By C.H. Spurgeon
“A bruised reed shall He not break and smoking flax
shall He not quench, till He send forth judgment unto victory.”
Matthew 12:20
BABBLING fame ever loves to talk of one man or another.
Some there are whose glory it trumpets forth and whose honor it extols above
the heavens. Some are her favorites and their names are carved on marble–heard
in every land and every clime. Fame is not an impartial judge–she has her
favorites. Some men she extols, exalts and almost deifies–others, whose virtues
are far greater and whose characters are more deserving of commendation, she
passes by unheeded and puts the finger of silence on her lips. You will
generally find that those persons beloved by fame are men made of brass or iron
and cast in a rough mold.
Fame caresses Caesar because he ruled the earth with a
rod of iron. Fame loves Luther, because he boldly and manfully defied the Pope
of Rome and with knit brow dared laugh at the thunders of the Vatican. Fame
admires Knox, for he was stern and proved himself the bravest of the brave.
Generally, you will find her choosing out the men of fire and mettle, who stood
before their fellow creatures fearless of them–men who were made of courage–who
were consolidated lumps of fearlessness and never knew what timidity might be.
But you know there is another class of persons equally
virtuous and equally to be esteemed–perhaps even more so–whom fame entirely
forgets. You do not hear her talk of the gentle-minded Melancthon–she says but
little of him–yet he did as much, perhaps, in the Reformation, as even the
mighty Luther. You do not hear fame talk much of the sweet and blessed
Rutherford and of the heavenly words that distilled from his lips. Or of
Archbishop Leighton, of whom it was said that he was never out of temper in his
life. She loves the rough granite peaks that defy the storm cloud–she does not
care for the more humble stone in the valley, on which the weary traveler
rests.
She wants something bold and prominent–something that
courts popularity–something that stands out before the world. She does not care
for those who retreat in shade. Therefore, it is, my Brethren, that the blessed
Jesus, our adorable Master, has escaped fame. No one says much about Jesus,
except His followers. We do not find His name written among the great and
mighty men. Though, in truth, He is the greatest, mightiest, holiest, purest
and best of men that ever lived. But because He was, “Gentle Jesus, meek and
mild,” and was emphatically the Man whose kingdom is not of this world–because
He had nothing of the rough about Him, but was all love–because His words were
softer than butter, His utterances more gentle in their flow than oil–because
never man spoke so gently as this Man–therefore He is neglected and forgotten.
He did not come to be a conqueror with His sword, nor a
Mohammed with His fiery eloquence, but He came to speak with a “still small
voice,” that melts the rocky heart, that binds up the broken in spirit. A voice
that continually says, “Come unto Me all you that are weary and heavy laden.”
“Take My yoke upon you and learn of Me, for I am meek and lowly of heart and
you shall find rest unto your souls.” Jesus Christ was all gentleness. And this
is why He has not been extolled among men as otherwise He would have been.
Beloved, our text is full of gentleness. It seems to have
been steeped in love. And I hope I may be able to show you something of the
immense sympathy and the mighty tenderness of Jesus, as I attempt to speak from
it. There are three things to be noticed!–First, mortal frailty. Secondly,
Divine compassion. And thirdly, certain triumph–“till He send forth judgment
unto victory.”
First, we have before us a view of MORTAL FRAILTY–bruised
reed and smoking flax–two very suggestive metaphors and very full of meaning.
If it were not too fanciful–and if it is I know you will excuse me–I should say
that the bruised reed is an emblem of a sinner in the first stage of his
conviction. The work of God’s Holy Spirit begins with bruising. In order to be
saved the fallow ground must be plowed up–the hard heart must be broken–the
rock must be split in sunder. An old divine says there is no going to Heaven
without passing hard by the gates of Hell–without a great deal of soul-trouble
and heart-exercise. I take it, then, that the bruised reed is a picture of the
poor sinner when first God commences His operation upon the soul. He is a
bruised reed, almost entirely broken and consumed–there is but little strength
in Him.
The smoking flax I conceive to be a backsliding Christian–one who has been a burning and a shining light in his day, but by neglect of the means of grace, the withdrawal of God’s Spirit and falling into sin, his light is almost gone out–not quite–it never can go out, for Christ says, “I will not quench it.” But it becomes like a lamp when ill-supplied with oil–almost useless. It is not quite extinguished–it smokes. It was a useful lamp once, but now it has become as smoking flax. So I think these metaphors very likely describe the contrite sinner as a bruised reed and the backsliding Christian as smoking flax. However, I shall not choose to make such a division as that, but I shall put both the metaphors together and I hope we may fetch out a few thoughts from them.
