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Dedicated
to freeing the moral captives through education-by way of the printed
word-God's word.

Hypertable of
Contents:
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THAT
MEN BY NATURE ARE DEAD
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IN
CHRIST JESUS THERE IS LIFE
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ETERNAL
LIFE IS GIVEN TO ALL WHO COME FOR IT
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THAT
BY NATURE NO MAN WILL COME TO CHRIST
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ARMINIAN
PRAYER
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The New Park Street Pulpit
Free Will--A Slave
A Sermon
Delivered on Lord's Day
morning, Dec. 2,1855,
Delivered by
C. H. SPURGEON,
At New Park Street Chapel, Southwark.
"And ye will not come to me, that ye might have
life"-- John
5:40.
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the Arminians, mounted upon the top of their walls, and often
discharged with terrible noise against the poor Christians
called Calvinists. I intend to spike the gun this morning, or,
rather, to turn it on the enemy, for it was never theirs; it was
never cast at their foundry at all, but was intended to teach
the very opposite doctrine to that which they assert.
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Usually, when the text is taken, the
divisions are: First, that man has a will. Secondly, that he is
entirely free. Thirdly, that men must make themselves willing to
come to Christ, otherwise they will not be saved. Now, we shall
have no such divisions; but we will endeavor to take a more calm
look at the text; and not, because there happen to be the words
"will," or "will not" in it, run away with
the conclusion that it teaches the doctrine of free- will.
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It has already been proved
beyond all controversy that free-will is nonsense. Freedom
cannot belong to will any more than ponderability can belong to
electricity. They are altogether different things. Free agency
we may believe in, but free- will is simply ridiculous. The will
is well known by all to be directed by the understanding, to be
moved by motives, to be guided by other parts of the soul, and
to be a secondary thing.
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| Philosophy and religion both
discard at once the very thought of free-will; and I will go as
far as Martin Luther, in that strong assertion of his, where he
says, "If any man doth ascribe aught of salvation, even the
very least, to the free-will of man, he knoweth nothing of
grace, and he hath not learnt Jesus Christ aright." It may
seem a harsh sentiment; but he who in his soul believes that man
does of his own free-will turn to God, cannot have been taught
of God, for that is one of the first principles taught us when
God begins with us, that we have neither will nor power, but
that he gives both; that he is "Alpha and Omega" in
the salvation of men.
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| Our four points, this morning,
shall be: First--that every man is dead, because it says:
"Ye will not come to me, that ye might have life."
Secondly--that there is life in Jesus Christ: "Ye
will not come
to me, that ye might have life." Thirdly--that
there is life in Christ Jesus for every one that comes for it:
"Ye will not come to me, that ye might have life;"
implying that all who go will have life. And fourthly--the gist of
the text lies here, that no man by nature ever will come to
Christ, for the text says, "Ye will not come to
me, that ye might have life." So far from asserting that men
of their own wills ever do such a thing, it boldly and flatly
denies it, and says, "Ye WILL NOT come to me, that ye might
have life." Why, beloved, I am almost ready to exclaim, Have
all free-willers no knowledge that they dare to run in the teeth
of inspiration? Have all those that deny the doctrine of grace no
sense? Have they so departed from God that they wrest this to
prove free-will; whereas the text says, "Ye WILL NOT come to
me that ye might have life."
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I. First,
then, our text implies
THAT MEN BY
NATURE ARE DEAD.
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No being needs to go after life if he has
life in himself. The text speaks very strongly when it says,
"Ye will not come unto me, that ye might have life."
Though it saith it not in words, yet it doth in effect affirm that
men need a life more than they have themselves. My hearers, we are
all dead unless we have been begotten unto a lively hope.
