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Do You Know Him?
C.H. Spurgeon

Charles Haddon Spurgeon (1834 - 1892). British Baptist preacher and author born in Kelvedon, Essex, England. Converted at 15 in 1850 after hearing a Methodist lay preacher, he was baptized and began preaching at 16, soon gaining prominence for his oratory. By 1854, he pastored New Park Street Chapel in London, which grew into the 6,000-seat Metropolitan Tabernacle, where he preached for 38 years. Known as the "Prince of Preachers," Spurgeon delivered thousands of sermons, published in 63 volumes as The New Park Street Pulpit and Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit, still widely read. He founded the Pastors’ College in 1856, training over 900 ministers, and established Stockwell Orphanage, housing 500 children. A prolific writer, he penned classics like All of Grace (1886) and edited The Sword and the Trowel magazine. Married to Susannah Thompson in 1856, they had twin sons, both preachers. Despite battling depression and gout, he championed Calvinist theology and social reform, opposing slavery. His sermons reached millions globally through print, and his library of 12,000 books aided his self-education. Spurgeon died in Menton, France, leaving a legacy enduring through his writings and institutions.
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Sermon Summary
In this sermon, the speaker paints a vivid picture of a person who has been captured and enslaved by Roman soldiers during the time of the Roman emperors. The person is stripped, whipped, branded, and imprisoned, and is ultimately appointed to die in the amphitheater for the entertainment of a tyrant. As the person stands alone and naked in the Colosseum, facing a huge lion, they are filled with fear and certain of their impending death. However, just as the person is about to be attacked, a mysterious deliverer appears from the crowd and confronts the lion, driving it away. The deliverer then comforts the person and sets them free. The speaker uses this story to illustrate the power of Christ as our ultimate deliverer and the desire we should have to know Him and bless Him for our salvation.
Sermon Transcription
The Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit. Do you know him? Sermon delivered on Sunday morning, January 31st, 1864, by the Reverend C. H. Spurgeon at the Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington. Philippians 3, verse 10. That I may know him. The object of the Apostle's life, that for which he sacrificed everything, country, kindred, honor, comfort, liberty, and life itself, was that he might know Christ. Observe that this is not Paul's prayer as an unconverted man, that he may know Christ and so be saved. For it follows upon the previous supplication that he might win Christ and be found in him. This is the desire of one who has been saved, who enjoys the full conviction that his sins are pardoned and that he is in Christ. It is only the regenerated and saved man who can feel the desire that I may know him. Are you astonished that a saved man should have such a desire as this? A moment's reflection will remove your astonishment. Imagine for a moment that you are living in the age of the Roman emperors. You have been captured by Roman soldiers and dragged from your native country. You have been sold for a slave, stripped, whipped, branded, imprisoned, and treated with shameful cruelty. At last, you are appointed to die in the amphitheater to make holiday for a tyrant. The populace assemble with delight. There they are, tens of thousands of them, gazing down from the living sides of the capacious Colosseum. You stand alone and naked, armed only with a single dagger, a poor defense against gigantic beasts. A ponderous door is drawn up by machinery, and forth there rushes the monarch of the forest, a huge lion. You must slay him or be torn to pieces. You are absolutely certain that the conflict is too stern for you and that the sure result must and will be that those terrible teeth will grind your bones and drip with your blood. You tremble. Your joints are loosed. You are paralyzed with fear like the timid deer when the lion has dashed it to the ground. But what is this? A wonder of mercy. A deliverer appears. A great unknown leaps from among the gazing multitude and confronts the savage monster. He quails not at the roaring of the devourer, but dashes upon him with a terrible fury till, like a whipped cur, the lion slinks towards his den, dragging himself along in pain and fear. The hero lifts you up, smiles into your bloodless face, whispers comfort in your ear, and bids you be of good courage, for you are free. Do you not think that there would arise at once in your heart a desire to know your deliverer? As the guards conducted you into the open street and you breathed the cool fresh air, would not the first question be, who was my deliverer, that I may fall at his feet and bless him? You are not, however, informed. But