SECRET SINS
#116,
Delivered on February 8, 1857, by C. H. Spurgeon
"Cleanse me from secret faults." Psalm 19:12
Self-righteousness arises partly from pride, but
mainly from ignorance of God’s Law. It is
because men know little or nothing concerning
the solemn character of the Divine Law that they
foolishly imagine themselves to be righteous.
They are not aware of the deep spirituality and
the stern severity of the Law or they would have
other and wiser notions. Once let them know how
strictly the Law deals with the thoughts—how it
brings itself to bear upon every emotion of the
inner man—and there is not one creature beneath
God’s Heaven who would dare to think himself
self-righteous in God’s sight in virtue of his
own deeds and thoughts.
Only let the Law be truly revealed to a man. Let
him know how strict the Law is and how
infinitely just and his self-righteousness will
shrivel into nothing—it will become a filthy rag
in his sight—whereas before he thought it to be
a goodly garment. David, having seen God’s Law
and having praised it in this Psalm, which I
have read in your hearing, is brought by
reflecting on its excellency, to utter this
thought, "Who can understand his errors?" and
then to offer this prayer, "Cleanse me from
secret faults."
In
the Lateran Council of the Church of Rome, a
decree was passed that every true believer must
confess his sins, all of them, once each year to
a priest and they affixed to it this
declaration—that there is no hope of pardon but
in complying with that decree. What can equal
the absurdity of such a decree as that? Do they
suppose that they can tell their sins as easily
as they can count their fingers? Why, if we
could receive pardon for all our sins by telling
every sin we have committed in one hour, there
is not one of us who would be able to enter
Heaven.
Besides the sins that are known to us and that
we may be able to confess, there are a vast mass
of sins which are as truly sins as those which
we do observe but which are secret and come not
beneath our eyes. Oh if we had eyes like those
of God, we would think very differently of
ourselves. The sins that we see and confess are
but like the farmer’s small samples which he
brings to market when he has left his granary
full at home. We have but a very few sins which
we can observe and detect, compared with those
which are hidden to ourselves and unseen by our
fellow creatures.
I
doubt not it is true of all of us who are here
that in every hour of our existence in which we
are active, we commit tens of thousands of sins
for which conscience has never reproved us
because we have never seen them to be wrong,
seeing we have not studied God’s Laws as we
ought to have done. Now be it known to us all
that sin is sin, whether we see it or not—that a
sin secret to us is a sin as truly as if we knew
it to be a sin, though not so great a sin in the
sight of God as if it had been committed
presumptuously, seeing that it lacks the
aggravation of willfulness. Let all of us who
know our sins offer this prayer after all our
confessions—"Lord, I have confessed as many as I
know but I must add an etcetera after them and
say, ‘Cleanse me from secret faults.’ "
That, however, will not be the essence of my
sermon this morning. I am going after a certain
class of men who have sins not unknown to
themselves but secret to their fellow creatures.
Every now and then we turn up a fair stone which
lies upon the green sward of the professing
Church, surrounded with the verdure of apparent
goodness and to our astonishment we find beneath
it all kinds of filthy insects and loathsome
reptiles and in our disgust at such hypocrisy,
we are driven to exclaim, "All men are liars.
There are none in whom we can put any trust at
all."
It
is not fair to say so of all, but really, the
discoveries which are made of the insincerity of
our fellow creatures are enough to make us
despise our kind because they can go so far in
appearances and yet have so little soundness of
heart. To you, Sirs, who sin secretly and yet
make a profession—you who break God’s Covenants
in the dark and wear a mask of goodness in the
light. To you, Sirs, who shut the doors and
commit wickedness in secret—to you I shall speak
this morning. O may God also be pleased to speak
to you and make you pray this prayer—"Cleanse me
from secret faults."
I
shall endeavor to urge upon all pretenders
present to give up, to renounce, to detest, to
hate, to abhor all their secret sins. And,
first, I shall endeavor to show the folly of
secret sins. Secondly, the misery of
secret sins. Thirdly, the guilt of secret
sins. Fourthly, the danger of secret sins
and then I shall try to apply some words by way
of remedy—that we may all of us be enabled to
avoid secret sins.
