Lectionary Calendar
Sunday, November 24th, 2024
the Week of Christ the King / Proper 29 / Ordinary 34
the Week of Christ the King / Proper 29 / Ordinary 34
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Bible Commentaries
Spurgeon's Verse Expositions of the Bible Spurgeon's Verse Expositions
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These files are public domain.
Text Courtesy of BibleSupport.com. Used by Permission.
Bibliographical Information
Spurgeon, Charle Haddon. "Commentary on Matthew 13". "Spurgeon's Verse Expositions of the Bible". https://www.studylight.org/commentaries/eng/spe/matthew-13.html. 2011.
Spurgeon, Charle Haddon. "Commentary on Matthew 13". "Spurgeon's Verse Expositions of the Bible". https://www.studylight.org/
Whole Bible (47)New Testament (16)Gospels Only (5)Individual Books (10)
Verse 22
Sown Among Thorns
August 19th, 1888
by
C. H. SPURGEON
(1834-1892)
"And some fell among thorns; and the thorns sprung
up, and choked them"-- Matthew 13:7 .
"He also that received seed among the thorns is he
that heareth the word; and the care of this world,
and the deceitfulness of riches, choke the word,
and he becometh unfruitful-- Matthew 13:22 .
Then that which comes of his sowing is unfruitful, the
sower's work is wasted: he has spent his strength for
nothing. Without fruit the sower's work would even seem
to be insane, for he takes good wheat, throws it away,
and loses it in the ground. Preaching is the most idle
of occupations if the Word is not adapted to enter the
heart, and produce good results. O my hearers, if you
are not converted, I waste time and energy in standing
here! People might well think it madness that one whole
day in the week should be given up to hearing speeches-
madness, indeed, it would be if nothing came of it to
conscience and heart. If you do not bring forth fruit
to holiness, and the end is not everlasting life, I
would be better employed in breaking stones on the road-
side than in preaching to you.
Fruit-bearing made the difference appear in the various
soils upon which the sower scattered seed. You would
not so certainly have known the quality if you had not
seen the failure or success of the seed. We do not know
your hearts until we see your bearing toward the
Gospel. If it produces in you holiness and love to God
and humanity, then we know that there is good soil in
you; but if you are merely promising people, but not
performing people, then we know that the ground of your
heart is hard, or stony, or thorny. The Word of the
Lord tries the hearts of the children of men, and in
this it is as the fire which distinguishes between
metal and dross. 0 my dear hearers, you undergo a test
today! Peradventure you will be judging the preacher,
but a greater than the preacher will be judging you,
for the Word itself shall judge you. You sit here as a
jury upon yourselves; your own condition will be
brought clearly out by the way in which you receive or
refuse the Gospel of God. If you bring forth fruit to
the praise of God's grace, well; but if not, however
you may seem to hear with attention and may retain what
you hear in your memories, if no saving effect is
produced upon your souls we shall know that the soil of
your heart has not been prepared of the Lord and
remains in its native barrenness.
What fruit have you born hitherto from all your
hearing? May I venture to put the question to each one
of you very pointedly'? Some of you have been hearers
from your childhood--are you any the better? What long
lists of sermons you must have heard by now! Count over
your Sundays; how many they have been! Think of the
good men now in heaven to whom you once listened!
Remember the tears that were drawn from you by their
discourses! If you are not saved yet, will you ever be
saved? If you are not holy yet, will you ever be holy?
Why has the Lord spent so much on one who makes no
return? To what purpose is this waste? Surely you will
have much to answer for in that great day when the
servants of God shall give in their accounts, and you
shall have no joy when they come to mention you. How
will you excuse yourselves before God for having
occasioned Him so much disappointment?