instead of it, you are gently led away to a noble mansion house where your many wounds are washed and healed with salve of rarest power. You are clothed in sumptuous apparel. You are made to sit down at a feast. You eat and are satisfied. You rest upon the softest down. The next morning you are attended by servants who guard you from evil and minister to your good. Day after day, week after week, you are once supplied. You live like a courtier. There is nothing that you can ask which you do not receive. I am sure that your curiosity would grow more and more intense till it would ripen into an insatiable craving. You would scarcely neglect an opportunity of asking the servants, Tell me, who does all this? Who is my noble benefactor? For I must know him. Well, but, they would say, is it not enough for you that you are delivered from the lion? Nay, say you, it is for that very reason that I pant to know him. Your wants are richly supplied. Why are you vexed by curiosity as to the hand which reaches you the boon? If your garment is worn out, there is another. Long before hunger oppresses you, the table is well loaded. What more do you want? But your reply is, It is because I have no wants, that therefore my soul longs and yearns, even to hungering and to thirsting, that I may know my generous loving friend. Suppose that as you wake up one morning you find lying upon your pillow a precious love token from your unknown friend, a ring sparkling with jewels and engraved with a tender inscription, a bouquet of flowers bound about with a love motto. Your curiosity now knows no bounds. But you are informed that this wondrous being has not only done for you what you have seen, but a thousand deeds of love which you did not see, which were higher and greater still as proofs of his affection. You are told that he was wounded and imprisoned and scourged for your sake, for he had a love to you so great that death itself could not overcome it. You are informed that he is every moment occupied in your interests, because he has sworn by himself that where he is there you shall be. His honors you shall share, and of his happiness you shall be the crown. If I am he thinks you would say, Tell me, men and women, any of you who know him, tell me who he is and what he is. And if they said, But it is enough for you to know that he loves you and to have daily proofs of his goodness, you would say, No, these love tokens increase my thirst. If ye see him, tell him I am sick of love. The phlegons which he sends me and the love tokens which he gives me, they stay me for a while with the assurance of his affection, but they only impel me onward with the more unconquerable desire that I may know him. I must know him. I cannot live without knowing him. His goodness makes me thirst and pant and even die that I may know him. Have I imagined emotions which would not be natural? I think not. The most cruel in calculating would be warmed with desires like these. Methink what I have now pictured before you will wake the echoes in your breasts, and you will say, Ah, it is even so. It is because Christ loved me and gave himself for me that I want to know him. It is because he has shed his blood for me and has chosen me that I may be one with him forever, that my soul desires a fuller acquaintance with him. Now may God the Holy Ghost very graciously lead me onward that I may also quicken in you the desire to know him. Beloved, let us pass by that crowd of outer-court worshippers who are content to live without knowing Christ. I do not mean the ungodly and profane. We will not consider them just now. They are altogether strangers and foreigners to him. I mean children of God, the visible saints. How many there are of those whom I must call outer-court worshippers, for they are strangers to this panting to know him. They can say with Paul that I may win him and be found in him. That they do want, but this higher wish that I may know him has not stirred their hearts. How many brethren we know who are content to know Christ's historic life. They read the evangelists and they are charmed with the perfect beauty of the Savior's history. Never man spake like this man, say they. And they confess that never man acted with such love as he did. They know all the incidents of his life from his manger to his cross, but they do not know him. They are as men who have read Caesar's commentaries, but who have never seen Caesar. They know the battles which Caesar fought. They can even recognize the mantle which Caesar wore that day he overcame the Nervi, but they do not know Caesar himself. The person of the Lord Jesus is as much hidden from their eyes as the golden pot of manna when concealed in the ark. They know the life of Christ, but not Christ the life. They admire his way among men, but they see not himself as the way. Others there are who know Christ's doctrine and prize it too, but they know not him. All which he taught is dear to them, orthodoxy. For this they would burn at