I.
First,
then, the FOLLY of secret sins.
Pretender, you are fair to look upon. Your
conduct is outwardly upright, amiable, liberal,
generous and Christian. But you indulge in some
sin which the eyes of man have not yet detected.
Perhaps it is private drunkenness. You do revile
the drunkard when he staggers through the
street. But you can yourself indulge in the same
habit in private. It may be some other lust or
vice. It is not for me just now to mention what
it is. But, Pretender, we say unto you, you are
a fool to think of harboring a secret sin and
you are a fool for this one reason—that your sin
is not a secret sin—it is known
and shall one day be revealed. Perhaps very
soon.
Your sin is not a secret! The eyes of God have
seen it! You have sinned before His face! You
have shut the door and drawn the curtains and
kept out the eye of the sun but God’s eye
pierces through the darkness. The brick walls
which surrounded you were as transparent as
glass to the eye of the Almighty. The darkness
which did gird you was as bright as the summer’s
noon to the eye of Him who beholds all things.
Know you not, O man, that "all things are naked
and open to the eyes of Him with whom we have to
do?"
As
the priest ran his knife into the entrails of
his victim, discovered the heart and liver and
what else did lie within, so are you, O man,
seen by God. Cut open by the Almighty, you have
no secret chamber where you can hide yourself.
You have no dark cellar where you can conceal
your soul. Dig deep, yes, deep as Hell but you
can not find earth enough upon the globe to
cover your sin. If you should heap the mountains
on its grave, those mountains would tell the
tale of what was buried in their bowels. If you
could cast your sin into the sea, a thousand
babbling waves would tell the secret out.
There is no hiding it from God. Your sin is
photographed in high Heaven! The deed, when it
was done, was photographed upon the sky and
there it shall remain and you shall see yourself
one day revealed to the gazing eyes of all men a
hypocrite, a pretender, who did sin in fancied
secret, observed in all your acts by the
all-seeing Jehovah. O what fools men are, to
think they can do anything in secret. This world
is like the glass hives wherein bees sometimes
work—we look down upon them and we see all the
operations of the little creatures. So God looks
down and sees all our eyes are weak. We cannot
look through the darkness but His eye, like an
orb of fire, penetrates the blackness and reads
the thought of man and sees his acts when he
thinks himself most concealed.
Oh,
it were a thought enough to curb us from all
sin, if it were truly applied to us—"You, God,
see me!" Stop thief! Drop that which you have
taken! God sees you! No eye of detection of
earth has discovered you but God’s eyes are now
looking through the clouds upon you. Swearer!
Though none at whom you swore heard your oath,
God heard it. It entered into the ears of the
Lord God of Sabbath. And those who lead a filthy
life and yet are respectable among men— your
vices are all known.
They are written in God’s book. He keeps a diary
of all your acts. And what will you think on
that day when a crowd shall be assembled,
compared with which this immense multitude is
but a drop in a bucket and God shall read out
the story of your secret life and men and angels
shall hear it? Certain I am there are none of us
who would like to have all our secrets read,
especially our secret thoughts. If I should
select out of this congregation the most holy
man. If I should bring him forward and say,
"Now, Sir, I know all your thoughts and am about
to tell them," I am sure he would offer me the
largest bribe that he could gather if I would be
pleased to conceal at least some of them.
"Tell," he would say, "of my acts—of them
I am not ashamed. But do not tell my thoughts
and imaginations—of them I must ever stand
ashamed before God." What, then, Sinner, will be
your shame when your private lusts, your closet
transgressions, your secret crimes shall be
heralded from God’s Throne, proclaimed by His
own mouth and with a voice louder than a
thousand thunders preached in the ears of an
assembled world? What will be your terror and
confusion then, when all the deeds you have done
shall be proclaimed in the face of the sun, in
the ears of all mankind? O renounce the foolish
hope of heresy, for your sin is this day
recorded and shall one day be advertised upon
the walls of Heaven.
II.
In the
next place, let us notice the MISERY of
secret sins.