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First, we are all of us, by nature,
legally dead--"In the day that thou eatest thereof thou
shalt die the death," said God to Adam; and though Adam did
not die in that moment naturally, he died legally; that is to say
death was recorded against him. As soon as, at the Old Bailey, the
judge puts on the black cap and pronounces the sentence, the man
is reckoned to be dead at law. Though perhaps a month may
intervene before he is brought on the scaffold to endure the
sentence of the law, yet the law looks upon him as a dead man. It
is impossible for him to transact anything. He cannot inherit, he
cannot bequeath; he is nothing--he is a dead man. The country
considers him not as being alive in it at all. There is an
election--he is not asked for his vote because he is considered as
dead. He is shut up in his condemned cell, and he is dead. Ah! and
ye ungodly sinners who have never had life in Christ, ye are alive
this morning, by reprieve, but do ye know that ye are legally
dead; that God considers you as such, that in the day when your
father Adam touched the fruit, and when you yourselves did sin,
God, the Eternal Judge, put on the black cap and condemned you?
You talk mightily of your own standing, and goodness, and
morality--where is it? Scripture saith, ye are "condemned
already." Ye are not to wait to be condemned at the
judgment-day--that will be the execution of the sentence--ye are
"condemned already." In the moment ye sinned; your names
were all written in the black book of justice; every one was then
sentenced by God to death, unless he found a substitute, in the
person of Christ, for his sins.
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What would you think if you were to go into
the Old Bailey, and see the condemned culprit sitting in his cell,
laughing and merry? You would say, "The man is a fool, for he
is condemned, and is to be executed; yet how merry he is."
Ah! and how foolish is the worldly man, who, while sentence is
recorded against him, lives in merriment and mirth! Do you think
the sentence of God is of no effect? Thinkest thou that thy sin
which is written with an iron pen on the rocks for ever hath no
horrors in it? God hath said thou art condemned already. If thou
wouldst but feel this, it would mingle bitters in thy sweet cups
of joy; thy dances would be stopped, thy laughter quenched in
sighing, if thou wouldst recollect that thou art condemned
already. We ought all to weep, if we lay this to our souls: that
by nature we have no life in God's sight; we are actually,
positively condemned; death is recorded against us, and we are
considered in ourselves now, in God's sight, as much dead as if we
were actually cast into hell; we are condemned here by sin, we do
not yet suffer the penalty of it, but it is written against us,
and we are legally dead, nor can we find life unless we find legal
life in the person of Christ, of which more by-and-by. But,
besides being legally dead, we are also spiritually dead.
For not only did the sentence pass in the book, but it passed in
the heart; it entered the conscience; it operated on the soul, on
the judgment, on the imagination, and on everything. "In the
day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die," was not
only fulfilled by the sentence recorded, but by something which
took place in Adam. Just as, in a certain moment, when this body
shall die, the blood stops, the pulse ceases, the breath no longer
comes from the lungs, so in the day that Adam did eat that fruit
his soul died; his imagination lost its mighty power to climb into
celestial things and see heaven, his will lost its power always to
choose that which is good, his judgment lost all ability to judge
between right and wrong decidedly and infallibly, though something
was retained in conscience; his memory became tainted, liable to
hold evil things, and let righteous things glide away; every power
of him ceased as to its oral vitality. Goodness was the vitality
of his powers--that departed. Virtue, holiness, integrity, these
were the life of man; but when these departed man became dead.
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And now, every man, so far as spiritual
things are concerned, is "dead in trespasses and sins"
spiritually. Nor is the soul less dead in a carnal man, than the
body is when committed to the grave; it is actually and positively
dead--not by a metaphor, for Paul speaketh not in metaphor, when
he affirms, "You hath he quickened who were dead in
trespasses and sins."
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But my hearers, again, I would I could preach
to your hearts concerning this subject. It was bad enough when I
described death as having been recorded; but now I speak of it as
having actually taken place in your hearts. Ye are not what ye
once were; ye are not what ye were in Adam, not what ye were
created. Man was made pure and holy. Ye are not the perfect
creatures of which some boast; ye are altogether fallen, ye have
gone out of the way, ye have become corrupt and filthy. Oh! listen
not to the siren song of those who tell you of your moral dignity,
and your mighty elevation in matters of salvation. Ye are not
perfect; that great word, "ruin," is written on your
heart; and death is stamped upon your spirit.
