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God's Will About the Future
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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The sermon transcript discusses the uncertainty and fleeting nature of life, emphasizing the need to recognize God in the future. It highlights the folly of counting on the future and the fact that we are ignorant of what lies ahead. The sermon also warns against boasting about the future, considering it a sin. The speaker references Wesley's journal as an example of living each moment for the Lord rather than focusing on distant plans. The sermon concludes with a call to action, urging listeners to share the story of the Cross and not leave anything undone for their Lord and Master.
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The following is found at the end of the sermon which you're about to hear. When last week's sermon was sent to the printers, Mr. Spurgeon wasn't able to write a letter to go at the end of it, for he was suffering so severely that he could not even dictate a message to his sermon readers. It was not then anticipated that his illness would take the terrible form it afterwards assumed, but on Tuesday, January 26th, when the doctor came, he was obliged to report his patient's condition as serious. Since then, the daily bulletins have carried the sad tidings far and wide, and most of the readers of the sermons probably know by this time that their beloved preacher has been suffering from the same malady that so grievously afflicted him during last summer and autumn. His illness on this occasion has not developed exactly the same symptoms as before, but the date of writing this note, January 31st, the doctor reports that his condition gives cause for the gravest anxiety. The next note. It is with profound regret that the publishers record the death of the beloved pastor of the Metropolitan Tabernacle. He was called to his rest at Mentone on Sunday, January 31st at 11 p.m. To all who were privileged to know, Mr. Spurgeon, this event has come as a great sorrow, a sorrow which will certainly be shared by every reader of the weekly sermons. Revelation 14, verse 13. I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me, write, blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth. Yea, saith the Spirit, that they may rest from their labors, and their works do follow them. The Metropolitan Tabernacle Poet. God's Will About the Future. A sermon intended for reading on Lord's Day, February 7th, 1892. Delivered by C. H. Spurgeon at the Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington on Thursday evening, October 16th, 1890. Go to now, ye that say, today or tomorrow we will go into such a city, and continue there a year, and buy and sell, and get gain. Whereas ye know not what shall be on the morrow, for what is your life? It is even a vapor that appeareth for a little time, and then vanisheth away. For that ye ought to say, if the Lord will, we shall live, and do this or that. But now ye rejoice in your boastings, all such rejoicing is evil. Therefore to him that knoweth to do good, and doeth it not, to him it is sin. James 4, verses 13 to 17. Men today are just the same as when these words were first written. We still find people saying what they are going to do today, tomorrow, or in six months time at the end of another year, and perhaps still farther. I have no doubt there are persons here who have their own career mapped out before them pretty distinctly, and they feel well nigh certain that they will realize it all. We are like the men of the past, and this book, though it has been written so long, might have been written yesterday. So exactly does it describe human nature as it is at the end of this 19th century. The text applies with peculiar force when our friends and fellow workers are passing away from us. Sickness and death have been busy in our midst. Perhaps in our abundant service we have been reckoning what this brother would do this week, and what that sister would be doing next week, and so on. Even for God's work we have had our plans depended in great measure on the presence of some beloved helpers. They have appeared amongst us in such buoyant health that we scarcely thought it possible that they would be struck down all in a such things occur. We begin to wonder that we have reckoned anything at all safe or even probable in such a shifting, changing world as this. With this in full view, I am going to talk about how we ought to behave with regard to the future, and attempt to draw some lessons for our own correction and instruction from the verses before us. Following the line of the text, and keeping as close to it as we can, we will notice first that counting on the future is folly. Then we will observe what is clear enough to us all, that ignorance of the future is a matter of fact. In the third place, I shall set before you the main truth of this passage, that recognition of God in the future is wisdom. Our fourth point shall be that boasting of the future is sin, and our final thought will be that the using of the present is a duty. To begin with, it will need but few words to convince you that counting on the future is folly. The apostle says, Go to now, as if he meant, You are acting absurdly. See how ridiculous your conduct