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Consolation in Christ
AUTHOR: Spurgeon, C.H.
PUBLISHED ON: April 2, 2003
DOC SOURCE: CCN
PUBLISHED IN: Sermons

                                                                                 

                                                    Consolation in Christ

                                                        A Sermon
                                                          (No. 348)

                          Delivered on Sabbath Morning, December 2nd, 1860, by the
                                              REV. C.H. SPURGEON
                                                At Exeter Hall, Strand.

              “If there be therefore any consolation in Christ, if any comfort of love, if any fellowship of the Spirit, if
              any bowels and mercies.” Philippians 2:1.

                  THE language of man has received a new coinage of words since the time of his perfection in Eden. Adam
                  could scarce have understood the word consolation, for the simple reason that he did not understand in
                  Eden the meaning of the word sorrow. O how has our language been swollen through the floods of our
          griefs and tribulations! It was not sufficiently wide and wild for man when he was driven out of the garden into the
          wide, wide world. After he had once eaten of the tree of knowledge of good and evil, as his knowledge was
          extended so must the language be by which he could express his thoughts and feelings. But, my hearers, when
          Adam first needed the word consolation, there was a time when he could not find the fair jewel itself. Until that
          hour when the first promise was uttered, when the seed of the woman was declared as being the coming man who
          should bruise the serpent’s head, Adam might masticate and digest the word sorrow, but he could never season
          and flavour it with the hope or thought of consolation, or if the hope and thought might sometimes flit across his
          mind like a lightning flash in the midst of the tempest’s dire darkness, yet it must have been too transient, too
          unsubstantial, to have made glad his heart, or to soothe his sorrows. Consolation is the dropping of a gentle dew
          from heaven on desert hearts beneath. True consolation, such as can reach the heart, must be one of the choicest
          gifts of divine mercy; and surely we are not erring from sacred Scripture when we avow that in its full meaning,
          consolation can be found nowhere save in Christ, who has come down from heaven, and who has again ascended
          to heaven, to provide strong and everlasting consolation for those whom he has bought with his blood.
              You will remember, my dear friends, that the Holy Spirit, during the present dispensation, is revealed to us as
          the Comforter. It is the Spirit’s business to console and cheer the hearts of God’s people. He does convince of sin;
          he does illuminate and instruct; but still the main part of his business lies in making glad the hearts of the renewed,
          in confirming the weak, and lifting up all those that be bowed down. Whatever the Holy Ghost may not be, he is
          evermore the Comforter to the Church; and this age is peculiarly the dispensation of the Holy Spirit, in which
          Christ cheers us not by his personal presence, as he shall do by-and-bye, but by te indwelling and constant abiding
          of the Holy Ghost the Comforter. Now, mark you, as the Holy Spirit is the Comforter, Christ is the comfort. The
          Holy Spirit consoles, but Christ is the consolation. If I may use the figure, the Holy Spirit is the Physician, but
          Christ is the medicine. He heals the wound, but it is by applying the holy ointment of Christ’s name and grace. He
          takes not of his own things, but of the things of Christ. We are not consoled to-day by new revelations, but by the
          old revelation explained, enforced, and lit up with new splendour by the presence and power of the Holy Ghost the
          Comforter. If we give to the Holy Spirit the greek name of Paraclete, as we sometimes do, then our heart confers
          on our blessed Lord Jesus the title of the Paraclesis. If the one be the Comforter, the other is the comfort.
              I shall try this morning, first, to show how Christ in his varied positions is the consolation of the children of
          God in their varied trials; then we shall pass on, secondly, to observe that Christ in his unchanging nature is a
          consolation to the children of God in their continual sorrows; and lastly, I shall close by dwelling awhile upon
          the question as to whether Christ is a consolation to us putting it personally, “Is Christ a present and available
          consolation for me.”
              I. First, CHRIST IN HIS VARIED POSITIONS IS A CONSOLATION FOR THE DIVERS ILLS OF THE
          CHILDREN OF GOD.
              Our Master’s history is a long and eventful one; but every step of it may yield abundant comfort to the
          children of God. If we track him from the highest throne of glory to the cross of deepest woe, and then through
