AN ASSUREDLY GOOD THING – Charles Spurgeon

AN ASSUREDLY GOOD THING

“It is good for me to draw near to God.” Psalm 73:28. WHEN a man is sick, everybody knows what is good for him; they recommend remedies by the score—salts from the earth, herbs of the field, drugs from the east, minerals from the rock, extracts, compounds, cordials, concoctions, quintessences, and I know not what besides; as many medicines as there are men, all these are cried up as good for our complaint. Amid such Babel, it is well for a man if he knows on his own account what is good for himself. Certainly in spiritual things, whatever others may recommend, it is of the first importance in all our trials to know by personal experience for ourselves what is in the highest sense good for us. One of your friends may commend a course of vigorous action, and another may bid you sit still; one may persuade you to contemplate your trial from its darkest side, and another may call your attention solely to the brighter lights; but if you know, through having passed through the trial before, what is truly good in such a case, it will be best to take your stand upon it, and not be led away by every “lo, here,” and “lo, there.” The psalmist, although he might have been surrounded by a thousand counselors, puts them all aside, and strong in the confidence which his experience gave him, he declares, “It is good for me to draw near to God.” It may seem good in the worldling’s eyes to go his way to his wine cups, and to make merry in dance; it may seem good to yonder truster in an arm of flesh to seek out his friends and his kinsmen, and entrust his case to their discretion; it may seem good to the desponding to retire in melancholy to brood over his sorrows, and to the dissipated to endeavor to drown all care in vanity, but to me, says the psalmist, it is good, pre-eminently good, that I should draw near unto God. I. Now, in this statement, the Psalmist, first of all, TACITLY CONDEMNS OTHER COURSES OF ACTION. Take the text in connection with the Psalm of which it is the conclusion, and you will see at once that he repents of a certain course of thought to which he had given way, and the recoil from his error is the exclamation, “It is good for me to draw near to God.” It is as if he meant to say, “It is not good for me to do what I have done; it is infinitely better for me to draw near to God.” We learn from this that it is not a good thing for us to try and fathom the mysteries of providence. What have we to do with measuring the great depths of providence? Is not this meddling with things too high for us? It should be enough for us to commit our boat to the Great Pilot, trusting all to Him who rules all—being well assured that He will bring His own beloved to their desired haven. We need not be curious to know the exact depth of all the deep places of the earth—it is enough that they are in His hands. Nor need the strength of the hills provoke our anxiety, for it is His, also; yet such is the tendency of the human heart that we crave to comprehend all things in the little hollow of our hand; we aspire to calculate the infinite, and sum the total of the immeasurable. It is with us as though foolish children should determine to measure the great and wide sea, and therefore should push off from the shore in a little boat to drift away, they know not where, in imminent hazard of their lives. Theories upon predestination, followed up by speculations upon the facts of providence, these are enough to drive men mad, and are certain to drive them into wicked thoughts—unjust towards God, and depressing towards themselves. Gotthold in his “Emblems” tells us of the adventures of his child; the father was one day sitting in his study, and 2 2 when he lifted his eyes from a book which had engrossed his attention, he saw standing upon the window ledge, his little son; he was troubled and frightened to the last degree, for the child stood there in the utmost peril of falling to the ground, and being dashed to pieces. The little one had always been anxious to know what his father was doing so many hours in the day in his study, and he had at last, by a ladder, managed to climb with boyish daring till there he stood outside the window, gazing at his father with his little eyes. “So,” said the father, as he took the child into his chamber and rebuked him for his folly, “So have I often tried to climb into the council chamber of God, to see why He did this and that; and thus have I exposed myself to peril of falling to my destruction.” My God, it is not good for me to pry into Your secrets with curiosity, but it is good for me to draw near unto You in sincerity. In connection with this Psalm we may also learn that it is not good for us, under any circumstances, to get very far from God. The verse that precedes the text runs thus—“They who are far from You shall perish.” Now, the tendency of repeated affliction is, in the carnal mind, to drive us away from God. “Surely He deals harshly with me,” says the sufferer. “No good has come to me since I began to attend a place of worship, and to become religious; evil after evil has happened to me in connection with my profession of godliness.” Because of this, the