"Till He Come" -- The Well-beloved's Vineyard
"TILL HE COME"
Communion Meditations And Addresses by C.H. Spurgeon, 1896
The Well-beloved's Vineyard.
An address to a little company of believers, in Mr. Spurgeon's own room at Mentone.
"My Well-beloved hath a vineyard in a very fruitful hill." -- Isaiah v. 1.
We recognize at once that Jesus is here. Who but He can be meant
by "My Well-beloved"? Here is a word of possession and a word of
affection, -- He is mine, and my Well-beloved. He is loveliness
itself, the most loving and lovable of beings; and we personally
love Him with all our heart, and mind, and soul, and strength: He
is ours, our Beloved, our Well-beloved, we can say no less.
The delightful relationship of our Lord to us is accompanied
by words which remind us of our relationship to Him, "My Well-beloved
hath a vineyard," and what vineyard is that but our heart,
our nature, our life? We are His: and we are His for the same
reason that any other vineyard belongs to its owner. He made us a
vineyard. Thorns and briars were all our growth naturally, but He
bought us with a price, He hedged us about, and set us apart for
Himself, and then He planted and cultivated us. All within us that
can bring forth good fruit is of His creating, His tending, and
His preserving; so that if we be vineyards at all we must be His
vineyards. We gladly agree that it shall be so. I pray that I may
not have a hair on my head that does not belong to Christ, and you
all pray that your every pulse and breath may be the Lord's.
This happy afternoon I want you to note that this vineyard is
said to be upon "a very fruitful hill." I have been thinking of
the advantages of my own position towards the Lord, and lamenting
with great shamefacedness that I am not bringing forth such fruit
to Him as my position demands. Considering our privileges,
advantages, and opportunities, I fear that many of us have need to
feel great searchings of heart. Perhaps to such the text may be
helpful, and it will not be without profit to any one of us, if
the Lord will bless our meditation upon it.
I. Our first thought, in considering these words, is that our
position as the Lord's vineyard is a very favourable one: "My
Well-beloved hath a vineyard in a very fruitful hill." No people
could be better placed for serving Christ than we are. I hardly
think that any man is better situated for glorifying God than I
am. I do not think that any women could be in better positions for
serving Christ than some of you, dear sisters, now occupy. Our
heavenly Father has placed us just where He can do the most for
us, and where we can do the most for Him. Infinite wisdom has
occupied itself with carefully selecting the soil, and site, and
aspect of every tree in the vineyard. We differ greatly, and need
differing situations in order to fruitfulness: the place which
would suit one might be too trying for another. Friend, the Lord
has planted you in the right spot: your station may not be the
best in itself, but it is the best for you. We are in the best
possible position for some present service at this moment; the
providence of God has put us on a vantage ground for our immediate
duty: "My Well-beloved hath a vineyard in a very fruitful hill."
Let us think of the times in which we live as calling upon
us to be very fruitful when we compare them with the years gone
by. Time was when we could not have met thus happily in our own
room: if we had been taken in the act of breaking bread, or
reading God's Word, we should have been haled off to prison, and
perhaps put to death. Our forefathers scarcely dared to lift up
their voices in a psalm of praise, lest the enemy should be upon
them. Truly, the lines have fallen unto us in pleasant places;
yea, we have a goodly heritage, in a very fruitful hill.
We do not even live in times when error is so rampant as to
be paramount. There is too much of it abroad; but taking a broad
view of things, I venture to say that there never was a time when
the truth had a wider sway than it has now, or when the gospel was
more fully preached, or when there was more spiritual activity.
Black clouds of error hover over us; but at the same time we
rejoice that, from John o' Groat's House to the Land's End, Christ
is preached by ten thousand voices, and even in the dark parts of
the earth the name of Jesus is shining like a candle in the house.
If we had the pick of the ages in which to live, we could not have
selected a better time for fruitbearing than that which is now
occurrent: this age is "a very fruitful hill."