Of
all sinners the man who makes a profession of
religion and yet lives in iniquity is the most
miserable. A downright wicked man, who takes a
glass in his hand and says, "I am a drunkard, I
am not ashamed of it," he shall be unutterably
miserable in worlds to come. But brief though it
is, he has his hour of pleasure. A man who
curses and swears and says, "That is my habit, I
am a profane man," and makes a profession of it,
he has, at least, some peace in his soul. But
the man who walks with God’s minister, who is
united with God’s Church, who comes out before
God’s people and unites with them and then lives
in sin—what a miserable existence he must have!
Why, he has a worse existence than the mouse
that is in the parlor, running out now and then
to pick up the crumbs and then back again to his
hole. Such men must run out now and then to sin.
And, oh, how fearful they are to be discovered!
One day, perhaps, their character turns up. With
wonderful cunning they manage to conceal and
gloss it over but the next day something else
comes and they live in constant fear, telling
lie after lie, to make the last lie appear
truthful— adding deception to deception—in order
that they may not be discovered—
"Oh, ‘tis a tangled web we weave,
When once we venture to deceive,"
If
I must be a wicked man give me the life of a
boisterous sinner who sins before the face of
day. If I must sin let me not act as a hypocrite
and a coward. Let me not profess to be God’s and
spend my life for the devil. That way of
cheating the devil is a thing which every honest
sinner will be ashamed of. He will say, "If I
serve my master I will serve him out and out, I
will have no sham about it. If I make a
profession, I will carry it out but if I do not,
if I live in sin, I am not going to gloss it
over by cant and hypocrisy." One thing which has
hamstringed the Church and cut her very sinews
in two has been this most damnable hypocrisy.
Oh,
in how many places have we seen men whom you
might praise to the very skies if you could
believe their words— but whom you might cast
into the nethermost pit if you could see their
secret actions? God forgive any of you who are
so acting! I had almost said I can scarce
forgive you. I can forgive the man who
riots openly and makes no profession of being
better. But the man who fawns and cants and
pretends and prays and then lives in sin—that
man I hate—I cannot bear him. I abhor him from
my very soul. If he will turn from his ways, I
will love him but in his hypocrisy he is to me
the most loathsome of all creatures.
‘Tis said the toad does wear a jewel in her head
but the hypocrite has none but bears filthiness
about him—while he pretends to be in love with
righteousness. A mere profession, my Hearers, is
but painted pageantry to go to Hell in. It is
like the plumes upon the hearse and the
trappings upon the black horses which drag men
to their graves—the funeral array of dead souls.
Take heed above everything of a waxen profession
that will not stand the sun. Take care of all
that needs to have two faces to carry it out. Be
one thing, or else the other. If you make up
your mind to serve Satan, do not pretend to
serve God. And if you serve God, serve Him with
all your heart.
"No
man can serve two masters." Do not try it, do
not endeavor to do it, for no life will be more
miserable than that. Above all beware of
committing acts which it will be necessary to
conceal. There is a singular poem by Hood,
called "The Dream of Eugene Aram"—a most
remarkable piece it is, indeed, illustrating the
point on which I am now dwelling. Aram has
murdered a man and cast his body into the
river—"a sluggish water, black as ink, the depth
was so extreme." The next morning he visited the
scene of his guilt—
"And sought the black accursed pool,
With a wild misgiving eye;
And he saw the dead in the river bed,
For the faithless stream was dry."
Next he covered the corpse with heaps of leaves
but a mighty wind swept through the wood and
left the secret bare before the sun—
"Then down I cast me on my face,
And first began to weep,
For I knew my secret then was one
That earth refused to keep.
On land or sea though it should be
Ten thousand fathoms deep."
In
plaintive notes he prophesies his own discovery.
He buried his victim in a cave and trod him down
with stones but when years had run their weary
round the foul deed was discovered and the
murderer put to death. Guilt is a "grim
chamberlain," even when fingers are not bloody
red. Secret sins bring fevered eyes and
sleepless nights until men burn out their
consciences and become in very deed ripe for the
pit. Hypocrisy is a hard game to play at, for it
is one deceiver against many observers. And for
certain it is a miserable trade, which will earn
at last, as its certain climax, a tremendous
bankruptcy.
