Charles Spurgeon Collection: Spurgeon - C.H. - Sermons from Psalms: 087 PSA 127:2 The Peculiar Sleep of the Beloved

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Charles Spurgeon Collection: Spurgeon - C.H. - Sermons from Psalms: 087 PSA 127:2 The Peculiar Sleep of the Beloved



TOPIC: Spurgeon - C.H. - Sermons from Psalms (Other Topics in this Collection)
SUBJECT: 087 PSA 127:2 The Peculiar Sleep of the Beloved

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The Peculiar Sleep of the Beloved





March 4, 1855

by

C. H. SPURGEON

(1834 - 1892)







"For so he giveth his beloved sleep."-- Psa_127:2.



The sleep of the body is the gift of God. So said Homer of old, when

he described it as descending from the clouds and resting on the tents

of the warriors around old Troy. And so sang Virgil, when he spoke of

Palinurus falling asleep upon the prow of his ship. Sleep is the gift of

God. We think that we lay our heads upon our pillows, and compose

our bodies in a peaceful posture, and that, therefore we naturally and

necessarily sleep. But it is not so. Sleep is the gift of God; and not a

man would close his eyes, did not God put his fingers on his eyelids;

did not the Almighty send a soft and balmy influence over his frame

which lulled his thoughts into quiescence, making him enter into that

blissful state of rest which we call sleep. True, there be some drugs

and narcotics whereby men can poison themselves well nigh to death,

and then call it sleep; but the sleep of the healthy body is the gift of

God. He bestows it; he rocks the cradle for us every night; he draws

the curtain of darkness; he bids the sun shut up his burning eyes; and

then he comes and says, "Sleep, sleep, my child; I give thee sleep."

Have you not known what it is at times to lie upon your bed and strive

to slumber? and as it is said of Darius, so might it be said of you: "The

king sent for his musicians, but his sleep went from him." You have

attempted it, but you could not do it; it is beyond your power to

procure a healthy repose. You imagine if you fix your mind upon a

certain subject until it shall engross your attention, you will then sleep;

but you find yourself unable to do so. Ten thousand things drive

through your brain as if the whole earth were agitated before you. You

see all things you ever beheld dancing in a wild phantasmagoria

before your eyes. You close your eyes, but still you see; and there be

things in your ear, and head, and brain, which will not let you sleep. It

is God alone, who alike seals up the sea boy's eyes upon the giddy

mast, and gives the monarch rest: for with all appliances and means to

boot, he could not rest without the aid of God. It is God who steeps the

mind in lethe, and bids us slumber, that our bodies may be refreshed,

so that for tomorrow's toil we may rise recruited and strengthened. O

my friends, how thankful should we be for sleep. Sleep is the best

physician that I know of. Sleep hath healed more pains of wearied

bones than the most eminent physicians upon earth. It is the best

medicine; the choicest thing of all the names which are written in all

the lists of pharmacy. There is nothing like to sleep! What a mercy it is

that it belongs alike to all! God does not make sleep the boon of the

rich man, he does not give it merely to the noble, or the rich, so that

they can keep it as a peculiar luxury for themselves; but he bestows it

upon all. Yea, if there be a difference, the sleep of the labouring man

is sweet, whether he eat little or much. He who toils, sleeps all the

sounder for his toil. While luxurious effeminacy cannot rest, tossing

itself from side to side upon a bed of eider down, the hard-working

labourer, with his strong and powerful limbs, worn out and tired,

throws himself upon his hard couch and sleeps: and waking, thanks

God that he has been refreshed. Ye know not, my friends, how much

ye owe to God, that he gives you rest at night. If ye had sleepless

nights, ye would then value the blessing. If for weeks ye lay tossing on

your weary bed, ye then would thank God for this favour. But as it is

the gift of God, it is a gift most precious, one that cannot be valued

until it is taken away; yea, even then we cannot appreciate it as we

ought.



The Psalmist says there are some men who deny themselves sleep. For

purposes of gain, or ambition, they rise up early and sit up late. Some

of us who are here present may have been guilty of the same thing. We

have risen early in the morning that we might turn over the ponderous

volume, in order to acquire knowledge; we have sat at night until our

burned-out lamp has chidden us, and told us that the sun was rising;

while our eyes have ached, our brain has throbbed, our heart has

palpitated. We have been weary and worn out; we have risen up early,

and sat up late, and have in that way come to eat the bread of sorrow.