And first, the encouragement offered in our text applies
to weak ones. What in the world is weaker than the bruised reed, or the smoking
flax? A reed that grows in the bog or marsh, let but the wild duck light upon
it and it snaps. Let but the foot of man brush against it and it is bruised and
broken. Every wind that comes howling across the river makes it shake to and
fro and well near tears it up by the roots. You can conceive of nothing more
frail or brittle, or whose existence depends more upon circumstances than a
bruised reed.
Then look at smoking flax–what is it? It has a spark
within it, it is true, but it is almost smothered–an infant’s breath might blow
it out, or the tears of a maiden quench it in a moment. Nothing has a more
precarious existence than the little spark hidden in the smoking flax. Weak
things, you see, are here described. Well, Christ says of them, “The smoking
flax I will not quench. The bruised reed I will not break.” Let me go in search
of the weaklings. Ah, I shall not have to go far. There are many in this house
of prayer this morning who are indeed weak. Some of God’s children, blessed be
His name, are made strong to do mighty works for Him.
God has His Samsons, here and there, who can pull up
Gaza’s gates and carry them to the top of the hill. He has here and there His
mighty Gideons, who can go to the camp of the Midianites and overthrow their
hosts. He has His mighty men, who can go into the pit in winter and slay the
lions–the majority of His people are a timid, weak race. They are like the
starlings that are frightened at every passerby, a little fearful flock. If
temptation comes, they fall before it. If trial comes, they are overwhelmed by
it–their frail skiff is danced up and down by every wave. And when the wind
comes, they are drifted along like a sea bird on the crest of the billows.
Weak things, without strength, without force, without
might, without power Ah, dear Friends, I know I have got hold of some of your
hands now and your hearts, too. For you are saying, “Weak? Ah, that I am. Full
often I am constrained to say, I would, but cannot sing. I would, but cannot
pray. I would, but cannot believe.” You are saying that you cannot do anything.
Your best resolves are weak and vain. And when you cry, “My strength renew,”
you feel weaker than before. You are weak, are you? Bruised reeds and smoking
flax? Blessed be God, this text is for you, then. I am glad you can come in
under the denomination of weak ones, for here is a promise that He will never
break nor quench them, but will sustain and hold them up.
I know there are some very strong people here–I mean
strong in their own ideas. I often meet with persons who would not confess any
such weakness as this. They are strong minds. They say, “Do you think that we
go into sin, Sir? Do you tell us that our hearts are corrupt? We do not believe
any such thing. We are good, pure and upright. We have strength and might.” To
you I am not preaching this morning. To you I am saying nothing. But take
heed–your strength is vanity, your power is a delusion, your might is a lie–for
however much you may boast in what you can do, it shall pass away. When you
come to the real contest with death, you shall find that you have no strength
to grapple with it–when one of these days of strong temptation shall come–it
will take hold of you, moral man and down you will go.
And the glorious livery of your morality will be so
stained, that though you wash your hands in snow water and make yourselves ever
so clean, you shall be so polluted that your own clothes shall abhor you. I
think it is a blessed thing to be weak. The weak one is a sacred thing. The
Holy Spirit has made him such. Can you say, “No strength have I?” Then this
text is for you.
Secondly, the things mentioned in our text are not only
weak, but worthless things. I have heard of a man who would pick up a pin as he
walked along the street, on the principle of economy. But I never yet heard of
a man who would stop to pick up bruised reeds. They are not worth having. Who
would care to have a bruised reed–a piece of rush lying on the ground? We all
despise it as worthless. And smoking flax! What is the worth of that? It is an
offensive and noxious thing and the worth of it is nothing. No one would give
the snap of a finger either for the bruised reed or smoking flax.
Well, then, Beloved, in our estimation there are many of
us who are worthless things. There are some here, who, if they could weigh
themselves in the scales of the sanctuary and put their own hearts into the
balance of conscience, would appear to be good for nothing–worthless, useless.
There was a time when you thought yourselves to be the very best people in the
world–when if anyone had said that you had more than you deserved, you would
have kicked at it and said, “I believe I am as good as other people.” You
thought yourselves something wonderful–extremely worthy of God’s love and
regard but you now feel yourselves to be worthless. Sometimes you imagine God
can hardly know where you are, you are such a despicable creature–so
worthless–not worth His consideration.
