Sin And Grace
A Sermon
Published on Thursday, October 22nd, 1908.
Delivered by
C. H. SPURGEON,
At the Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington
On Lord's-day Evening, November 1st, 1874.
"Where sin abounded, grace did much more abound."—Romans 5:20.
THERE are two very powerful forces in the world, which have been here
ever since the time when Eve partook of the forbidden fruit in the garden of
Eden. Those two forces are sin and grace. A very great power is sin, a power
dark, mysterious, baleful, but full of force. The sorrows of mankind, whence
came they but from sin? We should have known no war, nor pestilence, nor
famine, nor would aught of sickness or sorrow ever have smitten the human
race had not sin sown its evil seed in this earth. Sin is the Pandora's box
from which all evil has come to mankind. See what ravages death has made;
its hillocks are everywhere. Its mighty scythe mows men down as the mower
cuts down the grass of the field; but death came by sin and after death
comes judgment, and, to the ungodly, the doom that never can be desired, the
eternal wrath whose blackness the wildest tempest cannot imitate. Who digged
this pit? It was the justice of God on account of sin, and sin must
therefore be charged with the authorship of sorrow, disease, death, and
hell. This is no mean power with which we have come into conflict; it is a
veritable Goliath, stalking along and defyin the whole race of mankind.
The
power that is to fight and overcome sin is ever described in the Word of
God, as the natural goodness of human nature, Pshaw! That is but as wax
before the fire, or as the fat of rams upon the altar; it is consumed in a
moment in the fierce heat of sin. The force to combat sin is never
described, in the truthful pages of God's Word, as the power of human
endeavor to keep the law. Indeed, this has been tried, and it has utterly
failed. The way to heaven is not up the steep sides of Sinai; that granitic
mountain is too rugged and too high for unaided human feet to climb. Not
there can be found the weapons with which a man may slay his sins, and fight
his way to everlasting bliss.
The
only counter force against sin is grace; so my text tells us, and we may
learn the same truth from a hundred texts besides. And what is grace? Grace
is the free favor of God, the undeserved bounty of the ever-gracious Creator
against whom we have offended, the generous pardon, the infinite,
spontaneous lovingkindness of the God who has been provoked and angered by
our sin, but who, delighting in mercy, and grieving to smite the creatures
whom he has made, is ever ready to pass by transgression, iniquity, and sin,
and to save his people from all the evil consequences of their guilt. Here,
my brethren and sisters in Christ, is a force that is fully equal to the
requirements of the duel with sin; for this grace, of which I am going to
speak, is divine grace, and hence it is omnipotent, immortal, and immutable.
This favor of God never changes; and when once it purposes to bless anyone,
bless him it will, and none can revoke the blessing. The gracious purpose of
God's free favor to an undeserving man is more than a match for that man's
sin, for it brings to bear, upon his sin, the blood of the incarnate Son of
God, and the majestic and mysterious fire of the eternal Spirit, who burns
up evil and utterly consumes it. With God the Father, God the Son, and God
the Holy Ghost united against sin, the everlasting purposes of grace are
bound to be accomplished, sin must be overcome and my text proved to be
true, "Where sin abounded, grace did more abound."
I.
To illustrate the great principle of my text, I ask you to notice, first,
that the context refers us to THE ENTRANCE OF THE LAW. "The law entered,
that the offense might abound. But where sin abounded, grace did much more
abound."
Instead
of giving any historical statement concerning the introduction of the law in
the days of Moses, I am going to speak about the experimental matter of the
introduction of the law of God into our hearts. Those of you who have been
converted remember the time when the law of the Lord first entered your
heart. The law engraved on the two tables of stone, the law recorded in the
Bible, does but very little for us; but when the law really enters our
heart, is does much for us. What does it do?