          the grave up again the shining steeps of heaven, and onward through his meditorial kingdom, on to the day when
          he shall deliver up the throne to God even our Father, throughout every part of that wondrous pathway there may
          be found the flowers of consolation growing plenteously, and the children of God have but to stoop and gather
          them. “All his paths drop fatness, all his garments which he wears in his different offices, smell of myrrh, and
          aloes and cassia, out of the ivory palaces, whereby he makes his people glad.”
              To begin at the beginning, there are times when we look upon the past with the deepest grief. The withering of
          Eden’s flowers has often caused a fading in the garden of our souls. We have mourned exceedingly that we have
          been driven out to till the ground with the sweat of our brow that the curse should have glanced on us through
          the sin of our first parent, and we have been ready to cry, “Woe worth the day in which our parent stretched forth
          his hand to touch the forbidden fruit.” Would to God that he had rested in unsullied purity, that we his sons and
          daughters might have lived beneath an unclouded sky, might never have mourned the ills of bodily pain or of
          spiritual distress. To meet this very natural source of grief, I bid you consider Christ in old eternity. Open now the
          eye of thy faith, believer, and see Christ as thine Eternal Covenant-head stipulating to redeem thee even before
          thou hadst become a bond-slave, bound to deliver even before thou hadst worn the chain. Think, I pray thee, of
          the eternal council in which thy restoration was planned and declared even before thy fall, and in which thou wast
          established in an eternal salvation even before the necessity of that salvation had begun. O, my brethren, how it
          cheers our hearts to think of the anticipating mercies of God! He anticipated our fall, foreknew the ills which it
          would bring upon us, and provided in his eternal decree of predestinating love an effectual remedy for all our
          diseases, a certain deliverance from all our sorrows. I see thee, thou fellow of the Eternal, thou equal of the
          Almighty God! Thy goings forth were of old. I see thee lift thy right hand and engage thyself to fulfil thy Father’s
          will “In the volume of the book it is written of me, ‘I delight to do thy will, O God.'” I see thee forming, signing,
          and sealing that eternal covenant by which the souls of all the redeemed were there and then delivered from the
          curse, and made sure and certain inheritors of thy kingdom and of thy glory. In this respect Christ shines out as
          the consolation of his people.
              Again, if ever your minds dwell with sadness upon the fact that we are at this day absent from the Lord,
          because we are present in the body, think of the great truth that Jesus Christ of old had delights with the sons of
          men, and he delights to commune and have fellowship with his people now. Remember that your Lord and Master
          appeared to Abraham in the plains of Mamre under the disguise of a pilgrim. Abraham was a pilgrim, and Christ to
          show his sympathy with his servant, became a pilgrim too. Did he not appear also to Jacob at the brook Jabbok?
          Jacob was a wrestler, and Jesus appears there as a wrestler too. Did he not stand before Moses under the guise
          and figure of a flame in the midst of a bush? Was not Moses at the very time the representative of a people who
          were like a bush burning with fire and yet not consumed? Did he not stand before Joshua Joshua the leader of
          Israel’s troops, and did he not appear to him as the captain of the Lord’s host? And do you not well remember that
          when the three holy children walked in the midst of the fiery furnace, he was in the midst of the fire too, not as a
          king, but as one in the fire with them? Cheer then thy heart with this consoling inference. If Christ appeared to his
          servants in the olden time, and manifested himself to them as bone of their bone, and flesh of their flesh, in all
          their trials and their troubles, he will do no less to thee to-day; he will be with thee in passing through the fire; he
          will be thy rock, thy shield, and thy high tower; he will be thy song, thy banner, and thy crown of rejoicing. Fear
          not, he who visited the saints of old will surely not be long absent from his children to-day; his delights are still
          with his people, and still will he walk with us through this weary wilderness. Surely this makes Christ a most
          blessed consolation for his Israel.
              And now to pursue the Master’s footsteps, as he comes out of the invisible glories of Deity, and wears the
          visible garment of humanity. Let us view the babe of Bethlehem, the child of Nazareth, the Son of Man. See him,
          he is in every respect a man. “Of the substance of his mother” is he made; in the substance of our flesh he suffers;
