnot run and fall upon your neck and kiss you." "But, oh, I cannot put words together! I have tried, but failed to do so."Do you not see that this father kissed his son before the prodigal had said a word Do you not perceive that very clearly inthe narrative? The prayer, truly, had been concocted in his own heart, but he had not uttered it! He neveruttered all of it,but his father had kissed him and blessed him before he had spoken a single word! So, it is not your prayers, it is not yourfeelings, it is not anything in you that will save you-it is the great heart of God who loves you that is your highest hopeand the real grounds why you should be saved! Would to God you could believe this and find peace with Him through Jesus ChristHis Son even now!

III. Now I want to make a third observation, which is that THE FASHION OF PRAYER MATTERS LITTLE, AS LONG AS IT IS TRUE PRAYER.

This young man had intended to pray a contradictory prayer Notice what his prayer was. It makes me smile as I read it. Listen-"Iwill arise and go to my father and will say unto him, Father," and so on, "I am not worthy to be called your son." Why, then,did he call him, "Father"? So there is often a beautiful inconsistency about a true penitent's prayer-he puts God in His rightplace by calling Him, "Father," yet he does not dare, himself, to get into his right place to be called a son. But, surely,if I may call God, "Father/'l may call myself, "son," for the relationship necessarily exists on both sides if it exists atall! Ah, poor Sinner, I daresay your first prayer is full of blunders, but that does not matter as long as your heart is init! The Lord knows how to put our prayers together and take all the contradictions out of them-He understands the meaningof our sighs and our groans!-

"To Him there's music in a groan And beauty in a tear."

Notice, too, that the prodigal's prayer was a confession rather than a prayer "Father, I have sinned against Heaven and inyour sight, and am no more worthy to be called your son." You see, he does not ask for anything-he just acknowledges his guiltinessand his unworthiness. It is only part of a prayer-a one-legged prayer, as it were-but, blessed be God, He accepts limpingprayers! The oddest, strangest, most singular prayers that ever were prayed, so long as the heart of the man is in them goingtowards the Father, shall not be refused!

I am going to read you some Scriptures to comfort those of you who are afraid you cannot be saved because you cannot pray.Have you ever noticed what is regarded as prayer according to the Word of God? David says, in the 22nd Psalm, "Why are Youso far from helping me, and from the words of my roaring?" So that roaringis prayer when the heart is so sad that it cannotuse words-when it roars like a wild beast rather than speaks like a human being! Some of you know what it means to get intosuch a state of misery that you dare not speak and yet cannot be silent-to be so distracted that you cannot think consecutively,you cannot read your own thoughts and do not know how to shape them before God- so that your utterance is more that of theroaring of a wounded and dying animal than the praying of a sensible, intelligent man. Yet even thatis prayer and God acceptsit as prayer!

Cries also are prayers. In the same 22nd Psalm, at the second verse, we read, "O my God, I cry in the daytime, but You hearnot; and in the night season, and am not silent." This is the cry of pain that comes from a child, rather than the intelligentexpression of the thoughts within the soul. But have you never known, dear Friend, what it is to be in such distress, evenas a man, that you wish you could get alone and weep? The tears, perhaps, have refused to come, and you have sat down andsaid, "I am lost! I am lost. Ah, me! What will become of me, O my God?" Such crying as that, when you can hardly get the wordsout, is the best praying in the world. It is only, "Oh!" and, "Ah!" and, "Would that!" and all manner of broken and strangeexpressions. Yet those are prayers such as God hears and answers!

I will give you another text to show that prayer may sometimes take the shape of a cry. In Psalm 69:3, we read, "I am weary of my crying: my throat is dry." So crying isprayer, even hoarse crying, when, at last, the throatbecomes so dry that not a word can be uttered. But that is not all, for breathingmay also be praying. In the Book of Lamentations,in the third Chapter, at the 56th verse, we find this amazing petition, "Hide not Your ears from my breathing." The man cannotspeak, his soul is too full. If he looks through Heaven and earth, he cannot find a word that he can utter! But quick andhot are the breathings of his life which seems as if it would ebb away. Yet that is true prayer. Some of the best prayer thatever reaches the ears of the Lord God of Sabaoth is just like that-the breathing of agony when the very life seems to be expiring.As everything that has breath is to praise Jehovah, so let everyone who has breath feel that he can pray, for even breathingmay be prayer!

