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Joy Out of Travail
T. Austin-Sparks

T. Austin-Sparks (1888 - 1971). British Christian evangelist, author, and preacher born in London, England. Converted at 17 in 1905 in Glasgow through street preaching, he joined the Baptist church and was ordained in 1912, pastoring West Norwood, Dunoon, and Honor Oak in London until 1926. Following a crisis of faith, he left denominational ministry to found the Honor Oak Christian Fellowship Centre, focusing on non-denominational teaching. From 1923 to 1971, he edited A Witness and a Testimony magazine, circulating it freely worldwide, and authored over 100 books and pamphlets, including The School of Christ and The Centrality of Jesus Christ. He held conferences in the UK, USA, Switzerland, Taiwan, and the Philippines, influencing leaders like Watchman Nee, whose books he published in English. Married to Florence Cowlishaw in 1916, they had four daughters and one son. Sparks’ ministry emphasized spiritual revelation and Christ-centered living, impacting the Keswick Convention and missionary networks. His works, preserved online, remain influential despite his rejection of institutional church structures. His health declined after a stroke in 1969, and he died in London.
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Sermon Summary
In this sermon, the speaker emphasizes the importance of having a deep appreciation for the things of God. He highlights how easily humans can take God's blessings for granted and become complacent in their faith. The speaker also emphasizes the value of fellowship and community within the church, stating that believers should cherish the opportunity to gather with other believers and experience the richness of the body of Christ. The sermon concludes with a call to have a genuine love and appreciation for God and all that He has given, recognizing that unbelief and cheapness in relation to spiritual values will lead to despair, while faith in God will bring about something new and better.
Sermon Transcription
One or two fragments of the word. Firstly, in the book of Genesis. Book of Genesis, chapter three, verses sixteen and seventeen. Unto the woman he said, I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy conception. In sorrow shalt thou bring forth children. Thy desire shall be to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee. Unto Adam he said, because thou hast hearkened unto the voice of thy wife, and hast eaten of the tree of which I commanded thee, saying, Thou shalt not eat of it. Caste is the ground for thy sake. Toil shalt thou eat of it all the days of thy life. The letter to the Romans, chapter eight, at verse twenty-two. We know that the whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain together until now. Not only so, but ourselves also. The gospel by John, chapter sixteen, at verse twenty-one. A woman, when she is in travail, hath sorrow, because her hour is come. But when she is delivered of the child, she will remembereth no more the anguish, for the joy that a man is born into the world. The letter to the Galatians, chapter four, verse nineteen. My little children, of whom I am again in travail, until Christ be fully formed in you. It is not the first time that we have spoken on this matter here, but I feel quite sure in my heart that it is the Lord's word for this time. This law of travail is written deep in creation, and perhaps mostly in human history. It is one fact which no one can deny. It is there. We cannot get away from it. It is forcing itself upon our consciousness and recognition all through our lives. The Bible, as we have seen, begins with the establishment of this law, both in human life and in the natural order. The Bible ends with the abolition of that law, its complete removal from every realm of creation. It can be traced through the whole Bible. In almost every book of the Bible, this law of travel can be found. And in the last book, the book of the Revelation, which is the culmination of all the things that are in the rest of the Bible, we find that the outstanding feature of that book is this law of traveling. In every connection and direction, it is a book of traveling. The church is in traveling. The overcomers are in traveling. The nations are in traveling. All the heavenly bodies are in traveling. It is the culmination of this law which has been operating all the way through history. It began with the birth of the first child. It ends with the birth of a new heaven and a new earth. It is therefore a very important thing that we should understand the meaning attached to this law, why God introduced it and established it, and has never lifted it, and never does, but holds all history of individuals, of families, of society, of nations, and peculiarly of the church to this law. I say it's very important that we should understand the divine meaning attaching to travel. What did God mean man to learn by it? Of course, this morning we are not so concerned with man in general, or even with the world, although it would be instructive. Were we to see what God is doing in nations, and in society, and in industry, and in science, and in every other realm by this law, for it's there, but that is not our present object. If the church is what we are given to understand that it is, the central object of God's concern, of God's interest, the center of his concentrated activities, then the church has something to learn from this law. Because there is no doubt about it, that however true it is in every other realm, the church has the very center of its history, the walking out of this law, traveling. There is a concentration, it would seem, of this law in the church. Whenever God has done anything that had the church in view, that is, an elect, a people for his name, on every occasion of his fresh movements in that direction, it took place through travel. I have only to hint at some of the experiences of the men of God in the early phases of history. What travel they went through in relation to the purpose of God. Individually, I mean. Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, David, Moses, and all the others. In the people, Israel. Lord said, I have seen the affliction of my people. I have heard their cry by reason of their taskmasters. I am come down. It was out of travel that Israel was born as a nation. Deep, terrible anguish. Same is true in the recovery of the remnant from captivity. You know that this is the word that the prophets used about Israel in that connection. They are always speaking about Israel's travel, Zion traveling. The birth of the remnant from exile came through the terrible travel of the seventy years. In some degree, I think it was true when the Lord Jesus was born, there was Simeon, Anna, and others waiting for the consolation of Israel. The indications are that they were in this state of the bathrooms of a new age. It was not out of relation with their prayers and their faithfulness and their sufferings that Christ was born into this world. We know what happened when he was born. Prophecy fulfilled the voice of weeping for Rachel, weeping for her children that are not. It was a state of travel through which he came. But of all these instances, perhaps the greatest was the travel of the cross. What an anguish was the cross to the disciples, to those believers. They were not a small company altogether. The cross was a terrible experience of anguish, of pain, of suffering. Out of it came the church. The church was born out of that suffering. And so we go on to the end and find the same thing obtained in the final emergence of creation and church and nations by the coming of the Lord. What does the Lord mean us to learn? Why did he introduce that law at the beginning? Well, briefly and simply, and yet, dear friends, with such depth of meaning for us here, as well as for all the Lord's people. The main lesson, as I see it, is this. The Lord introduced and established that law of travel in order to bring about a deep and an adequate appreciation of divine values. Man was given everything that the heart could desire at the beginning. He was blessed with every blessing. He was surrounded with everything that he could wish for. And he seemed to take it so much as a matter of course, so much for granted, and he held it so cheaply, so lightly, so superficially, as to forget the greatness of the love of God in the giving and in his creation. To forget how wonderful it all was that God had done that, and what God had done, and to be ready at the slightest offer of something for his own gratification to just let it all go. You can see quite clearly that that was the trouble. No real heart appreciation of God and God's love, and God's greatness, and of all this that God had given. He took it so easily. Easy come, easy go. I think the heart of that sin, wrong, and tragedy was just that ease with which man can turn from God. From what God had said. God said that, well, what does it matter? God said it. The ease with which he can turn away from it and let it go for some bribe, some way that would be to his self-pleasure. And the Lord brought in this Lord Travail to recover the sense of values. And you can see exactly how that works out. You know, if you don't suffer for a thing, you don't value it. If it costs you nothing, then it means little. If you have really suffered agonies and anguish for anything, for anyone, over any matter, that thing is of infinite preciousness. You're going to fight for that. You're going to watch over that with keen jealousy. That is something very precious. And is not that just how the Lord Travail works? Yes, it's like that. If it comes without travel, without any cost, well, it's taken too lightly, isn't it? Far too lightly. It doesn't mean all that that means, which has cost you almost your very life. And the Lord introduced this factor that in every birth it's a question of life or death. Life and death are in the balances every time. Big governing question. How is it going? You're held in tension. And when it's all right, how the heart goes out. Thank God. Thank God. Worship. God comes into his place. God comes into his place. Very often with those who have never given him any place before, they relate this as spontaneous. Thank God. You see the principle. See how true it is. And so God established this, ah yes, this painful way, this suffering way, as the only way in which he could recover and establish the law of values, of preciousness, and save man from his superficiality. With regard to the most costly things. He did it in order to secure a heart relationship with himself and with everything that comes from him. A heart relatedness. That is love. Love. Love that is far removed from despising the Lord or anything of the Lord. Love that involves the very life itself. That if its object is lost, then life itself goes with it. See. Like that. Every divine deposit. Every divine deposit is on that basis, dear friends. Sooner or later, every divine deposit will take on this value. Anything that comes from God will sooner or later pass into the realm of suffering. Into the realm of travail. To find out how much value we put upon it. How much it really means to us. How much we have seen of God in it. It will become a matter of life or death under this law. All divine things have been put upon this basis. Take the matter of fellowship with God. Our very union with the Lord. This relatedness that he has brought about between us. I venture to say, dear friends, that there is nothing in all the range of our lives as God's people which causes us so much exercise and sometimes