Ah,
you who have sinned without discovery, "Be sure
your sin will find you out." And remember, it
may find you out before long. Sin, like murder,
will come out—men will even tell tales about
themselves in their dreams. God has sometimes
made men so pricked in their consciences that
they have been obliged to come forward and
confess the crime. Secret sinner! If you want
the foretaste of damnation upon earth, continue
in your secret sin, for no man is more miserable
than he who sins secretly and yet tries to
preserve a character.
Yonder stag, followed by the hungry hounds with
open mouths, is far more happy than the man who
is followed by his sins. Yonder bird, taken in
the fowler’s net and laboring to escape, is far
more happy than he who has weaved around himself
a web of deception and labors to escape from it
day by day by making the toils more thick and
the web more strong. Oh, the misery of secret
sins! Truly, one may pray, "Cleanse me from
secret faults."
III.
But
now, next, the guilt—the
solemn GUILT of secret sin.
Now, John, you do not think there is any evil in
a thing unless somebody sees it, do you? You
feel that it is a very great sin if your master
finds you out in robbing the till—but there is
no sin if he should not discover it—none at all.
And you, Sir, you fancy it to be very great sin
to play a trick in trade, in case you should be
discovered and brought before the court. But to
play a trick and never be discovered, that is
all fair—do not say a word about it Mr.
Spurgeon, it is all business. You must not touch
business—tricks that are not discovered, of
course you are not to find fault with them. The
common measure of sin is the notoriety of it.
But
I do not believe that. A sin is a sin, whether
done in private or before the whole world. It is
singular how men will measure guilt. A railway
servant puts up a wrong signal—there is an
accident. The man is tried and severely
reprimanded. The day before he put up the wrong
signal but there was no accident and therefore
no one cursed him for his neglect. But it was
just the same, accident or no accident—the
accident did not make the guilt—it was the deed
which made the guilt, not the notoriety nor yet
the consequence of it. It was his business to
have taken care and he was as guilty the first
time as he was the second, for he negligently
exposed the lives of men. Do not measure sin by
what other people say of it. But measure sin by
what God says of it and what your own conscience
says of it.
Now
I hold that secret sin, if anything, is the
worst sin. Because secret sin implies that the
man who commits it has Atheism in his heart. You
will ask how that can be? I reply, he may be a
professing Christian but I shall tell him to his
face that he is a practical Atheist if he labors
to keep up a respectable profession before man
and then secretly transgresses. Why, is he not
an Atheist who will say there is a God, yet at
the same time thinks more of man than he does of
God? Is it not the very essence of Atheism—is it
not a denial of the Divinity of the Most High
when men lightly esteem Him and think more of
the eye of a creature than of the observation of
their Creator?
There are some who would not for the life of
them say a wicked word in the presence of their
minister but they can do it knowing God is
looking at them. They are Atheists. There are
some who would not trick in trade for all the
world if they thought they would be discovered.
But they can do it while God is with them, that
is, they think more of the eye of man than of
the eye of God. And they think it worse to be
condemned by man than to be condemned by God.
Call it by what name you will—the proper name of
that is practical Atheism. It is dishonoring
God. It is dethroning Him— putting Him down
below His own creatures. And what is that but to
take away His Divinity?
Brethren, do not, I beseech you, incur the
fearful guilt of secret sins. No man can sin a
little in secret—it will certainly engender more
sin. No man can be a hypocrite and yet be
moderate in guilt—he will go from bad to worse
and still proceed—until when his guilt shall be
published—he shall be found to be the very worst
and the most hardened of men. Take heed of the
guilt of secret sin. Ah, now if I could preach
as Rowland Hill did, I would make some people
look to themselves and tremble!
It
is said that when he preached, there was not a
man in the window, or standing in the crowd, or
perched up anywhere but said, "There, he is
preaching at me. He is telling me about my
secret sins." And when he proclaimed God’s
omniscience, it is said men would almost think
they saw God bodily present in the midst of them
looking at them. And when he had finished his
sermon, they would hear a voice in their ears,
"Can any hide himself in secret places that I
cannot see him? says the Lord. Do not I fill
Heaven and earth? says the Lord."
