Sermon 785. Wanted, A Guest Chamber!

A sermon

(No. 785)

Delivered on Lord's-day Morning, DECEMBER 15, 1867, by

C.H.SPURGEON,

At the Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington

"The Master says, Where is the guest chamber, where I shall eat the Passover with My disciples."- Mark 14:14.

As far as we know, out of the many thousands who had come to Jerusalem from the utmost ends of the earth to keep the Passover,none were left unaccommodated with a guest chamber except our Lord Jesus Christ. Jerusalem, at the time of the Passover, wasone great inn-the whole of the houses were occupied not only by the regular tenants, but by their friends from the countryparts of Judea. Each one had invited his own friends and all the houses were filled. But there was found no one to invitethe Savior and He had no dwelling of His own. He who received sinners, was excluded by all. The Friend of man was houseless,and at the national festival He was no man's guest. He would have been left in the streets, if by His own supernatural powerHe had not found Himself an upper room in which to keep the feast.

It is so even to this day-Jesus is not received among the sons of men save only where by His supernatural power and GraceHe makes the heart anew. Every pursuit has its eager followers, every art its votaries, every object its devotees, but Jesusis uncared for and neglected. Art, science, poetry, literature, mechanics, politics, wealth-all these obtain a willing homage.Men need no renewal of their minds to follow after these! But to the natural man the Lord Jesus has no form nor comelinessand He, therefore, is despised and rejected. "He came unto His own, and His own received Him not." Like the Levite in thedays of the Judges, "There was no man that took him into his house to lodging."

All doors are open enough to the Prince of Darkness, but Jesus must clear a way for Himself or lodge in the streets. I thinkI hear Him crying even to His own Church, "Open to Me, My sister, My love, My dove, My undefiled-for My head is filled withdew and My locks with the drops of the night." Doubtless one reason for this may be found in the fact that it was dangerousto receive Christ at that season. The rulers were hunting Him-thirsty for His blood-and they had issued the command that ifany man knew where He was, he should tell them, that they might take Him. In the first place, to harbor Christ was to runthe risk of being put out of the synagogue, to become the object of public contempt. In the second, and perhaps in conclusion,to meet with a sudden and violent death!

Therefore, prudent, careful men closed their doors against Him and argued that they could not expose their families to somuch peril. They might in their hearts admire Him. In their souls they might lament that He was so harshly dealt with, butthey could not run the risk of declaring themselves to be on His side by entertaining Him at that moment of excitement. Sois it at this hour, men always have a good reason, as they think, for that most unreasonable of all unkind-nesses-the rejectionof Jesus, their best Friend. The farm, the merchandise, the newly-married wife-all these are the transparent, weak excusesfor not coming to the Gospel supper.

Preoccupation of mind with some other pursuit, or the self-denials which Christianity would involve, or the difficulties whichare supposed to beset a consistent Christian profession-any, or all of these, and worse than these-serve to satisfy the humanconscience with the shadow of an excuse. Jesus Christ is kept on the cold side of the door and our worst enemies are welcomed!Though it is the highest honor that man can have to entertain Him, yet a cruel refusal is given Him and any excuse in theworld is thought to be sufficient. Yet there was one who was willing to entertain the Savior, and the Lord knew Him and whereto find Him according to that ancient saying, "The Lord knows them that are His."

There shall never be a time in the world's history so dark but surely the Lord will have His chosen stars shining brightlyamid the gloom. Christ shall never be so much despised but what there will be found here and there elect souls, hearts thatthe Lord has touched, who will say, "Come in and welcome most sweet Lord! We rejoice to render You the hospitality of ourloving hearts." Be of good courage, my Brothers and Sisters! Piety may be at a low ebb, but it shall never run dry! The lampmay flicker, but it cannot be extinguished! Our ranks may be thinned, but the host shall hold the

battlefield! There are a few names even in Sardis! There is one Lot, at least, even in Sodom! And in the raging Sanhedrima Nicodemus holds a seat!

