Название: The Spurgeon Series 1857 & 1858
Автор: Charles H. Spurgeon
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Религия: прочее
Серия: Spurgeon's Sermons
isbn: 9781614582069
isbn:
5. II. In the second place, the prophet calls these waivers to an account for the amount of time which they had consumed in making their choice. Some of them might have replied, “We have not yet had an opportunity of judging between God and Baal, we have not yet had time enough to make up our minds”; but the prophet puts away that objection, and he says, “How long do you hesitate between two opinions? How long? For three and a half years not a drop of rain has fallen at the command of Jehovah; is not that proof enough? You have been all this time, three and a half years, expecting, until I should come, Jehovah’s servant, and give you rain; and yet, though you yourselves are starving, your cattle dead, your fields parched, and your meadows covered with dust, like the very deserts, yet all this time of judgment, and trial, and affliction, has not been enough for you to make up your minds. How long, then,” he said, “do you hesitate between two opinions?”
I do not speak, this morning, to the thoroughly worldly; with them I have now nothing to do; another time I may address them. But I am now speaking to you who are seeking to serve God and to serve Satan; you, who are trying to be Christian worldlings, trying to be members of that extraordinary corporation, called the “religious world,” which is a thing that never had an existence except in title. You are endeavouring, if you can, to make up your mind which it shall be; you know you cannot serve both, and you are coming now to the period when you are saying, “Which shall it be? Shall I go thoroughly into sin, and revel in the pleasures of the earth, or become a servant of God?” Now, I say to you this morning, as the prophet did, “How long do you hesitate?” Some of you have been hesitating until your hair has grown grey; the sixtieth year of some of you is drawing near. Is not sixty years long enough to make your choice? “How long do you hesitate?” Perhaps one of you may have tottered into this place, leaning on his staff, and you have been undecided up until now. Your eightieth year has come; you have been a religious character outwardly, but a worldling truly; you are still up to this date hesitating, saying, “I do not know on which side to be.” How long, sirs, in the name of reason, in the name of mortality, in the name of death, in the name of eternity, “How long do you hesitate between two opinions?” You middle aged men, you said when you were youths, “When we are out of our apprenticeship we will become religious; let us sow our wild oats in our youth, and let us then begin to be diligent servants of the Lord.” Lo! you have come to middle age, and are waiting until that quiet villa shall be built, and you shall retire from business, and then you think you will serve God. Sirs, you said the same when you came of age, and when your business began to increase. I therefore solemnly demand of you, “How long do you hesitate between two opinions?” How much time do you want? Oh! young man, you said in your early childhood, when a mother’s prayer followed you, “I will seek God when I come to manhood”; and you have passed that day; you are a man, and more than that and yet you are still hesitating. “How long hesitate you between two opinions?” How many of you have been church goers and chapel goers for years! You have been impressed, too, many a time; but you have wiped the tears from your eyes, and have said, “I will seek God and turn to him with full purpose of heart”; and you are now just where you were. How many more sermons do you want? How many more Sundays must roll away wasted? How many warnings, how many sicknesses, how many tollings of the bell to warn you that you must die? How many graves must be dug for your family before you will be impressed? How many plagues and pestilences must ravage this city before you will turn to God in truth? “How long do you hesitate between two opinions?” Would to God that you could answer this question, and not allow the sands of life to drop, drop, drop from the glass, saying, “When the next goes I will repent,” and yet that next one finds you impenitent. You say, “When the glass is just so low, I will turn to God.” No, sir, no; it will not do for you to talk so; for you may find your glass empty before you thought it had begun to run low, and you may find yourself in eternity when you only thought about repenting and turning to God. How long, you grey heads, how long, you men of ripe years, how long, you youths and maidens, how long will you be in this undecided, unhappy state? “How long do you hesitate between two opinions?”
6. Thus we have brought you so far. We have noted that there are two opinions, and we have asked the question, how much time do you need to decide. One would think the question would require very little time, if time were all was to it, if the will would not be biased to evil and contrary to good, it would require no more time than the decision of a man who has to choose a gallows or life, wealth or poverty; and if we were wise, it would take no time at all; if we understood the things of God, we would not hesitate, but say at once, “Now and for ever God is my God.”
7. III. But the prophet charges these people with the absurdity of their position. Some of them said, “What! prophet, may we not continue to hesitate between two opinions? We are not desperately irreligious, so we are better than the profane; certainly we are not thoroughly pious; but, at any rate, a little piety is better than none, and the mere profession of it keeps us decent, let us try both!” “Now,” says the prophet, “how long do you hesitate?” or, if you like to read it so, “how long do you limp between two opinions?” (how long do you wriggle between two opinions? would be a good word if I might use it.) He represents them as like a man whose legs are entirely СКАЧАТЬ