Smithfield or lay down their necks at Tower Hill. Many of them are well instructed and divinely illuminated in the doctrine of Christ, and the wonder is that they should stop there. Because, beloved, it does seem to me when I begin to know a man's teaching that the next thing is the desire to know his person. Addison in one of the spectators tells us that the reason why so many books are printed with the portraits of the authors is just this, that as a man reads a book, he feels a desire to know what sort of appearance the author had. This indeed is very natural. If you have ever been refreshed under a minister's printed sermons, if you have at any time received any benefit from his words, I know you have said, I would like to see that man. I would like to hear the truth flow hot and fresh from his living lips. I would like to know just how he said that sentence and how that passage sounded as it came from his earnest heart. My beloved, surely if you know the doctrine of Jesus, if you have so been with Christ as to sit at his feet and hear what he has to say, you must, I hope, have had some longings to know him, to know his person, and if you have, you will have had to pass by multitudes of followers of Jesus who rest satisfied with his words, but forget that he is himself the word. Beloved, there are others, and against them I bring no complaint. They go as far as they can who are delighted with Christ's example. Christ's character is, in their esteem, the mirror of all perfection. They desire to walk in his footsteps. They listen to his sermon upon the mount. They are enchanted with it, as well they may be. They pray to be obedient in all things to Christ as their Master and their Lord. They do well. Mark, I am finding no fault with any of these who prize the history or who value the doctrine or who admire the precept, but I want more. I do want, beloved, that you and I should know him. I love his precepts, but I love him better. Sweet is the water from Bethlehem's well and well worth the struggle of the armed men to win but a bucket from it, but the well itself is better and deserves all Israel's valor to defend it. As the source is ever more valuable than the stream, so is Christ ever better than the best words of his lips or the best deeds of his hand. I want to know him. I do care for his actions. My soul would sit down and admire those masterly works of holy art, his miracles of humiliation, of suffering, of patience and of holy charity, but better far I love the hands which wrought these masterworks, the lips which spoke these goodly words, and the heart which heaved with that matchless love which was the cause of all. Yes, beloved, we must get farther than Immanuel's achievements, however glorious we must come to know him. Most believers rest perfectly at ease with knowing Christ's sacrifice. They see Jesus as the great high priest, laying a great sacrifice upon the altar for their sins, and with their whole heart they accept his atonement. By faith they know that all their sin is taken away by precious blood. This is a most blessed and hallowed attainment I will grant you, but it is not every Christian who perceives that Christ was not only the offerer of a sacrifice but was himself the sacrifice and therefore loves him as such. Priest, altar, victim, everything Christ was. He gathers up all in himself, and when I see that he loved me and gave himself for me, it is not enough to know this fact. I want to know him, the glorious person who does and is all this. I want to know the man who thus gave himself for me. I want to behold the lamb once slain for me. I want to rest upon the bosom which covers the heart which was pierced with the spear. I pray him to kiss me with the kisses of that mouth which cried Eloi, Eloi, I love Calvary, the scene of woe, but I love Christ better, the great object of that agony, and even his cross and all his sufferings, dear though these must ever be to the Christian mind, only occupying a second place. The first seat is for himself, his person, his deity, and humanity. Thus, you see, we have to leave a great many believers behind. Nor have we enumerated all, for I believe that even some of those saints who have received grace to look for the coming of Christ, yet in their vision of his coming too much forget him. Is it not possible for me to pant for the second advent as to lose sight of him who is to make that advent? So to long for a millennium that I may forget him who is to reign king of kings? So to pant after that glory of Israel that I may forget him who is Israel's glory? Anywhere short of knowing him, I would not have you stop, beloved. And even when you know him, I would urge you still to be impelled with the same desire and to press forward, crying with the apostle that I may know him. Beloved, how many there are who have heard of Christ and read about Christ, and that is enough for them. But it is not enough for me, and it should not be enough for you. The apostle did not say, I