Providence Baptist Church
1599 E. Township Line Road
Plainfield, IN 46168
Pastor: Wayne Walker
Obstacles Removed
(from "Why Are Men Saved"- message #115 in New Park Street Pulpit)
By: C. H. Spurgeon
I have detained you too long; let me close by noticing
the OBSTACLES REMOVED in the word "nevertheless." I shall do that in somewhat of
an interesting form, by way of parable.
Once on a
time, Mercy sat upon her snow-white throne, surrounded by the troops of love. A
sinner was brought before her, whom Mercy designed to save. The herald blew the
trumpet, and after three blasts thereof, with a loud voice, he said—"O heaven
and earth, and hell, I summon you this day to come before the throne of Mercy,
to tell why this sinner should not be saved." There stood the sinner, trembling
with fear; he knew that there were multitudes of opponents, who would press into
the hall of Mercy, and with eyes full of wrath would say, "He must not, and he
shall not escape, he must be lost!" The trumpet was blown, and Mercy sat
placidly on her throne, until there stepped in one with a fiery countenance; his
head was covered with light; he spoke with a voice like thunder, and out of his
eyes flashed lightning! "Who art thou?" said Mercy. He replied, "I am Law; the
law of God." "And what hast thou to say?" "I have this to say," and he lifted up
a stony tablet, written on both sides; "these ten commands this wretch has
broken. My demand is blood; for it is written, 'The soul that sinneth it shall
die.' Die he, or justice must." The wretch trembles, his knees knock together,
the marrow of his bones melts within him, as if they were ice dissolved by fire,
and he shakes with very fright. Already he thought he saw the thunderbolt
launched at him, he saw the lightning penetrate into his soul, hell yawned
before him in imagination, and he thought himself cast away for ever. But Mercy
smiled, and said, "Law, I will answer thee. This wretch deserves to die; justice
demands that he should perish—I award thee thy claim." And oh! how the sinner
trembles. "But there is one yonder who has come with me to-day, my king, my
Lord; his name is Jesus; he will tell you how the debt can be paid, and the
sinner can go free." Then Jesus spake, and said, "O Mercy, I will do thy
bidding. Take me Law; put me in a garden; make me sweat drops of blood; then
nail me to a tree; scourge my back before you put me to death; hang me on the
cross; let blood run from my hands and feet; let me descend into the grave; let
me pay all the sinner oweth; I will die in his stead." And the Law went out and
scourged the Savior, nailed him to the cross, and coming back with his face all
bright with satisfaction, stood again at the throne of Mercy, and Mercy said,
"Law, what hast thou now to say?" "Nothing," said he, "fair angel, nothing."
"What! not one of these commands against him?" "No, not one. Jesus, his
substitute, has kept them all—has paid the penalty for his disobedience; and
now, instead of his condemnation, I demand as a debt of justice that he be
acquitted." "Stand thou here," said Mercy, "sit on my throne; I and thou
together will now send forth another summons." The trumpet rang again. "Come
hither, all ye who have aught to say against this sinner, why he should not be
acquitted;" and up comes another—one who often troubled the sinner, one who had
a voice not so loud as that of the Law, but still piercing and thrilling—a voice
whose whispers were like the cuttings of a dagger. "Who art thou?" says Mercy.
"I am Conscience; this sinner must be punished; he has done so much against the
law of God that he must be punished; I demand it; and I will give him no rest
till he is punished, nor even then, for I will follow him even to the grave, and
persecute him after death with pangs unutterable." "Nay," said Mercy, "hear me,"
and while he paused for a moment, she took a bunch of hyssop and sprinkled
Conscience with the blood, saying, "Hear me, Conscience, 'The blood of Jesus
Christ, God's Son, cleanseth us from all sin;' Now hast thou ought to say,?"
"No," said Conscience, "nothing."
'Covered is his unrighteousness;
From condemnation he is free.'
Henceforth I will not grieve him; I will be a good conscience unto him, through
the blood of our Lord Jesus Christ." The trumpet rang a third time, and growling
from the innermost vaults, up there came a grim black fiend, with hate in his
eyes, and hellish majesty on his brows. He is asked, "Hast thou anything against
that sinner?" "Yes," said he, "I have; he has made a league with hell, and a
covenant with the grave, and here it is signed with his own hand. He asked God
to destroy his soul in a drunken fit, and vowed he would never turn to God; see,
here is his covenant with hell!" "Let us look at it," said Mercy; and it was
handed up, whilst the grim fiend looked at the sinner, and pierced him through
with his black looks. "Ah! but," said Mercy, "this man had no right to sign the
deed; a man must not sign away another's property. This man was bought and paid
for long beforehand; he is not his own; the covenant with death is disannulled,
and the league with hell is rent in pieces. Go thy way Satan," "Nay," said he,
howling again, "I have something else to say: that man was always my friend; he
listened ever to my insinuations; he scoffed at the gospel; he scorned the
majesty of heaven; is he to be pardoned, whilst I repair to my hellish den, for
ever to bear the penalty of guilt?" Said Mercy, "Avaunt, thou fiend; these
things he did in the days of his unregeneracy; but this word 'nevertheless'
blots them out. Go thou to thy hell; take this for another lash upon thyself—the
sinner shall be pardoned, but thou—never, treacherous fiend!" And then Mercy,
smilingly turning to the sinner, said, "Sinner, the trumpet must be blown for
the last time!" Again it was blown, and no one answered. Then stood the sinner
up, and Mercy said, "Sinner ask thyself the question—ask thou of heaven, of
earth, of hell—whether any can condemn thee?" And the sinner stood up, and with
a bold loud voice said, "Who shall lay anything to the charge of God's elect?"
And he looked into hell, and Satan lay there, biting his iron bonds; and he
looked on earth, and earth was silent; and in the majesty of faith the sinner
did even climb to heaven itself, and he said, "Who shall lay anything to the
charge of God's elect? God?' And the answer came, "No; he justifieth." "Christ?"
Sweetly it was whispered, "No; he died." Then turning round, the sinner joyfully
exclaimed, "Who shall separate me from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus
our Lord." And the once condemned sinner came back to Mercy; prostrate at her
feet he lay, and vowed henceforth to be hers for ever, if she would keep him to
the end, and make him what she would desire him to be. Then no longer did the
trumpet ring, but angels rejoiced, and heaven was glad, for the sinner was
saved.
Thus, you
see, I have what is called, dramatized the thing; but I don't care what it is
called; it is a way of
arresting the ear, when nothing else will. "Nevertheless;" there is the
obstruction taken away! Sinner, whatever be the "nevertheless," it shall never
the less abate the Savior's love; not the less shall it ever make it, but it
shall remain the same.
"Come, guilty soul, and flee away
To Christ and heal thy wounds;
This is the glorious gospel-day,
Wherein free grace abounds.
Come to Jesus, sinner, come."
On thy knee weep out a sorrowful confession; look to his cross, and see the
substitute; believe, and live. Ye almost demons, ye that have gone farthest in
sin, now, Jesus says, "If you know your need of me, turn unto me, and I will
have mercy upon you: and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon."