Life and Death
Sermon #503 Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit 1
Volume 9 1
DEATH AND LIFE IN CHRIST
NO.
503
A SERMON
DELIVERED ON SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 5, 1863
BY THE REV.
C.
H.
SPURGEON
AT THE METROPOLITAN TABERNACLE, NEWINGTON
“Now if we be dead with Christ, we believe that we shall also live with Him:
knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more; death hath no more dominion over him.
For in that he died, he died unto sin once: but in that he liveth, he liveth unto God.
Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin,
but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord.
”
Romans 6:8-11
THE apostles never traveled far from the simple facts of Christ’s life, death, resurrection, ascension,
exaltation, and second advent.
These things, of which they were the witnesses, constituted the staple of
all their discourses.
Newton has very properly said that the two pillars of our religion are the work of
Christ for us and His work in us by the Holy Spirit.
If you want to find the apostles, you will surely discover them standing between these two pillars.
They are either discoursing upon the effect of the passion in our justification, or, its equally delightful
consequence in our death to the world and our newness of life.
What a rebuke this should be to those in
modern times who are always straining after novelties.
There may be much of the Athenian spirit among congregations, but that should be no excuse for its
being tolerated among ministers.
We, of all men, should be the last to spend our time in seeking
something new.
Our business, my brethren, is the old labor of apostolic tongues—to declare Jesus, who
is the same yesterday, today, and forever.
We are mirrors reflecting the transactions of Calvary, telescopes manifesting the distant glories of an
exalted Redeemer.
The nearer we keep to the cross, the nearer, I think, we keep to our true vocation.
When the Lord shall be pleased to restore to His church once more a fervent love to Christ, and when
once again we shall have a ministry that is not only flavored with Christ, but of which Jesus constitutes
the sum and substance, then shall the churches revive—then shall the set time to favor Zion come.
The goodly cedar which was planted by the rivers of old, and stretched out her branches far and
wide, has become in these modern days like a tree dwarfed by Chinese art.
It is planted by the rivers as
aforetime, but it does not flourish.
Only let God the Holy Spirit give to us once again the bold and clear
preaching of Christ crucified in all simplicity and earnestness, and the dwarf shall swell into a forest-
giant, each expanding bud shall burst into foliage, and the cedar shall tower aloft again, until the birds of
the air shall lodge in its branches.
I need offer you no apology, then, for preaching on those matters which engrossed all the time of the
apostles and which shall shower unnumbered blessings on generations yet to come.
I.
THE FACTS REFERRED TO IN THESE FOUR VERSES CONSTITUTE THE GLORIOUS
GOSPEL WHICH WE PREACH.
1.
The first fact here very clearly indicated is that Jesus died.
He who was divine, and therefore
immortal, bowed His head to death.
He whose human nature was allied to the omnipotence of His divine
nature, was pleased to voluntarily submit Himself to the sword of death.
He who was pure and perfect,
and therefore deserved not death, which is the wages of sin, nevertheless condescended for our sake to
yield Himself up to die.
This is the second note in the Gospel scale.
The first note is incarnation—Jesus Christ became a
man—angels thought this worthy of their songs and made the heavens ring with midnight melodies.
The
second note is this, I say, that, being found in fashion as a man, He humbled Himself and became
obedient unto death, even the death of the cross.
He died as a sacrifice.
Methinks, after many lambs from the flocks of men had poured out their blood at the foot of the
altar, it was a strange spectacle to see God’s Lamb brought to that same altar to be sacrificed.
He is
without spot or blemish, or any such thing.
He is the firstling of the flock.
He is the only one of the
Great Master—a right royal, heavenly Lamb.
Such a Lamb had never been seen before.
He is the Lamb who is worshipped in heaven and who is
to be adored world without end.
Will that sacred head condescend to feel the axe? Will that glorious
victim really be slain? Is it possible that God’s Lamb will actually submit to die? He does so without a
struggle.
He is dumb in the shambles before the slaughterers.