ungodly man who was a formalist in his religion gives it all up. “It were better,” he says, “that I should find what pleasure I can in sin, since I can find none in godliness.” If God treats His hypocritical servants roughly, they soon turn against Him; when the loaves and fishes fail, the admiring multitudes go away; two or three tosses upon the waves make bad sailors hate the sea, and a trial or two will soon drive empty professors into an utter dislike of godliness. This is often the sieve in which God tries His people, and discerns between the chaff and the wheat. A dog may follow you as you pass by, if you offer it a bone, but if you give it a stroke from your staff, see if it will follow you, then! Yet, to its own master, the faithful creature will cling with even greater tenderness if it is beaten. If you are God’s own child, affliction will not make you fly from Him, but to him, saying, “Show me why You contend with me.” But if you, in mere formality, follow at God’s heels, as the dog pursues the stranger for a bone, then you will readily enough turn against the Lord if He chastens you. By this may we judge ourselves whether we are God’s servants or not. Beloved, it can never be a good thing to take offense at the dealings of the Lord. His ways are the best for us—to forsake them is always evil! Whatever temporary comfort we may gain by following the paths of evil, it will be shallow and short-lived, and soon a consequent and terrible darkness will cover our spirits. To depart from God’s law is always hazardous traveling; By-Path Meadow is never good for pilgrims; you may seem to gain in this world by walking apart from God in the indulgence of a dishonest practice, but the gain will be loss in the long run. You may even find a temporary deliverance from your pressing sorrow by a sinful step, but you will purchase the deliverance at an awful price, since sorrow will return to you multiplied sevenfold, and will find you naked, because your clear conscience, which was once your shield, has been vilely cast away. He that amidst a thousand troubles, keeps his heart whole by standing firm in his integrity, may battle against the entire world, and all the hosts of hell, and not be afraid! But he who gives way for the sake of policy shall find that a wounded spirit none can bear, and the weakness that shall come upon him, through having turned aside to crooked ways, shall be such as shall cost him a far more dolorous lamentation than all his afflictions could have wrung from him. Thus, at the outset of this sermon, we are warned that to peer into God’s secrets is not good, and to depart from God on account of His dealing severely with us, is the very worst policy that we can follow. II.

Coming more closely to the text, we observe WHAT IS IN THE TEXT PLAINLY COMMENDED. To draw near to God; what does this mean? To draw near to God, brothers and sisters, implies first that we are reconciled to Him by the death of His Son. For a man to attempt to draw near to God while God is angry with him would be a species of insanity; as well might the moth draw near to the candle or the stubble approach the flame! God is “a consuming fire,” and while our hearts are evil, there can nothing come of an approach to God but destruction! Before any one of us can draw near to God in acceptable prayer and praise, we must wash in the fountain that Christ has filled from His dying veins. Do you 3 3 believe in the atonement, my hearer? Believing in it, have you also received it? Do you rest your soul’s salvation upon the accomplished mediatorial work of Jesus Christ? If not, you are such an enemy to God that you may by no means even think yourself capable of drawing near to Him; your back is towards Him, and the faster you walk, the further from God will you journey, and your end will assuredly be to hear from Him the word “Depart!” You have been departing all your life! You shall go on departing throughout eternity—departing from the God whom you have hated, and despised, and forgotten. Before we can draw near to God then, we must have come with repentance and faith to the cross, and have looked up to Him who bled there, and we must have accepted Him as our salvation. I ask you whether you can accompany me in the first step. Have you laid hold on eternal life in Christ Jesus? Next, in order to draw near to God, the soul must grasp the thought that God is near to it, and the soul must have a clear sense of who and what God is. Ignorance is an effectual barrier to any approach to God, seeing that our drawing near is not physical since God is always equally near to our bodies. It is mental, and spiritual, and therefore, to such an approach there must be an intelligent knowledge and apprehension of the Lord. We must know Him as good, as great, as just, as holy, as merciful, as true, as faithful, and knowing Him—understanding something of His character—we must then grasp the thought that He is even now here, close at hand, nearer to us than any earthly friend could be, for He possesses our heart and compasses us on every side. As nothing can be nearer to the fish than the water in which it lives, so nothing can be nearer to us than God in whom we live, and move, and