is. Go to now, ye that say, Today or tomorrow we will do such and such a thing. There is almost a touch of sarcasm in the words. The fact of frail, feeble man so proudly ordering his own life and forgetting God seems to the apostle James so preposterous that he scarcely deems it worthwhile to argue the point. He only says, Go to now. Let us first look at the form of this folly, and notice what it was that these people said when they were counting on the future. The text is very full of suggestions upon this matter. They evidently thought everything was at their own disposal. They said, We will go, we will continue, we will buy, we will sell, we will get gain. But is it not foolish for a man to feel that he can do as he likes, and that everything will fall out as he desires? That he can both propose and dispose, and has not to ask God's consent at all? He makes up his mind, and he determines to do just what his mind suggests. Is it so, O man, that thy life is self-governed? Is there not after all one greater than thyself? Is there not a higher power that can speed thee, or can stop thee? If thou dost not know this, thou hast not yet learned the first letter of the alphabet of wisdom. May God teach thee that everything is not at your disposal, but that the Lord reigneth, the Lord sitteth king forever and ever. Notice that these people, while they thought everything was at their disposal, used everything for worldly objects. What did they say? Did they determine with each other, We will today or tomorrow do such and such a thing for the glory of God and for the extension of His kingdom? Oh no, there was not a word about God in it from beginning to end. Therein they are only too truly the type of the bulk of men today. They said, We will buy, then we will carry our goods to another market at a little distance, we will sell it a profit, and so we will get gain. Their first and their last thoughts were of the earth, earthy, and their one idea seemed to be that they might get sufficient to make them feel that they were rich and increased in goods. That was the highest ambition upon their minds. Are there not many who are living just in that way now? They think that they can map out their own life, and the one object of their effort seems to be to buy and sell and get gain, or else to obtain honor or to enjoy pleasure. Their heart rises not into the serene air of heaven. They are still groveling here below. All that these men of old spoke of doing was to be done entirely in their own strength. They said, We will, we will. They had no thought of asking the divine blessing nor of entreating the help of the Most High. They did not care for that. They were self-contained. They called themselves self-made men, and they intended to make money. Who cannot make money who has made himself? Who cannot succeed in business who owes his own character and his present standing entirely to his own exertions and to his own brain? So they were full of self-confidence and began reckoning for the future without a shadow of doubt as to their ability. Alas that men should do even so today, that without seeking counsel of God they should go forward in proud disdain or in complete forgetfulness of the arrow that flyeth by day and the pestilence that walketh in darkness until they are suddenly overwhelmed in eternal ruin. It is evident that to these men everything seemed certain. We will go into such a city. How did they know they would ever get there? We will buy and sell and get gain. Did they regulate the markets? Might there be no fall in prices? Oh no, they looked upon the future as a dead certainty and upon themselves as people who were sure to win whatever might become of others. They had also the foolish idea that they were immortal. If they had been asked whether men might not die they would have said yes of course all men must die some time or other. For all men count all men mortal, but in their hearts they would have made an exception in their own case if we may judge them by what we were apart from sovereign grace. All men count all men mortal but themselves. Without any saving clause they said we will continue there a year. How did they know that they would see a single quarter of that year through? But you must not press such men too closely with awkward questions. If you had done so they would have said do not talk about death, it makes one melancholy. Having looked at the form of this folly of counting on the future let us speak a little on the folly itself. It is a great folly to build hopes on that which may never come. It is unwise to count your chickens before they are hatched. It is madness to risk everything on the unsubstantial future. How do we know what will be on the morrow? It is grown into a proverb that we ought to expect the unexpected for often the very things happen which we thought would not happen. We are constantly surprised by the events which occur around us. In God's great oratory of providence there are passages of wondrous eloquence because of the surprised power that is in them. They come upon us at unwares and overwhelm us. How can we reckon upon anything in a world like this where nothing is certain but uncertainty? Besides the folly is seen in the fact of the frailty of our lives and the brevity of them. What is your life? It is even a vapor that appeareth for a