He gives up the warm blood of His heart to
the hand of the executioner, that He might expiate the wrath of God.
Tell it.
Let heaven ring with music and let hell be filled with confusion! Jesus, the Eternal Son of
God, the Lamb of JEHOVAH’S Passover, died.
His hands were pierced and His heart was broken.
To
prove how surely the spear had struck the mark, the vital fluid flowed in a double flood, even to the
ground—Jesus died.
If there were any doubt about this, there is doubt about your salvation and mine.
If there were any
reason to question this fact, then we might question the possibility of salvation.
But Jesus died and sin is
put away.
The sacrifice smokes to heaven—JEHOVAH smells a sweet savor, and is pleased through
Christ the victim to accept the prayers, the offerings, and the persons of His people.
Nor did He die as the victim only.
He died as a substitute.
We were drawn as soldiers for the great
warfare, but we could not go, for we were feeble, and should have fallen in the battle, and have left our
bones to be devoured by the dogs of hell.
But He, the mighty Son of God, became the substitute for us,
entered the battlefield, sustained the first charge of the adversary in the wilderness—three times He
repulsed the grim fiend and all his host, smiting His assailants with the sword of the Spirit, until the
enemy fled, and angels waited upon the weary Victor.
The conflict was not over, the enemy had but retired to forge fresh artillery and recruit his scattered
forces for a yet more terrible affray.
For three years the great Substitute kept the field against continual
onslaughts from the advance guard of the enemy, remaining conqueror in every skirmish.
No adversary
dared to show his face, or if he shot an arrow at Him from a distance, our substitute caught the arrow on
His shield and laughed His foes to scorn.
Devils were cast out of many that were possessed.
Whole legions of them were compelled to find
refuge in a herd of swine, and Lucifer himself fell like lightning from the heaven of His power.
At last
the time came when hell had gathered up all its forces—and now was also come the hour when Christ,
as our substitute, must carry His obedience to the utmost length.
He must be obedient unto death.
He has been a substitute up till now—will He now throw down His vicarious character? Will He
now renounce our responsibilities and declare that we may stand for ourselves? Not He.
He undertook
and must go through.
Sweating great drops of blood, He nevertheless flinches not from the dread assault.
Wounded in hands and in feet, He still maintained His ground, and though, for obedience sake, He
bowed His head to die, yet in that dying He slew death, put His foot upon the dragons’ neck, crushed the
head of the old serpent, and beat our adversaries as small as the dust of the threshing floor.
Yes, the blessed substitute has died.
I say if there were a question about this, then we might have to
die, but inasmuch as He died for us, the believer shall not die.
The debt is discharged to the utmost
farthing.
The account is cleared.
The balance is struck.
The scales of justice turn in our favor—God’s
sword is sheathed forever and the blood of Christ has sealed it in its scabbard.
We are free, for Christ
was bound.
We live, for Jesus died.
Dying thus as a sacrifice and as a substitute, it is a comfort to us to know that He also died as
Mediator between God and man.
There was a great gulf fixed, so that if we would pass to God we could
not, neither could He pass to us if He would condescend to do so.
There was no way of filling up this
gulf, unless there should be found one who, like the old Roman, Curtius, would leap into it.
Jesus comes, arrayed in His pontifical garments, wearing the breast-plate, bearing the ephod—a
priest forever after the order of Melchizedek.
His kingly character is not forgotten, for His head is
adorned with a glittering crown, and o’er His shoulders He bears the prophet’s mantle.
How shall I
describe the matchless glories of the Prophet-King, the royal Priest? Will He throw Himself into the
chasm?
He will.
Into the grave He plunges, the abyss is closed! The gulf is bridged and God can have
communion with man! I see before me the heavy veil which shields from mortal eyes the place where
God’s glory shines.
No man may touch that veil or he must die.
Is there any man found who can rend
it?—that man may approach the mercy seat.
O that the veil which parts our souls from Him that dwells
between the cherubims could be torn throughout its utmost length! Strong archangel, would you dare to
rend it? Should you attempt the work, your immortality were forfeited and you must expire.
