| A New Year's
Wish
by Charles H. Spurgeon
NO. 3231
A SERMON PUBLISHED ON THURSDAY, JANUARY 5TH, 1911,
DELIVERED BY C. H. SPURGEON,
AT THE METROPOLITAN TABERNACLE, NEWINGTON
But my God shall
supply all your need, according to his riches in glory by
Christ Jesus.-Philippians 4:19.
THE Philippians had several times sent presents to
Paul, to supply his necessities. Though they were not themselves rich, yet they made a
contribution, and sent Epaphroditus with it, an odour of sweet smell, a sacrifice
acceptable, well pleasing to God. Paul felt very grateful: he thanked God, but he
did not forget also to thank the donors; he wished them, every blessing, and he did as
good as say, You have supplied my need, and my God shall supply yours. You have
supplied my need of temporal food and raiment out of your poverty; my God shall supply all
your need out of his riches in glory. As, he says, in the eighteenth
verse, I have all and abound: I am full, so, he adds, my
God shall supply all your need. You have sent what you gave me by the hand of a
beloved brother, but God will send a better messenger to you, for he will supply all your
need by Christ Jesus. Every single word sounds as if he had thought it
over, and the Spirit of God had guided him in his meditation, so that he should to the
fullest extent wish them back a blessing similar to that which they had sent to him, only
of a richer and more enduring kind.
Now, on this New Years Day I would desire,
somewhat in the spirit of Paul, to bless those of you who have supplied, according to your
abilities, the wants of Gods work in my hands, and have given, even out of your
poverty, to the cause of God, according as there has been need. I count myself to be
personally your debtor though your gifts have been for the students, and the orphans, and
the colporteurs, and not for myself. In return for your kindness, after the manner of his
gracious love, my God shall supply all your need, according to his riches in glory
by Christ Jesus.
This verse is particularly sweet to me, for, when
we were building the Orphanage, I foresaw that, if we had no voting, and no collecting of
annual subscriptions, but depended upon the goodness of God, and the voluntary offerings
of his people, we should have times of trial, and therefore I ordered the masons to place
upon the first columns of the Orphanage entrance, these words, My God shall supply
all your need, according to his riches in glory by Christ Jesus. The text therefore
is out in stone upon the right hand and upon the left of the great archway. There stands
this declaration of our confidence in God; and as long as God lives, we shall never need
be remove it, for he will certainly supply the needs of his own work. While we serve him,
he will furnish our tables for us.
I. The text might suggest to us a field of gloomy
thought, if we wished to indulge the melancholy vein, for it speaks of all your
need. So, first, behold A GREAT NECESSITY: all your need. What a gulf!
What an abyss! All your need. I do not know how many believers made up the
church at Philippi, but the need of one saint is great enough; what must many need? It
would not be possible to tell the number of Gods children on earth, but the text
comprehends the need of the whole chosen family, all your need. We will not
ask you to reckon up the wonderful draught upon the divine exchequer which must be made by
all the needs of all the saints who are yet on earth: but please think of your own need;
that will be more within the compass of your experience and the range of your meditation.
May the Lord supply your need and all your need!
There is our temporal need, and that is no little
matter. If we have food and raiment, we should be therewith content; but there are many of
Gods people to when the mere getting of food and raiment is a wearisome toil; and
what with household cares, family trials, sickness of body, losses in business, and
sometimes the impossibility of obtaining suitable labor, many of Gods saints are as
hard put to it as Elijah was when he sat by the brook Cherith. If God did not send them
their bread and meat in a remarkable manner, they would surely starve; but their bread
shall be given them, and their water shall be sure. My God shall supply all your
need. You have, perhaps, a large family, and your needs are therefore greatly
increased, but the declaration of the text includes the whole of your needs personal and
relative.
After all, our temporal needs are very small
compared with our spiritual needs. A man may, with the blessing of God, pretty readily
provide for the wants of the body, but who shall provide for the requirements of the soul?
