Charles Spurgeon Collection: Spurgeon - C.H. - Sermons from Luke: 26 LUK 11:31 A Greater Than Solomon

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Charles Spurgeon Collection: Spurgeon - C.H. - Sermons from Luke: 26 LUK 11:31 A Greater Than Solomon



TOPIC: Spurgeon - C.H. - Sermons from Luke (Other Topics in this Collection)
SUBJECT: 26 LUK 11:31 A Greater Than Solomon

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                  A Greater Than Solomon



February 6, 1881

by

C. H. SPURGEON

(1834-1892)



"Behold a greater than Solomon is here"- Luk_11:31.



Our first thought is that no mere man would have said this concerning himself

unless he had been altogether eaten up with vanity; for Solomon was among the

Jews the very ideal of greatness and wisdom. It would be an instance of the

utmost self-conceit if any mere man were to say of himself-"A greater than

Solomon is here." Any person who was really greater and wiser than Solomon

would be the last man to claim such preeminence. A wise man would never think

of it; a prudent man would never say it. The Lord Jesus Christ, if we regard

Him as a mere man, would have never uttered such an expression, for a more

modest, self-forgetting man was never found in all our race. View it on the

supposition that the Christ of Nazareth was a mere man, and I say that His

whole conduct was totally different from the spirit which would have

suggested an utterance like this-"A greater Solomon is here." For men to

compare themselves with one another is not wise, and Christ was wise; it is

not humble, and Christ was humble. He would not have thus spoken if there had

not been cause and reason in His infinitely glorious nature. It was because

the divinity within Him must speak out. For God to say that He is greater

than all His creatures is no boasting; for what are they in His sight? All

worlds are but sparks from the anvil of His omnipotence. Space, time,

eternity, all these are as nothing before Him; and for Him to compare or even

to contrast Himself with one of His own creatures is supreme condescension,

let Him word the comparison how He may. It was the divine within our Lord

which made Him say-and not even then with a view to exalt Himself, but with a

view to point the moral that He was trying to bring before the people-"A

greater than Solomon is here." He did as good as say, "'The queen of the

south came from a distance to hear the wisdom of Solomon, but you refuse to

hear me. She gave attention to a man, but you will not regard your God. You

will not listen to me incarnate Deity who tells you words of infinite,

infallible wisdom." Our Lord Jesus is aiming at His hearers' good, and where

the motive is so disinterested there remains no room for criticism. He tells

them that He is greater than Solomon, to convince them of the greatness of

their crime in refusing to listen to the messages of love with which His lips

were loaded. Foreigners came from afar to Solomon; but 1, says He, have come

to your door, and brought infinite wisdom into your very gates, and yet you

refuse me. Therefore the queen of the south shall rise up in judgment against

you, for, in rejecting me, you reject a greater than Solomon.



The second thought that comes to one's mind is this: notice the self-

consciousness of the Lord Jesus Christ.



He knows who He is, and what He is, and He is not lowly in spirit because He

is ignorant of His own greatness. He was meek and lowly in heart-"Servus

servorum," as the Latins were wont to call Him, "Servant of servants," but

all the while He knew that He was Rex regum, or King of kings. He takes a

towel and He washes His disciples' feet; but all the while He knows that He

is their Master and their Lord. He associates with publicans and harlots, and

dwells with the common people; but all the while He knows that He is the only

begotten of the Father. He sits as a child, in the temple hearing and asking

questions of the rabbis; He stands among His disciples as though He were one

of themselves, conversing with the ignorant and foolish of the day, seeking

their good; but He knows that He is not one of them; He knows that He has

nothing to learn from them: He knows that he is able to teach senates and to

instruct kings and philosophers, for he is greater than Solomon. He wears a

peasant's garb, and has not where to lay His head; but He knows that,

whatever the lowliness of His condition, He is greater than Solomon; He lets

us perceive that he knows it, that all may understand the love which brought

Him down so low. It is grand humility on Christ's part that He condescends to

be our servant, our Savior, when He is so great that the greatest of men are

as nothing before Him. "He counted it not robbery to be equal with God": mark

that; and yet "He made himself of no reputation." Some people do not know

their own worth, and so, when they stoop to a lowly office it is no stoop to

their minds, for they do not know their own abilities. They do not know to

what they are equal; but Christ did know: He knew all about His own Deity,

and His own wisdom and greatness as man. I admire, therefore, the clear

understanding which sparkles in His deep humiliation, like a gem in a dark

mine. He is not one who stoops down according to the old rhyme-

As needs he must who cannot sit upright;



but He is One who comes down wittingly from His throne of glory, marking each

step and fully estimating the descent which He is making. The cost of our

redemption was known to Him, and He endured the cross, despising the shame.

