The problem of rubbish in the church is a hindrance to growth and progress, but with dependence on God and obedience to His will, we can overcome it and build on the foundation of Christ.
The sermon transcript discusses the creation of the world by God and how it ran gloriously through six days until the seventh day when God rested. The speaker encourages the audience to have patience and courage as God continues to build his church and work in the world. The transcript also addresses the tendency of humans to be self-righteous and guilty at the same time, leading to a heap of rubbish in their lives. The speaker emphasizes the need to remove this rubbish, including old habits and indifference to eternal things, in order to fully embrace God's work.
Full Transcript
The Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit, Rubbish, a sermon delivered by C. H. Spurgeon at the Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington, Nehemiah 4, verse 10. There is much rubbish so that we are not able to build the wall. Remember that Jerusalem had been totally destroyed by Nebuchadnezzar, and what destruction by the Babylonians meant may be inferred from the vast heaps of the dust of powdered bricks and charred wood which had been discovered upon the sites of cities which were utterly razed to the ground by the fierce soldiery of the terrible king.
The ruins are frequently so complete that even tradition has forgotten the name of the mound or heap which is the sole memorial to mark the sepulcher of a queenly city. The Babylonians made sure work when they did it. Their plowers made deep furrows and their destroyers cried one to another, overturn, overturn, overturn till not a stone shall abide in its place.
They reaped a nation with their swords as corn is cut down by the sickle, and they beat their cities till the ruins thereof were small as the dust of the summer threshing floor. Do you wonder that on the site of Jerusalem there remained much rubbish? Many modern destroyers have done their desolating work most wonderfully, and I may venture to quote what I have seen of their doings as an example of the much rubbish with which the foundations of a ruined city are sure to be covered. I have stood upon the Palatine Mount in Rome, where formerly the palaces of the Caesars raised themselves in more than imperial grandeur.
But what an alp of fragments, what a mountain of broken walls and columns and stones peering upward like the natural rock of Mother Earth, houses, convents, palaces have been built upon the mass, and for many seasons trees have bloomed and fruited, and gardens have brought forth their harvests above the spot where once the imperial tyrant was one to all the nations with a nod. To restore the palaces of the Palatine, the first labor would be the unearthing of the foundations, and this would probably be as huge an undertaking as the rebuilding of the palaces themselves. A mountain must be carried away ere a stone can be laid.
If you were able to visit the forum at Rome you would see, if you were there today, numbers of laborers with horses and carts continually at work taking away hundreds of thousands of tons of rubbish, which have covered up all that still remains of the ancient center and heart of Rome. So that Jerusalem, I do not doubt, was one vast heap made up of the debris of its houses, of the tower and armory of David, of the palace of the King, and of the temple itself. And though now, at the period we are about to speak of, the temple had been rebuilt and modern houses covered the site of the older Jerusalem, yet when they came to the wall of the city, with the view of thoroughly restoring it, they found it a complete ruin, and such a ruin that the mass which covered it up, it was difficult to dig through.
They could not build the wall because there was so much rubbish. Now this, it seems to me, is intended, or at least may justifiably be used, for a type of the work which God's people have to carry on in the name of Jesus and in the power of His Spirit in the world. We have to build the wall of the church for God, but we cannot build it, for there is so much rubbish in our way.
This is true, first, of the building of the church, which is the Jerusalem of God, and this is equally true of the temple of God, which is to be built in each one of our hearts. Full often we feel discouraged, though we hear the voice that saith, but ye, beloved, building up yourselves on your most holy faith, praying in the Holy Ghost, keep yourselves in the love of God, still we are apt to feel that we cannot build this wall, because there is so much rubbish. I shall speak first then of the great work comprised in the building up of the church.
Now, this enterprise is the work of God. He alone can build the church. When the Lord shall build up Zion, He shall appear in His glory, and we may build as we may, but except the Lord build the house, they labour in vain that build it.
Still our full and firm conviction that it is God's working does not at all interfere with the grand truth that He employs agents for the building up of His church in the world, that in fact He has commissioned us, His chosen servants, sent us into the world, each one according to our ability and opportunity to labour for Him. We work because God works by us. We are hindered, however, in this service by the fact that there is much rubbish in the way.
