"Till He Come" -- "I Will Give You Rest."
"TILL HE COME"
Communion Meditations And Addresses by C.H. Spurgeon, 1896
"I Will Give You Rest."
A communion address at Mentone.
"I will give you rest." -- Matthew xi. 28.
We have a thousand times considered these words as an
encouragement to the labouring and the laden; and we may,
therefore, have failed to read them as a promise to ourselves.
But, beloved friends, we have come to Jesus, and therefore He
stands engaged to fufil this priceless pledge to us. We may now
enjoy the promise; for we have obeyed the precept. The faithful
and true Witness, whose word is truth, promised us rest if we
would come to Him; and, therefore, since we have come to Him, and
are always coming to Him, we may boldly say, "O Thou, who art our
Peace, make good Thy word to us wherein Thou hast said, 'I will
give you rest.'"
By faith, I see our Lord standing in our midst, and I hear
Him say, with voice of sweetest music, first to all of us
together, and then to each one individually, "I will give you
rest." May the Holy Spirit bring to each of us the fulness of the
rest and peace of God! For a few minutes only shall I need your
attention; and we will begin by asking the question, --
I. What must these words mean?
A dear friend prayed this morning that, while studying the
Scriptures, we might be enabled to read between the lines, and
beneath the letter of the Word. May we have holy insight thus to
read our Lord's most gracious language!
This promise must mean rest to all parts of our spiritual
nature. Our bodies cannot rest if the head is aching, or the feet
are full of pain; if one member is disturbed, the whole frame is
unable to rest; and so the higher nature is one, and such intimate
sympathies bind together all its faculties and powers, that every
one of them must rest, or none can be at ease, Jesus gives real,
and, consequently, universal rest to every part of our spiritual
being.
The heart is by nature restless as old ocean's waves; it
seeks an object for its affection; and when it finds one beneath
the stars, it is doomed to sorrow. Either the beloved changes, and
there is disappointment; or death comes in, and there is
bereavement. The more tender the heart, the greater its unrest.
Those in whom the heart is simply one of the largest valves are
undisturbed, because they are callous; but the sensitive, the
generous, the unselfish, are often found seeking rest and finding
none. To such, the Lord Jesus says, "Come unto Me, and I will give
you rest." Look hither, ye loving ones, for here is a refuge for
your wounded love! You may delight yourselves in the Well-beloved,
and never fear that He will fail or forget you. Love will not be
wasted, however much it may be lavished upon Jesus. He deserves it
all, and he requites it all. In loving Him, the heart finds a
delicious content. When the head lies in His bosom, it enjoys an
ease which no pillow of down could bestow. How Madame Guyon rested
amid severe persecutions, because her great love to Jesus filled
her soul to the brim! O aching heart, O breaking heart, come
hither, for Jesus saith, "I will give you rest."
The conscience, when it is at all alive and awake, is much
disturbed because the holy law of God has been broken by sin. Now,
conscience once aroused is not easily quieted. Neither unbelief
nor superstition can avail to lull it to sleep; it defies these
opiates of falsehood, and frets the soul with perpetual annoyance.
Like the troubled sea, it cannot rest; but constantly casts up
upon the shore of memory the mire and dirt of past transgressions
and iniquities. Is this your case? Then Jesus says, "I will give
you rest." If, at any time, fears and apprehensions arise from an
awakened conscience, they can only be safely and surely quieted by
our flying to the Crucified. In the blessed truth of a
substitution, accepted of God, and fully made by the Lord Jesus,
our mind finds peace. Justice is honoured, and law is vindicated,
in the sacrifice of Christ. Since God is satisfied, I may well be
so. Since the Father has raised Jesus from the dead, and set Him
at His own right hand, there can be no question as to His
acceptance; and, consequently, all who are in Him are accepted
also. We are under no apprehension now as to our being condemned;
Jesus gives us rest, by enabling us to utter the challenge, "Who
is he that condemneth?" and to give the reassuring answer, "Christ
hath died."
The intellect is another source of unrest; and in these
times it operates with special energy towards labour and travail
of mind. Doubts, stinging like mosquitoes, are suggested by almost
every page of the literature of the day. Most men are drifting,
like vessels which have no anchors, and these come into collision
with us. How can we rest? This scheme of philosophy eats up the
other; this new fashion of heresy devours the last. Is there any
foundation? Is anything true? Or is it all romance, and are we
doomed to be the victims of an ever-changing lie? O soul, seek not
a settlement by learning of men; but come and learn of Jesus, and
thou shalt find rest! Believe Jesus, and let all the Rabbis
contradict. The Son of God was made flesh, He lived, He died, He
rose again, He lives, He loves; this is true, and all that He
teaches in His Word is assured verity; the rest may blow away,
like chaff before the wind. A mind in pursuit of truth is a dove
without a proper resting-place for the sole of its foot, till it
finds its rest in Jesus, the true Noah.
