Sermon 2543. Good Reasons for a Good Resolution
(No. 2543)
INTENDED FOR READING ON LORD'S-DAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1897.
DELIVERED BY C. H. SPURGEON,
AT THE METROPOLITAN TABERNACLE, NEWINGTON, ON LORD'S-DAY EVENING, JULY 20, 1884.
"I will greatly rejoice in the Lord, my soul shall be joyful inn my God; for He has clothed me with the garments of salvation,He has covered me with the robe of righteousness, as a bridegroom decks himself with ornaments, and as a bride adorns herselfwith her jewels." Isaiah 61:10.
Without any preface we will go straight to our text at once. In the words of the Prophet, we have two things brought beforeus-first, a resolution to be glad and, secondly, the reasons for being glad. Whenever a man makes a resolution, it shouldbe because he has a good reason for doing so. And when he has a good reason for it, he ought to adhere to his resolution andcarry it out to the fullest possible extent. I want you, dear Friends, because there are good reasons for it, to resolve thatyou will be glad in the Lord. Perhaps you are of a mournful spirit-it may be that you have peculiar trials just now-possiblythe very heaviness of the atmosphere makes you feel dull and sad. Never mind those things which would drag your spirit down,at least for tonight! Let us be glad and if we can make that gladness overlap tomorrow and if the stream should be sufficientlystrong to flow right through the week to another Sabbath-and if the torrent should be vigorous enough to run right to theend of the year-and if the mighty flood should be broad enough to cover all the rest of our lives, it will not be, even then,an unreasonable thing! I wish we could, each one of us, with such a Divine inspiration as would enable us to continue it throughouteternity, say, "I will greatly rejoice in the Lord, my soul shall be joyful in my God." But if we cannot reach to such a fullattainment ofjoy all at once, let us at least take a good mouthful of it even now-let us kneel down against the wellhead ofheavenly bliss and drink a deep draught of holy joy at this glad hour!
I. First, we are to think about A RESOLUTION TO BE GLAD.
I notice, first, that the Prophet's determination to be glad in the Lord is made without any reserve whatever. ' 'I will greatlyrejoice in the Lord, my soul shall be joyful in my God." He says, "I will, "and then he says, "my soul shall" He makes quitesure of it with his, "will," and his, "shall." It is with him a firm, fixed, steadfast, unquestioned resolve that his soulshall be full of delight in the Lord! Come, dear Friends, and let us make the same resolve by the help of God's Spirit! "Ihave a bad headache," says one, "but I will rejoice in the Lord all the same for that." "I have but very little at home, Iam very poor," I think I hear another say, but I trust you, too, will be able to add, "yet my soul shall be joyful in my God.If I cannot rejoice in earthly good things, I will rejoice in the highest good, even in God, who is Goodness itself." "I fear,"says another friend, "that I shall have trouble as soon as I return home. I am afraid I shall hear some very bad news." Letthis message of the Psalmist comfort your spirit-"He shall not be afraid of evil tidings: his heart is fixed, trusting inthe Lord." Do not keep any portion of what your hear so as to leave room for grief or fear, but, if you are a true Believerin the Lord Jesus Christ, surrender yourself completely to the highest form of enjoyment and say, here and now, "I will greatlyrejoice in the Lord, my soul shall be joyful in my God."
While the Prophet's resolution is wisely unreserved, notice how hearty i t is. He says not merely, "I will rejoice in theLord"-he is not going to be content with a cup full ofjoy-he means to have a wellfull of it, so he says, "I will greatly rejoicein the Lord." The Lord is such a great God that if we rejoice in Him at all, we ought greatly to rejoice in Him. Little sourcesof blessing may well produce little joy, but when we think of the great goodness of the great God to such great sinners aswe have been, each one of us who has been greatly pardoned through the great Sacrifice of Jesus may well say, "I will greatlyrejoice in the Lord." Then the Prophet adds, "My soul shall be joyful in my God." "My very soul, my truest and best self,shall be joyful in my God. Not only my lips, or the jubilant Psalms which I shall sing, but my very soulshall be joyful inmy God. I will sing as much as I can, but what I cannot sing, my soul shall feel. There shall be great waves of expressedjoy, but there shall be vast unstirred deeps of heavenly calm within my innermost nature-'My soul shall be joyful in my God.'"
