Your weekly Dose of Spurgeon
The PyroManiacs devote some space each weekend to highlights from the lifetime of works from the Prince of Preachers, Charles Haddon Spurgeon. The following excerpt is from The Sword and the Trowel, volume 7, pages 124-26, Pilgrim Publications.
"Are you not willing to pass through every ordeal if by any means you may save some?"
I want to say a word to you who are trying to bring souls to Jesus. You long and pray to be useful: do you know what this involves? Are you sure you do? Prepare yourselves, then, to see and suffer many things which you would rather be unacquainted with. Experiences which would be unnecessary to you personally will become your portion if the Lord uses you for the salvation of others.
An ordinary person may rest in his bed all night, but a surgeon
will be called up at all hours; a farming-man may take his ease at his
fireside, but if he becomes a shepherd he must be out among the lambs, and bear
all weathers for them; even so doth Paul say, “Therefore I endure
all things for the elect’s sakes, that they may also obtain the salvation
which is in Christ Jesus with eternal glory.” For this cause we shall be
made to undergo experiences which will surprise us.
Suppose that by some
painful operation you could have your right arm made a little longer,
I do not suppose you would care to undergo the operation; but if you
foresaw that by undergoing the pain you would be enabled to reach and
save drowning men who else would sink before your eyes, I think you
would willingly bear the agony, and pay a heavy fee to the surgeon to be thus
qualified for the rescue of your fellows.
Reckon, then, that to acquire
soul-winning power you will have to go through fire and water, through doubt
and despair, through mental torment and soul distress. It will
not, of course, be the same with you all, nor perhaps with any two of you, but
according to the work allotted you will be your preparation.
You must
go into the fire if you are to pull others out of it, and you will have to
dive into the floods if you are to draw others out of the water. You cannot
work a fire-escape without feeling the scorch of the conflagration, nor
man a life-boat without being covered with the waves.
If Joseph is to preserve
his brethren alive, he must himself go down into Egypt; if Moses is to
lead the people through the wilderness, he must first himself spend forty
years there with his flock. Payson truly said, “If any one asks to be made a
successful minister he knows not what he asks; and it becomes him to
consider whether he can drink deeply of Christ’s bitter cup and be baptized
in his baptism.”
3 comments:
Excellent! I’m crying here! Yes Lord, use me!
Wow! Amen!
AMEN
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