Paul
N. F. (3 Apr 2007)
"THE OBEDIENCE OF FAITH"
- When Charles H. Spurgeon said,
"If all the world would obey the Lord, what
a heaven on earth there would be!" --- No truer words were ever spoken.
-
-
-
THE OBEDIENCE OF FAITH
- (If
all the world would obey the Lord, what a heaven on earth there would be!)
-
- BY
CHARLES H. SPURGEON
(This sermon
was delivered on August 21, 1890)
-
-
By faith Abraham when he was called to go out into a
place which
he should after receive for an inheritance, obeyed; and he went out,
not knowing whither he went.
---Hebrews 11:8.
-
The part of the text to which I shall call your attention lies in these
words,
- By
faith Abraham obeyed. 'Obedience' what a blessing it would be if we
were all trained
to it by the Holy Spirit! How fully should we be restored if we
were perfect in it! If all the world would obey the Lord, what a heaven
on earth there
would be! Perfect obedience to God would mean love among
- men, justice to all classes,
and peace in every land. Our will brings envy, malice,
war; but the Lord's will would bring us love, joy, rest, bliss. Obedience--let
us pray for it for ourselves and others!
-
Is there a heart that will not bend To thy divine control? Descend,
O sovereign love,
descend, and melt that stubborn soul! Surely, though we have had to
mourn
- our
disobedience with many tears and sighs, we now find joy in yielding ourselves
as servants of
the Lord: our deepest desire is to do the Lord's will in all things.
-
Oh, for obedience! It has been supposed by many ill-instructed people
that the doctrine
of justification by faith is opposed to the teaching of good works, or
- obedience.
There is no truth in the supposition. We preach the obedience of faith.
- Faith
is the fountain, the foundation, and the fosterer of obedience. Men
obey not God
till they believe him. We preach faith in order that men may be brought
to
- obedience.
-
To disbelieve is to disobey. One of the first signs of practical obedience
is found in the
obedience of the mind, the understanding, and the heart; and this is expressed
in
- believing
the teaching of Christ, trusting to his work, and resting in his salvation.
Faith is the
morning star of obedience. If we would work the work of God, we must believe
on Jesus Christ
whom he hath sent. Brethren, we do not give a secondary place to obedience,
as some suppose. We look upon the obedience of the heart to the will of
- God as salvation.
-
The attainment of perfect obedience would mean perfect salvation. We regard
sanctification,
or obedience, as the great design for which the Saviour died. He shed
- his
blood that he might cleanse us from dead works, and purify unto himself
a people zealous
for good works.
-
It is for this that we were chosen: we are elect unto holiness. We know
nothing of election
to continue in sin. It is for this that we have been called: we are called
to be
- saints.
Obedience is the grand object of the work of grace in the hearts of those
who are chosen
and called: they are to become obedient children, conformed to the image
- of the Elder Brother,
with whom the Father is well pleased.
-
The obedience that comes of faith is of a noble sort. The obedience of a
slave ranks very
little higher than the obedience of a well-trained horse or dog, for it
is tuned to the crack
of the whip. Obedience which is not cheerfully rendered is not the obedience
of the heart,
and consequently is of little worth before God. If the man obeys because
he has no opportunity
of doing otherwise, and if, were he free, he would at once become a
- rebel
-- there is nothing in his obedience.
-
The obedience of faith springs from a principle within, and not from compulsion
without.
It is sustained by the mind's soberest reasoning and the heart's
- warmest
……passion.
-
The man reasons with himself that he ought to obey his Redeemer, his Father,
his …God;
and, at the same time, the love of Christ constrains him so to do, and thus
-
what …argument suggests affection performs.
-
A sense of great obligation, an apprehension of the fitness of obedience,
and spiritual renewal
of heart, work an obedience which becomes essential to the sanctified soul.
- Hence,
it is not relaxed in the time of temptation, nor destroyed in the hour of
losses and sufferings.
Life has no trial which can turn the gracious soul from its passion for
- obedience;
and death itself doth but enable it to render an obedience which shall be
as blissful
as it will be complete.
-
Yes, this is a chief ingredient of heaven, that we shall see the face of
our Lord, and serve him day and night in his temple. Meanwhile, the more
fully we obey at this present, the nearer we shall be to his temple-gate.
May the Holy Spirit work in us, so
that, by faith, like Abraham -- we may obey!
-
-
- Yours
in Christ,
-
Paul N. F.