          in the trials of our flesh he bows his head; under the weakness of our flesh he prays, and in the temptation of our
          flesh he is kept and maintained by the grace within. You to-day are tried and troubled, and you ask for consolation.
          What better can be afforded you than what is presented to you in the fact that Jesus Christ is one with you in your
          nature that he has suffered all that you are now suffering that your pathway has been aforetime trodden by his
          sacred foot that the cup of which you drink is a cup which he has drained to the very bottom that the river
          through which you pass is one through which he swam, and every wave and billow which rolls over your head did
          in old time roll over him. Come! art thou ashamed to suffer what thy Master suffered? Shall the disciple be above
          his Master, and the servant above his Lord? Shall he die upon a cross, and wilt not thou bear the cross? Must he
          be crowned with thorns, and shalt thou be crowned with laurel? Is he to be pierced in hands and feet, and are thy
          members to feel no pain? O cast away the fond delusion I pray thee, and look to him who “endured the cross,
          despising the shame,” and be ready to endure and to suffer even as he did.
              And now behold our Master’s humanity clothed even as ours has been since the fall. He comes not before us
          in the purple of a king, in the garb of the rich and the respectable, but he wears a dress in keeping with his
          apparent origin; he is a carpenter’s son, and he wears a dress which becomes his station. View him, ye sons of
          poverty, as he stands before you in his seamless garment, the common dress of the peasant; and if you have felt
          this week the load of want if you have suffered and are suffering this very day the ills connected with poverty,
          pluck up courage, and find a consolation in the fact that Christ was poorer than you are that he knew more of
          the bitterness of want than you ever yet can guess. You cannot say, “Foxes have holes, and the birds of the air
          have nests, but I have not where to lay my head;” or if you could go as far as that, yet have you never known a
          forty-day’s fast. You have some comforts left to you; you do know at least the sweet taste of bread to the hungry
          man, and of rest to the weary; but these things were often denied to him. Look at him, then, and see if there be
          not to you comfort in Christ.
              We pass now, O Jesus, from thy robe of poverty to that scene of shame in which thy garments were rent
          from thee, and thou didst hang naked before the sun. Children of God, if there be one place more than another
          where Christ becomes the joy and comfort of his people, it is where he plunged deepest into the depths of woe.
          Come, see him, I pray you, in the garden of Gethsemane; behold him, as his heart is so full of love that he cannot
          hold it in so full of sorrow that it must find a vent. Behold the bloody sweat as it distils from every pore of his
          body, and falls in gouts of gore upon the frozen ground. See him as all red with his own blood, wrapped in a
          bloody mantle of his own gore, he is brought before Herod and Pilate, and the Sanhedrim. See him now as they
          scourge him with their knotted whips, and afresh encrimson him, as though it were not ehough for him to be dyed
          once in scarlet, but he must again be enwrapped in purple. See him, I say, now that they have stripped him naked.
          Behold him as they drive the nails into his hand and into his feet. Look up and see the sorrowful image of your
          dolorous Lord. O mark him, as the ruby drops stand on the thorn-crown, and make it the blood-red diadem of the
          King of misery. O see him as his bones are out of joint, and he is poured out like water and brought into the dust
          of death. “Behold and see, was there ever sorrow like unto his sorrow that is done unto him?” All ye that pass by,
          draw near and look upon this spectacle of grief. Behold the Emperor of woe who never had an equal or a rival in
          his agonies! Come and see him; and if I read not the words of consolation written in lines of blood all down his
          side, then these eyes have never read a word in any book; for if there be not consolation in a murdered Christ,
          there is no joy, no peace to any heart. If in that finished ransom price, if in that efficacious blood, if in that
          all-accepted sacrifice, there be not joy, ye harpers of heaven, there is no joy in you, and the right hand of God
          shall know no pleasures for evermore. I am persuaded, men and brethren, that we have only to sit more at the
          Cross to be less troubled with our doubts, and our fears, and our woes. We have but to see his sorrows, and lose
          our sorrows; we have to see his wounds, and heal our own. If we would live, it must be by contemplation of his
          death; if we would rise to dignity it must be by considering his humiliation and his sorrow.

