MESSAGE
The Power of Christ
Illustrated by the Resurrection
by C. H. Spurgeon
“For our conversation is in heaven; from whence we
also we look for the Savior; the Lord Jesus Christ: who shall change our vile
body, that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body, according to the
working whereby he is able even to subdue all things unto himself” (Philippians
3:20-21).
I SHOULD MISLEAD YOU if I called these verses my
text, for I intend only to lay stress upon the closing expression, and I read
the two verses because they are needful for its explanation. It would require
several discourses to expound the whole of so rich a passage as this.
Beloved, how intimately is the whole of our life
interwoven with the life of Christ! His first coming has been to us salvation,
and we are delivered from the wrath of God through him. We live still because he
lives, and never is our life more joyous than when we look most steadily to him.
The completion of our salvation in the deliverance of our body from the bondage
of corruption, in the raising of our dust to a glorious immortality, that also
is wrapped up with the personal resurrection and quickening power of the Lord
Jesus Christ. As his first advent has been our salvation from sin, so his second
advent shall be our salvation from the grave. He is in heaven, but, as the
apostle saith, “We look for the Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ: who shall change
our vile body, that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body.” We have
nothing, we are nothing, apart from him. The past, the present, and the future
are only bright as he shines upon them. Every consolation, every hope, every
enjoyment we possess, we have received and still retain because of our
connection with Jesus Christ our Lord. Apart from him we are naked, and poor,
and miserable. I desire to impress upon your minds, and especially upon my own,
the need of our abiding in him. As zealous laborers for the glory of God I am
peculiarly anxious that you may maintain daily communion with Jesus, for as it
is with our covenant blessings, so is it with our work of faith and labor of
love, everything depends upon him. All our fruit is found in Jesus. Remember his
own words, “Without me ye can do nothing.” Our power to work comes wholly
from his power. If we work effectually it must always be according to the
effectual working of his power in us and through us. Brethren, I pray that our
eyes may be steadfastly turned to our Master at this season when our special
services are about to commence. Confessing our dependence upon him, and
resorting to him in renewed confidence, we shall proceed to our labor with
redoubled strength. May we remember where our great strength lieth, and look to
him and him alone, away from our own weakness and our own strength too—finding
all in him in our work for others as we have found all in him in the matter of
the salvation of our own souls. When the multitudes were fed, the disciples
distributed the bread, but the central source of that divine commissariat was
the Master’s own hand. He blessed, he brake, he gave to the
disciples, and then the disciples to the multitude. Significant also was one of
the last scenes of our Lord’s intercourse with his disciples before he was taken
up. They had been fishing all the night, but they had taken nothing; it was only
when he came that they cast the net on the right side of the ship, and then the
net was filled with a great multitude of fishes. Ever must it be so; where he is
souls are taken by the men-fishers, but nowhere else. Not the preaching of his
servants alone, not the gospel of itself alone, but his presence with his
servants is the secret of success. “The Lord working with them,” his
co-operating presence in the gospel, this is it which makes it “the power of God
unto salvation.” Lift up your eyes then, my brethren, confederate with us for
the spread of the Redeemer’s kingdom, to the Savior, the Lord Jesus, who is the
Captain of our salvation, through whom and by whom all things shall be wrought
to the honor of God, but without whom the most ardent desires, and the most
energetic efforts must most certainly fail. I have selected this text with no
less a design than this—that every eye may by it be turned to the omnipotent
Savior before we enter upon the hallowed engagements which await us.
In the text notice, first of all, the marvel to
be wrought by our Lord at his coming; and then gather from it, in the second
place, helps to the consideration of the power which is now at this time
proceeding from him and treasured in him; and then, thirdly, contemplate
the work which we desire to see accomplished, and which we believe will be
accomplished on the ground of the power resident in our Lord.
I. First, we have to ask you to CONSIDER BELIEVINGLY
THE MARVEL WHICH IS TO BE WROUGHT BY OUR LORD AT HIS COMING.
When he shall come a second time he will change our
vile body and fashion it like unto his glorious body. What a marvellous change!
