A Sermon Delivered on Sunday Evening, February 17th, 1861 by the
Rev. C. H. SPURGEON
At New Park Street, Southwark.
"He that believeth on him is not condemned" John 3:18
In the morning sermon our time was mainly taken up with the
description of Faithwhat it is. We had only a few minutes left at its close to
describe what it leads tothe privilege of justification, which is a gift to the soul
as the result of Faith. Let this high privilege, then, occupy our attention to-night. The
text says, "He that believeth on him[that is on Christ Jesus]is not
condemned."
To take up the subject in order, we shall notice first, the satisfactory declaration
here made; then, secondly, we shall endeavour to correct certain misapprehensions
respecting it, by reason of which the Christian is often cast down; and we shall close
with some reflections, positive and negative, as to what this text includes, and what
it excludes.
I. First of all, then, WHAT A SATISFACTORY DECLARATION!"He that believeth on
him is not condemned."
You are aware that in our courts of law, a verdict of "not guilty,"
amounts to an acquittal, and the prisoner is immediately discharged. So is it in the
language of the gospel; a sentence of "not condemned," implies the
justification of the sinner. It means that the believer in Christ receives now a present
justification. Faith does not produce its fruits by-and-by, but now. So far as
justification is the result of faith, it is given to the soul in the moment when it closes
with Christ, and accepts him as its all in all. Are they who stand before the throne of
God justified to-night?so are we, as truly and as clearly justified as they who walk
in white and sing his praises above. The thief upon the cross was justified the moment
that he turned the eye of faith to Jesus, who was just then, hanging by his side: and
Paul, the aged, after years of service, was not more justified than was the thief with no
service at all. We are to-day accepted in the Beloved, to-day absolved from
sin, to-day innocent in the sight of God. Oh, ravishing, soul-transporting thought!
There are some clusters of this vine which we shall not be able to gather till we go to
heaven; but this is one of the first ripe clusters and may be plucked and eaten here. This
is not as the corn of the land, which we can never eat till we cross the Jordan; but this
is part of the manna in the wilderness, and part too of our daily raiment, with which God
supplies us in our journeying to and fro. We are noweven now pardoned;
even now are our sins put away; even now we stand in the sight of God as
though we had never been guilty; innocent as father Adam when he stood in integrity, ere
he had eaten of the fruit of the forbidden tree; pure as though we had never received the
taint of depravity in our veins. "There is, therefore, now no condemnation to
them which are in Christ Jesus." There is not a sin in the Book of God, even now,
against one of his people. There is nothing laid to their charge. There is neither speck,
nor spot, nor wrinkle, nor any such thing remaining upon any one believer in the matter of
justification in the sight of the Judge of all the earth.
But to pass on, the text evidently means not simply present, but continual
justification. In the moment when you and I believed, it was said of us, "He is not
condemned." Many days have passed since then, many changes we have seen; but it is as
true of us to-night, "He is not condemned." The Lord alone knows how long our
appointed day shall behow long ere we shall fulfill the hireling's time, and like a
shadow flee away. But this we know, since every word of God is assured, and the gifts of
God are without repentance, though we should live another fifty years, yet would it still
be written here, "He that believeth on him is not condemned." Nay, if by some
mysterious dealing in providence our lives should be lengthened out to ten times the usual
limit of man, and we should come to the eight or nine hundred years of Methuselah, still
would it stand the same"He that believeth on him is not condemned."
"I give unto my sheep eternal life, and they shall never perish, neither shall any
pluck them out of my hand." "The just shall live by faith." "He that
believeth on him shall never be confounded." All these promises go to show that the
justification which Christ gives to our faith is a continual one, which will last as long
as we shall live. And, remember, it will last in eternity as well as in time. We shall not
in heaven wear any other dress but that which we wear here. To-day the righteous stand
clothed in the righteousness of Christ. They shall wear this same wedding dress at the
great wedding feast. But what if it should wear out? What if that righteousness should
lose its virtue in the eternity to come? Oh beloved! we entertain no fear about that.
Heaven and earth shall pass away, but this righteousness shall never wax old. No moth
shall fret it; no thief shall steal it; no weeping hand of lamentation shall rend it in
twain. It is, it must be eternal, even as Christ himself, Jehovah our righteousness.