There is need of perpetual pardon, for we are always sinning; and Jesus Christs
blood is always pleading for us, and cleansing us from sin. Every day there is need of
fresh strength battle against inward sin; and, blessed be God, it is daily supplied, so
that our youth is renewed like the eagles. As good soldiers of Jesus Christ, we need
armor from head to foot, and even then we do not know how to wear the armor, or how to
wield the sword, unless he who gave us these sacred implements shall be always with us.
Warring saint, God will supply all your need by his presence and Spirit. But we are not
merely warriors, we are also workers. We are called, many of us, to important spheres of
labor, (and, indeed, let no man think his sphere unimportant,) but here also our hands
shall be sufficient for us, and we shall accomplish our life-work. You have need to be
helped to do the right thing, at the right time, in the right spirit, and in the right
manner; your need, as a Sunday-school teacher, as an open-air preacher, and especially as
a minister of the gospel, will be very great; but the text meets all your requirements,
My God shall supply all your need. Then comes our need in suffering, for many
of us are called to take our turn in the Lords prison-house. Here we need patience
under pain, and hope under depression of spirit. Who is sufficient for furnace-work? Our
God will supply us with those choice graces and consolations which shall strengthen us to
glorify his name even in the fires. He will either make the burden lighter, or the burden
stronger; he will diminish the need, or increase the supply.
Beloved, it is impossible for me to mention all
the forms of our spiritual need. We need to be daily converted from some sin or other,
which, perhaps, we have scarcely known to be sin. We need to be instructed in the things
of God, we need to be illuminated as to the mind of Christ, we need to be comforted by the
promises, we need to be quickened by the precepts, we need to be strengthened by the
doctrines. We need, oh, what do we not need? We are just a bag of wants, and a heap of
infirmities. If any one of us were to keep a want-book, as I have seen tradesmen do, what
a huge folio it would need to be; and it might be written within and without, and crossed
and re-crossed, for we are full of wants from the first of January to the end of December;
but here is the mercy, My God shall supply all your need. Are you put in high
places? Have you many comforts? Do you enjoy wealth? What need you have to be kept from
loving the world, to be preserved from wantonness and pride, and the follies and fashions
of this present evil world. My God will supply your need in that respect. Are you very
poor? Then the temptation is to envy, to bitterness of spirit, to rebellion against God.
My God shall supply all your need. Are you alone in the world? Then you need
the Lord Jesus to be your Companion; and, your Companion he will be. Have you many around
you? Then you have need of grace to set them a good example, to bring up your children,
and manage your household in the fear of God. My God shall supply all your need.
You have need, in times of joy, to be kept sober and steady; you have need, in times of
sorrow, to be strong and quit yourselves like men; you have needs in living, and you will
have needs in dying, but your last need shall be supplied as surely as your first. My
God shall supply all your need.
Come, then, brethren, and look down into this
great gulf of need, and exultingly say, O Lord, we thank thee that our needs are
great, for there is the more room for thy love, thy tenderness, thy power, thy
faithfulness, to fill the chasm.
That first thought, which I said might be a gloomy
one, has all the dreariness taken out of it by four others equally true, but each of them
full of good cheer. The text not only mentions a great necessity, but it mentions also a
great Helper: My God; next, a great supply: My God shall supply all your
need; thirdly, an abundant store out of which to draw the gift: according to
his riches in glory; and lastly, a glorious channel through which the supply shall
come: by Christ Jesus.
II. So, for our enormous wants here is A GREAT
HELPER: My God shall supply all your need.
