Jesus Only
A Sermon (0924)
Delivered on Lord's Day Morning, April 3rd, 1870, by
the REV C H SPURGEON
at the Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.
And when they had lifted up their eyes, they saw no man, save Jesus only. - Matthew 17:8
The last words will suffice us for a text, "Jesus only." When Peter saw our Lord with Moses and Elias,
he exclaimed, "Master, it is good to be here," as if he implied that it was better to be with Jesus,
and Moses, and Elias, than to be with Jesus only. Now it was certainly good that for once in his life he should
see Christ transfigured with the representatives of the law and the prophets; it might be for that particular occasion
the best sight that he could see, but as an ordinary thing an ecstasy so sublime would not have been good for the
disciples; and Peter himself very soon found this out, for when the luminous cloud overshadowed him, and the voice
was heard out of heaven, we find that he with the rest became sore afraid. The best thing after all for Peter,
was not the excessive strain of the transfiguration, nor the delectable company of the two great spirits who appeared
with Jesus, but the equally glorious, but less exciting society of "Jesus only." Depend on it, brethren,
that ravishing and exciting experiences and transporting enjoyments, though they may be useful as occasional refreshments,
would not be so good for every day as that quiet but delightful ordinary fellowship with "Jesus only,"
which ought to be the distinguishing mark of all Christian life. As the disciples ascended the mountain side with
Jesus only, and as they went back again to the multitude with Jesus only, they were in as good company as when
they were on the mountain summit, Moses and Elias being there also; and although Jesus Christ in his common habiliments
and in his ordinary attire might not so dazzle their eyes as when they saw his raiment bright as the light, and
his face shining as the sun, yet he really was quite as glorious, and his company quite as beneficial. When they
saw him in his everyday attire, his presence was quite as useful to them as when he robed himself in splendor.
"Jesus only," is after all upon the whole a better thing than Jesus, Moses, and Elias. "Jesus only,"
as the common Jesus, the Christ of every day, the man walking among men, communing in secret with his disciples,
is a better thing for a continuance while we are in this body, than the sight even of Jesus himself in the excellence
of his majesty.
This morning, in trying to dwell upon the simple sight of "Jesus only," we shall hold it up as beyond
measure important and delightful, and shall bear our witness that as it was said of Goliath's sword, "there
is none like it," so may it be said of fellowship with "Jesus only." We shall first notice what
might have happened to the disciples after the transfiguration; we shall then dwell on what did happen; and then,
thirdly, we shall speak on what we anxiously desire may happen to those who hear us this day.
I. First, then, WHAT MIGHT HAVE HAPPENED to the three disciples after they had seen the transfiguration.
There were four things, either of which might have occurred. As a first supposition, they might have seen nobody
with them on the holy mount; they might have found all gone but themselves. When the cloud had overshadowed them,
and they were sore afraid, they might have lifted up their eyes and found the entire vision melted into thin air;
no Moses, no Elias, and no Jesus. In such a case they would have been in a sorry plight, like those who having
begun to taste of a banquet, suddenly find all the viands swept away; like thirsty men who have tasted the cooling
crystal drops, and then seen the fountain dried up before their eyes. They would not have gone down the mountain
side that day asking questions and receiving instruction, for they would have had no teacher left them. They would
have descended to face a multitude and to contend with a demon; not to conquer Satan, but to stand defeated by
him before the crowd; for they would have had no champion to espouse their cause and drive out the evil spirit.
They would have gone down among Scribes and Pharisees to be baffled with their knotty questions, and to be defeated
by their sophistries, for they would have had no wise man, who spake as never man spake, to untie the knots and
disentangle the snarls of controversy. They would have been like sheep without a shepherd, like orphan children
left alone in the world. They would henceforth have reckoned it an unhappy day on which they saw the transfiguration;
because having seen it, having been led to high thoughts by it, and excited to great expectations, all had disappeared
like the foam upon the waters, and left no solid residuum behind. Alas! For those who have seen the image of the
spirits of just men made perfect, and beheld the great Lord of all such spirits, and then have found themselves
alone, and all the high companionship forever gone.