little time. That cloud upon the mountain you see it as you rise in the morning. You have scarcely dressed yourself before all trace of it is gone. Here in our streets the other night we came to worship through a thick fog and found it here even in the house of prayer. But while we worshiped there came a breath of wind and on our way home a stranger would not have thought that London had been but a few hours before so dark with dirty mist. It had all disappeared. Life is even as a vapor. Sometimes those vapors especially at the time of sunset are exceedingly brilliant. They seem to be magnificence itself when the sun paints them with heavenly colors. But in a little while they are all gone and the whole panorama of the sunset has disappeared. Such is our life. It may sometimes be very bright and glorious but still it is only like a painted cloud and very soon the cloud and the color on it are alike gone. We cannot reckon upon the clouds. Their laws are so variable and their conditions obscure. Such also is our life. Why then is it that we are always counting upon what we are going to do? How is it that instead of living in the eternal future where we might deal with certainties we continue to live in the more immediate future where there can be nothing but uncertainties? Why do we choose to build upon clouds and pile our palaces on vapor to see them melt away as aforetime they have often melted instead of by faith getting where there is no failure, where God is all in all and his sure promises make the foundations of eternal mansions? Oh I would say with my strongest emphasis do not reckon upon the future. Young people I would whisper this in your ears. Do not discount the days to come. Old men whispering is not enough for you. I would say with a voice of thunder count not on distant years. In the course of nature your days must be few. Live in the present. Live unto God. Trust him now and serve him now. Very soon your life on earth will be over. With us see that counting on the future is folly. Secondly, ignorance of the future is a matter of fact. Whatever we may say about what we mean to do we do not know anything about the future. The apostle by the spirit speaks truly when he says, ye know not what shall be on the morrow. Whether it will come to us laden with sickness or health, prosperity or adversity we cannot tell. Tomorrow may mark the end of our life, possibly even the end of the age. Our ignorance of the future is certainly a fact. Only God knows the future. All things are present to him. There is no past and no future to his all seeing eyes. He dwells in the present tense evermore as the great I am. He knows what will be on the morrow and he alone knows. The whole course of the universe lies before him like an open map. Men do not know what a day may bring forth but Jehovah knows the end from the beginning. There are two great certainties about things that shall come to pass. One is that God knows and the other is that we do not know. As the knowledge of the future is hidden from us we ought not to pry into it. It is perilous, it is wicked to attempt to lift even a corner of the veil that hides from us the things to come. Search into the things that are revealed in holy scriptures and know them as far as you can. But be not so foolish as to think that any man or woman can tell you what is to happen on the morrow and do not think so much of your own judgment and foresight as to say that is clear, I can predict that. Never prophesy until after the event and then of course you cannot prophesy. Therefore never attempt to prophesy at all. Ye know not what shall be on the morrow and you ought not to make any unhallowed attempt to obtain the knowledge. Let the doom of king Saul on mount Gilboa warn you against such a terrible course. Further we are benefited by our ignorance of the future. It is hidden from us for our good. Suppose a certain man is to be very happy by and by. If he knows it he will be discontented till the happy hour arrives. Suppose another man is to have a great sorrow very soon. It is well that he does not know it, for now he can enjoy the present good. If we could have all our life written in a book with everything that was to happen to us recorded therein and if the hand of destiny should give us the book we should be wise not to read it but to put it by and say my god I would not long to see my fate with curious eyes. What gloomy lines are writ for me or what bright lines arise. It is sufficient that our heavenly father knows and his knowledge may well content us. Knowledge is not wisdom. He is wisest who does not wish to know what god has not revealed. Here surely ignorance is bliss. It would be folly to be wise. Because we do not know what is to be on the morrow we should be greatly humbled by our ignorance. We think we are so wise do we not and we make a calculation that we are sure is correct. We arrange that this is going to be done and the other thing but god puts forth his little finger and removes some friend or changes some circumstance and all our propositions fall to the ground. It is better for us when we are low before the throne of god than when we stand up and plume ourselves because we think we can say oh I knew it would be so. See how well I reckoned with what wondrous forethought I provided for it all. Had god blown upon all our