John 1:16 -
The Fullness of Jesus,
the Treasury of Saints
[Once again, we will use a sermon by C. H. Spurgeon for our study in the Prologue of John.
Mr. Spurgeon preached this sermon on the evening of February 28th, 1869 at the
Metropolitan Tabernacle in London. It can be found in Volume XV of The Metropolitan
Tabernacle Pulpit (Sermon #858).]--Ed
16
And of His fullness have all we received, and grace for grace.[Footnote #1]
These are not words spoken by John the Baptist, as a cursory reader might imagine,
but they were written by John the Evangelist. The verse preceding is a paragraph
cast into the midst of the gospel causing a temporary break. Omitting that verse, we
read as follows: "The Word was made flesh and dwelt among us (and we beheld
His glory, the glory as of the only-begotten of the Father), full of grace and truth;
. . . and of His fullness have all we received, and grace for grace" (John 1:14,16). In
its more limited meaning, as it stands in its connection, the text appears to teach
that while Jesus Christ dwelt on earth, there was a divine glory about His person
and character, which His apostles and disciples clearly beheld, perceiving in Him
and in His teaching a fullness of grace and truth; and further, that this grace and
truth were divinely contagious, so that the disciples participated therein, and men
took this being especially true of the apostles, who drank most fully into the life
and power of Jesus, and continued to reveal to the world, after their Master was
taken up, the grace and truth of the gospel committed to them.
But this passage is not to be restricted to so limited a sense: it is of far wider range
and of much greater depth. We understand it of our Lord Jesus in the whole of His
character and work; looking beyond His earthly life we see Him in His crucifixion,
His resurrection, His ascension, His session at the right hand of God and His
Second Advent, and beholding Him as the all-sufficient Savior, we this day behold
His glory, the glory as of the only-begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth;
and we, that is, the whole range of the saints in all ages past and in all periods to
come, we receive out of this fullness superabundant grace.
I. In discussing this text, I shall first remind you of the ONE GLORIOUS PERSON
concerning whom this verse is written. There are other persons in the verse, but
they are comparatively insignificant.
"All we" are mentioned as the receivers; we occupy the humblest place, but the one
throne of the text (and a glorious high throne it is) is reserved for Him who is
intended in the pronoun "His". "Of His fullness have all we received"; we know
that this is no other than that august personage whom John calls "The Word", or the
speech of God; so called, because God in nature has revealed Himself, as it were,
inarticulately and indistinctly, but in His Son He has revealed Himself as a man
declares his inmost thoughts, by distinct and intelligible speech. Jesus is to the
Father what speech is to us; He is the unfolding of the Father's thoughts, the
revelation of the Father's heart. He that hath seen Christ hath seen the Father.
"Wouldst thou have me see thee?" said Socrates, "then speak"; for speech reveals the
man. Wouldst thou see God? Listen to Christ, for He is God's Word, revealing the
heart of Deity.
Lest, however, we should imagine Jesus to be a mere utterance, a mere word
spoken and forgotten, our apostle is peculiarly careful that we should know that
Jesus is a real and true person, and therefore tells us that the divine Word, out of
whose fullness we have received, is most assuredly God. No language can be more
distinct. He ascribes to Him the eternity which belongs to God: "In the beginning
was the Word" (John 1:1). He peremptorily claims divinity for Him: "The Word
was God" (John 1:1). He ascribes to Him the acts of God: "Without Him was not
anything made that was made" (John 1:3). He ascribes to Him self-existence, which
is the essential characteristic of God: "In Him was life" (John 1:4). He claims for
Him a nature peculiar to God: "God is light, and in Him is no darkness at all" (I
John 1:5), and the Word is "the true light, which lighteth every man that cometh
into the world" (John 1:9). No writer could be more explicit in his utterances; and
beyond all question he sets forth the proper deity of the Blessed One of whom we
all must receive if we would obtain eternal salvation.
