Charles Spurgeon Collection: Spurgeon - C.H. - Sermons from Zechariah: 08 ZEC 14:6-7 Light at Evening Time

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Charles Spurgeon Collection: Spurgeon - C.H. - Sermons from Zechariah: 08 ZEC 14:6-7 Light at Evening Time



TOPIC: Spurgeon - C.H. - Sermons from Zechariah (Other Topics in this Collection)
SUBJECT: 08 ZEC 14:6-7 Light at Evening Time

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                  Light at Evening Time



April 20, 1916

by

C. H. SPURGEON

(1834-1892)



"And it shall come to pass in that day, that the light shall not be clear nor

dark: But it shall be one day which shall be known to the Lord, not day, nor

night; but it shall come to pass, that at evening time it shall be light."-

Zec_14:6-7.



As we read the Scriptures, we are continually startled by fresh discoveries

of the magnificence of God. Our attention is fixed upon a passage, and

presently sparklets of fire and glory dart forth. It strikes us; we are

struck by it. Hence these bright coruscations. Our admiration is excited. We

could not have thought that so much light could possibly lie concealed within

a few words. Our text thus reveals to us in a remarkable manner the

penetration, the discernment, the clear-sightedness of God. To our weak

vision the current of human affairs is like twilight. It is not altogether

dark, for it is broken with some gleams of hope. Nor is it altogether bright,

for heavy masses of darkness intervene. It is neither day nor night. There is

a mingle-mangle of good and evil, a strange confused mixture, wherein the

powers of darkness con tend with the powers of light. But it is not so with

God. With him, it is one clear day. What we think to be confusion, is order

before his eye. Where we see advance and retrogression, he sees perpetual

progress. We full often bemoan our circumstances as altogether disastrous,

while God, who seeth the end from the beginning, is working out his ordained

purpose. Our God maketh the clouds to be the dust of his feet, and the winds

to be his chariot. He sees order in the tempest and the whirlwind. When the

bosom of earth heaves with earthquake, he hears music in every throb and when

earth and heaven seem mingled in one wild disorder and storm, his hand is in

the midst of all, so marking, that every particle of matter should be

obedient to his settled laws, and that all things should work together to

produce one glorious result. "Things are not what they seem." Oh! how good it

is for us to know that this world's history is not so black and bad as to our

dim senses it would appear. God is writing it out, sometimes with a heavy

pen; but when complete, it will read like one great poem, magnificent in its

plan, and perfect in all its details. At the present hour there may be much

in the condition of our country to cause anxiety or even to create alarm. And

it is not hard to point certainly to many things that seem to augur no good.

But there always were evil prophets. There always have been times and crises

when dark portents favoured unwelcome predictions. But thus far the fury of

every tempest has been mitigated; a sweet calm has followed each perilous

swell of the ocean, and the good old ship has kept afloat England's flag-we

fondly believe:-



"The flag that's braved a thousand years,

The battle and the breeze,"



will not be run down yet. We thank God that the history of our deliverances

supplies us with fair omens of an ever-gracious Providence. Let us comfort

ourselves with the belief that there is a future of peace and prosperity

within her borders and of influence for good among the nations of the world

for Britain and British Christians.* Then let each man brace up his sinews

for the fight, and struggle for the right Bright days are assuredly in store

for those who lift the standard and unfurl the flag of righteousness and

truth. "At evening time it shall be light." Even now it is "one day" which is

known to the Lord.



As our time is brief, I mean to confine your attention to one clause of the

text, "At evening time it shall be light." It seems to be a rule in God's

dispensations that his light should break upon men gradually; and when it

appears about to suffer an eclipse it will brighten up and shine with

extraordinary lustre. "At evening time it shall be light." Of this mode of

God's procedure we will take five illustrations.



I. LET REVELATION SUPPLY US WITH THE FIRST.



When God first revealed himself to the sons of men, he did not come to them

in a blazing chariot of fire, manifesting all his glorious attributes. The

sun in the Tropics, we are told, rises on a sudden. The inhabitants of those

regions know none of our delightful twilight at dawn or evening, but the

curtain rises and falls abruptly. This is not the way in which God has

revealed himself to us by degrees, softly, slowly, he lifts the veil. Thus

has God been pleased to make himself known. He took in his hand a flaming,

torch when the world was dark. Without a single ray of comfort, and he lit up

the first star that ever shone over the wild waste of the world's wilderness.

