“Seeking for Jesus.” John 6:24. THE persons who are here - TopicsExpress



          

“Seeking for Jesus.” John 6:24. THE persons who are here described as seeking for Jesus were looking after Him from a very mean and selfish motive—not because of the gracious Words which He spoken, nor to render Him thanks for benefits received at His hands, but merely because they had eaten of the loaves and fishes, and hoped to do so again. From such sordid motives let us flee; may we all shun with detestation the very idea of making a profession of religion for the sake of worldly advantage; for it is detestable to the last degree. Those who seek Jesus Christ with the groveling desire to make a gain of godliness are hypocrites of the meanest order; like Judas they will follow the Lord while they can steal from the bag, and like that “son of perdition,” they will sell Him when the 30 pieces of silver are the reward of treachery; let them know that such gain will involve their souls’ eternal loss! I shall apply the words before us to those who really and spiritually seek Jesus, seek Him as Jesus— the Savior who saves His people from their sins. Last Sunday morning I tried to speak concerning maturity in Grace—(See #945, Volume 16—RIPE FRUIT—by the Grace of God, visit: spurgeongems.org) giving the advanced Believer a word, and as we are bound to give a portion of meat in due season to all classes, I will now deal with those who are but babes in Grace, if indeed they are babes at all. I shall speak to those who cannot say, “We have found Him,” but who are earnestly “seeking for Jesus.” I. First, let us notice THE CHARACTER OF THE STATE described as “seeking for Jesus.” In it there is a mingling of good and evil; we see in it much of the Light of God, but too much of darkness; it is neither day nor night, a dim twilight, hopeful but overclouded; I may call it “not Light, but darkness visible.” It is one of those miry places, a marsh, not altogether sea, and certainly not land; like the brackish water of the river’s mouth, not altogether salt, but assuredly not sweet. “Seeking for Jesus” has a large amount of hopefulness in it; it is as the almond tree in blossom, though as yet there is no fruit. The seeker at any rate is not now indifferent; he is not a careless sluggard, demanding yet more sleep, and folding of the hands; he is not a defiant rebel, daring the Wrath of God with blasphemous audacity; he is no longer a denier of Revelation; he would not be seeking for Jesus unless he had some kind of Faith—at any rate, a theoretical Faith in a Savior, and in his need of Him. Now it is a very encouraging sign when we see men awakened and willing to hear; when we can bring men to think, we are very grateful, for thoughtfulness lies on the road to conviction of sin, and conviction is on the way to Faith in the Lord Jesus Christ. I am glad, my dear Friend, that you are now no longer deaf to the appeals of God’s Word; it is well that your ears are open, and though as yet what you hear is far from bringing you any comfort, rest assured it is a great blessing to you to hear the Truth of God, even when it condemns you! I rejoice to see you under concern, and I hope that something may come of it. Your face is now turned in the right direction, now that you are “seeking for Jesus.” When you sought sinful pleasure, you were facing the pit of Hell—now your face is heavenward. I am glad that Jesus is the Objective of your search, for depend upon it, nothing else is worth seeking for; Salvation from sin and Hell should be the first objective of your soul’s desire. For an alarmed and awakened sinner to seek rest in ceremonies will be a search for bread among ashes; to labor for Salvation by your own righteousness will be looking for substance among dreams; your seeking after Jesus shows that you are on the right tack, and though as yet you have not reached the haven, the helm is set in the right direction, and I am grateful to God for it, and encouraged concerning you; I regard your present state as the little cloud which foretells the coming rain. But, alas, I may be disappointed, and the early cloud may melt into nothingness! Hope tells a flattering tale, but she may be deceived. What a pleasing sight it is to see a man who has formerly been prayerless casting himself upon his knees in secret! How gratifying to see the unread Bible brought out from the dust, and carefully studied! I think an angel must look on with holy interest when he sees the fresh tear fall in the solitary chamber, and the unaccustomed suppliant bow before his God; glad are those blessed spirits when they hear the seeker say, “O God, I will seek You until I find You; I will cry unto You till I receive an answer of peace.” Intelligence of such a vow would make a Church rejoice in hope—trusting that the time for newborn children of God to be found in her midst was fully come! A heart that turns itself to Christ, if haply it may find Him, is evidently in a hopeful condition. Yet in the state of “seeking for Jesus” there is much that is doubtful, for, my Brothers and Sisters, the seeker after Christ remains disobedient to the great Command of the Gospel. If he were obedient to the great Gospel Precept, he would at once cease to be a seeker, and become a happy finder! What is the Command of the Gospel? “Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and you shall be saved.” Properly speaking, Christ is not an Object for seeking, He is not far from any of us—like the bronze serpent uplifted by Moses, He is not so much to be looked for as looked at. We have neither to clamber to Heaven to find Him in the loftiness of His Deity, to bring Him down, nor dive into the chambers of Hades to bring Him up again from the dead. Thus says the Lord, “The Word is near you, even in your mouth, and in your heart: that is, the Word of Faith, which we preach; that if you shall confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus, and shall believe in your heart that God has raised Him from the dead, you shall be saved.” Jesus is Immanuel, God With Us! A prayer will reach Him, a wish will find Him, a groan will pierce His heart—do but confide in Him, and He is yours! The first Command of the Gospel to guilty sinners is not to pray, to search the Scriptures, to attend upon sermons—all these are natural duties, and woe unto the man who neglects any of them; but the Command, the special Command of the Gospel