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Do not conceive, O moral man, that thou
wilt be able to stand before God in thy morality, for thou art
nothing but a carcass embalmed in legality, a corpse arrayed in
some fine robes, but still corrupt in God's sight. And think
not, O thou possessor of natural religion! that thou mayest by
thine own might and power make thyself acceptable to God. Why,
man! thou art dead! and thou mayest array the dead as gloriously
as thou pleasest, but still it would be a solemn mockery. There
lieth queen Cleopatra--put the crown upon her head, deck her in
royal robes, let her sit in state; but what a cold chill runs
through you when you pass by her. She is fair now, even in her
death--but how horrible it is to stand by the side even of a
dead queen, celebrated for her majestic beauty! So you may be
glorious in your beauty, fair, and amiable, and lovely; you put
the crown of honesty upon your head, and wear about you all the
garments of uprightness, but unless God has quickened thee, O
man! unless the Spirit has had dealings with thy soul, thou art
in God's sight as obnoxious as the chilly corpse is to thyself.
Thou wouldst not choose to live with a corpse sitting at thy
table; nor doth God love that thou shouldst be in his sight. He
is angry with thee every day, for thou art in sin--thou art in
death. Oh! believe this; take it to thy soul; appropriate it,
for it is most true that thou art dead, spiritually as well as
legally.
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The third kind of death is the consummation
of the other two. It is eternal death. It is the execution
of the legal sentence; it is the consummation of the spiritual
death. Eternal death is the death of the soul; it takes place
after the body has been laid in the grave, after the soul has
departed from it. If legal death be terrible, it is because of its
consequences; and if spiritual death be dreadful, it is because of
that which shall succeed it. The two deaths of which we have
spoken are the roots, and that death which is to come is the
flower thereof.
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Oh! had I words that I might this morning
attempt to depict to you what eternal death is. The soul has come
before its Maker; the book has been opened; the sentence has been
uttered; "Depart ye cursed" has shaken the universe, and
made the very spheres dim with the frown of the Creator; the soul
has departed to the depths where it is to dwell with others in
eternal death. Oh! how horrible is its position now. Its bed is a
bed of flame; the sights it sees are murdering ones that affright
its spirit; the sounds it hears are shrieks, and wails, and moans,
and groans; all that its body knows is the infliction of miserable
pain! It has the possession of unutterable woe, of unmitigated
misery. The soul looks up. Hope is extinct--it is gone. It looks
downward in dread and fear; remorse hath possessed its soul. It
looks on the right hand--and the adamantine walls of fate keep it
within its limits of torture. It looks on the left--and there the
rampart of blazing fire forbids the scaling ladder of e'en a
dreamy speculation of escape. It looks within and seeks for
consolation there, but a gnawing worm hath entered into the soul.
It looks about it--it has no friends to aid, no comforters, but
tormentors in abundance. It knoweth nought of hope of deliverance;
it hath heard the everlasting key of destiny turning in its awful
wards, and it hath seen God take that key and hurl it down into
the depth of eternity never to be found again. It hopeth not; it
knoweth no escape; it guesseth not of deliverance; it pants for
death, but death is too much its foe to be there; it longs that
non-existence would swallow it up, but this eternal death is worse
than annihilation. It pants for extermination as the laborer for
his Sabbath; it longs that it might be swallowed up in nothingness
just as would the galley slave long for freedom, but it cometh
not--it is eternally dead. When eternity shall have rolled round
multitudes of its everlasting cycles it shall still be dead.
Forever knoweth no end; eternity cannot be spelled except in
eternity. Still the soul seeth written o'er its head, "Thou
art damned forever." It heareth howlings that are to be
perpetual; it seeth flames which are unquenchable; it knoweth
pains that are unmitigated; it hears a sentence that rolls not
like the thunder of earth which soon is hushed--but onward,
onward, onward, shaking the echoes of eternity--making thousands
of years shake again with the horrid thunder of its dreadful
sound-- "Depart! depart! depart! ye cursed!" This is the
eternal death.
