Sermon 633. Two Loving Invitations

A SERMON PREACHED BY C. H. SPURGEON, AT THE METROPOLITAN TABERNACLE NEWINGTON.

"Come and see." John 1:39.

"Come and dine." John 21:12.

THE one text is in the beginning and the other at the end of John's Gospel. There is a mystery here. Here is typified a growthwhich it were well for us to understand. "Come and see," is for babes in Grace-"Come and dine," is for strong men in ChristJesus. We must notice the order. "Come andsee," is the beginning of spiritual life as it is the beginning of this Gospel. "Come and dine," is a high after-privilegeof the spiritual life and a blessed result of it. "Come and see," is the Gospel's cry to those outside its pale-it has nothingto conceal, it wears nomask, it has no most holy place into which entrance is forbidden. It has a "sanctum sanctorum," but the way into it is open.Open and above-board in all its doings, the Truth as it is in Jesus bares its bosom secrets and cries to every passerby, "Comeand see."

The seals of the book are broken, the darkness is rolled away, the vision is open and with clarion note the invitation isissued, "Come and see." Romanism may conceal its worship under the Latin tongue. Difficult phraseology and polished periodsmay hide from the multitude the teaching of professedProtestants, but the true preacher of Christ declares, "I determined not to know anything among you, save Jesus Christ andHim crucified. And my speech and my preaching was not with enticing words of man's wisdom, but in demonstration of the Spiritand of power."

The shutters of every window are open. The key is put into every lock and every door is thrown wide open. Investigation iscourted upon every point-the Gospel stands at her door and says, "Come in here, come and see." You have this short sentence,"Come and see," as, first of all, anencouragement to enquirers. Many of you are like John's disciples. They had heard John preach and they believed his wordand when they saw Christ, to whom John pointed, they followed Him. But not knowing Him, they followed Him with a questionupon the tip of theirtongues-"Master, where do You dwell?" He said, "Come and see." You also are anxious to know Christ. You have heard His Wordpreached by some of His witnesses and you want to know Him personally for yourselves. You have a pressing question to puttonight and Jesus encouragesyou to ask. No-to come and get your own answer with your own eyes. "Come," He says, "Come and see."

There are three ways, I think, by which persons are to, "Come and see." One is by observation. We ought to give attentionto the teaching of the Gospel, to weigh it and prove it. If it is found false we are to cast it away with decision. But ifit is found worthy of our attention we are to hold itfast and never let it go. Many persons are careless. They will consider the last new novel, or they have been clamoringto get the "Life of Julius Caesar," to see what the Emperor of the French can have to say upon that subject. But concerningChrist Crucified they have nocuriosity. They frequent their place of worship without feeling enough interest in the affair to ask themselves why theygo. They do not expect to understand what they hear, or if they understand it they care not whether the thing is true or not.It is nothing to them that Jesusshould die.

Now surely a theme which involves eternal consequences, a matter which deals with my immortal spirit ought not to be put intothe background and left to careless inadvertence. I ought, at least, to give it something like the consideration which itclaims at my hands. But some look at it throughcolored spectacles. They are prejudiced against the Gospel. They observe it, they say, but their observation is tincturedby themselves and by their own character. Some persons make up their minds as to what the Gospel ought to be before they tryto find out what it is. They do notcome to the Bible, nor to the hearing of the Word in order to discover what the Truth of God is. No, they sit down and dreamand fashion in their own minds just such a sort of concoction as they imagine Gospel Truth should be and everything whichis contrary to this they will kickagainst, like the foolish ox which kicks against the goad.

It would be no use for me, in astronomy, to make an hypothesis and then go out with a telescope and say, "That star oughtnot to be where it is. According to my theory Jupiter ought not to have moved as he has moved and therefore I do not believein Jupiter, nor in the stars, for I do not liketheir goings on." Who but madmen talk thus? I must always shape my views to facts, and regarding the Bible as the greatstorehouse of facts, I must take care that I go to it with a candid and unbiased judgment. May God help me to do so. To findout what the Truth of God is, "Comeand see," but ask God to open your eyes that you may behold the wondrous things which are written in His Law.