have heard of him on whom I have believed, but I know whom I have believed. To hear about Christ may damn you. It may be a savour of death unto death to you. You have heard of him with the ear, but it is essential that you know him in order that you may be partakers of eternal life. My dear hearers, be not content unless you have this as your soul's present portion. Others there are who have been persuaded by the judgment and encouragement of others that they know something about the great Redeemer. They do not know him, but still they are persuaded by others that they have an interest in him. Let me warn you of second-hand spirituality. It is a rotten soul deceiving deception. Beware of all esteeming yourself according to the thoughts of others, or you will be ruined. Another man's opinion of me may have great influence over me. I have heard of a man in perfectly good health, killed by the opinion of others. Several of his friends had foolishly agreed to play him a practical trick, whereupon one of them met him and said, How ill you look this morning. He did not feel so. He was very much surprised at the remark. When he met the next, who said to him, Oh dear, how bad you look, he began to think there might be something in it. And as he turned smart round the corner, a third person said to him, What a sight you are, how altered from what you used to be. He went home ill. He took to his bed and died. So goes the story, and I should not marvel if it really did occur. Now, if such might be the effect of persuasion and supposed belief in the sickness of a man, how much more readily may men be persuaded into the idea of spiritual health. A believer meets you and by his treatment seems to say, I welcome you as a dear brother and means it too. You are baptized and you are received into church fellowship. And so everybody thinks that you must be a follower of Christ, and yet you may not know him. Oh, I do pray you do not be satisfied with being persuaded into something like an assurance that you are in him, but do know him, know him for yourself. There are many who I hope will be saved there long, but I am in great doubt of them because they can only say they half think they know Christ. They do not quite believe in him, but they do not disbelieve in him. They hold between two opinions. Our dear here, that is a very dangerous place to stand in. The borderland is the devil's hunting ground. Undecided souls are fair game for the great fowler. God give you once for all the true decision by which through grace you shall know him. Do not be satisfied with thinking you know him, hoping you know him, but know him. Oh, it is nothing to have heard about him, to have talked about him, to have eaten and have drank with him, to have preached him, or even to have wrought miracles in his name, to have been charmed by his eloquence, to have been stirred with the story of his love, to have been moved to imitate him. This shall nothing avail you unless you win him and are found in him. Seek with the apostle to give up everything of your own righteousness and all other objects and aims in life and say, this I seek after that I may know him. Thus much then on the first point, leaving those behind who do not know him, let us make an advance. Secondly, let us draw curtain after curtain, which shall admit us to know more of Christ. Did you ever visit the manufacturer of splendid porcelain at Sevres? I have done so. If anybody should say to me, do you know the manufacturer at Sevres? I would say, yes, I do. And no, I do not. I know it for I've seen the building, I've seen the rooms in which the articles are exhibited for sale, and I've seen the museum and model room. But I do not know the factory as I would like to know it, for I've not seen the process of manufacture and have not been admitted into the workshops as some are. Suppose I had seen, however, the process of the moulding of the clay and the laying on of the rich designs, if anybody should still say to me, do you know how they manufacture those wonderful articles? I should very likely still be compelled to say, no, I do not, because there are certain secrets, certain private rooms into which neither friend nor foe can be admitted, lest the process should be open to the world. And so, you see, I might say I knew and yet might not half know. And when I half knew, still there would be so much left that I might be compelled to say I do not know how many different ways there are of knowing a person. And even so, there are all these different ways of knowing Christ, so that you may keep on all your lifetime still wishing to get into another room and another room near and near to the great secret, still panting to know him. Good Rutherford says, I urge upon you a near communion with Christ and a growing communion. There are curtains to be drawn by in Christ that we never shot and new foldings in love with him. I despair that ever I shall win to the far end of that love. There are so many plies in