How great the transformation! How high the ascent! Our body in its present state
is called in our translation a “vile body,” but if we translate the Greek more
literally it is much more expressive, for there we find this corporeal frame
called “the body of our humiliation.” Not “this humble body,” that is hardly the
meaning, but the body in which our humiliation is manifested and enclosed. This
body of our humiliation our Lord will transform until it is like unto his own.
Here read not alone “his glorious body,” for that is not the most literal
translation, but “the body of his glory;” the body in which he enjoys and
reveals his glory. Our Savior had a body here in humiliation; that body was like
ours in all respects except that it could see no corruption, for it was
undefiled with sin; that body in which our Lord wept, and sweat great drops of
blood, and yielded up his spirit, was the body of his humiliation. He rose again
from the dead, and he rose in the same body which ascended up into heaven, but
he concealed its glory to a very great extent, else had he been too bright to be
seen of mortal eyes. Only when he passed the cloud, and was received out of
sight, did the full glory of his body shine forth to ravish the eyes of angels
and of glorified spirits. Then was it that his countenance became as the sun
shining in its strength. Now, beloved, whatever the body of Jesus may be in his
glory, our present body which is now in its humiliation is to be conformed unto
it; Jesus is the standard of man in glory. “We shall be like him, for we shall
see him as he is.” Here we dwell in this body of our humiliation, but it shall
undergo a change, “in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump:
for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and we
shall be changed.” Then shall we come into our glory, and our body being made
suitable to the glory state, shall be fitly called the body of glory. We need
not curiously pry into the details of the change, nor attempt to define all the
differences between the two estates of our body; for “it doth not yet appear
what we shall be,” and we may be content to leave much to be made known to us
hereafter. Yet though we see through a glass darkly, we nevertheless do see
something, and would not shut our eyes to that little. We know not yet as we are
known, but we do know in part, and that part knowledge is precious. The gates
have been ajar at times, and men have looked awhile, and beheld and wondered.
Three times, at least, human eyes have seen something of the body of glory. The
face of Moses, when he came down from the mount, shone so that those who
gathered around him could not look thereon, and he had to cover it with a veil.
In that lustrous face of the man who had been forty days in high communion with
God, you behold some gleams of the brightness of glorified manhood. Our Lord
made a yet clearer manifestation of the glorious body when he was transfigured
in the presence of the three disciples. When his garments became bright and
glistering, whiter than any fuller could make them, and he himself was all aglow
with glory, his disciples sew end marvelled. The face of Stephen is a third
window as it were through which we may look at the glory to be revealed, for
even his enemies as they gazed upon the martyr in his confession of Christ, saw
his face as it had been the face of an angel. Those three transient gleams of
the morning light may serve as tokens to us to help us to form some faint idea
of what the body of the glory of Christ and the body of our own glory will be.
Turning to that marvellous passage in the
Corinthians, wherein the veil seems to be more uplifted than it ever had been
before or since, we learn a few particulars worthy to be rehearsed. The body
while here below, is corruptible, subject to decay; it gradually becomes weak
through old age, at last it yields to the blows of death, falls into the ground,
and becomes the food of worms. But the new body shall be incorruptible, it shall
not be subject to any process of disease, decay, or decline, and it shall never,
through the lapse of ages, yield to the force of death. For the immortal spirit
it shall be the immortal companion. There are no graves in heaven, no knell ever
saddened the New Jerusalem. The body here is weak, the apostle says “it is sown
in weakness;” it is subject to all sorts of infirmities in life, and in death
loses all strength. It is weak to perform our own will, weaker still to perform
the heavenly will; it is weak to do and weak to suffer: but it is to be “raised
in power, all infirmity being completely removed.” How far this power will be
physical and how far spiritual we need not speculate; where the material ends
and the spiritual begins we need not define; we shall be as the angels, and we
have found no difficulty in believing that these pure spirits “excel in
strength,” nor in understanding Peter when he says that angels are “greater in
power and might.” Our body shall be “raised in power.”