It always was so. When Paul began to build for God, and the apostles went forth as wise master builders, there lay before them in towering heaps the old Jewish rubbish, hard to remove, heavy to bear away, and in quantity equal to a huge hill. The foundation was there.
Thank God we have not to lay that that is laid in Christ Jesus and firmly laid. Another foundation can no man lay, but the Jews with their traditions had overlaid the foundations. They had added to the word of God.
They had put glosses upon it. They had taken away its real meaning and put to it a meaning of their own. They had invented rites and ceremonies innumerable, and traditions of a father's dark and mysterious, so that though a man should seek to find out the truth, he could not by reason of the abundance of the confused material and traditional superstition with which they had covered it up.
The apostles had to begin their gospel labor amongst their fellow countrymen in the midst of this much rubbish. No sooner did they begin to remove the worthless deposits than the lovers of tradition assailed them, raised a great dust, and became their violent persecutors, following them from city to city, scandalizing them, and committing all manner of violence against them. You cannot remove ruins without arousing the owls and bats.
The most rotten rubbish upon earth is sure to find some defender. By this rubbish many have gained their wealth, and they are full of wrath if any threaten to disturb it. The apostles soon found that they had fallen upon troublous times, yet by God's help they cleared away that rubbish and were enabled to build their wall till the New Jerusalem became famous in the earth.
They encountered in the wider world of the Roman Empire the rubbish of old paganism, and oh, what rubbish that was! He who was acquainted with the classic writers knows how polluted were the people of their times. Their satirists ascribed to them mirthfully vices which even with tears we would not dare to mention. The superstitions of the age were groveling to a hideous degree.
Their very gods were monsters of crime, and their sacred rites orgies of lust and drunkenness. The priests had successfully endeavored to make vice into a religion, though the pretense of mysterious worship had devised means for pandering to the basest passions of the most corrupt human nature. It is no small mass of rubbish which the student of today sifts over as he makes researches into the Greek and Roman mythology.
Men could not find out God, for God's many and Lord's many stood in the way. Neither could they believe in the simplicity of Jesus Christ, because their foolish heart was darkened. God made man upright, but he hath found out many inventions, and all these inventions helped to turn him from his uprightness and to pervert his judgment.
Yet those who went before us labored on amidst that foul and noisome rubbish, and were so successful in their earnest excavations that at this day no one thinks of worshiping Jupiter or Saturn or Venus or Mercury. These demon deities have gone to the limbo from which they came. They have been smitten by the gospel, and they have withered like grass so that no man boweth himself before them any more.
The God of truth has come, and these bats and owls of the night have betaken themselves into obscurity and oblivion. This rubbish was cleared away, and the foundations were built upon by earnest men that went before us, though they had to lay each stone in martyr blood and cement it with agonies and tears. Moreover, remember that in those early days the church in her building had to encounter the very much rubbish of the various philosophies of mankind.
There was a kind of feeling after God in the heathen mind, but this feeling after God was misdirected and proudly self-confident, and therefore it missed its way. And in the process of thought the more spiritual-minded amongst men, if I may venture to call men spiritual at all who were never renewed by grace, invented theories and imaginings which they thought to be exceeding wise, but which in fact were folly itself dressed out in the robes of vain glory. These philosophies had a great following and exercised so subtle and powerful influence that they were felt even in the church itself.
In the writings of the apostles Paul and John you continually meet with allusions to the great Gnostic philosophy which perverted so many Christians. Ever since that day human wisdom has been a greater curse to the church than anything else. The ignorance of Christians has never been so evil a thing, bad as it is, as the vain knowledge, the false wisdom with which men have been puffed up in their fleshly minds.
It is an ill day when men know too much to know Christ. It is a great misfortune when men are too manly to be converted and to become as little children and to sit at the feet of the great teacher. Yet there are many professors of religion who talk as if this was their condition and as if they were proud of it.
Even at this present time the outside philosophies of unchristian men infect the church, spoil her, injure her, dilute the wine of the kingdom, overturn the children's milk, and to a great extent poison the bread of life. Sad that it should be so, but the rubbish of philosophy has always been in the way of the building up of the wall of the church of God and the story of the apostolical age may serve as a great comfort to us in these evil times. As they were hindered so are we, but as they persevered and overcame, even so will we by our great master's aid.