We have sometimes seen people joyful just as far as the surface of their face. They tried to look glad, but underneath thesmiling countenance there lurked a cruel grief. Have I not seen sparkling eyes which could not help betraying the inward firesof sorrow that burned in the heart's inmost depths? Have I not heard men sing when their singing was almost a mockery, forhad they expressed themselves as they felt, they would have groaned rather than have sung? But, O my God, there shall be withme no mere semblance of joy, no feigning praise, no misrepresentation of the real feeling of my heart-"my soul shall be joyfulin my God."
I invite you, dear Christian Friends-and I pray the Holy Spirit, the Comforter, to enable you-to be as full of holy joy asyou can be, for there is good reason for it and no harm can come of it! It is perfectly safe to take the deepest possibledraughts of spiritual joy-this is a wine of which a man may drink to the fullest and he shall never be intoxicated. You maybe so enamored of earthly things as to perish through that love, but if you are so enraptured with your Lord that you findyour whole delight in Him, you cannot possibly go to an excess in that direction! I am sure some of you have tried to singthe bass notes long enough-I want to get you to run up the scale till you reach the very highest notes that can be sung onearth! You have sat down and groaned together in uncomfortable misery quite long enough. Now rouse yourselves from your sadness,shake off the dust of discontentment and sorrow-and let us sing together unto God, our exceeding joy, in whom there are fathomlessdepths of infinite delight!
So we have seen that this resolution to be glad is unreserved and very hearty-all the more hearty because it is double. "Iwill greatly rejoice," says the Prophet, and then he adds, "my soul shall be joyful." You may say the same, dear Friend-"Iwill be glad, and then I will be glad again. I will joy, and then I will rejoice. I will have a duplicate of it! I will repeatmy delights and heap them up, one upon another, as though by this Pelion on Ossa I should climb to the very heavens and sitdown in the full joy of my God." Oh, what a blessing it will be if many of you are helped to do this even now-and to continuedoing it!
Further, notice that this unreserved and hearty resolution is altogether spiritual' 'I will greatly rejoice in the Lord, mysoul shall be joyful in my God." Joy in the creature must necessarily be limited, for the creature is limited. Joy i n thecreature may be harmful, for the creature may beguile you and allure you away from the Creator. Joy in yourself is a fiction-therecan be no true satisfaction in it! Joy even in the work of God in your soul may sometimes be questionable, for you may notbe sure that it is God's work in which you are rejoicing. But when you can say, "I will greatly rejoice in the Lord, my soulshall be joyful in my God," you have a subject for joy and an object of joy higher than I can ever describe! I thought, lastnight, as I turned this text over, the best thing that ever could have happened for me is that God is what He is. I couldnot wish Him to be other than He is-not even when He frowns upon me. Blessed be His name, He never frowns upon His childrenexcept in love! He never smites them except in greater mercy than He could show by not striking them. He is altogether thebest conceivable God! Yes, He is inconceivably, unutterably, boundlessly good-let His name be praised and magnified forever!You may say to yourself, "I am a great many things that I ought not to be, but I have my God. He is my Father and I am Hischild, and though He made the heavens and the earth, yet He loves me with an everlasting love and He has set the whole ofHis heart's affection upon me! Even worthless me, He loves with all the infinity of His Divine Nature!"
O Friends, the thought of God should bring to our souls incessant pleasure! Think of any one Person of the blessed Trinityin Unity-think of the Father and then see how you ought to rejoice that He is your Father, and such a Father! Then think ofthe Son of God, our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. His very name is honey in the mouth and music in the ears, light in thelife and Heaven upon earth! Then think of the Holy Spirit, that Divine Person who deigns to take upon Himself the office ofComforter, that we may not know a sorrow which shall not be relieved, that we may not bear a burden out of which He will nottake all the heaviness and woe! Blessed Father, blessed Son and blessed Holy Spirit, blessed be the Triune God forever andever! "I will greatly rejoice in the Lord, my soul shall be joyful in my God." This joy in the Lord is all spiritual and inthat kind of rejoicing you can never run to excess!