I
wish I could do that. That I could make every
man look to himself and find out his secret sin.
Come my Hearer, what is it? Bring it forth to
the daylight. Perhaps it will die in the light
of the sun. These things love to not be
discovered. Tell your own conscience, now, what
it is. Look it in the face. Confess it before
God and may He give you grace to remove that sin
and every other and turn to Him with full
purpose of heart. But know this—your guilt is
guilt discovered or undiscovered and if there is
any difference it is worse, because it has been
secret. God save us from the guilt of secret
sin! "Cleanse me from secret faults."
IV.
And
note, next,
the
DANGER of secret sin.
One
danger is that a man cannot commit a little sin
in secret without being by-and-by betrayed into
a public sin. You cannot, Sir, though you may
think you can, preserve a moderation in sin. If
you commit one sin, it is like the melting of
the lower glacier upon the Alps. The others must
follow in time. As certainly as you heap one
stone upon the mound today, the next day you
will cast another, until the heap, reared stone
by stone, shall become a very pyramid. See the
coral insect at work—you cannot decree where it
shall stay its work.
It
will not build its rock just as high as you
please. It will not stay until it shall be
covered with weeds and until the weeds shall
decay. And then there shall be soil upon it and
an island shall be created by tiny creatures.
Sin cannot be held in with bit and bridle. "But
I am going to have a little drink now and then,
I am only going to be intoxicated once a week or
so. Nobody will see it. I shall be in bed
directly." You will be drunk in the streets
soon. "I am only just going to read one
lascivious book, I will put it under the sofa
when anyone comes in." You will keep it in your
library yet, Sir.
"I
am only going into that company now and then."
You will go there every day, such is the
bewitching character of it. You cannot help it.
You may as well ask the lion to let you put your
head into his mouth. You cannot regulate his
jaws—neither can you regulate sin. Once go into
it, you cannot tell when you will be destroyed.
You may be such a fortunate individual that like
Van Amburgh you may put your head in and out a
great many times. But rest assured that one of
these days it will be a costly venture.
Again—you may labor to conceal your vicious
habit but it will come out—you cannot help it.
You keep your little pet sin at home. But mark
this, when the door is ajar the dog will be out
in the street. Wrap him up in your bosom, put
over him fold after fold of hypocrisy to keep
him secret—the wretch will be singing some day
when you are in company. You cannot keep the
evil bird still. Your sin will gad abroad. And
what is more, you will not mind it some of these
days. A man who indulges in sin privately, by
degrees gets his forehead as hard as brass. The
first time he sinned, the drops of sweat stood
on his brow at the recollection of what he had
done.
The
second time, no hot sweat was on his brow—only
an agitation of the muscle. The third time there
was the sly, sneaky look but no agitation. The
next time, he sinned a little further. And by
degrees he became the bold blasphemer of his God
and exclaims, "Who am I that I should fear
Jehovah and who is He that I should serve Him?"
Men go from bad to worse. Launch your boat in
the current—it must go where the current takes
it. Put yourself in the whirlwind—you are but a
straw in the wind—you must go which way the wind
carries you—you cannot control yourself.
The
balloon can mount, but it cannot direct its
course. It must go whichever way the wind blows.
If you once mount into sin there is no stopping.
Take heed if you would not become the worst of
characters. Take heed of the little sins. They,
mounting one upon another, may at last heave you
from the summit and destroy your soul forever.
There is a great danger in secret sins.
But
I have here some true Christians who indulge in
secret sins. They say it is but a little one and
therefore do they spare it. Dear Brethren, I
speak to you and I speak to myself, when I say
this—let us destroy all our little secret sins.
They are called little and if they are, let us
remember that it is the foxes, even the little
foxes, that spoil our vines. For our vines have
tender shoots. Let us take heed of our little
sins. A little sin, like a little pebble in the
shoe, will make a traveler to Heaven walk very
wearily.