Yet John does not fail to set forth that our Lord was also man. He saith, "the Word
was made flesh" (John 1:14)--not merely assumed manhood, but was made; and
made not merely man, as to His nobler part, His soul but man as to his flesh, His
lower element. Our Lord was not a phantom, but one who, as John declares in his
epistle, was touched and handled. "The Word dwelt among us" (John 1:14). He
tabernacled with the sons of men--a carpenter's shed His lowly refuge, and the
caves and mountains of the earth His midnight resort in His after life. He dwelt
among sinners and sufferers. among mourners and mortals, Himself completing
His citizenship among us by becoming obedient to death, even the death of the
cross. See, then, my beloved brethren, where God has treasured up the fullness of
His grace. It is in a person so august that heaven and earth tremble at the majesty of
His presence, and yet in a person so humble that He is not ashamed to call us
"brethren".
The apostle, lest we should by any means put a second person in comparison with
the one and only Christ, throughout this chapter continually enters caveats and
disclaimers against all others. He bars the angels and shuts out cherubim and
seraphim by saying, "Without Him was not anything made that was made!" (John
1:3). At the creation of the world no ministering spirit may intrude a finger; angels
may sing over what Jesus creates, but as the builder of all things He stands alone.
Further on, the apostle guards the steps of the throne against John, and virtually
against all the other witnesses of the Messiah; albeit among those that are born of
women there was not a greater than John the Baptist, yet, "he was not that Light"
(John 1:8). The stars must hide their heads when the sun shines; John must decrease
and Christ must increase. Nay, there was one whom all the Jews reverenced and
whose name is coupled with that of the Lamb in the truimphant song of heaven;
they sang the song of Moses, the servant of God, and of the Lamb. But even he is
excluded from the glory of this text, "For the law was given by Moses, but grace
and truth came by Jesus Christ" (John 1:17). Moses must sit down at the foot of the
throne with the tables of stone in his hands, but Jesus sits on the throne and
stretches out the silver sceptre to His people. Lest there should remain a
supposition that another person yet unmentioned should usurp a place, the apostle
adds, "No man at any time hath seen the Father" (John 1:18). The best and holiest
have all alike been unable to look into that excellent glory; but the Word has not
only seen the Father, but has declared Him unto us.
The text is as Tabor to us, and while in its consideration, at the first we see Moses
and Elijah and all the saints with the Lord Jesus, receiving of His fullness, yet all
these vanish from our minds, and our spirit sees "no man, but Jesus only" (Matt.
17:8). Gazing into this text, one feels as John did when the gates of heaven were
opened to him and he looked within them, and he declared, "I looked, and lo, a
Lamb stood on the Mount Zion" (Rev. 14:1). He saw other things afterwards, but
the first thing that caught his eye and retained his mind was the Lamb in the midst
of the throne. Brethren, it becomes us as ministers, to be constantly making much of
Christ, to make Him indeed the first, the last, and the midst of all our discourses,
and it becomes all believers, whenever they deal with matters of salvation, to set
Jesus on high and to crown Him with many crowns. Give Him the best of your
thoughts, and works, and affections, for He it is who fills all things, and to whom
all things should pay homage.
II. Secondly, there are TWO PRECIOUS DOCTRINES in the text.
The first doctrine teaches us that in this glorious person of Jesus all fullness is
treasured up, and the second, without which the first might yield us little comfort,
that all this treasure of grace is received by His saints, so that all His saints receive
all they have that is gracious and truthful from Himself.