But Jesus comes, the King Immortal, Invisible, with His strong hands He rends the veil from top to
bottom—and now men draw nigh with confidence, for when Jesus died a living way was opened.
Sing,
O heavens, and rejoice O earth! There is now no wall of partition, for Christ has dashed it down! Christ
has taken away the gates of death, posts and bars, and all—and like another Samson carried them upon
His shoulders far away.
This, then, is one of the great notes of the Gospel—the fact that Jesus died.
Oh! you who would be
saved, believe that Jesus died.
Believe that the Son of God expired.
Trust that death to save you and you
are saved.
’Tis no great mystery.
It needs no learned words, no polished phrases—Jesus died—the
sacrifice smokes, the substitute bleeds, the Mediator fills up the gap.
Jesus dies—believe and live.
2.
But Jesus rises—this is no mean part of the Gospel.
He dies.
They lay Him in a new sepulchre.
They embalm His body in spices—His adversaries are careful that His body shall not be stolen away.
The stone, the seal, the watch, all prove their vigilance.
Aha! Aha! What do ye, men? Can you imprison immortality in a tomb! The fiends of hell, too, I
doubt not, watched the sepulchre, wondering what it all could mean.
But the third day comes and with it
the messenger from heaven.
He touches the stone—it rolls away.
He sits upon it, as if he would defy the
whole universe to roll that stone back again.
Jesus awakes, as a mighty man from his slumber—unwraps the napkin from His head and lays it by
itself.
Unwinds the cerements in which love had wrapped Him and puts them by themselves—for He
had abundant leisure.
He was in no haste.
He was not about to escape like a felon who bursts the prison,
but like one whose time of jail-deliverance has come, and lawfully and leisurely leaves His cell.
He steps to the upper air, bright, shining, glorious, and fair.
He lives.
He died once, but He rose
again from the dead.
There is no need for us to enlarge here.
We only pause to remark that this is one of
the most jubilant notes in the whole Gospel scale.
For see, brethren, the rich mysteries, which, like the
many seeds of the pomegranate, are all enclosed in the golden apple of resurrection.
Death is overcome.
There is found a man who by His own power was able to struggle with death and hurl him down.
The
grave is opened.
There is found a man able to dash back its bolts and to rifle its treasures.
And thus, brethren, having delivered Himself, He is able also to deliver others.
Sin, too, was
manifestly forgiven.
Christ was in prison as a hostage, kept there as a surety.
Now that He is suffered to
go free, it is a declaration on God’s behalf that He has nothing against us.
Our substitute is discharged.
We are discharged.
He who undertook to pay our debt is suffered to go free.
We go free in Him.
“He rose
again for our justification.
”
Nay more, inasmuch as He rises from the dead, He gives us a pledge that hell is conquered.
This was
the great aim of hell to keep Christ beneath its heel.
“Thou shalt bruise his heel.
” They had gotten the
heel of Christ, His mortal flesh beneath their power, but that bruised heel came forth unwounded.
Christ
sustained no injury by His dying.
He was as glorious, even in His human nature, as He was before He
expired.
“Thou wilt not leave my soul in hell, neither wilt thou suffer thy holy one to see corruption.
”
Beloved, in this will we triumph—that hell is worsted—Satan is put to confusion and all his hosts are
fallen before Immanuel.
Sinner, believe this.
It is the Gospel of your salvation.
Believe that Jesus of
Nazareth rose again from the dead, and trust Him, trust Him to save your soul.
Because He burst the
gates of the grave, trust Him to bear your sins, to justify your person, to quicken your spirit, and to raise
your dead body—and verily, verily, I say unto you—you shall be saved.
3.
We now strike a third note, without which the Gospel were not complete.
Inasmuch as Jesus died,
He is now living.
He does not, after forty days, return to the grave.
He departs from earth, but it is by
another way.
From the top of Olivet He ascends until a cloud receives Him out of their sight.
And now
at this very day He lives.