In the worst times of superstition God raises up witnesses for His Truth. We need never fear for the Church-an imperishableseed is in her and nothing shall destroy her. The gates of Hell shall not prevail against her. Though her ministers may falland many of her professed members may apostatize, yet the Lord will keep up the succession of the saints, and Jesus shallnot lack a man to bear up the standard of the Cross! So long as the earth remains, the everlasting kingdom of the Son of Davidshall stand!

I shall now call your attention to the whole incident of our Lord's finding a guest chamber in which to keep the Passover.I shall regard the question which I have selected for a text, first, as the mighty word of the Master's effectual Grace, andnext, as the affectionate enquiry of the servant's obedient solicitude.

I. First, the Master says, "Where is the guest chamber?" This question may be regarded as THE MIGHTY WORD OF THE MASTER'SEFFECTUAL GRACE. Our Lord intended to celebrate the Passover in the large upper room belonging to the person to whom He sentPeter and John. The message which He sent by their lips was all-powerful-the man at once yielded up his furnished parlor withoutdifficulty or demur, because there went a power with the word which the man was unwilling and unable to resist.

Viewing this as a symbolical representation of the way in which hearts are won for Jesus, we observe, in the first place,that the time and the circumstances were all appointed. Two Apostles were commanded to go to the city and when they shouldcome to the city, Providence would be there working before them-they were to meet a man just at the entrance of the city.He was to be there at the very moment of their arrival-he and none but he. This man must bear a pitcher-the pitcher must befilled with water. The water carrier must proceed to a certain house, and to no other. This house must contain an upper room,large enough to receive Christ and 12 others. This room must be in the possession of a person who would be perfectly willingto receive the Master and His disciples, and the good man of the house must be home to show the room and give the messengersadmittance at once.

Here were several very unlikely things to meet together at one particular juncture, and yet they did so meet! Providence arrangesthat when the Apostles are at the city gates, the tankard-bearer is there, too, with his pitcher full of water. He goes tothe house, the house is the right habitation-the man who possesses it shall be the right man, and Christ shall be entertained.Beloved, there are quite as many notable circumstances to be observed in the conversion of each one of God's people! I donot doubt that the Lord has settled, concerning every one of His elect, the exact time when they shall pass from death untolife. He has determined the precise instrumentality by which they shall be converted. He has determined the exact word thatshall strike with power upon their mind, the period of conviction which they shall undergo, and the instant when they shallburst into the joyful liberty of a simple faith in Christ!

It is all settled, all arranged and predetermined in the Divine purpose. If the very hairs of our head are all numbered, muchmore the circumstances of the most important of all events which can occur to us! This may not seem to be a very practicalTruth of God, and yet I think it is. I may go, for instance, a journey by rail. It is left to my option at what time to start,and in what carriage I shall ride. Yet I select a particular hour and carriage, and soon a person is thrown in my way whomI have never seen before. The conversation is directed towards holy things. That person is already anxious, and my conversationis so consoling that it seems to him that I am sent for the very purpose of relieving his anxiety!

As we converse upon Divine things he is led to see what he never saw before-the way of salvation by the Substitu-tionary Sacrificeis opened up to him and he casts himself into the hands of the Savior! Now, who shall say but what there was an arrangementthere which God Himself, in His infinite wisdom, saw fit to make for the designed end?

You have two ways, today, of going home from the Tabernacle. You know not why, but you select one of the two, and in thatstreet, if you are on the alert as you should be-and anxious to deliver souls from going down to the pit- you may meet withan individual whom you would not have seen if you had taken the other route. And it may be that you, by a few words concerningeternal salvation, shall direct that person into the way of peace and lead him to lay hold on eternal life. He who observesProvidence shall never need a Providence to observe. And he who watches Providence with the view of discovering occasionsfor usefulness will find himself surrounded with golden opportunities for soul-winning.

I would have you, therefore, respect the workings of Divine Providence by being upon your watchtower to avail yourselves ofthem. You know nothing of the secret decree of God but you can see what the decree brings forth. And if you are wise, youcan benefit your neighbors by it. Believe firmly that God has a purpose to serve by everything that occurs and that He wouldhave you, His servants, watchful for all opportunities that you may bring men to a knowledge of the Truth. I hope, this morning,that there are some here who scarcely know why they are in the Tabernacle and the secret is that eternal purposes of DivineGrace towards them are now ripe for fulfillment!