plans they would have come to naught. We know nothing surely but that thought humble us greatly. Seeing that these things are so we should remember the brevity the frailty and the end of our life. We cannot be here long. If we live to the extreme age of men how short our time is but the most of us will never reach that period wherein we may say one to another my lease has run out. How frail is our hold on this world in a moment we're gone gone like the moth you put your finger upon it and it is crushed. Man is not great. Man is less than little. He is as nothing. He is but a dream. Ere he can scarcely say that he is here we are compelled to say that he is gone. We are glad that we do not know when our friends are to die and we feel thankful that we cannot foretell when we shall depart out of this life. What good would it do us? Some who are in bondage through fear of death might be in greater bondage still while those who are now careless about it would probably feel more content in their callousness. If they had to live another 20 years they would say at any rate we may sport away 19 of them. As for those of us to whom this world is a wilderness and who count ourselves but pilgrims hurrying through it we know enough when we know that this is not our rest because it is polluted and that the day will soon come when we shall enter into the canine of our inheritance and be forever with the Lord. Meanwhile the presence of the Lord makes a heaven even of the wilderness. Since he is with us we are content to leave the ordering of our lives to his unerring wisdom. We ought for every reason to be thankful that we do not know the future but at any rate we can clearly see that to count on it is folly and that ignorance of it is a matter of fact. Thirdly recognition of God with regard to the future is true wisdom. What says our text? For that ye ought to say if the Lord will we shall live and do this or that. I do not think that we need always in every letter and in every hand bill put if the Lord will yet I wish that we oftener used those very words. The fashionable way is to put it in Latin and even then to abbreviate it and use only the two consonants dv to express it. You know it is a fine thing when you can put your religion into Latin and make it very short then nobody knows what you mean by it or if they do they can praise your scholarship and admire your humility. I do not care about those letters dv. I rather like what Fuller says when he describes himself as writing in his letter such passages as God willing or God lending me life. He says I observe Lord that I can scarcely hold my hand from encircling these words in a parentheses as if they were not essential to the sentence but may as well be left out as put in whereas indeed they are not only of the commission at large but so of the quorum that without them all the rest is nothing. Wherefore hereafter I will write these words freely and fairly without any enclosure about them. Let critics censor it for bad grammar I am sure it is good divinity. So he quaintly puts the matter. Still whether you write if the Lord will or not always let it be clearly understood and let it be conspicuous in all your arrangements that you recognize that God is over all and that you are under his control. When you say I will do this or that always add in thought if not in word if the Lord will. No harm can come to you if you bow to God's sovereign sway. We should recognize God in the affairs of the future because first there is a divine will which governs all things. I believe that nothing happens apart from divine determination decree. Even the little things of life are not overlooked by the all-seeing eye. The very hairs of your head are all numbered. The station of a rush by the river is as fixed and foreknown as the station of a king. The chaff from the hand of the winnower is steered as much as the stars in their courses. All things are under regulation and have an appointed place in God's plan and nothing happens after all but what he permits or ordains. Knowing that we will not always say if the Lord will yet we will always feel it. Whatever our purposes may be there is a higher power which we must ever acknowledge and there is an omnipotent purpose before which we must bow in lowliness reverent saying if the Lord will. But while many of God's purposes are hidden from us there is a revealed wheel which we must not violate. It is chiefly in reference to this that the Christian should always say I will do this or that provided that when the time comes I shall see it to be consistent with the law of God and with the precepts of the gospel. I say now I will do this or that but certain other things may occur which will render it improper for me to do so. Hence to be quite in accordance with the word I so deeply reverence I must always put in the saving clause sometimes giving utterance to it but in every case meaning whether I put it into words or not I will do so and so if it be right to do it. I will go or I will stay if it be the will of God. In addition to this there is a providential will of God which we should always consult. With this guidance which comes from the circumstances that surround us believers are familiar. Sometimes a thing may seem to us to be right enough morally and yet we may not quite know whether we should do it or