1. First, consider this master truth, that all grace is treasured up in Christ Jesus. "His
fullness," says the text. Ah! what a word, "His fullness"! If I had no other text given
me to preach from until all preaching should be ended, this might suffice. His
fullness! O brethren, here is a fullness which cannot be measured for length, or
breadth, or depth, for He is filled with all the fullness of God. "In Him dwelleth all
the fullness of the Godhead bodily"(Col. 2:9). The fullness of which the text speaks
particularly is His double fullness of grace and truth. There is in Jesus Christ a
fullness of essential grace, for it is His nature to overflow with free mercy to the
miserable sons of men. It was a fullness of grace in Him that made Him enter into
the eternal covenant and undertake suretyship engagements for us; it was a fullness
of love and grace which sustained Him in the discharge of His liabilities as our
Great Substitute, and the fullness of grace it is which constrains Him still to
persevere in His work, saying, "For Zion's sake I will not rest, and for Jerusalem's
sake I will not hold my peace" (Isa. 62:1). In Christ there is a fullness of grace to
impart to us, and to that the text refers a fullness of pardoning grace, so that no sin
can ever exceed His power to forgive; a fullness of justifying grace, so that He
justifieth the ungodly; a fullness of converting grace, so that He calleth to Him
whom He pleases; a fullness of quickening grace, for "He quickeneth whom He
will" (John 5:21). Here is a fullness of purifying grace, for His blood cleanseth us
from all sin, and a further fullness of comforting grace, of sustaining grace, of
satisfying grace, of restoring grace--Jesus has a fullness in whatever office you
regard Him, and with whatsoever needs.
He is never limited in any gift or grace, but always full thereof. This fullness time
would fail us to rehearse. Drink you of it; plunge you into it, and you shall know
far more than I by any possibility can tell. This, however, I may say--the fullness
which dwells in Christ is from the text clearly proved to be an abiding fullness, for,
mark, "All we," saith he, "have received of it"; and yet he calls it a "fullness" still. It
was a fullness before a single sinner came to it to receive pardon--before a solitary
saint had learned to drink of that river the streams whereof make glad the church;
and now, after thousands, and even myriads of blood-redeemed saints, have drank
of this life-giving stream, it is just as overflowing as ever. We are accustomed to say,
that if a child takes a cupful from the sea it is just as full as before, but that is not
literally true, there must be just so much the less of water in the ocean; but it is
literally true of Christ, that when we have not only taken out cups full--for our
needs are too great to be satisfied with such small quantities--when we have taken
out oceans full of grace--and we want as much as that to carry us to heaven--there is
actually as much left. Although we each have drawn upon the exchequer of His
love to an extent so boundless that we cannot understand it, yet there is as much
mercy and grace left in Christ as there was before, and it is a "fullness" still, after all
the saints have received of it.
Brethren, there is a fullness of truth in our Lord as well as grace, that is to say,
everything which Christ says is not only true, but emphatically true; and not only
true in one sense, but true in multiplied senses--true to the letter and to the jots and
to the tittles; true today and true tomorrow, and true forever; true to one saint and
true to every saint; true at one season and true in all seasons. There is a blessed
emphasis of divine reality in Christ Jesus. Every word He speaks is as the decree of
God; every doctrine that He promulgates is clear as the great white throne. In Him
there is no admixture of error. "Never man spake like this man" (John 7:46),
because His teaching is unalloyed from heaven. Brethren, there is an abiding
fullness of truth in Christ; after you have heard it for fifty years, you see more of its
fullness than you did at first. Other truths weary the ear. I will defy any man to
hold together a large congregation, year after year, with any other subject but Christ
Jesus. He might do it for a time; He might charm the ear with the discoveries of
science, or with the beauties of poetry, and His oratory might be of so high an order
that He might attract the multitudes who have itching ears, but they would in time
turn away and say, "This is no longer to be endured. We know it all." All music
becomes wearisome but that of heaven; but oh! if the minstrel doth but strike this
celestial harp, though he keepeth his fingers always among its golden strings, and
be but poor and unskilled upon and instrument so divine, yet the melody of Jesus'
name, and the sweet harmony of all His acts and attributes, will hold His listeners
by the ears and thrill their hearts as nought beside can do. The theme of Jesus' love
is inexhaustible, though preachers may have dwelt upon it century after century, a
freshness and fullness still remain.
2. The second doctrine is that all the saints have received all of grace out of the fullness of
Christ. It is not one saint who has derived grace from the Redeemer, but all. "Of His
fullness have all we received." And they have not merely derived a part of the
blessings of grace from Jesus, but all that they ever had they received from Him. It
would be a wonderful vision if we could now behold passing before us the long
procession of the chosen, the great and the small, the goodly fellowship of apostles,
the noble army of martyrs, the once weeping but now rejoicing band of penitents.
