Sermon 2916. A Memorable Milestone

(No. 2916)

A SERMON PUBLISHED ON THURSDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1904.

DELIVERED BY C. H. SPURGEON,

AT THE METROPOLITAN TABERNACLE, NEWINGTON, ON THURSDAY EVENING, MARCH 25, 1886.

"I have preached righteousness in the great congregation: lo, I have not refrained my lips, O Lord, You know. I have not hidYour righteousness within my heart; I have declared Your faithfulness and Your salvation: I have not concealed Your loving-kindnessand Your truth from the great congregation. Withhold not Your tender mercies from me, O Lord: let Your loving-kindness andYour truth continually preserve me." Psalm 40:9-11.

THE 25th ANNIVERSARY OF MR. SPURGEON'S FIRST SERMON IN THE TABERNACLE!

SOMETIMES, dear Friends, we should take a review of life. There are occasions when men feel bound to do so and the retrospectmay be full of profit to themselves. I find that many look back in hours of trouble. A dark cloud brings them to a pause.In prosperity they might have run on with very little thought, but sorrow calls them to a halt. They are driven to God inprayer and at such times it is not unusual for them, if God has been gracious to them in the past, to recollect His greatgoodness and to mention it while they are pleading at the Mercy Seat. They say, "He has dealt well with His servants. TheLord has helped us up to now." They look back and see the Ebenezers which they have raised in past years and then they cry,"Has God forgotten to be gracious?"-

"And can He have taught me to trust in His name, And thus far have brought me to put me to shame?' Thus they drive their griefsaway and the remembrance of past mercy helps them to snatch firewood from the altars of the bygone years, with which to kindlethe sacrifice of the present moment.

Men are also accustomed to review their lives when they are brought near to the grave. It is helpful, when we fear that lifeis about to end, to begin to add it up, to see what the sum total reaches. If God should say to us, "Set your house in order,for you shall die, and not live," the best way to do it is to remember the past-looking at what we have done and what Godhas done-and then to set one against the other, that we may repent of the sin and may hope because of the mercy. Now, albeitthat we may not, ourselves, be brought so near to death's door as that, yet during the past month or so we have, as a people,been continually going to the sepulcher. I think that there were seven notable Brothers and Sisters who fell asleep last week,so constantly have death's arrows been flying among us. Therefore, as we are come to the bank of the river and are remindedthat we must, ourselves, shortly put off this tabernacle, let us look back a little and remember all the ways the Lord ourGod has led us.

There are, however, other occasions apart from those of great sorrow or of apprehended departure when wise men are fully warrantedin considering the period as peculiarly noteworthy. I have come to such a time today. Twenty-five years have passed over ourheads since I preached my first sermon in this house. The sanctuary was opened with songs of joy-many who were with us thenare now in Glory-and many of you who are with us today were not even born then. To those who were at the opening of the Tabernacle,it must seem almost an old building now! I hear people talk of "the dear old Tabernacle" and well they may, for a quarterof a century is no mean period in the history of a building or of a Church. There has been a great deal done in those 25 yearsand we have both personally and as a Church enjoyed abounding mercy. I did not think it right to let the occasion pass overwithout offering devout thanksgiving to the Lord

for all His loving-kindness to us, and endeavoring to say some words that shall perhaps make us feel more our indebtednessto God and cause us to determine to be more than ever consecrated to His service.

This text, though it belongs, first of all, in the most Divine and fullest sense to our gracious Master, also belongs to David-andthrough David to those whom God has called to bear testimony to the Gospel of His Grace. We can say and we do say, humblybut most earnestly-and I know that there are many Brothers here who can join us, each in his own ministry, and many Brothersand Sisters who, though not in the ministry, can say, in any event in the spirit of the words after their measure-"I havepreached righteousness in the great congregation: lo, I have not refrained my lips, O Lord, You know. I have not hid Yourrighteousness within my heart; I have declared Your faithfulness and Your salvation: I have not concealed Your loving-kindnessand Your truth from the great congregation."