have our being. The Lord is not merely round about us, but He is in our souls, filling their every corner and chamber, entering into the core and center of our physical and mental nature. Now, when our mind is filled with these two thoughts—God near us, and reconciled to us—we have become capable of spiritually drawing near to Him! As yet I have not succeeded in my description. How shall I tell you what to draw near to God is? It is prayer, but it is more than prayer. I bow my knee, and I begin to ask the Lord to help me in my time of trouble. I tell Him what my trial is; I put up my requests, uttering them with such words as His Holy Spirit gives me on the occasion; but this alone, is not drawing near to God. Prayer is the modus operandi, it is the outward form of drawing near to God, but there is an inner spiritual approach which is scarcely to be described by language. Shall I tell you how I have sometimes drawn near to Him? I have been worn and wearied with a heavy burden, and have resorted to prayer; I have tried to pour out my soul’s anguish in words, but there was not vent enough by way of speech, and therefore my soul has broken out into sighs, and sobs, and tears. Feeling that God was hearing my heart-talk, I have said to Him, “Lord, behold my affliction; You know all about it; deliver me! If I cannot exactly tell You, there is no need of my words, for You see for Yourself; You searcher of hearts, You read me as I read a book; will You be pleased to help Your poor servant? I scarcely know what help it is I need, but You know; I cannot tell You what I desire, but teach me to desire what You will be sure to give; conform my will to Yours.” Perhaps at such a time there may be a peculiar bitterness about your trouble, a secret with which no stranger may intermeddle, but you can tell it all to your God. With broken words, sighs, groans, and tears, you lay bare the inmost secret of your soul. Taking off the doors of your heart from their hinges, you bid the Lord come in, and walk through every chamber, and see the whole. I do not know how to tell you what drawing near to God is better than by this rambling talk; it is getting to feel that the Lord is close to you, and that you have no secret which you wish to keep back from Him, but have unveiled your most private and sacred desires to Him. The getting right up to Jesus, our Lord; the leaning of your head, when it aches with trouble, upon the heart that always beats with His pity; the casting of all care upon Him, believing that He cares for you, pities you, and sympathizes with you—this is drawing near to God! It is good for me to draw near to God if this is what drawing near to God is. Let us make a further attempt at the definition. Drawing near to God may assume the form of praise. It would be a sad proof of selfishness if we never approached our God except to ask for something. Brothers and sisters, I hope we often feel that our heavenly Father has been so bountiful, kind, and tender to us that our cup runs over, and our heart pours itself out in the language of some grand old Psalm, 4 4 or we sing like the Virgin, “My soul does magnify the Lord; my spirit has rejoiced in God my Savior.” Thus to draw near to God in song is something, but there is a still further approach; the soul will sometimes climb so near her God in thankfulness, that words fail her, and she sits down, like David, in the Lord’s presence, wondering, “Why all this for me? What am I, and what is my father’s house, that You have brought me here? O Lord, Your mercy overwhelms me! Come then, expressive silence, speak the divine praise.” You have seen a little child when it is greatly pleased with a gift from its mother. It says but little by way of gratitude, but it begins to kiss its mother at a vehement rate, as though it never could be done! Such drawing near in love exists between a regenerate soul and its God. True saints fall to close embraces of gratitude, exhibiting inexpressible thankfulness, real, and deep, and therefore not to be worded—weights of love too heavy to be carried on the backs of such poor staggering bearers as our words. This is drawing near to God, and it is good for us. As when on a sultry day the traveler strips off his garments and plunges into the cool refreshing brook, and rises from it invigorated to pursue his way, so it is when a spirit has learned, either in prayer or in praise, to really draw near to God! It bathes itself in the brooks of heaven (streams branching from the river of the water of life), and goes on its way refreshed with heavenly strength! Still, I have not fully described drawing near to God; to draw near to God has in it the element of looking at the matter in the divine light. Our light here below is nothing better than candlelight at its best. Now, by candlelight there are many things of which we cannot judge; colors are not truly seen by candlelight; only by sunlight is the brightness of the tints apparent. We too often judge our afflictions and the providential dispensations of God by the candlelight of human reason. Oh, if we could draw near to God, and get into His light, and begin to look at things in their eternal bearings, how good it would be! To take the