Does anyone enquire how he can come and see in the matter of observation? We invite you, dear Friends, to a diligent readingof Scripture as one means of seeing. The worst-read book in England is the Bible. People read a verse of it, or half a chapterin the morning and think they understand it.Suppose anyone were to read a poet in that way. Let the world's favored poet, Shakespeare, be treated in such a style asthat and what man could ever appreciate his beauties? If you get a poet, say Cowper-you read "The Task" through. You do notthink of snatching a line or twohere and there-if you did you would be like the Greek teacher who carried a brick about as a specimen of a house which hehad for sale.

If you read Young's, "Night Thoughts," it is true that almost every line is noteworthy and is as fine-tuned as a distinctproposition. But still he who would appreciate the beauties of Young must read the "Night Thoughts" through, or, at least,read a book at a time. Yet there are thousands of youwho never did read one of the Gospels through, never read one of the Epistles through with a studious mind desiring to catchthe drift and to understand the sense. And do you dream you will ever know what the Bible teaches by just recalling a portionhere and a portion there?Impossible! Absurd! If you have any care to, "Come and see," read the Bible in a common-sense way and sit down with thedetermination that, as far as the human mind can find out what God means, you will know what He has revealed concerning HisSon. I am not afraid of what theconsequences will be if you do that! If, moreover, you seek the aid of the Divine Spirit, your search cannot be in vain.You shall see Jesus and rejoice in His great salvation.

Then next, I earnestly desire you to hear the Gospel as well as read it-only take care that what you hear is the Gospel. Itis very easy to find Divines of flowery speech and flowing tongue, from whom, in a course of seven years, you would probablylearn nothing whatever of the doctrines ofthe Covenant of Grace. It has been said that if you were to hear a lecturer on geology or astronomy deliver some twelveor thirteen lectures you would be able to pick up a pretty clear idea of the system of geology or astronomy, which the lecturermeant to teach. But I declare andprotest, and will prove it by sermons printed by sundry authors, that you might hear thirteen thousand sermons of some menwithout knowing what system of Divinity they taught, if, indeed, they have any system of Divinity at all!

What do you go to God's House for? Is it to have your ears tickled? Do you go to the place of worship that you may admirethe eloquence of man? Go to your theater or your senate if this is your desire! Such places are the legitimate arena for display-comenot to God's House for that. There weshould resort to learn to pray. We should come that we may, in the words of our text, "see." See ourselves, and better still,see the Lord Jesus! This should be the first enquiry as we go up the steps into the place of meeting-"Sirs, we would see Jesus."And if Jesus is not tobe seen there, no matter how brilliant the display of fireworks with which the sermonizer may indulge you-that is not theproper place in which to spend the precious hours of Sunday!

We would see Jesus! We would know what we must do to be saved! Observe then, observe carefully. Keep your eyes open, not onlyto the world of Nature, but to the Book of God and the lives of His people and thus, "Come and see." Truly, Enquirer, thereis a better way of coming and seeing and that isby believing. If you can at once believe God's Word, you shall see far better than if you are merely a seeker and, surely,the revelation of God in Christ may well demand your implicit faith. See how true others have found it. If the propositionis, "can Christ forgivesin?"-hear what others say who can sing of pardon bought with blood and of promises applied to their souls with power breathingpeace and pardon to their hearts!

Do you remember your mother? Do you remember the glitter of her eyes in death's dark hour? Do you remember how she bore herdying testimony that all that God had said concerning Christ was true? That He was able to save to the uttermost them thatcome unto God by Him? She was no woman given todeception! If I remember rightly you can say of her that she was a common-sense, shrewd woman-not easily deceived and yetin that last article of death-when every sham comes crumbling down and all that is mere paint and tinsel is broken and dashedaway, she found thesolidity of her hopes and rejoiced in them!