I. Coming, then, to our text, here is, first, A CONTINUAL TESTIMONY. Many of you have borne testimony for God in your homesas well as in your lives. Some of you have borne the testimony in your classes in the Sunday school. Some in the streets,some in cottage meetings-some in larger assemblies. We especially who are called to the public ministry of the Word, haveborne this testimony in "the great congregation." But all of us who are the Lord's servants have, I hope, borne our testimonyaccording to our opportunities and abilities.

It has been imperfect, but it has been sincere. In looking back upon our testimony for God, we could almost wish to obliterateit because of its imperfections, but we can truthfully say that it has been sincerely borne up to the measure of the capacitygiven to us. It has been borne without a doubt, without any mental reservation, with intensity of spirit- borne because itcould not be silenced. I have preached the Gospel to you, my Brothers and Sisters, because I have believed it-and if whatI have preached to you is not true, I am a lost man! For me there is no joy in life and no hope in death except in that Gospelwhich I have continually expounded here. It is not to me a theory. I would scarcely stop at saying that it is a belief. Ithas become matter of absolute fact to me! It is interwoven with my consciousness. It is part of my being. Every day makesit dearer to me-my joys bind me to it, my griefs drive me to it! All that is behind me, all that is before me, all that isabove me, all that is beneath me-everything compels me to say that my testimony has been borne with my heart, mind, soul andstrength-and I am grateful to God that I can say this, putting it as the text puts it, "O Lord, You know." If others do notknow the truth of the matter, I rejoice that my Master knows my heart.

I feel grateful to God that I can say this because of the subjects of the testimony. The first subject of the Psalmist's testimonyhad been God's "righteousness." That is the main point to be noticed in all testimony for God-God's positive righteousnessin Himself, God's way of righteousness by which He justifies the ungodly and God's method of spreading righteousness in theworld by the power and energy of His Holy Spirit. I, for one, believe in a God who punishes sin. I have never flattered youwith the idea that sin is a trifle and that in some future age it may expiate itself. No, the righteousness of God has seemedto me to be a dark background upon which to draw the bright lines of His everlasting love in Christ Jesus. In the Expiationof Christ, the righteousness of God is vindicated to the fullest. He is "just, and the Justifier of him that believes in Jesus."I ask for no pardon to be given to me unrighteously. My conscience could not be satisfied with a forgiveness that came tome unjustly, for the Glory of God would be dishonored thereby. There would be a blot upon the Heavenly statute-book if sinwere pardoned without atonement. But we have preached the righteousness of God and we feel that, in doing so, we lay a surefoundation upon which to build the comfort and hope of the Believer in Christ Jesus!

In addition to the righteousness of God, the Psalmist had preached His "faithfulness." The Lord keeps all His promises. Heis the Faithful Promiser-what He promises He performs. There is no lie in Him, nor change, nor shadow of a turning. "Has Hesaid and shall He not do?" Which of His promises ever failed? Has He drawn back even in the least degree from His Covenant,or altered the word which has gone forth out of His lips? Our testimony has not been borne to a fickle God and a feeble salvationwhich saves for a time and after all, does not really save, but allows saints to fall away and perish everlastingly. No, wehave given unfaltering utterance to that declaration of our Lord, "I give unto My sheep eternal life, and they shall neverperish, neither shall any pluck them out of My hand." We believe in everlasting love, in an Everlasting Covenant, orderedin all things and sure and, therefore, righteousness and faithfulness have been the two foundations of our ministry-upon whichwe have tried to build a Gospel worth our preaching and worth your having.