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II. Secondly,
IN CHRIST JESUS THERE IS LIFE,
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for he says: "Ye will not come to me
that ye might have life." There is no life in God the
Father for a sinner; there is no life in God the Spirit for a
sinner apart from Jesus. The life of a sinner is in Christ. If you
take the Father apart from the Son, though he loves his elect, and
decrees that they shall live, yet life is only in his Son. If you
take God the Spirit apart from Jesus Christ, though it is the
Spirit that gives us spiritual life, yet it is life in Christ,
life in the Son. We dare not, and cannot apply in the first place,
either to God the Father, or to God the Holy Ghost for spiritual
life. The first thing we are led to do when God brings us out of
Egypt is to eat the Passover--the very first thing. The first
means whereby we get life is by feeding upon the flesh and blood
of the Son of God; living in him, trusting on him, believing in
his grace and power.
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Our second thought was--there is life in
Christ. We will show you there are three kinds of life in Christ,
as there are three kinds of death.
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First there is legal life in Christ.
Just as every man by nature considered in Adam had a sentence of
condemnation passed on him in the moment of Adam's sin, and more
especially in the moment of his own first transgression, so I, if
I be a believer, and you, if you trust in Christ, have had a legal
sentence of acquittal passed on us through what Jesus Christ has
done. O condemned sinner! Thou mayest be sitting this morning
condemned like the prisoner in Newgate; but ere this day has
passed away thou mayest be as clear from guilt as the angels
above. There is such a thing as legal life in Christ, and, blessed
be God! some of us enjoy it. We know our sins are pardoned because
Christ suffered punishment for them; we know that we never can be
punished ourselves, for Christ suffered in our stead. The Passover
is slain for us; the lintel and door-post have been sprinkled, and
the destroying angel can never touch us. For us there is no hell,
although it blaze with terrible flame. Let Tophet be prepared of
old, let its pile be wood and much smoke, we never can come
there--Christ died for us, in our stead. What if there be racks of
horrid torture? What if there be a sentence producing most
horrible reverberations of thundering sounds? Yet neither rack,
nor dungeon, nor thunder, are for us! In Christ Jesus we are now
delivered. "There is therefore NOW no condemnation unto us
who are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after
the Spirit."
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Sinner! Art thou legally condemned this
morning? Dost thou feel that? Then, let me tell thee that faith in
Christ will give thee a knowledge of thy legal acquittal. Beloved,
it is no fancy that we are condemned for our sins, it is a
reality. So, it is no fancy we are acquitted, it is a reality. A
man about to be hanged, if he received a full pardon would feel it
a great reality. He would say, "I have a full pardon; I
cannot be touched now." That is just how I feel.
"Now freed from sin I walk at large,
The Savior's blood's my full discharge,
At his dear feet content I lay,
A sinner saved, and homage pay."
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Brethren, we have gained legal life in
Christ, and such legal life that we cannot lose it. The sentence
has gone against us once--now it has gone out for us. It is
written, "THERE IS NOW NO CONDEMNATION," and that now
will do as well for me in fifty years as it does now. Whatever
time we live it will still be written, "There is therefore, now
no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus."
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Then, secondly, there is spiritual life
in Christ Jesus. As the man is spiritually dead, God has spiritual
life for him, for there is not a need which is not supplied by
Jesus, there is not an emptiness in the heart which Christ cannot
fill; there is not a desolation which he cannot people, there is
not a desert which he cannot make to blossom as the rose. O ye
dead sinners! spiritually dead, there is life in Christ Jesus, for
we have seen--yes! these eyes have seen--the dead live again; we
have known the man whose soul was utterly corrupt, by the power of
God seek after righteousness; we have known the man whose views
were carnal, whose lusts were mighty, whose passions were strong,
suddenly, by irresistible might from heaven, consecrate himself to
Christ, and become a child of Jesus. We know that there is life in
Christ Jesus, of a spiritual order; yea, more, we ourselves, in
our own persons, have felt that there is spiritual life. Well can
we remember when we sat in the house of prayer, as dead as the
very seat on which we sat. We had listened for a long, long while
to the sound of the gospel, but no effect followed, when suddenly,
as if our ears had been opened by the fingers of some mighty
angel, a sound entered into our heart. We thought we heard Jesus
saying, "He that hath ears to hear, let him hear." An
irresistible hand put itself on our heart and crushed a prayer out
of it. We never had a prayer before like that. We cried, "O
God! have mercy upon me a sinner."