After that lot of rubbish had been cleared away, the task was only begun. For soon after apostolic times and the first zeal of Christians had gone, there came the old Roman rubbish, which in the end proved a worse hindrance than all which had preceded it. This popish rubbish was found in layers.
First one doctrinal heir, and then another, and then another, and then another, and then another, till at this time the heirs of the church of Rome are as countless as the stars, as black as midnight, and as foul as hell. Her abominations reek in the nostrils of all good men, her idolatries are the scorn of reason and the abhorrence of faith. The iniquities of her practice and the enormities of her doctrine almost surpass belief.
Popery is as much the masterpiece of Satan as the gospel is the masterpiece of God. There can scarcely be imagined anything of devilish craftiness or satanic wickedness which could be compared with her. She is unparalleled the queen of iniquity.
Behold upon her forehead the name Mystery, Babylon the great, the mother of harlots and abominations of the earth. The church of Rome and her teachings are a vast mountain of rubbish covering the truth. For weary years good men could not get at the foundation because of this very much rubbish.
Here and there a Wycliffe spied out the precious cornerstone and leaped for joy because he could get his foot upon it and say, Jesus Christ himself elect and precious is the stone on which I build my hope. Here and there a John Huss or a Jerome of Prague or a Savonola in the thick midnight yet nevertheless found out the foundation and wept their very hearts out because of the much rubbish which threatened to bury even them while they were seeking the foundation. A master excavator was Martin Luther.
How grandly he laid bare the glorious foundation of justification by faith alone. An equally grand worker at this great enterprise was Master John Calvin who laid open long stretches of the ancient foundations of the covenant of grace. Well was he supported by his brother of Zurich, Swingly and John Knox in Scotland and others in this land.
They cleared away for a while some of the rubbish but there was such a mass of it that they had to throw it up in heaps on either side and it beginning to come crumbling down again on the foundation and to cover it up once more. A perfect reformation they could not work and the remnant of the rubbish is now our plague and hindrance. Everywhere the much rubbish is being diligently cast upon the wall by the emissaries of the evil one and we can scarcely get to the foundations to build there on the gold and silver and precious stones which God commits to us with which to build up his own house.
Alas there is very very much rubbish. I saw in Rome that the wagons which took away the earth from the forum were marked Regius Cava. They belonged to the royal excavations and I long to see royal excavators employed by the king of kings to get to work to excavate again the foundations of the wall of Jerusalem and cart away some of the tremendous heaps of rubbish that still lie upon the walls.
God grant we may see good and great work done in this direction before long. But beloved friends if all this rabbinical and pagan and philosophical and Romish rubbish were all gone still the work would scarcely have begun for there is yet very much rubbish of other kinds lying here about. There is much rubbish arising from the world the flesh and the devil so that we are not able to build the wall.
Look at human sin how that impedes us. Oh if there were no false systems of religion if priests and scribe were silent if false prophet and antichrist were both out of the way yet the sins of men are a vast and hideous mass of rotten rubbish and our labors of love are hindered thereby. How hard it is to get at human ears for the world has the first word and often the last word with the most of men.
Ear gate is choked with rubbish. How harder still it is to get at human hearts for there Satan reigns as in his own palace and takes care to erect huge barricades and earthworks of the rubbish of carnal lust and pride and unbelief. Men are wrapped up in indifference to eternal things like mummies in their bands and gums.
They give all their energy to the answering of the question what shall we eat and what shall we drink and where with all shall we be clothed. Immortal as they are they live only for mortality. Though their grandest destiny lies in eternity yet all their efforts are bounded by the narrow space of time.
Charm oh thou charmer never so wisely but this adder hath no ear for thee. This people bent on its lust will still follow its own devices though Christ beckoned with his pierced hand yet turn they their back on him and even he from Calvary cries is it nothing to you that pass by is it nothing to you that Jesus should die. He is despised and rejected of men.
They see no form nor comeliness in him whose countenance contains within itself all celestial beauty. They cannot be got at by love or law by tears or terrors by prayers or preachings they are so absorbed in earthly things. We cannot build the wall for they're much rubbish.
They are wedded to their sins. They cling to their idols. They will not even think upon their soul and their God and their savior.