Then the Psalmist says that he had borne testimony to two things in conjunction with each other: "Your loving-kindness andYour truth." Oh, Brothers and Sisters, what a theme is here! "Your loving-kindness!" God's generous

mercy, His overflowing love, His "kinnedness," His kindness to His chosen whom He has made to be a people near unto Himself,to whom He manifests His very soul. That word, "loving," added to the word, "kindness," makes it a gem doubly precious! Whereis there among words any other equal to this-"loving-kindness"? I have exulted to preach to you the loving-kindness of theLord. I needed not to be driven to this happy task. I have almost needed, sometimes, to be stopped when I have passed thehour and my theme has carried me away! Oh, the loving-kindness of the Lord to those who put their trust under the shadow ofHis wings! That is a subject on which one might preach forever and yet not exhaust its treasures!

And then His "truth"-God's Truth-the truth of His Word. The truth of His Son! The truth of the great Doctrines which are givento us in the Gospel. I have not preached to you any sort of speculation. I have never sought to invent new forms of truth.It shall be seen one day whose thoughts shall stand-God's thoughts or man's. And it shall be seen which is the true ministry-thatwhich takes up God's Word and echoes it-or that which boils it down until the very life is extracted from it. I have no sympathywith the preaching which degrades the Truth of God into a hobbyhorse for its own thought and only looks upon Scripture asa kind of pulpit from which it may thunder out its own opinions! No, if I have gone beyond what that Book has taught, mayGod blot out everything that I have said! I beseech you, never believe me if I go an atom beyond what is plainly taught there.I am content to live and to die as the mere repeater of Scriptural teaching-as a person who has thought out nothing and inventednothing-as one who never thought invention to be any part of his calling, but who concluded that he was to take the messagefrom the lips of God to the best of his ability and simply to be a mouth for God to the people-mourning much that anythingof his own should come between-but never thinking that he was somehow to refine the message or to adapt it to the brillianceof this wonderful century and then to hand it out as being so much his own that he might take some share of the glory of it.No, no! We have aimed at nothing of the kind! "I have declared Your faithfulness and Your salvation: I have not concealedYour loving-kindness and Your truth from the great congregation." Nothing have we preached as our own. If there has been anythingof our own, we do bitterly take back those words and eat them-and repent that we should have ever been guilty of the sin andfolly of uttering them! The things which we have learned of God our Father and of His Son Jesus Christ, by His Holy Spirit,we have sought to speak unto you.

Now, dear Friends, let me say, next, that this text describes a work which has been done under great difficulties. It mayseem a very easy thing to simply have a message and to tell it. Yes, it appears so. But it is not as easy as it looks at firstsight. I do not suppose that you always find your servants deliver your messages accurately. Did you ever sit around a tableand tell one person a story, and ask him to tell it to his neighbor? Let each one whisper it and by the time it gets to theend of the table, you will scarcely recognize your tale, it will have been altered so much! There is a tendency in the mindsof all of us to alter what we tell-it is a struggle to keep to the exact truth. Besides, this is an age which likes prettythings-something fresh and new-and it is not always easy to swim upstream, or to go against the tendency of the time and thespirit of the age. We have no particular desire to be thought fools anymore than anybody else-and we know where all the wisdomis-at least we ought to know, for we hear often enough about it. Ask the brethren of the "modern thought" school if they havenot all the wisdom that is to be had nowadays! If they do not say that they have, many of them act as if they thought theyhad! No, Friends, it is not so easy, after all, to keep to the plain Truth of God. There is a Brother who has struck out somethingwonderfully fresh. We read his book-shall we not at least go with him a little way? You will find, Brothers, that if you determineto hold fast the faith once and for all delivered to the saints, you will have a battle to fight in which you will be beatenunless you rely upon God for strength! If you are willing to let the Truth of God go, you have but to seek to please man andit is soon done! And only then will you be greeted with, "Hail fellow! Well met!" But if you mean to declare God's Truth,you will need the help of the Most High in the struggle.