You have other friends. In business they are not second-rate men. With regard to matters of common sense you would trust themas well as any that you know. They are not hot-headed and enthusiastic. They are not likely to be carried away by the multitude,after some hare-brained prophet. And yetsteadily and solemnly they tell you that Christ has given them new hearts and right spirits. That He has changed their lives.That He has given them a peace and a joy they never knew before. They tell you that they have answers to prayer-that wheneverthey spread their casebefore God, their heavenly Father hears them and sends them speedy relief. They tell you that they find in religion a springof moral action such as was never found in the mere precepts and teachings of law and conscience.

Now believe these men. If they were the worst men in the neighborhood. If they were the felons and rogues of trade, I wouldrecommend you not to believe them-but since they are the best in the world and rank high in your esteem-at least trust themso far as to come, yourself, to acandid observation of these things and believe that at least there is some truth in them. I would to God, dear Friends,that you would believe these things to be true concerning Christ's ability to save because you have Cod's Word for it. Andif you ask me how I know it is God'sWord, I can take you in vision to Nineveh.

See the excavated cities and palaces, the winged bulls and lions buried in the rubbish-all which tell us that that Book whichspoke of them before they were discovered-must have a high antiquity. And the volume which, written in the times of theirglory, yet told of their tremendousfall, must have had an inspiration in it not belonging to common books. The best proof of this inspiration is, perhaps,to be found in this-that we know that God wrote another book, the book of Nature. And as the two works of one author are quitesure to exhibit some commonpoints in which you may find out the author's idioms, so every student of Nature and Revelation has been able to say thatthe two volumes bear marks of the same Writer. And the more they have studied both books, the more they have said, "We findthe same God in the one as in theother."

The God of Nature is kind and good. So is the God of Revelation. The God of Nature is the terrible God of the avalanche andthunderbolt, the tempest and the whirlwind. And the God of this Book is terrible out of His holy place when He comes to judgethe sons of men. We find that the very sameimprimatur which is set upon the book of Nature is also stamped upon the Book of God. We should be glad, therefore, if youcould believe this and believing this you would soon, "come and see." For mark you, the best way of knowing about Christ isto try Him, to experience Him! Andsince you want to know if He can forgive sins, trust Him to forgive yours. You want to know if He can change the human heart-trustHim to change yours.

You long to know if there is a peace that passes all understanding which will still the throbs of your guilty heart. Try Himand see! You pant to learn if there is a joy which can gild your darkest hours with sunlight and make the dreary passage throughthe shades of death to be full of life andhope-try Him and see! We are not afraid to stake all upon the trial. I will cheerfully be bondsman for my Lord and Master.If there can be a soul that does sincerely trust Him that shall not find, even in this life, salvation, and in the world tocome, eternal joy, then I amcontent to be deceived, or content to suffer the deceiver's doom!

Beloved, if we only promised you something to be had in the next world, you could not make the test at once. But that whichwe hold out to you is present salvation. It is not some future joy merely, but present joy! Oh, if you trust Jesus Christyou shall, "come and see," that sin is mastered aswell as pardoned! That the guilty conscience is pacified forever and that your joy and peace can begin this side of thegrave. Enquirer, "come and see!" Oh, pass not by! Neglect not the exhibition of Divine love and Grace, but, "come," oh, "comeand see!" May the Holy Spirit bringyou, for His name's sake.

Very hurriedly let me notice the next point. I think this invitation may be well addressed to every beginner in the schoolof Christ as well as to every enquirer. We ought not to be satisfied with merely being saved. As soon as ever we are saved-themoment we believe in Christ-our nextbusiness is to learn more of Christ. You want to know the doctrines, dear Friends. It is well to be thoroughly establishedin the faith. "Come and see." Search the Scriptures! See what God has revealed and be established in His Divine Truths. Everyprecept as well as every doctrinecries to you, "Come and see!"

