Sabado, Hunyo 19, 2021

Coming Judgment of the Secrets of Men (Charles H. Spurgeon, 1885)

 

Romans 2:16

“In the day when God shall judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ according to my gospel.”


It is impossible for any of us to tell what it cost the
     apostle Paul to write the first chapter of the epistle
     to the Romans. It is a shame even to speak of the
     things which are done of the vicious in secret places;
     but Paul felt it was necessary to break through his
     shame, and to speak out concerning the hideous vices of
     the heathen. He has left on record an exposure of the
     sins of his day which crimsons the cheek of the modest
     when they read it, and makes both the ears of him that
     heareth it to tingle. Paul knew that this chapter would
     be read, not in his age alone, but in all ages, and
     that it would go into the households of the most pure
     and godly as long as the world should stand; and yet he
     deliberately wrote it, and wrote it under the guidance
     of the Holy Spirit. He knew that it must be written to
     put to shame the abominations of an age which was
     almost past shame. Monsters that revel in darkness must
     be dragged into the open, that they may be withered up
     by the light. After Paul has thus written in anguish he
     bethought himself of his chief comfort. While his pen
     was black with the words he had written in the first
     chapter, he was driven to write of his great delight.
     He clings to the gospel with a greater tenacity than
     ever. As in the verse before us he needed to mention
     the gospel, he did not speak of it as "the gospel," but
     as "my gospel." "God shall judge the secrets of men by
     Jesus Christ, according to my gospel." He felt he could
     not live in the midst of so depraved a people without
     holding the gospel with both hands, and grasping it as
     his very own. "My gospel," saith he. Not that Paul was
     the author of it, not that Paul had an exclusive
     monopoly of its blessings, but that he had so received
     it from Christ himself, and regarded himself as so
     responsibly put in trust with it, that he could not
     disown it even for a instant. So fully had he taken it
     into himself that he could not do less than call it "my
     gospel." In another place he speaks of "our gospel;"
     thus using a possessive pronoun, to show how believers
     identify themselves with the truth which they preach.
     He had a gospel, a definite form of truth, and he
     believed in it beyond all doubt; and therefore he spoke
     of it as "my gospel." Herein we hear the voice of
     faith, which seems to say, "Though others reject it, I
     am sure of it, and allow no shade of mistrust to darken
     my mind. To me it is glad tidings of great joy: I hail
     it as 'my gospel.' If I be called a fool for holding
     it, I am content to be a fool, and to find all my
     wisdom in my Lord."

      "Should all the forms that men devise Assult my faith
      with treacherous art, I'd call them vanity and lies,
                And bind the gospel to my heart."
     
     Is not this word "my gospel" the voice of love? Does he
     not by this word embrace the gospel as the only love of
     his soul-for the sake of which he had suffered the loss
     of all things, and did count them but dung-for the sake
     of which he was willing to stand before Nero, and
     proclaim, even in Caesar's palace, the message from
     heaven? Though each word should cost him a life, he was
     willing to die a thousand deaths for the holy cause.
     "My gospel," saith he, with a rapture of delight, as he
     presses to his bosom the sacred deposit of truth.
     
     "My gospel." Does not this show his courage? As much as
     to say, "I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for
     it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that
     believeth." He says, "my gospel," as a soldier speaks
     of "my colours," or of "my king." He resolves to bear
     this banner to victory, and to serve this royal truth
     even to the death.
     
     "My gospel." There is a touch of discrimination about
     the expression. Paul perceives that there are other
     gospels, and he makes short work with them, for he
     saith, "Though we, or an angel from heaven, preach any
     other gospel unto you than that which we have preached
     unto you, let me be accused." The apostle was of a
     gentle spirit; he prayed heartily for the Jews who
     persecuted him, and yielded his life for the conversion
     of the Gentiles who maltreated him; but he had no
     tolerance for false gospellers. He exhibited great
     breadth of mind, and to save souls he became all things
     to all men; but when he contemplated any alteration or
     adulteration of the gospel of Christ, he thundered and
     lightninged without measure. When he feared that
     something else might spring up among the philosophers,
     or among the Judaizers, that should hide a single beam
     of the glorious Sun of Righteousness, he used no
     measured language; but cried concerning the author of
     such a darkening influence, "Let him be accursed."
     Every heart that would see men blessed whispers an
     "Amen" to the apostolic malediction. No greater curse
     can come upon mankind than the obscuration of the
     gospel of Jesus Christ. Paul saith of himself and his
     true brethren, "We are not as many, which corrupt the
     word of God;" and he cries to those who turned aside
     from the one and only gospel, "O foolish Galatians, who
     hath bewitched you?" Of all new doctrines he speaks as
     of "another gospel, which is not another; but there be
     some that trouble you."
     