Watts well sings-



This was compassion like a God,

That when the Savior knew

The price of pardon was his blood,

His pity ne'er withdrew.



Brethren, if our Savior Himself said that He was greater than Solomon, you

and I must fully believe it, enthusiastically own it, and prepare to proclaim

it. If others will not own it, let us be the more prompt to confess it. If He

Himself had to say, before they would own it, "A greater than Solomon is

here," let it not be necessary that the encomium should be repeated, but let

us all confess that He is indeed greater than Solomon. Let us go home with

this resolve in our minds, that we will speak greater things of Christ than

we have done, that we will try to love Him more and serve Him better, and

make Him in our own estimation and in the world's greater than He has ever

been. Oh for a glorious high throne to set Him on, and a crown of stars to

place upon His head! Oh to bring nations to His feet! I know my words cannot

honor Him according to His merits: I wish they could. I am quite sure to fail

in my own judgment when telling out His excellence; indeed, I grow less and

less satisfied with my thoughts and language concerning Him. He is too

glorious for my feeble language to describe Him. If I could speak with the

tongues of men and of angels, I could not speak worthily of Him. If I could

borrow all the harmonies of heaven, and enlist every harp and song of the

glorified, yet were not the music sweet enough for His praises. Our glorious

Redeemer is ever blessed: let us bless Him. He is to be extolled above the

highest heavens; let us sound forth His praises. Oh for a well-tuned harp!

May the Spirit of God help both heart and lip to extol Him at this hour.





First, then, we shall try to draw a parallel between Jesus and Solomon; and,

secondly, we will break away front all comparisons, and show where there

cannot be any parallel between Christ and Solomon at all.



I. First, then, BETWEEN CHRIST AND SOLOMON there are some points of likeness.



When the Savior Himself gives us a comparison it is a clear proof that a

likeness was originally intended by the Holy Spirit, and therefore we may say

without hesitation that Solomon was meant to be a type of Christ. I am not

going into detail, nor am I about to refine upon small matters; but I shall

give you five points in which Solomon was conspicuously like to Christ, and

in which our Lord was greater than Solomon. O for help in the great task

before me.



And, first, in wisdom. Whenever you talked about Solomon to a Jew his eyes

began to flash with exultation; his blood leaped in his veins with national

pride. Solomon-that name brought to mind the proudest time of David's

dynasty, the age of gold. Solomon, the magnificent, why, surely, his name

crowns Jewish history with glory, and the brightest beam of that glory is his

wisdom. In the east, and I think I may say in the west, it still remains a

proverb, "To be as wise as Solomon." No modern philosopher or learned monarch

has ever divided the fame of the son of David, whose name abides as the

synonym of wisdom. Of no man since could it be said as of him, "And all the

kings of the earth sought the presence of Solomon, to hear his wisdom, that

God had put in his heart." He intermeddled with all knowledge, and was a

master in all sciences. He was a naturalist: "and he spoke of trees from the

cedar trees that are in Lebanon even unto the hyssop that springeth out of

the wall: he spoke also of beasts, and of fowl, and of creeping things, and

of fishes." He was an engineer and architect, for he wrote: "I made me great

works; I built me houses; I planted me vineyards: I made me gardens and

orchards, and I planted trees in them of all kind of fruits: I made me pools

of water, to water therewith the wood that bringeth forth trees." He was one

who understood the science of government- politician of the highest order. He

was everything, in fact. God gave him wisdom and largeness of heart, says the

Scripture, like the sand of the sea: "and Solomon's wisdom excelled the

wisdom of all the children of the east country, and all the wisdom of Egypt.

