Biyernes, Setyembre 7, 2018

The Sum and Substance of all Theology (Charles H. Spurgeon, 1861)

John 6:37

All that the Father giveth me shall come to me; and him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out.” 

What a difference there is between the words of Christ, and those 
of all mere man! Most men speak many words, yet say but little; 
Christ speaks few words, yet says very much. In modern books, 
you may read scores of pages, and scarcely come across a new 
thought; but when Christ speaks, every syllable seems to tell. He 
hits the nail on the head each time He lifts the hammer of His 
Word. The Words of Christ are like ingots of solid gold; we 
preachers too often beat out the gold so thin, that whole acres of 
it would scarcely be worth a farthing. The Words of Christ are 
always to be distinguished from those of His creatures, not only 
for their absolute truthfulness, but also for their profound fulness 
of matter. In all His language He is "full of grace and truth." Look 
at the text before us. Here we have, in two small sentences, the 
sum and substance of all theology. The great questions which 
have divided the Church in all ages, the apparently contradictory 
doctrines which have set one minister of Christ against his fellow, 
are here revealed so simply and plainly, "that he may run that 
readeth" (Habakkuk ii.2). Even a child may understand the 
Words of Christ, though perhaps the loftiest human intellect 
cannot fathom the mystery hidden therein.

Take the first sentence of my text: "All that the Father giveth Me 
shall come to Me." What a weighty sentence! Here we have 
taught us what is called, in the present day, "High Calvinistic 
doctrine"--the purpose of God; the certainty that God's purpose 
will stand; the invincibility of God's will; and the absolute 
assurance that Christ "shall see of the travail of His soul, and 
shall be satisfied."

Look at the second sentence of my text: "And him that cometh to 
me I will in no wise cast out." Here we have the richness, the 
fulness, the unlimited extent of the power of Christ to save those 
who put their trust in Him. Here is a text upon which one might 
preach a thousand sermons. We might take these two sentences 
as a life-long text, and never exhaust the theme.

Mark, too, how our Lord Jesus Christ gives us the whole truth. 
We have many ministers who can preach well upon the first 
sentence: "All that the Father giveth Me shall come to Me." Just 
set them going upon Election, or everlasting covenant 
engagements, and they will be earnest and eloquent, for they are 
fond of dwelling upon these points, and a well-instructed child of 
God can hear them with delight and profit. Such preachers are 
often the fathers of the Church, and the very pillars thereof; but, 
unfortunately, many of these excellent brethren cannot preach so 
well upon the second sentence of my text: "And him that cometh 
to Me I will in no wise cast out." When they get to that truth, they 
are half afraid of it; they hesitate to preach what they consider to 
be a too open salvation. They cannot give the gospel invitation as 
freely as they find it in the Word of God. They do not deny it, yet 
they stutter and stammer sadly, when they get upon this theme.

Then, on the other hand, we have a large number of good 
ministers who can preach on this second clause of the text, but 
they cannot preach on the first clause. How fluent is their 
language as they tell out the freeness of salvation! Here they are 
much at home in their preaching; but, we are sorry to be 
compelled to say that, very often, they are not much at home 
when they come to doctrinal matters, and they would find it 
rather a difficult matter to preach fluently on the first sentence of 
my text. They would, if they attempted to preach from it, 
endeavour to cut out of it all that savours of Divine Sovereignty. 
They do not preach the whole "truth" which "is in Jesus." 

Why is it that some of us do not see both sides of God's revealed 
truth? We persist in closing one eye; we will not see all that may 
be seen if we open both our eyes; and, sometimes, we get angry 
with a brother because he can see a little more than we do. I think 
our text is very much like a stereoscopic picture, for it presents 
two views of the truth. Both views are correct, for they are both 
photographed by the same light. How can we bring these two 
truths together? We get the stereoscope of the scripture, and 
looking with both eyes, the two pictures melt into one. God has 
given us, in His Word, the two pictures of divine truth; but we 
have not all got the stereoscope properly adjusted to make them 
melt into one. When we get to heaven, we shall see how all God's 
truth harmonizes. If we cannot make these two parts of truth 
harmonize now, at any rate we must not dare to blot out one of 
them, for God has given them both.

Now, as God shall help me this morning, I want to expand both 
sentences of my text with equal fidelity and plainness. I shall not 
expect to please some of you while speaking on the first 
sentence, and I shall not be surprised if I fail to please others of 
you when I come to the second sentence; but, in ether case, it will 
be a small matter to me if I have an easy conscience because I 
have proclaimed what I believe to be the whole truth of God. I 
am sure you will be willing to give a patient hearing to that which 
you may not fully receive, if you believe it to be declared in all 
honesty. Reject what I say, if it be not true, but if it be the Word 
of God, receive it; and, be it known unto you that it is at your 
peril if you dare to reject the truthful Word of the glad tidings of 
God.