The
first thing the law does to most men is to develop the sin that is in
them. Paul writes, "I had not known sin, but by the law: for I had not
known lust, except the law had said, Thou shalt not covet." But, as soon as
he found that there was a law against a certain sin, by some unhallowed
instinct of his unrenewed nature, he wanted to do the very thing that he was
forbidden to do. It was like that with us, the first effect of the entrance
of the law of God into our hearts was to develop the sin that was already
within us. "That is a dreadful thing," says one Yes, it is; but look at the
matter from another aspect. Here is a man who has within him a dire disease
which will be fatal if it is allowed to remain, so the physician gives him
some medicine which throws the disease out. The man used to have a beautiful
complexion, but after he has taken that medicine, his face is covered with
blotches. Is that a bad thing? Yes, the blotches are bad, but the hidden
disease was worse. While that disease was concealed within his system, and
was killing him, he probably did not even know that is was there. He knew
that he was not well, and perhaps thought that he was dying as the result of
some other complaint; but now he sees what the disease is, and everybody
sees it, and now that which looked like an evil thing may turn out to be for
real good to the man. So does it often happen mentally, morally, and
spiritually. A man's wicked heart is full of enmity against God, yet he
thinks—and perhaps he is right in thinking—that he is outwardly a strictly
moral man; but, lo! the law of God, with its requirements of perfect purity
and Absolute obedience, enters his heart, and he rebels against it, and now
the sin is apparent, even to himself. It is likely now that this man will
repent of sin, it is highly probable that this development of his latent sin
will lead him to form a different opinion of himself from any that he ever
had before; and therefore, though the sin is evil, and the development of it
is evil, yet, where sin abounded, grace shall much more abound, and so good
shall come out of the evil after all.
When
the law enters a man's heart, it also brings his sin out in very strong
relief. He never saw his sin to be so black as he now sees it to be. A
stick is crooked, but you do not notice how crooked it is until you place a
straight rule by the side of it. You have a handkerchief, and it seems to be
quite white; you could hardly wish it to be whiter; but you lay it down on
the newly-fallen snow, and you wonder how you could ever have thought it to
be white at all. So the pure and holy law of God, when our eyes are opened
to see its purity, shows up our sin in its true blackness, and in that way
it makes sin to abound; but this is for our good, for that sight of our sin
awakens us to a sense of our true condition, leads us to repentance, drives
us by faith to the precious blood of Jesus, and no longer permits us to rest
in our self-righteousness; and so it can be said of us that, though the
entrance of the law has made our sin to abound, "Where sin abounded, grace
did much more abound."
The
entrance of the law of God into the heart very generally causes great
anguish. Well do I remember that experience, and so do some of you. When
the law entered our hearts, it came not merely with a straight rule, and
with a perfect pattern of whiteness, to show us our deformity and our
blackness, but it also came with a heavy whip; and it laid that whip about
our shoulders, and every time it fell it stung us to the quick. A little
while ago, I met with a brother who said to me, "You cannot too forcibly
describe the anguish of a convicted conscience; for," said he, "I remember
when I reckoned how long it would be before I must, in the ordinary course
of nature, be in hell. I said to myself, 'Suppose I live to be eighty years
of age, yet how short a time it will be before I must be enduring the
infinite wrath of God.'" Yes, that is the effect that the law of the Lord
often produces upon a man when is enters his heart. It brings a mirror
before him, and says to him "Look in there, and see not only what you have
done, but also what is the just consequence of your evil deeds." A man no
longer cavils at God's justice when the law once gets inside his heart; it
shuts his mouth except for graons and sighs, and he has plenty of them.
It
may be thought, by some people, to be a very sad thing that the law should
come into a man's heart to break it, and to cause him such sorrow and
anguish as I am trying to describe. Ah, but it is not so; it is a very
blessed thing. You cannot expect God to clothe you until he has stripped
you, nor to heal you until he has cut the proud flesh out of your wounds.