My dear brethren and sisters, there are some in this world and we ourselves have been among them, to whom something
like this has actually occurred. You have been under a sermon, or at a gospel ordinance, or in reading the word
of God, for a while delighted, exhilarated, lifted up to the sublimer regions, and then afterwards when it has
all been over, there has been nothing left of joy or benefit, nothing left of all that was preached and for the
moment enjoyed, nothing, at any rate, that you could take with you into the conflicts of every-day life. The whole
has been a splendid vision and nothing more. There has been neither Moses not Elias, nor Jesus left. You did remember
what you saw, but only with regret, because nothing remained with you. And, indeed, this which happens sometimes
to us, is a general habit of that portion of this ungodly world which hears the gospel and perceives not its reality;
it listens with respect to gospel histories as to legends of ancient times; it hears with reverence the stories
of the days of miracles; it venerates the far-off ages and their heroic deeds, but it does not believe that anything
is left of all the vision, any thing for to-day, for common life, and for common men. Moses it knows, and Elias
it knows, and Christ it knows, as shadows that have passed across the scene and have disappeared, but it knows
nothing of any one of these as abiding in permanent influence over the mind and the spirit of the present. All
come and all gone, all to be reverenced, all to be respected, but nothing more; there is nothing left, so far as
they are concerned, to influence or bless the present hour. Jesus and his gospel have come and gone, and we may
very properly recollect the fact, but according to certain sages there is nothing in the New Testament to affect
this advanced age, this enlightened nineteenth century; we have got beyond all that. Ah! Brethren, let those who
can be content to do so, put up with this worship of moral relics and spiritual phantoms; to us it would be wretchedness
itself. We, on the other hand, say, blessing the name of the Lord that we can say it, that there abides with us
our Lord Jesus. At this day he is with us, and will be with us even to the end of the world. Christ's existence
is not a fact confined to antiquity or to remote distance. By his Spirit he is actually in his church; we have
seen him, though not with eyes; we have heard him, though not with ears; we have grasped him, though not with hands;
and we feed upon his flesh, which is meat indeed, and his blood, which is drink indeed. We have with us at this
very day Jesus our friend, to whom we make known our secrets, and who beareth all our sorrows. We have Jesus our
interpreting instructor, who still reveals his secrets to us, and leads us into the mind and name of God. We have
Jesus still with us to supply us with strength, and in his power we still are mighty. We confess his reigning sovereignty
in the church, and we receive his all-sufficient succors. The church is not decapitated, her Head abides in vital
union with her; Jesus is no myth to us, whatever he may be to others; he is no departed shade, he is no heroic
personification: in very deed there is a Christ, and though others see him not, and even we with these eyes see
him not, yet in him believing we rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of glory. Oh, I trust it will never be so
with us, that as we go about our life work our religion shall melt into fiction and become nothing but mere sentiment,
nothing but thought, and dream, and vision; but may our religion be a matter of fact, a walking with the living
and abiding Saviour. Though Moses may be gone, and Elias may be gone, yet Jesus Christ abideth with us and in us,
and we in him, and so shall it be evermore.
Now, there was a second thing that might have happened to the disciples. When they lifted up their eyes they might
have seen Moses only. It would certainly have been a very sad exchange for what they did see, to have seen Moses
only. The face of Moses would have shone, his person would have awed them, and it would have been no mean thing
for man of humble origin like themselves to walk down the mountain with that mighty king in Jeshurun, who had spoken
with God face to face, and rested with him in solemn conclave by the space of forty days at a time. But yet who
would exchange the sun for the moon? Who would exchange the cold moonbeams of Moses and the law for the sunny rays
of the Saviour's divine affection? It would have been an unhappy exchange for them to have lost their Master whose
name is love, and to have found a leader in the man whose name is synonymous with law. Moses, the man of God, cannot
be compared with Jesus, the Son of God. Yet dear brethren, there are some who see Moses only. After all the gospel
preaching that there has been in the world, and the declaration of the precious doctrines of grace every Sabbath
day; after the clear revelations of Scripture, and the work of the Holy Spirit in men's hearts; yet we have among
us some who persist in seeing nothing but Moses only. I mean this, there are some who will see nothing but shadows
still, mere shadows still. As I read my Bible I see there that the age of the symbolical, the typical, the pictorial,
has passed away. I am glad of the symbols, and types, and pictures, for they remain instructive to me; but the
age in which they were in the foreground has given way to a clearer light, and they are gone forever. There are,
however, certain persons who profess to read the Bible and to see very differently, and they set up a new system
of types and shadows—a system, let me say, ridiculous to men of sense, and obnoxious to men of spiritual taste.
