Charles Spurgeon Collection: Spurgeon - C.H. - Sermons from Mark: 05 MAR 5:17 Christ's Curate in Decapolis
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Charles Spurgeon Collection: Spurgeon - C.H. - Sermons from Mark: 05 MAR 5:17 Christ's Curate in Decapolis
TOPIC: Spurgeon - C.H. - Sermons from Mark (Other Topics in this Collection)
SUBJECT: 05 MAR 5:17 Christ's Curate in Decapolis
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Christ's Curate In Decapolis
April 27th, 1890
by
C. H. SPURGEON
(1834-1892)
"And they began to pray him to depart out of their coasts. And when he
was come into the ship, he that had been possessed with the devil prayed
him that he might be with him. Howbeit Jesus suffered him not, but saith
unto him, God home to thy friends, and tell them how great things the
Lord hath done for thee, and hath had compassion on thee."-- Mar_5:17-19.
That is a striking name for a man, "he that had been possessed with the
devil." It would stick to him as long as he lived, and it would be a
standing sermon wherever he went. He would be asked to tell the story of
what he used to be, and how the change came about. What a story for
any man to tell! It would not be possible for us to describe his life while
he was a demoniac--the midnight scenes among the tombs, the cutting
himself with stones, the howling, the frightening away of all the
travellers that went near him, the binding with chains, the snapping of
the manacles, the breaking of the fetters, and a great many details that he
alone could enter into when he told the story among his own familiar
friends. With what pathos would he tell how Jesus came that way, and
how the evil spirit forced him to confront him! He would say, "That was
the best thing that could have happened to me, to be brought to the
Master of that desperate legion of demons, which had encamped within
my nature, and made my soul to be its barracks." He would tell how, in a
moment, out went the whole legion at the word of Christ.
There are some people who could tell a story very like this man's, a story
of slavery to Satan, and deliverance by the power of Christ. If you can
tell such a story, do not keep it to yourself. If Jesus has done great things
for thee, be ever ready to speak of it, till all men shall know what Christ
can do. I think that great sinners who have been saved are specially
called upon to publish the good news, the gospel of the grace of God. If
you have been valiant against the truth, be valiant for the truth. If you
were not lukewarm when you served Satan, be not lukewarm now that
you have come to serve Christ. There are some of us here who might
bear the name of "the man who was born blind", or "the leper that was
healed", or "the woman that was a sinner"; and I hope that we shall all
be willing to take any name or any title that will glorify Christ. I do not
find that this man ever persecuted Mark for libel because he wrote of
him as "he that had been possessed with the devil." Oh, no! He owned
that he was possessed with the devil once; and he glorified God that he
had been delivered by the Lord Jesus.
I. I am going to make a few observations upon the passage I have chosen
for a text; and the first observation is this, SEE HOW MEN'S DESIRES
DIFFERED. We find in the seventeenth verse that, "they began to pray
him to depart out of their coasts." In the eighteenth verse, "he that had
been possessed with the devil prayed him that he might be with him."
The people wanted Christ to go away from them; the man whom he had
cured wanted to go wherever he might go. To which class do you belong,
my dear friend?
I hope you do not belong to the first class, the class of the many who pray
Jesus to depart from them. Why did they want him to go?
I think it was, first, because they loved to be quiet, and to dwell at ease.
It was a great calamity that had happened; the swine had run into the
sea. They did not want any more such calamities, and evidently the
Person who had come among them possessed extraordinary power. Had
he not healed the demoniac? Well, they did not want him; they did not
want anything extraordinary. They were easy-going men, who would like
to go on the even tenor of their way, so they asked him to be good
enough to go away. There are some people of that kind still living. They
say, "We do not want a revival here; we are too respectable. We do not
want any stirring preaching here; we are very comfortable. Do not break
up our peace." Such men, when they think that God is at work in any
place, are half inclined to go elsewhere. They want to be quiet; their
motto is, "Anything for a quiet life." "Leave us alone, let us go on our
old way," is the cry of these foolish people, as it was the cry of the
Israelites, when they said to Moses, "Let us alone, that we may serve the
Egyptians."