At this time I will only deal with one class of you. I
will not speak to those of you who hear the Word, and
retain none of it because of the hardness of your
hearts; such are the wayside hearers. Neither will I
address myself to those who receive the truth with
sudden enthusiasm, and as readily quit it when trial
befalls them; such are the rocky-ground hearers. But I
will deal with those of you who hear the Word
attentively, and, in a sense, receive it into your
hearts and understandings so that the seed grows in
you, though its fruit never comes to perfection. You
are religious persons, and to all appearance you are
under the influence of godliness. You exhibit plenty of
leaf, but there is no corn in the ear, no substance in
your Christianity. I cannot speak with any degree of
physical vigor to you by reason of the infirmity under
which I struggle, but what I do say to you is steeped
in earnest desire that the Lord may bless it to you. An
eloquent congregation will make any preacher eloquent:
help me then this morning. If you will give me your
ear, you will make up for my deficiency of tongue:
especially if you give to God your hearts, He will
bless His truth, however feebly I may utter it.
First, I desire to talk to you a little about the seed
which you have received; secondly about the thorns;
thirdly about the result.
I. First a little about THE SEED. Remember, first, that
it was the same seed in every case. Yonder it has
brought forth thirty-fold; it was the same seed which
was lost upon you. In a still better case, the seed has
brought forth a hundred-fold; it was precisely the same
corn with which your field has been sown. The sower
went to his master's granary for all his seed; how is
it that in your case it is all lost? If there were two
Gospels, we might expect two results without fault in
the soil which failed. But with many of you to whom I
speak there has been only one Gospel throughout the
whole of your lives. You have been attending in this
house of prayer where we have never changed our seed,
but have gone on sowing the one eternal truth of God.
Many have brought forth fruit a hundred-fold from the
seed which has been scattered broadcast from this
platform. They heard no more than you have heard, but
how much better they treated it than you have done! I
want you to consider this. How covered with briars and
thorns must your mind be that the Gospel which
converted your sister or friend never touched you!
Though you may be nominally a believer in the Word of
God, it has never so affected you as to make you
gracious and holy. You are still a hearer only. How is
this? The fault is not in the seed, for it is the same
which has been so useful to others.
You have heard the Gospel with pleasure. "Heard it!"
You say, "I heard it when a little child." Your mother
brought you to the house of God in her arms. You have
heard it and still hear it, though it is rather like an
old song to you: but is this to be all? I am very
grateful that you do hear the Gospel, for I hope that
one of these days God may cause it to grow in you and
yield fruit. But still a grave responsibility is upon
you. Think how favored you have been! How will you
answer for this privilege if it is neglected and
rendered useless by that neglect? Dear hearers, if we
lived in the heart of Africa and we died without
believing in a Christ of whom we had not heard, we
could not be blamed for that. But here we are in the
heart of London where the Gospel is preached in all our
streets, and our blood will be on our own heads if we
perish. Do you mean to go down to hell? Are you so
desperate that you will go there wearing the garb of
Christians? If you do persist ruining your souls, my
eyes shall follow you with tears; and when I cannot
warn you any longer, I will weep in secret places
because of your perversity.
Those described in my text were not only hearers, but
in a measure they accepted the good Word. The seed fell
not only on this ground, but into it, so that it began
to grow. Of you it is true that you do not refuse the
Gospel, or raise disputes concerning it. I am glad that
you have no difficulties about the inspiration of
Scripture, or the deity of our Lord, or the fact of His
atonement. You do not befog yourselves with "modern
thought," but you avow your belief in the old, old
Gospel. So far so good; but what shall I make of the
strange fact that your acceptance of the truth has no
effect upon you? It is a very lamentable case, is it
not, that a person should believe the Gospel to be
true, and yet should live as if it were a lie? If it is
the truth, why do you not yield obedience to it? The
person knows that there is an atonement for sin, but he
has never confessed his sin and accepted the great
sacrifice. Those great truths, which circle about the
Cross like a coronet of stars, he has seen their beauty
and enjoyed their brilliance, but he has never allowed
their light to enter his heart and find a reflection in
his moral character. This is evil, only evil. If you
believe the truth, what do you more than the Devil? No,
you are behind him, for he believes, and trembles, and
you have not gone so far as the trembling. It should be
so that every great truth which is believed should
influence the mind, sway the thoughts, and mold the
life. This is the natural fruitage of great spiritual
truth. The doctrine of grace, when it takes possession
of the mind and governs the heart, produces the purest
results; but if it is held in unrighteousness, it is a
curse rather than a blessing to have a head knowledge.