Because he is our righteousness, the self-existent, the everlasting, the immutable
Jehovah, of whose years there is no end, and whose strength faileth not, therefore of our
righteousness there is no end; and of its perfection, and of its beauty there shall never
be any termination. The text, I think, very clearly teaches us, that he who believeth on
Christ has received for ever a continual justification.
Again, think for a moment; the justification which is spoken of here is complete.
"He that believeth on him is not condemned,"that is to say, not in any
measure or in any degree. I know some think it is possible for us to be in such a state as
to be half-condemned and half-accepted. So far as we are sinners so far condemned; and so
far as we are righteous so far accepted. Oh beloved, there is nothing like that in
Scripture. It is altogether apart from the doctrine of the gospel. If it be of works, it
is no more of grace; and if it be of grace, it is no more of works. Works and grace cannot
mix and mingle any more than fire and water; it is either one or the other, it cannot be
both; the two can never be allied. There can be no admixture of the two, no dilution of
one with the other. He that believeth is free from all iniquity, from all guilt, from all
blame; and though the devil bring an accusation, yet it is a false one, for we are free
even from accusation, since it is boldly challenged, "Who shall lay anything to the
charge of God's elect?" It does not say, "Who shall prove it?" but
"Who shall lay it to their charge?" They are so completely freed from
condemnation, that not the shadow of a spot upon their soul is found; not even the
slightest passing by of iniquity to cast its black shadow on them. They stand before God
not only as half-innocent, but as perfectly so; not only as half-washed, but as whiter
than snow. Their sins are not simply erased, they are blotted out; not simply put out of
sight, but cast into the depths of the sea; not merely gone, and gone as far as the east
is from the west, but gone for ever, once for all. You know, beloved, that the Jew in his
ceremonial purification, never had his conscience free from sin. After one sacrifice he
needed still another, for these offerings could never make the comers thereunto perfect.
The next day's sins needed a new lamb, and the next year's iniquity needed a new victim
for an atonement. "But this man, after he had offered one sacrifice for sins for
ever, sat down at the right hand of God." No more burnt-offerings are needed, no more
washing, no more blood, no more atonement, no more sacrifice. "It is finished!"
hear the dying Saviour cry. Your sins have sustained their death-blow, the robe of your
righteousness has received its last thread; it is done, complete, perfect. It needs no
addition; it can never suffer any diminution. Oh, Christian, do lay hold of this precious
thought; I may not be able to state it except in weak terms, but let not my weakness
prevent your apprehending its glory and its preciousness. It is enough to make a man leap,
though his legs were loaded with irons, and to make him sing though his mouth were gagged,
to think that we are perfectly accepted in Christ, that our justification is not partial,
it does not go to a limited extent, but goes the whole way. Our unrighteousness is
covered; from condemnation we are entirely and irrevocably free.
Once more. The non-condemnation is effectual. The royal privilege of justification
shall never miscarry. It shall be brought home to every believer. In the reign of King
George the Third, the son of a member of this church lay under sentence of death for
forgery. My predecessor, Dr. Rippon, after incredible exertions, obtained a promise that
his sentence should be remitted. By a singular occurrence the present senior
deaconthen a young manlearned from the governor of the gaol that the reprieve
had not been received; and the unhappy prisoner would have been executed the next morning,
had not Dr. Rippon gone post-haste to Windsor, obtained an interview with the king in his
bed-chamber, and received from the monarch's own hand a copy of that reprieve which had
been negligently put aside by a thoughtless officer. "I charge you, Doctor,"
said his majesty, "to make good speed." "Trust me, Sire, for that,"
responded your old pastor, and he returned to London in time, just in time, and only just
in time, for the prisoner was being marched with many others on to the scaffold. Ay, that
pardon might have been given, and yet the man might have been executed if it had not been
effectually carried out. But blessed be God our non-condemnation is an effectual thing. It
is not a matter of letter, it is a matter of fact. Ah, poor souls, you know that
condemnation is a matter of fact. When you and I suffered in our souls, and were brought
under the heavy hand of the law, we felt that its curses were no mock thunders like the
wrath of the Vatican, but they were real; we felt that the anger of God was indeed a thing
to tremble at; a real substantial fact. Now, just as real as the condemnation which
Justice brings, just so real is the justification which mercy bestows. You are not only
nominally guiltless, but you are really so, if you believe in Christ; you are not only
nominally put into the place of the innocent, but you are really put there the moment you
believe in Jesus. Not only is it said that your sins are gone, but they are gone. Not only
does God look on you as though you were accepted; you are accepted. It is a matter of fact
to you, as much a matter of fact as that you sinned. You do not doubt that you have
sinned, you cannot doubt that; do not doubt then that when you believe your sins are put
away. For as certain as ever the black spot fell on you when you sinned, so certainly and
so surely was it all washed out when you were bathed in that fountain filled with blood,
which was drawn from Emmanuel's veins.