not or perhaps there are two courses equally right when judged by the word of God and you are uncertain which to follow. The highest wisdom in such a case is to wait for God to make the path plain by some act of providence. When you come where two roads meet in your perplexity pull up, kneel down and lift your hearts to heaven asking your father the way and whenever we are purposing what we should do and we ought to make some purposes for God's people or not to be without forethought or prudence we should always say or mean without saying all my plans must wait till the Lord sets before me an open door. If God permit I will do this but if the Lord will I will stop and do nothing. My strength shall be to sit still unless the master wishes me to go forward. May I whisper into the ear of some very quick impetuous and hasty people that it would be greatly to their soul's benefit if they knew how to sit still. Many of us seem as if we must always do everything at once and hence we make no end of muddle for ourselves. There is often a blessed discipline in postponement. It is a grand word that that word wait especially in this particular connection. Wait on the Lord. Be of good courage. He shall strengthen thine heart. Wait I say on the Lord. Be patient. Sometimes even to be passive in the hand of God will be our strength and to stand still until the cloud fiery pillar moves in front of us will be our highest wisdom. There is yet another sense I would give to this expression. There is a royal will which we should seek to fulfill. That will is that the Lord's people should be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth. So as the servants of the most high we go forth to do this or that if the Lord will. That is to say if by so doing we can fulfill the great will of God and the salvation of men. I wish that this was the master motive with all Christians that we were each willing to say I will go and live in such a place if there are souls to be saved there. I will take a house in such a street if by living there I can be of service to my Lord and Master. I will go to China or Africa or to the ends of the earth if the Lord will. That is to say if by going there I can be helping to answer that prayer thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven. Dear Christian friends do you put yourselves entirely at God's disposal? Are you really his or have you kept back a bit of yourself from the surrender? If you have retained any portion for yourself that little reserve that you have made will be the channel by which your life will bleed away. You say we are not our own we are bought with a price. But do you really mean it? I'm afraid that there is a kind of mortgage on some Christians. They have some part they must give as they fancy to their own aggrandizement. They are not all for Christ. May the Lord bring us all to his feet in wholehearted consecration till we can say we will not go to that city unless we can serve God there. We will not buy and we will not sell unless we can glorify God by buying and selling. We will not wish even for the honest gain that comes of trading unless we can be promoting the will of God by getting it. Our best profit will consist in doing God's will. A man can as much serve God by measuring calico or by weighing groceries as he can by preaching the gospel if he is called to do it and if he does it in the right spirit. This should always be our one aim and we should put this ever in the forefront of our life. I go or I stay. I ascend or I descend if the Lord will. The Lord's will shall be done in my mortal body whether I live or whether I die. May this be your resolve then. Let this clause if the Lord will be written across your life and let us all set ourselves to the recognition of God in the future. It is a grand thing to be able to say wherever I go and whatever happens to me I belong to God and I can say that God will prepare my way as well when I am old and gray-headed as he did when I was a boy. He shall guide me all the way to my everlasting mansion in glory. He was the guide of my youth. He shall be the guide of my old age. I will leave everything to him all the way from earth to heaven and I will be content to live only a day's time and my happy song shall be so for tomorrow and its need I do not pray but keep me, guide me, hold me Lord, just for today. And now fourthly, boastings about the future are evil. But now ye rejoice in your boastings all such rejoicing is evil. I will not say much about this point but briefly ask you to notice the various ways in which men boast about the future. One man says about a certain matter, I will do it, I have made up my mind and he thinks, you cannot turn me, I am a man who when he has once put his foot down is not to be shifted from his place. Then he laughs and prides himself upon the strength of his will but his boasting is sheer arrogance. Yet he rejoices in it and the word of God is true of such a one. All such rejoicing is evil. Another man says, I shall do it, the thing is certain. To any difficulty is suggested he answers, but do not tell me about my proposing and God's disposing. I will propose and I will also dispose. I do not see any difficulty. I shall carry it out, I tell you, I shall succeed. Then he laughs in his own foolish pride and rejoices in his proud folly. All such