There at His Father’s right hand He sits—bright like a sun—clothed in
majesty.
The joy of all the glorified spirits—His Father’s intense delight.
There He sits, Lord of Providence—at His girdle swing the keys of heaven, and earth, and hell.
There He sits, expecting the hour when His enemies shall be made His footstool.
Methinks I see Him,
too, as He lives to intercede.
He stretches His wounded hands, points to His breastplate bearing the
names of His people, and for Zion’s sake He does not hold His peace, and for Jerusalem’s sake He does
not rest day nor night, but always pleads—“Oh God! Bless Your heritage.
Gather together Your
scattered ones.
I will that they whom You have given Me be with Me where I am.
” Believer, this is a
cluster of camphor to you, a bundle of myrrh—be you comforted exceedingly.
“He lives! the great Redeemer lives!
What joy the blest assurance gives!”
Trembling Penitent, let a living Savior cheer you.
Exercise faith in Him who only has immortality.
He lives to hear your prayer—cry to Him—He lives to present that prayer before His Father’s face.
Put
yourself in His hands.
He lives to gather together those whom He bought with His blood, to make those
the people of His flock who were once the people of His purchase.
Sinner, do you believe this as a matter of fact? If so, rest your soul on it, and make it shine as a
matter of confidence, and then you are saved.
4.
One more note and our Gospel song need not rise higher.
Jesus died.
He rose.
He lives.
And He
lives forever.
He lives forever.
He shall not die again.
“Death hath no more dominion over him.
” Ages
shall follow ages, but His raven locks shall never be blanched with years.
“Thou hast the dew of thy
youth.
”
Disease may visit the world and fill graves, but no disease or plague can touch the immortal Savior.
The shock of the last catastrophe shall shake both heaven and earth, until the stars shall fall like withered
fig leaves from the tree, but nothing shall move the unchanging Savior.
He lives forever.
There is no
possibility that He should be overcome by a new death.
“No more the bloody spear,
The cross and nails no more;
For hell itself shakes at His name,
And all the heavens adore.
”
Would it not be a strange doctrine indeed if any man should dream that the Son of God would again
offer His life as a sacrifice? He dies no more.
This, too, reveals another part of our precious Gospel, for
now it is certain, since He lives forever, that no foes can overcome Him.
He has so routed His enemies
and driven His foes off the battlefield, that they will never venture to attack Him again.
This proves, too, that His people’s eternal life is sure.
Let Jesus die and His people die.
Let Christ
leave heaven, and O you glorified ones! you must all vacate your thrones, and leave your crowns
without heads to wear them, and your harps untouched by fingers that shall wake them to harmony.
He lives forever.
Oh! seed of Abraham, you are saved with an everlasting salvation by the sure
mercies of David.
Your standing in earth and heaven has been confirmed eternally.
God is honored,
saints are comforted, and sinners are cheered, for “He is able also to save them to the uttermost that
come unto God by him, seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for them.
”
Now I would to God that on one of these four anchor-holds your faith might be able to get rest.
Jesus
died, poor trembler.
If He died and took your griefs, will not His atonement save you? Rest here.
Millions of souls have rested on nothing but Jesus’ death—and this is a granite foundation—no storms
of hell can shake it.
Get a good hand-hold on His cross—hold it and it will hold you.
You cannot depend
on His death and be deceived.
Try it—taste and see, and you shall find that the Lord is good, and that
none can trust a dying Savior without being with Him in Paradise.
But if this suffices you not, He rose again.
Fasten upon this.
He is proved to be Victor over your sins
and over your adversary.
Can you not, therefore, depend upon Him? Doubtless there have been
thousands of saints who have found the richest consolation from the fact that Jesus rose again from the
dead.
He rose again for our justification.
Sinner, hang on that.
Having risen He lives.
He is not a dead
Savior, a dead sacrifice.
He is able to hear our plea and to present His own.
Depend on a living Savior—
depend on Him now.
He lives forever, and therefore it is not too late for Him to save you.