Many of you business men are toiling in that style. We do not

condemn you for it; we do not forbid rising up early and sitting up

late; but we remind you of this text:--"It is vain for you to rise up

early, to sit up late, to eat the bread of sorrows: for so he giveth his

beloved sleep." And it is of this sleep, that God gives to his beloved,

that we mean to speak this morning, as God shall help us--a sleep

peculiar to the children of God--a sleep which he gives to "his

beloved."



Sleep is sometimes used in a bad sense in the Word of God, to express

the condition of carnal and worldly men. Some men have the sleep of

carnal ease and sloth: of whom Solomon tells us, they are unwise sons

that slumber in the harvest, causing shame; so that when the harvest is

spent, and the summer is ended, they are not saved. Sleep often

expresses a state of sloth, of deadness, of indifference, in which all

ungodly men are found, according to the words, "It is time for us to

awake out of sleep.--"Let us not sleep as do others, but let us who are

of the day be sober." There be many who are sleeping the sluggard's

sleep, who are resting upon the bed of sloth; but an awful waking shall

it be to them, when they shall find that the time of their probation has

been wasted; that the golden sands of their life have dropped unheeded

from the hourglass; and that they have come into that world where

there are no acts of pardon passed, no hope, no refuge, no salvation.



In other places you find sleep used as the figure of carnal security, in

which so many are found. Look at Saul, lying asleep in fleshly

security--not like David, when he said, "I will lay me down and sleep,

for thou Lord makest me to dwell in safety." Abner lay there, and all

the troops lay around him, but Abner slept. Sleep on, Saul, sleep on.

But there is an Abishai standing at thy pillow, and with a spear in his

hand he says, "Let me smite him even to the earth at once." Still he

sleeps; he knows it not. Such are many of you, sleeping in jeopardy of

your soul; Satan is standing, the law is ready, vengeance is eager, and

all saying, "Shall I smite him? I will smite him this once, and he shall

never wake again." Christ says, "Stay, vengeance, stay." Lo, the spear

is even now quivering--"Stay, spare it yet another year, in the hope

that he may yet wake from the long sleep of his sin." Like Sisera, I tell

thee, sinner, thou art sleeping in the tent of the destroyer; thou mayest

have eaten butter and honey out of lordly dish; but thou art sleeping on

the doorstep of hell; even now the enemy is lifting up the hammer and

the nail, to smite thee through thy temples, and fasten thee to the earth,

that there thou mayest lie for ever in the death of everlasting torment--

if it may be called a death.



Then there is also mentioned in the Scripture, a sleep of lust, like that

which Samson had when he lost his locks, and such sleep as many

have when they indulge in sin, and wake to find themselves stripped,

lost, and ruined. There is also the sleep of negligence, such as the

virgins had, when it is said, "they all slumbered and slept;" and the

sleep of sorrow, which overcame Peter, James, and John. But none of

these are the gifts of God. They are incident to the frailty of our

nature; they come upon us because we are fallen men; they creep over

us because we are the sons of a lost and ruined parent. These sleeps

are not the benisons of God; nor does he bestow them on his beloved.

We now come to tell you what those sleeps are, which he does bestow.