For he was wiser than all men; than Ethan the Ezralite, and Heman, and

Chalcol, and Darda, the sons of Mahol: and his fame was in all nations round

about." Yes; but our Savior knows infinitely more than Solomon. I want you

tonight to come to Him just as the Queen of Sheba came to Solomon, only for

weightier reasons. You do not want to learn anything concerning architecture

or navigation, agriculture or anatomy. You want to know only how you shall be

built up a spiritual house, and how you shall cross those dangerous seas

which lie between this land and the celestial city. Well, you may come to

Jesus and He will teach you all that you need to know, for all wisdom is in

Christ. Our divine Savior knows things past and present and future: the

secrets of God are with Him. He knows the inmost heart of God, for no one

knoweth the Father save the Son and He to whom the Son shall reveal Him. To

Him it is given to take the book of prophetic decree and loose the seven

seals thereof. Come, then, to Christ Jesus if you want to know the mind of

God, for it is written that He "is made unto us wisdom." Solomon might have

wisdom, but he could not be wisdom to others; Christ Jesus is that to the

full. In the multifarious knowledge which He possesses-the universal

knowledge which is stored up in Him-there is enough for your guidance and

instruction even to the end of life, however intricate and overshadowed your

path may be.



Solomon proved his wisdom in part by his remarkable inventions. We cannot

tell what Solomon did not know. At any rate, no man knows at this present

moment how those huge stones, which have lately been discovered, which were

the basis of the ascent by which Solomon went up to the house of the Lord,

were ever put into their places. Many of the stones of Solomon's masonry are

so enormous that scarcely could any modern machinery move them; and without

the slightest cement they are put together so exactly that the blade of a

knife could not be inserted between them. It is marvelous how the thing was

done. How such great stones were brought from their original bed in the

quarry-how the whole building of the temple was executed-nobody knows. The

castings in brass and silver are scarcely less remarkable. No doubt many

inventions have passed away from the knowledge of modern times, inventions as

remarkable as those of our own age. We are a set of savages that are

beginning to learn something, but Solomon knew and invented things which we

shall, perhaps, rediscover in 500 years time. By vehement exertion this

boastful nineteenth century, wretched century as it is, will crawl towards

the wisdom which Solomon possessed ages ago. Yet is Jesus greater than

Solomon. As for inventions, Solomon is no inventor at all compared with Him

who said, "Deliver him from going down into the pit, for I have found a

ransom." O Savior, didst thou find out the way of our salvation? Didst thou

bring into the world and carry out and execute the way by which hell-gate

should be closed, and heaven-gate, once barred, should be set wide open?

Then, indeed, art thou wiser than Solomon. Thou art the deviser of salvation,

the architect of the church, the author and finisher of our faith.



Solomon has left us some very valuable books-the Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and

the matchless Song. But, oh, the words of Solomon fall far short of the words

of Jesus Christ, for they are spirit and life.. The power of the word of

Jesus is infinitely greater than all the deep sayings of the sage. Proverbial

wisdom cannot match His sayings, nor can "The Preacher" rival His sermons,

and even the divine Song itself would remain without a meaning-an allegory

never to be explained-if it were not that Christ Himself is the sum and

substance of it. Solomon may sing of Christ, but Christ is the substance of

the song. He is greater than Solomon in His teachings, for His wisdom is from

above, and leads men up to heaven. Blessed are they that sit at His feet.



Again, Solomon showed His wisdom in difficult judgments. You know how he

settled the question between the two women concerning the child; many other

puzzles Solomon solved, and many other knots Solomon was able to untie. He

was a great ruler and governor-a man wise in politics, in social economy, and

in commerce-wise in all human respects. But a greater than Solomon is present

where Christ is. There is no difficulty which Christ cannot remove, no knot

which He cannot untie, no question which He cannot answer. You may bring your

hard questions to Him, and He will answer them; and if you have any

difficulty on your heart tonight, do but resort to the Lord Jesus Christ in

prayer, and search His word, and you shall hear a voice as from the sacred

oracle, which shall lead you in the path of safety.