I. I will begin with the first sentence of the text: "All that the 
Father giveth Me shall come to Me." We have here, first, THE FIRM 
FOUNDATION UPON WHICH OUR SALVATION RESTS.

It rests, you perceive, not on something which man does, but on 
something which God the Father does. The Father gives certain 
persons to His Son, and the Son says, "All that the Father giveth 
Me Shall come to Me." I take it that the meaning of the text is 
this,--that, if any do come to Jesus Christ, it is those whom the 
Father gave to Christ. And the reason why they come,--if we 
search to the very bottom of things,--is, that the Father puts it into 
their hearts to come. The reason why one man is saved, and 
another man is lost, is to be found in God; not in anything which 
the saved man did, or did not do; not in anything which he felt, or 
did not feel; but in something altogether irrespective of himself, 
even in the sovereign grace of God. In the day of God's power, 
the saved are made willing to give their souls to Jesus. The 
language of Scripture must explain this point. "As many as 
received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of 
God, even to them that believe on His name: which were born, 
not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, 
but of God" (John i. 12, 13). "So then it is not of him that willeth, 
nor of him that runneth, but of God that sheweth mercy" (Romans 
ix. 16). If you want to see the fount of grace, you must go to the 
everlasting God; even as, if you want to know why that river runs 
in this direction, and not in that, you must trace it up to its source. 
In the case of every soul that is now in heaven, it was the will of 
God that drew it thither. In the case of every spirit that is on its 
way to glory now, unto God and unto Him alone must be the 
honour of its salvation; for He it is who makes one "differ from 
another" (1 Cor. iv. 7).

I do not care to argue upon this point, except I put it thus: If any 
say, "It is man himself who makes the difference," I reply, "You 
are involving yourself in a great dilemma; if man himself makes 
the difference, then mark--man himself must have the glory." 
Now, I am certain you do not mean to give man the glory of his 
own salvation; you would not have men throw up their caps in 
heaven, and shout, "Unto ourselves be the glory, for we, 
ourselves, were the hinge and turning point of our own salvation." 
No, you would have all the saved cast their crowns at the feet of 
Jesus, and give to Him alone all the honour and all the glory. 
This, however, cannot be, unless, in that critical point, that 
diamond hinge upon which man's salvation shall turn, God shall 
have the control, and not the will of man. You know that those 
who do not believe this truth as a matter of doctrine, do believe it 
in their hearts as a matter of experience.

I was preaching, not very long ago, at a place in Derbyshire, to a 
congregation, nearly all of whom were Methodists, and as I 
preached, they were crying out, "Hallelujah! Glory! Bless the 
Lord!." They were full of excitement, until I went on to say in my 
sermon, "This brings me to the doctrine of Election." There was 
no crying out of "Glory!" and "Hallelujah!" then. Instead, there 
was a great deal of shaking of the head, and a sort of telegraphing 
round the place, as though something dreadful was coming. Now, 
I thought, I must have their attention again, so I said, "You all 
believe in the doctrine of Election?" "No, we don't, lad," said one. 
"Yes, you do, and I am going to preach it to you, and make you 
cry 'Hallelujah!' over it." I am certain they mistrusted my power 
to do that; so, turning a moment from the subject, I said, "Is there 
any difference between you and the ungodly world?" "Ay! Ay! 
Ay!" "Is there any difference between you and the drunkard, the 
harlot, the blasphemer?" "Ay! Ay! Ay!" Ay! there was a 
difference indeed. "Well, now," I said, "there is a great 
difference; who made it, then?" for, whoever made the difference, 
should have the glory of it. "Did you make the difference?" "No, 
lad," said one; and the rest all seemed to join in the chorus. "Who 
made the difference, then? Why, the Lord did it; and did you 
think it wrong for Him to make a difference between you and 
other men?" "No, no," they quickly said. "Very well, then; if it 
was not wrong for God to make the difference, it was not wrong 
for Him to purpose to make it, and that is the doctrine of 
Election." Then they cried, "Hallelujah!" as I said they would.