They choose their own delusions and reject their own mercies and it seems as if everything in the world help them this way. For the business of life the care and the ease the quiet and the noise the tumult and the turmoil thereof alike ensnare them. All these things are transformed by their alienated hearts into a mass of rubbish.
With one man it is the pursuit the arduous pursuit of learning. With another an intense greed for gold. With a third ambition.
With a fourth the lust of pleasure. But in each man the heap of rubbish prevents our getting at the heart. We cannot build the wall.
Who among us has not often gone back to his God and said who has believed our reports and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed. And this age of competition seems to make the thing worse than ever. Some are so poor that they tell us they cannot listen.
For they have to work and toil like slaves for their bread merely to keep body and soul together. And as for those who are rich oh God help the rich. Still is it true and perhaps truer now than ever for it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle and for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God.
The cares of this world and the deceitfulness of riches are a mass of rubbish so that we cannot build the wall. Oh how sad is the retrospect of the pastor as he remembers the many in whom he could never reach the conscience because of the intervening rubbish and how mournful is the prospect that lies before him. Our only consolation is that if we cannot build there is one who can.
And if the rubbish be so much that the strength of the bearers of burdens is decaying yet there is a strength which is not decayed. There is an arm which is not weary and can perform all that is needed. I am afraid dear brethren that in the work of building up the church the rubbish does not lie all with the sinners but there is much of it also with the saints.
There is very much rubbish among professors so that we cannot build the wall. I would be very patient with all men for I need much patience toward myself. But there are far too many dear brethren in Christ who seem to me to spend all their time indiligently doing nothing.
I have heard of a man who had by dint of great patience and much skill after many days of work very splendidly carved the image of Caesar on a cherry stone. What a splendid result to have achieved. The exploit was duly reported and chronicled.
But what of it? Truly I have read books which seem to me to be elaborately learned about nothing of any practical value and to amount to about as much as carving on a cherry stone and no more. What good must have come of it I am sure I could not tell. Brethren come out every now and then in the religious world so splendidly with some new fad and fancy of theirs, some grand discovery that they have made, some wonderful point of doctrine, some marvelous soul stirring discovery as it seems to be to them.
And all the world is to stand still and all the churches to be broken up and I don't know what until they have exhibited this precious thing which when you have carefully looked at it turns out to be very like the mouse which was the famous product of the labor of the mountain. It comes to nothing more. There is very much rubbish about brethren and therefore for the present distress if every Christian minister were to keep to preaching Christ and him crucified and nothing else I think he would do well.
If every Christian man were to just keep to the plain truths of scripture and have them worked into his own soul by the Holy Spirit and then speak them out with power and live for soul winning and care for nothing else he would do well. But there is very much rubbish. The whole evening will be spent by brethren in discussing a question just about as valuable as the famous inquiry of the schoolman as to how many angels would be able to stand on the point of a single needle.
After discussing it with some little temper perhaps and having prayed over it a good deal too, though I wonder how they dare do so, the whole of it ends in a bag of wind or a bottle of smoke and nothing else. Had that same time been spent in the visitation of the sick and reclaiming the Arabs of our streets, the lifting up of the ruffianism and the blackguardism of London into something like decency, morality and Christianity it might have been much better. But there is very much rubbish and I am very much afraid we all of us contribute to that rubbish heap a little.
We have all some favourite notion, some conceit, some invention of our own, some addition to the word, some subtraction from it and some impossible theory, some dogma or a doctrine rather of our own inventing than that of Bible teaching. And so there is very much rubbish so that we cannot build the wall. Does not one feel inclined full often to say, oh how I wish I could get at it, really get at it, get to doing something for God and Christ and the souls of men? Just let the dust cart come and clear the way.
These very excellent works upon futurity and profound books upon nothing, yet let them go beautifully written as they are and let us plunge into the middle of affairs and say God forbid that I should glory save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ. Now two or three things here about this matter by way of comfort. The first comfort to us is well, well the foundation is laid.
The foundation is laid and in addition to the foundation there are goodly rows of precious stones builded up thereon. The Lord has not yet laid all the twelve bejeweled courses but the instructed eye may see some of the lower bands of precious stones. Looking back in history I can see a foundation of martyrs built upon Christ who with the apostles and confessors make up the lower foundations of Jasper and Sapphire and Chalcedony.