Remarkable circumstances may have worked together to bring them here! Possibly had it been finer weather, the crowd wouldhave filled the place earlier, and they would have been excluded for lack of room-this wet weather gave them a chance of admissionwhere the Gospel is preached, and so the very drops of rain may have been God's messengers of mercy to them, indirectly workingfor their salvation! There may be circumstances which I cannot pretend to guess, which revolve round some of you concerningwhich God has said, "Thus and thus it shall be, that I may bring this man to the spot where I intend to arrest him by DivineGrace, and make him a saved soul." I do trust this may be the case and that miracles of mercy may be worked by our Redeemeraccording to the counsel of His will.

Note further a second thing, albeit the circumstances were all foreordained, yet Christ's entrance into this man's house wasworked by instrumentality. Had our Lord pleased to do so, He could have remained where He was. He could have secretly sentforth His Spirit into the householder's mind to constrain him to lend his upper room. Certainly there was no need why Peterand John should go as pioneers, for, if the Lord had gone Himself in Person, at once He would, of course, have obtained quiteas ready admission as His servants.

But He chose to work by means. So it is in conversion! The Lord could save souls, if He willed, without ministers, withoutteachers, without prayerful parents, without even the written Word! But He does not choose to do so. There are a few instancesin which men have been suddenly impressed where no cause for the impression was apparent beyond the immediate operation ofthe Holy Spirit. Apart from instrumentality men have been awakened and aroused in the midst of their sins, like Saul of Tarsus,who was struck down while on the road to persecute the saints in Damascus. The most obstinate have been suddenly subdued,but the general rule is that "Faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God." And men do not hear without a preacher,but God sends the preacher and the hearing ear, and then gives the willing heart by His effectual Grace.

So, Beloved, we must never fall into the delusion that the purposes of God set aside the use of means. I have heard thoughtlessor critical talkers say, "If God works out His purposes, then there is no need for preaching or any other means." Ah, simpletonthat you are, if we teach you that God works out His purposes by means, how crazy must you be to charge us with thinking lightlyof the means! If God accomplishes His eternal purposes by preaching, then the more need for preaching! And the more encouragementin it, for what were the use of preaching if God had not purposed to bless it? What were the use of plowing and sowing ifGod had not predestinated a harvest by such means?

We do not believe in a decree which ordains effects without causes-the ordinance of God is comprehensive, and takes in allthings-instrumentality is as much in the decree as is the result of such instrumentality. God, who determined to save, determinedalso to save by means-He determined to save no man without faith, and to give no man faith except through the knowledge ofthe Truth. The means are as much in the decree as in the result, and in using the means we hope to see the result followingaccording to the will of God.

The Apostles who were sent to the householder afford us a few instructive lessons. Mark carefully that all the disciples werequite willing to go. You observe it is said, "His disciples said unto Him, Where will You that we go and prepare that Youmay eat the Passover?" So every Christian should be anxious and willing to win souls to God-as well the Sisters as the Brothers!As well the weak as the strong! As well the babes as the full-grown men-we should all stand prepared to evangelize the world,and all be anxious to have our Master's blessing upon our work! Let everyone here this morning who knows Christ in his heart,be saying, "Lord, what will You have me to do?" Let us each be in the spirit of Isaiah when he cried "Here am I; send me!"

At the same time, the Master did not employ the whole of the 12 in this case, but preferred to send Peter and John. So inthe conversion of His people, He more frequently blesses His chosen servants-His ministers of Truth-these turn many to righteousnessand bring many captives to the Captain. He chooses His Peters and his Johns who have had the most familiar acquaintance withHimself and are best adapted to deliver His gracious message. And upon these He puts

special honor, thus manifesting His Sovereignty in the distribution of both gifts and Graces. Let every man who seeks to preachthe Gospel learn to do his Lord's work in the style of Peter and John who went not without being sent and commissioned.