If you cry to
Him, He will hear your prayer, even though it be in life’s last moment, for He lives forever.
Though the
ends of the earth were come, and you were the last man, yet He ever lives to intercede before His
Father’s face.
Oh! gad not about to find any other hope! Here are four great stones for you—build your hope on
these.
You cannot want surer foundations—He dies, He rises, He lives, He lives forever.
I tell you, soul,
this is my only hope, and though I lean there with all my weight it bends not.
This is the hope of all
God’s people and they abide contented in it.
Do you, I pray you, now come and rest on it.
May the Spirit of God bring many of you to Christ.
We
have no other Gospel.
You thought it a hard thing, a scholarly thing, a matter that a college must teach
you, that the university must give you.
It is no such matter for learning and scholarship.
Your little child
knows it and your child may be saved by it.
You without education—you that can scarce read in the Book, you can comprehend this.
He dies—
there is the cross.
He rises—there is the open tomb.
He lives—there is the pleading Savior.
He lives
forever—there is the perpetual merit.
Depend on Him! Put your soul in His hand and you are saved.
If I have brought you under the first head of my discourse to a sufficient height, you can now take
another step, and mount to something higher.
I do not mean higher as to real value, but higher as a
matter of knowledge, because it follows upon the fact as a matter of experience.
II.
The great facts mentioned in our text represent THE GLORIOUS WORK WHICH EVERY
BELIEVER FEELS WITHIN HIM.
In the text, we see death, resurrection, life, and life eternal.
You observe that the apostle only
mentions these to show our share in them.
I will read the text again—“Now if we be dead with Christ,
we believe that we shall also live with him: knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dieth no
more; death hath no more dominion over him.
For in that he died, he died unto sin once; but in that he
liveth, he liveth unto God.
Likewise reckon ye yourselves also to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto
God through Jesus Christ our Lord.
”
Well, then, it seems that as Christ was, so we also are dead.
We are dead to sin because sin can no
more condemn us.
All the sins which God’s people have ever committed dare not accuse, much less can
they condemn those for whom Jesus died.
Sin can curse an unbeliever, but it has no power so much as to
mutter half a curse against a man in Christ.
I cannot claim a debt of a dead debtor, and although I am a debtor to the law, yet since I am dead, the
law cannot claim anything of me, nor can sin inflict any punishment upon me.
He that is dead, as says
the preceding verse, is freed from sin—being dead to sin, we are free from all its jurisdiction.
We fear
not its curse.
We defy its power.
The true believer in the day when he first came to Christ died to sin as to its power.
Sin had been
sitting on a high throne in his heart, but faith pulled the tyrant down, and rolled him in the dust, and
though it still survives to vex us, yet its reigning power is destroyed.
From the day of our new birth, if we be indeed true Christians, we have been dead to all sin’s
pleasures.
Madame Bubble can no longer bewitch us.
The varnish and gilt have been worn off from the
palaces of sin.
We defy sin’s most skillful enchantments.
It might warble sweet music, but the dead ear
is not to be moved by melodies.
Keep your bitter sweets, O earth, for those who know no better delicacies.
Our mouths find no flavor
in your dainties.
We are dead to sin’s bribes.
We curse the gold that would have bought us to be
untruthful and abhor the comforts which might have been the reward of iniquity.
We are dead to its
threatenings, too.
When sin curses us, we are as little moved by its curses as by its promises.
A believer is mortified and dead to the world.
He can sing with Cowper—
“I thirst, but not as once I did
The vain delights of earth to share;
Your wounds, Emmanuel, all forbid
That I should seek my pleasures there.
It was the sight of Thy dear cross
First wean’d my soul from earthly things;
And taught me to esteem as dross
The mirth of fools and pomp of kings.
”
I am compelled, however, to say that this mortification is not complete.
We are not so dead to the
world as we should be.
Instead of saying here what the Christian is, I think I may rather say what he
should be, for where am I to look for men who are dead to the world nowadays?