Whose God is that? Why, Pauls God. That is
one of the matters in which the greatest saints are no better off than the very least, for
though Paul called the Lord My God, he is my God too. My dear old friend who
sits yonder, and has nothing but a few pence in all the world, can also say, and he
is my God too. He is my God, and he is as much my God if I am the meanest, most obscure,
and weakest of his people, as he would be my God if I were able, like Paul, to evangelize
the nations. It is, to me, delightful to think that my God is Pauls God,
because, you see, Paul intended this; he meant to say, You see, dear brethren, my
God has supplied all my wants; and as he is your God, he will supply yours. I have
been in the Roman dungeon in which Paul is said to have been confined, and a comfortless
prison indeed it is. First of all you descend into a vaulted chamber, into which no light
ever comes except through a little round hole in the roof; and then, in the middle of the
floor of that den, there is another opening, through which the prisoner was let down into
a second and lower dungeon, in which no fresh air or light could possibly come to him.
Paul was probably confined there. The dungeon of the Praetorium in which he was certainly
immured is not much better. Paul would have been left well nigh to starve there, but for
those good people at Philippi. I should not wonder but what Lydia was at the bottom of
this kind movement, or else the jailer. They said, We must not let the good apostle
starve; and so they made up a contribution, and send him what he wanted; and when
Paul received it he said, My God has taken care of me. I cannot make tents here in
this dark place so as to earn my own living, but my Master still supplies my need; and
even so, when you are in straits, will he supply you.
My God. It has often been sweet to me,
when I have thought of my orphan children, and money has not come in, to remember Mr.
Müllers God, and how he always supplied the children at Bristol. His God is my God,
and I rest upon him. When you turn over the pages of Scripture, and read of men who were
in sore trouble, and were helped, you may say, Here is Abraham, he was blessed in
all this, and Abrahams God will supply all my need, for he is my God. I read of
Elijah, that the ravens fed him; I have Elijahs God, and he can command the ravens
to feed me if he pleases. The God of the prophets, the God of the apostle, the God
of all the saints that have gone before us, this God is our God for ever and ever.
It seems to be thought by some that God will not work now as he used to die. Oh, if
we had lived in miraculous times, they say, then we could have trusted him!
Then there was manifest evidence of Gods existence, for he pushed aside the laws of
nature, and wrought for the fulfillment of his promises to his people. Yet that was
a rather coarser mode of working than the present one, for now the Lord produces the same
results without the violation of the laws of nature. It is a great fact that, without the
disturbance of a single law of nature, prayer becomes effectual with God; and God being
enquired of by his people to do it for them, does fulfill his promise, and supply their
needs. Using means of various kinds, he still gives his people all things necessary for
this life and godliness. Without a miracle, he works great wonders of loving care, and he
will continue so to do.
Beloved, is the God of Paul your God? Do you
regard him as such? It is not every man who worships Pauls God. It is not every
professing Christian who really knows the Lord at all, for some invent a deity such as
they fancy God ought to be. The God of Paul is the God of the Old and New Testament,-such
a God as we find there. Do you trust such a God? Can you rest upon him? There are
such severe judgments mentioned in Scripture. Yes, do you quarrel with them? Then
you cast him off; but if, instead thereof, you feel, I cannot understand thee, O my
God, nor do I think I ever shall, but it is not for me, a child, to measure the infinite
God, or to arraign thee at my bar, and say to thee, Thus shouldst thou have done,
and thus oughtest thou not to have done. Thou sayest, Such am I, and I
answer, Such as thou art, I love thee, and I cast myself upon thee, the God of
Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob, the God of thy servant Paul. Thou art my God, and I will
rest upon thee. Very well, then, he will supply all your need, according
to his riches in glory by Christ Jesus. Just think of that for a minute.
If he will supply you, you will be supplied
indeed, for God is infinite in capacity. He is indefinitely wise as to the manner of his
actions; and infinitely powerful as to the acts themselves. He never sleeps nor tires; he
is never absent from any place, but is always ready to help. Your needs come, perhaps, at
very unexpected times; they may occur in the midnight of despondency or in the noonday of
delight, but God is ever near to supply the surprising need. He is everywhere present and
everywhere omnipotent, and he can supply all your need, in every place, at every time, to
the fullest degree.