Let me drop into your mouth this piece of heavenly sweetmeat-"The Father Himself loves you." Try to get the flavor of thatprecious Word, "loves you." I have often said that if God is kind to you, it is a great thing. If God thinks of you, thatis a great thing. If God blesses you, that is a great thing. But if He loves you-ah, that is an almost unspeakable honor andjoy! Yet it is true. You knew once what it was to be loved by an affectionate mother. You know now what it is to love yourchild. But God loves you in a more intense way, even, than that, for all the loves of men and women are but the spray of thegreat ocean of His everlasting love. "Oh, but," you say, "there are so many for God to love." That is true, yet He loves youas much as if there were no other person in the whole universe, as if you stood alone with the eyes of Jehovah fixed uponyou and the whole heart of Jehovah wrapping you round about in its Divine folds of affection! "The father Himself loves you."May the Holy Spirit teach you to draw the sweetness of those words into your soul! "The father Himself loves you." Yes, more,if He loves you now, He always did love you! He has loved you with an everlasting love-loved you before yonder stars beganto let their light shine down among the sons of men! Before He had fixed the universe upon the huge pillars of His almightypower, He loved you and your names were engraved upon the palms of His hands, yes, upon His heart! And He will love you whenthis great earth and sun and moon and stars shall have passed away. As a moment's foam dissolves into the wave that bearsit and is lost forever, so shall the material creation pass away-but God shall still love you even as He loves His only-begottenSon, forever and forever.
Please observe, also, that the Prophet's resolution related to immediate' oy, though there is also a future meaning in hiswords. "I will greatly rejoice in the Lord," expresses a present determination as well as a resolve concerning the future.I hope greatly to rejoice in God if I should live to be gray-headed, and to be bent double with infirmities. But I will greatlyrejoice in the Lord at this moment. It is true that you or I may lie upon a bed of sickness, and draw near to the gates ofdeath, but I trust that, even then, we shall greatly rejoice in the Lord and be joyful in our God. But our text really meansthat, even now, we will be glad in Him. Come, dear Friends, let us, each one, say, "I will now, at this very moment, greatlyrejoice in the Lord. My soul shall be joyful in my God. Away, you cares, be gone from me, for He cares for me. Away all thoughtsof sin, for Christ has cast my sins behind His back into the depths of the sea. Away all fear of the future, for my timesare in His hands! Away all murmuring, all complaining at the Providence of God-my soul cries, 'Your will be done, O Lord!Not as I will, but as You will.'" When you reach that point, you may well say, "now will I greatly rejoice in the Lord, mysoul shall be joyful in my God."
I think if I stopped now, and said nothing more, you might say to me, "You have given us reasons enough to make us full ofjoy and to cause each one of us gladly to cry, "I will greatly rejoice in the Lord, my soul shall be joyful in my God."
II. But now, in the second place, I am going to give you, from the text, other good reasons for BEING GLAD.
The first is found in the Divine clothing here mentioned-"He has clothed me with the garments of salvation." Did you everbehold your soul naked to its shame in the sight of the all-seeing Jehovah? Did you ever try to hide yourself from God becauseyou were under a deep sense of sin? And did you hear His penetrating voice calling you, as He called Adam in the Garden, "Whereare you? Where are you? Where are you?" Did you stay away from Divine service and did you still hear in your soul the Lord'squestion, "Where are you?" Did you try to bury yourself in your business, so as to forget that urgent enquiry, and did itstill ring in your ears, "Where are you?" Did you rush off to some place of amusement and try amid worldly companions to forgetyourself and your God? And did the voice still follow you, always calling, "Where are you? Where are you?" And were you obliged,at last, to stand shivering before the Lord, without a rag to cover you, your fig leaves all withered with a glance of Hiseye of fire? And did He then cover you with the garments of salvation? Oh, then you knew the meaning of my text, when youwere no longer ashamed, for you were covered with the robe of Christ's righteousness! You were clothed with the garments ofsalvation and you could say, "I will greatly rejoice in the Lord, my soul shall be joyful in my God."