Next, these words mean rest about all things. He who is
uneasy about anything has not found rest. A thousand thorns and
briars grow on the soil of this earth, and no man can happily
tread life's ways unless his feet are shod with that preparation
of the gospel of peace which Jesus gives. In Christ, we are at
rest as to our duties; for He instructs and helps us in them. In
Him, we are at rest about our trials; for He sympathizes with us
in them. With His love, we are restful as to the movements of
Providence; for His Father loves us, and will not suffer anything
to harm us. Concerning the past, we rest in His forgiving love; as
to the present, it is bright with His loving fellowship; as to the
future, it is brilliant with His expected Advent. This is true of
the little as well as of the great. He who saves us from the
battle-axe of Satanic temptation, also extracts the thorn of a
domestic trial. We may rest in Jesus as to our sick child, as to
our business trouble, or as to grief of any kind. He is our
Comforter in all things, our Sympathizer in every form of
temptation. Have you such all-covering rest? If not, why not?
Jesus gives it; why do you not partake of it? Have you something
which you could not bring to Him? Then, fly from it; for it is no
fit thing for a believer to possess. A disciple should know
neither grief nor joy which he could not reveal to his Lord.
This rest, we may conclude, must be a very wonderful one,
since Jesus gives it. His hands give not by pennyworths and
ounces; he gives golden gifts, in quantity immeasurable. It is
Jesus who gives the peace of God which passeth all understanding.
It is written, "Great peace have they which love Thy law;" what
peace must they have who love God's Son! There are periods when
Jesus gives us a heavenly Elysium of rest; we cannot describe the
divine repose of our hearts at such times. We read, in the
Gospels, that when Jesus hushed the storm, "there was a great
calm," not simply "a calm", but a great calm, unusual, absolute,
perfect, memorable. It reminds us of the stillness which John
describes in the Revelation: "I saw four angels standing on the
four corners of the earth, holding the four winds of the earth,
that the wind should not blow on the earth, nor on the sea, nor on
any tree;" not a ripple stirred the waters, not a leaf moved on
the trees.
Assuredly, our Lord has given a blessed rest to those who
trust Him, and follow Him. They are often unable to inform others
as to their deep peace, and the reasons upon which it is founded;
but they know it, and it brings them an inward wealth compared
with which the fortune of an ungodly millionaire is poverty
itself. May we all know to the full, by happy, personal
experience, the meaning of our Saviour's promise, "I will give you
rest"!
II. But now, in the second: place, let us ask, -- Why should we
have this rest?
The first answer is in our text. We should enjoy this rest
because Jesus gives it. As He gives it, we ought to take it.
Because He gives it, we may take it. I have known some
Christians who have thought that it would be presumption on their
part to take this rest; so they have kept fluttering about, like
frightened birds, weary with their long flights, but not daring to
fold their tired wings, and rest. If there is any presumption in
the case, let us not be so presumptuous as to think that we know
better than our Lord. He gives us rest: for that reason, if for no
other, let us take it, promptly and gratefully. "Rest in the Lord,
and wait patiently for Him." Say with David, "My heart is fixed, O
God, my heart is fixed: I will sing and give praise."
"Now rest, my long-divided heart,
Fix'd on this blissful centre, rest."
Next, we should take the rest that Jesus gives, because it
will refresh us. We are often weary; sometimes we are weary in
God's work, though I trust we are never weary of it. There are
many things to cause us weariness: sin, sorrow, the worldliness of
professors, the prevalence of error in the Church, and so on.
Often, we are like a tired child, who can hold up his little head
no longer. What does he do? Why, he just goes to sleep in his
mother's arms! Let us be as wise as the little one; and let us
rest in our loving Saviour's embrace. The poet speaks of --
"Tired nature's sweet restorer, balmy sleep;"
and so it is. Sometimes, the very best thing a Christian man
can do is, literally, to go to sleep. When he wakes, he will be so
refreshed, that he will seem to be in a new world. But
spiritually, there is no refreshing like that which comes from the
rest which Christ gives. As Isaiah said, "This is the rest
wherewith ye may cause the weary to rest: and this is the
refreshing." Dr. Bonar's sweet hymn, which is so suitable for a
sinner coming to Christ for the first time, is just as appropriate
for a weary saint returning to his Saviour's arms; for he, too,
can sing, --
"I heard the voice of Jesus say,
'Come unto Me, and rest;
Lay down, thou weary one, lay down
Thy head upon My breast.'
I came to Jesus as I was,
Weary, and worn, and sad:
I found in Him a resting-place,
And He has made me glad."
Another reason why we should have this rest is, that it will
enable us to concentrate all our faculties. Many, who might be
strong servants of the Lord, are very weak, because their energies
are not concentrated upon one object. They do not say with Paul,
"This one thing I do." We are such poor creatures that we cannot
occupy our minds with more than one subject, at a time. Why, even
the buzzing of a fly, or the trumpeting of a mosquito, would be
quite sufficient to take our thoughts away from our present holy
service! As long as we have any burden resting on our shoulders,
we cannot enjoy perfect rest; and as long as there is any burden
on our conscience or heart, we cannot have rest of soul. How are
we to be freed from these burdens? Only by yielding ourselves
wholly to the Great Burden-Bearer, who says, "Come unto Me, and, I
will give you rest." Possessing this rest, all our faculties will
be centred and focussed upon one object, and with undivided hearts
we shall seek God's glory.