But, although this testimony has been borne under difficulties, it has been attended with unutterable pleasure. Oh, the delightof preaching the Gospel! I often say to young men who apply for admission to the College, "Do not become a minister if youcan help it." But if you cannot help it, if a Divine destiny drives you on, thank God that it is so! You are a happier manif you are able to preach the Gospel than if you had been elected to a throne! There is no business like it under Heaven!I have heard some say that our professional study of the Word of God may be a hindrance to our growth in the Divine life.I know what they mean and there is some truth in their words-but to me, the preaching of the Gospel has been a continual meansof Grace and I can say with the Apostle Paul, "Unto me, who am less than the least of all saints, is this Grace given, thatI should preach among the Gentiles the unreachable riches of Christ." It really is a Grace to be permitted to preach the Gospel-itbrings Grace with it. Brothers in the ministry, have you not read the Bible much more because you have had to preach the blessedTruths revealed in it? Have you not been driven to your knees much more because you have had to deal with anxious souls andto lead the people of God? I am sure that it is so and I thank God for giving me a calling which does not take me away fromthe Mercy Seat, but drives me to it! I am grateful that I have a message which I am glad to tell, glad to tell anywhere-amessage which never needs to be concealed, but which brings joy to me in telling it and salvation to our hearers in listeningto it! Blessed be God that we have such a story to proclaim!

I could say much more about this first point, but I must not, for our time is so short. This must suffice upon the subjectof our continual testimony.

II. Now, secondly, the text mentions A REMARKABLE AUDIENCE. The Psalmist says, twice over, "I have preached righteousnessin the great congregation." And yet again, "I have not concealed Your loving-kindness and Your truth from the great congregation'"

It is astonishing to the preacher that there should be a great congregation to hear the Gospel! I do not know how you thinkof it, but if anybody had been set here to speak so many times a week upon politics, I wonder whether he would have had acrowded congregation at the end of 25 years? My friend Mr. Varley speaks right mightily, but if he had been preaching upontotal abstinence for 25 years, I am sure that some would have totally abstained from coming to hear him! If I had to preachhere upon-well, what topic shall I say?-the object that the Liberation Society has in view, for instance, I am afraid thatI should have liberated many of you from attendance long before this. All other subjects are exhaustible, but give us thatBook and give us the Holy Spirit-and we may preach on forever! We shall never get to the end of it!

I have heard of two infidels, one of whom said to his fellow, "If you had to go to jail for 12 months and you could only haveone book, what book would you choose?" He was very surprised when his companion said, "Oh, I would take the Bible!" The firstone said, "But you do not believe in it-I wonder that you should choose that." "Oh, but," rejoined his friend, "it is no endof a book." His record is true-it is "no end of a book." Jerome used to say, "I adore the infinity of Holy Scripture." Andwell he might. I would like you to look at my Bible at home which is marked with all the texts I have preached from.

There are thirty-one completed volumes of my sermons and a thirty-second is in the making.

Of course, in addition to the 32 volumes in the regular weekly series, there are many more volumes printed and I have allthe texts marked from which I have preached. I sometimes make the outline of a sermon and then, when I turn to my Bible, Ifind that I have preached from that text and the sermon has been published-and I say, "That will not do for a Sunday morning."I do not want to have the same subject again more often than I can help. Sometimes, however, I find that the same text maybe taken and a new sermon readily enough made from it, for there is a springing well in Holy Scripture, never exhausted, andthe great congregation needs continually to come to hear repetitions of the same great Truths of God, though it is alwaysthe preacher's duty to seek for acceptable words in presenting it. Young man just beginning to preach-do not be afraid tostick to your texts-that is the best way to get variety in your discourses. Saturate your sermons with Bibline, the essenceof Bible Truth, and you will always have something new to say! But when I think of the great congregation, how encouragingit is! It is always good fishing where there are plenty of fish. We are bound to go and angle for a single soul, whereverthere is one to be found, and some do great service for the Master who take the fish one by one. But what a delight it isto have the great seine net of the Gospel and throw it into such a lake as this, God guiding the hand of the fisherman allthe while! Surely he should be a happy man!

But then, dear Friends, when we think of this great congregation, what solemn thoughts come over our mind! I come down tothis platform, sometimes, and when I get another look at this great congregation, I am staggered. Time after time I have feltas if I could run away sooner than face this tremendous throng again and speak to them once more.