Possibly these people wanted the Saviour gone because they had an eye
to business. That keeping of the swine was a bad business. As Jews, they
had no business with it. They may have said they did not eat them
themselves, they only kept them for other people to eat; and now they
had lost the whole herd. I wonder what all those swine would have
brought to their owners. As they began calculating how much they had
lost, they resolved that the Saviour must go out of their coasts before they
lost anything more. I do not wonder that, when men sell intoxicating
liquors, for instance, or when they follow any trade in which they cannot
make money except by injuring their fellow-men, they do not want
Christ to come that way. Perhaps some of you would not like him to see
you pay those poor women for making shirts. I am afraid, if Jesus Christ
were to come around, and go into some people's business houses, the
husband would say to his wife, "Fetch down that book where I enter the
wages, and hide it away; I should not like him to see that."
Oh, dear friend, if there be any such reason why you do not Christ to
come your way, I pray that the Holy Spirit may convince you that you do
need him to come your way. He who has the most objection to Christ is
the man who most wants Christ. Be you sure of this, if you do not desire
to be converted, if you do not wish to be born again, you are the person
above all others needing to be converted, and to be born again. Is it not a
most unwise decision when, for the sake of swine, we are willing to part
with Christ? "For what shalt it profit a man, if he gain the whole world,
and lose his own soul?" He will get a corner in the newspaper, saying
that he died worth so many thousands of pounds; and that will not be
true, for he was never worth a penny himself. Who would give a penny
for him now he is dead? He will cost money to get rid of him, but he
cannot not take it with him. He was not worth anything; he used his
money for selfish purposes; and never used it for the glory of God. Oh,
the poverty of an ungodly rich man!
I do not wonder that these people, taken up with themselves, and with
the world, prayed Christ "to depart out of their coasts." May he not, even
though you may not care to hear him, stop somewhere on the shore? No;
when men get excited against religion, they go to great lengths in trying
to drive it away from their midst. Many a poor man has lost his cottage,
where he had a few prayer-meetings, because the landlord not only did
not want Christ himself, but, like the dog in the manger, would not let
others have him who did not want him. Are any of you in that condition?
I hope that I have some here who are of another kind, like this poor man,
who prayed him that he might be with him. Why did he want to be with
Jesus? I think he wanted to be his attendant to show his gratitude. If he
might but wait on Christ, loose the latchets of his shoes, and wash his
feet, or prepare his meals, he would feel himself the happiest man on
earth. He would love to be doing something for the One who had cast a
legion of devils out of him.
Next, he wished not only to be an attendant to show his gratitude, but a
disciple that he might learn more of him. What he did know of Christ
was so precious, he had personally had such an experience of his
gracious power, that he wanted to be always learning something from
every word of those dear lips, and every action of those blessed hands.
He prayed him that he might be with him as a disciple who wished to be
taught by him.
He wanted also to be with him as a comrade, for not that Christ must go,
exiled from Decapolis, he seemed to feel that there was no reason why he
should remain there himself. "Lord, if thou must leave there Gadarenes,
let me leave the Gadarenes, too! Dost thou go, O Shepherd? Then let me
go with thee. Must thou cross the sea, and get thee gone, I know not
where? I will go with thee to prison and to death." He felt so linked with
Christ that he prayed him that he might be with him.