No man has any right to aspire to the Christian pastorate without a call from the Most High. There must come to us a settingapart, an ordination not of man, but by the Eternal Spirit making us to be vessels of mercy unto the nations. When we obtainthis anointing and appointment, we must take care that we go about our work in our Master's way. These men were not to goblundering into the city, hurrying to knock at the first door they might hit upon! They must look out for the man with thewater pot, and follow him. I think I see them. How anxiously they look around! And when they see the man they ask no questionsof him-that was not in the command-they follow blindly where he leads.

I mark the holy joy in their faces as they see the water carrier stop at a door and put down his load! How confidently theyenter the house and enquire for the landlord! The Master has given them the sign, they see the countersign and feel that allis well. The story reminds you of Eleazar, the servant of Abraham, when seeking a wife for Isaac. He, too, had an appointedsign-the damsel shall say, "Drink, and I will give your camels drink also." And lo, Rebekah came, and just what he had askedshe might do, she did! And then the man lifted up his heart to God and blessed the God of his Master Abraham for giving himgood speed on his errand.

If we would seek souls we must follow the indications of God's will! We must be like the handmaidens whose eyes watch theirmistresses. We must be anxious to detect the first sign of Divine Grace, to observe the kindling of the newborn life in theawakened soul, to discover the first incomings of the Divine light into the thick darkness of the natural heart. And thenwe must follow our Master's will-not inventing this clap-trap, and that excitement as new methods of revival, not fashioningnew gospels of our own-but keeping close to the all-perfect Gospel of our blessed God! We must preach the Truth of God simplyafter the Apostolic precedent, believing that in this way, and in this way only, we may expect to see the revival which weseek. The Master's word of power comes to men, then, by instrumentality.

Dear Hearers, you who are not converted, never neglect the means of Divine Grace, because it is through the means that God'sblessing will be most likely to come to you. "Being in the way, the Lord met with me." I have heard of a young lad who wasobserved to be especially attentive to the sermon, and when he was asked the reason, he said, "Because I believe that if thereis anything likely to do me good, Satan is sure to prevent my hearing it if possible, and therefore I listen with all my heartin the hope that I may hear to my soul's profit." You will not listen long in vain, if you listen so.

In the pools of the Gospel, men mostly catch what they fish for, and if you come to hear the Word desiring salvation, youwill, I trust, soon obtain it. If you resort to the place of worship merely to pass the time away, or to hear a popular preacher,you cannot expect a blessing from God. But if you come here breathing the prayer, "Lord, meet with me. Jesus, save me today,"I do not doubt that whoever the preacher may be, God will visit you through him and hear your prayer.

In the third place, although we are now speaking of Christ's effectual power, yet the man's will was consulted. Peter andJohn said to him, "The Master says, Where is the guest chamber?" They did not push themselves into the guest chamber and sayto the owner, "We take possession of this parlor in the Master's name whether you like it or not. We have come here, and wemean to stop here. Our Master sent us, and we shall not go away." Nothing of the kind! The man's chamber was his own, andthe Lord Jesus Christ respects the man's household rights by calling him "the good man of the house"-the master, the proprietor,the landlord of it.

So it is in conversion. Men are brought to God by the effectual power of Divine Grace, but Grace never violates, though itsubdues, the human will. They make a great mistake who think that God treats men as if they were logs-God knows they are notlogs, and never treats them so. He has made them in His own image, to be free, intelligent agents and He acts upon them asfree agents. It is difficult for some men to understand how Grace can be effectual and almighty, and yet man can still bea free agent. Now, if persons cannot see this, we are not bound to give them understandings, but the two things are consistentenough-prejudice creates the difficulty-and there is none, really.