I. First, there is a miraculous sleep which God has sometimes given to

his beloved--which he does not now vouchsafe. Into that kind of

miraculous sleep, or rather trance, fell Adam, when he slept

sorrowfully and alone; but when he awoke he was no more so, for God

had given him that best gift which he had then bestowed on man. The

same sleep Abram had, when it is said that a deep sleep came on him,

and he laid him down, and saw a smoking furnace and a burning lamp,

while a voice said to him, "Fear not, Abram; I am thy shield, and thy

exceeding great reward." Such a hallowed sleep also was that of Jacob,

when, with a stone for his pillow, the hedges for his curtains, he laid

him down and slumbered. Dreaming, he saw a ladder set upon the

earth, the top of which reached to heaven, the angels of God ascending

and descending upon it. Such a sleep had Joseph, when he dreamed

that the other sheaves made obeisance to his sheaf, and that the sun,

moon, and seven stars were subject unto him. So ofttimes did David

rest, when his sleep was sweet unto him, as we have just read. And

such a sleep was that of Daniel, when he said, "I was asleep upon my

face, and behold the Lord said unto me, Arise, and stand upon thy

feet." And such, moreover, was the sleep of the reputed father of our

blessed Lord, when in a vision of the night, an angel said to him,

"Arise, Joseph, and take the young child and his mother, and flee into

Egypt, for Herod will seek the young child to destroy him." These are

miraculous slumbers. God's angel hath touched his servants with the

magic wand of sleep, and they have slept, not simply as we do, but

slept a wondrous sleep; they have dived into the tenfold depths of

slumber; they have plunged into a sea of sleep, where they have seen

the invisible, talked with the unknown, and heard mystic and

wondrous sounds: and when they awoke, they have said, "What a

sleep! Surely, my sleep was sweet unto me." "So he giveth his beloved

sleep."



But, now-a-days, we do not have such sleeps as these. Many persons

dream very wonderful things, but most people dream nonsense. Some

persons put faith in dreams: and, certainly God doth warn us in dreams

and visions even now. I am sure he does. There is not a man but can

mention one or more instances of a warning, or a benefit, he has

received in a dream. But we never trust dreams. We remember what

Rowland Hill said to a lady, who knew she was a child of God,

because she dreamed such- and-such a thing: "Never mind, ma'am,

what you did when you were asleep; let us see what you will do when

you are awake." That is my opinion of dreams. I never will believe a

man to be a Christian merely because he has dreamed himself one; for

a dreamy religion will make a man a dreamer all his life--and such

dreamers will have an awful waking at last, if that is all they have to

trust in.



II. He gives his beloved, in the second place, the sleep of a quiet

conscience. I think most of you saw that splendid picture, in the

Exhibition of the Royal Academy--the Sleep of Argyle--where he lay

slumbering on the very morning before his execution. You saw some

noblemen standing there, looking at him, almost with compunction;

the jailer is there, with his keys rattling; but positively the man sleeps,

though tomorrow morning his head shall be severed from his body,

and a man shall hold it up, and say, "This was the head of a traitor."

He slept because he had a quiet conscience: for he had done no wrong.

Then look at Peter. Did you ever notice that remarkable passage,

where it is said that Herod intended to bring out Peter on the morrow;

but, behold, as Peter was sleeping between two guards, the angel

smote him? Sleeping between two guards, when on the morrow he was

to be crucified or slain! He cared not, for his heart was clear; he had

committed no ill. He could say, "If it be right to serve God or man,

judge ye;" and, therefore, he laid him down and slept. O sirs! do ye

know what the sleep of a quiet conscience is? Have you ever stood out

and been the butt of calumny--pelted by all men; the object of scorn--

the laugh, the song of drunkards? And have ye known what it is, after

all, to sleep, as if you cared for nothing, because your heart was pure?

Ah! ye who are in debt--ah! ye who are dishonest--ah! ye who love not

God, and love not Christ--I wonder ye can sleep, for sin doth put

pricking thorns in the pillow. Sin puts a dagger in a man's bed, so that

whichever way he turns it pricks him. But a quiet conscience is the

sweetest music that can lull the soul to sleep. The demon of

restlessness does not come to that man's bed who has a quiet

conscience--a conscience right with God--who can sing--



With the world, myself, and thee,

I, ere I sleep, at peace shall be.



"So he giveth his beloved sleep."



But let me tell you who have no knowledge of your election in Christ

Jesus, no trust in the ransom of a Saviour's blood--you, who have

never been called by the Holy Ghost--you, who were never

regenerated and born again--let me tell you that you do not know this

slumber. You may say your conscience is quiet; you may say, you do

no man any wrong, and that you believe at the bar of God you shall

have little to account for. But, sirs, you know that the soul that sinneth,

if it sins but once, must die. If the picture has a single flaw, it is not a

perfect one. If ye have sinned but once, ye shall be damned for it,

unless ye have something to take away that one sin. Ye do not know

this sleep, but the Christian does, for all his sins were numbered on the

"scape-goat's head of old." Christ has died for all his sins however

great or enormous; and there is not now a sin written against him in

the Book of God. "I, even I," says God, "am he that blotteth out thy

transgressions for my name's sake, and I will not remember thy sins."

Now thou mayest sleep; for "so he giveth his beloved sleep."