                                              “Lord, thy death and passion give
                                              Strength and comfort in my need,
                                                Every hour while here I live,
                                                On thy love my soul shall feed.”

              But come now, troubled heart, and follow the dead body of thy Master, for though dead, it is as full of
          consolation as when alive. It is now no more naked; the loving hands of Joseph of Arimathea, and Nicodemus,
          and the Magdalene and the other Mary, have wrapped it in cerements, and have laid it in the new tomb. Come,
          saints, not to weep, but to dry your tears. You have been all your lifetime subject to fear of death: come, break
          your bonds asunder; be free from this fear. Where your Master sleeps, you may surely find an easy couch. What
          more could you desire than to lie upon the bed of your royal Solomon? The grave is now no more a charnel-house
          or a dark prison; his having entered it makes it a blessed retiring-room, a sacred bath in which the King’s Esthers
          purify their bodies, to make them fit for the embraces of their Lord. It becomes now not the gate of annihilation,
          but the portal of eternal bliss, a joy to be anticipated, a privilege to be desired. “Fearless we lay us in the tomb,
          and sleep the night away, for thou art here to break the gloom, and call us back to day.”
              I am certain, brethren, that all the consolations which wise men can ever afford in a dying hour will never be
          equal to that which is afforded by the record, that Jesus Christ ascended from the tomb. The maxims of
          philosophy, the endearments of affection, and the music of hope, will be a very poor compensation for the light of
          Jesus’ grave. Death is the only mourner at Jesus’ tomb, and while the whole earth rejoices at the sorrow of its last
          enemy, I would be all too glad to die, that I might know him, and the power of his resurrection. Heir of heaven! if
          thou wouldst be rid once for all of every doubting thought about the hour of thy dissolution, look, I pray thee, to
          Christ risen from the dead. Put thy finger into the print of the nails, and thrust thy hand into his side, and be not
          faithless but believing. He is risen; he saw no corruption; the worms could not devour him; and as Jesus Christ has
          risen from the dead, he has become the first fruits of them that slept. Inasmuch as he has risen, thou shalt rise. He
          has rolled the stone away, not for himself alone, but for thee also. He has unwrapped the grave-clothes, not for his
          own sake, but for thy sake too, and thou shalt surely stand in the latter day upon the earth, when he shall be here,
          and in thy flesh thou shalt see God.
              Time would fail us, if we should attempt to track the Master in his glorious pathway after his resurrection. Let
          it suffice us briefly to observe that, having led his disciples out unto a mountain, where he has delighted often to
          commune with them, he was suddenly taken up from them, and a cloud received him out of their sight. We think
          we may conjecture, by the help of Scripture, what transpired after that cloud had covered him. Did not the angels

                                                “Bring his chariot from on high
                                                  To bear him to his throne,
                                              Clap their triumphant wings and cry,
                                                  His glorious work is done?”

          Do you not see him, as he mounts his triumphal chariot,

                                              “And angels chant the solemn lay,
                                              Lift up your heads, ye golden gates,
                                              Ye everlasting doors give away?”

          Behold angels gazing from the battlements of heaven, replying to their comrades who escort the ascending Son of
          Man. “Who is the King of Glory?” And this time those who accompany the Master sing more sweetly and more
          loudly than before, while they cry, “The Lord strong and mighty, the Lord mighty in battle! Lift up your heads, O
          ye gates, and be ye lifted up, ye everlasting doors, that the King of Glory may come in.” And now the doors

                                              “Loose all their bars of massy light,
                                              And wide unfold the radiant scene,”