it. Therefore, dig deep and set by as much time in the day for him as you can. He will be won by labor. To begin with, we know a person when we recognize him. You know the queen? Well, I do. I recollect seeing her. And if I were to see any quantity of ladies, I think I should know which was the queen and which was not. You may say honestly that you know her to that extent. Beloved, every Christian must, in this sense, know Christ. You must know him by a divine illumination so as to know who he is and what he is. When Jesus said to Simon Peter, whom sayest thou that I am? He said, Thou art the Christ, the son of the living God. And the Lord replied, Blessed art thou, Simon Barjonas, for flesh and blood have not revealed this unto thee. It is an early step in this knowledge of Christ to know and to believe that Jesus Christ is Lord, to know that Christ is God, divine to me, that Christ is man, brother to me, bone of my bone and flesh of my flesh, that as such he is a sin subduing savior, that he is for me an intercessor pleading before the throne, my prophet, priest and king. In this sense, I trust that most of you know him. If you do not, breathe this silent prayer now. Lord, help me that I may know him. But this knowledge of recognition is comparatively a low attainment, one of the lowest rounds of the ladder of light. In the second place, a believer knows Christ to a higher degree when he knows him by practical experimental acquaintance with what he does. For instance, I know Christ as a cleanser. They tell me he is a refiner, that he cleanses from spots. He has washed me in his precious blood, and to that extent I know him. They tell me that he clothes the naked. He hath covered me with a garment of righteousness, and to that extent I know him. They tell me that he is a breaker, and that he breaks fetters. He has set my soul at liberty, and therefore I know him. They tell me that he is a king, and that he reigns over sin. He hath subdued my enemies beneath his feet, and I know him in that character. They tell me he is a shepherd. I know him, for I am his sheep. They say he is a door. I have entered in through him, and I know him as a door. They say he is food. My spirit feeds on him as on the bread of heaven, and therefore I know him as such. You know, if anyone says, do you know Dr. So-and-so? It is a very satisfactory answer if you can reply, oh yes, I know him, for he attended me the last time that I was ill. There is more knowledge in that than if you could only say, oh yes, I know him, he wears such and such a hat, or he is a man of such and such an appearance. And so, Christian, this is a second and higher step to know Christ, because you have experienced in your own soul that he is just what God has revealed him to be. For we know a man in a better sense than this, when we are on speaking terms with him. Do you know So-and-so? Yes, you say, I not only know him by name so as to recognize him, I not only know him as a tradesman having dealt with him, but I know him because when we pass each other in the morning, we exchange a word or two. And if I had anything to say upon matters, any request to make, I should feel no difficulty about asking him. Well now, the Christian knows his Lord in this sense. He has every day official communication with Christ. He is on speaking terms with him. There may be persons here perhaps who know the Queen in a sense in which I do not know her. Perhaps they speak to her. They have so done. I have never done that. They go beyond me there. But you see, dear friends, this is not a very great thing, because you may be on speaking terms with a man, but you may not know much of him for all that. So you may be in the habit of daily prayer, and you may talk with Christ every morning and every evening, and you may know exceedingly little of him. You are on speaking terms with him, but there is something beyond this, very far beyond this. As I might say that I know a man merely because I meet him every day and ask him for what I want and understand that he is kind and generous. But how shallow is such an acquaintance, for I do not know his private character nor his inward heart. Even so, a believer may have constant dealings with Christ in his prayers and in his praises, and yet for all that he may have only gone a certain distance and may have need still to pray that I may know him. But you are said to know a person better still when he invites you to his house. At Christmas time there is a family party in a romp, and he asks you there, and you are one of the children and enter into all their sports around the fireside, and you indulge as they do in the genialities of social life. You are asked again. You go there pretty often. In fact, if there is a happy evening in that house, they generally expect to see friends so and so there. Well now, that is better. We are getting now into something like knowing a man, and I do trust there are many of you, beloved, who have got as far as this with regard to your