III. Again: there is the sleep of contentment which the Christian

enjoys. How few people in this world are satisfied. No man ever need

fear offering a reward of a thousand pounds to a contented man; for if

any one came to claim the reward, he would of course prove his

discontent. We are all in a measure, I suspect, dissatisfied with our lot;

the great majority of mankind are always on the wing; they never

settle; they never light on any tree to build their nest; but they are

always fluttering from one to the other. This tree is not green enough,

that is not high enough, this is not beautiful enough, that is not

picturesque enough; so they are ever on the wing, and never build a

peaceful nest at all. The Christian builds his nest; and as the noble

Luther said, "Like yon little bird upon the tree, he hath fed himself

tonight--he knoweth not where his breakfast is tomorrow. He sitteth

there while the winds rock the tree; he shuts his eyes, puts his head

under his wing, and sleeps; and, when he awakes in the morning sings,



Mortals cease from toil and sorrow;

God provideth for the morrow."



How few there are who have that blessed contentment--who can say,

"I want nothing else; I want but little here below--yea, I long for

nothing more--I am satisfied--I am content." You sung a beautiful

hymn just now; but I suspect that many of you had no right to it,

because you did not feel it.



With thy will I leave the rest,

Grant me but this one request;

Both in life and death to prove

Tokens of thy special love.



Could you say there was nothing you wanted on earth, save Jesus? Did

you mean that you are perfectly content--that you had the sleep of

contentment? Ah! no. You, who were apprentices, are sighing till you

shall be journeymen; you who are journeymen, are groaning to be

masters; masters are longing till they shall retire from business, and

when they have retired, they are longing that all their children shall be

settled in life. Man always looks for a yet-beyond; he is a mariner who

never gets to port; an arrow which never reaches the target. Ah! the

Christian hath this text and communed with it:--"So he giveth his

beloved sleep." In my reverie, as I was on the border of the land of

dreams, methought I was in a castle. Around its massive walls there

ran a deep moat. Watchmen paced the walls both day and night. It was

a fine old fortress, bidding defiance to the foe; but I was not happy in

it. I thought I lay upon a couch; but scarcely had I closed my eyes, ere

a trumpet blew, "To arms! To arms!" and when the danger was

overpast I lay me down again. "To arms! To arms! once more

resounded, and again I started up. Never could I rest. I thought I had

my armour on, and moved about perpetually clad in mail, rushing each

hour to the castle top, aroused by some fresh alarm. At one time a foe

was coming from the west; at another from the east. I thought I had a

treasure somewhere down in some dep part of the castle, and all my

care was to guard it. I dreaded, I feared, I trembled lest it should be

taken from me. I awoke, and I thought I would not live in such a tower

as that for all its grandeur. It was the castle of discontent, the castle of

ambition, in which man never rests. It is ever "To arms! To arms! To

arms!" There is a foe here or a foe there. His dear-loved treasure must

be guarded. Sleep never crosses the drawbridge of the castle of

discontent. Then I thought I would supplant it by another reverie. I

was in a cottage. It was in what poets call a beautiful and pleasant

place, but I cared not for that. I had no treasure in the world, save one

sparkling jewel on my breast; and I thought I put my hand on that and

went to sleep, nor did I wake till morning light. That treasure was a

quiet conscience and the love of God--"the peace that passeth all

understanding." I slept, because I slept in the house of content,

satisfied with what I had. Go ye, overreaching misers! Go ye, grasping

ambitious men! I envy not your life of inquietude. The sleep of

statesmen is often broken; the dream of the miser is always evil; the

sleep of the man who loves gain is never hearty; but God "giveth," by

contentment, "his beloved sleep."



IV. Once more: God giveth his beloved the sleep of quietness of soul

as to the future. O that dark future! that future! The present may be

well; but ah! the next wind may wither all the flowers, and where shall

I be? Clutch thy gold, miser; for "riches make to themselves wings and

fly away." Hug that babe to thy breast, mother; for the rough hand of

death may rob thee of it. Look at thy fame and wonder at it, O thou

man of ambition! But one slight report shall wound thee to the heart,

and thou shalt sink as low as e'er thou hast been lifted high by the

voices of the multitude. The future! All persons have need to dread the

future, except the Christian. God giveth to his beloved sleep with

regard to the events of coming time.



What may be the future lot,

High or low concerns me not;

This doth set my heart at rest,

What my God appoints is best.