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Some of us for months felt a hand pressing us
as if we had been grasped in a vice, and our souls bled drops of
anguish. That misery was a sign of coming life. Persons when they
are being drowned do not feel the pain so much as while they are
being restored. Oh! we recollect those pains, those groans, that
living strife that our soul had when it came to Christ. Ah! we can
recollect the giving of our spiritual life as easily as could a
man his restoration from the grave. We can suppose Lazarus to have
remembered his resurrection, though not all the circumstances of
it. So we, although we have forgotten a great deal, do recollect
our giving ourselves to Christ. We can say to every sinner,
however dead, there is life in Christ Jesus, though you may be
rotten and corrupt in your grave. He who hath raised Lazarus hath
raised us; and he can say, even to you, "Lazarus! come
forth."
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In the third place, there is eternal
life in Christ Jesus. And, oh! if eternal death be terrible,
eternal life is blessed; for he has said, "Where I am there
shall my people be." "Father, I will that they also,
whom thou hast given unto me, be with me where I am, that they
ay behold my glory." "I give unto my sheep eternal
life, and they shall never perish." Now, any Arminian that
would preach from that text must buy a pair of India rubber
lips, for I am sure he would need o stretch his mouth amazingly;
he would never be able to speak the whole truth without winding
about in a most mysterious manner. Eternal life--not a life
which they are to lose, but eternal life. If I lost life in Adam
I gained it in Christ; if I lost myself for ever I find myself
for ever in Jesus Christ. Eternal life! Oh blessed thought! Our
eyes will sparkle with joy and our souls bum with ecstasy in the
thought that we have eternal life. Be quenched ye stars! let God
put his finger on you--but my soul will live in bliss and joy.
Put out thine eye O sun!--but mine eye shall "see the king
in his beauty" when thine eye shall no more make the green
earth laugh. And moon, be thou turned into blood!--but my blood
shall ne'er be turned to nothingness; this spirit shall exist
when thou hast ceased to be. And thou great world! thou mayest
all subside, just as a moment's foam subsides upon the wave that
bears it--but I have eternal life. O time! thou mayest see giant
mountains dead and hidden in their graves; thou mayest see the
stars like figs too ripe, falling from the tree, but thou shalt
never, never see my spirit dead.
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III. This
brings us to the third point: that
ETERNAL LIFE
IS GIVEN TO ALL WHO COME FOR IT.
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There never was a man who came to Christ for
eternal life, for legal life, for spiritual life, who had not
already received it, in some sense, and it was manifested to him
that he had received it soon after he came. Let us take one or two
texts--"He is able to save to the uttermost them that come
unto him." Every man who comes to Christ will find that
Christ is able to save him--not able to save him a little, to
deliver him from a little sin, to keep him from a little trial, to
carry him a little way and then drop him--but able to save him to
the uttermost extent of his sin, unto the uttermost length of his
trials, he uttermost depths of his sorrows, unto the uttermost
duration of his existence. Christ says to every one who comes to
him, "Come, poor sinner, thou needst not ask whether I have
power to save. I will not ask thee how far thou hast gone into
sin; I am able to save thee to the uttermost." And there is
no one on earth can go beyond God's "uttermost."
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Now another text: "Him that cometh
to me, [mark the promises are nearly always to the coming ones] I
will in no wise cast out." Every man that comes shall find
the door of Christ's house opened--and the door of his heart too.
Every man that comes--I say it in the broadest sense--shall find
that Christ has mercy for him. The greatest absurdity in the world
is to want to have a wider gospel than that recorded in Scripture.
I preach that every man who believes shall be saved--that every
man who comes shall find mercy. People ask me, "But suppose a
man should come who was not chosen, would he be saved?" You
go and suppose nonsense and I am not going to give you an answer.
If a man is not chosen he will never come. When he does come it is
a sure proof that he was chosen. Says one, "Suppose any one
should go to Christ who had not been called of the Spirit."