sacred picture of providence, and with our magnifying glass look at the canvas inch by inch, is practically to see nothing; but to view the work of the Divine Artist as a whole, with all its lights and shades, and all the fair proportions which manifest the matchless skill, that would be to see, indeed! The fault of us all is this—we judge providence by the moment, instead of regarding it in its true magnitude, stretched upon the framework of that eternal love which knows neither beginning nor end. Your dear child dies. Yes and what calamity could be heavier? But if the death of one shall be the salvation of others, and if the child’s death is but the child’s admission into Paradise, the matter wears another aspect; it is no longer such a subject for tears as it otherwise might have been. Poverty scowls in your house—yes, and a sore ill is poverty, but if this poverty of pounds, shillings, and pence, should mean the reclaiming of a lost soul! If this trouble should be really needed to get us out of an ill position, and to bring us into a holier and happier state—preparatory for heaven—what would the loss of all earthly riches be compared with the winning of heaven? Brothers and sisters, we do not know how to judge! But if we must indulge our propensity to sit upon the bench, it would be good for us to get so near to God that we should weigh events in His scale, and consider matters according to His measurement. Further than this, a man may be enabled not merely to draw so near to God as to see things in God’s light, but he may even rise so high as to be pleased with anything and everything that pleases God! This is a high attainment when a soul can honestly say, “If I could have my will, it should be my will that God’s will should be done. Let Him do wholly as seems good in His sight; if it is for His glory that I pine in sickness; then I would not wish for health; and if it is for His honor that I should be poor and despised, and then I would not wish for comforts or for esteem.” The heart has need to pass through many a furnace before it attains to this, yet, my brothers and sisters, we very soon reach this point with regard to those we love on earth, for we would very cheerfully give up our own wishes to please some dear one. In fact, it is with very many their highest happiness if there is anything that is needed by the object of their affection, to deny themselves anything and everything, if but their dear one’s wish may be fulfilled. And shall we thus yield up ourselves at the shrine of a wife, or a husband, or a darling child— and shall we not rejoice to surrender self for our gracious Lord? Shall we put our idols higher than our God? Shame upon us if anything in heaven or earth is hard to do, or suffer for our Lord!

Let us ask to be able to say, “Nevertheless not as I will, but as You will; if it pleases You, my God, it pleases me.” No, 5 5 let the Lord have His way! If we could stand in His place, if we could have our way in opposition to Him, yet should it not be, but we would petition for the privilege of denying ourselves in order that His eternal purpose might be fulfilled. Brothers and sisters, may we learn to draw near to God in such a sense as this! May the secret of the Lord be with us! May the Spirit of the Lord overshadow our spirits! May His will be our joy; His light our delight, and Himself our all in all! We must now leave this point; we can go no further; words are scarcely the proper medium by which to instruct you in the art of drawing near to God. We must show you our fruit ripened under so divine a sun! You must know the sweetness of communion for yourselves, and knowing it for yourselves, you will subscribe with heart and soul to Asaph’s commendation, “It is good for me to draw near to God.” III. Thirdly, we shall occupy a little time in inquiring THE GROUNDS FOR SUCH AN UNQUALIFIED COMMENDATION—“It is good for me to draw near to God.” First, it is good in itself. How can it be otherwise than good to have access to Him who is the highest good? The courtier counts it a high honor, and satisfaction to sun himself in the presence of his monarch. He basks in the royal smile; shall not the courtiers of heaven count it an equal good to stand in the favor of the King of kings, and to delight themselves with the glory of His majesty? It is a pleasure to draw near to God. As the enlivening breath of summer awakens the joyous emotions of creation, filling the gardens with beauty, and the groves with song, even so the countenance of the Lord is the source of the highest pleasure to the renewed soul, enlightening it with celestial happiness! Out of heaven there are no such joys as those discovered in living near to God. Albeit everything that is pleasant is not, therefore, good—yet for once here is a good thing which is sound as well as sweet, as holy as it is happy, as divinely excellent as it is humanly desirable. Besides, to draw near to God is elevating! He who draws near to the earth grovels, and becomes earthy; he who draws near to the heavenly One is changed from glory to glory into the image of the heavenly. You shall know a man by his company, for we are all much shaped by our acquaintances, and he who has an acquaintance