so much travel as this matter of our communion and fellowship with God. Lose the consciousness of the nearness of the Lord. The consciousness of fellowship with the Lord just for a moment. Just for a day. And what anguish it brings, that lost consciousness of the Lord. The Lord does not depart and does not forsake his promise never to do it. But that does not mean that the Lord does not allow us to go through times when we have not the consciousness of his presence. When the clouds gather around and he seems to have gone far away and left us alone, then what happens? Does it matter? Does it matter? Can we go on? Just the same. Oh no. So everyone who is really in union with the Lord goes into travel over that and can never, never come to rest until that's recovered and the Lord is saying, this thing has got to be kept upon the basis of preciousness. And that's the only way of doing it. Through suffering, is it not? Our very fellowship with God has to become at times a matter of life and death. We have only we could take the time to illustrate, you know, Moses and the Lord having that controversy with the Lord over Israel. Well, it seems to me sometimes the Lord does play a part, play act. The Lord said to Moses, stand aside and let me destroy this people. Let me wipe them out and make it other people. What does Moses do? Oh no, he's not having that. He reasons and argues with the Lord. Blot me out of thy book if you don't forgive them. What was the Lord doing? I believe that the Lord was only doing this in the place where he got that man Moses in union with his own heart. And I think in his own heart the Lord said when Moses uttered those words, that's where I wanted to get you. That's what I've been after. Find out how precious my people are to you. How precious my interests are to you. How precious my investment in this people is to you. I must have somebody with me in my travail that gives a due value and that will not, not let go easily with whom it is a matter of life and death. Blot me out. Life or death, you see. That's the heart of God. The heart relationship. Matter of the values of the cross of the Lord Jesus. Oh, are you tired of the cross and hearing about the cross? Shortly before he went to America, Brother Harrison told me that the time that he had spent with a group of students in a retreat, he had spoken on the cross and they had said, oh, we are so tired of hearing about the cross. Haven't you something else to talk about? Talk about something else, not the cross. Are those values of the cross a matter of life and death to us? Do we hold them lightly? Is it just a teaching, a truth, or of infinite value and preciousness? What about the matter of divine life? Divine life is not the Lord trying all the time to bring us to the point where we will recognize the infinite value of divine life. Physically, yes. It may be that behind much of our physical suffering is the secret, the Lord seeking to bring us to the place where divine life is everything to us and we lay hold on it. We have a tremendous appreciation of divine life. Spirit, for soul, for body. The Lord throws us into situations where if it isn't his life then there is no surviving. If we do not now prove the tremendous value of divine life, we are finished. We are finished. This is the end. If we do not know him again in the power of his resurrection, it is not a theory, a teaching, something that has come right into our very history as a part of our being. Divine life, yes, without it we will not survive. It is that or it is death. But you see, the Lord works in relation to that to make it real. Oh that you realize that, dear friends, and rose up on this matter and saw the infinite value of the life that he has given because so many, so many Christians just say, yes, I have received eternal life in Jesus Christ. But what does it mean as a practical, everyday reality for the whole man, spirit, soul and body, divine life? God meant it to be so for us all. The word of God. When I say much about the value of the word of God, though do we not get tremendous exercise about this? You never traveled for a word from God? Never been on your knees and on your face, oh, that the Lord would speak out of his word for me in this situation? And has not his speaking out of his word to you been birth out of trapping? Has he not brought you into a situation where only if he speaks can you get through? Only if he gives you a word can you go on? It just doesn't come easily. You know quite well it isn't just a matter of opening the book and reading. No, you have to travel for something from the word. It's got to become so precious as to be of the value of life without which you die. Man shall not live by bread only, but he shall live by the word of God. Live, live, what's the alternative? To die for the word of God. Our life hangs on the word of God. That's what it's to be to us. And what about the church? Oh, here, dear friends, we touch something that we all need to be very, very clear on and very strong about. It's a matter of the church. Oh, we have so much teaching on the church. We've got all the church truth and doctrine. Perhaps you're tired of hearing about the church and the body of Christ and relatedness. You know, dear friends, there are believers, there are children of God who would give all that they could, that they possess, and all that this world could give them if they had it, in order to know something of the fellowship which is so cheap with us. Oh, for an hour with the Lord's people. Oh, for a day within the communion of the saints. Oh, to be able to be there amongst them. As they know, through travel, something of the value of the church. And in our experience, and we do speak out of experience, we have learned the truth of the church, not only from the Bible, but in this way, the