I think that there was this reason, also, one of fear, at the back of his
prayer. Perhaps one of that legion of devils might come back again, and
if he could keep with Christ, then Christ would turn the devil out again. I
should not wonder but he felt a trembling about him, as if he could not
bear to be out of the sight of the great Physician, who had healed him of
so grievous an ill. I would say to all here, that we are never safe except
we are with Christ. If you are tempted to go where you could not have
Christ with you, do not go. Did you ever hear the story of the devil
running away with a young man who was at the theatre? It is said that
John Newton sent after Satan, and said, "That young man is a member of
my church." "Well," replied the devil, "I do not care where he is a
member; I found him on my premises, and I have a right to him;" and
the preacher could not give any answer to that. If you go on the devil's
premises, and he takes you off, I cannot say anything against it. Go
nowhere where you cannot take Christ with you. Be like this man, who
longs to go wherever Christ goes.
II. Now, secondly, SEE HOW CHRIST'S DEALINGS DIFFER, and how
extraordinary they are. Here is an evil prayer: "Depart out of our coasts."
He grants it. Here is a pious prayer: "Lord, let me be with thee."
"Howbeit Jesus suffered him not." Is that his way, to grant the prayer of
his enemies, and refuse the petition of his friends? Yes, it is sometimes.
In the first case, when they prayed him to depart, he went. Oh, dear
friends, if Christ ever comes near you, and you get a little touched in
your conscience, and feel a throb of something like spiritual life, do not
pray him to go away; for if he does go, if he should leave you to yourself,
and never come again, your doom is sealed! Your only hope lies in his
presence; and if you pray against your one hope, you are a suicide, you
are guilty of murdering your own soul.
Jesus went away from these people because it was useless to stop. If they
wanted him to go, what good could he do to them? If he spoke, they
would not listen. If they heard his message, they would not heed it.
When men's minds are set against Christ, what else is to be done but to
leave them?
He could spend his time better somewhere else. If you will not have my
Lord, somebody else will. If you sit there in your pride, and say, "I want
not the Saviour," there is a poor soul in the gallery longing for him, and
crying, "Oh, that I might find him to be my Saviour!" Christ knew that,
if the Gaderenes refused him, the people on the other side of the lake
would welcome him on his return.
By going away, he even saved them from yet greater sin. If he had not
gone, they might have tried to plunge him into the lake. When men
begin to pray Christ to depart out of their coasts, they are bad enough for
anything. There might have followed violence to his blessed person, so
he took himself away from them. Is it not an awful thing that, if the
gospel ministry does not save you, it is helping to damn you? We are a
savour to God, always sweet; but in some men, we are a savour of death
unto death, while in others we are a savour unto life. O my hearers, if
you will not come to Christ, the seat you occupy is misappropriated!
There might be another person sitting here, to whom the gospel might be
very precious; and our opportunities of preaching it are none too many.
We do not like to waste our strength on stony ground, on hard bits of
rock that repel the seed. Rock, rock, rock, wilt thou never break; must we
continue to sow thee, though no harvest comes from thee? God changes
thee, rock; and make thee good soil, that yet the truth may grow upon
thee! The evil prayer, then, was answered.
The good prayer was not answered. Why was that? The chief reason
was, because the man could be useful at home. He could glorify God
better by going among the Gaderenes, and among his own family, and
telling what God had done for him, than he could be any attention he
could pay to Christ. It is remarkable that Christ took nobody to be his
body-servant, or personal attendant during his earthly ministry. He came
not to be ministered unto, but to minister. He did not desire this man to
he with him to make him comfortable; he bade him go back to his
family, and make known the power of Jesus Christ, and seek to win them
for God.
Perhaps, too, his prayer was not answered, lest his fear should have been
thereby sanctioned. If he did fear, and I feel morally certain that he did,
that the devils would return, then, of course, he longed to be with Christ.
But Christ take that fear from him, and as good as says to him, "You do
not need to be near me; I have so healed that you will never be sick
again." A patient might say to his doctor, "I have been so very ill, and
through your skill have been restored to health, I should like to be near
you, so that, if there should be any recurrence of my malady, I might
come to you at once." If the doctor should reply, "You may go to
Switzerland, or to Australia, if you like;" it would be the best evidence
that the doctor had not fears about him, and it ought to put a quietus to
his doubts.