          and he enters. “He claims those mansions as his right,” and all the angels rise to “receive the King of Glory in.”
          Behold him, as he rides in triumph through heaven’s streets; see Death and Hell bound at his chariot wheels. Hark
          to the “Hosannas” of the spirits of the just made perfect! Hear how cherubim and seraphim roll out in thunders
          their everlasting song “Glory be unto thee; glory be unto thee, thou Son of God, for thou wast slain and thou
          hast redeemed the world by thy blood.” See him as he mounts his throne and near his Father sits. Behold the
          benignant complacency of the paternal Deity. Hear him as he accepts him and gives him a name which is above
          every name. And I say, my brethren, in the midst of your tremblings, and doubtings, and fearings, anticipate the
          joy which you shall have, when you shall share in this triumph, for know you not that you ascended up on high in
          him? He went not up to heaven alone, but as the representative of all the blood-bought throng. You rode in that
          triumphal chariot with him; you were exalted on high, and made to sit far above principalities and powers in him;
          for we are risen in him, we are exalted in Christ. Even at this very day in Christ that Psalm is true “Thou hast
          put all things under his feet; thou madest him to have dominion over all the works of thy hands.” Come, poor
          trembler, thou art little in thine own esteem, and but a worm and no man! Rise, I say, to the height of thy nobility;
          for thou art in Christ greater than angels be, more magnified and glorified by far. God gives you grace, ye who
          have faith, that ye may now, in the fact of Jesus Christ’s exaltation, find consolation for yourself!
              But now to-day methinks I see the Master, as he stands before his Father’s throne, dressed in the garments of
          a priest; upon his breast I see the Urim and Thummim glittering with the bejewelled remembrances of his people.
          In his hand I see still the remembrance of his sacrifice, the nail mark; and there I see still upon his feet the impress
          of the laver of blood in which he washed himself not as the priest of old with water but with his own gore. I hear
          him plead with authority before his Father’s face, “I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with me
          where I am.” O my poor prayers, ye shall be heard! O my faint groans, ye shall be answered! Oh, my poor
          troubled soul, thou art safe, for

                                                “Jesus pleads and must prevail,
                                              His cause can never, never fail.”

              Come, my poor heart, lift up thyself now from the dunghill; shake thyself from the dust; ungird thy sackcloth
          and put on thy beautiful garments. He is our advocate to-day, our eloquent and earnest pleader, and he prevails
          with God. The Father smiles he smiles on Christ; he smiles on us in answer to Jesus Christ’s intercession. Is he
          not here also the consolation of Israel?
              I only remark once more that he who has gone up into heaven shall so come in like manner as he was seen to
          go up into heaven. He ascended in clouds, “Behold he cometh with clouds.” He went up on high with sound of
          trumpet and with shout of angels. Behold he cometh! The silver trumpet shall soon sound. ‘Tis midnight: the hours
          are rolling wearily along; the virgins wise and foolish are all asleep. But the cry shall soon be heard “Behold the
          bridegroom cometh, go ye forth to meet him.” That same Jesus who was crucified shall come in glory. The hand
          that was pierced shall grasp the sceptre. Beneath his arm he shall gather up all the sceptres of all kings; monarchies
          shall be the sheaves, and he shall be the kingly reaper. On his head there shall be the many crowns of universal
          undisputed dominion. “He shall stand in the latter day upon the earth.” His feet shall tread on the mount of Olivet,
          and his people shall be gathered in the valley of Jehoshaphat. Lo, the world’s great battle is almost begun; the
          trumpet sounds the beginning of the battle of Armageddon. To the fight, ye warriors of Christ, to the fight; for it is
          your last conflict, and over the bodies of your foes ye shall rush to meet your Lord he fighting on the one side by
          his coming, you on the other side by drawing near to him. You shall meet him in the solemn hour of victory. The
          dead in Christ shall rise first, and you that are alive and remain shall be changed in a moment, in the twinkling of
          an eye, at the last triumphant sounding of the dread tremendous trump. Then shall you know to the full how Christ
          can console you for all your sorrows, all your shame, and all your neglect which you have received from the hand
          of men. Ay, to-day bethink you, there awaits the recompense of an earthly splendour for your earthly poverty;
          there awaits you earthly dignity for your earthly shame. You shall not only have spiritual, but you shall have
          temporal blessings. He who takes away the curse will take it away not only from your soul, but from the very
          ground on which you tread. He who redeems you shall redeem not only your spirit, but your body. Your eyes
          shall see your Redeemer; your hands shall be lifted up in acclamation, and your feet shall bear your leaping joys in
          the procession of his glory, in your very body in which you have suffered for him you shall sit with him upon the
          throne and judge the nations of the earth. These things, I say, are all full of the purest and highest consolation to
          the children of God.
              II. Having taken nearly all my time upon the first point, I can only say a word or two upon the second and on
          the third. The second point was to be this CHRIST IN HIS UNCHANGING NATURE; a consolation for our
          continual sorrows.
              Christ is to his people a surpassing consolation. Talk of the consolations of philosophy? We have all the
          philosopher can pretend to; but we have it in a higher degree. Speak of the charms of music which can lull our
          sorrows to a blessed sleep?