with God shall be discerned of all men, for his face shall shine, and all his life and character shall be transfigured with holiness! Let but Jehovah dwell in a bush in the desert, and lowliness is forgotten in glowing glories! And even thus let the Holy Spirit rest upon the earnest of His servants, and the fishermen of Galilee shall become royal wonder-workers, whose names shall be as the names of the great ones who are on the earth! Approaching to God is, therefore, good in itself. For a chosen creature there is nothing better than to draw near to the Creator; it is so elevating, so honorable, and so delightful! Brothers and sisters, it is good to draw near to God if you consider for a moment our relations to God. Remember gratefully that we are His children who have been born into His family—and who shall deny but what it is a good thing for the child to come near to its parents? Where is the babe happier than on its mother’s breast? There its cares are at an end, its sorrows cease—it cries itself to sleep upon the warm breast of love, when elsewhere it had been disturbed with rude alarms. It is good for me, my God, like a babe to come nestling into Your bosom; it is always good for the chickens to shelter beneath the wings of the hen; the hawk may be in the air, but they are perfectly safe from cruelty—and when the child of God cowers down beneath the everlasting wings, and learns the meaning of David’s words, “He shall cover you with His feathers, and under His wings shall you trust,” oh, then it is good, indeed! We are the sheep of His pasture, and none shall doubt but what it is good for the sheep to draw near to the Shepherd. In His presence is fullness of joy, and nowhere else but there; He makes His sheep to lie down in green pastures because He is near them; it is His transporting presence that leads them beside the still waters. It must be good for those who are of the family of Christ to live very near to their Elder Brother, through whom all the inheritance comes to them. We are the disciples of our blessed Teacher and Master, and where should a disciple be but near his Lord? He wishes to be taught—let him sit at the Teacher’s feet. The believer is an imitator of Christ. He who would imitate his copy, must keep his copy near him, and before his eyes. We are “imitators of God’s dear children,” and therefore shall find it most helpful in our labor after the heavenly image, to draw very near, study very closely, and habitually dwell near to the Lord. 6 6 Brothers and sisters, it is good for us to draw near to God, again, because of our pitiable character and condition. We are weakest of the weak, and where should weakness lean but upon Him who delights to put forth His power for the upholding of the feeble? We are exceedingly foolish—even the wisest saints are foolish, apt to be deceived, and prone to error; where, then, can our folly be safer, but under the careful guidance of infallible wisdom? It must be good for us when we get into dilemmas, to inquire at the divine oracle, and ask the way that we may walk. Besides, we are many of us so prone to despond, that if others of more elastic step could afford to live without their God, certainly we could not! Timorous spirits will find it especially good to cultivate intimate communion with God, for unless they do this, depression of spirit may grow upon them, and despondency may degenerate into despair. It is good for such to plume their wings, and mount above the clouds, if the clouds have such deadly effect upon their joys. I cannot imagine a single quality in the child of God which does not argue for the necessity and benefit of drawing near to God; search yourselves through and through, and what will you find in your original nature that you can depend upon? O you who live nearest to God, take care to examine the secrets of your heart, and see if there is not within much to disgust, and little to content you! See if there is anything in you by nature, that you can rejoice in, or that you can lean upon! Now by your weakness, by your folly, by your sinfulness, by your unbelief—by every evil quality that must ruin you unless divine grace prevents—I urge you to draw near to God! And as each of these evils shall be overcome, you shall find increasingly that it is good to draw near to God. Dear friends, the correctness of the commendation in our text might be proven to you in many ways, and so we must trouble you with a few more arguments. It is good for you to draw near to God because of the removal of many evils with which you are constantly surrounded. You business people have to be busy in the world from Monday morning till Saturday night, and a man who is called to business ought to be diligent in it; there is no sin in diligence—in fact, it is a virtue, but the tendency of business is in many cases, to make a man covetous; in others, fretfulness is the great failing, and all worldliness is a strong temptation, for very frequently you are unmindful of your Lord, and too greedy for gain. In fact, unnumbered evils rise from our daily avocations like dust from our dry roads as we make our pilgrimage along them. In what way can a Christian shake the dust from his garments? How