Yes, and when you cannot breathe, what do you do, then? Why, when a man grows short of breath, then he pants. That again isprayer. Hear how David puts it in Psalm 42:1-"As the hart pants after the water brooks, so pants my soul after You, O God!" You know how the stag that has been hunted,longs to have its smoking flanks in the water brooks, and to take a deep draught from the cooling stream, for it seems tobe burning within like an oven. There it stands and pants to find the water-its whole soul seems to go up and down as it pants.Well, when you cannot breathe, when you feel as if that strong breath that I mentioned just now cannot be reached by you,you can pant! "I opened my mouth and panted," said David. Well, that again is some of the best prayer that God ever hears.Do not be afraid, therefore, that you cannot pray if even panting isprayer

Yet further, in the 69th Psalm, at the third verse, David says, "My eyes fail while I wait for my God." And in the fifth Psalm,third verse, "In the morning will I direct my prayer unto You, and will look up." So, you see, prayer may take another shape-lookingup may be a prayer I have read of an old saint who usually spent a whole hour in the day alone. And being watched and noticed,it was seen that he never said anything, but he stood quite still for an hour. So he was asked, "What, then, is your devotion?"He answered, "I look at God, and God looks at me." And I must confess that I sometimes find it a very high form of devotionto sit quite still and look up. There is a reverent silence of worship that will sometimes disable the spirit from any otherkind of communion. Prayer is-

"The upward glancing of an eye, When none but God is near."

Oh, you who cannot speak, but yet have your eyes-you can look up-and even in the look there shall be a prayer that God willregard, for He observes which way men's eyes go and, if their eyes are towards the hills, from where comes their help, Hewill bless them!

Next, a moan may be a prayer Notice this text, Jeremiah 31:18-"I have surely heard Ephraim bemoaning himself thus." Moaning is rather the language of a cow than of a man, but, oh, thatis a prayer that touches God's heart! We cannot bear to hear a child moan. You mothers who have nursed a sick child at night,I know that it has gone to your heart when you have heard that which you cannot describe otherwise than as moaning. And oh,poor troubled Sinner, if you cannot pray, but can only get alone and moan, that is good praying! See how Hezekiah prayed whenhe was sick-his praying was of this kind, according to Isaiah 38:14-"Like a crane or a swallow, so did I chatter: I did mourn like a dove." You know how a dove coos and how pathetic is themourning of a dove bereaved of its mate. That is good praying and though to you it seems like chattering and only making apoor, silly, bird-like noise, it is true prayer when the heart is in it!

I am laboring with all my might to bring these things before you that you may see how simple a matter prayer is, so long asthe heart is right with God. So notice, next, that prayer is a sigh. Psalm 80:11-"Let the sighing of the prisoner come before you." Further, it is a groan. Psalm 102:19, 20-"From Heaven did the Lord behold the earth; to hear the groaning of the prisoner." The very best prayer out of Heaven isa groan! Remember Romans 8:26? "The Spirit itself makes intercession for us with groans which cannot be uttered"-groans with such unutterable pain aboutthem that they are not to be fully expressed in words! These are the very intercessions of the Holy Spirit and, therefore,our groans are among the very best of prayers!

There is another form of prayer that David was accustomed to use and that was spreading out his hands. Psalm 88:9-"I have stretched out my hands unto You." And, in another place, Psalm 143:6-"I stretch forth my hands unto You." Sometimes he stood in prayer in this way, as if his heart was saying, "I need to getthe blessing. I long to receive it.

I am reaching out to You, my God, for it." How often have I seen a sick man pray like this when he could not do anything else,for words had gone and the mouth was stopped and choked, and the brow was covered with a clammy sweat! That is the sort ofprayer that God will hear. O Sirs, you may go through your liturgies as many times as you please and, perhaps, there may notbe any prayer in them, after all! You may intone them and accompany them with all the music of your choirs and your organs-andthey may fall flat as death before the Throne of God! But a true penitent who gets alone in his agony and does but groan,or stretch out his hands, or glance his eyes to Heaven, shall never be refused by the great Father above!

There is one other kind of prayer-there may be a great many more-but this must suffice for the present. David says, in Psalm 6:8, "The Lord has heard the voice of my weeping." There, again, is wondrous power, as if the tears that fell from penitent andearnest eyes were treasured up in the tear bottle of God. Every tear from His children's hearts will go to the heart of thegreat Father and He will answer the requests of our tears. There is a salt about the tear of a seeking soul that is pleasantto God. If your tears burn their way down your cheeks, they will burn their way into the heart of God-and you shall get theblessing that you desire.