My point at this time, especially as we are coming to the Communion table, is

this: I want you that love the Lord Jesus Christ to believe in His infinite

wisdom, and come to Him for direction. I fear that when you are in trouble,

you half suppose that the great keeper of Israel must have made a mistake.

You get into such an intricate path that you say, "Surely, my Shepherd has

not guided me aright." Never think so. When you are poor and needy still say,

"This my poverty was ordained by a greater than Solomon." What if you seem to

be deprived of every comfort, and you are brought into a strange and solitary

way, where you find no city to dwell in? Yet a guide is near, and that guide

is not foolish; but a greater than Solomon is here. I think I look tonight

into a great furnace. It is so fierce that I cannot bear to gaze into its

terrible blaze. For fear my eyeballs should utterly fail me and lose the

power of sight through the glare of that tremendous flame, I turn aside, for

the fury of its flame overpowers me. But when I am strengthened to look again

I see ingots of silver refining in the white heat, and I note that the heat

is tempered to the last degree of nicety. I watch the process to the end, and

I say, as I behold those ingots brought out all clear and pure, refined from

all dross, and ready for the heavenly treasury, "Behold, a greater than

Solomon was in that furnace work." So you will find it, O sufferer. Infinite

wisdom is in your lot. Come, poor child, do not begin to interfere with your

Savior's better judgment, but let it order all things. Do not let your little

"Know" ever rise up against the great knowledge of your dear Redeemer. Think

of this when you wade in deep waters and comfortably whisper to yourself-"A

greater than Solomon is here."



I have not time to enlarge, and therefore I would have you notice, next, that

our Lord Jesus Christ is greater than Solomon in wealth. This was one of the

things for which Solomon was noted. He had great treasures: he "made gold to

be as stones, and as for silver it was little accounted of," so rich did he

become. He had multitudes of servants. I think he had 60,000 hewers in the

mountains hewing out stones and wood, so numerous were the workmen he

employed. His court was magnificent to the last degree. When you read of the

victuals that were prepared to feed the court, and of the stately way in

which everything was arranged from the stables of the horses upwards to the

ivory throne, you feel, like the queen of Sheba, utterly astonished, and say,

"The half was not told me." But, oh, when you consider all the wealth of

Solomon, what poor stuff it is compared with the riches that are treasured up

in Christ Jesus. Beloved, He who died upon the cross, and was indebted to a

friend for a grave; He who was stripped even to the last rag ere He died; He

who possessed no wealth but that of sorrow and sympathy, yet had about Him

the power to make many rich, and He has made multitudes rich-rich to all the

intents of everlasting bliss; and therefore He must be rich Himself. Is He

not rich who enriches millions? Why, our Lord Jesus Christ, even by a word,

comforted those that were bowed down. When He stretched out His hand He

healed the sick with a touch. There was a wealth about His every movement. He

was a full man, full of all that man could desire to be full of; and now,

seeing that He has died and risen again, there is in Him a wealth of

pardoning love, a wealth of saving power, a wealth of intercessory might

before the Father's throne, a wealth of all things by which He enriches the

sons of men, and shall enrich them to all eternity.



I want this truth to come home to you: I want you to recognize the riches of

Christ, you that are His people; and, in addition, to remember the truth of

our hymn-



Since Christ is rich can I be poor?

What can I want besides?



I wish we could learn to reckon what we are by what Christ is. An old man

said, "I am very old; I have lost my only son; I am penniless; and, worst of

all, I am blind. But," added he, "this does not matter, for Christ is not

infirm; Christ is not aged; Christ has all riches; and Christ is not blind;

and Christ is mine; and I have all things in Him." Could you not get hold of

that somehow, brothers and sisters? Will not the Holy Spirit teach you the

art of appropriating the Lord Jesus and all that He is and has. If Christ be

your representative, why, then you are rich in Him. Go to Him to be enriched.