There are some who delight in outward ordinances; they must have rubric and ritual, vestments and ceremonial, and
this superabundantly, morning, noon and night. They regard days, and seasons, and forms of words and postures.
They consider one place holy above another. They regard a certain caste of men as being priestly above other believers,
and their love of symbols is seen in season and out of season. One would think, from their teachings, that the
one thing needful was not "Jesus only," but custom, antiquity, outward performance, and correct observance!
Alas! for those who talk of Jesus, but virtually see Moses, and Moses only. Ah! unhappy change for the heart if
it could exchange spiritual fellowship with Jesus for outward acts and symbolical representations. It would be
an unhappy thing for the Christian church if she could ever be duped out of the priceless boons which faith wins
from her living Lord in his fullness of grace and truth, to return to the beggarly elements of carnal ordinances.
Unhappy day, indeed, if Popish counterfeits of legal shadows should supplant gospel fact and substance. Blessed
be God, we have not so learned Christ. We see something better than Moses only.
There are too many who see Moses only, inasmuch as they see nothing but law, nothing but duty and precept in the
Bible. I know that some here, though we have tried to preach Christ crucified as their only hope, yet whenever
they read the Bible, or hear the Gospel, feel nothing except a sense of their own sinfulness, and, arising out
of that sense of sinfulness, a desire to work out a righteousness of their own. They are continually measuring
themselves by the law of God, they feel their shortcomings, they mourn over their transgressions, but they go no
further. I am glad that they see Moses, may the stern voice of the lawgiver drive them to the lawfulfiller; but
I grieve that they tarry so long in legal servitude, which can only bring them sorrow and dismay. The sight of
Sinai, what is it but despair? God revealed in flaming fire, and proclaiming with thunder his fiery law, what is
there here to save the soul? To see the Lord who will by no means spare the guilty, but will surely visit transgression
with eternal vengeance, is a sight which never should eclipse Calvary, where love makes recompense to justice.
O that you may get beyond the mount that might be touched, and come to Calvary, where God in vengeance is clearly
seen, but where God in mercy fills the throne. Oh how blessed is it to escape from the voice of command and threatening
and come to the blood of sprinkling, where "Jesus only" speaketh better things!
Moses only, however, has become a sight very common with some of you who write bitter things against yourselves.
You never read the Scriptures or hear the gospel without feeling condemned. You know your duty, and confess how
short you have fallen of it, and therefore you abide under conscious condemnation, and will not come to him who
is the propitiation for your sins. Alas, that there should be so many who with strange perversity of unbelief twist
every promise into a threatening, and out of every gracious word that drips with honey manage to extract gall and
wormwood. They see the dark shadow of Moses only; the broken tablets of the law, the smoking mount, and the terrible
trumpet are ever with them, and over all an angry God. They had a better vision once, they have it sometimes now;
for now and then under the preaching of the gospel they have glimpses of hope and mercy, but they relapse into
darkness, they fall again into despair, because they have chosen to see Moses only. I pray that a change may come
over the spirit of their dream, and that yet like the apostles they may see "Jesus only."
But, my brethren, there was a third alternative that might have happened to the disciples, they might have seen
Elijah only. Instead of the gentle Saviour, they might have been standing at the side of the rough-clad and the
stern-spirited Elias. Instead of the Lamb of God, there might have remained to them only the lion who roared like
the voice of God's own majesty in the midst of sinful Israel. In such a case, with such a leader, they would have
gone down from the mount, and I wot that if John had said, "Command fire from heaven," Elias would have
consumed his foes; the Pharisees, like the priests of Baal, would have found a speedy end; Herod's blood, like
Ahab's, would have been licked up by dogs; and Herodias, like another Jezebel, would have been devoured of the
same. But all this power for vengeance would have been a poor exchange for the gracious omnipotence of the Friend
of sinners. Who would prefer the slayer of the priests to the Saviour of men? The top of Carmel was glorious when
its intercession brought the rain for Israel, but how poor it is compared with Gethsemane, whose pleadings bring
eternal life to millions! In company with Jesus we are at Elim beneath the palm tree, but with Elias we are in
the wilderness beneath the stunted juniper. Who would exchange the excellency of Olivet for the terrors of Horeb?