rejoicings are evil. They are foolish but what is worse, they are wicked. Do I address myself to any who have no notion about heaven or the world to come but who feel that they are perfect masters of this world and therefore talk in the manner I have indicated and rejoice as they think how great they are? To such I would earnestly say, all such rejoicing is evil. I hear a third man say, I can do it, I feel quite confident. To him the message is the same, his boasting is evil. Though he thinks to himself, whatever comes in my way, I am always ready for it, he is greatly mistaken and errs grievously. I have often been in the company of a gentleman of this sort, but only for a very little while, for I have generally got away from him as soon as I could. He knows a thing or two, he has got the great secret that so many are seeking in vain. All of you ordinary people, he just snuffs you out. If he had more sense and could do as he does, well then you could be as well off as he is. Poor man, nobody needs to be poor, says he, nobody needs to be poor. I was poor a little while, but I made up my mind that I would not remain poor. I fought my own way and I could begin again with a crust and work myself up. You will notice his frequent use of the capital I, but ah dear sir, God has thunderbolts for these great eyes, they offend him, there are smoke in his nostrils. Pride is one of the things which his soul hates. No man ought to speak in such a strain, all such rejoicing is evil. But that young man yonder talks in a different tone. He has been planning what he will do when he succeeds, for of course he is going to succeed. Well I hope that he may. He is going to buy and sell and get gain, and he says I will do so and I am rich. He intends then to have his fling and to enjoy himself. He laughs as he thinks what he will do when his toilsome beginnings are over and he can have his own way. I would ask him to pause and consider his life in a more serious vein. All such rejoicing is evil. There is of course a future concerning which you may be certain. There is a future in which you may rejoice. God has prepared for them that serve him a crown of life, and by humble hope you may wear the crown even now. You may, by the thoughts of such amazing bliss, begin to partake of the joy of heaven, and this will do you no harm. On the contrary, it will set your heart at rest concerning your brief stay on earth, for what will it matter to you whether your life is cloudy or bright, short or long, when eternity is secure? But concerning the uncertainties of this fleeting life, if you begin to rejoice, all such rejoicing is evil. That brings me to my last and most practical point, which is this. The using of the present is our duty. Therefore to him that knoweth to do good and doeth it not, to him it is sin. I take this text with its context. It means that he who knows what he ought to do and does not do it at once, to him it is sin. The text does not refer to men who live in guilty knowledge of duty and yet neglect it. Its message is to men who know the present duty and who think that they will do it by and by. In the first place, it is sinful to defer obedience to the gospel. He that knoweth to do good and doeth it not, to him it is sin. Do you say, I am going to repent? Your duty is to repent now. I am going to believe, do you say? The command of Christ is, believe now. After I have believed, says one, I shall wait a long time before I make any profession. Another says, I am a believer and I shall be baptized someday. But as baptism is according to the will of the Lord, you have no more right to postpone it than you have to postpone being honest or sober. All the commands of God to the characters to whom they are given come as a present demand. Obey them now. And if anyone here, knowing that God bids him to believe, refuses to believe, but says that he hopes to trust Christ one of these days, let me read him this. To him that knoweth to do good and doeth it not, the word is in the present tense. To him it is sin. In the next place, it is sinful to neglect the common duties of life. Under the idea that we shall do something more by and by, you do not obey your parents, young man, and yet you are going to be a minister, are you? A pretty minister you will make. As an apprentice, you are very dilatory and neglectful, and your master would be glad to see the back of you. He wishes that he could burn your indentures, and yet you have an idea you're going to be a missionary, I believe. A pretty missionary you would be. There is a mother at home, and her children are neglected while she talks to her neighbors. But when her children are off her hands, she is going to be a true mother in Israel and look after the souls of others. Such conduct is sin. Mind your children, darn the stockings that tend to your other home duties, and when you have done that, talk about doing something in other places. If present duties are neglected, you cannot make up for the omission by some future piece of quixotic endeavor to do what you were never called to do. If we could all be quiet enough to hear that clock tick, we should hear it say, now, now, now. The clock therein resembles the call of God in the daily duties of the hour. To him that knoweth to do good and doeth it not, to him it is sin, even though he may dream of how he