can he wash his face from the grime of his daily labor? Why, only by drawing near to God! Maintain with earnest regularity your morning and evening prayers; do more than that—demand from time that it shall yield a little space for eternity; force yourself to be alone; pray God that your heart may be with Him while your hands are in your daily work. See to it that while you are in the world, you are not of it, because your aspirations, your thoughts, and desires are going upward, and your communion is with the Father, and with His Son, Jesus Christ. If you do this, you will find that business becomes less dangerous, the cares of it are less bitter, and the joys of it are less intoxicating. I do not know what may be the peculiar position which your affairs are in this morning, but I venture upon the remark that from the evil which springs out of your present condition, there is no cure like drawing near to God! Are you solitary and alone? Have you much leisure? Great temptations lurk in leisure—draw near to God, and they vanish, and leisure becomes space in which to serve your God! Are you suffering under very severe trials? Ah, it will be sweetly good to you to draw near to God, for then you will not become impatient, nor will you be permitted to think hard things of your gracious God and Father. Beyond the evils which drawing near to God will remove, there are many good things which drawing near to God will confer. These I cannot particularly instance, for they comprehend everything! There is no blessing in the covenant of grace which prayer cannot obtain, which close approaches to God will not ensure. Let me gather them up under these short heads—Are you a worker for God, and do you lack strength? Draw near to God and get it! Are you struggling and wrestling against a mighty inward sin or outward error? Then draw near to God, and you will learn the way to victory! Like the old fable of the giant whom Hercules would gladly destroy—who rose every time he fell to the ground stronger than before, because he touched his mother, earth—so the Christian, every time he is overcome, if he falls upon his God, rises stronger than before! Take care, O tried believer that you get near your God and you shall 7 7 be strong. Are you a minister? Do you preach the gospel? It is always good for an ambassador to receive his orders fresh from court—and it is good for us when we come into the pulpit with a message all glowing from the Master’s mouth! Oh, I can say, if no one else can, it is good for me to draw near to God! Nothing else could keep my soul standing in the midst of responsibilities so overwhelming, and trials that are neither few nor small! I had long since been utterly confounded were it not that I have been taught by experience to draw near to God, and breathe the bracing air of heaven before I come among you to talk of the things of God. Perhaps, my dear friend, you are conscious of having fallen into sin, and you say, “Do not talk about drawing near to God to me! I am so unworthy.” Well, if there is one to whom it is good to draw near to God above another, you are the man! You who have the most sin have most need of divine grace; where will you obtain pardon but by drawing near to God through Jesus Christ? You who are the foulest with inbred corruption—how will you win the victory over your natural depravity, but by drawing near to the strong for strength through the blood of the atonement, and seeking the power of the Holy Spirit? I say to you, brothers and sisters, whether it is sin or sorrow, whether it is temptation or depression—whatever may be the evil which assails you this day, it must be in the highest degree good for you to draw near to God! We have said enough, I think, to prove our point, but this much more must be added. This drawing near to God is a remedy for evil open to every child of God by the assistance of the Holy Spirit. You are poor, yes—but you can draw near to God without a golden bridge! You are ignorant—you can draw near to God without Latin or Greek! You are not gifted with rhetorical powers—you tell me you cannot put six sentences together; remember our gracious God does not require you to be a Demosthenes or a Cicero! You can draw near to God even though you cannot say a word! A prayer may be crystallized in a tear; a tear is enough water to float a desire to God! Yes, and if you cannot even weep, the very bitterest tears are those that drop inside the head—and these the Lord will cherish! When parching grief will not let the eyes relieve the heart with tears, the Lord can and will deliver; when no other balm will avail, it will be good for you to draw near to God—and you have the Lord’s permission to do so! Yes, in the long hours of the watchful night in the sick chamber, you can draw near to God, and in the sultry hours of the busy day you have no need to seek your oratory or your closet—you can draw near to God in the field and the shop! Here in this pew, or there in the street; yonder in your lonely attic, or in your miserable cellar, or in the midst of the ribald talk, and the coarse society of wicked workmen with whom you are toiling—anywhere, even though it were at the gates of hell, you can draw near to God!