     As for myself, looking at the matter afresh, amidst all
     the filthiness which I see in the world at this day, I
     lay hold upon the pure and blessed Word of God, and
     call it all the more earnestly, my gospel,-mine in life
     and mine in death, mine against all comers, mine for
     ever, God helping me: with emphasis-"my gospel."
     
     Now let us notice what it was that brought up this
     expression, "My gospel." What was Paul preaching about?
     Certainly not upon any of the gentle and tender themes,
     which we are told nowadays ought to occupy all our
     time; but he is speaking of the terrors of the law, and
     in that connection he speaks of "my gospel."
     
     Let us come at once to our text. It will need no
     dividing, for it divides itself. First, let us consider
     that on a certain day God shall judge mankind;
     secondly, on that day God will judge the secrets of
     men; thirdly, when he judges the secrets of men, it
     will be by Jesus Christ; and fourthly, this is
     according to gospel.
     
     I. We begin with the solemn truth, that ON A CERTAIN
     DAY GOD WILL JUDGE MEN. A judgment is going on daily.
     God is continually holding court, and considering the
     doings of the sons of men. Every evil deed that they do
     is recorded in the register of doom, and each good
     action is remembered and laid up in store by God. That
     judgment is reflected in a measure in the consciences
     of men. Those who know the gospel, and those who know
     it not, alike, have a certain measure of light, by
     which they know right from wrong; their consciences all
     the while accusing or else excusing them. This session
     of the heavenly court continues from day to day, like
     that of our local magistrates; but this does not
     prevent but rather necessitates the holding of an
     ultimate great assize.
     
     As each man passes into another world, there is an
     immediate judgment passed upon him; but this is only
     the foreshadowing of that which will take place in the
     end of the world.
     
     There is a judgment also passing upon nations, for as
     nations will not exist as nations in another world,
     they have to be judged and punished in this present
     state. The thoughtful reader of history will not fail
     to observe, how sternly this justice had dealt with
     empire after empire, when they have become corrupt.
     Colossal dominions have withered to the ground, when
     sentenced by the King of kings. Go ye and ask to-day,
     "Where is the empire of Assyria? Where are the mighty
     cities of Babylon? Where are the glories of the Medes
     and Persians? What has become of the Macedonian power?
     Where are the Caesars and their palaces?" These empires
     were forces established by cruelty, and used for
     oppression; they fostered luxury and licentiousness,
     and when they were no longer tolerable, the earth was
     purged from their polluting existence. Ah me! what
     horrors of war, bloodshed, and devastation, have come
     upon men as the result of their iniquities! The world
     is full of the monuments, both of the mercy and the
     justice of God: in fact the monuments of his justice,
     if rightly viewed, are proofs of his goodness; for it
     is mercy on the part of God to put an end to evil
     systems when, like a nightmare, they weigh heavily upon
     the bosom of mankind. The omnipotent, Judge has not
     ceased from his sovereign rule over kingdoms, and our
     own country may yet have to feel his chastisements. We
     have often laughed among ourselves at the idea of the
     New Zealander sitting on the broken arch of London
     Bridge amid the ruins of this metropolis. But is it
     quite so ridiculous as it looks? It is more than
     possible it will be realized if our iniquities continue
     to abound. What is there about London that it should be
     more enduring than Rome? Why should the palaces of our
     monarches be eternal if the palaces of Koyunjik have
     fallen? The almost boundless power of the Pharaohs has
     passed away, and Egypt has become the meanest of
     nations; why should not England come under like
     condemnation? What are we? What is there about our
     boastful race, whether on this side of the Atlantic or
     the other, that we should monopolize the favour of God?
     If we rebel, and sin against him, he will not hold us
     guiltless, but will deal out impartial justice to an
     ungrateful race.
     