Here, too, the body is a natural or soulish body—a
body fit for the soul, for the lowest faculties of our mental nature but
according to the apostle in the Corinthians, it is to be raised a spiritual
body, adapted to the noblest portion of our nature, suitable to be the
dwelling-place and the instrument of our new-born grace-given life. This body at
present is no assistance to the spirit of prayer or praise; it rather hinders
than helps us in spiritual exercises. Often the spirit truly is willing, but the
flesh is weak. We sleep when we ought to watch, and faint when we should pursue.
Even its joys as well as its sorrows tend to distract devotion: but when this
body shall be transformed, it shall be a body suitable for the highest
aspirations of our perfected and glorified humanity—a spiritual body like unto
the body of the glory of Christ. Here the body is sinful, its members have been
instruments of unrighteousness. It is true that our body is the temple of the
Holy Ghost; but, alas! there are traces about it of the time when it was a den
of thieves. The spots and wrinkles of sin are not yet removed. Its materialism
is not yet so refined as to be an assistance to the spirit; it gravitates
downwards, and it has a bias from the right line; but it awaits the last change,
and then it shall be perfectly sinless, as alabaster white and pure, upon which
stain of sin did never come; like the newly driven snow, immaculately chaste.
“As we have borne the image of the earthy, we shall also bear the image of the
heavenly.”
Being sinless, the body when it shall be raised
again shall be painless. Who shall count the number of our pains while in this
present house of clay? Truly we that are in this tabernacle do groan. Does it
not sometimes appear to the children of sickness as if this body were fashioned
with a view to suffering; as if all its nerves, sinews, veins, pulses, vessels,
and valves, were parts of a curious instrument upon which every note of the
entire gamut of pain might be produced? Patience, ye who linger in this
shattered tenement, a house not made with hands awaits you. Up yonder no sorrow
and sighing are met with; the chastising rod shall fall no longer when the
faultiness is altogether removed. As the new body will be without pain, so will
it be superior to weariness. The glorybody will not yield to faintness, nor fail
through languor. Is it not implied that the spiritual body does not need to
sleep, when we read that they serve God day and night in his temple? In a word,
the bodies of the saints, like the body of Christ, will be perfect; there shall
be nothing lacking and nothing faulty. If saints die in the feebleness of age
they shall not rise thus; or if they have lost a sense or a limb or are halt or
maimed, they shall not be so in heaven, for as to body and soul “they are
without fault before the throne of God.” “We shall be like him,” is true of all
the saints, and hence none will be otherwise than fair, and beautiful, and
perfect. The righteous shall be like Christ, of whom it is still true that not a
bone of him shall be broken, so not a part of our body after its change shall be
bruised, battered, or otherwise than perfect.
Put all together, brethren, and what a stretch it is
from this vile body to the glorious body which shall be! yet when Christ comes
this miracle of miracles shall be wrought in the twinkling of an eye. Heap up
epithets descriptive of the vileness of this body, think of it in all its
weakness, infirmity, sin, and liability to death; then admire our Lord’s body in
all its holiness, happiness, purity, perfection, and immortality; and know
assuredly that, at Christ’s coming, this change shall take place upon every one
of the elect of God. All believers shall undergo this marvellous transformation
in a moment. Behold and wonder! Imagine that the change should occur to you now.
What a display of power! My imagination is not able to give you a picture of the
transformation; but those who will be alive and remain at the coming of the Son
of God will undergo it, and so enter glory without death. “For this corruptible
must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality,” and
therefore the bodies of living believers shall in the twinkling of an eye pass
from the one state into the other; they shall be transformed from the vile to
the glorious, from the state of humiliation into the state of glory, by the
power of the coming Savior.