There they go! Methinks I see them all in their white robes, bearing their palms of
victory. But you shall not, if you stay the procession at any point, be able to
discover one who will claim to have obtained grace from another source than
Christ; nor shall one of them say, "I owed the first grace I gained to Christ, but I
gained other grace elsewhere." No, the unanimous testimony is "of His fullness
have all we received." My inner eye beholds the throng as the processing pauses
before the throne. Oh! see you not, how every man prostrates himself before the
throne of the Lamb, and altogether they cry, "Of His fullness have all we
received." Whoever we may be, however well we may have served our Master,
whatever of honor we have gained, though our Lord has helped us to finish our
course and to win the prize, yet it's all of Him--Not unto us, not unto us, but unto
Thy name be all the praise.
What a precious truth, then, we have before us, that all the saints in all ages have
been just what you and I must be tonight if we would be saved--receivers. They did
not any one of them bring anything to Christ, but received from Him. If they at this
moment cast their crowns at His feet, their crowns were first given to them by Him.
Their robes are wedding garments of His providing. The whole course of saintship
is receptive. None of the saints talk of what they gave; none of them speak of what
came of themselves, but they all bear testimony without a solitary exception that
they were all receivers from Jesus' fullness. Oh, but this casts mire into the face of
human self-sufficiency! What, not one saint who had a little of his own? Not one of
all the favored throng who could furnish himself? No, not one. Did none of them
look to the works of the law? No, they all went to Jesus and His grace, and none to
Moses and the law. Did none of them trust in priests of earthly anointing? Did none
of them bow down before holy fathers and saintly confessors to obtain absolution?
There is not a word said about such gentry, nor even a syllable concerning appeals
to saints, but all the saved ones received direct "from His fullness" who filleth all in
all.
I must not leave this second doctrine, however, without noting that these receptive
saints received very abundantly. They drew from an abundance, even a fullness;
and they also drew largely, as indicated by the words, "and grace for grace," which
words are only difficult to understand by reason of the extent of meaning hidden in
them, for they might be translated a dozen ways with equal accuracy. Do they not
mean this?-- Just as Samson slew so many Philistines that he cried out, "Heaps
upon heaps" (Judges 15:16), so our Lord has given to His people grace at such a
rate that they have grace upon grace for abundance. They have received from Him
such a plenty, such a pleroma of grace and truth, that as the ancients fabled Mount
Pelion to be piled upon Ossa by the giants, to make a staircase the the skies, so our
great Savior has piled mountains of grace upon mountains of grace, that on these,
as on stupendous ladder, His elect might climb to the throne of God. Yet not one
step to heaven is other than of grace: all comes out of His fullness.
III. We advance to the third point, and mark THREE EXPERIENCES indicated by
the text.
And first, beloved in the Lord, if you and I would receive of the fullness of Christ, it
is imperatively necessary that we should have an experience of our own emptiness.
All saints receive of Christ, but no vessel can receive beyond the measure of its
emptiness. The more full it is, so much the less is its capacity for reception, and the
more empty it is, so much the greater the space which can be filled. This is a hard
lesson for human nature, for we firmly believe in ourselves. Thou sayest, "I am rich
and increased in goods, and have need of nothing"; we learn this with our mother
tongue, and we repeat it so often that we believe it, and like the Pharisee, make it
our daily boast, "God, I thank thee that I am not as other men are." (Luke 18:11).
The Pharisee would see no chaff in his wheat, whereas grace makes us to be like the
publican, who could see no wheat in his chaff, and would only say, "God be
merciful to me a sinner" (Luke 18:13). It is hard going down the ladder of self-
knowledge. We give up with great reluctance our flattering opinions of ourselves.