Whether I am to live or die is no matter to me; whether I am to be the

"offscouring of all things," or "the man whom the king delighteth to

honour," matters not to me. All is alike, provided my Father doth but

give it. "So he giveth his beloved sleep." How many of you have

arrived at that happy point that you have no wish of your own at all? It

is a sweet thing to have but one wish; but it is a better thing to have no

wish at all--to be all lost in the present enjoyment of Christ and the

future anticipation of the vision of his face. O my soul! what would

the future be to thee, if thou hadst not Christ? If it be a bitter and a

dark future, what matters it, so long as Christ thy Lord sanctifies it,

and the Holy Ghost still gives thee courage, energy, and strength? It is

a blessed thing to be able to say with Madame Guyon--



To me 'tis equal, whether love ordained,

My life or death, appoint me pain or ease;

My soul perceives no real ill in pain,

In ease or health, no real good she sees.

One good she covets, and that good alone,

To choose thy will, from selfish bias free,

And to prefer a cottage to a throne,

And grief to comfort, if it pleases thee.

That we should bear the cross is thy command--

Die to the world, and live to sin no more;

Suffer unmoved beneath the rudest hand,

As pleased when shipwrecked, as when safe on shore.



It is a happy condition to attain. "So he giveth his beloved sleep." Ah!

if you have a self-will in your hearts, pray to God to uproot it. Have

you self-love? Beseech the Holy Spirit to turn it out; for if you will

always will to do as God wills, you must be happy. I have heard of

some good old woman in a cottage, who had nothing but a piece of

bread and a little wafer, and lifting up her hands, she said, as a

blessing, "What! all this, and Christ too?" It is "all this," compared

with what we deserve. And I have read of some one dying, who was

asked if he wished to live or die; and he said, "I have no wish at all

about it." "But if you might wish, which would you choose?" "I would

not choose at all." "But if God bade you choose?" "I would beg God to

choose for me, for I should not know which to take." Happy state!

happy state! to be perfectly acquiescent--



To lie passive in his hand,

And to know no will but his.



"So he giveth his beloved sleep."



V. In the fifth place: there is the sleep of security. Solomon slept with

his armed men round his bed, and thus slumbered securely; but

Solomon's father slept one night on the bare ground - - not in a palace-

-with no moat round his castle wall,--but he slept quite as safely as his

son, for he said, "I laid me down and slept, and I awaked, for the Lord

sustained me." Now, some persons never feel secure in this world at

all; I query whether one half of my hearers feel themselves so.

Suppose I burst out in a moment, and sing this--



I to the end shall endure,

As sure as the earnest is given;

More happy, but not more secure,

Are the glorified spirits in heaven.



You would say, that is too high doctrine; and I would reply, very

likely it is for you, but it is the truth of God, and it is sweet doctrine

for me. I love to know, that if I am predestinated according to the

foreknowledge of God the Father, I must be saved; if I was purchased

by the Son's blood, I cannot be lost, for it would be impossible for

Jesus Christ to lose one whom he has redeemed, otherwise he would

be dissatisfied with his labours. I know that where he has begun the

good work he will carry it on. I never fear that I shall fall away, or be

lost; my only fear is, lest I should not have been right at first; but,

provided I am right, if I be really a child of God, I might believe that

the sun would be smitten with madness, and go reeling through the

universe like a drunken man--I might believe that the stars would urn

form their courses, and instead of marching with their measured

tramp, as now they do, whirl on in wild courses like the dance of

Bacchanals--I could even conceive that this great universe might all

subside in God, "even as a moment's foam subsides again upon the

wave that bears it;" but neither reason, heresy, logic, eloquence, nor a

conclave of divines, shall make me pay a moment' attention to the vile

suggestion that a child of God may ever perish. Hence I tread this

earth with confidence. Arguing a little while ago with an Arminian, he

said, "Sir, you ought to be a happy man; for if what you say be true,

why you are as secure of being in heaven as if you were there." I said,

"Yes, I know it." "Then you ought to live above cares and tribulations,

and sing happily from morning to night." I said, "So I ought, and so I

will, God helping me." This is security. "He giveth his beloved sleep."

To know that if I died I should enter heaven--to be as sure as I am of

my own existence that God, having loved me with an everlasting love,

and he being immutable, will never hate me if he has once loved me--

to know that I must enter the kingdom of glory--is not this enough to

make all burdens light, and give me the hind's feet wherewith I may

stand upon my high places. Happy state of security! "So he giveth his

beloved sleep."