Come, my soul, think thou of this. Thou art actually and effectually cleared from guilt.
Thou art led out of thy prison. Thou art no more in fetters as a bond-slave. Thou art
delivered now from the bondage of the Law. Thou art freed from sin and thou canst walk at
large as a freeman. Thy Saviour's blood has procured thy full discharge. Come, my
soul,thou hast a right now to come to thy Father's feet. No flames of vengeance are
there to scare thee now; no fiery sword; justice cannot smite the innocent. Come, my soul,
thy disabilities are taken away. Thou wast unable once to see thy Father's face; thou
canst see it now. Thou couldst not speak with him, nor he with thee; but now thou hast
access with boldness to this grace wherein we stand. Once there was a fear of hell upon
thee; there is no hell for thee now. How can there be punishment for the guiltless? He
that believeth is guiltless, is not condemned, and cannot be punished. No frowns of an
avenging God now. If God be viewed as a judge, how should he frown upon the guiltless? How
should the Judge frown upon the absolved one? More than all the privileges thou mightest
have enjoyed if thou hadst never sinned, are thine now that thou art justified. All the
blessings which thou couldst have had if thou hadst kept the law and more, are thine
to-night because Christ has kept it for thee. All the love and the acceptance which a
perfectly obedient being could have obtained of God, belong to thee, because Christ was
perfectly obedient on thy behalf, and hath imputed all his merits to thy account that thou
mightest be exceeding rich, through him who for thy sake became exceeding poor.
Oh that the Holy Spirit would but enlarge our hearts, that we might suck sweetness out of
these thoughts! There is no condemnation. Moreover, there never shall be any condemnation.
The forgiveness is not partial, but perfect; it is so effectual that it delivers us from
all the penalties of the Law, gives to us all the privileges of obedience, and puts us
actually high above where we should have been had we never sinned. It fixes our standing
more secure than it was before we fell. We are not now where Adam was, for Adam might fall
and perish. We are rather, where Adam would have been if we could suppose God had put him
into the garden for seven years, and said, "If you are obedient for seven years, your
time of probation shall be over, and I will reward you." The children of God in one
sense may be said to be in a state of probation; in another sense there is no probation.
There is no probation as to whether the child of God should be saved. He is saved already;
his sins are washed away; his righteousness is complete: and if that righteousness could
endure a million years' probation, it would never be defiled. In fact, it always stands
the same in the sight of God, and must do so for ever and ever.
II. Let me now endeavour to CORRECT SOME MISAPPREHENSIONS, BY REASON OF WHICH CHRISTIANS
ARE OFTEN CAST DOWN.
What simpletons we are! Whatever our natural age, how childish we are in spiritual things!
What great simpletons we are when we first believe in Christ! We think that our being
pardoned involves a great many things which we afterwards find have nothing whatever to do
with our pardon. For instance, we think we shall never sin again; we fancy that the battle
is all fought; that we have got into a fair field, with no more war to wage; that in fact
we have got the victory, and have only just to stand up and wave the palm branch; that all
is over, that God has only got to call us up to himself and we shall enter into heaven
without having to fight any enemies upon earth. Now, all these are obvious mistakes.