We are hard to empty of the notion of our own inherent merit; and if the Lord spills
that upon the ground, we then hold to the idea of our own inherent strength. What
if we have no merit, yet at least we will have some by-and-by, and we spin out our
poor resolves as freely as a spider spins her web, and the fabric is as frail. And if
our notion of power be taken from us, we then betake ourselves to our self-
justification, by endeavoring to persuade ourselves that we are not responsible; or
wrapping ourselves in despair, we declare that we cannot help ourselves, and
wickedly cast our ruin upon destiny. Man is hard to be dragged away from the rock
of self-justification. Like Theseus in the old mythology, he is glued so fast to the
great stone of self-conceit which lies hard by the gates of hell, that a stronger than
Hercules is needed to tear him from it; and even such a deliverer must rend him
from it, leaving the skin behind. When the Lord comes and makes the sinner stand
before his bar and plead, "Lord, I am guilty," the man is made ready to receive of
Christ's merits because he is emptied of his own. Hear him again: "Lord, I would
fain repent and believe, but oh! for this I have no strength; be thou my helper." The
man's own power is gone, and with it his hardness of heart. He confessed that he
has willfully and wickedly sinned, and now the Lord pours of His grace and mercy.
Our Lord withholds from those who are full, but He is always ready to give to
those who are empty. Never does He keep back anything from those who are
consciously in need. Never does He give aught to those who say they need nothing.
There must be in each of us, then, an emptiness of self if we are to enjoy the fullness
of Christ.
But he who knows the emptiness of self is not [thereby] saved. The man who knows
he has the fever, is not cured by that knowledge. The man who knows he is
condemned to die, is not for that reason pardoned. It is a dreadful thing to stop
short with a mere sense of sin; we must go on to the second experience--a personal
reception of Christ Jesus. Here I shall put the question to each of my hearers,
especially to professors of religion: Have you received out of Christ's fullness? I am
not asking you whether you are church members. We sorrowfully know that it is
one thing to be that, and quite another thing to receive Christ. I do not ask you
whether you received the ordinance of the Lord's-supper. Alas! to receive bread and
wine is a very different thing from feeding upon the flesh and blood of Jesus Christ.
The one is a carnal act which Judas might perform, who had a devil, but the other is
a spiritual act, possible only for spiritual men. "Oh," saith one, "do not put high
standards before us." No, I am not. I am putting the lowest standard that can prove
a soul to be saved--have you received Christ? I want to call your attention to the
marvelous simplicity of this one act by which salvation comes to all the saints. It is
receiving. Now, receiving is a very easy thing. There are fifty things which you and
I cannot do, but, my dear friend, you could undoubtedly receive a guinea, could
you not? There is not a man, nor woman, nor child, here, so imperfect in power as
to be unable to receive. Everybody seems capable of receiving to any amount. Mark,
then, in salvation you do nothing but merely receive. There is a hand, a beggar's
hand, and if it be wanted to write a fair letter, it cannot do that, but be assured it
can receive. Try it, and the beggar will soon let you know. Look at that hand again,
see you not that it has the palsy? It quivers and shakes! Ah, but it can receive for all
that. Many a palsied hand has received a jewel. But do not you see that in addition
to being black, and filthy, and palsied, it has a foul disease? The leprosy lies within,
and is not to be washed out by any mode of purification known to us, and yet it can
receive. The saints all came to be saints, and remained saints, through doing exactly
what that poor black, leprous quivering hand can do. All their grace came by
receiving. So, dear hearer, I am not setting up a high test, though I am assuredly
setting up a very safe and needful one. Have you received out of the fullness of
Christ? Did you come all empty-handed and take Jesus Christ to be your all? I
know what you did at first. You were for accumulating the shining heaps of your
own merits, and esteeming them as if they were so much gold, but you found out
that your labour profited not, so at last you came empty-handed, and said, "My
precious Savior, do but give me Thyself and I will have done with merit. I renounce
all merit, and all doing and working, and I take Thee to be everything to me." Then,
friend, you are saved if that be true, for the acceptance of Christ is the mark of the
saint.