Is it not a dreadful thing to believe God's revelation
without receiving God's Spirit? This is to accept a
well, but never to drink of the water; to accept corn
in the barn, and yet to die of hunger. God have mercy
upon the possessors of a dead faith!
The seed sown among thorns lived and continued to grow.
And in many people's minds the Gospel of divine truth
is growing after a fashion: they understand it better,
can defend it more valorously, and speak of it more
fluently. Moreover, it does influence them in some form
and degree, for gross vices are forsaken. They are
decent imitations of believers; you can see the shape
of an ear: the stalk has struggled up through the
thorns until you can see its head, and you are led to
expect corn. But go to that apparent wheat-ear, and
feel it: there are the sheaths but there is nothing in
them; you have all the makings of an ear of wheat, but
it will yield no grain. I would speak to those before
me who, perhaps, have been baptized and are members of
the church; I want to ask of them a question or two. Do
you not think that there is a great deal of empty
profession nowadays? Do you not think that many have a
name to live and are dead? "Yes," say you, "I know a
neighbor whom I judge to be in that condition." May not
another neighbor judge the same of you? Would it not be
well to raise the question about yourself? Have you
really believed in the Lord Jesus? Are you truly
converted from sin and self? Turn that sharp eye of
yours homeward for a while. Examine your own actions,
and judge your condition by them. Put yourself into the
crucible. O my God, what if I should be a preacher to
others, and should be myself a castaway! Will not every
deacon and elder, and every individual church member,
speak to himself after the same fashion. You will go to
your Sunday school class this afternoon; will you be
teaching the children what you do not know? You mean to
go to a meeting this evening and talk to others about
conversion. Will you be exhorting them to that which
you have never yourself experienced? Will it be so? You
do not need fine preaching, but you do need probing in
the conscience. A thorough examination will do the
healthy no harm, and it may bless the sick. "Lord, let
me know the worst of my case," is one of my frequent
prayers, and I suggest it to you.
So much then about the seed: it was good seed, it was
sown, it was received by the soil, it grew and promised
well, but yet in the end it was unfruitful. No doubt
multitudes who receive Christianity become regular
attendants at our place of worship and are honest in
their moral character; but Christ is not all in all to
them. He holds a very secondary place in their
affections. Their wheat is overshadowed with a thicket
of thorns, and is so choked that it comes to nothing.
Their religion is buried beneath their worldliness. Sad
will their end be. God in mercy save us from such a
doom!
II. But now, secondly, I would speak a little about THE
THORNS. They are by Matthew described as "the care of
this world, and the deceitfulness of riches." Luke
adds, "and pleasures of this life," and Mark still
further mentions, "the lusts of other things." I
suppose that the sower did not see any thorns when he
threw the handful of corn; they had all been cut down
level with the surface. He probably hoped that it was
all good ground, and therefore he sowed it little
suspecting that the thorns were in possession.
Note well that thorns are natural to the soil. Since
the fall these are the firstborn children of the
ground. Any evil which hinders religion is not at all
an extraordinary thing--it is what we ought to expect
among fallen human beings. Grace is an exotic; thorns
are indigenous. Sin is very much at home in the human
heart and, like an ill weed, it grows apace. If you
wish to go to heaven, I might take a little time to
show you the way, and I would need to stir you up to
diligence; but if you must go to hell--well, "easy is
the way to destruction"--it is only a little matter of
neglect. "How shall we escape if we neglect so great
salvation?" Evil things are easy things: for they are
natural to our fallen nature. Right things are rare
flowers that need cultivation. If any of you are being
injured by the cares of the world and the deceitfulness
of riches, I am not astonished; it is natural that it
should be so. Therefore, be on your guard against these
mischiefs. I pray you say to yourself, "Come, there is
something in this man's talk. He is very slow and dull,
but still there is something in what he says. I may,
after all, be tolerating those thorns in my heart which
will kill the good seed, for I am of like passions and
infirmities with other people." I beseech you look to
yourselves that you be not deceived at the last.