Though the text has a great meaning, it does not mean anything of this kind. Observe that
although it does assert "He that believeth is not condemned"; yet it does not
say that he that believeth shall not have his faith exercised. Your faith will be
exercised. An untried faith will be no faith at all. God never gave men faith without
intending to try it. Faith is received for the very purpose of endurance. Just as our
Rifle Corps friends put up the target with the intention of shooting at it; so does God
give faith with the intention of letting trials and troubles, and sin and Satan aim all
their darts at it. When thou hast faith in Christ it is a great privilege; but recollect
that it involves a great trial. You asked for great faith the other night; did you
consider that you asked for great troubles too? You cannot have great faith to lay up and
rust. Mr. Greatheart in John Bunyan's Pilgrim was a very strong man, but then what strong
work he had to do. He had to go with all those women and children many scores of times up
to the celestial city and back again; he had to fight all the giants, and drive back all
the lions; to slay the giant Slaygood, and knock down the Castle of Despair. If you have a
great measure of faith, you will have need to use it all. You will never have a single
scrap to spare, you will be like the virgins in our Lord's parable, even though you be a
wise virgin, you will have to say to others who might borrow of you, "Not so, lest
there be not enough for us and for you." But when your faith is exercised with
trials, do not think you are brought into judgment for your sins. Oh no, believer, there
is plenty of exercise, but that is not condemnation; there are many trials, but still we
are justified; we may often be buffeted, but we are never accursed; we may ofttimes be
cast down, but the sword of the Lord never can and never will smite us to the heart. Yea,
more; not only may our faith be exercised, but our faith may come to a very low ebb, and
still we may not be condemned. When thy faith gets so small that thou canst not see it,
even then still thou art not condemned. If thou hast ever believed in Jesus, thy faith may
be like the sea when it goes out a very long way from the shore, and leaves a vast track
of mud, and some might say the sea was gone or dried up. But you are not condemned when
your faith is most dried up. Ay! and I dare to say it,when your faith is at the
flood-tide, you are not more accepted then, than when your faith is at the lowest ebb; for
your acceptance does not depend upon the quantity of your faith, it only depends upon its
reality. If you are really resting in Christ, though your faith may be but as a spark, and
a thousand devils may try to quench that one spark, yet you are not condemnedyou
shall stand accepted in Christ. Though your comforts will necessarily decay as your faith
declines, yet your acceptance does not decay. Though faith does rise and fall like the
thermometer, though faith is like the mercury in the bulb, all weathers change
it,yet God's love is not affected by the weather of earth, or the changes of time.
Until the perfect righteousness of Christ can be a mutable thinga football to be
kicked about by the feet of fiendsyour acceptance with God can never change. You
are, you must be, perfectly accepted in the Beloved.
There is another thing which often tries the child of God. He at times loses the light of
his Father's countenance. Now, remember, the text does not say, "He that believeth
shall not lose the light of God's countenance"; he may do so, but he shall not be
condemned for all that. You may walk, not only for days but for months in such a state
that you have little fellowship with Christ, very little communion with God of a joyous
sort. The promises may seem broken to you, the Bible may afford you but little comfort;
and when you turn your eye to heaven you may only have to feel the more the smarting that
is caused by your Father's rod; you may have vexed and grieved his Spirit, and he may have
turned away his face from you. But you are not condemned for all that. Mark the testimony,
"He that believeth is not condemned." Even when your Father smites you and
leaves a wale at every stroke, and brings the blood at every blow, there is not a particle
of condemnation in any one stroke. Not in his anger, but in his dear covenant love he
smites you. There is as unmixed and unalloyed affection in every love-stroke of
chastisement from your Father's hand as there is in the kisses of Jesus Christ's lips. Oh!
believe this; it will tend to lift up thy heart, it will cheer thee when neither sun nor
moon appear. It will honour thy God, it will show thee where thy acceptance really lies.
When his face is turned away, believe him still, and say, "He abideth faithful though
he hide his face from me." I will go a little further still. The child of God may be
so assaulted by Satan, that he may be well nigh given up to despair, and yet he is not
condemned. The devils may beat the great hell-drum in his ear, till he thinks himself to
be on the very brink of perdition. He may read the Bible, and think that every threatening
is against him, and that every promise shuts its mouth and will not cheer him; and he may
at last despond, and despond, and despond, till he is ready to break the harp that has so
long been hanging on the willow. He may say, "The Lord hath forsaken me quite, my God
will be gracious no more"; but it is not true. Yea, he may be ready to swear a
thousand times that God's mercy is clean gone for ever, and that his faithfulness will
fail for evermore; but it is not true, it is not true. A thousand liars swearing to a
falsehood could not make it true, and our doubts and fears are all of them liars. And if
there were ten thousand of them, and they all professed the same, it is a falsehood that
God ever did forsake his people, or that he ever cast from him an innocent man; and you
are innocent, remember, when you believe in Jesus. "But," say you, "I am
full of sin." "Ay," say I, "but that sin has been laid on
Christ." "Oh," say you, "but I sin daily." "Ay," say I,
"but that sin was laid on him before you committed it, years ago. It is not yours;
Christ has taken it away once for all. You are a righteous man by faith, and God will not
forsake the righteous, nor will he cast away the innocent." I say, then, the child of
God may have his faith at a low ebb; he may lose the light of his Father's countenance,
and he may even get into thorough despair; but yet all these cannot disprove my
text"He that believeth is not condemned."