Remember that Omnipotence has
servants everywhere;
-and that, whenever God wishes to send you aid, he
can do it without pausing to ask, How shall it be done? He has but to will it,
and all the powers of heaven and earth are subservient to your necessity. With such a
Helper, what cause have you to doubt?
III. The next point in the text is, A GREAT
SUPPLY. My God shall supply all your need.
Sometimes, we lose a good deal of the meaning of
Scripture through the translation; in fact, nothing ever does gain by translation except a
bishop. The present passage might be rendered thus My God will fill to the full all
your need. The illustration which will best explain the meaning is that of the woman
whose children were to be sold by her creditor to pay the debts of her late husband. She
had nothing to call her own except some empty oil-jars, and the prophet bade her set these
in order, and bring the little oil which still remained in the cruse. She did so, and he
then said to her, Go among your neighbours, and borrow empty vessels, not a few.
She went from one to another till she had filled her room full of these empty vessels, and
then the prophet said, Pour out. She began to pour out from her almost empty
cruse; and, to her surprise, it filled her largest oil-jar. She went to another, and
filled that, and then another and another. She kept on filling all the oil-jars, till at
last she said to the prophet, there is not a vessel more. Then the oil stayed,
but not till then. So will it be with your needs. You were frightened at having so many
needs just now, were you not? But now be pleased to think you have them, for they are just
so many empty vessels to be filled. If the woman had borrowed only a few jars, she could
not have received much oil; but the more empty vessels she had, the more oil she obtained.
So, the more wants and the more needs you have if you bring them to God, so much the
better, for he will fill them all to the brim, and you may be thankful that there are so
many to be filled. When you have no more wants, (but oh, when will that be?) then the
supply will be stayed, but not till then.
How gloriously God gives to his people! We wanted
pardon once: he washed us, and he made us whiter than snow. We wanted clothing, for we
were naked. What did he do? Give us some rough dress or other? Oh, no! but he said, Bring
forth the best robe, and put it on him. It was a fortunate thing for the prodigal
that, his clothes were all in rags, for then he needed raiment, and the best robe was
brought forth. It is a grand thing to be sensible of spiritual needs, for they will all be
supplied. A conscious want in the sight of God,-what is it but a prevalent request for a
new mercy? We have sometimes asked him to comfort us, for we were very low; but when the
Lord has comforted us, he has so filled us with delight that we have been inclined to cry
with the old Scotch divine, Hold, Lord, hold! It is enough. I cannot bear more joy.
Remember I am only an earthen vessel. We, in relieving the poor, generally give no
more than we can help, but our God does not stop to count his favours, he gives like a
king. He pours water upon him that is thirsty, and floods upon the dry ground.
IV. We must pass on to the next thought, and
consider for a minute or two THE GREAT RESOURCES out of which this supply is to come:
My God shall supply all your need, according to his riches in glory. The
preacher may sit down now, for he cannot compass this part of the text. Gods riches
in glory are beyond all thought.
Consider the riches of God in nature; who shall
count his treasures? Get away into the forests; travel on league after league among the
trees which cast their ample shade for no mans pleasure, but only for the Lord. Mark
on lone mountain-side and far-reaching plain the myriads of flowers whose perfume is for
God alone. What wealth each spring and summer is created in the boundless estates of the
great King! Observe the vast amount of animal and insect life which crowds the land with
the riches of divine wisdom, for the earth is the Lords, and the fullness
thereof. Look towards the sea; think of those shoals of fish, so countless that,
when only the fringe of them is touched by our fishermen, they find enough food to supply
a nation. Mark, too, the sunken treasures of the ocean, which no hand gathereth but that
of the Eternal. If you would see the wealth of the Creator, cast your eye to the stars;
tell ye their numbers if ye can. Astronomy has enlarged our vision, and made us look upon
this world as a mere speck compared with innumerable other worlds that God has made; and
it has told us that, probably, all the myriads of worlds that we can see with the
telescope are a mere fraction of the countless orbs which tenant infinite space. Vast are
Gods riches in nature. It needs a Milton to sing, as he sang in Paradise Lost, the
riches of the creating God.