O Sirs, to think of all these being dying men and dying women-and to think that this Gospel that I preach is needed by themall and may be refused by many with awful consequences-and may be accepted by some (it will be, thank God) with consequencesof unutterable joy! To think that we shall have to give an account of how we have preached and how you have heard! To thinkthat we shall all meet again at the Judgment Seat to give an account of every Sunday and every Thursday service! If Xerxescould not restrain a tear at the thought of his myriads of men passing away, who can look at a congregation like this withoutbeing moved with compassion? Yes, yes-it is not easy to preach to a great congregation so as to be able to say at the last,"I am pure from the blood of all men, for I have not shunned to declare unto you all the counsel of God."

The sight of this great congregation gathered tonight suggests many memories. I recollect some dear ones that used to sithere, and there, and there, and there. I can almost see them now-some dear old saints with gray heads that used to be ourglory-who are now with God. Some young and ardent spirits that were taken away before they reached their prime. You sit wheresat some who loved your Master well-and served Him faithfully. Worthily occupy their places, beloved Friends!

But excuse me if I say no more upon this topic. My brain seems in a whirl as dissolving views pass before my memory in quicksuccession. If you want to see life and death, stand here. I feel like the captain of a vessel on the bridge. I am lookingdown on you who are the passengers and crew but yet, from another point of view, I seem to be looking at great waves thatsweep by and more come, and others follow-a succession of changes, nothing abiding. How long shall we remain? How soon shallwe, too, also go? Well, it is something to have preached Christ to this great congregation! It is something to believe thatthose who have not received Him are without excuse. It is much better to believe that many have received Him and that we shallmeet them in Heaven, rejoicing in that glorious Sacrifice by which they have been cleansed from sin-in that dear Savior bywhose life and death they have been quickened and made heirs of eternal glory! Oh, that this faith may be in us all and thatwe may all at last join in the general assembly of the Church of the FirstBorn, whose names are written in Heaven!

III. I have only a few minutes left in which to expound upon the last of the points, THE SUGGESTED PRAYER. May I just giveyou an outline of what I would have said if we could have had more time? The prayer of the Psalmist is- "Withhold not Yourtender mercies from me, O Lord: let Your loving-kindness and Your truth"-the things which he had preached-"continually preserveme."

This prayer is suitable for the preacher and he prays it now. Taking David's words and making them my own, I pray to the Lordat this moment-"Withhold not Your tender mercies from me, O Lord: let Your loving-kindness and Your truth continually preserveme."

The prayer is also suitable for every Christian here. Let me read it and let every Christian pray it now-"Withhold not Yourtender mercies from me, O Lord: let Your loving-kindness and Your truth continually preserve me."

With a little alteration, this prayer may suit you who are not yet saved, but who desire to be-"Withhold not Your tender merciesfrom me, O Lord." Are you praying it? Is not this a good time in which to pray that prayer? The signs are all propitious.There is "the sound of a going in the tops of the mulberry trees." There are tokens for good abroad. There is dew about tonight.Now, therefore, pray this prayer if you have never prayed before-and God help you to claim the answer by appropriating faith!

It seems to me that this prayer was suggested to the Psalmist by at least three things.

First, it was suggested by the great congregation. David seems to say, "O Lord, there are so many others who need Your care.Let me not be lost in the crowd-withhold not Your tender mercies from me."-

"Lord, I hear of showers of blessing

You are scattering, full and free.

Showers, the thirsty land refreshing-

Let some drops fall on me, Even me." Next, the subject suggested it. "Your truth, Your loving-kindness, O Lord. Let thesepreserve me. I hear of Your goodness-I cannot bear to miss it. I hear of Your truth-I would not be a stranger to it. Lord,bless me, even me!"

Then, again, the future suggested, it. The Psalmist expected to suffer great trials and serious afflictions and, therefore,he prayed, "Let Your loving-kindness and Your truth continually preserve me."