"But what," say you, "if the child of God should sin?" It is a deep
and tender subject, yet must we touch it and be bold here. I would not mince God's truth
lest any should make a bad use of it. I know there are some, not the people of God, who
will say, "Let us sin, that grace may abound." Their condemnation is just. I
cannot help the perversion of truth. There be always men who will take the best of food as
though it were poison, and make the best of truth into a lie, and so be damning their own
souls. You ask, "What if a child of God should fall into sin?" I answer, the
child of God does fall into sin; every day he mourns and groans because when he would do
good, evil is present with him. But though he falls into sins, he is not condemned for all
thatnot by one of them, or by all of them put together, because his acceptance does
not depend upon himself, but upon the perfect righteousness of Christ; and that perfect
righteousness is not invalidated by any sins of his. He is perfect in Christ; and until
Christ is imperfect, the imperfections of the creature do not mar the justification of the
believer in the sight of God. But oh! if he fall into some glaring sin,O God, keep
us from it!if he fall into some glaring sin, he shall go with broken bones, but he
shall reach heaven for all that. Though, in order to try him and let him see his vileness,
he be suffered to go far astray, yet he that bought him will not lose him; he that chose
him will not cast him away; he will say unto him, "I, even I, am he that blotteth out
thy transgressions for mine own sake, and will not remember thy sins." David may go
never so far away, but David is not lost. He comes back and he cries, "Have mercy
upon me, O God!" And so shall it be with every believing soulChrist shall bring
him back. Though he slip, he shall be kept, and all the chosen seed shall meet around the
throne. If it were not for this last truththough some may stick at itwhat
would become of some of God's people? They would be given up to despair. If I have been
speaking to a backslider, I pray he will not make a bad use of what I have said. Let me
say to him, "Poor backslider! thy Father's bowels yearn over thee; he has not erased
thy name out of the registry. Come back, come back now to him and say, 'Receive me
graciously, and love me freely'; and he will say, 'I will put you among the children.' He
will pass by your backsliding and will heal your iniquities; and you shall yet stand once
more in his favour, and know yourself to be still accepted in the Redeemer's righteousness
and saved by his blood." This text does not mean that the child of God shall not be
tried, or that he shall not even sometimes fall under the trial; but it does mean this,
once for all: He that believeth on Christ is not condemned. At no time, by no means, is he
under the sentence of condemnation, but is evermore justified in the sight of God.
III. Now dear brethren, but little time remains for the closing points, therefore, in a
hurried manner, let me notice WHAT THIS TEXT EVIDENTLY INCLUDES; and may God grant that
these few words may nevertheless do good to our souls!
"He that believeth on him is not condemned." If we are not condemned, then at no
time does God ever look upon his children, when they believe in Christ, as being guilty.
Are you surprised that I should put it so? I put it so again; from the moment when you
believe in Christ, God ceases to look upon you as being guilty; for he never looks upon
you apart from Christ. You often look upon yourself as guilty, and you fall upon your
knees as you should do, and you weep and lament; but even then, while you are weeping over
inbred and actual sin, he is still saying out of heaven, "So far as your
justification is concerned, thou art all fair and lovely." You are black as the tents
of Kedarthat is yourself by nature; you are fair as the curtains of
Solomonthat is yourself in Christ. You are blackthat is yourself in Adam; but
comely, that is yourself in the second Adam. Oh, think of that!that you are always
in God's sight comely, always in God's sight lovely, always in God's sight as though you
were perfect. For ye are complete in Christ Jesus, and perfect in Christ Jesus, as the
apostle puts it in another place. Always do you stand completely washed and fully clothed
in Christ. Remember this; for it is certainly included in my text.