A man may be free enough, and yet he may be so overwhelmingly persuaded to a certain course that he cannot do otherwise. Suchmoral power does not at all interfere with true liberty. If we taught that men were saved against their wills, and that physicalforce was put upon them to make them Christians, we should deserve to be denounced as talking nonsense, or worse! But thepower which we speak of is moral, spiritual, persuasive, and operates in strict accordance with the usual laws of mind. TheGrace of God does no violence to the will, but sweetly overcomes its obstinacy, making

it a willing captive. The force that we speak of at any time when we speak of the power of Divine Grace, must be understoodby you all to be a force in consistency with the original constitution of manhood. And evermore, although our Lord works uponmen according to His own will, yet He always so works upon them as thinking, judging, willing men, and not as substances whichare to be hammered, broken, or twisted by brute force.

My Hearers, you must not expect that you will be lugged into Heaven by the ears, or whirled into salvation by the hair ofyour heads! If you are ever saved, the heart must be changed, and your whole being must freely consent to the rule of Grace.If you are ever born again, you will be made willing in the day of God's power. His Grace will come to you to remove yourprejudices, to overcome your obstinacy, and to make you willingly obedient to the Divine sway. How anxiously I wish that youhad such a will this morning! May the Lord bow your will by the Divine power of His love, and may you say today, "Lord, Iwill to be saved. I am willing to renounce sin and lay hold on eternal life." You shall never find God's will behind yours.Where He gives a willing mind, think it to be the indication of His own merciful willingness. When Grace has brought you tobe willing to accept Christ, then be not afraid, but believe at once!

But now, in the next place, although his will was consulted, yet, through a mysterious power exerted by our Lord, the householderraised no question but at once cheerfully and joyfully opened his guest chamber. He was not compelled to give up his upperroom, but yet he did it as surely as if force had been used. We do not observe the slightest hesitation. He acted as if hehad said, "Come in, and welcome. I owe too much to your Master to refuse." Perhaps this man had seen his child raised to life.Perhaps he had been a leper, and been healed. Perhaps he had been lame and been restored. At any rate, he was a friend ofChrist.

Who he was, and what he was, we do not know, but he joyfully accepted the honor which the Redeemer proposed to confer uponhim. By this shall we know, today, who are the Lord's chosen and who are not. For when the Gospel comes to some, they fightagainst it and will not have it. But where men receive it, welcoming it, and blessing God that it has come to them, this isa sure indication that there is a secret work going on in the soul and that God has chosen them unto eternal life. Are youwilling, dear Hearer, to receive Christ? Are you this day content to take Him and hold Him to be your All in All? Then thereis no difficulty in the way-you may have Him-His own power is working with you, making you willing, and the invitation is,"Whoever will, let him take of the water of life freely."

As for this man, I may say in conclusion that he had the unspeakable honor of entertaining Christ in his upper room at thelast supper at which our Savior sat before His death! And, O Brethren, if you and I receive Christ into our hearts, what anhonor to entertain the Son of God this side the stars! The Heaven of heavens cannot contain Him! All the glories of Paradiseare too little for the splendor of His Person and the dignity of His merits, and yet He condescends to find a house withinour narrow hearts!

We are not worthy that He should come under our roof, but what an unutterable privilege when He condescends to enter, forthen He makes a feast and causes our souls to feast with Him upon such royal dainties as Solomon, in all his glory, couldnot spread! We sit at a banquet where the viands are immortal, and give immortality to those who feed on them. If you haveever feasted with the Well-Beloved, I am sure you will wish the festival would never break up. You will long for the timewhen you may eat the bread of Heaven in Heaven, and drink the wine of the kingdom new in Glory and go no more out, but abidewith the Father world without end. Happy, thrice happy is the man who entertains the angels' Lord.

Thus have I outlined the story of effectual Grace. Christ's Grace comes to us while we are yet dead in sin-we are called byit. Instrumentality is used, yet the secret power of God does it all, and as a result of it, we, by entertaining the Savior,are greatly honored and eminently blessed. Now, is there not here, for Believers, a theme for earnest praise? Brethren, ifChrist has entered into your hearts and mine, and that entrance was effected wholly through His Grace, let us magnify Himexceedingly!-

" 'Twas the same love that spread the feast

That sweetly forced us in,

Else we had still refused to taste,

And perished in our sin."