That star was the promise that the seed of the woman should bruise the

serpent's head. In the light of that promise our first parents and their

immediate descendants were cheered in their daily toil. Seth and Enoch walked

with no other light that we know of but that. There is no record of any

promise beside, which they had received from the Lord. By-and-bye, as years

revolved, God lit up another star, and then another and another, till at last

Holy Scripture became like our sky at midnight-studded all over with greater

and lesser luminaries, all brightly manifesting the glory of God.



Still it was night. Though there was a little light, there was a prevalence

of darkness. All through the Jewish dispensation, the sun did not shine.

There was only cold, but beautous in its season, silver moonlight. Heavenly

truths were reflected in shadows; the substance was not visible. It was an

economy of cloud and smoke, of type and symbol, but not of light and day of

life, and immortality. For all the light that "o'er the dark her silver

mantle threw," the saints of those times were glad and grateful; but how much

more cause for joy and gratitude have we on whom the golden sun has shone!

Star after star had been lit up in the heavens by the inspiration of Moses,

and Samuel, and David, and all the prophets, till dark and deep the night

began to fall, till sable clouds gathered dense with direful auguries. and at

length a wild tempest was heard thundering in the sky. Isaiah had completed

the long roll of his prophecy; Jeremiah had uttered all his lamentations. The

eagle wing of Ezekiel soared no longer. Daniel had recorded his visions and

entered into rest. Zechariah and Haggai had fulfilled their mission, and at

last Malachi, foreseeing the day that should burn as an oven, and beyond it

the day when the Sun of righteousness should arise with healing in his wings,

closed that volume of testimony. That was midnight. The stare seemed to be

dying out, like as withered fig-leaves fall from the tree. There was no open

vision; the Word of God was scarce; there was a famine of the bread of life

in those days. And what then? Why, you all know. At evening time it was

light. Be who had long been promised suddenly came into his temple, a light

to lighten the Gentiles, and to be the glory of his people Israel. The

world's darkest hour had come, when there was born in Bethlehem, of the house

of David, Jesus, the Kin, of the Jews, and the Saviour of men. Then the day

dawned, and the day-spring from on high visited us, precisely at that darkest

hour, when men said, "God has forsaken the world, and left it to pine away in

everlasting gloom". Let that serve for a first illustration of light at

evening time, notable as a fact, and worthy to be recollected. This, too, is

precisely the way in which God acts:-



II. IN THE CONVERSION OF INDIVIDUALS.



God's laws on a great scale are always the same as his laws on little scale.

A pretty little rhyme, that many of you are familiar with, endorses this

statement.



"The very law that moulds a tear,

And bids it trickle from its source

That law preserves the world a sphere,

And guides the planets in their course."



The same law which controls a planet affects a grain of dust. As God caused

revelation to arise gradually, and, growing clearer and clearer, to become

clearest when it seemed about to expire, so in the experience of each

individual, the dawn precedes the day. When the light of divine grace first

visits a man, it shines with feeble beam. Man by nature is, like a house shut

up, the windows of which are all boarded over. Grace does not open every

window jet once and bid the sun stream in upon weak eyes accustomed to

darkness. It rather takes down a part of a shutter at a time, removes some

obstruction, and so lets in, through chinks, a little light, that one may be

able to bear it by degrees. The window of man's soul is so thickly encrusted

with dirt, so thoroughly begrimed, that no light at all can penetrate it,

till one layer is taken off, and a little yellow light is seen; and then

another is removed, and then another, still admitting more light, and

clearer. Was it not so with you who are now walking in the light of God's

countenance, Did not your light come to you by little and little? Your

experience, I know, confirms my statement, and as the light came, and you

discovered your sin, and began to see the suitability of Christ to meet your

case, you hoped that all was going on well. Then peradventure, on a sudden,

the light seemed altogether to depart. You were cast into the thick darkness

into the Valley of the Shadow of Death, and you said, "Oh! now my lamp is put

out for ever! I am cast out from God's presence! I am doomed beyond the hope

of mercy! I shall be lost for ever and ever!" Well now, Christian, ask

yourself what came of this? When you were thus broken, sore broken in the

place of dragons, and your soul suffered the wreck of all its carnal

confidence , what then? At that evening time the light shone clearer with you

than it had ever before. When darkness veiled your mind, you looked to

Christ, and were lightened with the true light. Despairing of yourself, you

cast yourself into the arms of Christ, and you had that peace of God which

passeth all understanding, and still keeps your heart and mind through Jesus

Christ.