Another great thought included in my text is this; you are never liable as a believer to
punishment for your sins. You will be chastised on account of them, as a father chastises
his child; that is a part of the Gospel dispensation; but you will not be smitten for your
sins as the lawgiver smites the criminal. Your Father may often punish you as he punisheth
the wicked. But, never for the same reason. The ungodly stand on the ground of their own
demerits; their sufferings are awarded as their due deserts. But your sorrows do not come
to you as a matter of desert; they come to you as a matter of love. God knows that in one
sense your sorrows are such a privilege that you may account of them as a boon you do not
deserve. I have often thought of that when I have had a sore trouble. I know some people
say, "You deserved the trouble." Yes, my dear brethren, but there is not enough
merit in all the Christians put together, to deserve such a good thing as the loving
rebuke of our heavenly Father. Perhaps you cannot see that; you cannot think that a
trouble can come to you as a real blessing in the covenant. But I know that the rod of the
covenant is as much the gift of grace as the blood of the covenant. It is not a matter of
desert or merit; it is given to us because we need it. But I question whether we were ever
so good as to deserve it. We were never able to get up to so high a standard as to deserve
so rich, so gracious a providence as this covenant blessingthe rod of our chastening
God. Never at any time in your life has a law-stroke fallen upon you. Since you believed
in Christ you are out of the law's jurisdiction. The law of England cannot touch a
Frenchman while he lives under the protection of his own Emperor. You are not under the
law, but you are under grace. The law of Sinai cannot touch you, for you are out of its
jurisdiction. You are not in Sinai or in Arabia. You are not the son of Hagar or the son
of a handmaid, you are the son of Sarah, and are come to Jerusalem and are free. You are
out of Arabia, and are come to God's own happy land. You are not under Hagar, but under
Sarah; under God's covenant of grace. You are a child of promise, and you shall have God's
own inheritance. Believe this, that never shall a law-stroke fall on you; never shall
God's anger in a judicial sense drop on you. He may give you a chastising stroke, not as
the result of sin, but rather as the result of his own rich grace, that would get the sin
out of you, that you may be perfected in sanctification, even as you are now perfect and
complete before him in the blood and righteousness of Jesus Christ.
IV. I was about to go into a list of things which this text includes, but the time fails
me; therefore I must spend the last minute or two in saying WHAT THIS TEXT EXCLUDES.
What does it exclude! Well, I am sure it excludes boasting. "He that believeth is not
condemned." Ah! if it said, "He that worketh is not condemned," then
you and I might boast in any quantity. But when it says, "He that believeth,"why,
there is no room for us to say half a word for old self. No, Lord, if I am not condemned,
it is thy free grace, for I have deserved to be condemned a thousand times since I have
been in this pulpit to-night. When I am on my knees, and I am not condemned, I am sure it
must be sovereign grace, for even when I am praying I deserve to be condemned. Even when
we are repenting we are sinning, and adding to our sins while we are repenting of them.
Every act we do, as the result of the flesh, is to sin again, and our best performances
are so stained with sin, that it is hard to know whether they are good works or bad works.
So far as they are our own, they are bad, and so far as they are the works of the Spirit
they are good. But then the goodness is not ours, it is the Spirit's, and only the evil
remains to us. Ah, then, we cannot boast! Begone, pride! begone! The Christian must be a
humble man. If he lift up his head to say something, then he is nothing indeed. He does
not know where he is, or where he stands, when he once begins to boast, as though his own
right hand had gotten him the victory. Leave off boasting, Christian. Live humbly before
thy God, and never let a word of self-congratulation escape thy lips. Sacrifice self, and
let thy song be before the throne"Not unto us, not unto us, but unto thy name
be glory forever."