Stop, my brother, that is a supposition thou hast no right to
make, for such a thing cannot happen; you only say it to entangle
me, and you will not do that just yet. I say every man who comes
to Christ shall be saved. I can say that as a Calvinist, or as a
hyper-Calvinist, as plainly as you can say it. I have no narrower
gospel than you have; only my gospel is on a solid foundation,
whereas yours is built upon nothing but sand and rottenness.
"Every man that cometh shall be saved, for no man cometh to
me except the Father draw him."
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"But," says one, "suppose all
the world should come, would Christ receive them?" Certainly,
if all came; but then they won't come. I tell you all that come--aye,
if they were as bad as devils, Christ would receive them; if they
had all sin and filthiness running into their hearts as into a
common sewer for the whole world, Christ would receive them.
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Another says, "I want to know about the
rest of the people. May I go out and tell them--Jesus Christ died
for every one of you? May I say--there is righteousness for
everyone of you, there is life for every one of you?" No; you
may not. You may say--there is life for every man that comes. But
if you say there is life for one of those that do not believe, you
utter a dangerous lie. If you tell them Jesus Christ was punished
for their sins, and yet they will be lost, you tell a willful
falsehood. To think that God could punish Christ and then punish
them--I wonder at your daring to have the impudence to say so! A
good man was once preaching that there were harps and crowns in
heaven for all his congregation; and then he wound up in a most
solemn manner: "My dear friends, there are many for whom
these things are prepared who will not get there." In fact,
he made such a pitiful tale, as indeed he might do; but I tell you
who he ought to have wept for--he ought to have wept for the
angels of heaven and all the saints, because that would spoil
heaven thoroughly.
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You know when you meet at Christmas, if you
have lost your brother David and his seat is empty, you say:
"Well, we always enjoyed Christmas, but there is a drawback
to it now-- poor David is dead and buried!" Think of the
angels saying: "Ah! this is a beautiful heaven, but we don't
like to see all those crowns up there with cobwebs on; we cannot
endure that uninhabited street: we cannot behold yon empty
thrones." And then, poor souls, they might begin talking to
one another, and say, "we are none of us safe here for the
promise was--"I give unto my sheep eternal life," and
there is a lot of them in hell that God gave eternal life to;
there is a number that Christ shed his blood for burning in the
pit, and if they may be sent there, so may we. If we cannot trust
one promise we cannot another." So heaven would lose its
foundation, and fall. Away with your nonsensical gospel! God gives
us a safe and solid one, built on covenant doings and covenant
relationship, on eternal purposes and sure fulfillments.
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IV. This
brings us to the fourth point,
THAT BY
NATURE NO MAN WILL COME TO CHRIST,
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for the text says, "Ye will not come to
me, that ye might have life." I assert on Scripture authority
from my text, that ye will not come unto Christ, that ye might
have life. I tell you, I might preach to you for ever, I might
borrow the eloquence of Demosthenes or of Cicero, but ye will not
come unto Christ. I might beg of you on my knees, with tears in my
eyes, and show you the horrors of hell and the joys of heaven, the
sufficiency of Christ, and your own lost condition, but you would
none of you come unto Christ of yourselves unless the Spirit that
rested on Christ should draw you. It is true of all men in their
natural condition that they will not come unto Christ.
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But, methinks I hear another of these
babblers asking a question: "But could they not come if they
liked?" My friend, I will reply to thee another time. That is
not the question this morning. I am talking about whether they
will, not whether they can. You will notice whenever you talk
about free- will, the poor Arminian, in two seconds begins to talk
about power, and he mixes up two subjects that should be kept
apart. We will not take two subjects at once; we decline fighting
two at the same time, if you please. Another day we will preach
from this text--"No man can come except the Father draw
him." But it is only the will we are talking of now; and it
is certain that men will not come unto Christ, that they might
have life. We might prove this from many texts of Scripture, but
we will take one parable. You remember the parable where a certain
king had a feast for his son, and bade a great number to come; the
oxen and fatlings were killed, and he sent his messengers bidding
many to the supper. Did they go to the feast? Ah, no; but they
all, with one accord, began to make excuse. One said he had
married a wife, and therefore he could not come, whereas he might
have brought her with him. Another had bought a yoke of oxen, and
went to prove them; but the feast was in the night-time, and he
could not prove his oxen in the dark. Another had bought a piece
of land, and wanted to see it; but I should not think he went to
see it with a lantern. So they all made excuses and would not
come. Well the king was determined to have the feast; so he said,
"Go out into the highways and hedges, and" invite
them--stop! not invite--"compel them to come in;" for
even the ragged fellows in the hedges would never have come unless
they were compelled.