                                              “Sweeter sounds than music knows,
                                              Charm us in our Saviour’s name.”

                                              “Jesus, the very thought of thee,
                                                With rapture fills my breast.”

          Speak we of the joys of frienship? and sweet they are indeed; but “there is a friend that sticketh closer than a
          brother” “a brother born for adversity.” There is one who is better than all friends, more able to cheer than those
          who are darest and nearest to our hearts. Or, speak we of the joys of hope? and certainly hope can console us
          when nothing else can do it. He is our hope. We cast the anchor of our hope into that which is within the veil,
          whither the forerunner hath for us entered. The consolations of Christ are unrivalled by any which can be offered
          by wit, by wisdom, by mirth, by hope itself; they are incomparable, and can never be surpassed.
              Again, the consolations of Christ, from the fact of his unchanging nature, are unfailing.

                                            “When every earthly prop gives way,
                                              He still is all our strength and stay.”

          Look you at Job, and see the picture of how Christ can console. The messenger rushes in “The Sabeans have
          taken away the oxen and the asses!” “Well, well,” Job might console himself and say, “but the sheep are left.” “But
          the fire of God hath fallen on the sheep! and the Chaldeans have carried away the camels and slain the servants!”
          “Alas!” the good man might say, “but my children are left, and if they be spared, then I can still have joy.” “The
          wind has come from the wilderness, and smitten the four corners of the house, and all thy sons and daughters are
          dead!” Ah! well-a-day, penniless and childless, the patriarch might weep; but, looking on his wife, he would say,
          “There still remaineth one sweet comforter, my well-beloved spouse.” She bids him “curse God and die;”
          “speaking as one of the foolish women speaketh.” Yet might Job say, “Though my wife hath failed me, there
          remaineth at least three friends; there they sit with me on the dunghill, and they will console me.” But they speak
          bitterness, till he cries, “Miserable comforters are ye all.” Well, but at least he has his own body in health, has he
          not? No, he sits down upon a dunghill, and scrapes himself with a potsherd, for his sores become intolerable. Well,
          well, “skin for skin, yea, all that a man hath will he give for his life.” He may at least cheer himself with the fact,
          that he lives. “Why should a living man complain?” Yes, but he fears he is about to die. And now comes out the
          grandeur of his hope: “I know that my Redeemer liveth, and though the worms devour this body, yet in my flesh
          shall I see God.” All the other windows are darkened; but the sun shines in at the oriel window of redemption. All
          the other doors are shut; but this great door of hope and joy still stands wide open. All other wells are dry; but this
          flows with an unceasing stream. Brothers and sisters, when all things else depart, an unchanging Christ shall be
          your unchanging joy.
              Furthermore, the consolations of Christ are all powerful consolations. When a poor soul is so deep in the mire
          that you cannot lift it with the lever of eloquence, nor draw it up with the hands of sympathy, nor raise it with
          wings of hope, he can touch it with his finger and it can spring up from the mire, and put his feet upon a rock, and
          feel the new song in its mouth and its goings well established. There is no form of melancholy which will not yield
          before the grace of God; there is no shape of distress which will not give way before the divine energy of the Holy
          Ghost the Comforter, when he uses Christ as the consolation.
              Again: this consolation is everlasting consolation. It consoled you, O aged sire, when as a youth you gave