The doctrine of Election is God's purposing in His heart that He 
would make some men better than other men; that He would give 
to some men more grace than to other men; that some should 
come out and receive the mercy; that others, left to their own free 
will, should reject it; that some should gladly accept the 
invitations of mercy, while others, of their own accord, 
stubbornly refuse the mercy to which the whole world of mankind 
is invited. All men, by nature, refuse the invitations of the gospel. 
God, in the sovereignty of His grace, makes a difference by 
secretly inclining the hearts of some men, by the power of His 
Holy Spirit, to partake of His everlasting mercy in Christ Jesus. I 
am certain that, whether we are Calvinists or Arminians, if our 
hearts are right with God, we shall all adoringly testify: "We love 
Him, because He first loved us." If that be not Election, I know 
not what it is.

II. Now, in the second place, note THE CERTAINTY OF THE ETERNAL 
SALVATION OF ALL WHO WERE GIVEN TO JESUS; "All that the Father giveth 
Me shall come to Me."

This is eternally settled, and so settled that it cannot be altered by 
either man or devil. All whose names are written in the Book of 
Life of the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world, all whom 
God the Father designed to save when He gave up His well-
beloved Son to die upon the cross of Calvary, shall in time be 
drawn by the Holy Spirit, and shall surely come to Christ, and be 
kept by the Spirit, through the precious blood of Christ, and be 
folded for ever with His sheep, on the hill-tops of glory.

Mark! "All that the Father giveth Me shall come to Me." Not one 
of those whom the Father hath given to Jesus shall perish. If any 
were lost, the text would have to read: "Almost all," or, "All but 
one;" but it positively says "All," without any exception; even 
though one may have been, in his unregenerate state, the very 
chief of sinners. Yet even that chosen one, that given one, shall 
come to Jesus; and when he has come, he shall be held by that 
strong love that at first chose him, and he shall never be let go, 
but shall be held fast, even unto the end. Miss Much-afraid, and 
Mrs. Despondency, and Mr. Feeble-mind, shall as certainly come 
to the arms of Christ, as Mr. Great-heart, and Mr. Faithful, and 
Mr. Valiant-for-Truth. If one jewel were lost from Christ's 
crown, then Christ's crown would not be all-glorious. If one 
member of the body of Christ were to perish, Christ's body would 
not be complete. If one of those who are one with Christ should 
miss his way to eternal live, Christ would not be a perfect Christ.

"All that the Father giveth Me Shall come to Me." "But suppose 
they will not come?" I cannot suppose any such thing, for He 
says they "shall come." They shall be made willing in the day of 
God's power. God knows how to make a passage through the 
heart of man; and though man is a free agent, yet God can incline 
him, willingly, to come to Jesus. There are many sentences even 
in Wesley's hymn-book which contain this truth. If God took 
away freedom from man, and then saved him, it would be but a 
small miracle. For God to leave man free to come to Jesus, and 
yet to so move him as to make him come, is a divinely-wrought 
miracle indeed. If we were for a moment to admit that man's will 
could be more than a match for God's will, do you not see where 
we should be landed? Who made man? God! Who made God? 
Shall we lift up man to the sovereign throne of Deity? Who shall 
be master, and have his way, God or man? The will of God, that 
says they "shall come", knows how to make them come.

"But suppose it should be one of those who are living in the 
interior of Africa, and he does not hear the gospel; what then?" 
He shall hear the gospel; either he shall come to the gospel, or 
the gospel shall go to him. Even if no minister should go to such a 
chosen one, he would have the gospel specially revealed to him 
rather than that the promise of the Almighty God should be 
broken.

"But suppose there should be one of God's chosen who has 
become so bad that there is no hope for him? He never attends a 
place of worship; never listens to the gospel; the voce of the 
preacher never reaches him; he has grown hardened in his sin, 
like steel that has been seven times annealed in the fire; what 
then?" That man shall be arrested by God's grace, and that 
obdurate, hard-hearted one shall be made to see the mercy of 
God; the tears shall stream down his cheeks, and he shall be 
made willing to receive Jesus as Saviour. I think that, as God 
could bend my will, and bring me to Christ, He can bring 
anybody.

                  "Why was I made to hear His voice,
                    And enter while there's room;
                When thousands make a wretched choice,
                        And rather than come?
              "'Twas the same love the spread the feast,
                      That sweetly forced me in;
                  Else I had still refused to taste,
                       And perish'd in my sin."