May be I am addressing some who have been for a long while the subjects of

such humbling influences, breaking them down. You had hoped things were going

pretty fairly with you, and you trusted that at the last you would come out

into clear sunshine. But oh! how disappointed you feel! You never felt so

wicked, never knew that you were so desperately rebellious. Your heart is

hard and stubborn; you feel as if there was a mutiny in your breast.

"Surely," you say, "such an one as I am never can be saved; it is a hopeless

case." Oh! my brother, very hopeful to our view is that which appears so

hopeless to you.



"Tis perfect poverty alone

That sets the soul at large;

While we can call one mite our own,

We have no full discharge."



Are you emptied of all merit, goodness, and hope in yourselves? Then your

redemption draweth nigh. When you are cleared out and turned upside down,

then eternal mercy greets you. Trust Christ. If you cannot swim, give

yourselves up to the stream, and you shall float. If you cannot stand, give

yourselves up to him, and he will bear you as on eagles' wings. Give up

yourself. There, let it die; it is the worst enemy you ever had. Though you

relied upon it, it has been a delusion and a snare to you. Now, therefore,

throw the whole weight and burden of your life of sin and folly upon Jesus'

Christ, the Sin-bearer, and this shall be the time of your deliverance, so

the darkest hour you ever knew shall give place to the brightest you have

ever experienced. You shall go your way rejoicing, with a joy unspeakable and

full of glory. A third illustration may be found in:-



III. THE DELIVERANCES WHICH A COVENANT GOD WORKS FOR AN AFFLICTED PEOPLE



The same rule which we have already observed will hold good here-at evening

time it shall be light. No child of God can be very long without trouble of

some kind or other, for sure it is that the road to heaven will always be

rough. Some visionaries have been talking of making a railroad to the city.

With this view, they would fill up the Slough of Despond, run a tramway right

through the middle of it, and construct a tunnel through the hill Difficulty.

I would not advise any of you to be shareholders in the company, for it will

never answer. It will bring thousands to the river of Death, and swamp them

there, but at the gates of the Celestial City not a passenger will ever

arrive by that route. There is a pilgrimage, and a weary pilgrimage too,

which must be taken before you can obtain entrance into those gates. Still,

in all their trials, God's people always find it true that at evening time it

shall be light. Are you suffering from temporal troubles. You cannot expect

to be without these. They are hard to bear. This, however, should cheer you,

that God is as much engaged to succour and support you in your temporal, as

he is in your spiritual interests. Beloved, the very hairs of your head are

all numbered. Not a sparrow falls on the ground without your Father knowing

it. Well, now, taking quite a material view of the question, you are of more

value than many sparrows. You may be very poor, yet be very, very dear to

your Father in heaven. Your poverty may reduce you to the utmost pinch, but

that will be the time of your sweetest relief. The widow woman at the gates

of Zarepta could hardly have been more wretched than when she had gone out to

gather a few sticks-she says two-enough, I suppose, to cook the handful of

meal and the few drops of oil, with which to make the last morsel for herself

and for her son. Ay, poor soul! At that very moment the prophet of God came

in-not while there was much meal or much oil, but just as they were all

spent. He came to tell her that the barrel of meal should not waste, nor the

cruse of oil fail, till the Lord sent rain, and famine ceased in the land.

