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Anthology of 3,000+ Classic Sermons: Spurgeon 0029 Christ Manifesting himself to his People


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Sermon #29 New Park Street Pulpit 1

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CHRIST MANIFESTING HIMSELF TO HIS PEOPLE

NO. 29

A SERMON DELIVERED ON SABBATH MORNING, JUNE 10, 1855,

BY THE REV. C. H. SPURGEON,

AT NEW PARK STREET CHAPEL.

“Judas said unto Him, not Iscariot, Lord, how is it that You will manifest

Yourself unto us and not unto the world?”

Joh_14:22

WHAT a blessed Master Jesus Christ was! How familiar did He allow His disciples to make themselves with Him!

Though He was the Lord of Life and Glory, the Great and Mighty One, as well as the Man of Nazareth, yet see how He

talks with His poor disciples, the fishermen, just as if He had been one of the same class and order with themselves! He

was none of your dignitaries who pride themselves on that dignity-none of those ecclesiastics who love to carry much of

formality about them and to walk above other men-as if they were not, indeed, their fellows. But He talks to His disciples

just as a father would to his children-even more kindly than a master might to his pupils. He lets them put the simplest

questions to Him and instead of rebuking them for their familiarity, He condescends to answer everything they

please to ask Him.

Philip uttered a sentence which one would think no sensible man who had been so long time with Jesus ever could

have troubled Him with. He said, “Show us the Father and it suffices us.” A stupid idea! As if Jesus Christ could show the

Father-that is to say, could show God to Philip! And Jesus kindly answered-“Have you been so long time with Me

and yet have you not known Me, Philip? Believe you not that I am in the Father and the Father in Me? He that has seen

Me has seen the Father.”

And now comes Judas (not Iscariot). And he puts also a very simple and easy question-one he needed not to have

asked. But Jesus Christ, instead of rebuking him, simply passes on to another subject and forbears most wisely to answer

the enquiry, because He would teach him more by silence than He could do by an explanation.

We must also notice here how very particular the Holy Spirit is that a good man should not be confounded with a

bad one. He says, “Judas, not Iscariot.” There were two of the name of Judas. The one who betrayed our Lord and the

other who wrote the Epistle of Jude, who should properly have been called Judas. Some of us, in reading the name Judas,

might have said, “Ah, it was that traitor Judas Iscariot that asked the question.” But the Holy Spirit would not allow

this mistake to be made. This again should teach us that it is not an idle wish for us to desire that our name should be

handed down to posterity.

We ought all to wish to have an unblemished character. We ought to desire to have that promise fulfilled, “The

memory of the just is blessed.” I would not wish my name to be mistaken for that of some criminal who was hanged. I

would not wish to have my name written even by mistake in the calendar of infamy. However much I may now be misrepresented,

it will one day be known that I have honestly striven for the glory of my Master. And God will say, “Judas, not

Iscariot.” The man was no deceiver after all.

But we will now forsake Judas altogether and proceed to look at our text. It contains two things-first, an important

fact. Secondly, an interesting enquiry. “Lord, how is it that You will manifest Yourself unto us and not unto the

world?” Here is a fact and an enquiry concerning it.

I. First, then, here is A GREAT FACT-that Jesus Christ does reveal Himself to His people, but He does not unto

the world. The fact is implied in the question. And even if Scripture did not declare it to be the Truth, there are many of

us who have a scripture written in our hearts-the bible of experience-which teaches us that it is true. Ask Christian

men whether they have not had manifestations of their Lord and Savior Jesus Christ in a peculiar and wonderful manner,

such as they never felt when they were in their unregenerate state. Turn to the biographies of eminent saints and you will

find there instances recorded in which Jesus has been pleased, in a very special manner, to speak to their souls, to unfold

the wonders of His Person and let them discern the matchless glories of His office.

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Yes, so have their souls been steeped in happiness that they have thought themselves to be in Heaven. Although they

were not there, they were well near on the threshold of it-for when Jesus manifests Himself to His people, it is a young

Heaven on earth, it is a Paradise in embryo, it is the beginning of the bliss of the glorified. Yes and it shall be the consummation

of that bliss when Jesus Christ shall perfectly unveil Himself to the admiring eyes of all His people and they

shall be like He and shall see Him as He is.