     Still, though such judgments proceed every day, yet
     there is to be a day, a period of time, in which, in a
     more distinct, formal, public, and final manner, God
     will judge the sons of men. We might have guessed this
     by the light of nature and of reason. Even heathen
     peoples have had a dim notion of a day of doom; but we
     are not left to guess it, we are solemnly assured of it
     in the Holy Scripture. Accepting this Book as the
     revelation of God, we know beyond all doubt that a day
     is appointed in which the Lord will judge the secrets
     of men.
     
     By judging is here meant all that concerns the
     proceedings of trial and award. God will judge the race
     of men; that is to say, first, there will be a session
     of majesty, and the appearing of a great white throne,
     surrounded with pomp of angels and glorified beings.
     Then a summons will be issued, bidding all men come to
     judgment, to give in their final account. The heralds
     will fly through the realms of death, and summon those
     who sleep in the dust: for the quick and the dead shall
     all appear before that judgment-seat. John says, "I saw
     the dead, small and great, stand before God;" and he
     adds, "The sea gave up the dead which were in it; and
     death and hell delivered up the dead which were in
     them." Those that have been so long buried that their
     dust is mingled with the soil, and has undergone a
     thousand transmutations, shall nevertheless be made to
     put in a personal appearance before the judgment-seat
     of Christ. What an issue will that be! You and I and
     all the myriad myriads of our race shall be gathered
     before the throne of the Son of God. Then, when all are
     gathered, the indictment will be read, and each one
     will be examined concerning things done in the body,
     according to that he hath done. Then the books shall be
     opened, and everything recorded there shall be read
     before the face of heaven. Every sinner shall then hear
     the story of his life published to his everlasting
     shame. The good shall ask no concealment, and the evil
     shall find none. Angels and men shall then see the
     truth of things, and the saints shall judge the world.
     Then the great Judge himself shall give the decision:
     he shall pronounce sentence upon the wicked, and
     execute their punishment. No partiality shall there be
     seen; there shall be no private conferences to secure
     immunity for nobles, no hushing up of matters, that
     great men may escape contempt for their crimes. All men
     shall stand before the one great judgment-bar; evidence
     shall be given concerning them all, and a righteous
     sentence shall go forth from his mouth who knows not
     how to flatter the great.
     
     This will be so, and it ought to be so: God should
     judge the world, because he is the universal ruler and
     sovereign. There has been a day for sinning, there
     ought to be a day for punishing; a long age of
     rebellion has been endured, and there must be a time
     when justice shall assert her supremacy. We have seen
     an age in which reformation has been commanded, in
     which mercy has been presented, in which expostulation
     and entreaty have been used, and there ought at last to
     come a day in which God shall judge both the quick and
     the dead, and measure out to each the final result of
     life. It ought to be so for the sake of the righteous.
     They have been slandered; they have been despised and
     ridiculed; worse than that, they have been imprisoned
     and beaten, and put to death times without number: the
     best have had the worst of it, and there ought to be a
     judgment to set these things right. Besides the
     festering iniquities of each age cry out to God that he
     should deal with them. Shall such sin go unpunished? To
     what end is there a moral government at all, and how is
     its continuance to be secured, if there be not rewards
     and punishments and a day of account? For the display
     of his holiness, for the overwhelming of his
     adversaries, for the rewarding of those who have
     faithfully served him, there must be and shall be a day
     in which God will judge the world.
     
     Why doth it not come at once? And when will it come?
     The precise day we cannot tell. Man nor angel knoweth
     that day, and it is idle and profane to guess at it,
     since even the Son of man, as such, knoweth not the
     time. It is sufficient for us that the Judgment Day
     will surely come; sufficient also to believe that it is
     postponed on purpose to give breathing time for mercy,
     and space for repentance. Why should the ungodly want
     to know when that day will come? What is that day to
     you? To you it should be darkness, and not light. It
     shall be your day of consuming as stubble fully dry:
     therefore bless the Lord that he delayeth his coming,
     and reckon that his longsuffering is for your
     salvation.
     