divine Lord. Christ has entertained you with some rare visits from his gracious presence. He brought you into the banqueting house, and his banner over you was love. When he manifested himself, he did it unto you as he did not unto the world. He was pleased in the majesty of his condescension to take you aside and show you his hands and his side. He called you friend. He treated you as such and permitted you to enjoy the sweets of being one of the family. Ah, but you may go into a man's house as a constant visitor, and yet you may not know him. That is to say, not in the highest sense. You speak to the man's wife and say, Your husband is a marvelously charming man. What a cheerful, joyful, spirited man he is. He never seems to have any depressions of spirit and experiences no changes whatever. She shakes her head and she says, Ah, you do not know him. You do not know him as I do, because she sees him at all times and at all hours. She can read the very heart of the man. That Christian has grown much in grace, who has advanced not only to be the friend of Christ, having occasional fellowship with him, but who comes to recognize his marriage union with the person of his Lord, and of whom it can be said, The secret of the Lord is with him that fear him, and he will show them his covenant. Now we have the intimacy of love with its perfect frankness, nearness, sweetness, joyousness, delight. The rending away of every separating veil makes the communion to be as near as it well can be this side the black river. But a Christian may get farther than this. Even the spouse may not know her husband. The most loving wife who ever entered into the cares of her husband must have discovered that there is something which separates his experience from her powers of comprehension. Luther's wife, Catherine, was of all women, the wife for Luther. But there were times in Luther's gigantic tribulations when he must leave Kate behind. There were extraordinary times with him, times both of ecstatic joy when, like a great angel, he stretched his mighty wings and flew right up to heaven, and of awful misery when he seemed to sink down to the very depths of hell, and in either case no other heart could keep pace with him. Then it was himself alone who had communion with himself. And a Christian may so grow in grace as to become identified with Christ, a member of his body, not so much married to him as a part of him, a member of the great body of Christ, so that he suffers with Christ, sympathizes with Jesus, his heart beating to the same dolorous tune, his veins swollen with the same floods of grief, or else his sparkling with that same gleam of joy according to the master's word, that my joy might remain in you and that your joy might be full. Well, have not you waited out of your depth, some of you? I have certainly got out of my own. I feel as if the master might come on to this platform, look round on many of us, and say, Have I been so long time with you, and yet hast thou not known me, Philip? For truly, even in the minor sense, though I trust we are saved, though we have believed in Jesus, yet we have not reached the height of this great text, that I may know him. Having taken you so far, let us sit down a few minutes and consider what sort of knowledge this knowledge of Christ is, that I may know him. Then it is clear if I know him, I shall have a very vivid sense of his personality, that I may know him. He will not be to me a myth, a vision, a spirit, but a person, a real solid person, as much real as I am myself or as my dearest friend can be to me. My soul never be satisfied with a shadowy Christ. My heart be thou never content until he hath embraced thy soul and proved to thee that he is the lover of his people. This knowledge, then, must be a knowledge of him in his personality. Then, beloved, it must be a personal knowledge on our part. I cannot know Christ through another person's brains. I cannot love him with another man's heart, and I cannot see him with another man's eyes. Heaven's delight is mine eyes shall see him and not another. These eyes shall behold the King in his beauty. Well, beloved, if this be heaven, we certainly cannot do without a personal sight of Christ here. I am so afraid of living in a second-hand religion. God forbid that I should get a biographical experience. Lord, save us from having borrowed communion. No, I must know him myself. Oh, God, let me not be deceived in this. I must know him without fancy or proxy. I must know him on my own account. Then, these few thoughts upon what sort of knowledge we must have. It must be an intelligent knowledge. I must know him. I must know his natures, divine and human. I must know his offices. I must know his attributes. I must know his works. I must know his shame. I must know his glory, for I do not know him if it be merely a subject of passion and not of intellect. I must let my head consciously meditate upon him until I get something like an idea of him that I may comprehend