You see, then, how Christ's dealings differ with different men. Have I
not known some continue in sin, and yet prosper in business, heaping up
wealth, and having all that heart could wish? Have I not known others
repent, and turn to God, and from that very day they have had more
trouble than they ever had before, and their way has been strangely
rough? Yes, I have seen them, too; and I have not envied the easy ways
of the wicked, neither have I felt that there was anything very wonderful
about the rough ways of the righteous; for, after all, it is not the way that
is the all-important matter, it is the end of the way; and if I could travel
smoothly to perdition, I would not choose to do so; and if the way to
eternal life is rough, I take it with all its roughness. At the foot of the
Hill Difficulty, Bunyan makes his pilgrim sing--
"The hill, though high, I covet to ascend,
the difficulty will not me offend;
For I perceive the way of life lies here."
III. My third point is this: SEE HOW GOOD A THING IT IS TO BE WITH JESUS.
This man entreated of the Lord that he might be with him.
If you have been saved recently, I expect you have a longing in your
heart to be with Christ always. I will tell you what shape that longing is
likely to take. You were so happy, so joyful, and it was such a blessed
meeting, that you said to yourself, "I am sorry it is over; I should like
this meeting to have been kept on all night, and the next day, and never to
end." Yes, you were of the mind of Peter, when he wanted to build the
three tabernacles on the holy mount, and to stop there the rest of his
days; but you cannot do it; it is no use wishing for it. You must go home
to that drinking husband or that scolding wife, to that ungodly father or
that unkind mother. You cannot stop in that meeting always.
Perhaps you have another idea of what it is to be with Christ. You are so
happy when you can get alone, and read your Bible, and meditate, and
pray, and you say, "Lord, I wish I could always be this; I should like to
be always upstairs in this room, searching the Scriptures, and having
communion with God." Yes, yes, yes; but you cannot do it. There are the
children's socks to be mended, there are buttons to be put on the
husband's shirts, and there are all sorts of odds and ends to be done, and
you must not neglect any one of them. Whatever household duties come
upon you, attend to them. You wish that you had not to go to the city to-
morrow. Would it not be sweet to have an all-night prayer-meeting, and
then to have an all-day searching the Scriptures? No doubt it would; but
the Lord has not so arranged it. You have to go to business, so just put
on your week-day clothes, and think yourself none the less happy
because you have to show your religion in your daily life.
"Ah, well!" says one, and this I very often hear, "I think that I should
always be with Christ if I could not get right out of business, and give
myself up to the service of the Lord." Especially do you think that it
would be so if your were a minister. Well, I have nothing to say against
the ministry of the gospel. If the Lord calls you to do it, obey the call,
and be thankful that he has counted you faithful, putting you into the
ministry; but if you suppose that you will be nearer to Christ simply by
entering the ministry, you are very much mistaken. I daresay that I had
about as many of the other people's troubles brought to me this morning,
after I had done the preaching, as would last most men a month. We
have to bear with everybody's trouble, and everybody's doubt, and
everybody's need of comfort and counsel. You will find yourself
cumbered with much serving, even in the service of the Lord; and it is
very easy to lose the Master in the Master's work. We want much grace
lest this insidious temptation should overcome us even in our ministry.
You can walk with Christ, and sell groceries. You can walk with Christ,
and be a chimney-sweep. I do not hesitate to say that, by the grace of
God, you can walk with Christ as well in one occupation as another, if it
is a rightful one. It might be quite a mistake if you were to give up your
business, under the notion that you would be more with Christ if you
became a city missionary, or a Bible-woman, or a coleporteur, or a
captain in the Salvation Army, or whatever other form of holy service
you might desire. Keep on with your business. If you can black shoes
well, do that. If you can preach sermons badly, do not do that.