When a woman is sowing with a fine white silken thread, see must have a
sharp needle to go first, to make a way for the thread to go through after
it; and the anguish of spirit, which the law creates in the soul, is just
the sharp needle which makes a way for the fine silken thread of the gospel
to enter our heart, and so to bless us. Let us thank God if ever we have
experienced the entrance of his law into our hearts: for, although it makes
sin to abound, is makes grace much more abound.
When
the law gets thoroughly into a man's heart, it drives him to despair of
himself. "Oh!" says he, "I cannot keep that law." Once, he thought that
he was as good as other people, and a little better than most; and he did
not know but that, with a little polishing, and a little help, he might be
good enough, to win the favor of God and go to heaven; but when the law
entered his heart, it soon smashed his idol to atoms. The Dagon of
self-righteousness speedily falls before the ten commands of God, and is so
broken that it can never be mended. Men try to set the stump of it up on its
pedestal again; but so long as the law of the Lord is in the same temple
with self-righteousness, self-righteousness can never be exalted again. To
some people, it seems to be a dreadful thing to give a man such a bad
opinion of himself, but, indeed, it is the greatest blessing that could come
to him, for when he despairs of himself, he will fly to Christ to save him.
When the last crust is gone from his cupboard, he will cry to the great
Giver of the bread of life, whereof, if a man eat, he shall live for ever.
You must starve the sinner's self-righteousness to mane him willing to feed
on Christ; and thus the very depths of his despair, when he thinks that he
must be lost for ever, will only lead him, by God's abundant love, to a
fuller appreciation of the heights of God's grace.
Once
more, when the law of God enters a man's heart, it pronounces a curse
upon him. That was a singular scene which was beheld over against mount
Ebal, and over against mount Gerizim, where one company read the curses, and
another company read the blessings out of the book of the law. Now the law
can do nothing for a sinner but say to him, "Cursed is every one that
continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the law to do
them;" but the gospel comes in, and it replies to the curse of the law with
such words as these, "Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven, whose
sin is covered. Blessed is the man unto whom the Lord impuneth not iniquity,
and in whose spirit there is no guile." Let the law curse as is may, the
gospel's blessing is richer and stronger, for the gospel says, "Therefore
being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus
Christ;" and "there is therefore now no condemnation to them, which are in
Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit."
II.
Now I change our line of thought, and come closer home to Christians, by
noticing that the great principle of our text is also illustrated in THE
AFTER-EXPERIENCE OF THE BELIEVER.
Some
young converts imagine that, as soon as they believe in Christ and find
peace with God, they will be perfect; and have no more sin within them. Such
an erroneous idea will only prepare them for a great disappointment, for
conversion is not the end of the battle with sin, it is only the beginning
of that battle. From the moment that a man believes in Jesus, and is thereby
saved, he begins his life-long struggle against his inbred sins. I
hear that, there are some brethren and sisters who have become perfect, and
I am pleased to hear it if it is true: but I am glad they are not members of
my family, I do not think I could live with them very peaceably, as I have
generally found that the so-called "perfect." People are usually not at all
pleasant people to be associated with those of us who do not profess to be
perfect. We wish we were perfect, and we wish that other people were
perfect; but, hitherto, our investigations have led us to believe that the
perfection which is claimed by certain persons is in every case a mistake,
and in many cases is a delusion and a sham.