Suppose I were to meet a woman, and I knew her husband to be a very wealthy

man, and that he loved her very much, and she were to say to me, "I am

dreadfully poor; I do not know where to get raiment and food." "Oh," I should

say, "That woman is out of her mind." If she has such a husband, surely she

has only to go to him for all that she needs. And what if nothing is invested

in her name, yet it is in his name, and they are one, and he will deny her

nothing." I should say, "My good woman, you must not talk in that fashion, or

I will tell your husband of you." Well, I think that I shall have to say the

same of you who are so very poor and cast down, and yet are married to Jesus

Christ. I shall have to tell your Husband of you, that you bring such

complaints against Him, for all things are yours, for ye are Christ's and

Christ is God's; wherefore, "lift up the hands that hang down, and confirm

the feeble knees"; use the knees of prayer and the hand of faith, and your

estate will well content you. Do not think, that you are married to Rehoboam,

who will beat you with scorpions, for you are joined to a greater than

Solomon. Do not fancy that your heavenly Bridegroom is a beggar. All the

wealth of eternity and infinity is His; how can you say that you are poor

while all that He has is yours?



Now, thirdly, and very briefly indeed. There was one point about Solomon in

which every Israelite rejoiced, namely that he was the prince of peace. His

name signifies peace. His father, David, was a great warrior, but Solomon had

not to carry on war. His power was such that no one dared to venture upon a

conflict with so great and potent a monarch. Every man throughout Israel sat

under his vine and figtree, and no man was afraid. No trumpet of invader was

heard in the land. Those were halcyon days for Israel when Solomon reigned.

Ah, but in that matter a greater than Solomon is here; for Solomon could not

give his subjects peace of mind, he could not bestow upon them rest of heart,

he could not ease them of their burden of guilt, or draw the arrow of

conviction from their breast and heal its smart. But I preach to you tonight

that blessed divine Man of Sorrows who has wrought out our redemption, and

who is greater than Solomon in His peace-giving power. Oh, come and trust

Him. Then shall your "peace be as a river, and your righteousness like the

waves of the sea." Am I addressing one of God's people who is sorely

troubled, tumbled up and down in his thoughts? Brother or sister, do not

think that you must wait a week or two before you can recover your peace. You

can become restful in a moment, for "He is our peace"-even He Himself, and He

alone. And, oh, if you will but take Him at once, laying hold upon Him by the

hand of faith as your Savior, this Man shall be the peace even when the

Assyrian shall come into the land. There is no peace like the peace which

Jesus gives; it is like a river, deep, profound, renewed, ever flowing,

overflowing, increasing and widening into an ocean of bliss. "The peace of

God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your heart and mind, through

Jesus Christ." Oh, come to Him. Come to Him at this moment. Do not remain an

hour away from your Noah, or rest, for with Him in the ark your weary wing

shall be tired no longer. You shall be safe and restful the moment you return

to Him. The fruit of the Spirit is joy. I want you to get that joy and to

enter into this peace. Blessed combination, joy and peace! Peace, peace,

there is music in the very word: get it from Him who is the Word, and whose

voice can still a storm into a calm. A greater than Solomon is here to give

you that peace; beat the sword of your inward warfare, into the plow-share of

holy service; no longer sound an alarm, but blow up the trumpet of peace in

this day of peace.



A fourth thing for which Solomon was noted was his great works. Solomon built

the temple; which was one of the seven wonders of the world in its time. A

very marvelous building it must have been, but I will not stay to describe

it, for time fails us. In addition to this he erected for himself palaces,

constructed fortifications, and made aqueducts and great pools to bring

streams from the mountains to the various towns. He also founded Palmyra and

Baalbed-those cities of the desert-to facilitate his commerce with India,

Arabia, and other remote regions. He was a marvelous man. Earth has not seen

his like. And yet a greater than Solomon is here, for Christ has brought the

living water from the throne of God right down to thirsty men, being Himself

the eternal aqueduct through which the heavenly current streams. Christ has

built fortresses and munitions of defense, behind which His children stand

secure against the wrath of hell; and He has founded and is daily finishing a

wondrous temple, His church, of which His people are the living stones,

fashioned, polished, rendered beautiful-a temple which God Himself shall

inhabit, for He "dwelleth not in temples made with hands, that is to say, of

this building"; but He dwells in a temple which He Himself doth pile, of

which Christ is architect and builder, foundation, and chief corner-stone.