The thorns were already established in the soil. They
were not only the natural inhabitants of the soil, but
they were rooted and fixed in it. Our sins within us
claim the freehold of our faculties and they will not
give it up if they can help it. They will not give way
to the Holy Spirit, or to the new life, or to the
influences of divine grace without a desperate
struggle. The roots of sin run through and through our
nature, grasp it with wonderful force, and keep up
their grasp with marvelous tenacity. O my dear hearer,
whoever you may be, you are a fallen creature! If you
were the pope himself, or the president of the United
States, or the queen of England, 'It would be true of
you that you were born in sin and shapen in iniquity,
and your unregenerate heart is deceitful above all
things and desperately wicked. The established church
of the town of Mansoul has the Devil for its
archbishop. Sin has enclasped our nature as a boa
constrictor encircles its victim, and when it has
maintained its hold for twenty, forty, or sixty years,
I hope you are not so foolish as to think that holy
things will easily get the mastery. Our evil nature is
radically conservative, and it will endeavor to crush
out every attempt at a revolution by which the grace of
God should reign through righteousness. Wherefore,
watch and pray, lest temptation choke that which is
good in you. Watch earnestly, for grace is a tender
plant in a foreign soil, in an uncongenial clime, while
sin is in its own element, and is strongly rooted in
the soil.
Do you know why so many professing Christians are like
the thorny ground? It is because processes have been
omitted which would have gone far to alter the
condition of things. It was the husbandman's business
to uproot the thorns, or burn them on the spot. Years
ago when people were converted, there used to be such a
thing as conviction of sin. The great subsoil plow of
soul-anguish was used to tear deep into the soul. Fire
also burned in the mind with exceeding heat: as people
saw sin and felt its dreadful results, the love of it
was burned out of them. But now we are dinned with
braggings about rapid salvations. As for myself, I
believe in instantaneous conversions, and I am glad to
see them; but I am still more glad when I see a
thorough work of grace, a deep sense of sin, and an
effectual wounding by the law. We shall never get rid
of thorns with plows that scratch the surface. Those
fields grow the best corn which are best plowed.
Converts are likely to endure when the thorns cannot
spring up because they have been plowed up. Dear
hearer, are you undergoing today a very severe
conviction of sin? Thank God for it. Are you in awful
trouble and anguish? Do not think that a calamity has
happened to you. May God Himself continue to plow you,
and then sow you, and make sure work in you for years
to come! So you see these thorns were natives, and old-
established natives, and it would have been well had
they been cut up.
The thorns were bound to grow. There is an awful
vitality in evil. First the thorns sent up a few tiny
shoots. These shoots branched out, and more and more
came to keep them company, until the wheat stood as a
lonely thing in a thicket of briars, and was more and
more overtopped and shadowed by them. The thorns
aspired to the mastery, and they soon obtained it; that
done, they set to work to destroy the wheat. They
blocked it up, crowded it out, and some of the thorn
shoots twisted around it, and held the wheat by the
neck until it was choked.
The thorns sucked away all the nutriment from the
wheat, and it was starved, for there is only a certain
quantity of nourishment in the soil, and if the thorns
have it, the wheat must go without it. There is only a
certain amount of thought and energy in a person; and
if the world gets it, Christ cannot have it. If our
thoughts run upon care and pleasure, they cannot be
eager about true religion: is not that clear? That is
the way in which those thorns served the wheat; they
starved it by devouring its food, and they choked it by
keeping off the air and sun; the poor thing became
shriveled and weak, and quite unable to produce the
grain which the sower expected of it. So it is with
many professing Christians. They are at first worldly,
but not so very worldly. They are fairly religious,
though by no means too zealous. They seek the pleasures
of the world, but by no means quite so much as others
we could name. But very soon the thorns grow, and it
becomes doubtful which will win, sin or grace, the
world or Christ. Two masters there cannot be, and in
this case it is especially impossible since neither of
the contending powers will brook a rival. Sin has
sprung from a royal though evil stock, and if it be in
the heart, it will struggle for the throne. So it came
to pass that the tares, being tolerated, choked the
good seed.