The miracle is amazing, if you view it as occurring
to those who shall be alive when Christ comes. Reflect, however, that a very
large number of the saints when the Lord shall appear a second time will already
be in their graves. Some of these will have been buried long enough to have
become corrupt. If you could remove the mould and break open the coffin-lid,
what would you find but foulness and putrefaction? But those mouldering relics
are the body of the saint’s humiliation, and that very body is to be transformed
into the likeness of Christ’s glorious body. Admire the miracle as you survey
the mighty change! Look down into the loathsome tomb, and, if you can endure it,
gaze upon the putrid mass; this, even this, is to be transformed into Christ’s
likeness. What a work is this! And what a Savior is he who shall achieve it! Go
a little further. Many of those whom Christ will thus raise will have been
buried so long that all trace of them will have disappeared; they will have
melted back into the common dust of earth, so that if their bones were searched
for not a vestige of them could be found, nor could the keenest searcher after
human remains detect a single particle. They have slept in quiet through long
ages in their lonely graves, till they have become absorbed into the soil as
part and parcel of mother earth. No, there is not a bone, nor a piece of a bone
left; their bodies are as much one with earth as the drop of rain which fell
upon the wave is one with the sea: yet shall they be raised. The trumpet call
shall fetch them back from the dust with which they have mingled, and dust to
dust, bone to bone, the anatomy shall be rebuilded and then refashioned. Does
your wonder grow? does not your faith accept with joy the marvel, and yet feel
it to be a marvel none the less?
Son of man, I will lead thee into an inner chamber
more full of wonder yet. There are many thousands of God’s people to whom a
quiet slumber in the grave was denied; they were cut off by martyrdom, were sawn
asunder, or cast to the dogs. Tens of thousands of the precious bodies of the
saints have perished by fire, their limbs have been blown in clouds of smoke to
the four winds of heaven, and even the handful of ashes which remained at the
foot of the stake their relentless persecutors have thrown into rivers to be
carried to the ocean, and divided to every shore. Some of the children of the
resurrection were devoured by wild beasts in the Roman ampitheatres or left a
prey to kites and ravens on the gibbet. In all sorts of ways have the saints’
bodies been hacked and hewn, and, as a consequence, the particles of those
bodies have no doubt been absorbed into various vegetable growths, and having
been eaten by animals have mingled with the flesh of beasts; but what of that?
“What of that?” say you, how can these bodies be refashioned? By what
possibility can the selfsame bodies be raised again? I answer it needs a miracle
to make any of these dry bones live, and a miracle being granted, impossibility
vanishes. He who formed each atom from nothing can gather each particle again
from confusion. The omniscient Lord of providence tracks each molecule of
matter, and knows its position and history as a shepherd knows his sheep; and if
it be needful to constitute the identity of the body, to regather every atom, he
can do it. It may not, however, be needful at all, and I do not assert that it
will be, for there may be a true identity without sameness of material; even as
this my body is the same as that in which I lived twenty years ago, and yet in
all probability there is not a grain of the same matter in it. God is able then
to cause that the same body which on earth we wear in our humiliation, which we
call a vile body, shall be fashioned like unto Christ’s body. No difficulties,
however stern, that can be suggested from science or physical law, shall for a
single instant stand in the way of the accomplishment of this transformation by
Christ the King. What marvels rise before me! indeed, it needs faith, and we
thank God we have it. The resurrection of Christ has for ever settled in our
minds, beyond all controversy, the resurrection of all who are in him; “For if
we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so them also which sleep in
Jesus will God bring with him.” Still it is a marvel of marvels, a miracle which
needs the fullness of the deity. Of whom but God, very God of very God, could it
be said that he shall change our bodies, and make them like unto his glorious
body?
I know how feebly I have spoken upon this sublime
subject, but I am not altogether regretful of that, for I do not wish to fix
your thoughts on my words for a single moment; I only desire your minds to grasp
and grapple with the great thought of the power of Christ, by which he shall
raise and change the bodies of the saints.
II. We will now pass on. Here is the point we aim
at. Consider, in the second place, that THIS POWER WHICH IS TO RAISE THE DEAD IS
RESIDENT IN CHRIST AT THIS MOMENT.
So saith the text, “according to the working whereby
he is able to subdue all things unto himself.” It is not some new power
which Christ will take to himself in the latter days and then for the first time
display, but the power which will arouse the dead is the same power which is in
him at this moment, which is going forth from him at this instant in the midst
of his church and among the sons of men. I call your attention to this, and
invite you to follow the track of the text.