That this is the case some of us know positively, because we
have been fruitful. Look back, brothers and sisters, upon times
when your hearts were warm, and your zeal was fervent, and you
served the Lord with gladness. I join with you in those happy
memories. Then we could run with the swiftest, we could fight with
the bravest, we could work with the strongest, we could suffer
with the most patient. The grace of God has been upon certain of
us in such an unmistakable manner that we have brought forth all
the fruits of the Spirit. Perhaps to-day we look back with deep
regret because we are not so fruitful as we once were: if it be
so, it is well that our regrets should multiply, but we must
change each one of them into a hopeful prayer. Remember, the vine
may have changed, but the soil is the same. We have still the same
motives for being fruitful, and even more than we used to have.
Why are we not more useful? Has some spiritual phylloxera taken
possession of the vines, or have we become frost-bitten, or sunburnt?
What is it that withholds the vintage? Certainly, if we
were fruitful once, we ought to be more fruitful now. The fruitful
hill is not exhausted; what aileth us that our grapes are so few?
We are planted on a fruitful hill, for we are called to work
which of all others is the most fruitful. Blessed and happy is
the man who is called to the Christian ministry; for this service
has brought more glory to Christ than any other. You, beloved
friends, are not called to be rulers of nations, nor inventors of
engines, nor teachers of sciences, nor slayers of men; but we are
soul-winners, our work is to lead men to Jesus. Ours is, of all
the employments in the world, the most fruitful in benefits to men
and glory to God. If we are not serving God in the gospel of His
Son with all our might and ability, then we have a heavy
responsibility resting upon us. "Our Well-beloved hath a vineyard
in a very fruitful hill:" there is not a richer bit of soil
outside Immanuel's land than the holy ministry for souls. Certain
of us are teachers, and gather the young about us while we speak
of Jesus. This also is choice soil. Many teachers have gathered a
grand vintage from among the little ones, and have not been a whit
behind pastors and evangelists in the glory of soul-winning. Dear
teachers, your vines are planted in a very fruitful hill. But I do
not confine myself to preachers and teachers; for all of us, as we
have opportunities of speaking for the Lord Jesus Christ, and
privately talking to individuals, have also a fertile soil to grow
in. If we do not glorify God by soul-winning, we shall be greatly
blamable, since of all forms of service it is most prolific in
praise of God.
And what is more, the very circumstances with which we are
surrounded all tend to make our position exceedingly favourable
for fruit-bearing. In this little company we have not one friend
who is extremely poor; but if such were among us, I should say the
same thing. Christ has gathered some of His choicest clusters from
the valley of poverty. Many eminent saints have never owned a foot
of land, but lived upon their weekly wage, and found scant fare at
that. Yes, by the grace of God, the vale of poverty has blossomed
as the rose. It so happens, however, that the most of us here have
a competence, we have all that we need, and something over to give
to the poor and to the cause of God. Surely we ought to be
fruitful in almsgiving, in caring for the sick, and in all manner
of sweet and flagrant influences. "Give me neither poverty nor
riches," is a prayer that has been answered for most of us; and if
we do not now give honour unto God, what excuse can we make for
our barrenness? I am speaking to some who are singularly healthy,
who are never hindered by aches and pains; and to others who have
been prospered in business for twenty years at a stretch: yours is
great indebtedness to your Lord: in your case, "My Well-beloved
hath a vineyard in a very fruitful hill." Give God your strength
and your wealth, my brother, while they last: see that all His
care of thee is not thrown away. Others of us seldom know many
months together of health, but have often had to suffer sorely in
body; this ought to make us fruitful, for there is much increase
from the tillage of affliction. Has not the Master obtained the
richest of all fruit from bleeding vines? Do not His heaviest
bunches come from vines which have been sharply cut and pruned
down to the ground? Choice flavours, dainty juices, and delicious
aromas come mostly from the use of the keen-edged knife of trial.
Some of us are at our best for fruitbearing when in other respects
we are at our worst. Thus I might truly say that, whatever our
circumstances may be, whether we are poor or rich, in health or in
affliction, each one of our cases has its advantages, and we are
planted "in a very fruitful hill."
Furthermore, when I look at our spiritual condition, I must
say for myself, and I think for you also, "My Well-beloved hath a
vineyard in a very fruitful hill." For what has God done for us?