Let me describe these thorns a little. Putting together
Matthew, Mark, and Luke, we find that there were four
sorts of thorns. The first is called "the care of this
world." This assuredly comes to the poor; they are apt
to grow anxious and mistrustful about temporal things.
"What shall we eat? What shall we drink? Wherewithal
shall we be clothed?" This trinity of doleful questions
much afflicts many. But anxiety comes to rich people
also. Care dwells with wealth as well as with poverty.
"How shall I get more? How shall I lay it up? How shall
I still increase it?"--and so on. It is "the care of
the age" which we are most warned against. Each age has
its own special fret. It is not a care for God--that is
not the care of any age; but the care of the age is
some vanity or another, and as a standing thing it is
the ambition to keep up with your fellows, to be
respectable, and to keep up appearances. This is the
care which eats as does a canker in the case of many.
Grim care turns many a black hair white, and furrows
many a brow. If you let care grow in your soul, it will
choke up your religion: you cannot care for God and for
mammon too. "We must have care," says one. There is a
care which is proper, and there is an anxiety which is
improper. That is proper care which you can cast upon
God--"Casting all your care upon him; for he careth for
you." That is an improper care which you dare not take
to God but have to bear yourself. Take heed of anxiety,
it will eat the heart out of your religion.
There were others who felt "the deceitfulness of
riches." Our Lord does not say "riches," but "the
deceitfulness of riches." The two things grow together:
riches are evermore deceitful. They deceive people in
the getting of them, for people judge matters very
unfairly when a prospect of gain is before them. The
jingle of the charming guinea, or of "the almighty
dollar," makes a world of difference to the ear when it
is hearing a case. People cannot afford to lose by
integrity and so they take the doubtful way, and either
sail near the wind or speculate until it amounts to
gambling. They would not endure the idea of such
conduct were it not that the hope of gain deceives
them. Our line of conduct ought never to be ruled by
gain or loss. Do right if the heavens fall. Do no
wrong, even though a kingdom should be its reward.
People turn to Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations, a
wonderful book, and there they find certain laws which
I believe to be as fixed and unalterable as the laws of
gravitation; led on by the deceitfulness of riches,
people make these laws into an excuse for grinding the
faces of the poor. They might as well take people to
the top of a rock, fling them down, and dash them to
pieces, and then cry out, "This is the natural result
of the law of gravitation." Of course, the law of
gravitation operates remorselessly, and so will the law
of supply and demand. We must not use either of these
laws as a cover for cruelty to the poor and needy, yet
many do so through "the deceitfulness of riches."
Riches are very deceitful when they are gained, for
they breed in men and women many vices which they do
not themselves suspect. One man is purse-proud, but he
thinks he is humble. He is a self-made man and worships
him that made him. Is it not natural that a person
should worship his maker? In his heart he thinks: "I am
somebody. I came up to London with half-a-crown in my
pocket, and now I could buy a whole street!" People
ought to respect someone of that kind, ought they not,
even though he may have made his money by very queer
practices? It little matters how you make money
nowadays; only get it, and you will have plenty of
admirers and the deceitfulness of riches will enable
you to admire yourself. With pride comes a desire for
wealthy society and vain company, and thus again
religion receives severe injury. There is apt to grow
up in the mind an idolatry of this world and its
treasures. "I don't love money," says one. "You know it
is not money that is the root of all evil, but the love
of it." Just so; but are you sure that you do not love
it? Your thoughts run a good deal after it. You hug it
rather closely and you find it hard to part with it. I
will not accuse you, but I would have you awake to the
fact that riches worm themselves into a person's heart
before he is well aware of it.
You may perceive the deceitfulness of riches if you
note the excuses which people make for getting so much
and withholding it from the cause of God. "They intend
to do a great deal of good with it." Did you hear the
Devil laugh? I am not speaking of many dear people in
this place who are doing a great deal of good with
their means, but I am speaking of those who are simply
living to accumulate wealth, and who say that they will
one day do a great deal of good with it. They say so.