Now, as a congregation we have completed 25 years in this building, but we must not reckon that we have reached the end ofour struggles, or even the end of our sins! O Brothers and Sisters, this is only a part of the way to Heaven. I think thatI told you, once before, that some friends, when they raise an Ebenezer, sit down on the top of it and say, "Here we are goingto stop." When this Tabernacle was opened, I remember that that night I put a sharp iron spike on the top of "the stone ofhelp," that nobody might sit upon it-and I do the same again on the Ebenezer stone I now raise in remembrance of God's goodness!Let none of us sit down at the end of this 25th year and say, "We have come this far and here we are going to stay." Longnights of darkness lie ahead-there are giants to be fought, mountains to be climbed, rivers to be crossed! Who dreams of easewhile he is here in the enemy's country? Out with your sword, man! You have not done with the battle. Awake, you that sleep!You have not come yet to the place of resting! This is the place for watching, praying, wrestling and struggling. Thereforedo we cry, "Withhold not Your tender mercies from me." We are getting older! We are getting weaker! We are, perhaps, gettingless wise! Who knows that all our years will bring us good news? They may bring us evil if we trust to our past experience.We need God with us now as much as we ever did! Therefore let us cry to Him, "From this night bless us more and more."

The poor Psalmist was in great trouble when he prayed this prayer. He says, "Innumerable evils have compassed me about." Thereforehe says, "Withhold not Your tender mercies from me."

He adds, "My iniquities have taken hold upon me." If there is one here whose conscience is accusing him and who is guiltybefore his God, let him pray this prayer because of his iniquities.

He goes on to say, "I am not able to look up." If that is your case-if you cannot, look up-pray the Lord to look down andcry to Him never to take His mercy from you!

David further says, concerning his iniquities, "They are more than the hairs of my head: therefore my heart fails me." Well,when our heart does fail us, let us recollect the mercy which has helped us so long-and let us cast ourselves again upon thatmercy for all that lies before us.

I am not going to venture upon any prophecy. I attended, on Wednesday, the funeral of our beloved Brother, Dr. Stanford. Youmay attend mine before this year is over-or I may attend yours. If you could draw up the curtain that hides the future, youwould not wish to do it, would you? Trust the Lord so that if you live, you are prepared to live- but if you die, you areprepared to die1 I think that the best thing you can do is to do the next thing that comes to you and to do it thoroughlywell. I was here last Monday. I had no rest from spiritual work from three in the afternoon till half-past nine at night.And about the middle of it I felt, "Well, I do not know how I shall get through this long long afternoon of seeing enquirersand candidates for Church fellowship." So I said to a Brother, "How am I to do it all?" However, there was a cup of tea infront of me and I said, "I think I will drink that tea-that is the next thing to be done."

Oftentimes that will be your best course, just do the next thing you can do when you are saying to yourself, "How shall Ido if I live to be old?" When you go home tonight, eat your supper and go to bed to the glory of God. And when you get upin the morning, do not think about what you are going to do at night. Do what comes to you when you begin the day's work andkeep right straight on. If you can see a step at a time, that is about as far as you need to see. Do not begin prying intothe future, but just go straight on from day to day, depending on God for the mercy and Grace and strength of the day. Thatis the way to live and I am persuaded that is the way to die! Mr. Wesley said, "If I knew that I was to die tonight and Ihad an engagement to attend a class meeting, I would go to it. If I had promised to call and see old Betty So-and-So on theway back, I would call in to see her. I have then to go home and have family prayer. I would do that. Then I would take myboots off and I would go to bed, just as I would do if I were notgoing to die." Oh, do not let death be a sort of additionto the program which was not calculated upon-but so live that whenever it comes you will be ready for it-even if it comeswhile we are sitting here tonight! Then yours will be a happy life, a joyful life, a useful life.