And there is a sleep, my dear friends, of security, which is enjoyed on

earth even in the midst of the greatest troubles. Do you remember that

passage in the book of Ezekiel, where it is said, "They shall dwell

securely in the wilderness and sleep in the woods?" A queer place to

sleep in! "In the woods." There is a wolf over yonder; there is a tiger

in the jungle; and eagle is soaring in the air; a horde of robbers dwell

in the dark forest. "Never mind," says the child of God:



He that hath made his refuge God,

Shall find a most secure abode;

Shall walk all day beneath his shade,

And there at night shall rest his head.



I have often admired Martin Luther, and wondered at his composure.

When all men spoke so ill of him, what did he say? Turn to that

Psalm--"God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in time of

trouble; therefore we will not fear, though the earth be removed, and

though the mountains be carried into the midst of the sea." In a far

inferior manner, I have been called to stand up in the position of

Martin Luther, and have been made the butt of slander, a mark for

laughter and scorn; but it has not broken my spirit yet; not will it,

while I am enabled to enjoy that quiescent state of--"So he giveth his

beloved sleep." But thus far I beg to inform all those who choose to

slander or speak ill of me, that they are very welcome to do so till they

are tired of it. my motto is cedo nulli--I yield to none. I have not

courted any man's love; I asked no man to attend my ministry; I

preach what I like, and when I like, and as I like. Oh! happy state--to

be bold, though downcast, and distressed--to go and bend my knee and

tell my Father all, and then to come down from my chamber, and say--



If on my face, for thy dear name,

Shame and reproach shall be;

I'll hail reproach, and welcome shame,

For thou'lt remember me.





VI. The last sleep God giveth his beloved is the sleep of a happy

dismission. I have stood by the graves of many servants of the Lord. I

have buried some of the excellent of the earth; and when I bid farewell

to my brother down below there slumbering in his coffin, I usually

commence my speech with those words, "So he giveth his beloved

sleep." Dear servants of Jesus! There I see them! What can I say of

them, but that "so he giveth his beloved sleep?" Oh! happy sleep! This

world is a state of tossing to and fro; but in that grave they rest. No

sorrows there; no sighs, no groans, to mingle with the songs that

warble from immortal tongues. Well may I address the dead thus:--

"My brother, oftentimes hast thou fought the battles of this world;

thou hast had thy cares, thy trials, and thy troubles; but now thou art

gone--not to worlds unknown, but to yonder land of light and glory.

Sleep on, brother! Thy soul sleepeth not, for thou art in heaven; but

thy body sleepeth. Death hath laid thee in thy last couch; it may be

cold, but it is sanctified; it may be damp, but it is safe; and on the

resurrection morning, when the archangel shall set his trumpet to his

mouth, thou shalt rise. `Blessed are they dead that die in the Lord: yea,

saith the Spirit, for they rest from their labours, and their works do

follow them.' Sleep on in thy grave, my brother, for thou shalt rise to

glory." "So he giveth his beloved sleep."



Some of you fear to die, and have good reason to do so, for death for

you would be the beginning of sorrows; and on its approach ye might

hear the voice of the angel of the Apocalypse: "One woe is past, but

behold two woes more are to come." If, sirs, ye were to die

unprepared, and unconverted, and unsaved, "There remaineth nothing

but a fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation." I need not

speak like a Boanerges, for it is to you a well known truth, that

without God, without Christ, "strangers from the commonwealth of

Israel," your portion must be amongst the damned--the fiends--the

tortured--the shrieking ghosts--the wandering souls who find no rest--



On waves of burning brimstone toss'd,

For ever, O for ever lost!



"The wrath to come!" "The wrath to come!" "The wrath to come!"



But beloved Christian brother, wherefore dost thou fear to die? Come

let me take thy hand:



To you and me by grace 'tis given,

To know the Saviour's precious name;

And shortly we shall meet in heaven,

Our end, our hope, our way the same.