We are about to talk somewhat this morning, then, concerning that special manifestation which Jesus Christ vouchsafes

to His people and to His people only. We will make four observations here. We will observe, first, something concerning

the favored persons-“unto us, not unto the world.” Secondly, concerning special seasons-“How is it that you

will?” He was not doing it just then. But “you will.” There are special seasons. Thirdly, some remarks concerning the

wonderful display-“You will manifest Yourself unto us, as you do not unto the world.” Then, fourthly, we shall dwell

a little upon the effects which this manifestation will produce upon our souls.

1. First, then, who are the favored people to whom Jesus Christ manifests Himself? “How is it that You will manifest

Yourself unto us and not unto the world?” It appears from the text that the persons to whom Jesus Christ shows Himself

in this wonderful manner do not belong to the world. Who, then, are these people? I am sure it would be difficult for you

or me to discover them. I shall, therefore, this morning employ a fiction and shall bid some spirit from an unknown

world point out these distinguished individuals.

O Spirit! I give you an errand. There are a certain number of people in this world who are not of it-go, search them

out and come back and tell me what you have found. We give the spirit time. He flies round the world and he returns. “I

have seen,” says he, “a multitude of men. They are all pursuing one common path. With one object I have seen them

trampling on each other in the fury of their hot pursuit. I have seen them hurrying after something which each one desired

for himself-but in the midst of the throng I saw a few marching in the opposite direction. They, with much elbowing

and strong opposition were going exactly contrary to the stream.

“I saw written on the foreheads of those who were proceeding with the crowd, the word ‘Self.’ But I marked those

who were proceeding in the other direction and behold, they had inscribed upon their brows, ‘Christ.’ And as I listened

to them frequently in their soliloquies I heard them say, ‘For us to live is Christ, for us to die is gain.’ I marked these

men. I saw them constantly pursuing their way in the teeth of all defiance, going against every opposition. I wondered

where they were going. And I saw that before them was a wicket gate and on it the words-‘Mercy for the chief of sinners.’

“I saw them enter there. I marked them as they ran along the walls of salvation. Tracking them along to their destination,

I saw them at last fold their arms in death, shut their eyes with tranquility. And I heard angels sing their requiem

and a voice shouted, ‘Blessed are the dead that die in the Lord.’ Surely these must be the persons who are not of the

world.” You have spoken rightly, O Spirit. These are the individuals. What did you see of them, O Spirit? Did they assemble

and congregate together? Or did they mix with the rest of humanity?

“Why,” says he, “I noticed that once in the week they crowded to a certain place they called the House of God. I

heard their song of praise. I saw them bend their knee in reverence, not only in that house, but in private. I witnessed

their groaning, their struggles and their agonies. I knew that they were men of prayer and men that loved God. I saw

them gather in secret assemblies to tell what the Lord had done for their souls. I marked that they would not be found

with the wicked. I saw some houses that they would not enter. At the corner of the street there stood a house, well lighted

up with many a lamp. And there were on its front some mystic signs, the marks of woe and ill-doings.

“I saw the wicked there, reeling to and fro. I observed them in their drunkenness. But I marked how the Christian

man put up his hand before his eyes and passed by that place. I saw, too, another haunt of Hell, where there were enacted

scenes that eye should not have beheld-where shouts of revelry and mirth, but not songs of holiness, were heard. I

looked round that theater and I discerned not a single one of these blessed persons. They would not run in the ways of the

wicked, nor sit in the seat of the scorner, nor stand in the council of the unrighteous.

“I marked that like ‘birds of a feather they would flock together’-that they found their mates and there they

went-that they built their nest in the same tree and would make their habitation beneath the selfsame roof. Yes,” said

the spirit, “I heard one of them exclaim, ‘He that tells lies shall not abide in my sight.’ I saw him drive the liar from his

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house and bid the profligate depart from him. I marked them. They were a select and separate people and I said, surely

these are the men of whom it is written, ‘They shall dwell alone, they shall not be numbered among the people.’ ”

Well, Spirit, rightly have you described them. I wonder how many there are here. The men to whom God will reveal

Himself and not to the world. They are men who are not worldly in principle, in action, in conversation, in desires, in

object, or in end. These are the persons. Do not tell me anything about universal grace, or universal manifestations!

While I have the power I will proclaim free grace to peculiar characters, as long as I find it written, “You will manifest

Yourself to us, but not to the world.”