I said there were three experiences: the first was emptiness; the second is receiving;
and the third is that blessed experience, the discovery that all we receive comes to us by
grace. Look at the last words, "And grace for grace,"which words may be read,
"And grace because of grace;" that is to say, the only reason why we get grace is
because of grace. Grace is the cause of itself. It is a self-creating thing. God will have
mercy on whom He will have mercy. He is gracious because He is gracious, and He
gives grace to men not because they deserve it, or ask for it, but because He is
gracious, and chooses to bless them. I trust, beloved brethren, you all have
experienced this. If you know your own emptiness and Christ's fullness, I am sure
you know in a measure the doctrine of grace, and I hope you will go on to know it
more and more. May you also get grace to have more grace; grace to qualify you for
a higher degree of grace. Now, you do not get some grace from God's grace, and
then the rest from your own efforts, but every step you have to go from the gate of
the City of Destruction up to the pearl-gate of the New Jerusalem, it is all grace. The
road to glory is paved with stones of grace. The chariot in which we ride to heaven
is all of grace. The strength that draws it, and the axle that bears it up, is all of grace
and grace alone. In the whole covenant of grace, from the first letter of the charter
down to its last word, there is nothing at all of merit or man's goodness, but it is
grace, grace, grace. As grace laid the foundation, so grace brings out every stone,
and as we sing-- "It lays in heaven the topmost stone, And well deserves the praise."
I cannot make out where some of the Lord's children get their creed from when
they preach up the dignity and free will of man. There are good people, but who
seem to me to use part of the speech of Ashdod, and only part of the speech of
Jerusalem. To my mind, free will seems such an incongruity when tacked on to
grace, and makes a man's ministry like Nebuchadnezzar's image, with its head of
gold, and its feet of clay: the two things do not consort. O for a gospel that is all of a
piece, that reveals the sinner as saved by grace from first to last, that God may have
all the praise.
IV. As briefly as possible we shall speak of FOUR DUTIES.
1. First, if we have received from Christ all we have, then let us praise Him. If we live
on His fullness, let us magnify and bless His name. Gratitude is a natural virtue,
and it ought always to be in us a spiritual grace. O let our tongues talk well of Him
to whom we owe everything! There was a poor man who was a pauper, but a kind
friend had taken care of Him, and the old man was never better pleased than when
he could garrulously tell out his thanks to passing strangers. "That's a dear man
who lives up at the white house there, sir. Do you see these clothes? He has given
me all. I have not a rag on me but what is of his finding, and I have a nice little
cottage down there, and, you know, he gave it to me--told me I might live there rent
free. He lets me walk through his grounds, and tells me I am welcome to all I can
desire." It was the old man's joy to expatiate upon the extraordinary goodness of his
benefactor. I wish we all imitated him. Do you see anything that is happy and
peaceful in me? It all came from Jesus. I am a poor worm with nothing at all in
myself that I could boast of, but if there be anything at all that could commend the
gospel, I received it all from my dear Lord and Master, who has done more for me
than tongue can tell. Brethren, speak more of Him and sing more His praise. If you
have the gift of song, never prostitute it (as I think it must be) to light, giddy, loose
verses. Keep your sweetest notes for Him. Music, reserve thy charms for Him. If the
things of this world might claim a note or two, yet, oh! let Him have the loudest of
your harmony. Ye daughters of Israel, go forth to meet your David; for if any of this
world hath helped you, if Saul hath slain his thousands, this David hath slain his
ten thousands. The mightiest of your foes He has overthrown. One of the best ways
of praising Jesus is by trusting Him more. Faith is often compact praise. A trustful
heart has in it the quintessence of music. Jesus loves to be trusted: it is a true, if
indirect, form of gratitude, when we repose confidence because of mercies received.
Once more, if you wish to praise the Prince of Peace, as I trust you do, go and beg
harder of Him. Go to Him this very night and say--
"The best return for one like me,
So wrethced and so poor,
Is from Thy gifts to draw a plea,
And ask Thee still for more."