Our
opinion is that men, after they are converted, and begin to examine
themselves in the light of God's Word, if they are at all like us, find
sin everywhere within them;—sin in the affections, so that the hearts
lusteth after evil things;—sin in the judgment, so that it often makes most
serious mistakes, and honestly puts bitter for sweet, and sweet for
bitter—sin in the desires, so that though we try to curb them, they wander
hither and thither, whither we would not;—sin in the will, so that Lord
Will-be-will proves that he is still very proud, and wants to have his own
way,—and is not willing to bow submissively to the will of God;—sin in the
memory, so that the most godly people can often recollect a snatch of a bad
old song which they used to hear or to sing, far more readily than they can
remember a text of Scripture; which they wish to treasure up in their
memories, for memory has become unhinged, like all the rest of our
faculties, and is quick to retain evil, and slow to retain that which is
good. Brethren and sisters in Christ, in what part of our body does sin not
dwell? Is there any single faculty, or power, or propensity that we have
which will not lead us astray if we will let it do so? Are we not obliged to
be always upon our guard against ourselves, and to watch ourselves as a
garrison of soldiers would have to watch the natives of a country whom they
had subdued, but who were anxious to throw off the yoke of the foreigners
who had overcome them. In a similar fashion, grace is a foreigner in
possession of our nature, and it holds by its own superior force what it has
won; and only by its supernatural strength are we kept from regaining our
former position.
Thus
you see how sin abounds, even in the heart of a believer; but, blessed be
God, grace doth much more abound there; for, although the will is
still strong, there is a higher power that subdues and controls it so that
our will is being gradually conformed to the will of God. Our affections,
though they are apt to grovel here below, do soar towards Christ, for he
really has won our hearts. Our desires do go astray, yet their main tendency
is towards holiness. Blessed be the name of the Lord, unless we are awfully
deceived, we do desire to do that which is well-pleasing in his sight. Our
memory, too, though I have already confessed its faultiness, does often
enable us to remember Jesus Christ, and it never will forget him whoever
else it may forget. Ay, and our whole nature, though I have truly spoken of
its faults, is a new nature, which God has wrought within us,—a nature that
is akin to the divine, and in this nature grace triumphs over sin, so that
where sin aboundeth, grace doth much more abound.
The
same truth may be learned in another way. Sin abounds in the believer, not
merely in the shape of the original sin in which he was born, and in the
tendency to sin which is ever present with him, but sin mars the best
thing he ever does. Did you ever examine one of your own prayers, did
you ever look at it critically after it was finished? Shall I tell you what
it was like? It was like something that man had manufactured, and which,
when observed by the naked eyed, looked very beautiful. Put a microscope
over it, and look at it. Take a needle if you like, for that seems to be one
of the most polished pieces of metal conceivable; and as soon as you place
it under the microscope, you say, "Why, I have got a rough bar of iron here!
Surely it cannot be a needle." Yes it is, but you are looking at it now with
a power far beyond your ordinary sight; and, in like manner, when the grace
of God opens a man's eyes to see his best actions as they appear in God's
sight, he sees that those actions are marred by sin. There is not anything
that he has done which appears to him to be what it ought to be when he
looks at it aright in the light of God's Word. The most consecrated action
of his life, the most devout communion with Christ, the most intense ardor
after God, falls far short of what it ought to be, and has something in it
which ought not to be there. When the grace of God is strong within us, it
makes sin appear to abound even to our own vision; we see it in every hymn
we sing, in every prayer we pray, in every sermon we preach.
Not
only do we see sin in our best things, but we also discover sin in our
omissions. We were never troubled about that matter before, but now we
recollect that what we do not do is often sinful;—not merely the wrong that
we commit, but the good that we omit, the good that we neglect or forget to
do. There is much sin there. Then we begin to examine our thoughts, and our
trivial utterances, and we see them all crusted over with sin. Tested under
the light of God's Word, everything seems to be honeycombed through and
through with sin, so that sin indeed aboundeth. Well, what then? Why, then,
this blessed text comes sweetly home to our hearts. "The blood of Jesus
Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin." And now, how gloriously grace
abounds! Now we prove the power of that precious blood which can wash us
whiter than snow, so that God himself shall say to each one of us, "There is
no spot in thee." Beloved brethren and sisters in Christ, I do firmly
believe that a deep and clear sense of sin is necessary to a right
estimation of the power of pardoning love. I am sure that it is a great
blessing to us when we have a deep sense of our sinnership. God forbid that
we should ever pray as the Pharisee did, "God, I thank thee, that I am not
as other men are." Far better would it be for us to imitate the publican,
and cry, "God be merciful to me a sinner." None but those who are lost prize
the Savior who came to seek and to save that which was lost, none but those
who feel that they are foul and vile rightly value his cleansing blood. O
beloved, when your sin abounds, then is the time to recollect that grace
much more abounds. Sinner as you are, you are forgiven, you are "accepted in
the Beloved," you are saved, you are a child of God, you shall be in heaven
ere long, to praise for ever the grace that shall be crowned with glory.