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Take another parable: A certain man had a
vineyard; at the appointed season he sent one of his servants for
his rent. What did they do to him? They beat that servant. He sent
another; and they stoned him. He sent another and they killed him.
And, at last, he said, "I will send them my son, they will
reverence him." But what did they do? They said, "This
is the heir, let us kill him, and cast him out of the
vineyard." So they did. It is the same with all men by
nature. The Son of God came, yet men rejected him. "Ye will
not come to me that ye might have life."
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It would take too much time to mention any
more Scripture proofs. We will, however, refer to the great
doctrine of the fall. Any one who believes that man's will is
entirely free, and that he can be saved by it, does not believe
the fall. As I sometimes tell you, few preachers of religion do
believe thoroughly the doctrine of the fall, or else they think
that when Adam fell down he broke his little finger, and did not
break his neck and ruin his race. Why, beloved, the fall broke man
up entirely. It did not leave one power unimpaired; they were all
shattered, and debased, and tarnished; like some mighty temple,
the pillars might be there, the shaft, and the column, and the
pilaster might be there; but they were all broken, though some of
them retain their form and position. The conscience of man
sometimes retains much of its tenderness--still it has fallen. The
will, too, is not exempt. What though it is "the Lord Mayor
of Mansoul," as Bunyan calls it?--the Lord Mayor goes wrong.
The Lord Will-be-will was continually doing wrong.
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Your fallen nature was put out of order; your
will, amongst other things, has clean gone astray from God. But I
tell you what will be the best proof of that; it is the great fact
that you never did meet a Christian in your life who ever said he
came to Christ without Christ coming to him.
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Arminian Prayer
You have heard a great many Arminian sermons, I dare say; but you
never heard an Arminian prayer--for the saints in prayer appear as
one in word, and deed and mind. An Arminian on his knees would
pray desperately like a Calvinist. He cannot pray about free-will:
there is no room for it. Fancy him praying, "Lord, I thank
thee I am not like those poor presumptuous Calvinists. Lord, I was
born with a glorious free-will; I was born with power by which I
can turn to thee of myself; I have improved my grace. If everybody
had done the same with their grace that I have, they might all
have been saved. Lord, I know thou dost not make us willing if we
are not willing ourselves. Thou givest grace to everybody; some do
not improve it, but I do. There are many that will go to hell as
much bought with the blood of Christ as I was; they had as much of
the Holy Ghost given to them; they had as good a chance, and were
as much blessed as I am. It was not thy grace that made us to
differ; I know it did a great deal, still I turned the point; I
made use of what was given me, and others did not-- that is the
difference between me and them."
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That is a prayer for the devil, for nobody
else would offer such a prayer as that. Ah! when they are
preaching and talking very slowly, there may be wrong doctrine;
but when they come to pray, the true thing slips out; they cannot
help it. If a man talks very slowly, he may speak in a fine
manner; but when he comes to talk fast, the old brogue of his
country, where he was born, slips out.
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I ask you again, did you ever meet a
Christian man who said, "I came to Christ without the power
of the Spirit?" If you ever did meet such a man, you need
have no hesitation in saying, "My dear sir, I quite believe
it--and I believe you went away again without the power of the
Spirit, and that you know nothing about the matter, and are in the
gall of bitterness and the bond of iniquity." Do I hear one
Christian man saying, "I sought Jesus before he sought me; I
went to the Spirit, and the Spirit did not come to me"? No,
beloved; we are obliged, each one of us, to put our hands to our
hearts and say-
"Grace taught my soul to pray,
And made my eyes to o'erflow;
'Twas grace that kept me to this day,
And will not let me go."