Will it ever be more than saying? I fear that in this
thing many rich people deceive themselves. They go on
accumulating the means but never using them; making
bricks, but never building. All they will get with It
be a corner in The Illustrated London News to say that
they died worth so much. O sirs, how can you be content
thus to have your good things choked? Wherever this
deceitfulness of riches is allowed the upper hand, it
chokes the good seed. A person cannot be eager to get,
and eager to keep, and eager to increase, and eager to
become a millionaire, and at the same time be a true
servant of the Lord Jesus. As the body grows rich, the
soul grows poor.
Luke tells us of another kind of weed, namely, "the
pleasures of this life." I am sure that these thorns
play a dreadful part nowadays. I have nothing to say
against recreation in its proper place. Certain forms
of recreation are needful and useful; but it is a
wretched thing when amusement becomes a vocation.
Amusement should be used to do us good "like a
medicine"; it must never be used as the food of the
individual. From early morning until late at night some
spend their time in a round of frivolities, or else
their very work is simply carried on to furnish them
funds for their pleasures. This is vicious. Many have
had all holy thoughts and gracious resolutions stamped
out by perpetual trifling. Pleasure, so called, is the
murderer of thought. This is the age of excessive
amusement. Everybody craves for it, like a babe for its
rattle. In the more sober years of our fathers, men and
women had something better to live for than silly
sports. The thorns are choking the age.
Mark adds, "and the lusts of other things." I will not
enumerate all those other things, but all things except
the things of Christ and of the Father are "other
things." If anybody spends his life on any object,
however good, short of the glory of God, the good seed
is choked by the inferior object. One person is
eminently scientific, and he will do well if his
science is used for holy purposes, but it can be used
to choke the seed. Another person is a great proficient
in the arts, and he does well if the arts are used as a
mule for Christ to ride upon, but if art is to ride
upon Christ, then it is ill enough. I met with a
clergyman many years ago who was going a long distance
to find a new beetle. He was a great entomologist, and
I did not blame him for it, for to a thoughtful person
entomology may yield many profitable lessons. But if he
neglected his preaching to catch insects, then I do not
wonder that a parishioner would wish that the beetles
would nibble his old sermons, for they were very stale.
I call it choking the seed when any inferior pursuit
becomes the master of our minds, and the cause of God
and truth takes a secondary place. The seed is choked
in our souls whenever Christ is not our all in all. You
see my drift: be it what it may--gain, glory, study,
pleasure--all these may be briers that will choke the
seed.
Mr. Jay was never more pleased than when at Bristol he
had a note sent up to him which ran as follows: "A
young man, who is prospering in business, begs the
prayers of God's people that prosperity may not be a
snare to him." Take care that you look thus upon your
prosperity. My dear friend Dr. Taylor, of New York,
speaks of some Christians nowadays as having a
"butterfly Christianity." When time, and strength, and
thought, and talent are all spent upon mere amusement,
what else are men and women but mere butterflies?
"Society" is just a mass of idle people keeping each
other in countenance. O dear hearers, surely we did not
come into this world to play away our days! I do not
think we came into this world either to slave ourselves
to death, or to rust away in laziness. We have come
here as a man enters into the porch that he may
afterward enter the house. This life is the doorway to
the palace of heaven. Pass through it in such style
that you may enter before the King with holy joy. If
you give your minds and thoughts to these passing
things, be they what they may, you will ruin your
souls, for the good seed cannot grow.
III. So I close in the last place by noticing THE
RESULT. The seed was unfruitful.
These briers and thorns could not pull the seed up, or
throw it away. It remained where it was, but they
choked it. So it may be that your business, your cares,
your pleasures have not torn up your religion by the
roots--it is there still, such as it is. But these
things suffocate your better feelings. Someone that is
choked is not good for much. If a thief gets into his
house, and he desires to defend his property, what can
he do while he is choked? He must wait until he gets
his breath again. What an amount of choked religion we
have around us! It may be alive. I do not know whether
it is or not; but it looks very black in the face. God
save you from having your religion choked!