Let every child of God here rejoice that he is clothed with the garments of salvation! From head to foot you are arrayed insalvation. "Oh!" says one, "I have been such a great sinner." Yes, but if you are trusting in Christ, He has saved you. Hehas put away your sin-you shall not be lost, for you are clothed with salvation. "But I am such a poor feeble creature, liableto be attacked and tempted by Satan." Yet God has so clothed you that no cold nor heat of temptation shall come upon you toyour harm. You are clothed from head to foot with the garments that will save you-the garments of salvation-yes, you are evennow a saved man, woman, or child!
What a wondrous dress this is-the garments of salvation! A helmet of salvation and the shoes of the preparation of the Gospelof peace, and all between the head and the feet-the entire person of the man-is covered with salvation! Think of this, dearFriend. Wherever you go, you have God's livery upon you. Some princes clothe their courtiers in silk, but God has clothedyou in salvation! Was there ever such another dress as this? Now will you not sing? Why, when you are clad in such a robeas this, if you do not sing, you ought to be ashamed of yourself! Surely you must praise the Lord. While clothed in that marvelousattire which only the Sacred Trinity could have made for you-"garments of salvation"-you must be joyful in your God! Come,my good Brother, join the rejoicing band. Is that Mr. Ready-to-Halt over there? Do you recollect what happened when Mr. Great-Heartcut off the head of Giant Despair? When the conductor of the pilgrims came back to the road where he had left Feeble-Mindand Ready-to-Halt to guard the women of the company-as soon as these poor men saw that it was really the giant's head, "theywere very jocund and merry, and Ready-to-Halt would dance. True," says Mr. Bunyan, "he could not dance without one crutchin his hand, but I promise you he footed it well" So, some of the timid, feeble ones do manage to get extraordinary joy whentheir spirits are revived by some special manifestation of the loving kindness of the Lord!
Then, beside this Divine clothing, there is sacred covering. The Prophet adds, "He has covered me with the robe of righteousness."That is the great mantle that goes over all the rest of the garments. We are first clothed with the garments of salvationand then there comes an outer covering to envelop us in the robe of righteousness! When God looks on a justified sinner, Hesees nothing in Him but righteousness, for He is covered with the robe of righteousness. That word, "cover," is one of thesacred words of the Hebrew language, as well as of our own English tongue. It seems to go everywhere, into all languages.The Atonement of Christ and the righteousness of Christ make up the great and perfect covering of a sinner! "Blessed is hewhose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered." The Mercy Seat of old was a great cover or coffer that went over theArk of the Covenant. And God has covered up His people in Christ, as we express it in the prayer we sometimes sing-
"Him and then the sinner see. Look through Jesus' wounds on me."
When God looks at His people, He does not see them, first, but He sees His Son. And then He looks through that heavenly mediumand sees them in His Son. Then is it, indeed, true that He has covered them with the robe of righteousness. Therefore, poorsinful child of God, crying out because of your sin, cease that moaning and groaning for a little while! No, have done withit altogether, and let your soul be joyful in the Lord! One of His names is, "The Lord Our Righteousness," and Christ, "ismade unto us righteousness." We are righteous in the righteousness of Christ which is imputed unto us. In the 53rd of Isaiahwe read, "By His knowledge," that is, "by the knowledge of Him shall My righteous Servant justify many, for He shall beartheir iniquities." I wish I knew how to speak of these glorious Truths of God as I feel them in my own soul, but I cannotfind words worthy of the wondrous theme! I have this holy joy in my own heart and it makes my spirit burn with a Divine delight!Oh, that I could communicate that delight to others, even without any words. But God the Holy Spirit can make this joy flashfrom heart to heart, till we all feel as if we could-
"Sit and sing ourselves away To everlasting bliss," clothed with the garments of salvation and covered with the robe of righteousness!