          your heart to Christ; it was your joy in the mid-winter of your manhood; it has become your strength and your
          song in the days of your old age; when tottering on your staff you shall go down to Jordan’s brink, he will be your
          consolation then. In the prospect of your coming dissolution, yea, when you walk through the valley of the
          shadow of death, you shall fear no evil, for he is with you; his rod and his staff shall comfort you. All other things
          shall pass away as a dream when you awaketh; but this substantial support shall abide with you in the midst of the
          swellings of Jordan, in the hour of the departure of your spirit from your body.
              And then remember that this is a consolation which is always within the believer’s reach. He is “a very present
          help in time of trouble.” Ye may always cheer your heart with Christ when other things are far away. When a
          friend visits you not, and your chamber becomes lonely when spouse has forgotten to speak the kind word to
          you, and children have become ungrateful, he will make your bed in your sickness, he will be your never-failing
          friend and abide with you in every dark and gloomy hour, till he brings you into his dear arms, where you will be
          emparadised for ever and ever.
              III. I close now with my last point the grave and serious question, IS CHRIST AN AVAILABLE
          CONSOLATION FOR ME?
              Who art thou, friend? Art thou one who needs no consolation? Hast thou a righteousness of thine own? Let
          me put it in thine own words. You are a good man, kind to the poor, charitable, upright, generous, holy. You
          believe there may be some faults in yourself, but they must be very few, and you trust that what with your own
          merits and with God’s mercy you may enter heaven. In the name of God, I do solemnly assure you, that Christ is
          not an available consolation for you. Christ will have nothing to do with you, so long as you have anything to do
          with yourself. If you are trusting in any measure whatever upon aught that you have ever done or hope to do, you
          are trusting in a lie, and Christ will never be friends with a lie. He will never help you to do what he came to do
          himself. If you will take his work as it is, as a finished work, well and good; but if you must needs add to it your
          own, God shall add unto you the plagues which are written in this Book, but he shall by no means give to you any
          of the promises and the comforts which Christ can afford.
              But instead thereof, I will suppose that I address myself this morning to a man who says, “I was once, I think,
          a believer in Christ; I made a profession of religion, but I fell from it, and I have lost for years all the hope and joy
          I ever had; I think I was a presumptuous man, that I pretended to have what I never had, and yet at the time I
          really thought I had it. May I think that there is consolation in Christ for a backslider and a traitor like me? Often,
          sir, do I feel as if the doom of Judas must be mine as if I must perish miserably, like Demas, who loved this
          present world.” Ah! backslider, backslider, God speaks to thee this morning, and he says, “Return ye backsliding
          children of men, for I am married to you;” and if married, there has never been a divorce between Christ and you.
          Has he put you away? Unto which of his creditors has he sold you? Where do you read in his Word, that he has
          divided from the affection of his heart one whose name was ever written in his Book? Come, come, backslider,
          come again to the cross. He who received you once will receive you again. Come where the flood is flowing; the
          blood that washed you once, can wash you yet once more. Come, come, thou art naked, and poor, and miserable;
          the raiment which was given to thee once, shall array thee again with beauty. The unsearchable riches which were
          opened up to thee aforetime, shall be thine again.