God's people in Egypt were not brought out until the rigour of their bondage

had become too bitter to bear. When it was intolerable, the Lord redeemed

them with a strong arm and a high hand. You may, my dear hearer, be so tried

that you think nobody ever had such a trial. Well, then, your faith may look

out for such a deliverance as nobody else ever experienced. If you have an

excess of grief, you shall have the more abundant relief. If you have been

alone in sorrow, you shall, by-and-bye, have a joy unspeakable, with which no

stranger can intermeddle. You shall lead the song of praise, as chief

musicians, whose wailings were most bitter in the abodes of woe. Do cast your

burden on God. Let me beseech those of you who love him, not to be shy of

him. Disclose to him your temporal griefs. For you, young people, you

remember I have just prayed that you might early in life learn to cast your

burden upon God. Your trials and troubles, while you are at home under your

father's roof, are not so heavy as those that will come when you begin to

shift for yourselves. Still, you may think them heavier, because your older

friends make light of them. Well, while you yet remain at the home of your

childhood, acquire the habit of carrying your daily troubles and griefs to

God. Whisper them into your Heavenly Father's ear, and he will help you. And

why should you men of business try to weather the storm without your God?

'Tis well to have industry, shrewdness, and what is called self-reliance-a

disposition to meet difficulties with determination, not with despondency:-



"To take arms against a sea of troubles,

And by opposing end them."



Still, the only safe, the only happy course for merchant or tradesman is to

commit his way unto God, with a simple, child-like faith, taking counsel at

the Scriptures, and seeking guidance in prayer. You will find it to be a

blessed way of passing through the ordinary routine of daily anxieties, and

the extraordinary pressure of occasional alarms and panics, if you can but

realise your sacred privileges as disciples of Christ in the midst of all

your secular duties.



Or are our trials of a spiritual character? Here full often our trials

abound, and here, too, we may expect that at evening time it shall be light.

Perhaps some of you pursue the road to heaven with very few soul-conflicts.