"Ah!" says one, "I know how I would like to be with Christ." Yes, yes, I
know; you would like to be in heaven. Oh, yes; and it is a laudable
desire, to wish to be with Christ, for it is far better than being here! But,
mind you, it may be a selfish desire, and it may be a sinful desire, if it be
pushed too far. A holy man of God was once asked by a fellow-servant of
Christ. "Brother So-and-so, do you not want to go home?" He said, "I
will answer you by another question. If you had a man working for you,
and on Wednesday he said, 'I wish it was Saturday,' would you keep him
on?" The other thought that he would need a large stock of patience to do
so. Why, do you not? You will be glad to see the back of him before
Saturday comes, for he will be no good for work. Have I a right to be
wanting to go to heaven if I can do any good to you here? Is it not more
of a heaven to be outside of heaven than inside, if you can be doing more
for God outside than in? Long to go when the Lord wills; but if not to
remain in the flesh be more for the good of the church and the world,
and more for the glory of God, waive your desire, and be not vexed with
your Master when, after having prayed that you may be with him; it has
to be written of you as it was of this man, "Howbeit Jesus suffered him
not."
Still, it is a very delightful thing to be with Jesus.
IV. But now, in the fourth place, SEE THAT THERE MAY BE SOMETHING EVEN
BETTER THAN THIS. In the sense which I have mentioned, there is something
better even than being with Christ.
What is better than being with Christ? Why, to be working for Christ!
Jesus said to this man, "Go home to thy friends, and tell them how great
things the Lord hath done for thee, and hath had compassion on thee."
This is more honourable. It is very delightful to sit at Jesus' feet; but if
the most honourable post on the field of battle is the place of danger; if
the most honourable thing in the State is to have royal service allotted to
you; then the most honourable thing for a Christian is not to sit down,
and sing, and enjoy himself, but to get up, and risk reputation, life, and
everything for Jesus Christ's sake. Dear friend, aspire to serve our Lord;
it is a more honourable thing even than being with him.
It is also better for the people. Christ is going away from the Gaderenes;
they have asked him to go, and he is going; but he seems to say to this
man, "I am going because they have asked me to go. My leaving them
looks like a judgment upon them for their rejection of me; but yet I am
not going away altogether. I am going to stop with you; I will put my
Spirit upon you, and so will continue with you. They will hear you
though they will not hear me." Christ, as it were, resigns the pastorate of
that district; but he puts another in his place, not so good as himself, but
one whom they will like better; not so powerful and useful as himself,
but one better adapted to them. When Christ was gone, this man would
be there, and the people would come to him to hear about those swine,
and how they ran down into the sea; and if they did not come to him, he
would go and tell them all about it; and so there would be a permanent
curate left there to discharge the sacred ministry, now that the great
Bishop had gone. I like that thought. Christ had gone to heaven, for he is
wanted there, and so he has left you here, dear brother, to carry on his
work.. You are not equal to him in any respect; but yet remember what
he said to his disciples, "He that believeth on me, the works that I do
shall he do also; and greater works than these shall he do; because I go
unto my Father." That is why Christ does not suffer you to be with him
at present. You must stop for the sake of the people among whom you
live, as "he that had been possessed with the devil" had to remain for the
sake of the Gaderenes, to whom he might testify concerning Christ.
His remaining, also, was better for his family; and do you not think that,
oftentimes, a man of God is kept out of heaven for the sake of his family?
You must not go yet, father; those boys still need your example and your
influence. Christian mother, you must not go yet; I know that your
children are grown up, and they are grieving you very much; but still, if
there is any check upon them, it is their poor old mother, and you must
stop till you have prayed them to God; and you will do so yet. Be of good
courage/ I believe that there are many here who might be in heaven, but
that God has some who he intends to bring in by them, so they must stay
here a little longer. Though infirm in body, shattered in nerve, and often
racked with acute pain, perhaps with deadly disease upon you, and
wishing to be gone, you must not go till your work is done.
"Howbeit Jesus suffered him not." This demoniac must go home, and tell
his wife and his children what great things the Lord had done for him.