You can understand how He can look upon an animalcule in
a drop of water, or upon a grain of dust in the sunbeam, or upon the insect of
the summer evening. But you can hardly tell how He can think of you, you appear
so worthless–a dead blank in the world, a useless thing. You say, “What good am
I? I am doing nothing. As for a minister of the Gospel, he is of some service.
As for a deacon of the Church he is of some use. As for a Sabbath-School
teacher, he is doing some good–but of what service am I?” And you might ask the
same question here. What is the use of a bruised reed? Can a man lean upon it?
Can a man strengthen himself with it ? Shall it be a pillar in my house? Can
you bind it up into the pipes of Pan and make music come from a bruised reed?
Ah, no. It is of no service. And of what use is smoking
flax? the midnight traveler cannot be lighted by it. The student cannot read by
the flame of it. It is of no use–men throw it into the fire and consume it. Ah,
that is how you talk of yourselves. You are good for nothing. So are these
things. But Christ will not throw you away because you are of no value. You do
not know of what use you may be and you cannot tell how Jesus Christ values you
after all. There is a good women there, a mother, perhaps. She says, “Well, I
do not often go out–I keep house with my children and seem to be doing no
good.” Mother, do not say so, your position is a high, lofty, responsible one.
In training up children for the Lord, you are doing as much for His name as yon
eloquent Apollos, who so valiantly preached the Word.
And you, poor man, all you can do is to toil from morning
till night and earn just enough to enable you to live day by day. You have
nothing to give away and when you go to the Sabbath-School, you can just read,
you cannot teach much. Well, but unto him to whom little is given of him little
is required. Do you not know that there is such a thing as glorifying God by
sweeping the street crossing? If two angels were sent down to earth, one to
rule an empire and the other to sweep a street, they would have no choice in
the matter, so long as God ordered them. So God, in His Providence, has called
you to work hard for your daily bread. Do it to His glory. “Whatsoever you do,
whether you eat or drink, do all to His honor.”
But, ah, I know there are some of you here who seem
useless to the Church. You do all you can. But when you have done it, it is
nothing. You can neither help us with money, nor talents, nor time and,
therefore, you think God must cast you out. You think if you were like Paul or
Peter you might be safe. Ah, Beloved, talk not so! Jesus Christ says He will
not quench the useless flax, nor break the worthless bruised reed. He has
something for the useless and for the worthless ones. But mark you, I do not say
this to excuse laziness–to excuse those that can do, but do not–that is a very
different thing.
There is a whip for the ass, a scourge for idle men and
they must have it sometimes. I am speaking now of those who cannot do it. Not
of Issachar, who is like a strong ass, crouching down between two burdens and
too lazy to get up with them. I say nothing for the sluggard, who will not plow
by reason of the cold. But of the men and women who really feel that they can
be of little service–who cannot do more. And to such, the words of the text are
applicable.
Now we will make another remark. The two things here
mentioned are offensive things. A bruised reed is offensive, for I believe
there is an illusion here to the pipes of Pan, which you all know are reeds put
together, along which a man moves his mouth, thus causing some kind of music.
This is the organ, I believe which Jubal invented and which David mentions, for
it is certain that the organ we use was not then in use. The bruised reed,
then, would of course spoil the melody of all the pipes. One unsound tube would
so let the air out, as to produce a discordant sound–or no sound at all–so that
one’s impulse would be to take the pipe out and put in a fresh one.
And, as for smoking flax, the wick of a candle or
anything of that kind, I need not inform you that the smoke is offensive. To me
no odor in all the world is so abominably offensive as smoking flax. But some
say, “How can you speak in so low a style?” I have not gone lower than I could
go myself, nor lower than you can go with me. For I am sure you are, if God the
Holy Spirit has really humbled you, just as offensive to your own souls and
just as offensive to God as a bruised reed would be among the pipes, or as
smoking flax to the eyes and nose. I often think of dear old John Bunyan, when
he said he wished God had made him a toad, or a frog, or a snake or anything
rather than a man, for he felt he was so offensive.