First notice that all the power by which the last
transformation will be wrought is ascribed to our Lord Jesus Christ now as
the Savior. “We look for the Savior, the Lord Jesus.” When Christ raises the
dead it will be as a Savior, and it is precisely in that capacity that we need
the exercise of his power at this moment. Fix this, my brethren, in your hearts;
we are seeking the salvation of men, and we are not seeking a hopeless thing,
for Jesus Christ is able as a Savior, to subdue all things, to himself; so the
text expressly tells us. It doth not merely say that as a raiser of the dead he
is able to subdue all things, but as the Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ. His
titles are expressly given, he is set forth to us as the Lord, the Savior, the
Anointed, and in that capacity is said to be able to subdue all things to
himself. Happy tidings for us! My brethren, how large may our prayers be for the
conversion of the sons of men, how great our expectations, how confident our
efforts! Nothing is too hard for our Lord Jesus Christ; nothing in the way of
saving work is beyond his power. If as a Savior he wakes the dead in the years
to come, he can quicken the spiritually dead even now. These crowds of dead
souls around us in this area and in these galleries, he can awaken by his
quickening voice and living Spirit. The resurrection is to be according to the
working of his mighty power, and that same energy is in operation now. In its
fullness the power dwells in him, let us stir him up, let us cry unto him
mightily, and give him no rest till he put forth that selfsame power now. Think
not, my brethren, that this would be extraordinary and unusual. Your own
conversion, if you have truly been raised from your spiritual death, was by the
same power that we desire to see exerted upon others. Your own regeneration was
indeed as remarkable an instance of divine power as the resurrection itself
shall be. Ay, and I venture to say it, your spiritual life this very day or any
day you choose to mention, is in itself a display of the same working which
shall transform this vile body into its glorious condition. The power of the
resurrection is being put forth to-day, it is pulsing through the quickened
portion of this audience, it is heaving with life each bosom that beats with
love to God, it is preserving the life-courses in the souls of all the
spiritual, so that they go not back to their former death in sin. The power
which will work the resurrection will be wonderful, but it will be no new thing.
It is everywhere to be beheld in operation in the church of God at this very
moment by those who have eyes to see it; and herein I join with the apostle in
his prayer “that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, may give
unto you the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of him: the eyes
of your understanding being enlightened; that ye may know what is the hope of
his calling, and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the saints,
and what is the exceeding greatness of his power to us-ward who believe,
according to the working of his mighty power, which he wrought in Christ, when
he raised him from the dead, and set him at his own right hand in the heavenly
places’ far above all principality, and power, and might, and dominion, and
every name that is named, not only in this world, but also in that which is to
come: and hath put all things under his feet, and gave him to be the head over
all things to the church, which is his body, the fullness of him that filleth
all in all.”
Note next that the terms of our text imply that
opposition may be expected to this power, but that all resistance will be
overcome. That word “subdue” supposes a force to be conquered and brought into
subjection. “He is able even to subdue all things unto himself.” Herein is a
great wonder! There will be no opposition to the resurrection. The trumpet sound
shall bring the dead from their graves, and no particle shall disobey the
summons; but to spiritual resurrection there is resistance—resistance which only
omnipotence can vanquish. In the conversion of sinners natural depravity is an
opposing force; for men are set upon their sins, and love not the things of God,
neither will they hearken to the voice of mercy. My brethren, to remove all our
fears concerning our Lord’s ability to save, the word is here used, “He is
able,” not only to raise all things from the dead, but “to subdue all
things to himself.” Here again I would bid you take the encouragement the text
presents you. If there be opposition to the gospel, he is able to subdue
it. If in one man there is a prejudice, if in another man the heart is darkened
with error, if one man hates the very name of Jesus, if another is so wedded to
his sins that he cannot part from them, if opposition has assumed in some a very
determined character, does not the text meet every case? “He is able to subdue
all things,” to conquer them, to break down the barriers that interpose to
prevent the display of his power, and to make I hose very barriers the means of
setting forth that power the more gloriously. “He is able even to subdue all
things.” O take this to the mercy-seat, you who will be seeking the souls of men
this month! Take it to him and plead this word of the Holy Spirit in simple,
childlike faith. When there is a difficulty you cannot overcome, take it to him,
for he is “able to subdue.”