I see professing Christians quite as fond of riches.
I see them almost as fond of gaiety and vanity.
Do
I not see those who wear the name of Jesus whose dress is as full of vanity as that of the worldling,
whose conversation has no more savor of Christ in it than that of the open sinner? I find many who are
conformed to this world and who show but little renewing of their minds.
Oh! how slight is the difference nowadays between the church and the world! We ought to be, in a
spiritual sense, evermore Dissenters—dissenting from the world, standing out and protesting against it.
We must be to the world’s final day Nonconformists, not conforming to its ways and vanities, but
walking outside the camp, bearing Christ’s reproach.
Do some of you recollect the day when you died to the world? Your friends thought you were mad.
They said you knew nothing of life, so your ungodly friends put you in the sepulchre and others of them
rolled a great stone against you.
They from that day put a ban upon you.
You are not asked out now
where you once were everybody.
The seal is put upon you—they call you by some opprobrious epithet, and so far as the world is
concerned, you are like the dead Christ.
You are put into your grave and shut out from the world’s life.
They do not want you any more at their merry-makings—you would spoil the party.
You have now
become such a Methodist—such a mean hypocrite, as they put it—that they have buried you out of
sight, and rolled back the stone, and sealed it, and set watchers at the door to keep you there.
Well, and
what a blessed thing that is—for if you be dead with Christ you shall also live with Him.
If we be thus dead with Christ, let us see that we live with Him.
It is a poor thing to be dead to the
world unless we are alive unto God.
Death is a negative and a negative in the world is of no great use by
itself.
A Protestant is less than a nobody if he only protests against a wrong.
We want a proclaimer, one
who proclaims the truth as well as protests against error.
And so, if we be dead to sin we must have, also, the life of Christ, and I trust, beloved, we know, and
it is not a matter of theory to us—I trust we know that in us there is a new life to which we were
strangers once.
To our body and our soul there has been superadded a spirit, a spark of spiritual life.
Just
as Jesus had a new life after death, so have we a new life after death, wherewith I trust we rise from the
grave.
But we must prove it.
Jesus proved His resurrection by infallible signs.
You and I, too, must prove to
all men that we have risen out of the grave of sin.
Perhaps our friends did not know us when we first
rose from the dead.
Like Mary, they mistook us for somebody else.
They said, “What! Is this William
who used to be such a hectoring, proud, ill-humored, domineering fellow? Can he put up with our jokes
and jeers so patiently?”
They supposed us to be somebody else, and they were not far from the mark, for we were new
creatures in Christ Jesus.
We talked with some of our friends, and they found our conversation so
different from what it used to be that it made their hearts burn within them—just as Jesus Christ’s
disciples when they went to Emmaus.
But they did not know our secret.
They were strangers to our new
life.
Do you recollect, Christians, how you first revealed yourselves unto your brethren, the church? In
the breaking of bread they first knew you.
That night, when the right-hand of fellowship was given to
you the new life was openly recognized and they said—“Come in thou blessed of the Lord, wherefore
standest thou without?”
I trust in resurrection-life you desire to prove to all men that this is not the common life you lived
before—a life which made you serve flesh and the lusts thereof—but that you are living now with higher
aims, and purer intentions, by a more heavenly rule, and with the prospect of a diviner result.
As we
have been dead with Christ, dear brethren, I hope we have also, in our measure, learned to live with
Him.
But now, remember, Christ lives forever and so do we.
Christ being raised from the dead dies no
more.
Death has no more dominion over Him.
The fourteenth verse is wonderfully similar—“Sin shall
not have dominion over you, for ye are not under the law, but under grace.
” Sin made us die once in
Adam, but we are not to be slain by it again.
If Christ could die now, we could die, but since Christ can
never die again, so the believer can never again go back to his old sin.
He dies to sin no more—he lives,
and sin has no more dominion over him.
Oh! this is a delightful theme! I know not how to express the joy my own heart feels at the sense of
security arising from the fact that Christ dies no more.