Every promise says, "Come and see!" Do not run short of promises! It is bad when a man is out of money. And the Christian,when he is without a promise in his hand is somewhat like a person without ready money in his purse. Study the promises. "Comeand see." As to experience, too, the Lord says,"Come and see." Do not talk of Tabor's height, as though you could never climb it. From the top of it there comes a voice,"Come and see." Do not speak of Pisgah, as though your feet might never tread its consecrated summit. The voice says, "Comeand see." If there is any point ofcommunion, or height of fellowship as yet unreached by you, there peals forth from its excellent glory the endearing exhortation,"Come and see." No boundry is set about the Mount of God! No fiery wall conceals the secret of the Eternal. "The Spirit ofthe Lord is with them thatfear Him. He will show them His Covenant." All Revelation cries with one voice, "Come and see!"

I think this is the cry of the Gospel to every sinner, "Come and see." Perhaps it is easier to use the eyes than any otherorgan except the ears. This I know, it is more pleasing to use the eyes than the ears. You can keep a set of children as happyas the birds of the air with a picturebook-when they would probably go to sleep if you were to talk to them. The eye has the greatest power of conferring pleasure.Whether it conveys truth to the heart more rapidly than the ear does, I cannot say. At any rate it does so most pleasinglyand for this reason, amongothers, Christ bids us to use the eyes. He hangs upon His Cross before you and cries, "Come and see." And He adds this promise-"Lookunto Me and be you saved, all you ends of the earth."

What is there to see? God made flesh! He that made the heavens veiling Himself in manhood! Is not this something? God camedown to you, poor Sinner, that He might take you up to Himself! What is there to see? There is the Son of God bleeding forhuman sin! His griefs are such that no tongue canexplain them and no pen can write them-but they are not for Himself-for in Him is no sin. "Come and see," for if you seethe griefs of Jesus and take them to be your trust, you shall be saved! "Come and see." Do you ask what there is to see? Thissame Jesus rises fromthe tomb! He could not have risen if He had not been God, or if He had not completed the great work of His people's redemption!

He ascends. The clouds receive Him! Up there in Heaven He stands pleading for sinners, pleading for us and, "He is able alsoto save them to the uttermost that come unto God by Him, seeing He ever lives to make intercession for them." "Come and see!""Come and see!" I am often asked, "Sir, how canI get faith?" I believe that faith comes from Christ and is His gift to sinners. Sit down in your chamber tonight when youget home, you that want to believe, and just think over this-GOD made flesh! If you will think of that, I pray the Holy Spiritvisit you and then thethought will strike you- "That is wonderful! Who could have dreamed of it? God suffering instead of man that the justiceof God might be fully satisfied and the mercy of God might have full scope!"

While you are thinking of this wonder and picturing the wounds and looking to the blood and thinking that you almost hearthe dropping of the blood upon the Mount of Calvary, I think you will, you scarcely know how, find yourself ready to sing-

"I do believe-I will believe That Jesus died for me; And on the Cross He shed His blood From sin to set me free."

You cannot make yourself believe. Faith is the gift of God and the work of the Holy Spirit. But it comes through hearing,and hearing is principally blessed to the working of faith, because it gives you a sight of Christ in meditation and, as somesay, "seeing is believing." Certainly such a sightas hearing gives is often made the channel by which the soul believes in Christ. "Come and see!"

Oh you worldlings! Turn your eyes here and see the Savior die! Maybe the spectacle will cool your hot blood and drive awayyour fever of worldliness and care! Oh, you giddy, careless men and women, look here and see your Redeemer bleed! Possiblyyou may be sobered by the sight. Oh young men andmaidens in your early youth! Since you may soon feel the arrows of death, look here and make your immortality secure! Yougrey-headed ones who have lost your vigor and spent your strength in sin, yet may the Holy Spirit bring you-"Come and see!"Oh, there is mercy yet, "Comeand see!"

The great sight is not withdrawn-it is no dissolving view that melts away-it is no burning bush from which you are bid tokeep off by the words, "Draw not near here." But here, over the Cross, hangs the motto and from the Mount of Calvary ringsthe silvery trumpet note, "Come and see!Come and see!"