with all saints what is the breadth and length and depth and height, and to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge. Then I must have an affectionate knowledge of him. And indeed, if I do know him at all, I must love him. As it is said of some men that there is such a charm about them that if once you get into their company you cannot criticize any longer but must admire, and so you feel with Christ. It is said of Garibaldi that if you are in a society he charms all so that even malice and slander must be silent in his presence. Infinitely supremely so is it with Christ. Being near him, his love warms our hearts till we glow with intense love to him. Then I shall find, if I know Christ, that this is a satisfying knowledge. When I know Christ, my mind will be full to the brim. I shall feel that I have found that which my spirit passeth after. This is that bread whereof if a man eat he shall never hunger. At the same time, it is an exciting knowledge. The more I know of Christ, the more I shall want to know. The deeper I plunge, the greater the deeps which will be revealed. The higher I climb, the loftier will be the summits which invite my eager footsteps. I shall want the more as I get the more. My spiritual thirst will increase, though in another sense it will be entirely quenched. And this knowledge of Christ will be a most happy one. In fact, so happy that sometimes it will completely bear me up above all trials and doubts and sorrows. And it will, while I enjoy it, make me something more than man that is born of a woman who is a few days and full of trouble. For it will fling about me the immortality of the ever-living Savior and gird me with the golden girdle of His eternal happiness. To be near to Christ is to be near to the pearly gates of the golden-streeted city. Say not, Jerusalem, my happy home, my labors have an end in thee. But say, Jesus, thou art my rest, and when I have thee my spirit is at peace. I might thus keep on speaking in praise of this knowledge, but I will not. Only permit me to say, what a refreshing, what a sanctifying knowledge is this to know Him. When the Laodicean church was neither hot nor cold, but lukewarm, how did Christ seek her revival? Did He send her precious doctrines? Did He send her excellent precepts? Mark you, He came Himself. For thus it is said, Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If any man hear my voice and open the door, I will come into him, and will sup with him, and he with me. That is a cure for it all, you see. No matter how lukewarm, though God may say I will spew thee out of my mouth, yet if Christ comes, that is the cure. The presence of Christ with His church puts away all her sicknesses. When the disciples of Christ were at sea in a storm, do you recollect how He comforted them? Did He send them an angel? No, it is I. Be not afraid. And when they knew Him, then they had no more fears. They were assembled one night, the doors being shut for fear of the Jews. How did He comfort them? Jesus Himself stood in the midst of them and said, Peace be unto you. There was Thomas full of doubts and fears. How did Jesus Christ take away his doubts? Reach hither thy finger, and behold my hands, and reach hither thy hand, and thrust it into my side. Oh, it is Christ who cures all. The company of Christ is the only thing which a Christian wants. I will undertake that if his heart be like an iceberg, as soon as Jesus comes, it shall flame like Vesuvius. His spirit shall be dead and like a rotten corpse, but if Jesus comes, he shall leap like a horse and become strong as a young unicorn. Thy presence makes me like the chariots of a minidab. Now do not think I am talking what I do not know. And do not imagine that I am talking mere fanatical slip-slop which I cannot prove. I do assert, and God who searcheth all hearts knows how true this is, I do assert that from the depths of doubt, of dullness, of worldliness, I have leaped in one moment into love and life and holy enthusiasm when Jesus Christ has manifested Himself unto me. I cannot describe the difference between my spirit waterlogged, worm-eaten, ready to sink to the bottom without Christ, and that same spirit like a strong-stanched ship with sails full with favourable winds speeding into harbour with a golden freight, like yon poor little bird which some cruel boy is torn from the nest and almost killed. It is not fledged yet and cannot fly, and it lies down to die, trampled in the mire in the streets. That is my heart without Christ. But see that other bird, the caged door is opened, its wings vibrate, it sings with all its might and flies up to talk with the sun. That is my heart when I have the conscious presence of my Lord Jesus Christ. I only bring in my own consciousness because I do not know yours. But I think I will now venture to say that every believer here will admit it is the same with him. Midst darkest shades, if he appear, my dawning is begun. He is my soul's bright morning star, and