I have already told you it was drained of all its
sustenance. Look at many Christians; I call them
Christians for they call themselves so. A boy in the
streets, selling mince pies, kept crying, "Hot mince
pies!" A person bought one of them, and found it quite
cold. "Boy," said he, why did you call these pies hot?"
"That's the name they go by, sir," said the boy. So
there are plenty of people that are called Christians,
but they are not Christians--that's the name they go
by; but all the substance is drained out of them by
other matters. You see the shape of a Christian, the
make of a Christian, and some of the talk of a
Christian, but the fruit of a Christian is not there.
That is the result of the choking by the thorns of
care, riches, pleasure, and worldliness in general.
What life there was in the wheat was very sickly. Let
me remind certain persons that their spiritual lives
are growing weak at this time. Morning prayer this
morning, how long did it take? Do not grow red in the
face. I will say no more about it. You are not coming
out tonight, are you? Half a Sunday is enough worship
for you. Would you not like to live in some country
place where you did not need to go out to a place of
worship even once? Bible reading, how much do you do of
that? Family prayer, is that a delight to you? Why,
numbers of so-called Christians have given up family
religion altogether. How about week-day services? You
are not often at a prayer-meeting. No, the distance is
too great! Thursday night service? "Well, well, you see
I might come, but there happens to be a lawn tennis
party that night." Will you come in the winter'? "Yes,
I would, but then a friend drops in, and we have an
evening at bagatelle." How many there are in this
condition! I am not going to judge them, but I remember
that an eminent minister used to say, "When weekday
services are forsaken, farewell to the life of
godliness. Such people never seem to bathe in their
religion, but they give themselves a wetting with the
end of the towel; thus they try to look decent, but
they are not inwardly cleansed.
As to confessing Christ before men and women, many fall
altogether. If you were pushed into a corner, and were
asked if you are a Christian, you would say, "Well, I
do go to a place of worship," but you are by no means
anxious to own the soft impeachment. Our Salvation Army
friends are not ashamed of their religion; why should
you be? Our Quaker friends used to wear broad brims,
but they are very properly giving up their peculiar
garb. I hope it is not to be to you an indication that
you may conceal your religion and be as much as
possible like the world. Do you hope to be soldiers and
yet never wear your regimentals? This is one of the
marks of feeble religion.
When it comes to defending the Gospel, where do you see
it in this age? I hoped that many would be found among
Baptists who would care for the truth; but now I come
to the conclusion that it is with many, as with the
showman when asked which was Wellington, and which was
Bonaparte: "Whichever you please, my little dears. Pay
your money, and take your choice!" Free will or free
grace, human merit or Christ's atonement, it does not
matter now. New theology or old theology, human
speculation or divine revelation--who minds? What do
they care whether God's truth stands or the Devil's
lies? I am weary of these drivellers! The thorns have
choked the seed in the pulpits and in the churches as
well as in private individuals. Oh, that God would
return! Oh, that His Spirit would raise up among us
people who believe indeed, and prove the power of their
belief!
The fruit of much modern piety is nil. I sat down one
day with three or four old Christian men. We had no
sooner met than we began to speak of the providential
dealings of God with His people. We related instances
of answers to prayer, and we spoke of the sovereign
grace of God, and His faithfulness to His saints. When
we had gone a little forward in the conversation, one
remarked how he had enjoyed the talk. "Alas!" said he,
"nobody talks about God now. His providence and His
readiness to hear prayer are seldom mentioned now. The
talk is all about the markets, and the weather, and
Home Rule, and Mr. Gladstone, and Disestablishment, but
little enough about the Lord Jesus Christ." That
witness was true. In old times the Lord's people spoke
often one to another, and the Lord stood at the window
and listened:--"The Lord hearkened, and heard it." He
liked their talk so well that He said He would print it-
-"A book of remembrance was written before him for them
that feared the Lord, and that thought upon his name."
Where do you get experimental Christian talk now'? The
thorns choke holy communion upon the best things.