Having obtained this rest, we shall be able to testify for
our Lord. I remember, when I first began to teach in a Sunday
School, that I was speaking one day to my class upon the words,
"He that believeth on Me hath everlasting life." I was rather
taken by surprise when one of the boys said to me, "Teacher, have
you got everlasting life?" I replied, "I hope so." The scholar
was not satisfied with my answer, so he asked another question,
"But, teacher, don't you know?" The boy was right; there can be
no true testimony except that which springs from assured
conviction of our own safety and joy in the Lord. We speak that we
do know; we believe, and therefore speak. Rest of heart, through
coming to Christ, enables us to invite others to Him with great
confidence, for we can tell them what heavenly peace He has given
to us. This will enable us to put the gospel very attractively,
for the evidence of our own experience will help others to trust
the Lord for themselves. With the beloved apostle John, we shall
be able to say to our hearers, "That which was from the beginning,
which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we
have looked upon, and our hands have handled, of the Word of life;
(for the life was manifested, and we have seen it, and bear
witness, and shew unto you that eternal life, which was with the
Father, and was manifested unto us;) that which we have seen and
heard declare we unto you, that ye also may have fellowship with
us: and truly our fellowship is with the Father, and with His Son
Jesus Christ."
Once more, this rest is necessary to our growth. The lily
in the garden is not taken up and transplanted two or three times
a day; that would be the way to prevent all growth. But it is kept
in one place, and tenderly nurtured. It is by keeping it quite
still that the gardener helps it to attain to perfection. A child
of God would grow much more rapidly if he would but rest in one
place instead of being always on the move. "In returning and rest
shall ye be saved; in quietness and in confidence shall be your
strength." Martha was cumbered about much serving; but Mary sat at
Jesus' feet. It is not difficult to tell which of them would be
the more likely to grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord
Jesus Christ.
This is a tempting theme, but I must not linger over it, as
we must come to the communion. I will give only one more answer to
the question, "Why should we have this rest?" It will prepare us
for heaven. I was reading a book, the other day, in which I met
with this expression, -- "The streets of heaven begin on earth."
That is true; heaven is not so far away as some people think.
Heaven is the place of perfect holiness, the place of sinless
service, the place of eternal glory; and there is nothing that
will prepare us for heaven like this rest that Jesus gives. Heaven
must be in us before we are in heaven; and he who has this rest
has heaven begun below. Enoch was virtually in heaven while he
walked with God on the earth, and he had only to continue that
holy walk to find himself actually in heaven. This world is part
of our Lord's great house, of which heaven is the upper story.
Some of us may hear the Master's call, "Come up higher," sooner
than we think; and then, with we rest in Christ, there we shall
rest with Christ, The more we have of this blessed rest now, the
better shall we be prepared for the rest that remaineth to the
people of God, that eternal "keeping of a Sabbath" in the Paradise
above.
III. I have left myself only a minute for the answers to my
third question, -- How can we obtain this rest?
First, by coming to Christ. He says, "Come unto Me, . . .
and I will give you rest." I trust that all in this little company
have come to Christ by faith; now let us come to Him in blessed
fellowship and communion at His table. Let us keep on coming to
Him, as the apostle says, "to whom coming," continually coming,
and never going away. When we wake in the morning, let us come to
Christ in the act of renewed communion with Him; all the day long,
let us keep on coming to Him even while we are occupied with the
affairs of this life; and at night, let our last waking moments be
spent in coming to Jesus. Let us come to Christ by searching the
Scriptures, for we shall find Him there on almost every page. Let
us come to Christ in our thoughts, desires, aspirations wishes; so
shall the promise of the text be fulfilled to us, "I will give you
rest."
Next, we obtain rest by yielding to Christ. "Take My yoke
upon you, . . . and ye shall find rest unto your souls." Christ
bids us wear His yoke; not make one for ourselves. He wants us
to share the yoke with Him, to be His true yoke-fellow. It is
wonderful that He should be willing to be yoked with us; the only
greater wonder is that we should be so unwilling to be yoked with
Him. In taking His yoke upon us what joy we shall enter upon our
eternal rest! Here we find rest unto our souls; a further rest
beyond that which He gives us when we come to Him. We first rest
in Jesus by faith, and then we rest in Him by obedience. The first
rest He gives through His death; the further rest we find through
copying His life.
Lastly, we secure this rest by learning of Christ. "Learn
of Me, for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest
unto your souls." We are to be workers with Christ, taking His
yoke upon us; and, at the same time, we are to be scholars in
Christ's school, learning of Him. We are to learn of Christ, and
to learn Christ; He is both Teacher and lesson. His gentleness
of heart fits Him to teach, and makes Him the best illustration of
His own teaching. If we can become as He is, we shall rest as He
does. The lowly in heart will be restful of heart. Now, as we come
to the table of communion, may we find to the full that rest of
which we have been speaking, for the Great Rest-Giver's sake!
Amen.
Next Sermon: The Memorable Hymn.
Previous Sermon: Bands of Love; or, Union to Christ.
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