Oh, I can conceive a nest of vipers and I think that they
are obnoxious. I can imagine a pool of all kinds of loathsome creatures,
breeding corruption, but there is nothing one half so worthy of abhorrence as
the human heart. God spares from all eyes but His own that awful sight–the
human heart. And could you and I but once see our heart, we should be driven
mad, so horrible would be the sight. Do you feel like that? Do you feel that
you must be offensive in God’s sight–that you have so rebelled against Him, so
turned away from His Commandments, that surely you must be obnoxious to Him? If
so, my text is yours.
Now, I can imagine some woman here this morning who has
departed from the paths of virtue and, while she is standing in the throng up
there, or sitting down, she feels as if she had no right to tread these
hallowed courts and stand among God’s people. She thinks that God might almost
make the chapel break down upon her to destroy her, she is so great a sinner.
Never mind, broken reed and smoking flax! Though you are the scorn of man and
loathsome to yourself, yet Jesus says to you, “Neither do I condemn you, go and
sin no more, lest a worse thing come unto you.”
There is some man here who has something in his heart
that I know not of–who may have committed crimes in secret, that we will not
mention in public. His sins stick like a leech to him and rob him of all
comfort. Here you are, young man, shaking and trembling, lest your crime should
be divulged before high Heaven. You are broken down, bruised like a reed,
smoking like flax. Ah, I have a word for you, too. Comfort! Comfort! Comfort!
Despair not. For Jesus says He will not quench the smoking flax, He will not
break the bruised reed.
And yet, my dear Friends, there is one thought before I
turn away from this point. Both of these articles, however worthless they may
be, may yet be of some service, When God puts His hand to a man, if he were
worthless and useless before, He can make him very valuable. You know the price
of an article does not depend so much upon the value of the raw material as
upon workmanship put upon it. Here is very bad raw material to begin
with–bruised reeds and smoking flax. But by Divine workmanship both these things
become of wondrous value. You tell me the bruised reed is good for nothing. I
tell you that Christ will take that bruised reed and mend it up and fit it in
the pipes of Heaven.
Then when the grand orchestra shall send forth its music,
when the organs of the skies shall peal forth their deeptoned sounds, we shall
ask, “What was that sweet note heard there, mingling with the rest?” And
someone shall say, “It was a bruised reed.” Ah, Mary Magdalene’s voice in
Heaven, I imagine, sounds more sweet and liquid than any other. And the voice
of that poor thief, who said “Lord, remember me,” if it is a deep bass voice,
is more mellow and more sweet than the voice of any other–because he loved
much, for he had much forgiven him. This reed may yet be of use.
Do not say you are good for nothing. You shall sing up in
Heaven yet. Do not say your are worthless–at last you shall stand before the
Throne among the blood-washed company and shall sing God’s praise. Yes, and the
smoking flax too, what good can that be? I will soon tell you. There is a spark
in that flax somewhere. It is nearly out, but still a spark remains. Behold the
prairie on fire! See you the flames come rolling on? See you stream after
stream of hot fire deluging the plain till all the continent is burnt and
scorched–till Heaven is reddened with the flame? Old night’s black face is
scarred with the burning and the stars appear affrighted at the conflagration.
How was that mass ignited?
By a piece of smoking flax dropped by some traveler. It
was fanned by the soft wind till the whole prairie caught the flame. So one
poor man–one ignorant man, one weak man–even one backsliding man, may be the
means of the conversion of a whole nation. Who knows but that you who are
nothing now may be of more use than those of us who appear to stand better
before God, because we have more gifts and talents? God can make a spark set a
world on fire–He can light up a whole nation with the spark of one poor praying
soul. You may be useful yet–therefore be of good cheer! Moss grows upon
gravestones. The ivy clings to the moldering pile, the mistletoe grows on the
dead branch and even so shall grace, piety, virtue, holiness and goodness come
from smoking flax and bruised reeds, by God’s grace!
II. Thus, my dear Friends, I have tried to find out the
parties for whom this text is meant and I have shown you somewhat of mortal
frailty. Now I mount a step higher–to DIVINE COMPASSION. “The bruised reed He
will not break, the smoking flax He will not quench.”
Notice what is first of all stated and then let me tell
you that Jesus Christ means a great deal more than He says. First of all, what
does He say? He says plainly enough that He will not break the bruised reed.
There is a bruised reed before me–a poor child of God under a deep sense of
sin. It seems as if the whip of the Law would never stop. It keeps on–lash,
lash, lash. And though you say, “Lord, stop it and give me a little respite,”
still it comes down the cruel thong–lash, lash, lash. You feel your sins.