You cannot do your Lord a better turn, nor make His heart more glad by way of
praising Him, than by opening your mouth wider than ever tonight, that thou
mayst receive more out of His fullness than thou hast ever had since thou hast
known Him.
2. The second duty is this: if up till now we have received out of Christ's fullness,
then let us repair to Him again. As ye have received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk ye
in Him. I find it my best and safest way, and I recommend it to you all, to live daily
on Christ, as I did when first I trusted in Him. If I have ever known Him at all, if He
has ever been revealed to me and in me, if He has ever answered my prayers, if He
has ever blessed me to your souls and made me the spiritual parent of any that are
in the skies, I do know that I had it all from Him, for I never had a grain of anything
good of my own, but all my grace has been the free grant of His sovereign will. But,
the devil says, "Ah, but you never knew Jesus!" Well, if I never did, I know what to
do now; I will go to Jesus at once. If I never did go to Him before, I will hasten to
Him now. Now, when I go to Jesus Christ in that way, not as a saint but as a sinner,
not as a preacher but as a poor, miserable offender, I find my comfort return to me.
I would like to be as a babe, always hanging on the breast of Jesus' love. I would
like to be the fruit which remains on the bough and so grows ripe and sweet. I
would like to be always locked up in Christ's buttery, and never to live on what I
had aforetime fed on, but feeding evermore. To this duty I invite you tonight. If you
have received, come and receive again; you have not received the whole of Christ's
fullness yet. But all that is in Christ is meant to be received. Jesus Christ is like the
sun, He is a storehouse of light, but the light is there to be shed abroad. He is like
the clouds, a storehouse of waters, but all that is in Him is to descend in showers
upon thirsty souls. There is nothing in Christ but what was meant to be distributed.
He is like Joseph's granaries in Egypt, full of corn for hungry men. Dost thou read
of mercy in Christ?--say, "That mercy was meant for needy sinner: I will even have
it." Little children, when they come to table, seem to know by instinct that
everything there is meant to be eaten; so they cry, "Give me this, give me that."
Now, in this be ye children. If you see anything in Christ, however rich and rare,
however precious and choice, say, "Lord, give me that, and give me that;" for it is all
meant to be given away--it is all provided on purpose to meet the needs of the
Lord's people. So we leave that duty, but I trust not till we have attended to it.
3. The third duty is, if you have been receiving of Christ, try to obtain more; for the
text says, "Grace for grace" -- that is, grace upon grace -- grace to fit you for higher
grace. If you are no richer than the old believers under the law, and you have found
only Jewish grace, come and ask for clearer views; if you have grace as a babe, ask
grace to be a young man; and if you have grown to be a young man, ask grace to be
a father. Aspire to the highest point of Christian perfection. In other matters we are
very covetous, but in the things of God, what an accursed contentment we soon fall
into. I use the word advisedly, for it is accursed, since it brings the curse of
barrenness upon us. I loathe to hear a believer say, "Well, if I am but just saved, that
is enough for me; if I may but just get in behind the door in heaven, I shall be
content." So you will, my dear brother, but you ought not to talk in that way. Your
business is to show forth as much of Christ to His glory as you possibly can. What!
are you so selfish that if you can creep into heaven that will content you? I would
like to carry my Master a whole casket of jewels in my bosom; I would fain say to
Him, "Here am I and the children whom thou hast given me" (Heb. 2:13; Isa. 8:18).
I would desire to die with the sweet satisfaction, "I have finished my course, I have
kept the faith; henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of life that fadeth not
away" (II Tim. 4:7-8). Do wrestle for more grace. If you are up to your ankles, wade
into this river of gracious but do not be content. I ask you to advance till you are up
to your loins, and be not fully satisfied even then. Forget the things that are behind,
be not satisfied till you find a river to swim in; strike out till you feel you are utterly
out of your depth, and then dive into it and strike out; glory in Christ to think that
it pleased the Father that in Him should all fullness dwell, and be glad that you
have learned to comprehend with all saints what are the heights and depths, and to
know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge.