I can see the glitter of those rows of gems upon the wall already. Read in the book of Revelation and see how they are described. For the last eighteen hundred years stone upon stone without sound of hammer they have been built and the walls are rising still.
Glory be to God the gospel is a success notwithstanding the sneer of Sanballat and the cruel speech of Tobiah the Ammonite. The wall is being built and the divine eye is upon it. It is God's great piece of architecture and he regards it with delight.
Concerning it it may be said I the Lord do keep it. I will keep it every moment lest any hurt it. I will keep it night and day.
There is for this building the divine decree. Thus saith the Lord behold the man whose name is the branch. He shall build the temple of the Lord even he shall build the temple of the Lord and he shall bear the glory.
The decree is omnipotent. It is being fulfilled and shall be fulfilled unto the end. I see at this moment the master mason upon the wall and I read concerning him he shall not fail or be discouraged and I read yet again of him the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hand and I see with him moreover a band of men whose hearts the Lord has touched and these labor day and night and cease not neither will they cease till the walls of Jerusalem are finished.
He is the great master builder and we each one of us bearing both sword and trowel as we are taught by him must be wise builders under his direction. The work is going on for it is in hands that never weary and it is directed by a mind that never faints. By firm decrees also is it banded and built and cemented so that it cannot fail or so much as a stone thereof be cast down and we have this to encourage us that God never has left a work unfinished yet.
He began the creation it is true it was not so difficult a task as this building up of his church for in the creation and all the things came into existence here in the building of the church there are two works destruction and creation the removal of the old and the erection of the new but nevertheless he who said behold I make all things new is quite equal to the task to which he has set himself and as he did not leave the world half finished did not make it a garden without a man to tenon it nay did not leave the man unfinished but made the woman to be his helpmate so he will not leave the work of salvation to which he has once put his hand unfinished but course upon course shall the jewels be laid emerald shall follow chalcedony the sardius shall be piled upon the sardonyx the barrel
upon the chrysolite the crisscrosses upon the tapas till at length in the appointed age the last garnishings of jacinth and amethyst shall crown the wall and they shall bring forth the top stone with shoutings of grace grace unto it he did not pause when he made the world because he needed fresh strength or wait and say that the undertaking was too much but its story ran on gloriously through all those wonderful six evenings and mornings until the seventh day came and the lord rested from all his work the six days are passed over us now with their evening gloom and morning brightness the lord is making the new world and he is building up his church slowly as we think but surely and in fit time and due order wait ye and in patience possess your souls for there shall yet come that
millennial sabbath in which again the sons of god shall shout for joy and the angel shall sing because the word of god is accomplished and his work is done have courage my brethren bear your burden in removing the rubbish use your sword and your trowel still for the work is the lord and it shall be accomplished if it were ours woe worth the day in which it was laid upon such feeble shoulders but since it is his we need not indulge a solitary trembling thought but arise and be of good cheer now i change the subject to ourselves a while may god grant we may speak to profit for a few minutes upon that branch of our topic there is a building going on in us it is the spirit's work to edify us that is to say to build us up in grace and that building up is carried on by the grace of love
knowledge poppeth up but love buildeth up we are each one of us called to be builders builders in god's strength as i have said before and let that not be forgotten but beloved i am afraid most of us have to say there is much rubbish so that we are not able to build the wall do you not often feel that you cannot be built up in heavenly graces because of the rubbish of your own corrupt nature oh what a fall the fall was what a total ruin did it make of our moral nature brethren do you not discover i do almost every day some fresh heap of rubbish which i hardly knew was there points in which we thought ourselves strong turn out to be our weaknesses there was an infirmity from which we happen those who thought that we were clear and therefore we were rather severe upon others for having such
an infirmity and sin but at last it broke out in ourselves it always had been in us but it did not have the occasion and the opportunity at length the provocation came and the hidden evil was revealed our brethren much more of such rubbish remains in us oh the rubbish of pride of unbelief of evil lustings of anger of despondency of self-exaltation brethren it is not worthwhile to stir it it is such a foul heap i have no desire to turn cinder sifter to it but there is never a jewel in it that will pay for the sifting but there it is and the building of grace does not advance as we could wish because of the corruption which still abideth in us notwithstanding all that some may say and then there is oftentimes in christian people the old rubbish of legal thought of legal acting and legal