Do you know that heaven is just across that narrow stream? Are you

afraid to plunge in and swim across? Do you fear to be drowned? I feel

the bottom--it is good. Dost thou think thou shalt sink? Hear the voice

of the Spirit: "Fear not, I am with thee; be not dismayed, I am thy God:

when thou passest through the river, I will be with thee, and the floods

shall not overflow thee." Death is the gate of endless joys, and dost

thou dread to enter there? What! fear to be emancipated from

corruption? Oh! say not so! but rather, gladly lay down and sleep in

Jesus, and be blessed.



I have finished expounding my subject. There is only one question I

want to ask of you before you pass out of those doors. Do you

seriously and solemnly believe that you belong to the "beloved" here

mentioned? I may be impertinent in asking such a question; I have

been accused of that before now, but I have never denied it. I rather

take the credit of it than not. But seriously and solemnly I ask you--Do

you know yourselves to be amongst the beloved? And if it happens

that you want a test, allow me to give you three tests, very briefly, and

I have done. It has been said that there are three kinds of preachers--

doctrinal preachers, experimental preachers, and practical preachers.

Now I think there are three things that make up a Christian--true

doctrine, real exzperience, and good practice.



Now, then, as to your doctrine. You may tell whether you are the

Lord's beloved partly by that. Some think it matters not what a man

believes. Excuse me: truth is alway precious, and the least atom of

truth is worth searching out. Now- a-days the sects do not clash so

much as they did. Perhaps that is good; but there is one evil about it.

People do not read the Bibles so much as they did. They think we are

all right. Now, I believe we may be all right in the main, but we cannot

be all right where we contradict one another; and it becomes every

man to search the Bible to see which is right. I am not afraid to submit

my Calvinism, or my doctrine of believer's baptism, to the searching

of the Bible. A learned lord, an infidel, once said to Whitfield, "Sir I

am an infidel, I do not believe the Bible, but if the Bible be true, you

are right, and your Arminian opponents are wrong. If the Bible be the

Word of God, the doctrines of grace are true;" adding that if any man

would grant him the Bible to be the truth, he would challenge him to

disprove Calvinism. The doctrines of original sin, election, effectual

calling, final perseverance, and all those great truths which are called

Calvinism--though Calvin was not the author of them, but simply an

able writer and preacher upon the subject--are, I believe, the essential

doctrines of the Gospel that is in Jesus Christ. Now, I do not ask you

whether you believe all this--it is possible you may not; but I believe

you will before you enter heaven. I am persuaded, that as God may

have washed your hearts, he will wash your brains before you enter

heaven. He will make you right in your doctrines. But I must enquire

whether you read your Bibles. I am not finding fault with you this

morning for differing from me, I may be wrong; but I want to know

whether you search the Scriptures to find what is truth. And, if you are

not a reader of the Bible, if you take doctrines second-hand, if you go

to chapel, and say, "I do not like that:' what matters your not liking it,

provided it is in the Bible? Is it Biblical truth, or is it not? If it is

God's truth, let us have it exalted. It may not suit you; but let me remind

you, that the truth that is in Jesus never was palatable to carnal men, and

I believe never will be. The reason you love it not, is because it cuts too

much at your pride; it lets you down too low. Search yourselves, then,

in doctrine.



Then take care that you remember the experimental test. I am afraid

there is very little experimental religion amongst us; but where there is

true doctrine, there ought always to be a vital experience. Sirs, try

yourselves by the experimental test. Have you ever had an experience

of your wretchedness, of your depravity, your inability, your death in

sin? Have you ever felt life in Christ, an experience of the light of

God's countenance, of wrestling with corruption? Have you had a

grace-given Holy Ghost-implanted experience of a communion with

Christ? If so, then you are right on the experimental test.



And, to conclude, take care of the practical test. "Faith without works

is dead, being alone." He that walketh in sin is a child of the devil; and

he that walketh in righteousness is a child of light. Do not think,

because you believe the right doctrines, therefore you are right. There

are many that believe right, act wrong, and they perish. "Be not

deceived; God is not mocked; whatsoever a man soweth that shall he

also reap."



I have done. Now let me beseech thee, you, by the frailty of your own

lives--by the shortness of time--by the dreadful realities of eternity--by

the sins you have committed--by the pardon that you need--by the

blood and wounds of Jesus--by his second coming to judge the world

in righteousness--by the glories of heaven--by the awful horrors of

hell--by time--by eternity--by all that is good--by all that is sacred--let

me beg of you, as you love your own souls, to search and see whether

ye are amongst the beloved, to whom he giveth sleep. God bless you.





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