4. The last duty and the last word. If you have received of Christ, encourage others to
receive of Him. Indeed, you need not go far for the encouragement, for you may first
of all look at home. If Jesus Christ received you, whom will He not receive? If my
Master's heart opened wide its doors to let me in, I know He has received one of the
blackest that ever was accepted; and I feel confident in recommending you, poor,
needy, troubled, conscience-stricken sinner, to come to Jesus by simple trust
tonight. I am sure if He had meant to reject you, He would not have accepted me. If
you want to encourage souls to come to Christ, what a wonderful text this is: "Of
His fullness have all we received." I must bring that little dream of mine up to
your mind's eye again. There are all the saints--millions of them-- and they tell you,
all of them, that they were all receivers. Now, suppose you were a beggar. You
know what beggars do. If they go to a door and get anything, they make a little
mark; you and I do not understand it, but it means "Good house to knock at;" and
the next beggar who comes sees that token, and he knocks boldly. If they get
nothing, of course, they make some scurvy remark or another, after their own
fashion, which the next beggar understands. Now, I have already made that mark
on Christ's door, and I have told you of it; it is a good house to knock at, for I have
tried it. But suppose, being a beggar, you were to meet some fifty or sixty tramps,
all coming down the street, and they were to say to you, "Are you in the same trade
as we are?" "Yes, I am a beggar." "Well," say they, "there's a good house down there,
we have all of us been to it, and they have given us all something." "What, given
something to all of you?" "Yes, to every one of us." "What, to that man yonder? why,
he looks good for nothing!" "Oh, well they gave him something." "What, to the
whole of you?" "Yes." "Then I shall be as quick as I can to knock and get the next
turn." Why, of course, everybody would feel that that is the shop to beg at where
nobody has been rejected. Now, since the world began there never has been a
sinner who sincerely asked for mercy through faith in the precious blood of Jesus
who has been rejected. Since Adam was cast out of the garden, there has never been
a sinner, whoever he might have been, that has cast himself by simple trust upon
the blood and righteousness of Jesus Christ, whom God has cast out. Well, but if
they all received, and all received"of His fullness," why not you?
One thing more: it may be that you will still say, "Perhaps the Lord will change His
mode of dealing, and reject me!" Oh, but let me tell you, He has pledged Himself
that He will not, for, in addition to all those who have received at His hands, there
is a promise given, "Him that cometh unto me, I will in no wise cast out" (John
6:37). He cannot cast you away, for He has said He will not, and that word "no
wise" is like the flaming cherub's sword, which turns every way, not to keep you
out of the garden of life, but to keep out all your doubts and fears. Observe, "I will
in no wise cast out." Then, if any man says, "But I am too old," that cannot be the
reason for your rejection, for Christ has said, "Him that cometh, I will in no wise
cast out." "Oh, but I have sinned beyond all reason, I have gone to an excess of riot:
Sir, I'm a damnable sinner; no one can say too bad of me." I do not care what you
are; He cannot cast you out, for He has said, "in no wise," that is, on no account, on
no consideration, under no circumstances. If you come to Christ, heaven and earth
may pass away, and yon blue sky shall be folded up and put away as a worn-out
mantle, and the stars shall fall like withered leaves in autumn, and the sun be
turned into darkness, and the moon into blood; but never shall a praying, trusting
sinner be cast away from the presence of God. O come, then, thou most guilty, thou
most empty, thou most worthless, come and welcome. Hark, the silver trumpet
sounds tonight, "Come and welcome! come and welcome! come and welcome!"
Come to the dear wounds of Jesus and be hidden there. Come to the fountain filled
with blood, and be cleansed there. Come to the heart of Christ in heaven by trusting
Him, and be saved both now and ever. May God bless you, and every one in this
great house tonight. May He bless every one of you young women up there, and of
men down there, and you strangers thronging the aisles; may every one of us have
to say, "Of His fullness have all we received, and grace for grace." The Lord bless
you. Amen.
Footnotes:
1. All Scriptures quoted in this study are taken from the King James Version.
-------------------------
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© 1994-2018, Scott Sperling