he my rising sun. I shall close by urging you, dearly beloved, who know the Lord, to take this desire of the Apostle and by exhorting you, make it your own that I may know him. I wish I had time this morning. Time will fly. I wish I had time to urge and press you believers onward to seek to know him. Paul, you see, gave up everything for this. You will be seeking what is worth having. There can be no mistake about this. If Paul will renounce all, there must be a reward which is worthy of the sacrifice. If you have any fears, if you seek Christ and find him, they will be removed. You complain that you do not feel the guilt of sin, that you cannot humble yourself enough. The sight of Christ is the very best means of setting sin in its true colors. There is no repenting like that which comes from a look of Christ's eye. The Lord turned and looked upon Peter, and he went out and wept bitterly. So, it is not a sight of the law. It is the sight of Christ looking upon us which will break our hearts. There is nothing like this to fill you with courage. When Dr. Andrew Reid found some difficulties in the founding of one of his orphan asylums, he sat down and he drew upon a little piece of paper the cross, and then he said to himself, What? Despair in the face of the cross? And then he drew a ring round the cross and wrote in it, Nil Desperandum, and took it for his coat of arms. Oh, there cannot be any despair in the presence of the cross. Thou dying Lamb, didst thou endare the cross, despising the shame? And shall I talk of difficulties when thy glory is in the way? God forbid! O holy face, bedewed with bloody sweat, I pledge myself in thy solemn and awful presence that though this face of mine should be bedewed with sweat of the like sort, to accomplish any labor upon which thou shalt put me, by thy will and in thy strength I will not shrink back from the task. A sight of Christ, brethren, will keep you from despondency and doubts and despair. A sight of Christ! How shall I stir you to it? It will fire you to duty. It will deliver you from temptation. It will, in fact, make you like him. A man is known by his company, and if you have become acquainted with Christ and know him, you will be sure to reflect his light. It is because the moon hath converse with the sun that she hath any light for this dark world's night. And if you talk with Christ the sun, he will shine on you so gloriously that you, like the moon, shall reflect his light, and the dark night of this world shall be enlightened by your radiance. And the Lord help us to know him. But I do seem this morning to have been talking to you about him, and not to have brought him forward. O, that I knew how to introduce you to him! You who do not love him! O, that I could make you seek after him! But you who do love him and have trusted in him! O, that I could make you hunger and thirst until you were filled with him! There he is, nailed to his cross, suffering. O, how much for you! There he is, risen, ascended, pleading before the throne of God for you. Here he is, lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world. Here he is, waiting to be comforted with your company, desiring communion with you, panting that his sister, his spouse, would be no longer a stranger to him. Here he is, waiting to be gracious, saying, Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Come, Christian, come, let this be thy desire, that I may know him. And you who do not know him, and have not loved him, I pray you, breathe this prayer with me. Lord, be merciful to me, a sinner. O sinner, he is a gentle Christ, he is a loving Saviour, and they that seek him early shall find him. May you seek and find him for his name's sake. Amen.
Do You Know Him?
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon (1834 - 1892). British Baptist preacher and author born in Kelvedon, Essex, England. Converted at 15 in 1850 after hearing a Methodist lay preacher, he was baptized and began preaching at 16, soon gaining prominence for his oratory. By 1854, he pastored New Park Street Chapel in London, which grew into the 6,000-seat Metropolitan Tabernacle, where he preached for 38 years. Known as the "Prince of Preachers," Spurgeon delivered thousands of sermons, published in 63 volumes as The New Park Street Pulpit and Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit, still widely read. He founded the Pastors’ College in 1856, training over 900 ministers, and established Stockwell Orphanage, housing 500 children. A prolific writer, he penned classics like All of Grace (1886) and edited The Sword and the Trowel magazine. Married to Susannah Thompson in 1856, they had twin sons, both preachers. Despite battling depression and gout, he championed Calvinist theology and social reform, opposing slavery. His sermons reached millions globally through print, and his library of 12,000 books aided his self-education. Spurgeon died in Menton, France, leaving a legacy enduring through his writings and institutions.