Ah, I know what you are saying this morning–“If God
continues this a little longer my heart will break–I shall perish in despair, I
am almost distracted by my sin. If I lie down at night I cannot sleep. It
appears as if ghosts were in the room–ghosts of my sins–and when I awake at
midnight, I see the black form of death staring at me and saying, "you are
my prey, I shall have you.” All the while Hell behind seems to burn. Ah, poor
bruised reed. He will not break you–conviction shall not be too strong–it shall
be great enough to melt you and to make you go to Jesus' feet. But, by His
grace, it shall not be strong enough to break your heart altogether, so that
you should die. You shall never be driven to despair. But you shall be
delivered. You shall come out of the fire, poor bruised reed and shall not be
broken.
So there is a backslider here this morning. He is like
the smoking flax. Years gone by you found such happiness in the ways of the
Lord and such delight in His service, that you said, “There I would forever
stay–
‘What peaceful hours I then enjoyed;
How sweat their memory still!
But they have left an aching void,
The world can never fill.’"
You are smoking and you think God will put you out. If I
were an Arminian, I should tell you that He would–but being a believer in the
Bible and nothing else–I tell you that He will not quench you. Though you are
smoking, you shall not die. Whatever your crime has been, the Lord says,
“Return, you backsliding children of men, for I will have mercy upon you.” He
will not cast you away, poor Ephraim! Only come back to Him–He will not despise
you, though you have plunged yourself in the mire and dirt, though you are
covered from head to foot with filthiness. Come back, poor Prodigal, come back,
come back!
Your father calls you. Hearken poor Backslider! Come at
once to Him whose arms are ready to receive you. It says He will not quench–He
will not break. But there is more under cover than we see at first sight. When
Jesus says He will not break, He means more than that. He means, “I will take
that poor bruised reed. I will plant it hard by the rivers of waters and
(miracle of miracles) I will make it grow into a tree whose leaf shall not
wither. I will water it every moment. I will watch it. There shall be heavenly
fruits upon it. I will keep the birds of prey from it, but the birds of Heaven,
the sweet songsters of Paradise shall make their dwellings in the branches.”
When He says that He will not break the bruised reed, He
means more. He means that He will nourish, that He will help and strengthen and
support and glorify–that He will execute His commission on it and make it
glorious forever. And when He says to the backslider that He will not quench
him, He means more than that–He means that He will fan him up to a flame. Some
of you, I dare say, have gone home from chapel and found that your fire had
gone nearly out. I know how you deal with it, you blow gently at the single
spark, if there is one–and least you should blow too hard, you hold your
fingers before it and if you were alone and had but one match, or one spark in
the tinder–how gently would you blow it!
So, Backslider, Jesus Christ deals with you–He does not
put you out–He blows gently. He says, “I will not quench you.” He means, “I
will be very tender, very cautious, very careful.” He will put on dry material,
so that by-and-by a little spark shall come to a flame and blaze up towards
Heaven and great shall be the fire thereof.
Now I want to say one or two things to Little-Faiths this
morning. The little children of God who are here mentioned as being bruised
reeds or smoking flax are just as safe as the great saints of God. I wish for a
moment to expand this thought and then I will finish with the other head. These
saints of God who are called bruised reeds and smoking flax saint is just as
much God’s elect as the great saint. When God chose His people, He chose them
all at once and altogether and He elected one just as much as the other. If I
choose a certain number of things, one may be less than the rest, but one is as
much chosen as the other and so Mrs. Fearing and Miss Despondency are just as
much elected as Great-Heart, or Old Father Honest.
Again–the little ones are redeemed equally with the great
ones! The feeble saints cost Christ as much suffering as the strong ones. The
tiniest child of God could not have been purchased with less of Jesus' precious
blood and the greatest child of God did not cost Him more. Paul did not cost
any more than Benjamin–I am sure He did not–for I read in the Bible that “there
is no difference.” Besides, when of old they came to pay their
redemption-money, every person brought a shekel. The poor shall bring no less
and the rich shall bring no more than just a shekel. The same price was paid
for the one as the other.
Now, then, little child of God, take that thought to your
soul. You see some men very prominent in Christ’s cause–and it is very good
that they should be–but they did not cost Jesus a farthing more than you did.