Yet I fear there are many who see Elias only. Prophecies of future woe fascinate them rather than thoughts of present
salvation. Elias may be taken representatively as the preparer of Christ, for our Lord interpreted the prophecy
of the coming of Elias as referring to John the Baptist. There are not a few who abide in the seeking, repenting,
and preparing state, and come not to "Jesus only." I am not myself fond of even using the term "preparing
for Christ," for it seems to me that those are best prepared for Christ who most feel themselves unprepared;
but there is no doubt a state of heart which prepares for faith—a sense of need, a consciousness of sin, a hatred
of sin, all these are preparations for actual peace and comfort in Christ Jesus, and oh! How many there are who
continue year after year merely in that preliminary condition, choosing the candle and refusing the sun. They do
not become believers, but are always complaining that they do not feel as yet fit to come to Christ. They want
Christ, they desire Christ, they would fain have Christ, but they stay in desire and longing and go no further.
They never get so far as to behold "the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world." The voice
from heaven to them they always interpret as crying, "The axe is laid unto the root of the trees; bring forth
therefore fruits meet for repentance." Their conscience is thrilled, and thrilled again, by the voice that
crieth in the wilderness, "Prepare ye the way of the Lord." Their souls are rent and torn by Elijah's
challenge, "If the Lord be God, follow him: but if Baal, then follow him;" but they remain still halting
between two opinions, trembling before Elias and not rejoicing before the Saviour. Unhappy men and women, so near
the kingdom, and yet out of it; so near the feast, and yet perishing for want of the living bread. The word is
near you(ah, how near!), and yet you receive it not. Remember, I pray you, that merely to prepare for a Saviour
is not to be saved; that to have a sense of sin is not the same thing as being pardoned. Your repentance, unless
you also believe in Jesus, is a repentance that needs to be repented of. At the girdle of John the Baptist the
keys of heaven did never hang; Elias is not the door of salvation; preparation for Christ is not Christ, despair
is not regeneration, doubt is not repentance. Only by faith in Jesus can you be saved, but complaining of yourselves
is not faith. "Jesus only" is the way, the truth, and the life. "Jesus only" is the sinner's
Saviour. O that your eyes may be opened, not to see Elias, not to see Moses, but to see "Jesus only."
You see, then, these three alternatives, but there was also another: a fourth thing might have happened when the
disciples opened their eyes—they might have seen Moses and Elias with Jesus, even as in the transfiguration. At
first sight it seems as if this would have been superior to that which they did enjoy. To walk down the mountain
with that blessed trio, how great a privilege! How strong might they have been for the accomplishment of the divine
purposes! Moses could preach the law and make men tremble, and then Jesus could follow with his gospel of grace
and truth. Elias could flash the thunderbolt in their faces, and then Christ could have uplifted the humble spirits.
Would not the contrast have been delightful, and the connection inspiriting? Would not the assemblage of such divers
kinds of forces have contributed to the greatest success? I think not. It is a vastly better thing to see "Jesus
only," as a matter of perpetuity, than to see Moses and Elias with Jesus. It is night, I know it, for I see
the moon and stars. The morning cometh, I know it cometh, for I see no longer many stars, only one remains, and
that the morning star. But the full day has arrived, I know it has, for I cannot even see the morning star; all
those guardians and comforters of the night have disappeared; I see the sun only. Now, inasmuch as every man prefers
the moon to midnight and to the twilight of dawn, the disappearance of Moses and Elias, indicating the full noontide
of light, was the best thing that could happen. Why should we wish to see Moses? The ceremonials are all fulfilled
in Jesus; the law is honored and fulfilled in him. Let Moses go, his light is already in "Jesus only."