     Moreover, the Lord keeps the scaffold standing till he
     hath built up the fabric of his church. Not yet are the
     elect all called out from among the guilty sons of men;
     not yet are all the redeemed with blood redeemed with
     power and brought forth out of the corruption of the
     age into the holiness in which they walk with God.
     Therefore the Lord waiteth for a while. But do not
     deceive yourselves. The great day of his wrath cometh
     on apace, and your days of reprieve are numbered. One
     day is with the Lord as a thousand years, and a
     thousand years as one day. Ye shall die, perhaps,
     before the appearing of the Son of man: but ye shall
     see his judgment-seat for all that, for ye shall rise
     again as surely as he rose. When the apostle addressed
     the Grecian sages at Athens he said, "God now
     commandeth all men everywhere to repent, because he
     hath appointed a day, in the which he will judge the
     world in righteousness by that man whom he hath
     ordained; whereof he hath given assurance unto all men,
     in that he hath raised him from the dead." See ye not,
     O ye impenitent ones, that a risen Saviour is the sign
     of your doom. As God hath raised Jesus from the dead,
     so shall he raise your bodies, that in these you may
     come to judgment. Before the judgment-seat shall every
     man and woman in this house give an account of the
     things done in the body, whether they be good or
     whether they be evil. Thus saith the Lord.
     
     II. Now I call your attention to the fact that "GOD
     WILL JUDGE THE SECRETS OF MEN." This will happen to all
     men, of every nation, of every age, of every rank, and
     of every character. The Judge will, of course, judge
     their outward acts, but these may be said to have gone
     before them to judgment: their secret acts are
     specially mentioned, because these will make judgment
     to be the more searching.
     
     By "secrets of men," the Scripture means those secret
     crimes which hide themselves away by their own infamy,
     which are too vile to be spoken of, which cause a
     shudder to go through a nation if they be but dragged,
     as they ought to be, into the daylight. Secret offences
     shall be brought into judgment; the deeds of the night
     and of the closed room, the acts which require the
     finger to be laid upon the lip, and a conspiracy of
     silence to be sworn. Revolting and shameless sins which
     must never be mentioned lest the man who committed them
     should be excluded from his fellows as an outcast,
     abhorred even of other sinners-all those shall be
     revealed. All that you have done, any of you, or are
     doing, if you are bearing the Christian name and yet
     practising secret sin, shall be laid bare before the
     universal gaze. If you sit here amongst the people of
     God, and yet where no eye sees you, if you are living
     in dishonesty, untruthfulness, or uncleanness, it shall
     all be known, and shame and confusion of face shall
     eternally cover you. Contempt shall be the inheritance
     to which you shall awake, when hypocrisy shall be no
     more possible. Be not deceived, God is not mocked; but
     he will bring the secrets of men into judgment.
     
     Specially our text refers to the hidden motives of ever
     action; for a man may do that which is right from a
     wrong motive, and so the deed may be evil in the sight
     of God, though it seem right in the sight of men. Oh,
     think what it will be to have your motives all brought
     to light, to have it proven that you were godly for the
     sake of gain, that you were generous out of
     ostentation, or zealous for love of praise, that you
     were careful in public to maintain a religious
     reputation, but that all the while everything was done
     for self, and self only! What a strong light will that
     be which God shall turn upon our lives, when the
     darkest chambers of human desire and motive shall be as
     manifest as public acts! What a revelation will that be
     which makes manifest all thoughts, and imaginings, and
     lustings, and desires! All angers, and envies, and
     prides, and rebellions of the heart-what a disclosure
     will these make!
     
     All the sensual desires and imaginings of even the best-
     regulated, what a foulness will these appear! What a
     day it will be, when the secrets of men shall be set in
     the full blaze of noon!
     
     God will also reveal secrets, that were secrets even to
     the sinners themselves, for there is sin in us which we
     have never seen, and iniquity in us which we have never
     yet discovered.
     
     We have managed for our own comfort's sake to blind our
     eyes somewhat, and we take care to avert our gaze from
     things which it is inconvenient to see; but we shall be
     compelled to see all these evils in that day, when the
     Lord shall judge the secrets of men. I do not wonder
     that when a certain Rabbi read in the book of
     Ecclesiastes that God shall bring every work into
     judgment, with every secret thing, whether it be good,
     or whether it be evil, he wept. It is enough to make
     the best men tremble. Were it not for thee, O Jesus,
     whose precious blood hath cleansed us from all sin,
     where should we be! Were it not for thy righteousness,
     which shall cover those who believe in thee, who among
     us could endure the thought of that tremendous day? In
     thee, O Jesus, we are made righteous, and therefore we
     fear not the trial-hour; but were it not for thee our
     hearts would fail us for fear!
     
