The Spurgeon Series 1859 & 1860. Charles H. Spurgeon
they have thought they were well rewarded with a little praise. Men, too, have sweated at the furnace; they have spent their livings, have starved their families, to invent some luxuries for the tables of the rich. Men have undergone unheard of labours, toils that positively appal you to read about, merely to become eminent in their profession, to be first in the rank of artisans among whom they were numbered.
16. When the world has a gulf to fill, it never lacks a Curtius {a} to leap into it, but Christ often sees his cause left and deserted by reason of the coldness of his friends. There is many a battle where the warriors of Christ turn their backs, though armed and carrying bows. I was thinking yesterday, and the thought struck me forcibly, that one thousand eight hundred years ago, or a little more, there were a few men met in an upper room for worship — about four hundred of them. They met, and they prayed, and they preached, and there was a divine fire kindled in their hearts; and in a few years, they had preached the gospel in every language under heaven, and the mass of the world became professedly Christians. Now here is a room, not with four hundred people, but oftentimes filled with thousands, and yet, does the religion of Christ progress as it should do? No. If there were only a few, with a hundredth part of the zeal of Christ’s disciples that there was in olden times, before another year rolls around, there would be missionaries in every town; the gospel would be preached in every village of India, and China, and every other nation accessible to the foot of the missionary. As it is we are an idle generation; a tribe of dwarfs has succeeded a race of giants, and now Christ’s cause creeps where it once ran, and only runs where once it was accustomed to fly as with wings of lightning. Oh, that God would make bare his arm! And if ever he does, the first sign of it will be that the church will begin to serve Christ more zealously. Some will give their blood to die in the preaching of the Word. Others will pour their wealth into coffers of the church, and every living soul, numbered in the family of Christ, will spend itself and be spent for its Master’s honour. “Not as the world gives do I give to you.” Oh Jesus, not as the world’s followers give, do we desire to give to you. They give their lives only once, we wish to “die daily”; they give much of their talent, we wish to give all. Take our heart, and seal it, make it as your own, that we may live to your honour, and die in your arms, and sit upon your throne with you for ever and ever.
{a} M. Curtius: a brave young Roman knight who, in obedience to an oracle, to save his country, leaped armed and on horseback into the chasm which suddenly opened in the Forum of Rome.
Little Sins
No. 248-5:185. A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, April 17, 1859, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Music Hall, Royal Surrey Gardens.
Is it not a little one? {Genesis 19:20}
1. These words we shall take for a motto, rather than a text in the ordinary acceptance of that term. I shall not this morning attempt to explain the connection. It was the utterance of Lot, when he pleaded for the salvation of Zoar; but I shall take it altogether away from the connection in which it stands, and make use of it in another fashion. The great Father of Lies has multitudes of devices by which he seeks to ruin the souls of men. He uses false weights and false balances in order to deceive them. Sometimes he uses false times, declaring at one time that it is too early to seek the Lord, and at another that it is now too late. And he uses false quantities, for he will declare that great sins are only little, and as for what he confesses to be little sins, afterwards he makes them to be nothing at all — mere peccadilloes, almost worthy of forgiveness in themselves. Many souls, I do not doubt, have been caught in this trap, and being snared by it, have been destroyed. They have ventured into sin where they thought the stream was shallow, and, fatally deceived by its depth, they have been swept away by the strength of the current to that cataract which is the ruin of such vast multitudes of the souls of men.
2. It shall be my business this morning to answer this temptation, and try to put a sword in your hands by which to resist the enemy when he shall come upon you with this cry; — “Is it not a little one?” and tempt you into sin because he leads you to imagine that there is but very little harm in it. “Is it not a little one?”
3. With regard then to this temptation of Satan concerning the littleness of sin, I would make this first answer, the best of men have always been afraid of little sins. The holy martyrs of God have been ready to endure the most terrible torments rather than step so much as one inch aside from the road of truth and righteousness. Witness Daniel: when the king’s decree went forth that no man should worship God for such and such a time, nevertheless he prayed three times a day as before, with his window open towards Jerusalem, not fearing the king’s commandment. Why could he not have retired into an inner room? Why might he not have ceased from vocal prayer, and have kept his petitions in his thought and in his heart? Would he not have been as well accepted as when he kneeled as usual, with the window open, so that all the world might see him? Ah! but Daniel judged that little as the offence might seem, he would rather suffer death at the jaws of the lion, than he would by that little offence provoke the anger of his God, or lead men to blaspheme his holy name, because his servant had been afraid to obey. Note, too, the three holy children. They are asked by King Nebuchadnezzar simply to bow the knee and worship the golden image which he had set up. How slight the homage! One bend of the knee, and all is done. One prostration, and they may go their way safely. Not so. They will not worship the golden image which the king has set up. They can burn for God, but they cannot turn from God. They can suffer, but they will not sin; and though all the world might have excused them with the plea of expediency, if they had performed that one little act of idol worship, yet they will not do it, but would rather be exposed to the fury of a furnace, seven times heated, than commit an offence against the Most High. So also among the early Christians. You may have read of that noble warrior for Christ, Martin Arethusa, the bishop. He had led the people to pull down the idol temple in the city over which he presided; and when the apostate emperor Julian came to power, he commanded the people to rebuild the temple. They were bound to obey on pain of death. But Arethusa all the while lifted up his voice against the evil they were doing, until the wrath of the king suddenly fell upon him. He was, however, offered his life on the condition that he would subscribe so much as a single half penny towards the building of the temple; no, less than that, if he would cast one grain of incense into the censer of the false god he might escape. But he would not do it. He feared God, and he would not commit the most tiny little sin to save his life. They therefore exposed his body, and gave him up to the children to prick him with knives; then they smeared him with honey, and he was exposed to wasps and stung to death. But all the while he would not give the grain of incense. He could give his body to wasps, and die in the most terrible pains, but he could not, he would not, he dared not sin against God. A noble example!
4. Now, brethren, if men have been able to perceive so much of sin in little transgressions, that they would bear inconceivable tortures rather than commit them, must there not be something dreadful after all in the thing of which Satan says, “Is it not a little one?” Men, with their eyes well opened by divine grace, have seen a whole hell slumbering in the most minute sin. Gifted with a microscopic power, their eyes have seen a world of iniquity hidden in a single act, or thought, or imagination of sin; and hence they have avoided it with horror, — have passed by and would have nothing to do with it. But if the straight road to heaven is through flames, through floods, through death itself, they had sooner go through all these torments than turn one inch aside to tread an easy and an erroneous path. I say this should help us when Satan tempts us to commit little sins, — this should help us to answer, “No, Satan, if God’s people think it to be great, they know better than you do. You are a deceiver; they are true. I must shun all sin, even though you say it is only little.” It may be further answered, in reply to this temptation of Satan with regard to little sins, thus: — “Little sins lead to great ones. Satan! you bid me to commit a small iniquity. I know you and who you are, you unholy one! You desire me to put in the thin end of the wedge. You know when that is once inserted you can drive it home, and split my soul in two. No, stand back! Little though the temptation is, I dread you, for your little temptation leads to something greater, and your small sin makes way for something worse.”
5. We all see in nature how easily