And why should I wish to retain Elias? The prophecies are all fulfilled in Jesus, and the preparation of which
Elias preached Jesus brings with himself. Let, then, Elias go, his light also is in "Jesus only." It
is better to see Moses and Elias in Christ, than to see Moses and Elias with Christ. The absence of some things
betokens a higher state of things than their presence. In all my library I do not know that I have a Lennie's English
Grammar, or a Mavor's Spelling Book, or a Henry's First Latin Exercises, nor do I regret the absence of those valuable
works, because I have got beyond the need of them. So the Christian wants not the symbols of Moses, or the preparations
of Elias, for Christ is all, and we are complete in him. He who is conversant with the higher walks of sacred literature
and reads in the golden book of Christ's heart, may safely lay the legal school-book by; this was good enough for
the church's infancy, but we have now put away childish things. "We, when we were children, were in bondage
under the elements of the world: but when the fullness of the time was come, God sent forth his Son, made of a
woman, made under the law to redeem them that were under the law, that we might receive the adoption of sons. And
because ye are sons, God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts, crying, Abba, Father. Wherefore
thou art no more a servant, but a son; and if a son, then an heir of God through Christ." My brethren, the
principle may be carried still further, for even the most precious things we treasure here below will disappear
when fully realized in heaven. Beautiful for situation was the temple on Mount Zion, and though we believe not
in the sanctity of buildings under the gospel, we love the place of solemn meeting where we are accustomed to offer
prayer and praise; but when we enter into perfection we shall find no temple in heaven. We delight in our Sabbaths,
and we would not give them up. O may England never lose her Sabbaths! but when we reach the Jerusalem above, we
shall not observe the first day of the week above the rest, for we shall enjoy one everlasting Sabbath. No temple,
because all temple; and no Sabbath day, because all Sabbath in heaven. Thus, you see, the losing of some things
is gain: it proves that we have got beyond their help. Just as we get beyond the nursery and all its appurtenances,
and never regret it because we have become men, so do Moses and Elias pass away, but we do not miss them, for "Jesus
only" indicates our manhood. It is a sign of a higher growth when we can see Jesus only. My brethren, much
of this sort of thing takes place with all Christians in their spiritual life. Do you remember when you were first
of all convinced and awakened, what a great deal you thought of the preacher, and how much of the very style in
which he spoke the gospel! But now, though you delight to listen to his voice, and find that God blesses you through
him, yet you have sunk the thought of the preacher in the glory of the Master, you see no man save "Jesus
only." And as you grow in grace you will find that many doctrines and points of church government which once
appeared to you to be all important, though you will still value them, will seem but of small consequence compared
with Christ himself. Like the traveller ascending the Alps to reach the summit of Mont Blanc; at first he observes
that lord of the hills as one born among many, and often in the twistings of his upward path he sees other peaks
which appear more elevated than that monarch of mountains; but when at last he is near the summit, he sees all
the rest of the hills beneath his feet, and like a mighty wedge of alabaster Mount Blanc pierces the very clouds.
So, as we grow in grace, other things sink and Jesus rises. They must decrease, but Christ must increase; until
he alone fills the full horizon of your soul, and rises clear and bright and glorious up into the very heaven of
God. O that we may thus see "Jesus only!"
II. Time hastens so rapidly, this morning, that I know not how I shall be able to compress the rest of my discourse
into the allotted space. We must in the most rapid manner speak upon WHAT REALLY HAPPENED.
"They saw no man, save Jesus only." This was all they wanted to see for their comfort. They were sore
afraid: Moses was gone, and he could give them no comfort; Elias was gone, he could speak no consolatory word;
yet when Jesus said, "Be not afraid," their fears vanished. All the comfort, then, that any troubled
heart wants, it can find in Christ. Go not to Moses, nor Elias, neither to the old covenant, not to prophecy: go
straight away to Jesus only. He was all the Saviour they wanted. Those three men all needed washing from sin; all
needed to be kept and held on their way, but neither Moses nor Elias could have washed them from sin, nor have
kept them from returning to it. But Jesus only could cleanse them, and did; Christ could lead them on, and did.
Ah! brethren, all the Saviour we want, we find in Jesus only. The priests of Rome and their Anglican mimics officiously
offer us their services. How glad they would be if we would bend our necks once again to their yoke! But we thank
God we have seen "Jesus only," and if Moses has gone, and if Elias has gone, we are not likely to let
the shavelings of Rome come in and fill up the vacancy. "Jesus only," is enough for our comfort, without
either Anglican, Mosaic, or Roman priestcraft.