Secularism teaches us that we ought to look to this world. Christianity teaches us that the best way to prepare for this worldis to be fully prepared for the next. It elevates and glorifies the secular duties which otherwise would trail in the mireif our conversation, our citizenship is in Heaven, even while we are on the earth! God bless you, Beloved! Let us praise Hisname for all the mercies of the past quarter of a century and trust His Grace for all the future.

EXPOSITION BY C. H. SPURGEON: PSALM40.

These are the words of David-they are the words of all God's tried and believing people, but above all they are the wordsof the Lord Jesus Christ, Himself. So complete is the union between Christ and the Believer that it is possible to describethem both at the same time. The experience of a child of God, sin alone excepted, is very much like the experience of thegreat First-Born. But Christ is always above us, so you will find words in this Psalm which belong to nobody but Jesus inall their fullness. Yet the title of it is, "A Psalm of David."

Verse 1. I waited patiently for the LORD; and He inclined unto me, and heard my cry. You and I can say that and so could ourDivine Master. Oh the wondrous patience of the Lord Jesus Christ in prayer! In that agony in the Garden when the bloody sweatshowed how great was the wrestling of His spirit, He could say, "I waited patiently for Jehovah, and He inclined unto Me andheard My cry."

2. He broughtme up also out ofan horriblepit, out ofthe miry clay, andset my feet upon a rock, and established my goings.We can say that, too. We remember when we were deep down in the mire, when we found it impossible to rise, for the more westruggled, the more we sank. It was clay under us-miry clay-we could not hope for a rescue, but the arm of Jehovah liftedus out of the deep and set us on a rock and there we stood to sing His praises. Jesus Christ could say the same. He said,"My soul is exceedingly sorrowful, even unto death." And He cried, "My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?" What a verydifferent frame of mind He was in a few minutes afterwards when He said, "Father, unto Your hands I commend My spirit" andshouted, "It is finished!" All His travail was over. It is a great thing for us to have fellowship with Christ in His sufferingwhich we could not have had if we had not, ourselves, also been brought up out of an horrible pit, out of the miry clay.

3. AndHe hasput a newsong in my mouth, evenpraise unto our God: many shallsee it, and fear, andshall trust in the LORD. Well,God has done that for you and for me. He has put a new song into our mouths which Satan cannot take out of it-and we are singingit today-and others who hear it shall be encouraged to trust in God. But is this true of Christ? Listen to those words atthe end of the 22nd Psalm where, beyond all doubt, it is the Savior who speaks-"My praise shall be of You in the great congregation;I will pay My vows before them that fear Him." So the Savior is the chief Leader of the holy song which goes up to God onaccount of redemption! He sings because God has delivered Him and delivered us. Both the Surety and the sinner are now freeand the song goes up from both of them! Again you see what sympathy, what fellowship, we have with Christ.

4. Blessed is that man that makes the LORD his trust, and respects not the proud, nor such as turn aside to lies. Jesus knewthe blessedness of faith. Remember how Paul quotes it, "I will put my trust in Him," as the language of the Redeemer, Himself.As Man, He had His fears. As Man there was worked in Him a wondrous faith in God. Oh that you and I might have the same trustand have no respect to the proud nor such as turn aside to lies!

5. Many O LORD, my God, are Your wonderful works which You have done, and Your thoughts which are to us-ward: they cannotbe reckoned up in order unto You: if I would declare and speak of them, they are more than can be numbered. We are not dealingwith a God who never deals with us. Faith in God is no fiction. We have already had from God the most wonderful displays ofpower-we have been the recipients of great mercy springing from His thoughts of love toward us. It ought to be an easy thingfor experienced saints to trust in God and I hope it has become so with us.