"There is life in a look at the Crucified One; There is life at this moment for you."

II. The second text is, "COME AND DINE." That is better-that is closer, nearer, dearer-more substantial than "come and see."That may be done at a distance, though "come" seems to invite us to make the distance less. But, "Come and dine"-that impliesthe same table, the samemeat-yes, and sometimes it means to sit side by side and lean our head upon the Savior's bosom. Here is nearness familiarand domestic-"come and dine."

Understand that while we are sinners faith brings us into a justified state by simply looking to Christ though the soul hashad no enjoyment of Him. But after believing, faith then assists us really to enjoy Christ. I know some of you are wishingand expecting to enjoy Christ first, and believe himafterwards. I would correct your error. You must take God's mercies in their order and season. And you will not find, "comeand dine," in the first chapter of John-there it is, "come and see." Believe Jesus first and you shall feed on Him afterwards!

Certain of you seem to me to be content to believe Christ and to say, "I am safe," without wishing to know the blessed enjoymentwhich is to be found in Him. It should not be so. You are not to be content with the first chapter of John. But go on to thelast and be not satisfied so long as there isa "yet" beyond. If you have seen Christ-if you have touched Christ-if you have put your finger into the print of the nails,be not satisfied till you know the meaning of the text, "Except a man eat My flesh and drink My blood, there is no life inhim." "Come and dine,"then, implies greater enjoyment than, "come and see."

"Come and see" gives peace, but, "come and dine," gives ecstasy-rapture-what shall I call it? It gives Heaven on earth, forit gives Christ. "Come and dine" must be experimentally understood before you can read the Book of Solomon's Song with profit."Come and see" can read theEvangelists. "Come and see" can read many of the Epistles. "Come and see" may wander delightfully through the Book of Psalms."Come and see" may enrich itself with Proverbs. But the Tree of Life, which is in the midst of the garden-that is, the Bookof Canticles [Song ofSolomon]-is not to be eaten of except by those who have heard the Master say, "Come and dine." I would to God that all theLord's people were not merely delivered from the chains of sin and washed in the Savior's blood but brought into the banquetinghouse, where waves thebanner of redeeming love!

There is more enjoyment, then, in the one than in the other. And there is also more nearness. When I first believed in ChristI felt a distance between myself and Him and the only nearness that I could get was to lay my hands upon His head and confessmy sins. But I hope some of us, after a fewyears of believing, know what it is to sit at His feet with Mary! To lean upon His bosom with John! Yes, and to say withthe spouse, "Let Him kiss me with the kisses of His mouth, for His love is better than wine." O Beloved, there is a nearnessto Christ which the worldling canonly laugh at if he should hear us talk of it!

Read "Rutherford's Letters," and you get glimpse of what it is to dine with Christ. Turn to "Hawker's Morning and EveningPortions," or even, if you will, wander amidst the quaint rhymes and sweet poetry of dear George Herbert- there you have,"come and dine" carried out in sweetest prose.Oh, to get so close to Christ that you can sing with a modern hymn writer-

"So near, so very near to God, I cannot nearer be; For in the Person of His Son I am as near as He! So dear, so very dearto God, I cannot dearer be;

The love wherewith He loves His Son Such is His love to me!"

This is a high attainment, but rest not satisfied till you have gained it. Yet, once more, "come and dine," gives us a visionof union with Jesus because the only meat that we can eat when we dine with Christ is Himself. We do not provide the supper.When He dined on that occasion with Hisdisciples, Peter dragged a net full of fishes out of the sea. But when they came on shore they found a fire already kindledand fish laid on it, so that the fish they ate did not come out of the sea-by their net-at any rate. Christ found the fishand lit the fire. And Hefound the bread and then said, "Come and dine." Ah, and the fire that warms our heart when we have fellowship with Him comesfrom Himself! And the fish that we eat is His own and the wine that we drink flows from His own heart.