     Now if you ask me why God should judge, especially the
     secrets of men-since this is not done in human courts,
     and cannot be, for secret things of this kind come not
     under cognizance of our short-sighted tribunals-I
     answer it is because there is really nothing secret
     from God. We make a difference between secret and
     public sins, but he doth not; for all things are naked
     and open to the eyes of him with whom we have to do.
     All deeds are done in the immediate presence of God,
     who is personally present everywhere. He knows and sees
     all things as one upon the spot, and every secret sin
     is but conceived to be secret through the deluded
     fantasy of our ignorance. God sees more of a secret sin
     than a man can see of that which is done before his
     face. "Can any hide himself in secret places that I
     shall not see him? saith the Lord."
     
     The secrets of men will be judged because often the
     greatest of moral acts are done in secret. The
     brightest deeds that God delights in are those that are
     done by his servants when they have shut the door and
     are alone with him; when they have no motive but to
     please him; when they studiously avoid publicity, lest
     they should be turned aside by the praise of men; when
     the right hand knoweth not what the left hand doeth,
     and the loving, generous heart deviseth liberal things,
     and doeth it behind the screen, so that it should never
     be discovered how the deed was done. It were a pity
     that such deeds should be left out at the great audit.
     Thus, too, secret vices are also of the very blackest
     kind, and to exempt them were to let the worst of
     sinners go unpunished. Shall it be that these polluted
     things shall escape because they have purchased silence
     with their wealth? I say solemnly "God forbid." He does
     forbid it: what they have done in secret, shall be
     proclaimed upon the house-tops.
     
     Besides, the secret things of men enter into the very
     essence of their actions. An action is, after all, good
     or bad very much according to its motive. It may seem
     good, but the motive may taint it; and so, if God did
     not judge the secret part of the action he would not
     judge righteously. He will weigh our actions, and
     detect the design which led to them, and the spirit
     which prompted them.
     
     Is it not certainly true that the secret thing is the
     best evidence of the man's condition? Many a man will
     not do in public that which would bring him shame; not
     because he is black-hearted enough for it, but because
     he is too much of a coward. That which a man does when
     he thinks that he is entirely by himself is the best
     revelation of the man. That which thou wilt not do
     because it would be told of thee if thou didst ill, is
     a poor index of thy real character. That which thou
     wilt do because thou wilt be praised for doing well, is
     an equally faint test of thy heart. Such virtue is mere
     self-seeking, or mean-spirited subservience to thy
     fellow-man; but that which thou doest out of respect to
     no authority but thine own conscience and thy God; that
     which thou doest unobserved, without regard to what man
     will say concerning it-that it is which reveals thee,
     and discovers thy real soul. Hence God lays a special
     stress and emphasis upon the fact that he will in that
     day judge "the secrets" of men by Jesus Christ.
     
     Oh, friends, if it does not make you tremble to think
     of these things, it ought to do so. I feel the deep
     responsibility of preaching upon such matters, and I
     pray God of his infinite mercy to apply these truths to
     our hearts, that they may be forceful upon our lives.
     These truths ought to startle us, but I am afraid we
     hear them with small result; we have grown familiar
     with them, and they do not penetrate us as they should.
     We have to deal, brethren, with an omniscient God; with
     One who once knowing never forgets; with One to whom
     all things are always present; with One will conceal
     nothing out of fear, or favour of any man's person;
     with One who will shortly bring the splendour of his
     omniscience and the impartiality of his justice to bear
     upon all human lives. God help us, where'er we rove and
     where'er we rest, to remember that each thought, word,
     and act of each moment lies in that fierce light which
     beats upon all things from the throne of God.
     
     III. Another solemn revelation of our text lies in this
     fact, that "GOD WILL JUDGE THE SECRETS OF MEN BY JESUS
     CHRIST." He that will sit upon the throne as the Vice-
     regent of God, and as a Judge, acting for God, will be
     Jesus Christ. What a name for a Judge! The Saviour-
     Anointed-Jesus Christ: he is to be the judge of all
     mankind. Our Redeemer will be the Umpire of our
     destiny.
     