Death has no more dominion over Him, and sin
has no more dominion over me, if I am in Christ.
Suppose, my brethren, suppose for a moment that
Christ could die again.
Bring out your funeral music! Let the muffled drums beat the Dead march!
Let the heavens be clothed in sackcloth, and let the verdant earth be robed in blackness, for the
atonement, earth’s great hope, is incomplete! Christ must die again! The adversaries we thought were
routed have gathered their strength again.
Death is not dead.
The grave is not open.
There will be no
resurrection!
The saints tremble.
Even in heaven they fear and quake.
The crowns upon glorified heads are
trembling.
The hearts that have been overflowing with eternal bliss are filled with anxiety, for the throne
of Christ is empty.
Angels suspend their songs.
The howlings of hell have silenced the shouts of heaven—the fiends are holding high holiday, and
they shriek for very joy—“Jesus dies again! Jesus dies again! Prepare your arrows! Empty your quivers!
Come up, you legions of hell! The famous Conqueror must fight, and bleed, and die again, and we shall
overcome Him yet!” God is dishonored, the foundations of heaven are removed, and the eternal throne
quivers with the shock of Christ subjected to a second death!
Is it blasphemy to suppose the case? Yet, my brethren, it were equal blasphemy to suppose a true
believer going back again to his old lusts, and dying again by sin, for that were to suppose that the
atonement were incomplete.
I can prove that it involves the very same things.
It supposes an unfinished
sacrifice, for if the sacrifice be finished, then those for whom it was offered must be saved.
It supposes hell triumphant—Christ had bought the soul, and the Spirit had renewed it, but the devil
wipes away the blood of Christ, expels the Spirit of the living God, and gets to himself the victory.
A
saint perish! Then God’s promise is not true and Christ’s word is false—“I give unto my sheep eternal
life, and they shall never perish.
” Then the foundations are removed, eternal justice is just a name, and
the divine honesty is suspected.
The purposes of God are frustrated and the crown of sovereignty rolls in
the mire.
Weep angels! Be astonished, O heavens! Rock, O you hills with earthquake! and hell come up and
hold riot! for God Himself has ceased to be God, since His people perish! “Because I live ye shall live
also,” is a divine necessity, and if dominion can ever be had by sin over a believer again, then, mark
you, death can again have dominion over Christ.
But that is impossible.
Therefore rejoice and be glad,
you servants of God.
You will notice, that as they live, so, like Jesus Christ, they live unto God.
This completes the
parallel.
“In that he liveth, he liveth unto God.
” So do we.
The forty days which Christ spent on earth He
lived unto God, comforting His saints, manifesting His person, giving forth Gospel precepts.
For the few
days we have to live here on earth, we must live to comfort the saints, to set forth Christ, and to preach
the Gospel to every creature.
And now that Christ has ascended, He lives unto God.
What does that mean? He lives, my brethren,
to manifest the divine character.
Christ is the permanent revelation of an invisible God.
We look at
Christ and we see justice, truth, power, love.
We see the whole of the divine attributes in Him.
Christian, you are to live unto God—God is to be seen in you.
You are to show forth the divine heart
of compassion, longsuffering, tenderness, kindness, patience.
You are to manifest God—living unto
God.
Christ lives unto God, for He completes the divine purpose by pleading for His people, by carrying
on His people’s work above.
You are to live for the same, by preaching, that sinners may hear and that the elect may live.
By
teaching that the chosen may be saved—teaching by your life, by your actions—that God’s glory may
be known and that His decrees may be fulfilled.
Jesus lives unto God, delighting Himself in God.
The immeasurable joy of Christ in His Father, no
tongue can tell.
Live in the same way, Christian.
Delight yourself in the Lord! Be blessed.
Be happy.
Rejoice in the Lord always, and again I say rejoice.
Our Redeemer lives unto God, that is He lives in constant fellowship with God.
Cannot you do so
too by the Holy Spirit? You are dead to sin—see to it that you live forever in fellowship with the Father
and with His Son Jesus Christ.