absolute necessity to our very life of the people of God. Had it not been for the people of God, we should not have got through. No, it's like that. So, the Lord takes us into experiences where only the church can save us, if I may put it like that. Only the church can be our salvation. Only relatedness can be our life. Don't hold this lightly. Don't throw it away easily. Believe me, dear friends, I'm not a prophet. But believe me, that if you have been brought in any vital way into relation to the truth of the church, sooner or later in your life, that's going to be a matter of life or death to you. God granted it may never be too late. Come to the end, and oh, if only I had more value and cherished the great gift of the church, with all the values bound up with it of covering and help, I would not be today where I am. I am here now because I have held too lightly the precious things that God gave me. I say again, sooner or later, God grant it may not be later or too late, you're going to come in a very practical way up against the truth that God has given you. And then it's going to be your life or your death. God has given you much. Oh, be not like Adam, and make it necessary for the Lord to take you into deep anguish and suffering in order to teach you the value of what he's given you. Suffer that word. It has cost him everything to bring us where we are. Let us not put too little value on it. But I won't stop there. I refer to John 16, 21. There are the two sides there, the woman when she's in trouble and so on. The other side. But, the issue, when it's all over, child is born, she forgets about the travail, in a joy that a man is born into the world. The Lord never meant suffering to end with itself. He never meant travail to be the last word. He never intended that the end should be death. Though death is always in the balances of this thing, he never intended it to be like that. He took the little family in Bethany into anguish, into deep anguish. But he said, not unto death, but for the glory of God. There is written in the very law of travail, the law of hope. The law of a new prospect. And all I'm going to say about that this morning is this. We, individually, or as a people, may go through times of deep suffering, trial, and everything seems to be in the balances. How's it going? How's it going? Is it life or death? We're in the grip of this crisis? Oh, let us believe with all our hearts that although we come this way again and again in our history, under the hand of God, it's unto something new. It's unto something better. It's unto a new hope. It's unto something better. It's unto a new hope. With a new expectation. Don't you believe that the end is shame, is remorse, is disappointment. God never established the law of travail, that that should be the end, but that there should be a birth of something infinitely precious. And it happens again and again, doesn't it? Every new emergence of something of the Lord is more precious than what was before. But it's costly. It's costly. I may say so, dear friends. It may be that we here have been going through travel. We're in the time of suffering, and perhaps we're inclined to feel that it's an end. Is it going to be loss? No, that's not the Lord's way. The Lord has so worked that, isn't it strange, we come into experiences in life where it's the most terrible experience we've ever had, and now and now, of course, this is the end. This is going to put finish to everything. And it is the most terrible suffering. And when it's passed, the strange thing about human nature, about something, is that we forget, we forget the anguish. That is, it passes, but what it has brought is the thing that governs and dominates everything, isn't it? The values that have come. Supposing we were always living in all the anguishes that we'd ever had. Life would be unbearable. But that passes. But we are living in the values. Well, I think that's all I've got to say. We do remember that cheapness in relation to the things of God will only end in disaster. Unbelief will end in despair. The faith in God in the dark and difficult day will produce something new and something better. If we are too easy-going about our spiritual values, nothing substantial will be effected. The Lord give us a due sense of the value of everything that he has given us and brought us into. We will not be able just to discard it and throw it away as though it didn't matter. May we be saved from death and have this law of love, infinite love for him and all things that are in him written deep in our hearts.
Joy Out of Travail
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T. Austin-Sparks (1888 - 1971). British Christian evangelist, author, and preacher born in London, England. Converted at 17 in 1905 in Glasgow through street preaching, he joined the Baptist church and was ordained in 1912, pastoring West Norwood, Dunoon, and Honor Oak in London until 1926. Following a crisis of faith, he left denominational ministry to found the Honor Oak Christian Fellowship Centre, focusing on non-denominational teaching. From 1923 to 1971, he edited A Witness and a Testimony magazine, circulating it freely worldwide, and authored over 100 books and pamphlets, including The School of Christ and The Centrality of Jesus Christ. He held conferences in the UK, USA, Switzerland, Taiwan, and the Philippines, influencing leaders like Watchman Nee, whose books he published in English. Married to Florence Cowlishaw in 1916, they had four daughters and one son. Sparks’ ministry emphasized spiritual revelation and Christ-centered living, impacting the Keswick Convention and missionary networks. His works, preserved online, remain influential despite his rejection of institutional church structures. His health declined after a stroke in 1969, and he died in London.