     This will be, I doubt not, first for the display of his
     glory. What a difference there will be then between the
     babe of Bethlehem's manger, hunted by Herod, carried
     down by night into Egypt for shelter, and the King of
     kings and Lord of lords, before whom every knee must
     bow! What a difference between the weary man and full
     of woes, and he that shall then be grit with glory,
     sitting on a throne encircled with a rainbow! From the
     derision of men to the throne of universal judgment,
     what an ascent! I am unable to convey to you my own
     heart's sense of the contrast between the "despised and
     rejected of men," and the universally-acknowledged
     Lord, before whom Caesars and pontiffs shall bow into
     the dust. He who was judged at Pilate's bar, shall
     summon all to his bar. What a change from the shame and
     spitting, from the nails and the wounds, the mockery
     and the thirst, and the dying anguish, to the glory in
     which he shall come whose eyes are as a flame of fire,
     and out of whose mouth there goeth a two-edged sword!
     He shall judge the nations, even he whom the nations
     abhorred. He shall break them in pieces like a potter's
     vessel, even those who cast him out as unworthy to live
     among them. Oh, how we ought to bow before him now as
     he reveals himself in his tender sympathy, and in his
     generous humiliation! Let us kiss the Son lest he be
     angry; let us yield to his grace, that we may not be
     crushed by his wrath. Ye sinners, bow before those
     pierced feet, which else will tread you like clusters
     in the wine-press. Look ye up to him with weeping, and
     confess your forgetfulness of him, and put your trust
     in him; lest he look down on you in indignation. Oh,
     remember that he will one day say, "But those mine
     enemies, which would not that I should reign over them,
     bring hither, and slay them before me." The holding of
     the judgment by the Lord Jesus will greatly enhance his
     glory. It will finally settle one controversy which is
     still upheld by certain erroneous spirits: there will
     be no doubt about our Lord's deity in that day: there
     will be no question that this same Jesus who was
     crucified is both Lord and God. God himself shall
     judge, but he shall perform the judgment in the person
     of his Son Jesus Christ, truly man, but nevertheless
     most truly God. Being God he is divinely qualified to
     judge the world in righteousness, and the people with
     his truth.
     
     If you ask again, Why is the Son of God chosen to be
     the final Judge? I could give as a further answer that
     he receives this high office not only as a reward for
     all his pains, and as a manifestation of his glory, but
     also because men have been under his mediatorial sway,
     and he is their Governor and King. At the present
     moment we are all under the sway of the Prince
     Immanuel, God with us: we have been placed by an act of
     divine clemency, not under the immediate government of
     an offended God, but under the reconciling rule of the
     Prince of Peace. "All power is given unto him in heaven
     and in earth." "The Father judgeth no man, but hath
     committed all judgment unto the Son: that all men
     should honour the Son, even as they honour the Father."
     We are commanded to preach unto the people, and "to
     testify that it is he which was ordained of God to be
     the judge of quick and dead." (Acts 10:42) Jesus is our
     Lord and King, and it is meet that he should conclude
     his mediatorial sovereignty by rewarding his subjects
     to their deeds.
     
     But I have somewhat to say unto you which ought to
     reach your hearts, even if other thoughts have not done
     so. I think that God hath chosen Christ, the man Christ
     Jesus, to judge the world that there may never be a
     cavil raised concerning that judgment. Men shall not be
     able to say-We were judged by a superior being who did
     not know our weaknesses and temptations, and therefore
     he judged us harshly, and without a generous
     consideration of our condition. No, God shall judge the
     secrets of men by Jesus Christ, who was tempted in all
     points like as we are, yet without sin. He is our
     brother, bone of our bone, flesh of our flesh, partaker
     of our humanity, and therefore understands and knows
     what is in men. He has shown himself to be skilful in
     all the surgery of mercy throughout the ages, and at
     last he will be found equally skilful in dissecting
     motives and revealing the thoughts and intents of the
     heart. Nobody shall ever be able to look back on that
     august tribunal and say that he who sat upon it was too
     stern, because he knew nothing of human weakness. It
     will be the loving Christ, whose tears, and bloody
     sweat, and gaping wounds, attest his brotherhood with
     mankind; and it will be clear to all intelligences that
     however dread his sentences, he could not be
     unmerciful. God shall judge us by Jesus Christ, that
     the judgment may be indisputable.
     