Now I have been talking riddles to some of you.
How many of you understand these things? If any
are troubled because they understood the first part and they do trust in Christ’s death, but they do not
understand the second part—ah! beloved, you shall comprehend one of these days.
If you are resting on
Christ’s death, that death shall yet be made mighty in you.
But you who have known something of this, I pray you struggle after more.
Ask the Lord to mortify
you altogether, to fill you with the divine life, and to help you to persevere unto the end.
Pray that you
may live unto God and unto God alone.
III.
Having brought you this far, there is only one other step to take, and then we have done.
Let us
notice that the facts of which we have spoken are PLEDGES OF THE GLORY WHICH IS TO BE
REVEALED IN US.
Christ died.
Possibly we shall die.
Perhaps we shall not.
We may be alive and remain at the coming
of the Son of man.
But it may be we shall die.
I do not think we should be as certain of death as some
Christians are, because the Lord’s coming is much more certain than our dying.
Our dying is not certain,
for He may come before we die.
However, suppose we shall die—Christ rose and so shall we.
“What though our inbred sins require
Our flesh to see the dust,
Yet as the Lord our Saviour rose,
So all His followers must.
”
Do not, my brethren, think of the cemetery with tears, nor meditate upon the coffin and the shroud
with gloomy thoughts.
You only sojourn there for a little season and to you it will not appear a moment.
Your body will sleep, and if men sleep all through a long night it only seems an hour to them, a very
short moment.
The sleeping time is forgotten, and to your sleeping body it will seem no time at all—
while to your glorified soul it will not seem long because you will be so full of joy that a whole eternity
of that joy would not be too long.
But you shall rise again.
I do not think we get enough joy out of our resurrection.
It will probably be
our happiest moment, or rather the beginning of the happiest life that we shall ever know.
Heaven is not
the happiest place.
Heaven at present is happy, but it is not the perfection of happiness, because there is
only the soul there, though the soul is full of pleasure.
But the heaven that is to be when body and soul
will both be there surpasses all thought.
Resurrection will be our marriage day.
Body and soul have been separated, and they shall meet again
to be remarried with a golden ring, no more to be divorced, but as one indissolubly united body to go up
to the great altar of immortality, and there to be espoused unto Christ forever and ever.
I shall come
again to this flesh, no longer flesh that can decay, no longer bones that ache—I shall come back to these
eyes and these ears, all made channels of new delight.
Say not this is a materialistic view of the matter.
We are at least one-half material, and so long as
there is material about us we must always expect joy that shall not only give spiritual but even material
delight to us.
This body shall rise again.
“Can these dry bones live?” is the question of the unbeliever.
“They will live,” is the answer of faith.
Oh! let us expect our end with joy and our resurrection with transport.
Jesus was not detained a prisoner,
and therefore no worm can keep us back, no grave, no tomb can destroy our hope.
Having risen He lives
and we shall rise to live forever.
Anticipate, my brethren, that happy day.
No sin, no sorrow, no care, no decay, no approaching
dissolution! He lives forever in God—so shall you and I—close to the Eternal—swallowed up in His
brightness, glorified in His glory, overflowing with His love! I think at the very prospect we may well
say—
“Oh! long-expected day begin,
Dawn on these realms of woe and sin.
”
We may well cry to Him to bid His chariots hasten and bring the joyous season! He comes, He
comes, believer! Rejoice with joy unspeakable! You have but a little time to wait, and when you have
fallen asleep you shall leap—
“From beds of dust and silent clay,
To realms of everlasting day;”
and you,
“Far from a world of grief and sin
With God eternally shut in,
Shall be for ever blest!”
May the Lord add His blessing, for Jesu’s sake.
Amen.
Taken from The Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit C.
H.
Spurgeon Collection.
Only necessary changes have been made, such
as correcting spelling errors, some punctuation usage, capitalization of deity pronouns, and minimal updating of a few archaic
words.
The content is unabridged.
Additional Bible-based resources are available at www.
spurgeongems.
org.