Charles Spurgeon Collection: Spurgeon - C.H. - Sermons from Matthew: 47 MAT 26:7-13 Good Work

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Charles Spurgeon Collection: Spurgeon - C.H. - Sermons from Matthew: 47 MAT 26:7-13 Good Work



TOPIC: Spurgeon - C.H. - Sermons from Matthew (Other Topics in this Collection)
SUBJECT: 47 MAT 26:7-13 Good Work

Other Subjects in this Topic:

         Good Work

by

Charles Haddon Spurgeon (1834-1892)



Mat_26:7-13 A woman came to him with an alabaster jar of very

expensive perfume, which she poured on his head as he was reclining at the

table. When the disciples saw this, they were indignant. "Why this waste?"

they asked. "This perfume could have been sold at a high price and the

money given to the poor."



Aware of this, Jesus said to them, "Why are you bothering this woman? She

has done a beautiful thing to me. The poor you will always have with you,

but you will not always have me. When she poured this perfume on my body,

she did it to prepare me for burial. I tell you the truth, wherever this

gospel is preached throughout the world, what she has done will also be

told, in memory of her."









Study carefully the story of the enthusiastic Christian woman who poured

the alabaster jar of very precious perfume on the head of our blessed Lord

and Savior.



Her first and last thoughts were for the Lord Jesus Himself.



Seek to do something for Jesus, which will be above all, a secret sacrifice

of pure love to Jesus. Do special and secretive work towards your Lord.

Between you and your Lord let there be secret tokens of love. You will say

to me, "What shall I do?" I refuse to answer. I am not to be a judge for

you; especially as to a private deed of love. The good woman did not say

to Peter, "What shall I give?" nor to John, "What shall I do?" but her

heart was imaginative. I will only say, that we might offer more private

prayer for the Lord Jesus. "Pray for Him and bless Him all day long" (PSA

72:15). Intercede for your neighbors; pray for yourselves; but could you

set apart a little time each day in which prayer should be all for Jesus?

Could you at such times cry with secret pleadings, "Hallowed be your name!

Your kingdom come! Your will be done on earth, as it is in heaven?"

Wouldn't it be a sweet thing to feel at such a time--I shall now go to my

bedroom, and give my Lord a few minutes of my heart's warmest prayer, that

He may see the concern of my soul for Him? That is one thing which all

saints can do.



Another holy offering is adoration--the adoring of Jesus. Don't we all too

often forget this adoration in our churches and shove it into a corner?

The best part of all of our church services is the worship--the direct

worship; and in this, the first place should be given to the worship of the

Lord Jesus. We sing at times to edify one another with psalms and

spiritual songs, but we should also sing simply and only to glorify Jesus.

We are to do this publicly in corporate worship; but shouldn't we also do

it alone? Shouldn't we all, if we can, find a period in which we will

spend the time, not in seeking the good of our fellow-men, not in seeking

our own good, but in adoring Jesus, blessing Him, magnifying Him, praising

Him, poring out our heart's love towards Him and presenting our soul's

reverence and concern. I suggest this to you. I can't teach you how to do

it. God's Holy Spirit must show your hearts the way.



I offer you one or two suggestions about doing good works for Jesus. Take

care that self never creeps in. It is to be all for Jesus: don't let the

dirty fingers of self-seeking stain your work. Never do anything for Jesus

out of the love for popularity. Be always glad if your right hand does not

know what your left hand does. Hide your works as much as possible from

the praise of your most closest friend. At the same, let me also add,

never have any fear of rejection from those who don't understand your love

for Jesus.



This good woman did her work publicly, because it was the best way to honor

her Lord; and if you can honor Him by doing a good work publicly before all

men, then do not be afraid. To some, the temptation may be to catch the

public eye; to others, the temptation may be to dread it. Serve your Lord

as if no eye sees you; but do not blush if all the eyes in the universe

should gaze upon you. Don't let self, in either case, come in to defile

the service.



Never congratulate yourself after you have done a work for Jesus. If you

say to yourself, "Well done!" you have sacrificed to yourself. Try to

always feel that if you had done all that should have been done, it would

only have been your reasonable service. Remember that deeds of self-

sacrifice are most acceptable to Jesus. He loves His people's gifts when

they give, and feel that they have given. We should measure what we do for

Him not by what we have given, but by what we have left; and if we have a

lot left over then we haven't given as much as the widow who gave two very

small copper coins--no, for certain we have not, for she gave "all she had

to live on."



Let us, above all, keep out of our heart the thought which is so common in

this life, that nothing is worth doing unless something practical comes out

of it--meaning by "practical" some obvious consequence on the morals of

others. Almost everyone asks the question, "What good will it do? What

good will it do for me? What good will it do for my neighbor? What is the

purpose of this effort?" No, the real issue is, if it will glorify Christ,

do it; and accept that motive as the highest and most conclusive of

reasons.