Little sins, like little thieves, may open the
door to greater ones outside. Christians,
recollect that little sins will spoil your
communion with Christ. Little sins, like little
stains in silk, may damage the fine texture of
Fellowship. Little sins, like little
irregularities in the machinery, may spoil the
whole fabric of your religion. The one dead fly
spoils the whole pot of ointment. That one
thistle may seed a continent with noxious weeds.
Let us, Brethren, kill our sins as often as we
can find them. One said—"The heart is full of
unclean birds. It is a cage of them." "Ah but,"
said another Divine, "you must not make that an
apology, for a Christian’s business is to wring
their necks."
And
so it is. If there are evil things, it is our
business to kill them. Christians must not
tolerate secret sins. We must not harbor
traitors. It is high treason against the King of
Heaven. Let us drag them out to light and offer
them upon the altar, giving up the dearest of
our secret sins at the will and bidding of God.
There is a great danger in a little secret sin.
Therefore avoid it, pass not by it, turn from it
and shun it and God give you grace to overcome
it!
V.
And now I come, in
finishing up, to plead with all my might with
some of you whom God has pricked in your
consciences. I have come to entreat you, if it
is possible, even to tears, that you will give
up your secret sins. I have one here for whom I
bless God. I love him, though I know him not. He
is almost persuaded to be a Christian. He halts
between two opinions. He intends to serve God,
he strives to give up sin but he finds it a hard
struggle and as yet he knows not what shall
become of him. I speak to him with all love—my
Friend, will you have your sin and go to Hell,
or leave your sin and go to Heaven?
This is the solemn alternative—to an awakened
sinner I put it—may God choose for you,
otherwise I tremble as to which you may choose.
The pleasures of this life are so intoxicating,
the joys of it so ensnaring that did I not
believe that God works in us to will and to do,
I should despair of you. But I have confidence
that God will decide the matter. Let me lay the
alternative before you—on the one hand there is
an hour’s merriment—a short life of bliss and
that a poor, poor bliss. On the other hand there
is everlasting life and eternal glory. On the
one hand, there is a transient happiness and
afterwards overwhelming woe. In this case there
is a solid peace and everlasting joy and after
it overflowing bliss.
I
shall not fear to be called an Arminian, when I
say, as Elijah did, "Choose this day whom you
will serve. If God is God, serve Him. If Baal be
God serve him." But, now, make your choice
deliberately. And may God help you to do it! Do
not say you will take up with religion, without
first counting the cost of it. Remember, there
is your lust to be given up and your pleasure to
be renounced—can you do it for Christ’s sake?
Can you? I know you cannot, unless God’s grace
shall assist you in making such a choice. But
can you say, "Yes, by the help of God, earth’s
gaudy toys, its pomps, pageantries, gewgaws, all
these I renounce"?—
"These can never satisfy,
Give me Christ or else I die."
Sinner, you will never regret that choice, if
God help you to make it. You will find yourself
a happy man here and thrice happy throughout
eternity. "But," says one, "Sir, I intend to be
religious but I do not hold with your
strictness." I do not ask you to do so. I hope,
however, you will hold with God’s strictness and
God’s strictness is ten thousand times greater
than mine. You may say that I am Puritanical in
my preaching—God will be Puritanical in judging
in that great day. I may appear severe but I can
never be so severe as God will be. I may draw
the harrow with sharp teeth across your
conscience but God shall drag harrows of eternal
fire across you one day.
I
may speak thundering things! God will not speak
them but hurl them from His hands. Remember, men
may laugh at Hell and say there is none. But
they must reject their Bibles before they can
believe the lie. Men’s consciences tell them
that—
"There is a dreadful Hell,
And everlasting pains.
Where sinners must with devils dwell,
In darkness, fire and chains."
Sirs, will you keep your secret sins and have
eternal fire for them? Remember it is of no use,
they must all be given up, or else you cannot be
God’s child. You cannot by any means have both.