Oh, what union is this! It is a depth that reason cannot fathom, that we eat the flesh and drink the blood of Christ! Herewe stand and look and look and look and though the water is clear as crystal, like the sea of glass before the Throne of God,yet to the bottom of it angelic sight can neverreach! One with Jesus-by eternal union-one! What does this mean, Believer?-

"One when He died. One when He rose; One when He triumphed over His foes! One when in Heaven He took His seat, And angelssang of Hell's defeat."

Can you comprehend it?-

"This Covenant stands secure, Though earth's old columns bow, The strong, the feeble and the weak Are one in Jesus now. Oh,sacred union, firm and strong, How great the Grace, how sweet the song, That worms of earth should ever be One with IncarnateDeity!"

And yet it is so. And he that has listened to the Savior's voice, "Come and dine," knows it to be so and rejoices! In this,also, you find an invitation to enjoy fellowship with the saints. You are not to eat your morsel alone, but in company. Wesit down in Heaven with Abraham, Isaac andJacob-at the marriage supper of the Lamb-and no small part of the heavenly bliss is connected with the fellowship whichexists among the saints in Gory. So also with our present feasting on the fat things full of marrow which Christ spreads beforeHis chosen ones. Weenjoy the company as well as the feast and find our happiness augmented by the society of kindred minds. The Supper of theLord is the table of communion, not only with the Master but also with all who love Him in sincerity and truth.

One of the surest ways of introducing discord into the midst of a Church is for the minister to starve the people. Hungrymen are sure to be quarrelsome. On the contrary, to unite a flock in closest bonds of love let the minister say, "Come anddine!"-and then put before them the finest ofthe wheat, honey out of the rock and wine upon the lees well refined. If you would have sweetest fellowship with each other,live on Christ! Enter into the banqueting house, sit beneath the banner of love and you will find that sacred comminglingof spirit with spirit which willprove that you are one in Christ Jesus.

Christians may differ on a variety of points. They may not see eye to eye on this thing and on that, but they have all onespiritual appetite and if we cannot all feel alike, we can all feed alike on the Bread of Life sent down from Heaven. Getnearer to Christ and eat of His flesh and drink of Hisblood and you will find yourself linked more and more in spirit to all who are like yourself, supported by the same heavenlymanna. We do not expect to see all Christians agreeing, but we are sure that one of the most likely plans for cultivatinga brotherly spirit is to listen toChrist's words, "Come and dine."

We see in these words the source of strength for every Christian. To look at Christ is to live, but for strength to serveHim you must come and dine. When our Lord had raised the daughter of Jairus He commanded them to give her meat so that shemight be strengthened. And so He says to all of us,"Come and dine." We need as much food for the soul as for the body and unless we eat we shall be fainting by the way. Arethere not many Christians who allow themselves to suffer a great deal of unnecessary weakness on account of neglecting thisprecept of the Master? I hold that weare bound to lift up the feeble knees and drooping hands-and in order to do this we must live by faith on the Son of Godand listen to His voice as He says, "Eat, oh My Friends, yes, drink, oh My Beloved."

If you want to be as Mr. Feeblemind, I can give you the receipt. Take only a small portion of spiritual food morning and nightin your closets. Neglect family prayer. Never attend a Prayer Meeting. On no account speak about religious matters duringthe week. Go late to the House of God and fallasleep when you get there. As soon as you leave the place of worship talk about the weather. Confine yourself to these rulesfor a few weeks and you will very soon be reduced low enough to allow Satan to attack you with every chance of giving youa severe and dangerous fall.

Doctors tell us that nowadays the classes of disease most prevalent are those which indicate a low condition of the vitalforces. And I think that we are suffering in the Church from the same sort of maladies. You never hear of anyone who is toozealous, too rash in venturing himself for Christ!There was a time when the Church had to censure her young converts because they courted persecution and invited martyrdom!Now we need to stir up the Church and to urge on our people to more self-sacrifice for the cause of Christ.