If a deed done for Christ causes you to be disliked, and threatens to

deprive you of usefulness, then do it anyway. I count my own character,

popularity, and usefulness to be nothing compared with the devotion to the

Lord Jesus. It is the devil's logic which says, "You see I can't share the

truth, because I am afraid of the consequences." What have we to do with

consequences? Be honest, and fear not! The consequences are God's

concerns, and not yours. If you have done a good work for Christ, though

to you it may appear that it has caused a lot of problems, yet you have

already done it, then Christ has accepted it, and He will make a note of

it, and in your conscience He will smile to you His approval.



There is a good defense for any kind of work which you may do for Jesus,

and for Jesus only. However great the cost, nothing is wasted which is

spent on the Lord, for Jesus deserves it. What if it did nothing for

others; did it please Him? He has a right to it. Is nothing to be done

for the Master of the feast? Are we to be looking after the sheep so much

that we never honor the shepherd? Are the Lord's servants to be cared for

while we do nothing for the Precious Lord Himself? I have sometimes felt

in my soul the wish that I had no one to serve but my Lord. When I have

tried to do my best to serve God, and a heartless critic has torn my work

to pieces, I have thought, "I didn't do it for you! I wouldn't have done

it for you! I did it for my Lord. Your judgment is a small matter. You

condemn my zeal for the truth. You condemn what He commands."



Thus you may go about your service, and feel "I do it for Christ, and I

believe that Christ accepts my service, and I am content with that." Jesus

deserves that much should be done for Him. Do you doubt that? A birthday

present is given to dad on his birthday. That present is of no use to mom,

or to the children; it cannot be eaten, it cannot be worn; dad could not

give it away to anybody, it is of no value to anybody but himself. Does

anybody say, "What a pity such a gift was selected, even though dad is

pleased"? No, everybody says, "That is just the thing we like to give to

dad, since it is something he needs personally. We meant it to be for him;

we felt this was the perfect gift for him, and we are glad that the gift

will bring him pleasure."



So with regard to Jesus. Find out what will please Him; and do it for Him.

Think of no one else in the matter. He deserves all you can do for Him,

and infinitely more.



Besides, you may be sure that any action which appears to you as useless,

if prompted by love, has a place in Christ's plan, and will be turned into

something of great value. This anointing of our Lord's head was said to be

useless. "No," said Jesus, "When she poured this perfume on my body, she

did it to prepare me for burial." There have been men who have done an

heroic deed for Christ, and at the time they did it they might have asked,

"How will this serve my Lord's purpose?" But somehow it was the very thing

that was wanted. When the great preachers Whitefield and Wesley went out

into the open fields to preach, it was thought to be a fanatical

innovation, and perhaps they, themselves, would not have ventured upon it

if there had not been an absolute necessity; but what seemed to that age

a daring deed, set an example to all of England, and open-air preaching

has become an accepted agency of great worth. If you, for Christ's sake,

become visionary, don't worry, your folly may be the wisdom of the ages to

come.



The woman's loving act was not wasted; for it has helped us all down to

this very moment. There has it stood in the Bible; and all who have read

it, and are right in their heart, have been motivated by it to sacred

consecration out of love to Jesus. That woman has been a preacher to

nineteen centuries; the influence of that alabaster jar is not exhausted

today, and never will be. Whenever you meet a friend in Europe, Asia,

Africa, or America, who has done anything for our Lord Jesus, you still

smell the perfume of the sacred spikenard. Her act is doing all of us good

at this hour; it is filling this church with fragrance.



If you are serving Christ in your own secret way in which you do not seek

to benefit others, but to honor Him, it may be you will be an instructive

example to saints in ages to come. Oh, that I could stir some hearts to

personal consecration to Jesus, my Lord! Young men, we want missionaries

to go abroad; are none of you ready to go? Young women, we want those who

will look after the sick in the lowest haunts of London; will none of you

consecrate yourselves to Jesus, the Savior?



I shook hands with a good missionary of Christ from Western Africa. He had

been there sixteen years. I believe that they reckon four years to be the

average missionary's life in this malaria region. He had buried twelve of

his companions in the time. For twelve years he had scarcely seen the face

of a white man. He was going to Africa to live a little while longer,

perhaps, but he expected soon to die; and then he added, as I shook his

hand, "Well, many of us may die; perhaps hundreds of us will do so; but

Christ will win at the last! Africa will know and will fear our Lord

Jesus; and what does it matter what becomes of us--our name, our

reputation, our health, our life--if Jesus wins at the last?" What heroic

words! What a missionary spirit!



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