Our next remark is concerning special seasons. These highly favored men do not always see Jesus Christ alike. They

do not always dive in the sunshine of His countenance. There are special times when God is pleased to reveal Himself to

His people. And these seasons are generally of two kinds-times of duty and times of trial. I never found a lazy or indifferent

Christian have a manifestation of Jesus Christ. I never heard one who gave himself wholly to business talk much of

spiritual manifestations. No, poor soul, he had got religion enough to save him, but not enough to make him realize the

spiritual and special blessings of a Christian.

Those who do but little for Christ, Christ does but little for them in the way of special favors. Those who sit down,

fold their arms, eat, drink and are satisfied, are not the men who enter into the secret chamber of the Most High and enjoy

the presence of the Almighty. The men who are the most zealous for their Master discern the most of His loving kindness

and enjoy the richest blessings from the Lord. Ask a Christian when he is the happiest, he will say when he works the

most. I know I am. I have not tried rest yet and no doubt I shall find it anything but rest when I have it. When I pass a day

without preaching my Master’s name I feel that I have not done what I ought to have done and I do not rest satisfied till I

am within the four boards of a pulpit again.

When we work the hardest we feel grace the most plentiful. When we dig the deepest we get the sweetest water. He

who toils the most has his bread the most sweetened. And depend upon it-drops of sweat are blessed things to make dry

bread go down. We shall always have more happiness the more we labor for Christ. As for Issachar, who is so strong,

crouching down between two burdens-the man who is doing little-the promise is, “A whip for the horse, a bridle for

the ass and a rod for the fool’s back.”

The man who is idle must have chastisement. But he who serves his God may rejoice, for God will treat him with

dainties. He will give him his portion mixed with honey. He will say, “I have taken your bread and dipped it in My own

dish. Take it and eat it, for you are one who works in My own vineyard.” It will be in seasons of duty, or, as I have said,

in seasons of trial. And you must not suppose when a Christian is laid aside from duty that he is doing nothing. Do not

imagine that the time of your sickness has been lost to you. You were not only profiting yourselves, but actually serving

God by your suffering, if you bore it patiently.

Don’t you know the text-“We fill up that which is behind of the sufferings of Christ, for His body’s sake, which is

the Church.” Christ’s mystical body, you are aware, is made up of the Head and all the members. The Head had a certain

amount to suffer-that is all finished. But the body has a measured portion to endure also. And the more you suffer, so

much the less suffering there is for somebody else. There is a certain quantum of trial which the whole Church has to sustain

before it gets to Heaven. For as Jesus Christ was afflicted, even so the whole of His people must have fellowship with

His sufferings.

There is a cup that is full of mixture and the righteous must drink it. We must all have a sip from it. But if one of us

can take a deep draught and do it patiently, there is so much the less for our fellows. Let us not complain, then-for it is

in the time of trouble we see most of Jesus. Before Israel fought Amalek, God gave them water from the Rock and sent

them manna from Heaven. And before Jacob met Esau the angel of God wrestled with him at the brook Jabbok and hosts

of angels met him at Mahanaim. Previous to trial you may generally expect a season of joy-and when that season of joy

is over, you may say, “We must expect some danger now, for we have received too much delight.”

But when the trial comes, then expect to have delight with it. For our troubles are generally proportioned to our

joys and our joys are usually proportioned to our troubles. The more bitter the vessel of grief, the sweeter the cup of consolation.

The heavier weight of trial here, the brighter the crown of glory hereafter. In fact, the same word in Hebrew

signifies “weight” and “glory.” A weight of trouble is a glory to a Christian, for it is an honor to him. And glory is a

weight, for it often bows him down and makes him lie low at his Master’s feet. I appeal to my Brothers and Sisters and

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ask them when it is they have seen most of Jesus-when they have been walking in the garden of delights, or when the

bitter medicine has been in their mouth?

Have you not had better visions of Jesus when you have been racked with pain than when you have been elevated by

prosperity? When the barn has been full, the oil vat has been bursting and the wine has been running over, it is often then

that the sanctuary of God has been forsaken and the cabinet of God’s loving kindness is nearly disregarded. But when the

fig tree does not blossom and when there are no herds in the stalls, then it is that God often comes nearest to His children

and most reveals Himself to them.