He, again, was to them, as they went afterwards into the world, enough for a Master. "No man can serve two
masters," and albeit, Moses and Elias might sink into the second rank, yet might there have been some difficulty
in the follower's mind if the leadership were divided. But when they had no leader but Jesus, his guidance, his
direction and command were quite sufficient. He, in the day of battle, was enough for their captain; in the day
of difficulty, enough for their direction. They wanted none but Jesus. At this day, my brethren, we have no Master
but Christ; we submit ourselves to no vicar of God; we bow down ourselves before no great leader of a sect, neither
to Calvin, nor to Arminius, to Wesley, or Whitfield, "One is our Master," and that one is enough, for
we have learned to see the wisdom of God and the power of God in Jesus only.
He was enough as their power for future life, as well as their Master. They needed not ask Moses to lend them official
dignity, nor to ask Elias to bring them fire from heaven: Jesus would give them of his Holy Spirit, and they should
be strong enough for every enterprise. And, brethren, all the power you and I want to preach the gospel, and to
conquer souls to the truth, we can find in Jesus only. You want no sacred State prestige, no pretended apostolical
succession, no prelatical unction; Jesus will anoint you with his Holy Spirit, and you shall be plenteously endowed
with power from on high, so that you shall do great things and prevail. "Jesus only." Why, they wanted
no other motive to constrain them to use their power aright. It is enough incentive to a man to be allowed to live
for such a one as Christ. Only let the thought of Christ fill the enlightened intellect, and it must conquer the
sanctified affections. Let but Jesus be well understood as the everlasting God who bowed the heavens, and came
down and suffered shame and ignominy, that he might redeem us from the wrath to come; let us get but a sight of
the thorn-crowned head, and those dear eyes all red with weeping, and those sweet cheeks bruised and battered by
the scoffer's fists; let us but look into the tender heart that was broken with griefs unutterable for our sakes,
and the love of Christ must constrain us, and we shall thus "judge, that if one died for all, then were wll
dead: and that he died for all, that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves, but unto him which
died for them and rose again." In the point of motive, believers do not need the aid of Moses. That you ought
to do such a thing because otherwise you will be punished, will but little strengthen you, nor will you be much
aided by the spirit of prophecy which leads you to hope that in the millennial period you will be made a ruler
over many cities. It will be enough to you that you serve the Lord Christ; it suffices you if you may be enabled
to honor him, to deck his crown, to magnify his name. Here is a stimulus sufficient for martyrs and confessors,
"Jesus only." Brethren, it is all the gospel we have to preach—it is all the gospel we want to preach—it
is the only ground of confidence which we have for ourselves; it is all the hope we have to set before others.
I know that in this age there is an overweening desire for that which has the aspect of being intellectual, deep,
and novel; and we are often informed that there are to be developments in religion, even as in science; and we
are despised as being hardly men, certainly not thinking men, if we preach today what was preached two hundred
years ago. Brethren, we preach to-day what was preached eighteen hundred years ago, and wherein others make alterations,
they create deformities, and not improvements. We are not ashamed to avow that the old truth of Christ alone is
everlasting; all else has gone or shall go, but the gospel towers above the wrecks of time: to us "Jesus only"
remains as the sole topic of our ministry, and we want nothing else.
For "Jesus only" shall be our reward, to be with him where he is, to behold his glory, to be like him
when we shall see him as he is, we ask no other heaven. No other bliss can our soul conceive of. The Lord grant
that we may have a fullness of this, and "Jesus only" shall be throughout eternity our delight.
There was here space to have dilated at great length, but we have rather given you the heads of thought, than the
thoughts themselves. Though the apostles saw "Jesus only," they saw quite sufficient, for Jesus is enough
for time and eternity, enough to live by and enough to die by.