You will have to look in the margin of your Bible to get the next reason for being glad, which is, hallowed service. Our textsays, "He has covered me with the robe of righteousness, as a bridegroom decks himself with ornaments." The marginal readingis, "as a bridegroom decks himself as a priest." Our text must mean that because in the sixth verse it is written, "you shallbe named the priests of the Lord." So, when God comes to clothe His people, He clothes them with such robes that they arefit to execute their priestly office. I think there is nothing that I detest more than the idea of priest-craft and I hopethat you do the same. Who is any poor mortal man that he should interpose himself between a sinner and his Savior? Take careto go straight away to Christ. But, in the true Scriptural sense, there is a priesthood which belongs to all Christians andI want you to understand, poor Believer, notwithstanding all your infirmities and imperfections, that the Lord has so coveredyou with the righteousness of Christ that you are clad in a priest's holy vestments! You have, all over you, the pure whitelinen which is the righteousness of saints, and you are wearing that royal miter which permits you to exercise the priesthood,for He, "has made us kings and priests unto God." We are "a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, an holy nation, a peculiarpeople."
child of God, how glad you would be if you could really rejoice in all this! Just think of it-at this moment you are a priestunto God on behalf of the world! The dumb world cannot speak to God, but you are to speak to Him in the place of the wholeanimate and inanimate creation! You are a priest unto the Most High! The rest of mankind must be farmers, and vine-dressers,and tend the flocks, and mind earthly things, but you, as a Believer, have to do everything in the name of the Lord Jesusand to make everything you have to do into a daily sacrifice unto God! What a wonderful thing it is that you, who once wereonly fit to associate with devils-you who were black as Hell, itself, are now, through faith in Christ-made so clean and areso gloriously arrayed that you may stand before the Lord and swing the censer to and fro, and let the sweet perfume of yourpraises fill the whole house and ascend acceptably unto God! You may stand here and offer unto God the living sacrifice ofyour entire being, which shall be holy, acceptable unto God by Jesus Christ, your Savior!
Will you not be glad that it is so? Made a priest unto God, can you be miserable? You must not! Do you not remember that thepriests were never to mar the corners of their beards? They were not to shave their heads, or to adopt the common customsof men in mourning because they were God's servants, and they must be glad and rejoice before Him. Ordained to such a sacredoffice as the priesthood, put on your ornaments, yes, put on your beautiful robe that is all of blue! Christ gives to youa garment fringed with holy bells, which cause you, wherever you go, to sound forth the sweet tinkling of holy joy, for Hemakes even you to be like unto Himself for glory and for beauty, and to stand before the Presence of God without fear, acceptedin Himself. What a good reason for joy there is in all this!
Now I must bring you back to the text, that you may see that there is a joy here which is, perhaps, the sweetest of all, thatis, the joy of heavenly marriage-"as a bridegroom decks himself with ornaments." "A bridegroom!" Then it is true that I, apoor stranger and an alien, am married to Christ! There is the mention of a bride and a bridegroom, too, and it is all toimpress upon us this idea, that every believing soul is joined unto Christ in a true, real, mystical, conjugal union whichshall never be broken. "Quis separabit?" "Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?" Jehovah hates putting away, so Hewill never divorce a soul that is once married to Him. Now are we no longer our own, but we belong to Christ, and our song,the sweetest that can be sung this side of Heaven, is-
"I my Best-Beloved's am, And He is mine."
"My beloved is mine, and I am His; He feeds among the lilies." There is no angel with whom Christ has entered into union asHe has with you and with me. "He took not on Him the nature of angels." He took not up angels, but He has taken upon Him thenature of the seed of Abraham! He came here as a Man, bone of our bone, and flesh of our flesh. The Head of all the redeemedis Christ. His name is named on us and, as surely as Adam is our sire, so surely is Christ the second Adam, our Heavenly Bridegroom!Glory be unto His holy name!