will in years to come make up for his present neglect. Then, dear friends, it is sinful to postpone purposes of service. If you have some grand project and holy purpose, I would ask you not to delay it. My dear friend, Mr. William Olney, whose absence we all mourn tonight, was a very prompt, energetic man. He was here, he was there, he was everywhere, serving his lord and master, and now that he is suddenly stricken down, his life cannot be said to be in any sense unfinished. There is nothing to be done in his business, there is nothing to be done in his relation to this church, there is nothing left undone with regard to anybody. It is all as finished as if he had known that he was going to be struck down, and I believe that that is the way we all ought to live. Mr. Whitfield said that he would not go to bed unless he had put even his gloves in their right place. If he should die in the night, he would not like to have anybody asking, where did he leave his gloves? That is the way for a Christian man always to live, have everything in order, even to a pair of gloves. Finish up your work every night, nay finish up every minute. I have seen Mr. Wesley's journal, though it is not exactly a journal, it does not give an account of what he did in a day, nor even what he did in an hour. He divided his time into portions of twenty minutes each, and I have seen the book in which there is the record of something done for his lord and master every twenty minutes of the day. So exactly did he live that no single half minute ever seemed to be wasted. I wish that we all lived in that way, so that we looked not at projects in some distant future that never will be realized, but at something to be done now. Last Thursday, when I was speaking, I said that some Christian people had never told out the story of the cross to others, and urged them to begin to do so at once. A young friend, sitting in this place, leaned over the front of the pew and touched a friend sitting there, saying to her, I would like to speak to you about that. He had never spoken to her before. He did not even know her, and he thus addressed her while the service was proceeding. A member of the church sitting by her side, who heard what the young man said, was so pleased with his prompt action that she stayed after the service to sympathize and help while he explained the way of salvation. The young person, to whom he spake, came to tell me last Tuesday that she had found the Savior through that well-timed effort. Dear friends, that is the way to serve the Lord. If we were to do things at the moment when they occurred to us, we should do them to purpose. But oh how many pretty things you have always meant to do, and have never even attempted. You have strangled the infant projects that have been born in your mind. You have not suffered them to live, and grow up into the manhood of real action. First thoughts are best in the service of God, and the carrying of them out would secure great benefits to others and much fruit for yourselves. To him that knoweth to do good, and doeth it not, to him it is sin. God help us, if we are saved, to get at this holy business of serving the Lord Christ, which as far exceeds buying, and selling, and getting gain, as the heavens are higher than the earth. Let us do something for Christ at once. You young people that are newly converted, if you do not very soon begin to work for Christ, you will grow up to be idle Christians, scarcely Christians at all. But I believe that to attempt something suited to your ability almost immediately, as God shall direct you, will put you on the line of a useful career. God will bless you, and enable you to do more as the years roll onwards. I have this last word. To him that knoweth to do good, and doeth it not, to him it is sin. That is, it is sinful in proportion to our knowledge. Is there any brother here into whose mind God has put something fresh, something good? I pray him to translate it into action at once. Oh, but nobody has done it before. Somebody must be first, and why should not you be first, if you are sure that it is a good thing, and has come into your heart through God the Holy Ghost? But if you know to do good, and do not do it, it will be sin every minute that you leave it undone. Therefore get at it at once. And you, my sister, who tonight, while sitting here, have been thinking of something you might have done, which you have not yet attempted, attempt it at once. Do not let another sun rise, if you can help it before you have begun the joyful and blessed service. The time is short. Our opportunities are passing, for what is your life? It is even a vapor that appeareth for a little time and then vanisheth away. Be up and doing. Soon we shall be gone. May we never hear the summons to go home, or there is anything left undone that we ought to have done for our Lord and Master. I am conscious of having spoken, but very feebly and imperfectly. But you know, my heart is heavy because of this sore trial which has come upon us through the stroke that has fallen upon our beloved Deacon William only. And when the heart is so sad, the brain cannot be very lively. May God bless the word, for Jesus' sake. Amen.
God's Will About the Future
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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.