Certainly there are some who do not often get through a week without being

troubled on every side-fighting without, and fears within. Ah! brethren, when

some of you tell me of your doubts and fears, I can well sympathise with you,

if I cannot succour you. Is there anywhere a soul more vexed with doubts, and

fears, and soul-conflicts than mine? I know not one. With heights of joy in

serving my Master, I am happily familiar, but into very depths of despair-

such an inward sinking as I cannot describe-I have likewise sunk. A more

frequent, or a more fearful wretchedness of heart than I have suffered it is

not likely any of you ever felt. Yet do I know that my Redeemer liveth, that

the battle is sure, that the victory is safe. If my testimony be worth aught,

I have always found that when I am most distressed about circumstances that I

cannot control, when my hope seems to flicker where it ought to flare, when

the worthlessness and wretchedness of my nature obscure the evident of any

goodness and virtue imparted to me or wrought in me, just then it is that a

sweet spring of cool consolation bubbles up to quench my thirst, and a sweet

voice greets my ear, "It is I; be not afraid". My witness is for the Master,

that, though he may leave us for a little, it is not for long. "For a small

moment have I forsaken thee, but with great mercy have I gathered thee; in a

little wrath I hid my face from thee for a moment, but with everlasting mercy

will I have pity upon thee, saith the Lord, thy Redeemer. "Oh! believer, stay

yourself upon God when you have nothing else to stay upon. Do not rely upon

appearances; above all, do not listen to the suggestions of a murmuring,

hardened spirit; do not credit the insinuations of the infernal fiend who,

when he finds you downhearted, be it from sickness of body or anxiety of

mind, is sure then to whisper some disparaging thoughts of God. What though

the suggestion strikes your heart that the Lord has forsaken you, that your

sins cannot be forgiven, that you will fall by the hand of the enemy, hurl it

back. You know whence it came. Depend upon it, though heaven and earth go to

wreck, God's promise will stand. Should hell break loose, and demons

innumerable invade this earth, they shall not go one inch beyond their

tether. The chain that God has cast about them shall restrain them. Not an

heir of heaven shall be left to the clutch of the destroyer. Nay, his head

shall not lose a hair without divine permission. You shall come out of the

furnace with not a smell of fire upon you. And being so eminently preserved,

in such imminent peril, your salvation shall constrain you to bless God on

earth, and bless him to all eternity, with the deepest self-humiliation and

the highest strains of gratitude and adoration. So, then, both in our

temporal and spiritual concerns, at evening time, when the worst has come to

the worst, it shall be light. When the tide has ebbed out the farthest, it

will begin to flow in. When the winter has advanced to the shortest day, we

shall then begin to return to spring. Be assured that it is so, it has been

so, and it shall be so. To the very end of your days you may look for light

at evening time. And now may I not appeal for a fourth illustration of the

same truth to some of our friends who have come to:-



IV. THE EVENING TIME OF HUMAN LIFE?



This is often a delightful time, when the shadows are drawn out, and the air

is still, and there is a season of preparation for the last undressing, and

of anticipation for the appearing before the King in his beauty. I envy some

of our brethren, the more advanced saints. Although old age brings its

infirmities and its sorrows, yet they have found that brings with it the

mellow joys of a matured experience, and a near prospect of the coming glory

so near, so very near to their actual realisation. John Bunyan's picture of

the Land Beulah was no dream, though he calls it so. Some of our aged

brethren and sisters have come to a place of very peaceful repose, where they

do hear the songs of angels from the other side of the stream, and the

bundles of myrrh from the mountains of Bethen they bear in their bosoms. I

know you find, my dear friends, that at evening time it is light to you, very

light. You were called by grace when you were young. Bright was your day-

dawn; a precious dew from the Lord fell upon you in the morning. You have

borne the burden and heat of the day. You feel like a child that has grown

tired. You are ready to say, "Let us go to sleep, mother; let us go to

sleep." But meanwhile, before you close your eyes you are conscious of such

divine refreshment, of such love and such joy shed abroad in your hearts,

that you find the last stage of the journey to be blessed indeed, waiting and

watching for the trumpet-call that shall bid you come up higher. Your light

is brighter now than ever it was before. When you come at length to depart,

though it will be "evening time" in very truth, it will be "light." You have

watched the sun go down sometimes. How glorious he is at his setting! He

looks twice as large as he did when he was high up in the sky, and if the

clouds gather round him, how he tints them all with glory! Is there anything

in all the world so magnificent as the setting sun, when all the colours of

heaven seem poured out upon earth's sky? It does not fill you with gloom, for

it is so radiant with glory. Such, now, shall your dying bed be. To those who

watch you, you shall be an object of mare sacred interest than ever you were

before. If there be some pains that distress you, and some temptations that

harass you, they shall be but the clouds which your Master's grace and your

Saviour's presence shall gild with splendour. Oh! how light, how very light,

it has been at evening time with some of our beloved friends! We have envied

them as we have beheld the brightness gleaming from their brows in their last

expiring moments. Oh! their songs! You cannot sing like them. Oh! their notes

of ecstasy! You cannot understand the bliss unspeakable, as though the spray

of the waves of heaven dashed into their faces, as though the light of the

unclouded land had begun to stream upon their visage, and they were

transfigured upon their Tabor before they passed into their rest!



Never fear dying, beloved. Dying is the last, but the least, matter that a

Christian has to be anxious about. Fear living-that is a hard battle to

fight; a stern discipline to endure; a rough voyage to undergo. You may well

invoke God's omnipotence to your aid. But to die, that is to end the strife,

to finish your course, to enter the calm heaven. Your Captain, your Leader,

your Pilot is with you. One moment, and it is over: "A gentle wafting to

immortal life." It is the lingering pulse of life that makes the pains and

groans. Death ends them all. What a light, oh! what a transparent light it

must be when the spirit immediately passes through the veil into the glory-

land! In vain the fancy strives to paint the vision of angels and of

disembodied spirits, and, above all, the brightness of the glory of Christ

the Lamb in the midst of the throne! Oh! the joy of that first bowing before

the Mercy-seat! Oh! the rapture of that first casting the crown at his feet

who loved us and redeemed us! Oh! the transport of that first folding in

Immanuel's bosom, that first kiss with the kisses of his mouth, face to face!

Do you not long for it? May you not say, "drop rapidly, ye sands of time! Fly

round, ye axles of the running years, and let his chariot come, or let our

soul soon pass, and leave her mortal frame behind, to be for ever with the

Lord!" Yes, "at evening time is shall be light." Turning now from these

personal reflections, we seek our last illustration in the mysterious

unfolding of destiny, for it is our firm belief that:-



V. IN THE HISTORY OF THE WORLD AT LARGE this saying shall be verified, and it

shall come to pass that "at evening time it shall be light."