Oh, that this blessed marriage union were more fully understood by us and that our expectancy bestirred us to wait with sacredimpatience till the time when He shall come to take us to Himself to be one with Him, partakers of His Throne and of His crown,and of His Glory, forever and forever! Come, my Brothers and Sisters, have I not given you a grand reason for making as yourown this good resolution of the Prophet, "I will greatly rejoice in the Lord, my soul shall be joyful in my God"?
Last of all, to work out the whole text, we have, here, attractive adornment-"as a bridegroom decks himself with ornaments,and as a bride adorns herself with her jewels." So that every Believer in Christ is a person goodly to look upon-in the esteemof God, he is fair and lovely. "He delights not in the strength of the horse: He takes not pleasure in the legs of a man.The Lord takes pleasure in them that fear Him, in those that hope in His mercy." Does it not surprise you that God shouldever have seen anything beautiful in you? My heart has often melted when I have read those words of the Heavenly Bridegroomto His spouse, "Turn away your eyes from Me, for they have overcome Me." What? My eyes! Shall they ever overcome my blessedBridegroom? Yes, and He says to you, Believer, "You are all fair, My love; there is no spot in you." So thoroughly has Hewashed and cleansed you, that He beholds His own image reflected in your eyes and He takes infinite delight in what He hasmade you, by His Grace! "He will rejoice over you with joy; He will rest in His love, He will joy over you with singing."
1 want you, each one, to drink in this blessed Truth of God, if you can. Not only that you are notthe object of hatred toGod, but that you are the object of His intense delight! Not only that you never cause anger to spring up in His bosom, forHis anger is turned away from you, but that you even raise in His heart emotions of Divine affection! You are thus able tohold the King in His inner chamber of communion and say Him, "I will not let You go." O Beloved, if you did but realize whereyou once were and where you now are-and where you shall be forever and ever-you would be ready to leap for joy! Come, then,will you not be glad in your Lord? What? Is some little petty trial to rob God of His Glory? I have said to myself, sometimes,when I have been sorely sick and have become fearfully depressed through pain, "If I get over this illness, I will give Goda sevenfold portion of thankful service and praise." I have tried to pay up my arrears when I recovered. I have thought, "Iam afraid, while I was full of pain, I was very dull, stupid, despondent and almost despairing. Now that I have got rid ofall that, I will let my dear Lord see whether I cannot make up a little for lost time."
I want you, dear Friends, to do so from this very hour! Go home, sit down and bless the Lord! Sometimes, even singing is notgood enough to present to our God, and music cannot convey all we want to say. Then let-
"Expressive silence muse His praise." Sit still and mediate on all the Lord's goodness to you and so keep out all sadnesswhile you bless His holy name! I like, sometimes, to be like those beautiful lilies that send up a long straight stem andthen throw out a lovely flower in which white and gold are charmingly blended, just as if they would give God all they could.They cannot say a word, but they stand quite still and they seem to bless the Lord by standing still and looking so beautiful!I like to sit down and feel as if He had made me to consider the lilies and so to consider them that I would do just the sameas they do-just show myself to Him-as much as to say, "See, my Lord, what You have done for me? I was a poor, lost, all-but-condemnedwretch, yet You have made me a prince of the blood royal! You have lifted me from the dunghill and set me among Your saints!Glory, glory, glory, glory be unto Your dear name forever and ever!"
While I have been talking about this choice theme, I have been grieving over the many who know not by personal experiencewhat it is to have this great change worked within them. Dear Friends, let me tell you, once and for all, that you cannotmake yourselves fit for Heaven. You cannot clothe yourselves with the garments of salvation. You cannot renew your own nature.Somebody says, "But, Sir, you discourage people by telling them that they cannot change themselves." That is the very thingI want to do! "Oh, but, I want to set a man working!" says one. Do you? I want to set him not working, that is to say, I wanthim to have done with any idea that salvation is of himself! I want him to drop that thought, altogether, and just to feelthat if his salvation is to Come out of himself, he has to get everything out of nothing, and that is not only difficult,but impossible! He has to get life out of his own death, to get cleanness out of the filthy ditch of his own nature, out ofwhich it can never come!