Once
more on this point. I believe that many of you have had an experience
similar to mine, and that there have been times when you have been living
specially near to God, and walking in the light of his countenance, when, on
a sudden, the sin that dwelleth in you has seemed to attack you just when
you least expected it. I know that my fiercest temptations often come to me
immediately after my highest enjoyment of communion with God. They seem to
come like a sharp draught of cold air the moment you step out of a warm
room, and you hardly know what to do for the best, you are scarcely prepared
for it. It will sometimes happen that a tempter, which you thought you had
quite overcome, will rush upon you like a lion out of a thicket; or a
passion, which you thought had been most eventually conquered, will come
sweeping down upon you like a hurricane from the hills, and your poor little
skiff upon the lake seems well-nigh overwhelmed with its furious onslaught.
Then, as you look at yourselves, and are surprised to find so much sin in
yourselves, you know that sin abounds; what do you do then? Well, I believe
that, at such times, Christians try to nestle closer than ever under the
wings of God, and they feel humbler, and they go to the precious blood of
Jesus with a more intense desire to prove again its cleansing power; and
they cry to the Strong for strength, and they feel more than ever they did
before their need of the Holy Spirit's sanctifying power. Ralph Erskine said
that he was more afraid of a sleeping devil than of a roaring devil, and
there was good reason for his fear, for when the devil was roaring, the
saints would be more on the watch than when he was quiet. The worst
temptation in the world is not to be tempted at all; but when there is a
strong temptation, and your soul is fully aware of it, you are on your guard
against it. The wave of temptation may even wash you higher up upon the Rock
of ages, so that you cling to it with a firmer grip than you have ever done
before, and so again where sin abounds, grace will much more abound.
III.
Now I must close with a few general observations upon another matter. The
great truth revealed in our text is not only illustrated by the entrance of
the law into the hearts of believers, and in the after-life of Christians,
but also IN ALL THE BLESSINGS OF SALVATION.
It
is very wonderful, but it is certainly true, that there are many persons
in heaven in whom sin once abounded. In the judgment of their
fellow-men, some of them were worse sinners than others. There was Saul of
Tarsus, there was the dying thief, there was the woman in the city who was a
sinner,—a sinner in a very open and terrible sense. These, and many more of
whom we read in the Scriptures, were all great sinners, and it was a great
wonder of grace, in every instance, that they should be forgiven; but did
they make poor Christians when they were converted? Quite the reverse; they
loved much because they had been forgiven much. Amongst the best servants of
God are many of those who were once the best servants of the devil. Sin
abounded in them, but grace much more abounded when. It took possession of
their hearts and lives. They were long led captive by the devil at his will,
but they never were such servants to Satan as they afterwards became to the
living and true God. They threw all the fervor of their intense natures into
the service of their Savior, and so rose superior to some of their
fellow-disciples, who did not so fully realize how much they owed to their
Lord. I trust that any here present, who have gone far in sin, may be saved
by the immeasurable grace of God ere they leave this building, and that,
throughout the whole of their future lives, they may love Jesus Christ
better, and serve him more than others who have not sinned as deeply as they
have.