fearing in our old estate we were going to be saved by our own merits that was our notion since our conversion we doctrinally abhor the idea of any thought of human merit but experimentally we indulge it the legal spirit will come in like an eel weed it springs up spontaneously in the garden from which grace uprooted it though we are not children of the bond woman but of the free yet the flesh often tries to put the old yoke of bondage upon us so that if paul were here he would say to us having begun in the spirit are you now made perfect by the flesh ishmael tries to domineer over isaac though driven out of the house he shows his tyrant face at the window we get the bond slaves dread and sometimes entertain the bond slaves hope and think that we are to work for wages and instead of
understanding that the gift of god is eternal life while the only wages we could earn would be the wages of sin which is death oh the old legal tendency how deep seated how prone to revive it will scarcely be conceived that sinners should at the same time be self righteous and guilty but yet it is so that abounding as we do in the tendency to sin we equally abound in the tendency to fancy that in us that is in our flesh there dwells some good thing hence arises another heap of rubbish and then old habits what rubbish they are you have been before your conversion guilty of gross sin do you not often find the recollection of those old times coming over you like a hideous dream i know some who when a hymn is given out cannot help recollecting an old song which they used to sing which is
suggested to them by perhaps the holiest word in the song ah the text of scripture is sometimes conjured up before their memory a sin which they wish with all their hearts they've never occurred which they would give their eyes to forget yes the old habits will struggle for mastery and if we do not fall into them as i pray god we never may yet will they vex and trouble us and herein also the much rubbish prevents the building up of the wall of the divine life and so is it with worldly possessions associations do not you find that even the common associations of business into which you are obliged to enter do very much by way of heaping rubbish upon the wall of your spirit you have to meet with ungodly men you cannot command their tongues you may rebuke their language when it becomes
profane but there is very much of talk which is not profane and which we could not very well rebuke but which nevertheless is not sweet with godliness or savory with grace and it damages us we wish sometimes that we were away altogether from worldly men we cry woe is me that i dwell in mishak and tabernacle in the tents of qadar and so again as the result of our being in the world there is very much rubbish and i will tell you another kind of rubbish that i think some brethren have quite enough of if not too much and that is the rubbishing idea that they have come to be somebody after all many acquire that notion if they are getting on in the world if god prospers them then they say ah now i really am a great one and worthy of much honor i am not now like my poorer brethren it is sad to
see what fine air certain prosperous professors give themselves they forget the rock whence they were hewn and lift up their horn on high as if they were more than mortal that is rubbish indeed but there are some others who have had choice seasons of fellowship with christ and they have been for a while free from temptation and there have been no great upbreaking of the great deep of corruption within them and therefore they say ah now i am getting on i think somehow i am getting up to the higher life i should not wonder that i should be perfect one of these days rubbish brother it is all rubbish every bit of it it is not worthy harboring for an instant it may be very glittering rubbish it looks amazingly like gold but all is not gold that glitters any notion of our own attainments which
could lead us for a moment to speak of what we are with any degree of complacency is only rubbish for my own part i desire constantly to stand at the foot of the cross with no other testimony concerning myself than this i the chief of sinners am but jesus died for me personal holiness is to be sought for with all our hearts and it can only be obtained by faith in jesus christ by simple faith in him he gives us power to overcome sin through his precious blood but depend upon at the moment we conclude that we have overcome you can say what paul could not say that he had attained and was already perfect we are in an evil case our pride has overpowered our judgment and we are fools if anyone here is in a condition in which he is able to open his mouth wide in his own praise i would advise him
to fetch a big dust cart or rather all the dust carts in the parish and take that boasting every shovel full of it away for it is of no use to him it will be very soon that it'll make such a dust as to fly in the eyes and ears of his christian brethren build the wall we cannot while there is so much of this proud rubbish in me that is in my flesh there dwelleth no good thing low down at the cross foot in the dust be still our place for we are in ourselves nothing less than nothing emptiness vanity death that is our place christ is made of god unto you wisdom righteousness sanctification and redemption in him be all your glory in him alone for if not so the rubbish will cover up the foundation i will suppose that some of you are mourning tonight some of god's people because of all this