The riches of God in providence are equally
without bound. He saith to this creature, Go, and he goeth, and to another,
Do this, and he doeth it, for all things do his bidding. Think of the wealth
of God in grace. There nature and providence stand eclipsed, for we have the fountain of
eternal love, the gift of an infinite sacrifice, the pouring out of the blood of his own
dear Son, and the covenant of grace in which the smallest blessing is infinite in value.
The riches of his grace! God is rich in mercy,-rich in patience, love, power,
kindness, rich beyond all conception.
Now your needs shall be supplied
according to the riches of nature, and the riches of providence, and the riches of grace;
but this is not all; the apostle chooses a higher style, and writes according to his
riches in glory. Ah, we have never seen God in glory! That were a sight our eyes
could none at present behold. Christ in his glory, when transfigured upon earth, was too
resplendent a spectacle even for the tutored eyes of Peter, and James, and John.
At the too-transporting
light,-
darkness rushed upon them, and they were as men
that slept What God is in his glory do ye know, ye angels? Does he not veil his face even
from you lest, in the excessive brightness of his essence, even you should be consumed?
Who amongst all his creatures can tell the riches of his glory, when even the heavens are
not pure in his sight, and he charges his angels with folly?
His riches in glory. It means not only
the riches of what he has done, but the riches of what he could do; for if he has made
hosts of worlds, he could make as many myriads more, and then have but begun. The
possibilities of God omnipotent, who shall reckon? But the Lord shall supply all your need
according to such glorious possibilities. When a great king gives according to his,
riches, then he does not measure out stinted alms to beggars, but he gives like a king, as
we say; and if it be some grand festival day, and the
king is in his state array, his largesse is on a noble scale. Now, when God is in his
glory, bethink you, if you can, what must be the largesse that he distributes,-what the
treasures that he brings forth for his own beloved! Now, according to his riches in
glory, he will supply all your needs. After that, dare you despond? O soul, what
insanity is unbelief? What flagrant blasphemy is doubt of the love of God! He must bless
us; and, blessed by him, we must be blest indeed. If he is to supply our needs according
to his
riches in glory, they will be supplied to the full.
V. Now let us close our meditation by considering
THE GLORIOUS CHANNEL by which these needs are to be supplied: According to his
riches in glory by Christ Jesus.
You shall have all your souls wants
satisfied, but you must go to Christ for everything. By Christ Jesus. That is
the fountainhead where the living waters well up. You are not to keep your wants supplied
by your own care and fretfulness. Consider the lilies, how they grow. You are
to be enriched by Christ Jesus. You are not to have your spiritual wants
supplied by going to Moses, and working and toiling as if you were your own saviour, but
by faith in Christ Jesus. Those who will not go to Christ Jesus must go without grace, for
God will give them nothing in the way of grace except through his Son. Those who go to
Jesus the most shall oftenest taste of his abundance, for through him all blessings come.
My advice to myself and to you is that we abide in him; for, since that is the way by
which the blessing comes, we had better abide in it. We read of Ishmael that he was sent
into the wilderness with a bottle, but Isaac dwelt
by the well Lahai-roi, and it is wise for us to dwell by the well Christ Jesus, and never
trust to the bottles of our own strength. If you wander from Christ Jesus, brother, you
depart from the center of bliss.
All this year I pray that you may abide by the
well of this text. Draw from it. Are you very thirsty? Draw from it, for it is full; and
when you plead this promise, the Lord will supply all your need. Do not cease receiving
from God for a minute. Let not your unbelief hinder the Lords bounty, but cling to
this promise, My God shall supply all your need, according to his riches in glory by
Christ Jesus. I know not how to wish you a greater blessing. If you are
enabled by the Holy Spirit to realize it, you will enjoy what I earnestly wish for you,
namely, |