It cannot be God and the World. It cannot be
Christ and the devil. It must be one or the
other. Oh, that God would give you grace to
resign all! For what are they worth? They are
your deceivers now and will be your tormentors
forever. Oh, that your eyes were open to see the
rottenness, the emptiness and trickery of
iniquity! Oh, that God would turn you to
Himself! Oh, may God give you grace to cross the
Rubicon of repentance at this very hour! May He
give you grace to say, "Henceforth it is war to
the knife with my sins. Not one of them will I
willingly keep but down with them, down with
them—Canaanite, Hittite, Jebusite, they shall
all be driven out."—
"The dearest idol I have known.
Whatever that idol be.
Help me to tear it from its Throne,
And worship only Thee."
"But oh, Sir, I cannot do it, it would be like
pulling my eyes out." Yes but hear what Christ
says—"It were better for you to enter into life
with one eye, than having two eyes to be cast
into Hell fire." "But it would be like cutting
my arm off." Yes and it would be better for you
to enter into life crippled or maimed, than to
be cast into Hell fire forever. Oh, when the
sinner comes before God at last, do you think he
will speak as he does now? God will reveal his
secret sins—the sinner will not then say, "Lord,
I thought my secret sins so sweet, I could not
give them up."
I
think I see how changed it will be then. "Sir,"
you say now, "you are too strict." Will you say
that when the eyes of the Almighty are glowering
on you? You say now, "Sir you are too precise."
Will you say that to God Almighty’s face? "Sir,
I mean to keep such-and-such a sin." Can
you say it at God’s bar at last? You will not
dare to do it then. Ah, when Christ comes a
second time there will be a marvelous change in
the way men talk. Methinks I see Him. There He
sits upon His Throne. Now, Caiaphas, come and
condemn Him now! Judas! Come and kiss Him now!
What do you stick at, man? Are you afraid of
Him?
Now, Barabbas! Go, See whether they will prefer
you to Christ now. Swearer, now is your
time. You have been a bold man—curse Him to His
face now. Now drunkard—stagger up to Him
now. Now infidel—tell Him there is no
Christ now—now that the world is lit with
lightning and the earth is shaking with thunder
till the solid pillars thereof do bow
themselves—tell God there is no God now! Now
laugh at the Bible. Now scoff at the minister.
Why Men, what is the matter with you? Why, can’t
you do it?
Ah,
there you are, you have fled to the hills and to
the rocks—"Rocks hide us! Mountains fall on us!
Hide us from the face of Him that sits on the
Throne." Ah, where are your boasts now? Alas!
alas! For you, in that dread day of wonders—
secret sinner—what will become of you? Go out of
this place unmasked. Go out to examine yourself,
go out to bend your knee, go out to weep, go out
to pray. God give you grace to believe! And oh,
how sweet and pleasant the thought—that this day
sinners have fled to Christ and men have been
born again to Jesus!
Brethren, before I finish, I repeat the words at
which so many have quibbled—it is now or never,
it is turn or burn. Solemnly in God’s sight I
say it. If it is not God’s Truth I must
answer for it in the great day of account. Your
consciences tell you it is true. Take it home
and mock me if you will. This morning I am clear
of your blood—if any seek not God but live in
sin, I shall be clear of your blood in that day
when the Watchman shall have your souls demanded
of Him. Oh, may God grant that you may be
cleared in a blessed manner! When I went down
these pulpit stairs a Sabbath or two ago, a
friend said to me words which have been in my
mind ever since—"Sir, there are nine thousand
people this day without excuse in the Day of
Judgment."
It
is true of you this morning. If you are damned,
it will be not for want of preaching to you and
it shall not be for want of praying for you. God
knows that if my heart could break of itself, it
would, for your souls. God is my witness how
earnestly I long for you in the heart of Christ
Jesus. Oh, that He might touch your hearts and
bring you to Him! For death is a solemn thing.
Damnation is a horrible thing. To be out of
Christ is a dreadful thing. To be dead in sin is
a terrible thing. May God lead you to view these
things as they are and save you, for His mercy’s
sake! "He that believes and is baptized shall be
saved."
"Lord, search my soul, try every thought;
Though my own heart accuse me not
Of walking in a false disguise,
I beg the trial of your eyes,
Does secret mischief lurk within?
Do I indulge some unknown sin?
O turn my feet whenever I stray,
And lead me in Your perfect way."