     But harken well-for I speak with a great weight upon my
     soul-this judgment by Jesus Christ, puts beyond
     possibility all hope of any after-interposition. If the
     Saviour condemns, and such a Saviour, who can plead for
     us? The owner of the vineyard was about to cut down the
     barren tree, when the dresser of the vineyard pleaded,
     "Let it alone this year also;" but what can come of
     that tree when that vinedresser himself shall say to
     the master, "It must fall; I myself must cut it down!"
     If your Saviour shall become your judge you will be
     judged indeed. If he shall say, "Depart, ye cursed,"
     who can call you back? If he that bled to save men at
     last comes to this conclusion, that there is no more to
     be done, but they must be driven from his presence,
     then farewell hope. To the guilty the judgment will
     indeed be a

          "Great day of dread, decision, and despair."
     
     An infinite horror shall seize upon their spirits as
     the words of the loving Christ shall freeze their very
     marrow, and fix them in the ice of eternal despair.
     There is, to my mind, a climax of solemnity in the fact
     that God shall judge the secrets of men by Jesus
     Christ.
     
     Does not this also show how certain the sentence will
     be? for this Christ of God is too much in earnest to
     play with men. If he says, "Come, ye blessed," he will
     not fail to bring them to their inheritance. If he be
     driven to say, "Depart, ye cursed," he will see it
     done, and into the everlasting punishment they must go.
     Even when it cost him his life he did not draw back
     from doing the will of his Father, nor will he shrink
     in that day when he shall pronounce the sentence of
     doom. Oh, how evil must sin be since it constrains the
     tender Saviour to pronounce sentence of eternal woe! I
     am sure that many of us have been driven of late to an
     increased hatred of sin; our souls have recoiled within
     us because of the wickedness among which we dwell; it
     has made us feel as if we would fain borrow the
     Almighty's thunderbolts with which to smite iniquity.
     Such haste on our part may not be seemly, since it
     implies a complaint against divine long-suffering; but
     Christ's dealing with evil will be calm and
     dispassionate, and all the more crushing. Jesus, with
     his pierced hand, that bears the attestation of his
     supreme love to men, shall wave the impenitent away;
     and those lips which bade the weary rest in him shall
     solemnly say to the wicked, "Depart, ye cursed, into
     everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his
     angels." To be trampled beneath the foot which was
     nailed to the cross will be to be crushed indeed: yet
     so it is, God shall judge the secrets of men by Jesus
     Christ.
     
     It seems to me as if God in this intended to give a
     display of the unity of all his perfections. In this
     same man, Christ Jesus, the Son of God, you behold
     justice and love, mercy and righteousness, combined in
     equal measure. He turns to the right, and says, "Come,
     ye blessed," with infinite suavity; and with the same
     lip, as he glances to the left, he says, "Depart, ye
     cursed." Men will then see at one glance how love and
     righteousness are one, and how they meet in equal
     splendour in the person of the Well-beloved, whom God
     has therefore chosen to be Judge of quick and dead.
     
     IV. I have done when you have borne with me a minute or
     two upon my next point, which is this: and ALL THIS IS
     ACCORDING TO THE GOSPEL. That is to say, there is
     nothing in the gospel contrary to the solemn teaching.
     Men gather to us, to hear us preach of infinite mercy,
     and tell of the love that blots out sin; and our task
     is joyful when we are called to deliver such a message;
     but oh, sirs, remember that nothing in our message
     makes light of sin. The gospel offers you no
     opportunity of going on in sin, and escaping without
     punishment. Its own cry is, "Except ye repent, ye shall
     all likewise perish." Jesus has not come into the world
     to make sin less terrible. Nothing in the gospel
     excuses sin; nothing in it affords toleration for lust
     or anger, or dishonesty, or falsehood. The gospel is as
     truly a two-edged sword against sin, as ever the law
     can be. There is grace for the man who quits his sin,
     but there is tribulation and wrath upon every man that
     doeth evil. "If ye turn not, he will whet his sword; he
     hath bent his bow, and made it ready." The gospel is
     all tenderness to the repenting, but all terror to the
     obstinate offender. It has pardon for the very chief of
     sinners, and mercy for the vilest of the vile, if they
     will forsake their sins; but it is according to our
     gospel that he that goeth on in his iniquity, shall be
     cast into hell, and he that believeth not shall be
     damned. With deep love to the souls of men, I bear
     witness to the truth that he who turns not with
     repentance and faith to Christ, shall go away into
     punishment as everlasting as the life of the righteous.
     This is according to our gospel: indeed, we had not
     needed such a gospel, if there had not been such a
     judgment. The background of the cross is the judgment-
     seat of Christ. We had not needed so great an
     atonement, so vast a sacrifice, if there had not been
     an exceeding sinfulness in sin, an exceeding justice in
     the judgment, and an exceeding terror in the sure
     rewards of transgression.
     