Darkness has prevailed for a long time, nor does the prospect grow much

brighter at present. The noble enterprise of our great missionary societies

is not altogether unrequited. The prayers and efforts of a long succession of

godly men are not to be accounted vain and fruitless, but we commonly feel

more cause to lament than to exult. How little is the world lit up with the

light of God yet! Are there more saved souls in the world now than there were

a hundred years after Christ's death? I do not know that there are. A greater

surface is covered with the profession of Christianity now, but at that time

the light was bright where it did shine. I am afraid to say what I think of

the gloom that is hanging in thick folds of cloud and scud, over the nations

of the earth. Still the oracle cheers my heart, "At evening time it shall be

light." Some men prophesy that it will not be so. Long ages of delay make

them grow impatient. This impatience provokes questioning. Those questions

invariably tend to unbelief. But who shall make void the promises of God? Are

not nations to be born in a day? Will the wild Arab never bow before the King

of Zion? Shall not Ethiopia stretch out her arms to God? As children of the

day, doth it not behove us to walk in the light of the Lord? Divine testimony

has more weight with us than the conjectures of benighted men! Christ has

bought this world, and he will have it in possession from the river even to

the ends of the earth. He has redeemed it, and he will claim it for his own.

You may rest assured that whatever is contained in the scroll of prophecy

shall be fulfilled according to the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of

God. Notwithstanding any difficulties you may have in interpreting the seals

or the trumpets of the Apocalypse, You have no room to doubt that Jesus

Christ will be acknowledged King of Kings and Lord of Lords over this whole

world, and that in every corner and nook of it his name will be famous. To

him every knee shall bow, and every tongue shall confess that he is Lord, to

the glory of God the Father. Do not be troubled by seers or soothsayers. Rest

patiently. "Of the times and seasons, brethren, ye have no need that I write

unto you, for ye yourselves know perfectly that the day of the Lord so cometh

as a thief in the night." As for you, your business is to work for the

spreading of his kingdom, to be continually scattering the light you have,

and praying for more, to be waiting upon God for more of the tongue of fire,

for more of the baptism of the Eternal Spirit, for more vital quickening

power. When the whole Church shall be wakened up to a spirit of earnestness

and enterprise, the conversion of this world will be speedily accomplished;

the idols will then be cast to the moles and the bats; anti-Christ shall sink

like a millstone in the flood, and the glory of the Lord shall be revealed,

and all flesh shall see it together, for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken

it.



Talking but the other day upon missionary affairs with one who understands

them well, he said, "Sir, we have enough missionaries in India now, of all

sorts, for the evangelisation of India, if no more were sent out, provided

that they were the right men." Oh! God, call, qualify, send for the right

men; baptize them with the Holy Ghost and with fire; and make them fit

instruments to do, to dare, to die, but withal to conquer. Bethink you,

brethren, how, when Christ began with twelve men, he shook the earth, and now

that Christians are numbered by tens of thousands, do ye tell me that the

glory of God is not to be revealed, and the conquest of the world is not to

be completed? I am afraid the Church is getting downhearted. She holds her

banner low; she marches to the fight with bated breath and tremulous spirit.

She will never win thus with craven heart. Oh! that she had more faith in her

God! Then would she be "clear as the moon, fair as the sun, and terrible as

an army with banners." If she would expect great things, she would see great

things. Nations would be born in a day if we believed it and myriads would

flock, like doves, to their windows if we did but look for it, work for it,

and bless God for such a measure of encouragement as we have. "At evening

time it shall be light." Accept this as a prophecy. Believe it on the highest

warranty. Hope for it with the liveliest anticipation. So may ye live to see

it. And unto God shall be the praise, world without end. Amen.



*"Reference is made here to a circumstance which caused the English public

some passing anxiety; but a few days sufficed to disperse the cloud, and in a

few months it was obliterated from people's memory."



Provided by:



Tony Capoccia

Bible Bulletin Board

Box 314          

Columbus, NJ, USA 08022 

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