Note next, that the language of our text includes
all supposable cases. He is able to “subdue all things unto himself,”
not here and there one, but “all things.” Brethren, there is no man in
this world so fallen, debased, depraved, and wilfully wicked, that Jesus cannot
save him—not even among those who live beyond the reach of ordinary ministry. He
can bring the heathen to the gospel, or the gospel to them. The wheels of
providence can be so arranged that salvation shall be brought to the outcasts;
even war, famine, and plague, may become messengers for Christ, for he, too,
rides upon the wings of the wind. There lived some few years ago in Perugia, in
Italy, a man of the loosest morale and the worst conceivable disposition. He had
given up all religion, he loathed God, and had arrived at such a desperate state
of mind that he had conceived an affection for the devil, and endeavored to
worship the evil one. Imagining Satan to be the image and embodiment of all
rebellion, free-thinking, and lawlessness, he deified him in his own mind, and
desired nothing better than to be a devil himself. On one occasion, when a
Protestant missionary had been in Perugia preaching, a priest happened to say in
this man’s hearing, that there were Protestants in Perugia, the city was being
defiled by heretics. “And who do you think Protestants are?” said he. “They are
men who have renounced Christ and worship the devil.” A gross and outrageous lie
was this, but it answered far other ends than its author meant. The man hearing
this, thought, “Oh, then, I will go and meet with them, for I am much of their
mind;” and away he went to the Protestant meeting, in the hope of finding an
assembly who propagated lawlessness and worshipped the devil. He there heard the
gospel, and was saved. Behold in this and in ten thousand cases equally
remarkable, the ability of our Lord to subdue all things unto himself. How can
any man whom God ordains to save escape from that eternal love which is as
omnipresent as the deity itself? “He is able to subdue all things to himself.”
If his sword cannot reach the far off ones his arrows can, and even at this hour
they are sharp in his enemy’s hearts. No boastful Goliath can stand before our
David; though the weapon which he uses to-day be but a stone from the brook, yet
shall the Philistine be subdued. If there should be in this place a Deist, an
Atheist, a Romanist, or even a lover of the devil, if he be but a man, mercy yet
can come to him. Jesus Christ is able to subdue him unto himself. None have gone
too far, and none are too hardened. While the Christ lives in heaven we need
never despair of any that are still in this mortal life—“He is able to subdue
all things unto himself.”
You will observe, in the text that nothing is
said concerning the unfitness of the means. My fears often are lest souls
should not be saved by our instrumentality because of faultiness in us; we fear
lest we should not be prayerful enough or energetic or earnest enough; or that
it should be said, “He could not do many mighty works there because of their
unbelief.” But the text seems to obliterate man altogether—“He is able to
subdue all things unto himself”—that is to say, Jesus does it, Jesus
can do it, will do it all. By the feeblest means he can work mightily, can take
hold of us, unfit as we are for service, and make us fit, can grasp us in our
folly and teach us wisdom, take us in our weakness and make us strong. My
brethren, if we had to find resources for ourselves, and to rely upon ourselves,
our enterprise might well be renounced, but since he is able, we will
cast the burden of this work on him, and go to him in believing prayer, asking
him to work mightily through us to the praise of his glory, for “He is able even
to subdue all things unto himself.”
Note that the ability is said in the text to
be present with the Savior now. I have already pointed that out to you,
but I refer to it again. The resurrection is a matter of the future, but the
working which shall accomplish the resurrection is a matter of the present.
“According to the working whereby he is able even to subdue all things unto
himself,” Jesus is as strong now as he ever will be, for he changes not. At this
moment he is as able to convert souls as at the period of the brightest revival,
or at Pentecost itself. There are no ebbs and flows with Christ’s power.