Fervent prayer! Mighty prayer! Where do you meet with
it? Thank God, we have some brothers and sisters here
whose prayers could unlock the windows of heaven, or
shut them up; but it is not so with many. Go to the
prayer-meetings of most of the churches. What poor
things! Of course I find in country places that many
drop the prayer-meeting during hay-time and harvest. In
London they do not drop the prayer-meetings in summer
because they are too small to need dropping. They take
up the fragment of a prayer-meeting and mend with it
the worn-out lecture, so that it becomes neither
lecture nor prayer meeting. How can we expect a
blessing when we are too lazy to ask for it? Is it not
evidence of a dying religion when, to cover their
carelessness about meeting for prayer, we even hear
ministers doubting the value of prayer-meetings and
calling them "religious expedients"?
Where do you meet with intense enjoyment of the things
of God? The spiritual life is low when there is little
delight in holy service. Oh, for the old Methodistic
fire! Oh, to feel our hearts dance at the sound of
Jesus' name! Oh, to flame up like beacon fires, and
blaze toward heaven with holy ecstasy! It is a
sorrowful day when religion goes abroad without wearing
her ornaments of joy. When an army has left its flag
behind, it has evidently given up all idea of victory.
If there is a declension in spiritual life, we cannot
expect to see deeds of holy consecration. Oh, for men
and women who bring their alabaster boxes to Jesus! I
am glad when I hear this kind of lamentation. "My dear
sir, I have not done for the Lord what I ought to have
done. I have been a believer now for many years, but I
have not given to His cause what I ought to have given;
tell me what I can do." There are hopeful signs in such
inquiries and therefore they are well, but it would be
better to begin early and avoid such regrets.
I would put it to you, my dear hearer, have you been
fruitful? Have you been fruitful with your wealth? Have
you been fruitful with your talent? Have you been
fruitful with your time? What are you doing for Jesus
now? Salvation is not by doings, you are saved by
grace, but if you are so saved, prove it by your
devoted life. Consecrate yourself anew this day wholly
to your Master's service. You are not your own, but
bought with a price, and if you would not be like these
thorn-choked seeds, live while you live, with all-
consuming zeal.
"Well," says one, but there are the thorns." I know
there are. They were here when our blessed Lord came
among us, and they made Him a cruel crown. Are you
going to grow more of them? May I urge you to give up
cultivating thorns'? They are useless; they come to no
good. Whatever the pursuit is, short of the glory of
God, it is a thorn and there is no use in it. It will
in the end be painful to you as it was to your Lord. A
thorn will tear your flesh, aye, tear your heart.
Especially when you come to die will these thorns be in
your pillow. Even if you die in the Lord, it will
grieve your heart to think you did not live more to
Jesus. If you live for these things, you will rue the
day, for they are like thorns, painful in the getting,
painful in the keeping, and painful in the extraction.
You who have had a thorn in your hand know what I mean.
Worldly cares come with pain, they stay with pain, and
they go with pain.
Still, there is a use for thorns. What is that use?
First, if you have thorns about you today, make a
child's use of them. What does a child do? If he gets a
thorn in his finger, he looks at it, and cries. How it
smarts! Then he runs off to his mother. That is one of
the sweet uses of his adversity, it admits him to his
mother at once. She might say, "What are you coming in
for? Run about the garden." But he cries, "Please,
mother, I've got a thorn in my finger." This is quite
enough argument to secure him the best attention of the
queen of the house. See how tenderly she takes out the
little dagger! Let your cares drive you to God. I shall
not mind if you have many of them if each one leads you
to prayer. If every fret makes you lean more on the
Beloved, it will be a benefit. Thus make good use of
the thorns.
Another service to which thorns may be put is to make a
hedge of them, to keep the goats of worldly pleasure
from eating the young shoots of your graces. Let the
sorrows of life keep off temptations which else might
do you serious mischief.
May we meet in heaven! Oh, may we all meet in heaven!
What a congregation I have addressed this morning! I
feel overawed as I look at you. From the ends of the
earth have many of you come. The Lord bless you!
Strangers are here in vast numbers, for the most of our
regular hearers are at the seaside. I may never see you
again on earth. May we all meet in heaven, where thorns
will never grow! May we be gathered by the angels in
that day when the Lord shall say, "Gather the wheat
into my barn"! Amen. So let it be.