     "According to my gospel," saith Paul; and he meant that
     the judgment is an essential part of the gospel creed.
     If I had to sum up the gospel I should have to tell you
     certain facts: Jesus, the Son of God, became man; he
     was born of the virgin Mary; lived a perfect life; was
     falsely accused of men; was crucified, dead, and
     buried; the third day he rose again from the dead; he
     ascended into heaven and sitteth on the right hand of
     God; from whence he shall also come to judge the quick
     and the dead. This is one of the elementary truths of
     our gospel; we believe in the resurrection of the dead,
     the final judgment, and the life everlasting.
     
     The judgment is according to our gospel, and in times
     of righteous indignation its terrible significance
     seemeth a very gospel to the pure in heart. I mean
     this. I have read this and that concerning oppression,
     slavery, the treading down of the poor, and the
     shedding of blood, and I have rejoiced that there is a
     righteous Judge. I have read of secret wickednesses
     among the rich men of this city, and I have said within
     myself, "Thank God, there will be a judgment day."
     Thousands of men have been hanged for much less crimes
     than those which now disgrace gentlemen whose names are
     on the lips of rank and beauty. Ah me, how heavy is our
     heart as we think of it! It has come like a gospel to
     us that the Lord will be revealed in flaming fire,
     taking vengeance on them that know not God, and that
     obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. (2 Thess.
     1:8) The secret wickedness of London cannot go on for
     ever. Even they that love men best, and most desire
     salvation for them, cannot but cry to God, "How long!
     How long! Great God, wilt thou for ever endure this?"
     God hath appointed a day in which he will judge the
     world, and we sigh and cry until it shall end the reign
     of wickedness, and give rest to the oppressed.
     Brethren, we must preach the coming of the Lord, and
     preach it somewhat more than we have done; because it
     is the driving power of the gospel. Too many have kept
     back these truths, and thus the bone has been taken out
     of the arm of the gospel. Its point has been broken;
     its edge has been blunted. The doctrine of judgment to
     come is the power by which men are to be aroused. There
     is another life; the Lord will come a second time;
     judgment will arrive; the wrath of God will be
     revealed. Where this is not preached, I am bold to say
     the gospel is not preached. It is absolutely necessary
     to the preaching of the gospel of Christ that men be
     warned as to what will happen if they continue in their
     sins. Ho, ho, sir surgeon, you are too delicate to tell
     the man that he is ill! You hope to heal the sick
     without their knowing it. You therefore flatter them;
     and what happens? They laugh at you; they dance upon
     their own graves. At last they die! Your delicacy is
     cruelty; your flatteries are poisons; you are a
     murderer. Shall we keep men in a fool's paradise? Shall
     we lull them into soft slumbers from which they will
     awake in hell? Are we to become helpers of their
     damnation by our smooth speeches? In the name of God we
     will not. It becomes every true minister of Christ to
     cry aloud and spare not, for God hath set a day in
     which he will "judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ
     according to my gospel." As surely as Paul's gospel was
     true the judgment will come. Wherefore flee to Jesus
     this day, O sinners. O ye saints, come hide yourselves
     again beneath the crimson canopy of the atoning
     sacrifice, that you may be now ready to welcome your
     descending Lord and escort him to his judgment-seat. O
     my hearers, may God bless you, for Jesus' sake. Amen.
     
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