Now, after all this, I think that I may add that there is nobody here who dares to say that if he wills to pray, he cannotpray. If there is true prayer in his heart, the expression of it is so simple, so varied, so easy, that everyone must be capableof it! And I do pray that many here may feel that it is not so much howthey come, or with whatthey come, as that if they dobut come with the heart, God will receive them! Dear Hearts, will you not come? I wonder whether I am right in the reflectionI sometimes make after I have been preaching? I sometimes say to myself, "I think that if I had heard that sermon when I wasseeking the Savior, I would have found Him." I do not know how to put Christ's love more plainly, or give the invitation moresimply. I wonder that souls do not come and yet I know that you will not come unless my Master draws you! But, surely, Hewill draw you! He is drawing you! Breathe a prayer to Him. He who refuses to pray deserves to be lost. He who knows that Godwill hear a cry, a breath, a groan, a moan, a panting and will not put up any of these-ah, well, what shall I say of him?Are you choosing your own damnation? Do you really mean to be ruined forever? Do not so, I pray you! God help you to come,now, to the great Father and to find joy and peace in Him! "For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son,that whoever believes in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life." "He that believes and is baptized shall be saved.""To as many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God." "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you shallbe saved." "Turn you, turn you from your evil ways; for why will you die, O house of Israel?" "As I live, says the Lord God,I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked; but that the wicked turn from his way and live."

May He turn you, and bless you, and save you, for His great mercy's sake! Amen.

EXPOSITION BY CHARLES H. SPURGEON: LUKE 15.

Verse 1. Then drew near unto Him all the publicans and sinners for to hear Him. It was a motley group-"all the publicans andsinners"-the riff-raff, the scum, as people sometimes call them. "All the publicans and sinners" drew near unto Jesus "forto hear Him."

2. And the Pharisees and scribes murmured, saying, This Man receives sinners, and eats with them. "See," they said, "whatkind of a ministry this must be that attracts all these low people? In what a condition must be the mind of this Man who seemspleased to associate with such people as these!"

3. And He spoke this parable unto them, saying.-Our Savior's aim was to show them that the first objective of God is to findthe lost, that His first thoughts are toward the guilty and the fallen that He may bless and save them. "He spoke this parableunto them saying."

4. What man of you, having an hundred sheep, if he loses one of them, does not leave the ninety and nine in the wildernessand go after that which is lost, until he finds it?s not the shepherd's first thought concerning the one lost sheep? Forthe time, anxiety about that lost one swallows up the consideration of the 99 that are in safe keeping! And he goes "afterthat which is lost, until he finds it."

5, 6. And when he has found it, he lays it on his shoulders, rejoicing. And when he comes home, he calls together his friendsand neighbors, saying unto them, Rejoice with me; for I have found my sheep which was lost. He did not say, "Rejoice withme over the 99 that were never lost," but, for the time, all his anxiety and, afterwards, all his joy, centered upon the lostone.

7. Isay unto you, that likewise joy shall be in Heaven over one sinner that repents, more than over ninety andnine just persons,which need no repentance. The mercy of God shall seem, as it were, to swallow up every other attribute, and His great heartshall rejoice to the fullest over repenting sinners!

8. Either what woman having ten pieces of silver, if she loses one piece, does not light a candle, and sweep the house, andseek diligently till she finds it. The woman's candle and broom and eyes are all for this one lost piece of silver! She doesnot look, just now, at the other nine pieces. They are, at present, left in a safe place by themselves, and she is thinkingonly of this lost piece.

9. And when she has found it, she calls her friends and her neighbors together, saying, Rejoice with me; for I have foundthe piece which I had lost. She does not rejoice one half so distinctly and markedly over the nine pieces which were not lost,as she does over the one piece that had been lost, but now is found.

10. Likewise, Isay unto you, there is joy in thepresence of the angels of God over one sinner that repents. Our Savior, yousee, is still keeping on the same tack and showing that He was right in associating with the publicans and sinners, sinceHe aimed at finding and reclaiming and saving them. He now goes on with a third most beautiful and instructive parable.

11-15. And He said, A certain man had two sons and the younger of them said to his father, Father, give me the portion ofgoods that falls to me. And he divided unto them his living. And not many days after the younger son gathered all togetherand took his journey into a far country, and there wasted his substance with riotous living. And when he had spent all, therearose a mighty famine in that land; and he began to be in need. And he went andjoined himself to a citizen of that country;and he sent him into his fields to feed swine. That was the best the citizen of the far country could do for the prodigal!The devil's best is always bad-what must his worst be? If he sets his favorites the employment of feeding swine, what willhe do with them when the time of his favor is over and they are forever in his power?