Omnipotence is in the hand that once was pierced, permanently abiding there. Oh,
if we could but rouse it; if we could but bring the Captain of the host to the
field again, to fight for his church, to work his servants! What marvels should
we see, for he is able. We are not straitened in him, we are straitened in
ourselves if straitened at all.
Once more, for your comfort be it remembered that
the fact of there having been, as it were, a considerable time in which few have
been converted to Christ, is no proof that his power is slackening; for it is
well known to you that very few have as yet been raised from the dead, only here
and there one like Lazarus and the young man at the gates of Nain, but you do
not therefore doubt the Lord’s power to raise the dead. Though he tarrieth we do
not mistrust his power to fulfill his promise in due time. Now the power which
is restrained, as it were, so that it does not work the resurrection yet, is the
same which may hare been restrained in the Christian church for awhile, but
which will be as surely put forth ere long in conversion as it will be in the
end of time to accomplish the resurrection. Let us cry unto our Lord, for he has
but to will it and thousands of sinners will be saved; let us lift up our hearts
to him who has but to speak the word and whole nations shall be born unto him.
The resurrection will not be a work occupying centuries, it will be accomplished
at once; and so it may be in this house of prayer, and throughout London, and
throughout the world, Christ will do a great and speedy work to the amazement of
all beholders. He will send forth the rod of his strength out of Zion, and rule
in the midst of his enemies. He will unmask his batteries, he will spring his
mines, he will advance his outworks, he will subdue the city of his adversaries,
and ride victoriously through the Bozrah of his foes. Who shall stay his hand?
Who shall say unto him, “What doest thou?”
I wish we had time to work out the parallel which
our text suggests, between the resurrection and the subduing of all things. The
resurrection will be worked by the divine power, and the subduing of sinners is
a precisely similar instance of salvation. All men are dead in sin, but he can
raise them. Many of them are corrupt with vice, but he can transform them. Some
of them are, as it were, lost to all hope, like the dead body scattered to the
winds, desperate cases for whom even pity seems to waste her sighs; but he who
raises the dead of all sorts, with a word can raise sinners of all sorts by the
selfsame power. And as the dead when raised are made like to Christ, so the
wicked when converted are made like to Jesus too. Brilliant examples of virtue
shall be found in those who were terrible instances of vice; the most depraved
and dissolute shall become the most devout and earnest. From the vile body to
the glory-body, what a leap, and from the sinner damnable in lust to the saint
bright with the radiance of sanctity, what a space! The leap seems very far, but
omnipotence can bridge the chasm. The Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ is able to
do it; he is able to do it in ten thousand thousand cases, able to do it at this
very moment. My anxious desire is to engrave this one thought upon your hearts,
my brethren and sisters, yea, to write it on the palms of those hands with which
you are about to serve the Lord, learn it and forget it not—almighty power lies
with Jesus to achieve the purpose upon which our heart is set, namely, the
conversion of many unto himself.
III. I said I would ask you to consider, in the
third place, THE WORK WHICH WE DESIRE TO SEE ACCOMPLISHED. I will not detain you
however, with that consideration farther than this.
Brethren, we long to see the Savior subduing souls
unto himself. Not to our way of thinking, not to our church, not to the
honor of our powers of persuasion, but “unto himself.” “He is able even
to subdue all things unto himself.” O sinner, how I wish thou wert subdued to
Jesus, to kiss those dear feet that were nailed for thee, to love in life him
who loved thee to the death. Ah! soul, it were a blessed subjection for thee.
Never subject of earthly monarch so happy in his king as thou wouldst be. God is
our witness, we who preach the gospel, we do not want to subdue you to
ourselves, as though we would rule you and be lords over your spirits. It is to
Jesus, to Jesus only that we would have you subdued. O that you desired this
subjection, it would be liberty, and peace, and joy to you!