Yes, "sweetly forced me in;"--there is no other word that can so 
accurately describe my case. Oh, how long Jesus Christ stood at 
the door of my heart, and knocked, and knocked, and knocked in 
vain! I asked: "Why should I leave the pleasures of this world?" 
Yet still He knocked, and there was music in every sound of His 
pleading voice; but I said, "Nay, let Him go elsewhere." And 
though, through the window, I could see His thorn-crowned head, 
and the tears standing in His eyes, and the prints of the nails in 
His hands, as He stood and knocked, and said, "Open to Me," yet 
I heeded Him not. Then He sent my mother to me, and she 
pleaded, "let the Saviour in, Charlie;" and I replied, in action, 
though not in words, "Nay, I love thee, my mother; but I do not 
love Christ, thy Saviour." Then came the black hours of sickness; 
but in effect I said, "Nay, I fear not sickness, nor death itself; I 
will still defy my Maker." But it happened, one day, that He 
graciously put in His hand by the hole of the door, and I moved 
toward Him, and then I opened the door, and cried, "Come in! 
Come in!" Alas! alas! He was gone; and for five long years I 
stood, with tears in mine eyes, and I sought Him weeping, but I 
found Him not. I cried after Him, but He answered me not. I said, 
"Whither is He gone? Oh, that I had never rejected Him? Oh, that 
He would but come again!" Surely the angels must then have 
said, "A great change has come over that youth; he would not let 
Christ in when He knocked, but now he wants Christ to come." 
And when He did come, do you think my soul rejected Him? 
Nay, nay; but I fell down at His feet, crying, "Come in! Come in! 
thou Blessed Saviour. I have waited for Thy salvation, O my 
God!"

There is no living soul beyond the reach of hope, no chosen one 
whom Christ cannot bring up even from the very gates of hell. He 
can bare His arm, put out His hand, and pluck the brand "out of 
the fire" (Zechariah iii.2). In a horrible pit, in the miry clay, His 
jewels have been hidden; but down from the throne of light He 
can come, and thrusting in His arm of mercy, He can pull them 
out, and cause them to glitter in His crown for ever. Let it be 
settled in our hearts, as a matter of fact, that what God has 
purposed to do, He will surely accomplish.

I need not dwell longer upon this point, because I think I have 
really brought out the essence of this first sentence of my text: 
"All that the Father giveth Me shall come to Me." Permit me just 
to remark, before I pass on, that I am sometimes sad on account 
of the alarm that some Christians seem to have concerning this 
precious and glorious doctrine. We have, in the Baptist 
denomination,--I am sorry to have to say it,--many ministers, 
excellent brethren, who, while they believe this doctrine, yet 
never preach it. On the other hand, we have some ministers, 
excellent brethren, who never preach anything else. They have a 
kind of barrel-organ that only plays five tunes, and they are 
always repeating them. It is either Election, Predestination, 
Particular Redemption, Effectual Calling, Final Perseverance, or 
something of that kind; it is always the same note. But we have 
also a great many others who never preach concerning these 
doctrines, though they admit they are doctrines taught in Sacred 
Scripture. The reason for their silence is, because they say these 
truths are not suitable to be preached from the pulpit. I hold such 
an utterance as that to be very wicked. Is the doctrine here--in 
this Bible? If it is, as God hath taught it, so are we to teach it. 
"But," they say, "not in a mixed assembly." Where can you find 
an unmixed assembly? God has sent the Bible into a mixed 
world, and the gospel is to be preached in " all the world", and 
"to every creature." "Yes," they say, "preach the gospel, but not 
these special truths of the gospel; because, if you preach these 
doctrines, the people will become Antinomians and Hyper-
Calvinists." Not so; the reason why people become Hyper-
Calvinists and Antinomians, is because some, who profess to be 
Calvinists, often keep back part of the truth, and do not, as Paul 
did, "declare all the counsel of God"; they select certain parts of 
Scripture, where their own particular views are taught, and pass 
by other aspects of God's truth. Such preachers as John Newton, 
and in later times, your own Christmas Evans, were men who 
preached the whole truth of God; they kept back nothing that 
God has revealed; and, as the result of their preaching, 
Antinomianism could not find a foot-hold anywhere. We should 
have each doctrine of Scripture in its proper place, and preach it 
fully; and if we want to have a genuine revival of religion, we 
must preach these doctrines of Jehovah's sovereign grace again 
and again. Do not tell me they will not bring revivals. There was 
but one revival that I have ever heard of, apart from Calvinistic 
doctrine, and that was the one in which Wesley took so great a 
part; but then George Whitefield was there also to preach the 
whole Word of God. When people are getting sleepy, if you want 
to arouse and wake them up thoroughly, preach the doctrine of 
Divine Sovereignty to them; for that will do it right speedily.

III. I shall now turn very briefly to the second sentence of my 
text: "And him that cometh to Me I will in no wise cast out."