Is there one here--a solitary one-- man or
woman, young or old, who can say, "I sought God before he
sought me?" No; even you who are a little Arminian, will
sing--
"O yes! I do love Jesus--
Because he first loved me."
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Then, one more question. Do we not find, even
after we have come to Christ, our soul is not free, but is kept by
Christ? Do we not find times, even now, when to will is not
present with us? There is a law in our members, warring against
the law of our minds. Now, if those who are spiritually alive feel
that their will is contrary to God, what shall we say of the man
who is "dead in trespasses and sins"? It would be a
marvelous absurdity to put the two on a level; and it would be
still more absurd to put the dead before the living. No; the text
is true, experience has branded it into our hearts. "Ye will
not come to me, that ye might have life."
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Now, we must tell you the reasons why men
will not come unto Christ. The first is, because no man by nature
thinks he wants Christ. By nature man conceives that he does not
need Christ; he thinks that he has a robe of righteousness of his
own, that he is well-dressed, that he is not naked, that he needs
not Christ's blood to wash him, that he is not black or crimson,
and needs no grace to purify him. No man knows his need until God
shows it to him; and until the Holy Spirit reveals the necessity
of pardon, no man will seek pardon. I may preach Christ for ever,
but unless you feel you want Christ you will never come to him. A
doctor may have a good shop, but nobody will buy his medicines
until he feels he wants them.
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The next reason is, because men do not like
Christ's way of saving them. One says, "I do not like it
because he makes me holy; I cannot drink or swear if he saved
me." Another says, "It requires me to be so precise and
puritanical, and I like a little more license." Another does
not like it because it is so humbling; he does not like it because
the "gate of heaven" is not quite high enough for his
head, and he does not like stooping. That is the chief reason ye
will not come to Christ, because ye cannot get to him with your
heads straight up in the air; for Christ makes you stoop when you
come. Another does not like it to be grace from first to last.
"Oh!" he says, "If I might have a little
honor." But when he hears it is all Christ or no Christ, a
whole Christ or no Christ, he says, "I shall not come,"
and turns on his heel and goes away. Ah! proud sinners, ye will
not come unto Christ. Ah! ignorant sinners, ye will not come unto
Christ, because ye know nothing of him. And that is the third
reason.
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Men do not know his worth, for if they did
they would come unto him. Why did not sailors go to America before
Columbus went? Because they did not believe there was an America.
Columbus had faith, therefore he went. He who hath faith in Christ
goes to him. But you don't know Jesus; many of you never saw his
beauteous face; you never saw how applicable his blood is to a
sinner, how great is his atonement; and how all-sufficient are his
merits. Therefore, "ye will not come to him."
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And oh! my hearers, my last thought is a
solemn one. I have preached that ye will not come. But some will
say, "it is their sin that they do not come." IT IS SO.
You will not come, but then your will is a sinful will. Some think
that we "sew pillows to all armholes" when we preach
this doctrine, but we don't. We do not set this down as being part
of man's original nature, but as belonging to his fallen nature.
It is sin that has brought you into this condition that you will
not come. If you had not fallen, you would come to Christ the
moment he was preached to you; but you do not come because of your
sinfulness and crime. People excuse themselves because they have
bad hearts. That is the most flimsy excuse in the world. Do not
robbery and thieving come from a bad heart? Suppose a thief should
say to a judge, "I could not help it, I had a bad
heart." What would the judge say? "You rascal! why, if
your heart is bad, I'll make the sentence heavier, for you are a
villain indeed. Your excuse is nothing." The Almighty shall
"laugh at them, and shall have them in derision." We do
not preach this doctrine to excuse you, but to humble you. The
possession of a bad nature is my fault as well as my terrible
calamity. It is a sin that will always be charged on men; when
they will not come unto Christ it is sin that keeps them away. He
who does not preach that, I fear is not faithful to God and his
conscience. Go home, then, with this thought; "I am by nature
so perverse that I will not come unto Christ, and that wicked
perversity of my nature is my sin. I deserve to be sent to hell
for it." And if the thought does not humble you, the Spirit
using it, no other can. This morning I have not preached human
nature up, but I have preached it down. God humble us all. Amen.
C. H. Spurgeon
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