You need never fear that anyone will kill himself with too much work-we must rather lament that there seems so little exuberanceof spirit and vital force among Christians. We, none of us, need to put ourselves on a low diet-on the contrary, we oughtto accumulate strength and urgeevery power to its full dimension in the Master's service! For this purpose, "Come and dine." All your strength dependsupon union with Christ! Away from Him you must wither as a branch severed from the vine. Feeding on Him, you will be likethe branch which is drinking up the sapfrom the parent stem. You will be strong enough to bring forth fruit and fill your post among the other members of the onegreat band of Christians!

We can see, moreover, in these words the foundation of the Christian's growth and progress in spiritual things. To see Christis to begin the Christian's life, but to grow in Divine Grace we must, "come and dine." The early history of the first disciplesis by no means satisfactory. They wereevidently only babes in spiritual things. How little they seemed to comprehend the Savior's mission. He liked to say, "HaveI been so long time with you and yet have you not known Me, Philip?" They misunderstood the nature of His Kingdom and werecontinually displaying a carnal andselfish spirit. It is evident that the early dawn of spiritual life is all they had then received. They had seen Jesus.They loved Him and followed Him even unto trial and disgrace-but yet they were far from possessing the Spirit of Christ.

Now after they had reached this stage of living on Christ they became new men. It is no longer mere sight, but an inward appropriationof Christ Jesus by faith and the consequences are manifest. They are seen developing themselves under the blessed outpouringof the Holy Spirit into workmen thatneeded not to be ashamed. They endured hardness as good soldiers of the Cross. They fought a good fight and they finishedtheir course with joy. A higher order of life is clearly theirs. They have risen in the scale of spiritual existence! A clearerlight shines around them and theyhave manifestly grown in Grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ! Beloved, we long for your edification!We covet for you the best gifts, and therefore we say, "Come and dine."

Many Christians remain stunted and dwarfed in spiritual things so as to present the same appearance year after year. No upspringingof thought and feeling is manifest in them. They exist but do not grow. The reason is evident-they are not taking of Christ-andthey neglect to appropriateto themselves the blessing which He is waiting to bestow. Why should you rest content with being in the tender green bladewhen you can go on and reach the ear and eventually the full corn in the ear? I would that all God's servants were more inearnest to develop that good thingwhich has been implanted in them by the Holy Spirit!

It is all very well to keep other men's vineyards, but you must not neglect your own. Why should it ever be winter in ourhearts? We must have our seed time, it is true, but oh, for a spring time-yes, a summer season-which shall give promise ofan early harvest! Now if you would ripenin Grace you must live near Christ-in His Presence-basking in the sunshine of His smiles. You must hold sweet communionwith Him. You must leave the distant view of His face and come near, as John did, and pillow your head on His breast. Thenyou will find yourselfadvancing in holiness, in love, in faith, in hope-yes, in every godly gift! What a joy it is to see men and women dailyliving on Christ! You may watch them grow as you have watched the flowers and trees in the gardens expanding under the genialshowers and sunshine of thelast few weeks.

It robs a deathbed of its terrors to see the aged Christian rapidly preparing for Glory, but I would rather the man grew beforehe was about to be taken from us so that we might be the better for his expanded Graces and enjoy his beauty of holiness afew years here on earth. We do not grudge thesaints in Glory anything-but it would be a mercy to us if Christians would try and get as much of perfection and maturityas possible a few years sooner-so as to gladden our eyes with some bright blossoms as well as the somber green blades. Itis all very well, the freshverdure in early spring, but

I like also the russet hues of autumn and the rich clusters of the vintage with the songs of the reaper and the shout of "harvesthome!"

The golden grain is a goodly and pleasant thing to see as the field waves in the autumn breeze. So, also, I like to mark maturityin Christ's fields, as well as in the earthly ones. It is a glorious sight, an experienced saint-a man who has been much withJesus and learned of Him-whohas caught the Master's spirit and reflects it brightly to all around! As the sun rises first on mountaintops and gildsthem with his light and presents one of the most charming sights to the eyes of the traveler, so is it one of the most delightfulcontemplations in the world tomark the glow of the Spirit's light on the head of some saint who has risen up in spiritual stature, like Saul, above hisfellows! For then, like some mighty Alp, snow-capped, he reflects, first of all, the beams of the Sun of Righteousness andbears the sheen of His brilliance highaloft for all to see-and seeing it-to glorify His Father which is in Heaven! That you may thus grow in Grace, listen tothe Master's voice-"Come and dine."