16. Andhe would gladly have flledhis belly with the husks that the swine did eat: andno man gave unto him. Here was the freeand easy gentleman who had spent his thousands without a thought, and now, "no man gave unto him." I do not know that thisprodigal spent his living with harlots-the Scripture does not say that he did. It was his elder brother who said that andhe may have made out the case to be even worse than it was. He was simply a waster of his substance in riotous living-andthat was bad enough. But I never find that the younger brother tried to set himself right and repudiate the slanderous accusationof the elder. It was not worthwhile for him to try to do so, for he was right with his father and he would get right withhis elder brother, by-and-by. If you get right with God, my dear Friend, even if some Christian people should not believein you, never mind about that! Even if they should think you worse than you have been, never mind! If you are right with God,you will be right with them in due time.

17. And when he came to himself-For he had journeyed into a far country and he had gone as far away from himself as he hadgone from his father! But, "when he came to himself."

17-22. He said, How many hired servants of my father's have bread enough and to spare, and I perish with hunger! I will ariseand go to my father, and will say unto him, Father, I have sinned against Heaven, and before you, and am no more worthy tobe called your son: make me as one of your hired servants. And he arose, and came to his father. But when he was yet a greatway off, his father saw him, and had compassion, and ran, and fell on his neck, and kissed him. And the son said unto him,Father, I have sinned against Heaven, andin your sight, and am no more worthy to be called your son. But the father said toHis servants.-As much as to say-"Let me hear no more of this, my Son! I cannot bear it. You break my heart with the storyof your repentance." "The father said to His servants."

22. Bring forth the best robe, andput it on him; andput a ring on his hand, and shoes on his feet. "Dress him like a gentleman!Do not let it be seen that he ever was in rags-'Bring forth the best robe, and put it on him; and put a ring on his hand,and shoes on his feet.'"

23. And bring here the fatted calf, and kill it; and let us eat, and be merry. ' 'Do all that you can to make this poor brokenheart happy again, to lift this poor fallen son into the sphere from which he has been away so long. Make him feel at home'and let us eat, and be merry.'"

24. For this, my son, was dead, and is alive again; he was lost, and is found. And they began to be merry. I have no informationthat they ever left off being merry. The Church of God never ceases to praise and bless the Lord for saved sinners. If youcome to Christ, dear Friend, you will set bells a-ringing that will never leave off throughout eternity! "They began to bemerry."

25. 26. Now his elder son was in the field: and as he came and drew near to the house, he heard music and dancing. And hecalled one of the servants and asked what these things meant Perhaps he was not very musical and did not care much for joyand delight. He may have been a hard-working, plodding man, but not a happy one.

27, 28. And he said unto him, Your brother is come; and your father has killed the fatted calf because he has received himsafe and sound. And he was angry, and would not go in; therefore came his father out, and entreated him. I scarcely know wherethe father's love is the more seen-in falling on the neck of the younger son, or in going out to entreat this elder son whowas in a pet because the returned prodigal had been welcomed so kindly.

29. Andhe answering said to his father, Lo, these many years do Iserve you, neither transgressed I at any time your commandment:and yet you never gave me a kid, that I might make merry with my friends. He seems to say, "I have had no joy of religion.I have been a good, steady, moral person, but my soul has had no high delights."

30. But as soon as this, your son, was come, which has devoured your living with harlots, you have killed for him the fattedcalf''Not even a little lamb or kid of the goats for me, but a fatted calf for him!" So some still say, "There has been arevival and some of the worst people in the parish have been brought to Christ. But we, who have always gone to church andalways were moral and upright, have not had half the joy of these new converts. No fuss has been made over us-all the rejoicingis over the returning prodigals." Do you see your portraits, any of you? If so, may you soon be set right by the only Onewho can make you what you ought to be!

31. And he said unto him, Son, you are ever with me, and all that I have is yours.' 'Everything I have is yours. If you havenot had the kid you spoke of, it was your own fault-you might have taken it if you had pleased. The whole house is at yourdisposal. I never denied you anything. All that I have is yours.'"

32. It was meet that we should make merry, and be glad. See, the younger son did not speak for himself-there was no need forhim to do so. His father spoke for him. What a blessed Intercessor, what a wondrous Advocate we have with our elder Brother!We may well leave them alone, ourselves, for He will bring them right-"It was meet that we should make merry and be glad."

32. For thisyour brother, was dead, andis alive again; and was lost, andis found.