Let us extol the amazing love which has worked in us so mightily to redeem us from our natural hardness of heart! Let thoserefuse to sing who have never known their obligations to Sovereign Grace! But those of us who feel our debt must praise thelavish hand which has dealt so bountifully with us!

And ought not this, moreover, to encourage every worker for God? Brethren, if the Master can thus find a banqueting housewhen He seems to be altogether destitute, and find it with but a word, let us never despair of the salvation of any man! Letus go forth to our labor for souls believing that the Lord will still find Himself a lodging within men's hearts! What ifnine out of 10 of the unconverted here should say, "We will not admit the Savior," yet there is a remnant according to theelection of Grace who will welcome Him! We may be content to be rebuffed with a 100 negatives if but one soul is obedientto our message!

If we had to preach to thousands year after year, and never rescued but one soul, that one soul would be a full reward forall our labor, for a soul is of countless price! Let us be of good courage, the Master may give us all our hearers as ourhire if He wills to do so! He can subdue the most hard heart with a word, and make our ministry, which has been barren upto this moment, suddenly become fruitful to His glory! God grant that many this day may learn what effectual Grace is, andChrist shall have all the praise.

II. During the second part of our discourse we shall regard the question of the text as the AFFECTIONATE ENQUIRY OF THE LORD'SSERVANTS. We have not, this morning, any verbal direction as to any special person in this house. I am not told to speak especiallyto that young man, or to yonder young woman. I am not directed to address the appeals of the Gospel to those who may be sittingin this area, or to those in the galleries. I am not at all directed, as were Peter and John-still the directions to the Gospel-preacherare very sufficient and plain.

Here they are, "Go you into all the world, and preach the Gospel to every creature." I am not called to preach to the electalone-I do not know them. I know that my message will be of no service to any but the chosen, but, in order that it may cometo these, it is our work to address it to all. We cast the net into the sea and the Lord sends us what fish He wills. To oneand all, therefore, of you who have not known Christ, I have this question to ask-"The Master says, Where is the guest chamber?"

I will explain the question first. Christ Jesus would have entertainment in the human heart. He says, "Where is the heartin which I may dwell? Where is the soul that is ready, this morning, to open its gates that I may enter in and dwell there?"Now, observe that I am not asking you the question, "Where is Christ?" for your answer would be a very distressing one-youhave not found Him! There are, I hope, many scores and hundreds here who have admitted Him into the inner chamber of theirspirits, and are now enjoying fellowship with Him. But to you unconverted ones I put no question as to that matter, for youare strangers to communion with Jesus.

Nor am I asking, "Where is there a feast for the Master? Where will He find a festival of virtue and good works?" No, but,"Where is there room for Him?" He will bring the feast-the chamber is all He asks. Christ asks nothing good from you-he onlyasks the empty room in which He may spread the good things which He will bring with Himself. The Master asks you not to preparethe feast, for you are penniless in your natural estate. You have absolutely nothing upon which He can feed, for you havenot even food for your own soul! And you have spent your money for that which is not bread, and your labor for that whichsatisfies not. He asks an empty chamber-this is all. Room for the Savior! Room for the Savior! Room for the Savior to enterand dwell!

It is not your virtues, your excellencies, nor anything good of you that He asks for, but simply the empty room in which youare willing to entertain Him. The question is, simply and alone, "Where is the guest chamber?" Not, Where is the guest chamberthat is sumptuously decorated and made fit for the great King? Not, Where is the chamber that is glittering with gilded panelsand pavements of mosaic? Jesus seeks no lofty chamber in which to lodge! No, if there is one of you that has a heart loftyand proud, Christ will not come to you-for all the splendor of your pretended goodness are faded and stained in His sight.He dwells not with the proud, nor with the great.

But if you have a broken heart and a contrite spirit, "to this man will I look, and with this man will I dwell, says the Lord."Are you guilty? Well, that need not keep the sin-atoning Priest away. Is the guest chamber of your heart all soiled and foul?Is it full of evils? Jesus Christ does not enquire concerning that! He only asks you if you are willing that He should comein and dwell there, and if you say, "Yes," it will be His business to cleanse the chamber and fit it for Himself. Only, "Whereis a guest chamber?" Is there a heart here, this morning, that is open to Jesus? Is there a man or woman who has room forthe Lord of Glory?