rubbish i want to say to you this first dear brethren thank god that you have the foundation surely laid are you sure of that i pray you rest not till you are certain of it i know that safe with him remains protected by his power what i've committed to his hands till the decisive hour i know whom i have believed none but jesus none but jesus there rests our soul's only hope upon his precious blood and righteousness every other hope we heartily abhor well the foundation is laid blessed be god for that when a man is brought to rest alone in jesus then there is laid for him in zion a sure foundation stone and to that he is cemented by sovereign grace now let us thank god again that the building up of his temple in us is his own work he began it he digged out and made clear to us our own
emptiness he cast out our self-righteousness and he laid christ where our self had once been the lord did that and he has done everything else which has been done in us that has been worth the doing i cannot i am sure no brother here can look upon any step he has ever taken as a real advance in divine life which was taken in any strength but in the strength of god whatever we have done of ourselves had been much better undone for all that nature spins will have to be unraveled sooner or later salvation is of the lord jonah learned that in the whale's belly it was worthwhile getting into the wells belly to learn we want to know it through and through salvation is of the lord alone and to him must be all the praise and there is our comfort it is his work to save us we are not our own
saviors christ is the savior it is the spirit's work to make us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light it is the bridegroom not the bride that is to make the bride fit for her husband so says the scripture christ loved the church and gave himself for it that he might sanctify and cleanse it with the washing of water by the word that he might present it to himself a glorious church not having spot a wrinkle or any such thing it is he that presents the bride to himself and he that makes her fit to be presented blessed be god the work is in sure and competent hands and therefore finally let us by divine grace work on in faith with diligence in faith i say believing that our work of faith and labor of love are not in vain in the lord believing that prayer is not a vain
exercise that drawing near to god in communion is not a vain thing that trusting in the lord is no idle dream but that surely he will complete what he has begun but let us add to faith the most earnest endeavors let us diligently strive to get away this rubbish whatever that habit obstructs our edification god help us to conquer it whatever sin there is about it may the blood of jesus enable us to subdue it let us press forward dear brethren and sisters never content never satisfied till we wake up in his likeness and as we have not all his likeness yet not satisfied with ourselves let us press forward looking to that which is before us and forgetting that which is behind faith and diligence by god's good grace shall give us to be built up on our most holy faith not with wood and hay and
stubble but with gold and silver and precious stones which will abide the fire look that she be built on the foundation that is the last and yet the first question are you on the foundation some build very rapidly but they are not on the foundation yes you have a very fine character and you have a noble profession but is the palatial structure based on the rocky foundation or on the sand our little children at the seaside will build very fine castles with their wooden spades but the next tide sweeps all away because it is sand built on sand i am afraid the religion of multitudes is just that sand built on sand is that your religion dear hira does it consist of church goings or chapel goings and prayer meetings and sacrament takings and all that well then it is sand built on sand but if
you are a poor and needy sinner and you have rested your soul on jesus and then renewed in heart by his spirit have been zealous for good works then is it no longer sand built on sand but the work of the spirit of god upon the one foundation which god laid from all eternity in the person and the work of his only begotten son the lord bless you every one of you for jesus sake amen
Sermon Outline
- I points: - The Problem of Rubbish - The Ruins of Jerusalem - The Need for Excavation
- II points: - The Work of God - The Role of Human Agents - The Hindrance of Rubbish
- III points: - The Apostolic Age - The Clearing Away of Rubbish - The Building of the Wall
- IV points: - The Modern Church - The Influence of Philosophy - The Need for Reformation
- V points: - The Plague of Rubbish - The Call to Excavation - The Promise of God's Help
Key Quotes
“They reaped a nation with their swords as corn is cut down by the sickle, and they beat their cities till the ruins thereof were small as the dust of the summer threshing floor.” — C.H. Spurgeon
“It is an ill day when men know too much to know Christ.” — C.H. Spurgeon
“There is very much rubbish among professors so that we cannot build the wall.” — C.H. Spurgeon
Application Points
- We must be willing to excavate and remove the obstacles that hinder our growth and progress.
- We must depend on God and obey His will in order to overcome the problem of rubbish.
- We must be careful not to add to the word of God or put our own traditions and interpretations on it.