He paid the same price for you that He paid for them. Recollect again, you are
just as much a child of God as the greatest saint. Some of you have five or six
children. There is one child of yours, perhaps who is very tall and handsome
and has, moreover, gifts of mind. And you have another child who is the
smallest of the family, perhaps has but little intellect and understanding. But
which is the more your child? “The more?” you say. “Both alike are my children,
certainly, one as much as the other.” And so, dear Friends, you may have very
little learning, you may be very dark about divine things, you may but “see men
as trees walking,” but you are as much the children of God as those who have
grown to the stature of men in Christ Jesus.
Then remember, poor tried Saint, that you are just as
much justified as any other child of God. I know that I am completely
justified–
“His blood and righteousness
My beauty are, my glorious dress.”
I want no other garments except Jesus' doings and His
imputed righteousness. The boldest child of God wants no more. And I, who am
“less than the least of all saints,” can be content with no less and I shall
have no less, O Ready-to-Halt, you are as much justified as Paul, Peter, John
the Baptist, or the loftiest saint in Heaven. There is no difference in that
matter. Oh, take courage and rejoice.
Then one thing more. If you were lost, God’s honor would
be as much tarnished as if the greatest one were lost. A strange thing I once
read in an old book about God’s children and people being a part of Christ and
in union with Him. The writer says–“A father sits in his room and there comes
in a stranger. The stranger takes up a child on his knee and the child has a
sore finger, so he says, ‘My child, you have a sore finger.’ ” “Yes!” the child
says. “Well, let me take it off and give you a golden one!” The child looks at
him and says, “I will not go to that man any more, for he talks of taking off
my finger. I love my own finger and I will not have a golden one instead of
it.”
So the saint says, “I am one of the members of Christ,
but I am like a sore finger and He will take me off and put a golden one on.”
“No,” says Christ, “No, no–I cannot have any of My members taken away. If the
finger be a sore one, I will bind it up, I will strengthen it.” Christ cannot
allow a word about cutting His members off. If Christ lose one of His people,
He would not be a whole Christ any longer. If the meanest of His children could
be cast away Christ would lack a part of His fullness–yes, Christ would be
incomplete without His Church. If one of His children must be lost, it would be
better that it should be a great one, than a little one. If a little one were
lost, Satan would say, “Ah, you save the great ones, because they had strength
and could help themselves. But the little one that has no strength, you could
not save Him.”
You know what Satan would say, but God would shut Satan’s
mouth, by proclaiming, “They are all here, Satan–in spite of your malice, they
are all here. Every one is safe. Now lie down in your den forever and be bound
eternally in chains and smoke in fire!” So shall he suffer eternal torment, but
not one child of God ever shall.
One thought more and I shall have done with this head.
The salvation of great saints often depends upon the salvation of little ones.
Do you understand that? You know that my salvation, or the salvation of any
child of God, looking at second causes, very much depends upon the conversion
of someone else. Suppose your mother is the means of your conversion. You
would, speaking after the manner of men, say that your conversion depended upon
hers–for her being converted, made her the instrument of bringing you in.
Suppose such-and-such a minister to be the means of your calling. Then your
conversion, in some sense, though not absolutely, depends upon his. So it often
happens that the salvation of God’s mightiest servants depends upon the
conversion of little ones.
There is a poor mother–no one ever knows anything about
her–she goes to the house of God. Her name is not in the newspapers, or
anywhere else. She teaches her child and brings him up in the fear of God. She
prays for that boy. She wrestles with God and her tears and prayers mingle
together. The boy grows up. What is he? A missionary–a William Knibb–a Moffat–a
Williams. But you do not hear anything about the mother. Ah, but if the mother
had not been saved, where would the boy have been? Let this cheer the little
ones and may you rejoice that He will nourish and cherish you, though you are
like bruised reeds and smoking flax.
III. Now, to finish up, there is a CERTAIN VICTORY. “Till
He send forth judgment unto victory.”
Victory! There is something beautiful in that word. The
death of Sir John Moore, in the Peninsular war, was very touching. He fell in
the arms of triumph and sad as was his fate, I doubt not that his eye was lit
up with luster by the shout of victory. So also, I suppose, that Wolfe spoke a
truth when He said, “I die happy,” having just before heard the shout, “they
run, they run.” I know victory, even in that bad sense–for I look not upon
earthly victories as of any value–must have cheered the warrior. But oh, how
cheered the saint when he knows that victory is his! I shall fight during all
my life, but I shall write “vici” on my shield. I shall be “more than conqueror
through Him that loved me.”