But Jesus builds for eternity, an everlasting temple, and, when all visible

things pass away, and the very ruins of Solomon's temple and Solomon's

aqueduct are scarcely to be discerned, what a sight will be seen in that New

Jerusalem! The twelve courses of its foundations are of precious stones, its

walls bedight with diamonds rare, its streets are paved with gold, and its

glory surpasses that of the sun. I am but talking figures, poor figures, too;

for the glory of the city of God is spiritual, and where shall I find words

with which to depict it? There, where the Lamb Himself is the light, and the

Lord God Himself doth dwell-there the whole edifice, the entire New

Jerusalem-shall be to the praise and the glory of His grace who gave Jesus

Christ to be the builder of the house of His glory, of which I hope we shall

form a part for ever and ever.



Now, if Christ does such great works, I want you to come to Him, that He may

work in you the work of God. That is the point. Come and trust Him at once.

Trust Him to build you up. Come and trust Him to bring the living water to

your lips. Come and trust Him to make you a temple of the living God. Come,

dear child of God, if you have great works to do, come and ask for the power

of Christ with which to perform them. Come, you that would leave some

memorial to the honor of the divine name, come to Him to teach and strengthen

you. He is the wise master-builder; come and be workers together with Christ.

Baptize your weakness into His infinite strength, and you shall be strong in

the Lord, and in the power of His mind. God help you to do so.



Once more. I draw the parallel upon the fifth point, and I have done with it.

Solomon was great as to dominion. The kingdom of the Jews was never anything

like the size before or after that Solomon made it. It appears to have

extended from the river of Egypt right across the wilderness far up to the

Persian Gulf. We can scarcely tell how far Solomon's dominions reached; they

are said to have been "from sea to sea, and from the river even unto the ends

of the earth." By one mode or another he managed to bring various kings into

subjection to him, and he was the greatest monarch that ever swayed the

sceptre of Judah. It has all gone now. Poor, feeble Rehoboam dropped from his

foolish hands the reins his father held. The kingdom was rent in pieces, the

tributary princes found their liberty, and the palmy days of Israel were

over. On the contrary, our Lord Jesus Christ at this moment has dominion over

all things. God has set Him over all the works of His hands. Ay, tell it out

among the heathen that the Lord reigneth. The feet that were nailed to the

tree are set upon the necks of His enemies. The hands that bore the nails

sway at this moment the sceptre of all words: Jesus is King of kings, and

Lord of lords! Hallelujah! Let universal sovereignty be ascribed to the Son

of man: to Him who was "despised and rejected of men, a man of sorrows and

acquainted with grief." Tell it out, ye saints, for your own comfort. The

Lord reigneth, let the earth rejoice, let the multitude of the isles be glad

thereof Everything that happens in providence is under His sway still, and

the time is coming when a moral and spiritual kingdom will be set up by Him

which shall encompass the whole world. It does not look like it, does it? All

these centuries have passed away, and little progress has been made. Ah, but

He cometh; and when He cometh, or ere He cometh, He shall overturn, overturn,

overturn, for His right it is, and God will give it Him. And, as surely as

God lives, unto Him shall every man bow the knee, "and every tongue shall

confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father." Do not be

afraid about it. Do not measure difficulties, much less tremble at them. What

is faith made for but to believe that which seems impossible? To expect

universal dominion for Christ when everything goes well is but the

expectation of reason; but to expect it when everything goes ill, is the

triumph of Abrahamic confidence. Look upon the great mountain and say, "Who

art thou, 0 great mountain? Before the true Zerubbabel thou shall become a

plain." In the blackest midnight, when the ebon darkness stands thick and

hard as granite before you, believe that, at the mystic touch of Christ, the

whole of it shall pass away, and at the brightness of His rising the eternal

light shall dawn, never to be quenched. This is to act the part of a

believer; and I ask you to act that part, and believe to the full in Christ

the Omnipotent. What means this stinted faith in an almighty arm? What a

fidget we are in and what a worry seizes us if a little delay arises!

Everything has to be done in the next ten minutes, or we count our Lord to be

slack. Is this the part of wisdom? The Eternal has infinite leisure, who are

we that we should hasten Him?