To change the question, -- what has God not done for us? What more
could He say than to us He hath said? What more could He do than
to us He hath done? He hath dealt with us like a God. He has loved
us up from the pit, He has loved us up to the cross, and up to the
gates of heaven; He has quickened us, forgiven us, and renewed us;
He dwells in us, comforts us, instructs us, upholds us, preserves
us, guides us, leads us, and He will surely perfect us. If we are
not fruitful, to His praise, how shall we excuse ourselves? Where
shall we hide our guilty heads? Shall yonder sea suffice to lend
us briny tears wherewith to weep over our ingratitude?
II. I go a step further, by your leave, and say that our
position, as the Lord's vineyard, is favourable to the production
of the fruit which He loves best. I believe that my own position
is the most favourable for the production of the fruit that the
Lord loves best in me, and that your position is the same. What is
this fruit?
First, it is faith. Our Lord is very delighted to see faith
in His people. The trust which clings to Him with childlike
confidence is pleasant to His loving heart. Our position is such
that faith ought to be the easiest thing in the world to us. Look
at the promises He has given us in His Word: can we not believe
them? Look at what the Father has done for us in the gift of His
dear Son: can we not trust Him after that? Our daily experience
all goes to strengthen our confidence in God. Every mercy asks,
"Will you not trust Him?" Every want that is supplied cries, "Can
you not trust Him?" Every sorrow sent by the great Father tests
our faith, and drives us to Him on whom we repose, and so
strengthens and confirms our confidence in God. Mercies and
miseries alike operate for the growth of faith. Some of us have
been called upon to trust God on a large scale, and that necessity
has been a great help towards fruit-bearing. The more troubles we
have, the more is our vine digged about, and the more nourishment
is laid to its roots. If faith does not ripen under trial, when
will it ripen? Our afflictions fertilize the soil wherein faith
may grow.
Another choice fruit is love. Jesus delights in love. His
tender heart delights to see its love returned. Am I not of all
men most bound to love the Lord? I speak for each brother and
sister here, is not that your language? Do you not all say, "Lives
there a person beneath yon blue sky who ought to love Jesus more
than I should do?" Each sister soliloquizes, "Sat there ever a
woman in her chamber who had more reason for loving God than I
have?" No, the sin which has been forgiven us should make us love
our Saviour exceeding much. The sin which has been prevented in
other cases should make us love our Preserver much. The help which
God has sent us in hours of need, the guidance which He has given
in times of difficulty, the joy which He has poured into us in
days of fellowship, and the quiet He has breathed upon us in
seasons of trial, -- all ought to make us love Him. Along our life-road,
reasons for loving God are more numerous than the leaves
upon the olives. He has hedged us about with His goodness, even as
the mountains and the sea are round our present resting-place.
Look backward as far as time endures, and then look far beyond
that, into the eternity which has been, and you will see the
Lord's great love set upon us: all through time and eternity
reasons have been accumulating which constrain us to love our
Lord. Now turn sharply round, and gaze before you, and all along
the future faith can see reasons for loving God, golden milestones
on the way that is yet to be traversed, all calling for our loving
delight in God.
Christ is also very pleased with the fruit of hope, and we
are so circumstanced that we ought to produce much of it. The aged
ought to look forward, for they cannot expect to see much more on
earth. Time is short, and eternity is near; how precious is a good
hope through grace! We who are not yet old ought to be exceedingly
hopeful; and the younger folk, who are just beginning the
spiritual life, should abound in hope most fresh and bright. If
any man has expectations greater than I have, I should like to see
him. We have the greatest of expectations. Have you never felt
like Mercy in her dream, when she laughed and when Christiana
asked her what made her laugh, she said that she had had a vision
of things yet to be revealed?
Select any fruit of the Spirit you choose, and I maintain
that we are favourably circumstanced for producing it; we are
planted upon a very fruitful hill. What a fruitful hill we are
living in as regards labour for Christ! Each one of us may find
work for the Master; there are capital opportunities around us.
There never was an age in which a man, consecrated to God, might
do so much as he can at this time. There is nothing to restrain
the most ardent zeal. We live in such happy times that, if we
plunge into a sea of work, we may swim, and none can hinder us.