Still further explaining the question, let me remark that some offer Christ a room which He cannot accept as a guest chamber.Yes, they will receive Christ into their heads, they have no objection to believe the Truths taught in the Bible

concerning Him with a notional faith. My Lord will not eat the Passover there. No, you may be very orthodox, indeed, and exceedinglysound in doctrine, but when Jesus comes into the house He will have the best parlor, namely, the heart. Not here in the coldattic of the brain, but there in the warm parlor of the heart-there must Jesus dwell! Are you willing this day to have Christto be your Lord and Savior?

Soul! Soul, are you willing to trust Christ with your eternal interests? Are you willing, now, to hang upon Him as the vesselhangs upon the nail, having no other dependence? Are you willing to become His servant, to do what He bids you? Are you willingto be His friend, to find your best solace in fellowship with Him? Are you willing now, all guilty and defiled as you are,to accept His righteousness as your righteousness, and His blood as your cleansing? Does your mind bring out the keys of theheart's castle and offer them to the King, and do you say, "Come in, my Lord, come in! I have too long stood out against Youand resisted all the invitations of Your Grace, but now lift up your heads, O you gates, and be you lift up, you doors ofmy spirit, that the King of Glory may come in"?

That is all I ask of you. No merits am I sent to seek after! Nothing good am I bid to seek in you! Only if you are willingand obedient, you shall eat the good of this land. If you are willing to trust Him, then I have found out the man with whomChrist is predestinated to dwell! God has given the will-He will surely work the way. He has made you cheerfully to be Hishost-He is equally willing to be your guest. Where is the guest chamber? I cannot very well come round to all of you and takeyou by the hand and say, "Is there a guest chamber, my Friend, in your heart?"-it might take too long a time to pass frompew to pew to put to you the question, but I do desire to put it (and to press it very earnestly) to each one, "The Mastersays, Where is the guest chamber?"

Did you notice, when I read the passage in Luke just now, that it ran a little differently from what it does in Mark?-"TheMaster says unto you, Where is the guest chamber?" I trust He says that to some of you in the singular, and with singularpower. The Master says to you, this morning, this day of Grace, this hour of love which you have been spared to see, thoughyou might well have been cut down in your sins-the Master says unto you, "Mary, John, Where is the guest chamber?" Take myadvice and give a speedy affirmative answer to that question, and may this be the day when Jesus shall enter in triumph intoyour soul!

I will tell you in a minute or two why it is that I feel earnest to press this question, "The Master says, Where is the guestchamber?" I press it, first, for His sake-yes, all His true servants long to get Him entertainment in human hearts. SometimesI have thought upon my own ministry, and I have said, "Yes, during the time in which I have been pastor of the Church, wehave carried out many great works. We have built a vast house for prayer, erected houses for alms-women, orphanages for theyoung and carried on the college. But what would all this be if these were the only results of gathering this people together,and preaching to them from Sunday to Sunday? The only success that is worth having is the winning of souls! If we do not seesouls brought to Christ to bow at His feet, and own Him as King, we go back to our closet, crying, "Who has believed our report,and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed?"

Christ must be crowned in men's hearts or we pine with grief! We cannot be satisfied to see Him stand in the street, His headwet with dew, and His locks with the drops of the night-we must have the Son of God entertained, for oh, it grieves us evenunto brokenness of heart-it troubles us exceedingly that He should be used so ill who loved us so well! That He should berejected who gave up Heaven and all its glories that He might redeem us from going down to Hell! By the wounds of Christ,and by the bloody sweat that covered Him when He redeemed us from our sins, we do beseech you listen to this voice, "Whereis the guest chamber?" and reply, "Lord, that guest chamber is in my soul today."