2. The next thought is, the wondrous display itself. Jesus Christ manifest Himself. There are many manifestations of

God to His children but this is the most precious of all. Some manifestations we never wish to have again. We do not

want to have that discovery which we had of our sinfulness, when first we were awakened-we will leave it to God-we

will never pray for it. But here is a manifestation we should like to have every day. “I will manifest Myself to him.” He

does this in different ways. I have had for a long while a manifestation of His sufferings in Gethsemane. I have been for

months musing on His agonies. I think I have even eaten the bitter herbs that grow there and drank of that black brook

Kidron.

I have sometimes gone up stairs alone, to put myself in the very posture Jesus Christ was in and I thought I could

sympathize with Him in His sufferings. I thought I saw the sweat of blood falling down to the ground. I had so sweet a

view of my Savior in His agonies, I hope that one day I may be able to accompany Him still further and see Him on Calvary

and hear His death shriek “Eli, Eli, lama Sabacthani?” Some of you, I know, have seen Jesus with the eye of faith

quite as plainly as if you had seen Him with your natural eyes. You could see your Savior hanging on the Cross. You

thought you saw the very crown of thorns on His head and the drops of blood streaming down His face.

You heard His cry. You saw His bleeding side. You beheld the nails and before long you could have gone and pulled

them out. You could have wrapped Him up in linen and spices and carried His body and washed it with tears and

anointed it with precious ointment. At other times you have had a manifestation of Christ in His gifts. You have seen

that mighty sacrifice He offered, the pile smoking up to Heaven and all your sins burnt up with it. You have seen clearly

the justifying righteousness He has put upon you. And as you have looked at yourselves you have said-

“Strangely, my soul, are you arrayed

By the great sacred Three.

In sweetest harmony of praise

Let all my powers agree.”

There are times when you have felt much joy at the exaltation of Jesus Christ as displayed in His gifts.

Then, again, you will see Him in His triumph, with one foot upon Satan and the other upon death. You will be able

to behold Him marching up the sky with all the glittering hosts behind Him. And in due time you will have a manifestation

of Him to your soul, as sitting on His Father’s Throne until His enemies are made His footstool. And faith will

sometimes so outsoar the wings of time that we can bring futurity to the present and see that great and pompous appearance,

when on the Great White Throne the King shall sit and grasp His scepter and when His saints before Him shall

shout His praise.

If I were to go much farther, I should be accused of fanaticism and so it may be. But yet I will believe and must believe

that there are seasons when the Christian lives next door to Heaven. If I have not gone within an inch of the pearly gates I

am not here. If I have not sometimes snuffed the incense from the censers of the glorified and heard the music of their

harps, I think I am not a living man. There have been seasons of ecstatic joy, when I have climbed the highest mountains

and I have caught some sweet whisper from the Throne. Have you had such manifestations? I will not condemn you if you

have not-but I believe most Christians have them and if they are much in duty and much in suffering they will have

them.

It is not given to all to have that portion. But to some it is and such men know what religion means. I was reading a

short time ago of a Mr. Tennant. He was about to preach one evening and thought he would take a walk. As he was

walking in the woods he felt so overpoweringly the presence of Christ and such a manifestation of Him, that he knelt

down and they could not find him at the hour when he was to have preached. He continued there for hours, insensible as

to whether he was in the body or out of the body. And when they waked him he looked like a man who had been with

Jesus and whose face shone.

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He never should forget, he said, to his dying day, that season of communion, when positively, though he could not

see Christ, Christ was there, holding fellowship with him. Heart against heart, in the sweetest manner. A wondrous display

it must have been. You must know something of it, if not much-otherwise you have not gone far on your spiritual

course. God teach you more and lead you deeper! “Then shall you know, when you follow on to know the Lord.”

4. Then what will be the natural effects of this spiritual manifestation? The first effect will be humility. If a man says, “I

have had such-and-such spiritual communications, I am a great man”-he has never had any communications at all. For

“God has respect unto the humble, but the proud He knows afar off.” He does not want to come near the proud to know

them and will never give them any visits of love.

It will give a man happiness. For he must be happy who lives near to God. Again-it will give a man holiness. A

man who has not holiness has never had this manifestation. Some men profess a great deal-but do not believe any man

unless you see that his deeds answer to what he says. “Be not deceived, God is not mocked.” He will not bestow His favors

upon the wicked. While He will not cast away a perfect man, neither will He respect an evil doer. Thus there will be three

effects of nearness to Jesus, all beginning with the letter “h”-humility, happiness and holiness. May God give them to

us!