Discouragement of this sort is the very thing I always aim at in my preaching! I am afraid that there are many people whoare made to believe that they are saved when they are not. My belief is that God never healed a man till he was wounded andthat he never made a man alive till he was dead. It is God's way, first, to drag us down and make us feel that we are nothing,can do nothing, and that we are shut up to be saved by Grace-that Christ must save us from beginning to end, or else we cannever be saved at all! Oh, if I could but bring all my hearers not only into a state of discouragement, but into a conditionof despair about themselves, thenI would know that they were on the road to a simple faith in the Lord Jesus Christ! Our extremityis God's opportunity! Oh, how I long to get you all to that extremity!-
"Tis perfect poverty, alone, That sets the soul at large! While we can call one mite our own, We have no full discharge."
It is absolute helplessness and death that lays the sinner where Christ can deal with him. When he is nothing, Christ shallbe everything. Have you never heard of the man who saw a person drowning and plunged into the river after him and swam tohim? The poor fellow tried to clutch his rescuer, but the swimmer knew that-if he let the man get hold of him, he could notbring him ashore, so he kept swimming round him. The man went down and still his rescuer swam around him, but did not touchhim. He went down again because the swimmer could see that he was still too strong and, when he was just going down the thirdtime, then the wise rescuer laid hold of him, for he was helpless and so could not impede his deliverer!
That is what you have to be, dear Friends. When you cannot do anything, then you cannot any longer hinder Christ! But, aslong as you can do a hand's turn, you will hamper my dear Lord and Master. Your business is just to yield yourself right upinto His hands to be saved by Him alone. "Are there to be no good works?" asks someone. Oh, yes, plenty of them, as soon asever Christ has saved you! The frstthing the man does when he has quit his own works and given himself up entirely to Christ,is to cry, "Lord, what will You have me do? You have saved me, now I will do all I can, not for my self-salvation, but toglorify You and show men what Your Grace has done, and so express in some poor feeble way the gratitude I feel for the freesalvation which Your Grace has given me."
Some of you will have to go down once or twice more before the Lord Jesus Christ will give you eternal salvation. You arestill too good. You are still too big. You are too strong-you have such a very respectable character that you are not contentto come in at Christ's back door, where He receives none but poor, guilty sinners! You are not quite naked yet-there is arag or two of your own righteousness about you. You will have to be stripped and then you shall put on the robe of Christ'srighteousness! You have only a bone or two broken and you can crawl about a little-you have yet to be ground to powder! Whenyou become nothing-when you have no good feelings, no good desires, or anything you can bring to Christ-when you come to Christ,not with a broken heart, but for a broken heart, then He will receive you! Then you will be the kind of man that Christ cameto save! Oh, that He would bring you to that point very speedily, for His dear name's sake! Amen.
EXPOSITION BY C. H. SPURGEON: ISAIAH3.
Verse 1. The Spirit of the Lord God is upon Me. These are the words of the Lord Jesus Christ. The Prophet, looking forwardto the time of His coming into the world, put them into His mouth and, in due time, our Savior read them and applied themto Himself in the synagogue at Nazareth as He said, "This day is this Scripture fulfilled in your ears." "The Spirit of theLord God is upon Me."
1. Because the Lord has anointed Me to preach good tidings unto the meek; He has sent Me to bind up the brokenhearted, Godhas sent Christ to bind up the broken-hearted. Then will He not do it? Will He refuse, my broken-hearted Brother or Sister,to bind you up? O deeply-troubled, tempest-tossed spirit, will the Anointed One reject you and refuse to fulfill His officeupon you? Never! It is both His name and His office to save, for He is called Jesus, the Savior. O broken-hearted one, lookto Him! Hear Him say, at this moment, "Jehovah has sent Me to bind up the broken-hearted"
1. To proclaim liberty to the captives. Where are you, poor, wretched bond-slaves of sin, lettered with the iron chains ofdespair? Christ proclaims liberty even to you! Trust Him and you shall be-
"Freed from sin, and walk at large, Your Savor's blood your full discharge." "Jehovah has sent Me to proclaim liberty to thecaptives."