What next does the text exclude? Methinks it ought to excludenow I am about to smite
myselfit ought to exclude doubts and fears. "He that believeth is not
condemned." How dare you and I draw such long faces, and go about as we do sometimes
as though we had a world of cares upon our backs? What would I have given ten or eleven
years ago if I could have known this text was sure to me, that I was not condemned. Why, I
thought if I could feel I was once forgiven, and had to live on bread and water, and be
locked up in a dungeon, and every day be flogged with a cat-o'-nine tails, I would gladly
have accepted it, if I could have once felt my sins forgiven. Now you are a forgiven man,
and yet you are cast down! Oh! shame on you. No condemnation! and yet miserable? Fie,
Christian! Get thee up and wipe the tears from your eyes. Oh! if there be a person lying
in gaol now, to be executed next week, if you could go to him and say, "You are
pardoned," would he not spring up with delight from his seat; and although he might
have lost his goods, and though it would be possible for him, after pardon, to have to
suffer many things, yet, so long as life was spared, what would all this be to him? He
would feel that it was less than nothing. Now, Christian, you are pardoned, your sins are
all forgiven. Christ has said to you, "Thy sins, which are many, are all forgiven
thee"and art thou yet miserable? Well, if we must be so sometimes, let us make
it as short as we can. If we must be sometimes cast down, let us ask the Lord to lift us
up again. I am afraid some of us get into bad habits, and come to make it a matter of
practice to be downcast. Mind, Christian, mind, it will grow upon youthat peevish
spiritif you do not come to God to turn these doubts and fears out of you, they will
soon swarm upon you like flies in Egypt. When you are able to kill the first great doubt,
you will perhaps kill a hundred; for one great doubt will breed a thousand, and to kill
the mother is to kill the whole brood. Therefore, look with all thy eyes against the first
doubt, lest thou shouldest become confirmed in thy despondency, and grow into sad despair.
"He that believeth on him is not condemned." If this excludes boasting, it ought
to exclude doubts too.
Once more. "He that believeth on him is not condemned." This excludes sinning
any more. My Lord, have I sinned against thee so many times, and yet hast thou freely
forgiven me all? What stronger motive could I have for keeping me from sinning again? Ah,
there are some who are saying this is licentious doctrine. A thousand devils rolled into
one, must the man be who can find any licentiousness here. What! go and sin because I am
forgiven? Go and live in iniquity because Jesus Christ took my guilt and suffered in my
room and stead? Human nature is bad enough, but methinks this is the very worst state of
human nature, when it tries to draw an argument for sin from the free grace of God. It is
far harder to sin against the blood of Christ, and against a sense of pardon, than it is
against the terrors of the law and the fear of hell itself. I know that when my soul is
most alarmed by a dread of the wrath of God, I can sin with comfort compared with what I
could when I have a sense of his love shed abroad in my heart. What more monstrous! to
read your title clear, and sin? Oh, vile reprobate! you are on the borders of the deepest
hell. But I am sure if you are a child of God, you will say when you have read your title
clear, and feel yourself justified in Christ Jesus,
"Now, for the love I bear his name,
What was my gain, I count my loss;
My former pride I call my shame,
And nail my glory to his cross."
Yes, and I must, and will esteem all things
but loss for Jesus' sake. O may my soul be found in him, perfect in his righteousness!
This will make you live near to him: this will make you like unto him. Do not think that
this doctrine by dwelling on it will make you think lightly of sin. It will make you think
of it as a hard and stern executioner to put Christ to death; as an awful load that could
never be lifted from you except by the eternal arm of God; and then you will come to hate
it with all your soul, because it is rebellion against a loving and gracious God, and you
shall by this means, far better than by any Arminian doubts or any legal quibbles, be led
to walk in the footsteps of your Lord Jesus, and to follow the Lamb whithersoever he
goeth.
I think this whole sermon, though I have been preaching to the children of God, is meant
for sinners too. Sinner, I would that thou didst say so. If you know this, that he that
believeth is not condemned, then, sinner if thou believest, thou wilt not be
condemned; and may all I have said to-night help you to this belief in thy soul. Oh, but
sayest thou, "May I trust Christ?" As I said this morning, it is not a question
of whether you may or may not, you are commanded. The Scripture commands the gospel to be
preached to every creature, and the gospel is"Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ
and thou shalt be saved." I know you will be too proud to do it, unless God by his
grace should humble you. But if ye feel to-night that you are nothing and have nothing of
your own, I think you will be right glad to take Christ to be your all-in-all. If you can
say with poor Jack the Huckster,
"I'm a poor sinner and nothing at
all,"
You may go on and say with him, this night,
"But Jesus Christ is my all in
all."
God grant that it may be so, for his name's sake. Amen.
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