There is never a possibility for Satan to block up this road, nor rob you of this privilege, and thus you bear about with you, O believer, a charm against every ill—a weapon that will stand you in good stead against every foe, and when the waters of the last black river shall roar in your ears, and your blood shall be made to freeze, and your heart and your flesh shall fail you—then as you draw near to God by committing your spirit to Him, you shall find that He is the strength of your life, and your portion forever! It shall always be good for you to draw near to God. There is no need that I should say more in conclusion, except to finish by a word of practical advice. If it is indeed, so good to draw near to God, let us do it at once! Children of God, have you been living at a distance from your Father? The silver bell rings this morning, and invites you to return; an angel voice cries, “Come back! Come back! Come back!” Will you not answer, “I will arise and go to my Father”? Have you had a little prosperity, a thriving time in business, and have you ungratefully forgotten the God who gave you this? Oh, now that the prosperity is for a while removed, out of the darkness let the voice of long-suffering mercy be heard, for it calls to you, “Return unto Me, backsliding child; return.” It shall be good for you to acquaint yourself with God, now, though you have lost the privilege of communion for a while; the privilege has not lost its sweetness; it will still bring you countless blessings to approach your God. Do I address any dear friend here who is very happy and rejoicing? I hope his joy will abide with him, and that he will rejoice in the Lord always! But it will be good for him, at this bright hour, to draw 8 8 near to God, for communion with God will give a deeper and healthier tone to your joy, so that it shall not intoxicate you. You shall have all the true mirth that lies in earthly comfort, but the evil element shall be neutralized—your feet shall stand on your high places, but your soul shall not be puffed up with pride! Fellowship with God is good for you! O seek it now! Draw near to God at once! I would suggest to each believer the propriety of trying to get between now and the next Lord’s-Day, a special season alone. Strain after a devotional vacation. Surely if you can spare time for holidays, and recreations, you can clear a space for special drawing near to God! I believe this church would be visited with a very great ingathering, if all the members of it made it a solemn matter of duty to draw near to God especially, and particularly. I feel persuaded the ministry would revive in freshness, converts would be more numerous, and the people of God more rejoicing if we did this; we might expect to see a general revival of religion if all the faithful in Christ’s church drew near to Him with greater vehemence of supplication, a higher expectation, and a greater boldness of faith. May God give us divine grace to attempt this! Alas, I have been very conscious, while preaching this morning, that my subject has small attractions for a great many present, because they never did draw near to God, and what I have spoken will seem to them to be an idle tale. Ah, my dear friends, if you live and die a stranger to God, as you have lived up to now; God, whom you do not know today, will not know you in another world! No love-knowledge will He have of you. You will ask of His Son for mercy, but He will reply, “I never knew you. Depart from Me, you cursed.” You will need an interest in Jesus’ blood in the next world; you will need to have a part in the love of Christ when He comes in His kingdom; but as you do not know Him here, He will not know you there. Woe is me that I should have to tell you this! Do you know what becomes of those who forget God? The Scripture is very plain: “The wicked shall be turned into hell, and all the nations that forget God.” Shall that be your portion? Will you always be forgotten of God? Oh, it would be good for you to draw near to God! And you may do so, for Jesus welcomes those who desire forgiveness! You have but to ask Him to accept you and He will! In your pew this morning, the prayer may successfully assault His ear—send it up—“O Son of David, I desire to draw near to God; introduce me to Your Father’s presence by the merit of Your sacrifice.” You shall not seek in vain, dear heart! Christ will have pity upon you, and you shall be saved! O that today, today, TODAY you might learn for the first time, that it is good to draw near to God! PORTION OF SCRIPTURE READ BEFORE SERMON—PSALM 73.

Charles Spurgeon 

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