"Now," says somebody, "he is going to knock down all that he 
has been building up." Well, I would rather be inconsistent with 
myself than with my Master; but I dare not alter this second 
sentence, and I have no desire to alter it. Let it stand as it is, all 
its glorious simplicity:--

         "HIM THAT COMETH TO ME I WILL IN NO WISE CAST OUT."

Let the whole world come, still this promise is big enough to 
embrace them all in its arms. There is no mistake here, the wrong 
man cannot come. If any sinner come to Christ, he is sure to be 
the right one. Mark, too, as there is no limitation in the person 
coming, so there is no limitation in the manner of the coming. 
Says one, "Suppose I come the wrong way?" You cannot come 
the wrong way; it is written, "No man can come to Me, except 
the Father which hath sent Me draw him." "No man can come 
unto Me, except it were given unto him of My Father" (John 
vi.44,65). If, then, you come to Christ in any way, you are drawn 
of the Father, and He cannot draw the wrong way. If you come to 
Christ at all, the power and will to come have been given you of 
the Father. If you come to Christ, He will in no wise cast you out; 
for no possible or conceivable reason will Jesus ever cast out any 
sinner who comes to Him. There is no reason in hell, or on earth, 
or in heaven, why Jesus should cast out the soul that comes to 
Him. If Satan, the foul accuser of the brethren, brings reasons 
why the coming sinner should not be received, Jesus will "cast 
down" the accuser, but He will not "cast out" the sinner. "Come 
unto Me, all ye that labour, and are heavy laden, and I will give 
your rest," is still His invitation and His promise, too.

Let us suppose a case by the way of illustration. Here is a man in 
Swansea,--ragged, dirty, coal-begrimed,--who has received a 
message from Her Most Gracious Majesty, Queen Victoria. It 
reads in this wise: "You are hereby commanded to come, just as 
you are, to our palace at Windsor, to receive great and special 
favours at our hand. You will stay away at your peril." The man 
reads the message, and at first scarcely understands it; so he 
thinks, "I must wash and prepare myself." Then, he re-reads the 
royal summons, and the words arrest him: "Come just as your 
are." So he starts, and tells the people in the train where he is 
going, and they laugh at him. At length he arrives at Windsor 
Castle; there he is stopped by the guard, and questioned. He 
explains why he has come, and shows the Queen's message; and 
he is allowed to pass. He next meets with a gentlemen in waiting, 
who, after some explanations and expressions of astonishment, 
allows him to enter the ante-room. When there, our friend 
becomes frightened on account of his begrimed and ragged 
appearance; he is half inclined to rush from the place with fear, 
when he remembers the works of the royal command: "Stay away 
at your peril." Presently, the Queen herself appears, and tells him 
how glad she is that he has come just as he was. She says she 
purposes that he shall be suitably clothed, and be made one of the 
princes of her court. She adds, "I told you to come as you were. It 
seemed to be a strange command to you, but I am glad you have 
obeyed, and so come."

I do think this is what Jesus Christ says to every creature under 
heaven. The gospel invitation runs thus: "Come, come, come to 
Christ, just as you are." "But, let me feel more." No, come just as 
you are. "But let me get home to my own room, and let me pray." 
No, no, come to Christ just as you are. As you are, trust in Jesus, 
and He will save you. Oh, do dare to trust Him! If anybody shall 
ask, "Who are you?" answer, "I am nobody." If anyone objects, 
"You are such a filthy sinner," reply, "Yes,'tis true, so I am; but 
He Himself told me to come." If anyone shall say, "You are not 
fit to come," say, "I know I am not fit; but He told me to come." 
Therefore,--

                "Come, ye sinners, poor and wretched,
                   Weak and wounded, sick and sore;
                   Jesus ready stands to save you,
                   Full of pity join'd with power;
                             He is able,
                    He is willing; doubt no more.
                 "Let not conscience make you linger,
                      Nor fitness fondly dream;
                    All the fitness He requireth,
                     Is to feel you need of Him:
                          This He gives you;
                   'Tis the Spirit's rising beam."

Sinner, trust in Jesus: and if thou dost perish trusting in Jesus, I 
will perish with thee. I will make my bed in hell, side by side 
with thee, sinner, if thou canst perish trusting in Christ, and thou 
shalt lie there, and taunt me to all eternity for having taught thee 
falsely, if we perish. But that can never be; those who trust in 
Jesus shall never perish, neither shall any pluck them out of His 
hand. Come to Jesus, and He will in no wise cast thee out.

May the Lord bless the words I have spoken! Though hastily 
suggested to my mind, and feebly delivered to you, the Lord bless 
them, for Christ's sake! Amen.

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