II. Now for the second point-AN INTERESTING INQUIRY. Judas said, “How is it that You will manifest Yourself

unto us and not unto the world?” How was this inquiry suggested and how was it answered?

First, it was suggested by ignorance. Poor Judas thought-“How can Jesus manifest Himself to us and not to the

world? Why, if He comes down again, the world will see Him as well as we do. How can He do it? Suppose He appears in

a chariot of fire, or descends in a cloudy pillar-if we see Him, the world must see Him, too.” So, poor thing, he very

ignorantly said, “How can it be, Lord?” Perhaps, too, the question was put by reason of his great kindness. “Ah, Lord,”

said he, “how can it be that You will manifest Yourself to us and not unto the world?” He was slightly an Arminian-he

wanted it all to be given to everybody.

And he said, “How is it that You will manifest Yourself to us and not unto the world?” “O Lord,” said he, “I wish it

were for everybody! I wish it were-my benevolence bids me wish it.” Ah, my Beloved, we never need be more benevolent

than God is. Some say, “If all sinners were saved it would glorify God more.” Certainly God knows better than we do

how many sinners will glorify Him and we had better leave the number to Him and not get to meddling with what we

have no business with. It says in Scripture, “Fools will be meddling.” And fools they are who go meddling with what is

no concern of theirs.

But however this was, Judas said, “Lord, how is it that You will manifest Yourself unto us and not unto the world?”

Perhaps, again, it was love to His Master that made him put the question. “O Lord, I thought You would come and be

King over all the world. And now it appears that You are only to be King over some.” He wished Christ’s dominion

might be universal. He wanted to see every heart the Savior’s Throne. He desired everyone to bow to Him and a very just

and laudable wish it was. And so he asked Christ, “How can it be, Lord, that You will not conquer all?”

Jesus never answered the question. It was right to ask it. But we shall never get the solution of it till we get up yonder.

Perhaps not there. Yet again-perhaps the question was proposed by admiration. “Oh,” he said, “how is it that You

will manifest to us and not unto the world?” Why, he might have said of himself, “What am I? What is my brother Peter

here? Nothing but a fisherman. What is John? Nothing but a fisherman. And as for Matthew, he was a publican and

cheated hundreds. And Zaccheus, how many widows’ houses did he devour! And yet You say You will manifest yourself

unto us and not unto the world?

“There stands Mary the sinner-what did she do, that you should manifest Yourself to her? And there is Mary Magdalene

-she had seven devils. Lord, how is it that You will manifest Yourself unto us and not unto the world?” Is not

this a question we have often had to ask of our own souls?-

“Pause, my soul, adore and wonder;

Ask, O why such love to me?”

And the only answer we could give was-

“Grace has put me in the number

Of the Savior’s family.”

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Come to me and ask me, “Sir, why am I a Christian? Why does God love me?” I must reply, “Because He does love

you.” “But why does He love me?” The only answer I can give you again is, “Because He would love you.” For it is written,

“He will have mercy on whom He will have mercy.” Surely we might admiringly stand here and say, “Lord. Why,

Lord, why do You manifest Yourself unto us and not unto the world?” “Yes,” but some would say, “because you are

better than the world. That is the reason. A fine lot better by nature, certainly!”

Better than the world by nature? Why, some of us were rather worse. There are some of you here who indulged once

in every form of vice-who would blush to stand up here and tell the sins you have committed. But God has manifested

Himself to you as He does not unto the world. Surely we shall have a perpetual cause of wonder in the doings of sovereign

grace.

But what is the answer? Why does Christ manifest Himself to some as He does not unto the world? The question was

not answered. For it was unanswerable. Our Lord went on to say-“If a man love Me, he will keep My words: and My

Father will love him and We will come unto him and make Our abode with him.” He did not tell him why He would

manifest Himself unto them and not unto the world. I have often been asked this question myself-“You say God manifests

Himself to some and not to others-can you tell me why?” Well, Jesus Christ did not and I cannot be expected to do

it any more than He did.

But I will ask you whether you have any objection to it. Is it not enough that He should do so? He has declared that

He has “power over the clay, to make of the same lump one vessel unto honor and another unto dishonor.” And if anyone

finds fault He says, “Who are you, O man? Shall the thing formed say to Him that formed it, why have You made me

thus?” What man shall ask of his father, “Why have you begotten me?” “Am I not God and can I not do what I will with

My own?” “But,” says the objector, “is it not unjust for God to manifest Himself to one and not to the other?”