6-8. Sacrifice and offering You didnot desire; My ears have You opened: burnt offering andsin offering have You not required.Then said I, Lo, I come: in the volume ofthe Book it is written of Me, I delight to do Your will, O My God: yes, Your Lawis within My heart Now we undoubtedly get the words of Christ. Our Lord said these words and, therefore, He came to fulfillthe Father's will and present on our behalf an acceptable Sacrifice with blood better than that of bulls or of goats. Youand I have to say this in a very humble measure. We do not now bring to God any sacrifice of bulls or goats, but we do bringour whole heart to Him, trusting to be accepted, for He has written on those hearts His own Law and it is our delight to nowdo the will of God. This is the kind of sacrifice that God accepts-true, fervent, obedient hearts! God grant us always topresent it.

9, 10. I have preached righteousness in the great congregation: lo, I have not refrained My lips, O LORD, You know. I havenot hid Your righteousness within My heart; I have declared Your faithfulness and Your salvation: I have not concealed Yourloving-kindness and Your truth from the great congregation. What a preacher Christ was! How He told out what He had learnedof the Father! How fully, how constantly was He the Witness for God to men! Some of us following far behind, with unequalfootsteps, nevertheless can say, "I have preached righteousness in the great congregation." It is a great comfort in feeling,if you are called to present the Gospel, that as far as you know, you have preached it and have kept back nothing that Godhas taught you. It will be a thousand mercies if any of God's servants shall be found clear at the last. When we have doneall, we are unprofitable servants-we have only done what it was our duty to do. But there is still a sweet peace about fidelitywhen in the integrity of one's heart we can say that we have not refrained our lips as God knows. Then comes the prayer-

11. Withhold not Your tender mercies from Me, O LORD: let Your loving-kindness and Your truth continually preserve Me. Ifyou have dealt honestly with God's Word, you may expect that God will deal graciously with you. Surely He would not send usto proclaim a message of mercy and then deny mercy to us! That cannot be. But Brothers, when we have done our best for Godand before God, yet we cannot boast-we still need mercy and we fall back upon the loving-kindness of God just as the sinnermust do when he first of all comes to God. May we always be in that true and humble frame of mind which looks for nothingbut mercy.

12. For innumerable evils have compassed me about: my iniquities have taken hold upon me so that I am not able to look up;they are more than the hairs of my head: therefore my heart fails me. Now here is a passage in which the Master is not tobe seen but only the servant! This is the man that said that God had put a new song into his mouth. He is a true child ofGod to whom God had had respect and whose prayer God had heard, yet see what a plight he has come to! Dear Friends, you andI may have to undergo this trial. Happy shall we be if we have such faith in God that even when innumerable evils compassus about, we shall remember the innumerable mercies of God, such mercies as the Psalmist had spoken of in the fifth verse.When our iniquities take hold upon us, what a mercy it is to think that Christ has taken hold upon us, too, and will neverlet us go! When our sins seem more than the hairs of our head and our heart is failing us, it is very sweet to feel that thedepths of eternal love and of atoning merit have drowned even our innumerable sins-they are cast upon the head of Him thatsaid "Lo, I come to do Your will." They are carried away and they have ceased to be through Him whose precious blood and gloriousrighteousness have made us accepted before God!

13. Be pleased O LORD, to deliver me: O LORD, make haste to help me. You may pray like that and yet be a true Believer. Theman that is not in haste to be saved does not need to be saved at all. He that can put it off till tomorrow knows nothingabout it! A true Believer, when he is crying for mercy, cries, "My case is urgent! Help me now, make haste to help me."

14-17. Let them be ashamed and confounded together that seek after my soul to destroy it; let them be driven backward andput to shame that wish me evil Let them be desolate for a reward of their shame that say unto me, "Aha, aha. Let all thosethat seek You rejoice and be glad in You: let such as love Your salvation say continually, The LORD be magnified. But I ampoor and needy, yet the LORD thinks upon me: You are my Help and my Deliverer; make no tarrying, Omy God.''But I am poor andneedy, yet"-oh blessed, "yet"-"Yet the Lord thinks upon me." He does not throw me a penny and pass on as we often do to thepoor and needy! But He stops and thinks. Yet He makes no tarrying. He answers the cry of His people and comes in haste todeliver them!