Each feeble saint shall win the day–each man upon his
crutches–each lame one–each one full of infirmity, sorrow, sickness and
weakness–shall gain the victory. “They shall come with singing unto Zion, as
well the blind, lame and the woman with child together.” So says the Scripture.
Not one shall be left out. But He shall “send forth judgment unto victory.”
Victory! Victory! victory! This is the lot of each Christian. He shall triumph
through his dear Redeemer’s name.
Now a word about this victory. I speak first to aged men
and women. Dear Brothers and Sisters, you are often, I know, like the bruised
reed. Coming events cast their shadows before them. And death casts the shadow
of old age on you. You feel the grasshopper to be a burden, you feel full of
weakness and decay, your frame can hardly hold together. Ah, you have here a
special promise. “The bruised reed I will not break.” “I will strengthen you.”
“When your heart and your flesh fails, I will be the strength of your heart and
your portion forever”–
“Even down to old age, all My people shall prove
My sovereign, eternal, unchangeable love;
And when hoary hairs shall their temples adorn
Like lambs they shall still in My bosom be borne.”
Tottering on your staff, leaning, feeble, weak and
wan–fear not the last hour–that last hour shall be your best! Your last day
shall be a consummation devoutly to be wished. Weak as you are, God will temper
the trial to your weakness. He will make your pain less, if your strength is
less. But you shall sing in Heaven, “Victory! Victory! Victory!”
There are some of us who could wish to change places with
you, to be so near Heaven–to be so near Home. With all your infirmities, your
gray hairs are a crown of glory to you. For you are near the end, as well as in
the way of righteousness. A word to you middle-aged men, battling in this
life’s rough storm. You are often bruised reeds. Your religion is so encumbered
by your worldly callings, so covered up by the daily din of business, business,
business, that you seem like smoking flax. It is as much as you can do to serve
your God and you cannot say that you are “fervent in spirit” as well as
“diligent in business.”
Man of business, toiling and striving in this world, He
will not quench you when you are like smoking flax. He will not break you when
you are like the bruised reed, but will deliver you from your troubles. You
shall swim across the sea of life and shall stand on the happy shore of Heaven.
And you shall sing, “Victory,” through Him that loved you. You youths and
maidens! I speak to you and have a right to do so. You and I oftentimes know
what the bruised reed is, when the hand of God blights our fair hopes. We are
full of giddiness and waywardness–it is only the rod of affliction that can
bring folly out of us–for we have much of it in us.
Slippery paths are the paths of youths and dangerous ways
are the ways of the young. But God will not break or destroy us. Men, by their
over caution, bid us never tread a step lest we fall. But God bids us go and
makes our feet like hind’s feet, that we may tread upon high places. Serve God
in early days. Give your hearts to Him and then He will never cast you out, but
will nourish and cherish you.
Let me not finish without saving a word to little
children. You who have heard of Jesus, He says to you, “The bruised reed I will
not break, the smoking flax I will not quench.” I believe there is many a
little prattler, not six years old, who knows the Savior. I never despise
infantile piety. I love it. I have heard little children talk of mysteries that
gray-headed men knew not. Ah, little children who have been brought up in
Sabbath-Schools and love the Savior’s name, if others say you are too forward,
do not fear, love Christ still–
Gentle Jesus, meek and mild
Still will look upon a child;
Pity your simplicity,
And suffer you to come to Him.
He will not cast you away. For smoking flax He will not
quench and the bruised reed He will not break.
Matthew 12:20
The smoking flax I conceive to be a backsliding Christian–one who has been a burning and a shining light in his day, but by neglect of the means of grace, the withdrawal of God’s Spirit and falling into sin, his light is almost gone out–not quite–it never can go out, for Christ says, “I will not quench it.” But it becomes like a lamp when ill-supplied with oil–almost useless. It is not quite extinguished–it smokes. It was a useful lamp once, but now it has become as smoking flax. So I think these metaphors very likely describe the contrite sinner as a bruised reed and the backsliding Christian as smoking flax. However, I shall not choose to make such a division as that, but I shall put both the metaphors together and I hope we may fetch out a few thoughts from them.
How sweat their memory still!
But they have left an aching void,
The world can never fill.’"
My beauty are, my glorious dress.”
My sovereign, eternal, unchangeable love;
And when hoary hairs shall their temples adorn
Like lambs they shall still in My bosom be borne.”
Still will look upon a child;
Pity your simplicity,
And suffer you to come to Him.
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