1. And the opening of the prison to them that are bound. There is a general discharge of prisoners. The time has come forit. Christ died to make it possible-He lives to perfect the emancipation of all for whom He died. He comes, by His Spirit,to give you the experience of it-"the opening of the prison to them that are bound."
2. To proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord, and the day of vengeance of our God; to comfort all that mourn. Oh, what preciouswords are these! Christ comes, commissioned of the father, "to comfort all that mourn."
3. To appoint unto them that mourn in Zion, to give unto them beauty for ashes, the oil ofjoy for mourning, the garment ofpraise for the spirit of heaviness; that they might be called trees of righteousness, the planting of the Lord, that He mightbe glorified. This message is spoken to all the Lord's people, but it has a special reference to the Jews, God's ancient people.Happy times are coming for them in the years that yet lie in the future, when they accept the Messiah whom they have so longrejected.
4. And they shall build the old wastes, they shall raise up the former desolations, and they shall repair the waste cities,the desolations of many generations. In the days to come, Judea shall again be inhabited and the ruined cities shall be builtup once more. God will bring back His ancient people, converting them to the true faith and clothing them with glory. As forourselves, this verse is true in another sense. If we believe in Jesus, that part of us which has been given up to waste shallyet be turned to usefulness and to God's praise.
5, 6. And strangers shall stand and feed your flocks, and the sons of the men shall be your plowmen and your vinedressers.But you shall be named the Priests of the Lord. This was true of God's ancient people, but it is true of us, also. Let uscast away our earthly cares-let our only care be to serve our God-for then strangers shall stand and feed our flocks, andthe sons of the alien shall be our plowmen and our vinedressers, but we, "shall be named the Priests of the Lord."
6, Men shall call you the Ministers of our God: you shall eat the riches of the Gentiles, and in their glory shall you boastyourselves. God's chosen people are His children. All the rest of mankind are only His servants, and the servants must waitupon the children whether they like it or not. Even of the angels in Heaven it is written, "Are they not all ministering spirits,sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation?" All things are the servants of the man who is the servantof God! He who is consecrated to God shall find all things consecrated to him. When all that is yours, works for God, thenall things shall work together for good for you.
7, 8. For your shame you shall have double; and for confusion they shall rejoice in their portion: therefore in their landthey shall possess the double: everlasting joy shall be unto them. For I the Lord love judgment, I hate robbery for burntoffering. God cannot endure that we should sacrifice to Him what we have gained by oppression and wrong-doing. Some men seemto try to cut themselves in halves and then say, "So much is to be secular, and so much is to be sacred." Do not believe it!You are only one man, and what you are in secular things, that you are altogether. You cannot say, "So much is to be religion,and so much is to be business." If your religion is not your business, and if your business does not melt into your religion,there is not much that is good in you. We cannot say, "I shall do this because it is religion, and I shall do that becauseit is business." No, no! The man is one and there is nothing to a Christian that can be marked off as secular-for all thingsare sacred to the man who truly serves God.
8, 9. And I will direct their work in truth, and I will make an everlasting covenant with them. And their seed shall be knownamong the Gentiles, and their offspring among the people: all that see them shall acknowledge them, that they are the seedwhich the Lord has blessed. A visible stamp of Divine blessing shall be upon Believers in Christ. "They are the seed whichthe Lord has blessed," and all men shall acknowledge that it is so.
10, 11. I will greatly rejoice in the Lord, my soulshall bejoyfulin my God; for He has clothedme with the garments of salvation,He has covered me with the robe of righteousness, as a bridegroom decks himself with ornaments, and as a bride adorns herselfwith her jewels. For as the earth brings forth her bud, and as the garden causes the things that are sown in it to springforth, so the Lord God will cause righteousness andpraise to spring forth before all the nations.
So may it be right speedily, for our Lord Jesus Christ's sake! Amen.