God replies-“Do you charge Me with injustice? In what respect? Do I owe you anything? Bring the bill and I will

pay it. Do I owe you grace? Then grace would not be grace. It would be a debt. If I owe you grace, you shall have it.”

“But why should my brother have it? He is equally as bad as I.” “Surely,” replies the King, “I may give as I please.” You

have two beggars at your door-have you not a right to turn one away and give the other something? And can I not do

as I will with my own? “I will have mercy upon whom I will have mercy and to whom I will I give it.”

“Well,” says the objector, “suppose I ask and plead for it, shall I not have it? “Yes, you shall,” says God, for so the promise

runs-“Everyone that asks receives and he that seeks finds and to him that knocks it shall be opened.” “But I cannot have

it unless it is written that I shall have it.” “Yes, but if you ask, it is written that you shall ask. And the means are as much ordained

as the end-you could not ask unless I inclined you. And now do not talk to Me of injustice. I ask you to find the passage

in My Word where I ever promised to give grace to everyone. Vile wretch! Have you not rebelled against Me? Your doom

is to be sent to Hell forever. Do you not deserve it?”

“Yes.” “Then who are you that dare to accuse Me of injustice? If I have fifty men on a scaffold to be hanged, have I not a

right to pardon which I will and give the punishment to all the rest? Will you not yield to it?” “No,” says the objector, “I will

never yield to it.” “Then, my Friend, expect not salvation till you do.” Is there a man here who kicks against Divine sovereignty?

It is a testing doctrine. And if he does not receive it, it shows that his pride is not out of him. If we do but preach Divine

sovereignty, some will say, “That man is an Antinomian and a hyper.” We disdain your slander and remind you that the

accusation might more properly be made against yourself. It is you that are the Antinomian, in rebelling against Divine sovereignty.

But a man who receives the doctrine of sovereignty will go to the Throne, saying-

“Perhaps He will admit my plea,

Perhaps will hear my prayer-

But if I perish I will pray,

And perish only there.”

And now, what do you say to this, my Friends? I know what some would say. They would cry, “Nonsense” we believe religion

is a thing very good to keep people in order. But as to these manifestations and these ecstasies, we do not believe in them.”

Very well, Beloved. I have just proved the Truth of what the text says. He does not manifest Himself unto the world. And

you have proved yourself that you are one of the world, because you have not any manifestations. But there are some Christians

here who say, “We do not know much about these manifestations.” No, I know you do not. The Church has been getting

for the last few years into a lean, starved state. God has sent very few preachers who would preach up these special things and

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the Church has been getting lower and lower. And what would become of us, I cannot tell, if there were not saved a little salt,

which God has scattered over the putrefying mass.

Some of us have been living on low ground, when we might have been standing on high places. We have been tarrying in

the valley of Baca, when we might as well have been living on the top of Carmel. I would not choose to dwell in a valley, if I

might build my house on the delectable mountains. O Christian! Up this morning! Let your feet be shod with light once more!

Trip lightly across the plain of trouble-get to the side of Calvary-ascend to the very summit. And from Calvary, I tell

you-you can see across the plain as far as Heaven itself. If you can but get to Pisgah’s top, you shall sing-

“Sweet fields beyond the swelling flood

Stand dressed in living green.”

And, by God’s grace, your spirit shall become like the chariots of Amminadab. Seek, my Brethren such spiritual manifestations,

if you have never experienced them. And if you have been privileged to enjoy them, seek more of them. For what is

there that can so certainly make life happy and so fit you for the sky, as these revelations of Jesus Christ? Oh, you who despise

what we enjoy, from the depths of my soul I pity you. Take heed, lest the first revelation you have of Christ is when He shall be

revealed in flaming fire-taking vengeance on His enemies.

If He is not revealed in mercy, He will be in justice. God give you grace to see Him on Calvary before you see Him on Sinai.

To behold Him as the Savior of sinners before you see Him as the Judge of the quick and dead. God bless you and lead you

back to these manifestations constantly! Amen. Amen. Amen.

Adapted from The C.H. Spurgeon Collection, Version 1.0, Ages Software, 1.800.297.4307