The
same truth comes out if we think of what sin has done for us. O
brethren, sin has infected the nature of man with a foul leprosy, a deadly
disease, but Jesus has cured the disease, and given us a life of a holier
kind than we ever knew before. Sin has robbed us; but Christ has restored to
us more than sin ever took away from us. Sin has stripped us; but Christ has
clothed us in a better robe than our natural righteousness could ever have
been. Well do we sing of Jesus,—
"In him the tribes of Adam boast
More blessings than their father lost."
Sin has brought us very low, but Christ has lifted us higher than we stood
before sin cast us down. Sin took away from man his love to God, but Christ
has given us an intenser love to God than Adam ever had, for we love God
because he has first loved us, and given his Son to die for us, and we have,
in his greater grace, a good reason for yielding to him a greater love. Sin
took away obedience from man, nut now that saints obey to a yet higher
degree than they could have doen before; for I suppose it would not been
possible for unfallen man to suffer, but now we are capable of suffering for
Christ; and many martyrs have gone signing to death for the truth, because,
while sin made them capable of suffering, Christ's grace has made them
capable of obedience to him in the suffering, and so of doing more to prove
their allegiance to God than would have been possible if they had never
fallen. Sin, dear brethren and sisters in Christ, has shut us out of Eden;
yet let us not weep, for Christ has prepared a better paradise for us in
heaven; Sin has deprived us of the river that rippled o'er sands of gold,
and of the green glades of that blessed garden into which suffering could
never have come unless sin had first entered, but God has provided for us "a
pure river of water of life," and a lovelier garden than Eden ever was; and
there we shall for ever dwell through the abounding grace of our Lord and
Savior Jesus Christ, which has abounded even over our abounding sin.
Sin
has separated us from God, but grace has brought us nearer to God than we
ever were before sin divided us from him. Until Christ became man, there was
no man on the earth, and there would have been no man, who was more to God
than man could be to his Maker; but now there lives a Man who is more to God
than any created being ever could be, for that Man is also God, and he sits
at the right hand of his Father, and shares with him the control of the
universe. That Man has brought the human race nearer to the Deity than the
mere act of creation could possibly have done. Glory be to God for Jesus
Christ, the Man from heaven, the Son of Mary, and the Son of the Highest.
Sin wrought us untold mischief, but grace has made even that mischief to be
a gain to us, for now we are sought with blood as, otherwise, we never could
have been. Now we know both sin and righteousness as we could not otherwise
have done; and now the whispering of the old serpent, which was a lie, has
proved to have a truth concealed in it, for we are indeed as gods, since we
have become partakers of the divine nature by virtue of our union with the
Christ of God. O wondrous Fall, which would have broken us hopelessly had it
not been for still more marvelous grace! O wondrous restoration which has
lifted us up, and made us more perfect than we were before we were broken,
and elevated us to a glory of which we could never have dreamed, had we
lived with Adam and Eve in paradise, and remained in innocence for ever!
One
practical remark I want to make before I close; it is this, if you have
received this grace, which has abounded over your sin, take care that you do
more for grace than you ever did for sin. It is wonderful how much
people will do for sin, what they will give, what they will spend, and what
they will endure to gratify their passions and serve their cruel taskmaster,
Satan. I should not like to guess what some men waste on their lusts; I
should not like to make a calculation as to what some people spend in a year
on what they call their pleasures. Well, whatever the amount is, shall they
give more, shall they do more for their god than we give and do for ours?
Shall they be more intense in their adoration of Satan than we are in our
obedience to God? That must never be, nor must we ever permit, them to outdo
us in the praises of their treasure. They make night hideous with their
praises of their god, Bacchus; but we do not often annoy them with the songs
of Zion; it would be as well, perhaps, if we did; but we are often cowards
in not rendering due praises to our God. They are not ashamed to make the
welkin ring with their lascivious notes; then let us pluck up courage, and
solidly assert the glories of our God and the wonders of our Lord and
Savior, Jesus Christ. Especially, let us never be ashamed to say, "He loved
me, and gave himself for me, and blessed be his holy name for ever and ever.
Amen."
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