III. I must close, though I fain would linger. Brethren, let us think of WHAT WE DESIRE MAY HAPPEN to all now present.
I do desire for my fellow Christians and for myself, that more and more the great object of our thoughts, motives,
and acts may be "Jesus only." I believe that whenever our religion is most vital, it is most full of
Christ. Moreover, when it is most practical, downright, and common sense, it always gets nearest to Jesus. I can
bear witness that whenever I am in deeps of sorrow, nothing will do for me but "Jesus only." I can rest
in some degree in the externals of religion, its outward escarpments and bulwarks, when I am in health; but I retreat
to the innermost citadel of our holy faith, namely, to the very heart of Christ, when my spirit is assailed by
temptation, or besieged with sorrow and anguish. What is more, my witness is that whenever I have high spiritual
enjoyments, enjoyments right, rare, celestial, they are always connected with Jesus only. Other religious things
may give some kind of joy, and joy that is healthy too, but the sublimest, the most inebriating, the most divine
of all joys, must be found in Jesus only. In fine, I find if I want to labor much, I must live on Jesus only; if
I desire to suffer patiently, I must feed on Jesus only; if I wish to wrestle with God successfully, I must plead
Jesus only; if I aspire to conquer sin, I must use the blood of Jesus only; if I pant to learn the mysteries of
heaven, I must seek the teachings of Jesus only. I believe that any thing which we add to Christ lowers our position,
and that the more elevated our soul becomes, the more nearly like what it is to be when it shall enter into the
religion of the perfect, the more completely every thing else will sink, die out, and Jesus, Jesus, Jesus only,
will be first and last, and midst and without end, the Alpha and Omega of every thought of head and pulse of heart.
May it be so with every Christian.
There are others here who are not yet believers in Jesus, and our desire is that this may happen to them, that
they may see "Jesus only." "Oh," saith one, "Sir, I want to see my sins. My heart is very
hard, and very proud; I want to see my sins." Friend, I also desire that you should, but I desire that you
may see them not on yourself, but on Jesus only. No sight of sin ever brings such true humiliation of spirit as
when the soul sees its sins laid on the Saviour. Sinner, I know you have thought of sins as lying on yourself,
and you have been trying to feel their weight, but there is a happier and better view still. Sin was laid on Jesus,
and it made him to be covered with a bloody sweat; it nailed him to the cross; it made him cry, "Lama Sabachthani;"
it bowed him into the dust of death. Why, friend, if you see sin on Jesus you will hate it, you will bemoan it,
you will abhor it. You need not look evermore to sin as burdening yourself, see Jesus only, and the best kind of
repentance will follow. "Ah, but," saith another, "I want to feel my need of Christ more."
You will see your need all the better if you look at Jesus only. Many a time an appetite for a thing is created
by the sight of it. Why, there are some of us who can hardly be trusted in a bookseller's shop, because though
we might have done very well at home without a certain volume, we no sooner see it than we are in urgent need of
it. So often is it with some of you about other matters, so that it becomes most dangerous to let you see, because
you want as soon as you see. A sight of Jesus, of what he is to sinners, of what he makes sinners, of what he is
in himself, will more tend to make you feel your need of him than all your poring over your poor miserable self.
You will get no further there, look to "Jesus only." "Ay," saith another, "but I want
to read my title clear, I want to know that I have an interest in Jesus." you will best read your interest
in Christ, by looking at him. If I want to know whether a certain estate is mine, do I look into my own heart to
see if I have a right to it? But I look into the archives of the estate, I search testaments and covenants. Now,
Christ Jesus is God's covenant with the people, a leader and commander to the people. To-day, I personally can
read my title clear to heaven, and shall I tell you how I read it? Not because I feel all I wish to feel, nor because
I am what I hope I yet shall be, but I read in the word that "Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners,"
I am a sinner, even the devil cannot tell me I am not. O precious Saviour, then thou hast come to save such as
I am. Then I see it written again, "He that believeth and is baptized, shall be saved." I have believed,
and have been baptized; I know I trust alone in Jesus, and that is believing. As surely then as there is a God
in heaven I shall be in heaven one day. It must be so, because unless God be a liar, he that believeth must be
saved. You see it is not by looking within, it is by looking to Jesus only that you perceive at last your name
graven on his hands. I wish to have Christ's name written on my heart, but if I want assurance, I have to look
at his heart till I see my name written there. O turn your eye away from your sin and your emptiness to his righteousness
and his fullness. See the sweat drops bloody as they fall in Gethsemane, see his heart pierced and pouring out
blood and water for the sins of men upon Calvary! There is life in a look at him! O look to him, and though it
be Jesus only, though Moses should condemn you, and Elias should alarm you, yet "Jesus only" shall be
enough to comfort and enough to save you. May God grant us grace every one of us to take for our motto in life,
for our hope in death, and for our joy in eternity, "Jesus only." May God bless you for the sake of "Jesus
only." Amen.
PORTION OF SCRIPTURE READ BEFORE SERMON - Matthew 17