Notice that this subjection is eminently to be
desired, since it consists in transformation. Catch the thought of the text. He
transforms the vile body into his glorious body, and this is a part of the
subjection of all things unto himself. But do you call that subjection? Is it
not a subjection to be longed after with an insatiable desire, to be so subdued
to Christ that I, a poor, vile sinner, may become like him, holy, harmless,
undefiled? This is the subjection that we wish for you, O unconverted ones. We
trust we have felt it ourselves, we pray you may feel it too. He is able to give
it to you. Ask it of him at once. Now breathe the prayer, now believe that the
Savior can work the transformation even in you, in you at this very moment. And,
O my brethren in the faith, have faith for sinners now. While they are pleading
plead for them that this subjection which is an uplifting, this conquering which
is a liberating, may be accomplished in them.
For, remember again, that to be subjected to Christ
is, according to our text, to be fitted for heaven. He will change our vile body
and make it like the body of his glory. The body of the glory is a body fitted
for glory, a body which participates in glory. The Lord Jesus can make you,
sinner, though now fitted for hell, fitted for heaven, fitted for glory, and
breathe into you now an anticipation of that glory, in the joy and peace of mind
which his pardon will bring to you. It must be a very sad thing to be a soldier
under any circumstances; to have to cut and hack and kill and subdue, even in a
righteous cause, is cruel work; but to be a soldier of King Jesus is an honor
and a joy. The service of Jesus is a grand service. Brethren, we have been
earnestly seeking to capture some hearts that are here present, to capture them
for Jesus. It has been a long and weary siege up till this hour. We have
summoned them to surrender, and opened fire upon them with the gospel, but as
yet in vain. I have striven to throw a few live shells into the very heart of
their city, in the form of warning and threatening and exhortation. I know there
have been explosions in the hearts of some of you, which have done your sins
some damage, killed some of the little ones that would have grown up to greater
iniquity. You have been carefully blockaded by providence and grace. Your hearts
have found no provision for joy in sin, no helps to peace in unrighteousness.
How I wish I could starve you out until you would yield to my Lord, the crown
Prince, who again to-day demands that you yield to him. It is dreadful to compel
a city to open its gates unwillingly to let an enemy come in; for however gentle
be the enemy his face is an unwelcome sight to the vanquished. But oh! how I
wish I could burst open the gates of a sinner’s heart to-day, for the Prince
Emmanuel to come in. He who is at your gates is not an alien monarch, he is your
rightful prince, he is your friend and lover. It will not be a strange face that
you will see, when Jesus comes to reign in you. When the King in his beauty wins
your soul, you will think yourselves a thousand fools that you did not receive
him before. Instead of fearing that he will ransack your soul, you will open all
its doors and invite him to search each room. You will cry, “Take all, thou
blessed monarch, it shall be most mine when it is thine. Take all, and reign and
rule.” I propound terms of capitulation to you, O sinner. They are but these:
yield up yourself to Christ, give up your works and ways, both good and bad, and
trust in him to save you, and be his servant henceforth and for ever. While I
thus invite you, I trust he will speak through me to you and win you to himself.
I shall not plead in vain, the word shall not fall to the ground. I fall back
upon the delightful consolation of our text, “He is able to subdue all things
unto himself.” May he prove his power this morning. Amen and Amen.
PORTIONS OF SCRIPTURE READ BEFORE SERMON—Philippians
3.
MESSRS, PASSMORE AND ALABASTER, 18, Paternoster Row,
beg to inform the sermon readers that the second volume of MR. SPURGEON’S GREAT
WORK UPON THIS PSALMS is receiving the most favorable notice of the reviewers.
The first edition of Vol. I is nearly exhausted, and a second edition will be
issued. The large volumes, unusually crowded with matter, are published at 8s.
each, a price far below the usual charge for such books. The following extract
is from the Baptist Magazine:—
“It seems to us that Mr. Spurgeon has got himself
not only to the devout and scholarly exposition of the Psalms, but also to the
rendering of his work positively fascinating by its many charms. . . . In the
possession of this book the young will find themselves at college, with the
learned and the good of all ages for their tutors; and mature Christians will
have the largest spiritual knowledge increased, and its richest experiences
strengthened.”
Delivered on Lord’s-day Morning, January 19th, 1871
by
C. H. SPURGEON,
At the Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington
If you need help in becoming a Christian here is
A Free Gift for You.
Click for printer friendly page