We notice one more thought and then must conclude. Here is preparation for service. "Come and dine," says the Master. Butbefore the feast is concluded, He says to Peter, "Feed My lambs." And again, "Feed My sheep." Further adding, "Follow Me."All the strength supplied by Christ is for service andfor use in His vineyard. When the Prophet Elijah found the cake baked on the coals and the cruse of water placed at hishead as he lay under the juniper tree, he had a commission to go forty days and forty nights in the strength of it, journeyingtowards Home, the mount of God. Soalso with us-we eat so as to be able to expend our strength in the Master's service. We come to the Passover and eat ofour Paschal Lamb with loins girt and with our staff in our hand-so as to start off at once when we have satisfied our spirits.

Some Christians are for living on Christ but are not so anxious to live for Christ. Now I rejoice to know that I can spendand be spent for the Lord. And I find in labor for Christ that, "it is more blessed to give than to receive." I never feelso like the Master as when I go about trying to dogood. Heaven is the place where saints feast most and work most. They sit down at the table of our Lord and they serve Himday and night in His Temple. They eat of heavenly food and render perfect service. Now earth should be a preparation for Heaven-comeand dine-andthen go and labor! Freely you receive-freely give! Gather up all the fragments of your feast and go and carry it to Lazarusat the gate! Yes, carry the loaves and fishes to oth-ers-as the disciples did when the Lord had multiplied their little supply-tosatisfy thethousands who were famishing for want of food.

We have yet to learn more concerning the design of our Lord in giving us His Grace. We are not to hold the precious grainsof Truth like a mummy does the wheat, for ages, without giving it a chance of growing. No, feed yourself and then go forthand bid others come and eat and drink. Go out intothe highways and hedges and compel them to come in, that there may be many more rejoicing with you in the Light and Lifeof Christ! Why does the Lord send down rain upon the thirsty earth and give sunshine and genial refreshing breezes? Is itnot that these may all help the fruitsof the earth to yield food for man and beast? Even so the Lord calls us in to enjoyment and feasting that we may afterwardsgo out to labor and service.

My dear Hearers, I always seek to see you fruitful in all good works, to do His will who provides all things for us richlyto enjoy. You are aware that our Father is glorified if we bring forth much fruit and so shall we be His disciples. Eat, then!Spare not-you are welcome to as much as youcan consume! But when you have eaten the fat and drunk of the sweet, go and tell of it to sinners round that the starvingmay come and find "wine and milk, without money and without price." You are to preach the Gospel to every creature-proclaimthe good news of water from theRock Christ Jesus which flows in the midst of the world's wilderness, so that all may drink and live. Tell of the finestof the wheat on which you have feasted.

Bid the prodigal leave the husks which the swine eat and return to the Father's house, there to eat of the fatted calf andfeast at the parental board. Tell them there is room in the Savior's heart! And never cease proclaiming His matchless loveand power and His willingness to say to all, "Comeunto Me all you that are weary and heavy laden and I will give you rest." "Come and dine."

I send you away, however, wishing to make the first part of the sermon the more telling to most of you-"Come and see." Youare black with sin, but blackness does not blind the eye. Your righteousness is nothing better than filthy rags, but the mostragged beggar may look. Our strange oldproverb says, "A cat may look at a king," and the blackest sinner out of Hell may look at Christ! And though he has sinwell near as devilish as that of Lucifer, yet, looking to Christ all manner of sin and of iniquity shall be forgiven him!

Look, Sinner-look! May the Holy Spirit now open those eyes of yours and turn them to the Savior's Cross and make you live!May the best of Heaven's blessings be yours tonight and in eternity! Amen and Amen.