Then, too, our labour is made, by God's grace, to be so pleasant
to us. No true servant of Christ is weary of the work, though he
may be weary in the work: it is not the work that he ever
wearies of, for he wishes that he could do ten times more. Then
our Lord makes our work to be successful. We bring one soul to
Jesus, and that one brings a hundred. Sometimes, when we are
fishing for Jesus, there may be few fish, but, blessed be His
name, most of them enter the net; and we have to live praising and
blessing God for all the favour with which He regards our labour
of love. I do think I am right in saying that, for the bearing of
the fruit which Jesus loves best, our position is exceedingly
favourable.
III. And now, this afternoon, at this table, our position
here is favourable even now to our producing immediately, and upon
the spot, the richest, ripest, rarest fruit for our Well-beloved.
Here, at the communion-table, we are at the centre of the truth,
and at the well-head of consolation. Now we enter the holy of
holies, and come to the most sacred meeting-place between our
souls and God.
Viewed from this table, the vineyard slopes to the south,
for everything looks towards Christ, our Sun. This bread, this
wine, all set our souls aslope towards Jesus Christ, and He shines
full upon our hearts, and minds, and souls, to make us bring forth
much fruit. Are we not planted on a very fruitful hill?
As we think of His passion for our sake, we feel that a wall
is set about us to the north, to keep back every sharp blast that
might destroy the tender grapes. No wrath is dreaded now, for
Jesus has borne it for us; behold the tokens of His all-sufficient
sacrifice! No anger of the Lord shall come to our restful spirits,
for the Lord saith, "I have sworn that I will not be wroth with
thee, nor rebuke thee." Here, on this table, are the pledges of
His love unspeakable, and these, like a high wall, keep out the
rough winds. Surely, we are planted on a very fruitful hill.
Moreover, the Well-beloved Himself is among us. He has not
let us out to husbandmen, but He Himself doth undertake to care
for us; and that He is here we are sure, for here is His flesh,
and here is His blood. You see the outward tokens, may you feel
the unseen reality; for we believe in His real presence, though
not in the gross corporeal sense with which worldly spirits blind
themselves. The King has come into His garden: let us entertain
Him with our fruits. He who for this vineyard poured out a bloody
sweat, is now surveying the vines; shall they not at this instant
give forth a goodly smell? The presence of our Lord makes this
assembly a very fruitful hill: where He sets His feet, all good
things flourish.
Around this table, we are in a place where others have
fruited well. Our literature contains no words more precious than
those which have been spoken at the time of communion. Perhaps you
know and appreciate the discourses of Willison, delivered on
sacramental occasions. Rutherford's communion sermons have a
sacred unction upon them. The poems of George Herbert, I should
think, were most of them inspired by the sight of Christ in this
ordinance. Think of the canticles of holy Bernard, how they flame
with devotion. Saints and martyrs have been nourished at this
table of blessing. This hollowed ordinance, I am sure, is a spot
where hopes grow bright, and hearts grow warm, resolves become
firm, and lives become fruitful, and all the clusters of our
soul's fruit ripen for the Lord.
Blessed be God, we are where we have ourselves often grown.
We have enjoyed our best times when celebrating this sacred
Eucharist. God grant it may be so again! Let us, in calm
meditation and inward thought, now produce from our hearts sweet
fruits of love, and zeal, and hope, and patience; let us yield
great clusters like those of Eshcol, all for Jesus, and for Jesus
only. Even now, let us give ourselves up to meditation, gratitude,
adoration, communion, rapture; and let us spend the rest of our
lives in glorifying and magnifying the ever-blessed name of our
Well-beloved whose vineyard we are.
"While such a scene of sacred joys
Our raptured eyes and souls employs,
Here we could sit, and gaze away
A long, an everlasting day.
"Well, we shall quickly pass the night,
To the fair coasts of perfect light;
Then shall our joyful senses rove
O'er the dear object of our love.
"There shall we drink full draughts of bliss,
And pluck new life from heavenly trees.
Yet now and then, dear Lord, bestow
A drop of heaven on worms below."
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