His purposes will ripen fast,

Unfolding every hour.



A day is long to us: but a thousand years to Him are but the twinkling of a

star. Oh, rest in the Lord, and wait patiently for Him, for the time shall

come when the God of Israel shall put to rout His adversaries, and the Christ

of the cross shall be the Christ of the crown. We shall one day hear it said-

The great Shepherd reigns; and His unsuffering kingdom now hath come, Then

rocks and hills, and vales and islands of the sea shall all be vocal with the

one song, "Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive honor and glory and

power and dominion and might forever and ever!"



Thus have I tried to draw the parallel, but I pray you to see the Lord Jesus

for yourself, and know whether I have spoken the truth about Him. You have

heard the report; now, like the Queen of Sheba, go and see for yourself. Get

to Christ, as to His dominion, come under His sway and own His sceptre. Go

and trust your King; love your King; praise your King; delight in your King.

How courtiers delight to be summoned to court! How glad they are to see the

queen's face. How pleased they are if she gives them but a kindly word!

Surely, their fortune is made, or at least their hopes arc raised and their

spirits lifted up. Shall we not sun ourselves in the presence of the blessed

and only Potentate? Let us come into the presence of our King tonight, or

else let us sit here and weep. Let us come to His table to feed upon Himself.

Let us live on His Word. Let us delight in His love; and we shall surely say,

"A greater than Solomon is here."



II. I shall not detain you longer than a minute or two while I remark that we

must rise beyond all parallels, if we would reach the height of this great

argument, for BETWEEN CHRIST AND SOLOMON THERE IS MUCH MORE CONTRAST THAN

COMPARISON-much more difference than likeness.



In His nature the Lord Jesus is greater than Solomon. Alas, poor Solomon! The

strongest man that ever lived, namely, Samson, was the weakest of men; and

the wisest man that ever lived, was, perhaps, the greatest, certainly the

most conspicuous, fool. How different is our Lord! There is no infirmity in

Christ, no folly in the incarnate God. The backsliding of Solomon finds no

parallel in Jesus, in whom the prince of this world found nothing though he

searched Him through and through.



Our Lord is greater than Solomon because He is not mere man. He is man,

perfect man, man to the utmost of manhood, sin excepted; but still He is

more, and infinitely more, than man. "In him dwelleth all the fullness of the

Godhead bodily." He is God Himself, "The Word was God." God dwells in Him,

and He Himself is God.



As in nature He was infinitely superior to Solomon, and not to be compared

with him for a moment, so was He in character. Look at Christ and Solomon for

a minute as to real greatness of character, and you can hardly see Solomon

with a microscope, while Christ rises grandly before you, growing every

moment till He fills the whole horizon of your admiration. Principally let me

note the point of self-sacrifice. Jesus lived entirely for other people; He

had never a thought about Himself Solomon was, to a great extent, wise unto

himself, rich unto himself, strong unto himself; and you see in those great

palaces, and in all their arrangements, that he seeks his own pleasure,

honor, and emolument; and, alas! that seeking of pleasure leads him into sin,

that sin into a still greater one. Solomon, wonderful as he is, only compels

you to admire him for his greatness, but you do not admire him for his

goodness. You see nothing that makes you love him, you rather tremble before

him than feel gladdened by him. Oh, but look at Christ. He does not have a

thought for Himself. He lives for others. How grandly magnificent He is in

disinterested love. He "loved his church and gave himself it." He pours out

even His heart's blood for the good of men: and hence, dear friends, at this

moment our blessed Lord is infinitely superior to Solomon in His influence.

Solomon has little or no influence today. Even in his own time he never

commanded the influence that Christ had in His deepest humiliation. I do not

hear of any that were willing to die for Solomon; certainly nobody would do

so now. But how perpetually is enthusiasm kindled in 10,000 breasts for

Christ! They say that if again there were stakes in Smithfield we should not

find men to burn at them for Christ. I tell you, it is not so. The Lord Jesus

Christ has at this moment a remnant according to the election of His grace

who would fling themselves into a pit of fire for Him, and joy to do it. "Who

can separate us"-even us poor pygmies-"from the love of God which is in

Christ Jesus our Lord?" "Oh," says one, "I do not think I could suffer

martyrdom." You are not yet called to do so, my brother, and God has not

given You the strength to do it before the need arises; but you will have

strength enough if ever it comes to your lot to die for Jesus. Did you never

hear of the martyr who, the night before he was to be burnt, sat opposite the

fire, and, taking his shoe off, he held his foot close to the flame till he

began to feel the burning of it? He drew it back and said, "I see God does

not give me power to bear such suffering as I put upon myself, but I make

none the less doubt," said he, "that I shall very well stand the stake

tomorrow morning, and burn quick to the death for Christ without starting

back." And so he did, for he was noticed never to stir at all while the

flames were consuming him. There is a great deal of difference between your

strength today and what your strength would be if you were called to some

tremendous work or suffering. My Lord and Master, let me tell you, wakes more

enthusiasm in human breasts at this moment than any other name in the

universe. Napoleon once said, "I founded a kingdom upon force, and it will

pass away"; but "Christ founded a kingdom upon love, and it will last forever

and ever." And so it will. Blot out the name of Christ from the hearts of His

people? Strike you sun from the firmament, and quench the stars; and when you

have achieved that easy task, yet have you not begun to remove the glory of

the indwelling Christ from the hearts of His people. Some of us delight to

think that we bear in our body the marks of the Lord Jesus. "Where?" says

one. I answer, it is all over us. We have been buried into His name, and we

belong to Him, in spirit, soul, and body. That watermark, which denotes that

we are His, can never be taken out of us. We are dead with Him, wherein also

we were buried with Him and are risen again with Him; and there is nothing at

this moment that stirs our soul like the name of Jesus. Speak for yourselves.

Is it not so? Have you never heard of one who lay dying, his mind wandering,

and his wife said to him, "My dear, do you not know me?" He shook his head;

and they brought near his favorite child. "Do you not know me?" He shook his

head. One whispered, "Do you know the lord Jesus Christ?" and he said, "He is

all my salvation and all my desire." Oh, blessed name! Blessed name! Some

years ago I was away from this place for a little rest, and I was thinking to

myself, "Now, I wonder whether I really respond to the power of the gospel as

I should like to do? I will go and hear a sermon and see." I would like to

sit down with you, in the pews sometimes and hear somebody else preach-not

everybody, mark you, for when I hear a good many I want to be doing it

myself. I get tired of them if they do not glow and burn. But that morning I

thought I would drop into a place of worship such as there might be in the

little town. A poor, plain man, a countryman, began preaching about Jesus

Christ. He praised my Master in very humble language, but he praised Him most

sincerely. Oh, but the tears began to flow. I soon laid the dust all round me

where I sat, and I thought, "Bless the Lord! I do love Him." It only wants

somebody else to play the harp instead of me, and my soul is ready to dance

to the heavenly tune. Only let the music be Christ's sweet, dear, precious

name, and my heart leaps at the sound. Oh, my brethren, sound out the praises

of Jesus Christ! Sound out that precious name! There is none like it under

heaven to stir my heart. I hope you can all say the same. I know you can if

you love Him; for all renewed hearts are enamored of the sweet Lord Jesus. "A

greater than Solomon is here." Solomon has no power over your hearts, but

Jesus has. His influence is infinitely greater; his power to bless is

infinitely greater; and so let us magnify and adore Him with all our hearts.



Oh, that all loved Him! Alas that so many do not! What strange monsters! Why,

if you do not love Christ, what are you at? You hearts of stone, will you not

break? If His dying love does not break them, what will? If you cannot see

the beauties of Jesus, what can you see? You blind bats! O you that know not

the music of His name, you are deaf. O you that do not rejoice in Him, you

are dead. What are you at, that you are spared through the pleadings of His

love, and yet do not love Him? God have mercy upon you, and bring you to

delight yourselves in Christ, and trust him! As for us who do trust Him, we

mean to love Him and delight in Him more and more, world without end. Amen.



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Tony Capoccia

Bible Bulletin Board

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Columbus, NJ USA 08022  

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