We press this upon you also for our own sake. We are afraid lest we shall be found unprofitable servants. If you can be wonto Christ, so much the more joy and rejoicing to us, for what is our crown of rejoicing? Is it not you, in the day of ourLord Jesus Christ? But most of all, we press this upon you for your own soul's sake. O Beloved, if you do but entertain Christ,you will have entertained Heaven! You will be no losers by loving Christ, but unspeakable gainers! Trust in Jesus and yoursins are forgiven you, a bright future is secured and the vile past is blotted out! Get Christ, and if you are ever so poor,or ever so full of pain, yet are you to be envied!

But oh, if you live and die without Christ, we scarcely dare to picture the scene around your dying bed- imagination refusesto lift the curtain and to view your soul in a disembodied state driven forever from hope! We recollect that dreadful text,"These shall go away into everlasting punishment." We cannot bear it that you should know the eternity of God's wrath! Thatyou should have to feel the perpetual flame of the Divine anger! Oh, for your own sake, if

you have any true self-love and would be delivered from eternal misery, open wide your heart that Jesus Christ may enter

in!

Do you still ask, "But what do you mean by 'Where is the guest chamber?' " I will answer it yet again. Jesus Christ deservesfrom you a simple, personal, immediate, undivided faith in Himself. Wherever Christ comes, He comes to be trusted-you musttrust Him wholly-rejecting all confidences of your own. Trust Him at this moment and do not postpone or put off faith to amore convenient season. If Jesus Christ is to be the Guest in the guest chamber of your heart, you must now give yourselfup wholly to Him, for-

"Know, nor of the terms complain, To reign, and with no partial sway- Where Jesus comes, He comes to reign, Lusts must beslain that disobey."

If you trust Christ, you must then obey Christ. In the power of the Spirit sin will have to be cast out, for Christ will noteat the Passover with sin reigning in the chamber. All the lusts of the flesh must be renounced. He will make you to renouncethem, for Christ will not feast with you while you enjoy the dainties of sin. Christ will have no fellowship with Belial.He will not sit at the same table as the devil. Are you willing now? It is all I ask. Has His Spirit made you willing by Hispower to give up favorite sins, to renounce secret lusts, to be molded and fashioned by the Divine hand, and made to be vesselsfit for Divine use? Are you willing to have Christ for your Master and your Savior?

Where, where is the guest chamber? My Master, You know! Would God some voice would say, "Here it is." For, remember (and thenI have done), if you entertain not Christ now, the day will come when you will wish you had, but wish in vain! In the dayyou shall see Him upon His Throne and He shall say to you, "You rejected Me, and now I reject you. You heard the Gospel-youwere invited, you were pleaded with-but you had no ear to all My invitations." In that day, when He has no ear for you, butwhen He deals out the thunderbolts of His just anger, you will wish that you had hearkened to Him!

Oh, I would to God I could make men look upon their Sabbaths and the sermons they hear as they will look upon them anotherday. How many there are today wringing their hands in torment, and crying, "O that we could hear the Gospel again! O for anotherinvitation to come to Christ! But it is past now. The hour of mercy is struck, and we have come into the eternity of vengeancewhere there are no acts of pardon passed, and no hopes held out for souls to escape from their everlasting misery!" O be wise,now! "Today, if you will hear His voice, harden not your hearts." Today, while yet His Spirit pleads with men, make your soulsguest chambers for Him, and, if you admit Him now, you will now rejoice exceedingly in that day when He comes in His glory!

It will be no mean joy to the Believer to say, when He sees His Lord in the clouds of Heaven, "By His effectual Grace I haveknown Him before. I received Him into my heart when men spoke evil of Him-when He was rejected, I accepted him. When He walkedthrough the streets, and they were miry, and He was clothed in rags, I took Him in. He was hungry and I fed Him. He was sickand in prison, and I visited Him, and ministered to Him."

Oh, it will be a joy unspeakable for the soul to hear Him say, "Inasmuch as you did it unto one of the least of these My Brethren,you did it unto Me. You have been with Me in My temptations, you shall be with Me in My glory. You shared My tribulationsand humiliations, and now you shall partake in all My triumphs. You shall sit on My right hand forever and ever." Be thisthe portion of every person within these walls, and may God be glorified in each one of us, not in His justice, but in Hismercy, for Jesus' sake. Amen.