                                              “To thy Father’s bossom press’d,
                                                Once again a child confess’d,
                                              From his hand no more to roam,
                                              Come, backsliding sinner, come.”

              But I hear another say, “I am not a backslider, but simply one who desires to be saved. I can say honestly, I
          would give my right arm from its socket if I might but be saved. Why, sir, if I had ten thousand worlds I would
          freely cast them away as pebble stones, and worthless, if I might but find Christ.” Poor soul, and does the devil tell
          thee thou shalt never have Christ? Why, thou hast a warrant to lay hold on Christ to-day. “No,” sayest thou, “I
          have no right whatever.” The fact that thou sayest thou hast no right should at least comfort the minister in
          addressing himself freely to thee. The right of a sinner to come to Christ does not lie in the sinner, nor in any
          feelings which the sinner may have had; it lies in the fact that Christ commands him to come. If one of you should
          receive as you went out of younder door a command to go at once to Windsor, and have an interview with the
          Queen, as soon as you had received the order and were sure it came from her, you might say, “Well, but if I had
          known this, I should have put on other clothes;” but the order is peremptory, “Come now; come just as you are;”
          you would, I think, without any very great doubt, though greatly wondering, take your place and ride there at
          once. When you came to the gate, some tall grenadier might ask you what you were at. “Why,” he might say,
          “you are not fit to come and see Her Majesty; you are not a gentleman; you have not so many hundreds a year;
          how can you expect to be admitted?” You show the command, and he lets you pass on. You come to another
          door, and there is an usher there. “You are not in a court dress,” says he; “you are not properly robed for the
          occasion.” You show the command, and he lets you pass on. But suppose when at last you should come into the
          ante-room you should say, “Now I dare not go in; I am not fit; I feel I shall not know how to behave myself.”
          Suppose you are silly enough not to go, you would be disobedient and ten times more foolish in disobeying than
          you could have been by any blunders in behaviour if you had obeyed. Now it is just so with you to-day. Christ
          says, “Come unto me.” He does not merely invite you, because he knows you would think you did not deserve the
          invitation; but he gives the command, and he bids me say to you, “Repent, and be baptized every one of you;” he
          bids me command you in his name, “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved.” Of his grace and
          mercy he puts it as a command. “But,” you say. Ah! what right have you to say “but” to the Lord’s commands?
          Again,I say, away with your “buts.” What right have you to be “butting” at his laws and his commands. “But,” you
          say, “do hear me for a moment.” I will hear you then. “Sir, I cannot imagine that if such a hard-hearted sinner as I
          am were really to trust Christ I should be saved.” The English of that is, that you give God the lie. He says you
          shall be, and do you think he speaks an untruth? “Ah!” says another, “but it is too good to be true. I cannot believe
          that just as I am, if I trust in Christ, my sin shall be forgiven.” Again, I say, the simple English of that is, that you
          think you know better than God; and so you do in fact stand up and say to his promise, “Thou art false.” He says,
          “Him that cometh unto me I will in no wise cast out.” “Ah!” you say, “but that does not mean me?” Can any
          language speak more plainly? “Him. What him? Why, any “him” in the world.
              “Yes,” says one, “but the invitations are made to character ‘Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy
          laden;’ I am afraid I am not heavy laden enough?” Yes, but you will mark, while the invitation is given to
          character, yet the promise is not given to the character; it is given to those who come “Come unto me, and I will
          give you rest;” and while that one invitation may be confined to the weary and heavy laden, yet there are scores of
          others that stand as wide and free as the very air we breathe. If you have that qualification, do not come even with
          it, because you are unqualified when you think you are qualified; you are unfit when you think you are fit; and if
          you have a sense of need, which you think makes you fit to come to Christ, it shows you are not fit and do not
          know your need; for no man knows his need till he thinks he does not know his need, and no man is in a right
          state to come to Christ till he thinks he is not in a right state to come to Christ. But he who feels that he has not
          one good thought or one good feeling to recommend him, he is the man who may come. He who says, “But I may
          not come,” is the very man that is bidden to come. Besides, my friends, it is not what you think, or what I think; it
          is what Christ says; and is it not written by the hand of the Apostle John, “This is the commandment, that ye
          believe on Jesus Christ whom he hath sent?” Men who say it is not the duty of sinners to believe, I cannot think
          what they make out of such a text as that “This is the commandment, that ye believe on Jesus Christ, whom he
          hath sent;” and that one where God expressely says, “He that believeth not is condemned already, because he
          believeth not.” Why, I should think I was addressing heathens, if I addressed a company of men who thought that
          God did not command men to repent; for Scripture is so plain upon the point, and I say, if God commands thee to
          do it, thou mayest do it. Let the devil say “Nay,” but God says “Yes.” Let him stand and push you back; but say
          to him, “Nay, Satan, nay, I come here in God’s name;” and as devils fear and fly before the name of Christ, so
          will Satan and thy fears all fly before his command. He commands thee to believe that is, to trust him. Trust
          him, soul, trust him; right or wrong, trust him.
              But some of you want a great temptation, and a great deal of despair, before you will trust him. Well, the Lord
          will send it to you, if you will not trust him without it. I remember John Bunyan says he had a black temptation,
          and it did him a great deal of good; for, said he, “Before I had the temptation I used always to be questioning a
          promise, and saying, ‘May I come, or may I not come?'” But at last he said, “Yea, often when I have been making
          to the promise, I have seen as if the Lord would refuse my soul for ever: I was often as if I had run upon the pike,
          and as if the Lord had thrust at me, to keep me from him as with a flaming sword.” Ah! and perhaps you may be
          driven to that. I pray you may; but I would infinitely rather that the sweet love and grace of God would entice you
          now to trust Jesus Christ just as you are. He will not deceive you, sinner; he will not fail you. Trusting him, you
          shall build on a sure foundation, and find him who is the consolation of Israel and the joy of all his saints.

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