is, “Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ!” Now, the seeking sinner is disobedient to the Command; he is going about here and there seeking, but he declines trusting. He is eagerly looking abroad for that which is at home; he is seeking for peace afar off when it is near him; he looks east and west to behold a wonder, while The Wonderful, The Savior, stands at his right hand ready to forgive! The Way of Salvation for me as a sinner is simply this, that I, being a sinner, do now put my trust in Christ Jesus the Substitute for sinners! God has set forth His Crucified Son as the accepted Propitiation for sin—the Way of Salvation is that I accept Him for what God has set Him forth—namely, as the Atonement for my sin, in which I place my sole reliance. Seeing He is God, seeing He took upon Himself the nature of man, seeing that as Mediator He suffered in the place of as many as trust in Him, I trust Him, and I obtain thereby the blessed result of His sufferings—I am, in fact, thereby saved! Now, it is certainly some good thing to be a seeker, but it is also an ill thing if I follow my seeking, and refuse God’s Way of Salvation. Hear what the Apostle John says—“He who believes not God has made Him a liar because he believes not the record that God gave of His Son.” This is no small sin to be guilty of, and it entails no small punishment, for “he who believes not is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only-begotten Son of God.” Suppose that I have been told of a remedy for my disease; well, it is very good that I desire to be cured of my deadly malady; it is so far hopeful that I have sent for a physician, but after being informed that there is only one specific remedy for my disease, and that it alone will certainly heal me, if I were still to continue seeking a remedy, or to say I am seeking this one true remedy, I shall remain sick, and ultimately die! I shall never be healed unless I take that which is prescribed—to seek it is not enough, I must actually take it! In seeking, then, there is some good, but oh, how much of evil! Here are gleams and flashes of the Light of God, but oh, how dense is the darkness! Here is a little smoke in the flax, but I dare scarcely call it a spark. O Seeker for Jesus, think of this, for while I would not discourage you, yet would I encourage you to end your seeking by becoming a Believer! Look not at Salvation’s cup, but drink of it! Stand not by the Fountain’s brim, but wash in it and be clean! O may the Holy Spirit lead you to cease your search for goodly pearls, for the Pearl of Great Price is before you! Jesus is not to be discovered as a secret; He stands before you openly; behold His hands and His feet! Mark well His torn side, and as you look, trust, and from now on He is all your own! Hear, dear Friend, your true position. It is the case of a soldier on the battlefield, wounded, bleeding, life oozing away from him; he is perishing, but he is sufficiently sensible to know it, and to call for help. The surgeon is on the field within hearing; the sufferer pleads for relief with many cries and entreaties; so far, so good, but I pray you remember that crying and weeping will not of themselves heal the sick man—the surgeon must actually come and bind up his wounds; and if he refuses to receive him, he may cry as he will, but he will bleed to death. So remember that your prayers and seeking, of themselves, cannot save you—Jesus must come to you, and it is madness on your part to refuse Him by your unbelief! To give another similitude—you are today like the manslayer of old; you have done the murderous deed; Vengeance is armed against you; Judgment, swift as lightning pursues you! You are not now slumbering in foolish security, or presumptuously defying the avenger, but happily you are so awakened, that you are running towards the City of Refuge. I delight to mark your earnest running, but run as you may, you are not safe until you are within the city gate! The most vigorous running will not save you if it does not end within the walls of refuge. To enter that open gate, to dwell within that sheltering wall, to enjoy the privilege of sanctuary—this is safety; all else is but hope of escape, and not deliverance itself. To pray, to hear, to desire, to seek—all this is the roadway and the running, but Christ Himself must be laid hold upon by Faith, or we are not saved! Run, Man, but oh, take care that you run in God’s Way— by Faith in Jesus—and not by trusting in your resolves and feelings! You must have Christ to be yours by personal Faith, or you must die eternally. Let me give yet another picture. You are like one who has been asleep in a burning house. At last you are awakened; the cries of those who would gladly save you have broken your deadly slumber; you start up in horror. I think I see you now at the upper window, with the flames drawing near to you; you clearly perceive your danger, you passionately clamor for aid; all your energies are on edge; so far, so good. But, Man, all this will not rescue you—you must get on the fire escape which is now uplifted to the window! Are you unwilling to take the one and only way of escape? It is close to you; it is suitable, it is efficient! Why seek another? There it is, and precisely what you need! Your present alarm will only be the prelude of your despair if you put from you the way of escape. I put these figures before you that you may see that while you are only seeking for Jesus, your best friends dare not altogether hope for you, but are led to tremble, too! We wonder which way the scale will turn—your future quivers in the balances. As anxious eyes watch a laboring boat making with difficulty for port, and in imminent danger of the rocks, so we watch you; we see you like Lot and his family, ready to leave the City of Destruction, but you have not yet reached the mountains, and our heart asks concerning you, “Will he linger in the plain? Will he look back? Or will he altogether be delivered?” If you remain as you are, there is no hope for you; all the supposed good which is now in you is vanity itself if it leaves you short of Christ! Remember well this verse, and I will pass on— “Why those fears, poor seeking sinner? Why those anxious, gloomy fears? Sighs and sorrows cannot save you, Healing dwells not in your tears; It is BELIEVING Which the soul to Christ endears.”
Posted on: Thu, 01 Jan 2015 12:31:44 +0000

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