Many eminent preachers have pictured the scene of his going home, so I
will try to do it. You may only fancy what it would be if it were your
case; and you had been shut up in an asylum, or had been almost too bad
even for that. How glad your friends were to have you taken away, and
then how much more glad to find you come back perfectly well! I can
imagine how the man's wife would look through the window when she
heard his voice. Has he come back in a mad fit? How the children will be
filled with terror at the sound of their father's voice until they were
assured that there was indeed a change in him! Ah, poor sinner, you
have come here to-night! Perhaps you forget that your children often
have to hide away under the bed when father comes home. I know that
there are such persons about, and they may even find their way into the
Tabernacle. The Lord have mercy upon the drunkard, and turn his cups
bottom upwards, and make a new man of him! Then, when he goes
home, to tell of free grace and dying love, and of the wonderful change
that God has wrought in him, he will be a blessing to his family and to
all about him. It may be, dear friend, that you have to stop here till you
have undone some of the mischief of your early life. You have to bring to
God some of those whom you tempted, and led astray, and helped to
ruin.
So, you see, dear friends, there is something better even than being with
Christ; that is working with Christ.
V. But, lastly, CONSIDER THAT THERE IS YET A CASE WHICH IS BEST OF ALL. We
must always have three degrees of comparison.
What is the best state of all? To be with Christ is good; to be sent by
Christ on a holy errand, is better; but here is something that is best of
all, namely; to work for him, and to be with him at the same time. I want
every Christian to aspire to that position. Is it possible to sit with Mary
at the Master's feet, and yet to run about like Martha, and get the dinner
ready? It is; and then Martha will never be cumbered with much serving
if she does that, and she will never find fault with her sister Mary. "But,
sir, we cannot sit and stir at the same time." No, not as to your bodies;
but you can as to you souls. You can be sitting at Jesus' feet, or leaning
on his breast, and yet be fighting the Lord's battles, and doing his work.
In order to do this, cultivate the inner as well as the outer life.
Endeavour not only to do much for Christ, but to be much with Christ,
and to live wholly upon Christ. Do not, for instance, on the Sabbath-day,
go to a class, and teach others three times, as some whom I know do; but
come once and hear the Master's message, and get your soul fed; and
when you have had a spiritual feast in the morning, give the rest of the
day to holy service. Let the two things run together. To be always eating,
and never working, will bring on repletion, and spiritual dyspepsia; but
to be always working and never eating,--well, I am afraid that you will
not bear that trial so well as the gentleman who yesterday ate his first
meal after forty days fasting. Do not try to imitate him. It is not a right
and wise thing to do; but very dangerous. Get spiritual food as well as do
spiritual work.
Let me say to you, again, grieve very much if there is the least cloud
between you and Christ. Do not wait until it is as thick as a November
fog; be full of sorrow if it is only like a tiny, fleecy cloud. George
Muller's observation was a very wise one, "Never come out of your
chamber in the morning until everything is right between you and God."
Keep in perpetual fellowship with Jesus; and thus you can be with him,
and yet be serving him at the same time.
And mind this, before you begin Christ's service, always seek his presence
and help. Do not enter upon any work for the Lord without having first seen
the face of the King in his beauty; and in the work often recall your mind
from what you are doing, to him for whom you are doing it, and by whom you
are doing it; and when the work is completed, do not throw up you cap, and
say, "Well done, self!" Another will say to you, by-and-by, "Well done!" if
you deserve it. Do not take the words out of his mouth. Self-praise is no
recommendation. Solomon said, "Let another man praise thee, and not thine
own mouth; a stranger, and not thine own lips." When we have done all, we
are still unprofitable servants; we have only done that which is our duty
to do. So, if you are as humble as you are active, as lowly as you are
energetic, you may keep with Christ, and yet go about his errands to the
ends of the earth; and I reckon this to be the happiest experience that any
one of us can reach this side of the gates of pearl. The Lord bless you,
and bring you there, for Christ's sake! Amen.
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