Heaven and Hell
Spurgeon contrasts heaven's glorious rest and fellowship with the horror of outer darkness, urging sinners that sovereign grace saves the most hopeless while mere religious heritage cannot, and calling all to simply look to Christ.
Primary Verses
Introduction: The Two-Part Text
And I say unto you, that many shall come from the east and west, and shall sit down with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven. But the children of the kingdom shall be cast out into outer darkness, there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth. Matthew 8, 11-12. This is a land where plain speaking is allowed, and whether people are willing to afford a fair hearing to anyone who can tell them that which is worth their attention.
Tonight I am quite certain of an attentive audience, for I know you too well to suppose otherwise. This field, as you are all aware, is private property and I would just give a suggestion to those who go out in the open air to preach,
That it is far better to get into a field or a plot of unoccupied building ground than to block up the roads and stop business. It is moreover far better to be somewhat under protection so that we can at once prevent disturbance. Tonight I shall, I hope, encourage you to seek the road to heaven. I shall also have to utter some very sharp things concerning the end of the lost in the pit of hell.
Upon both these subjects I will try and speak as God helps me, but I besiege you as you love your souls way right and wrong this night, see whether what I say be the truth of God.
If it be not, reject it utterly and cast it away. But if it is, at your peril disregard it, for as you shall answer before God, the great judge of heaven and earth, it will go ill with you, if the words of His servant and of His Scripture be despised. My text has two parts.
The first is very agreeable to my mind and gives me pleasure. The second is terrible in the extreme but since they are both the truth, they must be preached. The first part of my text is, I say unto you that many shall come from the east and west and shall sit down with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven.
Heaven as a Land of Rest
Let us take the first part. Here is a most glorious promise. I will read it again. Many shall come from the east and west and shall sit down with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven.
I like that text because it tells me what heaven is and gives me a beautiful picture of it. It says, it is a place where I shall sit down with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob.
Oh, what a sweet thought that is for the working man. He often wipes the hot sweat from his face, and he wonders whether there is a land where he shall have to toil no longer.
He scarcely ever eats a mouthful of bread that is not moistened with the sweat of his brow. Often he comes home weary, and flings himself upon his couch, perhaps too tired to sleep. He says, oh!
Is there no land, where I can rest? Is there no place where I can sit and for once let these weary limbs be still? Is there no land where I can be quiet? Yes, thou sun of toil and labour, there is a happy land. Far, far away, where toil and labour are unknown.
Beyond John Blue Wilkin, there is a city fair and bright. Its walls are jasper and its light is brighter than the sun. There the weary are addressed, and the wicked cease from troubling. Immortal spirits are yonder, who never wipe sweat from their brow, for they so not, neither do they reap. They have not to toil in labor. There on a green and flowery mount,
Their weary soul shall sit, and with transporting joys recount the labors of their feet. To my mind, one of the best views of heaven is that it is a land of rest, especially to the working man. Those who have not to work hard think they will love heaven as a place of service. That is very true. But to the working man, to the man who toils with his brain or with his hands, it must ever be a sweet thought
That there is a land where we shall rest. Soon, this voice will never be strained again. Soon, these lungs will never have to exert themselves beyond their power. Soon, this brain shall not be racked for thought. But I shall sit at the banquet table of God, yea, I shall recline on the bosom of Abraham and be at ease forever."
Oh, weary sons and daughters of Adam, you will not have to drive the plowshare into the unthankful soil in heaven. You will not need to rise to daily toils before the sun hath risen and labor still when the sun hath long ago gone to his rest. But ye shall be still, ye shall be quiet, ye shall rest yourselves, for all are rich in heaven,
Heaven as Fellowship: We Shall Know One Another
All are happy there, all are peaceful. Toil, trouble, travail, and labour are words that cannot be spelled in heaven. They have no such things there, for they always rest. And mark the good company they sit with. They are to sit down with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob. Some people think that in heaven we shall know nobody. But our text declares here that we shall sit down with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob.
Then I am sure that we shall be aware that they are Abraham and Isaac and Jacob. I have heard of a good woman who asked her husband when she was dying. My dear, do you think he will know me when you and I get to heaven? Shall I know you?" he said. Why, I have always known you while I have been here, and do you think I should be a greater fool when I get to heaven?
I think it was a very good answer. If we have known one another here, we shall know one another there. I have dear departed friends up there, and it is always a sweet thought to me, that when I shall put my foot, as I hope I may, upon the threshold of heaven, there will come my sisters and brothers to class me by the hand and say, yes, thou loved one, and thou art here.
Dear relatives that have been separated, you will meet again in heaven." One of you has lost a mother.
She is gone above, and if you follow the track of Jesus, you shall meet her there. May thinks I see yet another coming to meet you at the door of paradise, and though the ties of natural affection may be in a measure forgotten,
I may be allowed to use a figure. How blessed would she be as she turned to God and said, Here am I, and the children that thou hast given me. We shall recognize our friends, husband, you will know your wife again.
Mother, you will know those dear babes of yours. You marked their features when they lay panting and gasping for breath. You know how ye hung over their graves when the cold sword was sprinkled over them, and it was said,
Earth to earth, dust to dust and ashes to ashes. But ye shall hear those loved voices again, ye shall hear those sweet voices once more, ye shall yet know that those whom ye loved have been loved by God. Would not that be a dreary heaven for us to inhabit where we should be alike unknowing and unknown? I would not care to go to such a heaven as that.
I believe that heaven is a fellowship of the saints, and that we shall know one another there. I have often thought I should love to see Isaiah, and as soon as I get to heaven, me thinks I would ask for him, because he spoke more of Jesus Christ than all the rest. I am sure I should want to find out good George Whitefield, he who so continually preach to the people and war himself out with a more than Seraphic zeal.
Oh yes, we shall have choice company in heaven when we get there. There will be no distinction of learned and unlearned clergy and laity, but we shall walk freely one among another, we shall feel that we are brethren, we shall sit down with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob. I've heard of a lady who was visited by a minister on her deathbed, and she said to him,
I want to ask you one question. Now I'm about to die.
Well, said the minister, what is it? Oh, said she in a very affected way. I want to know if there are two places in heaven, because I could not bear that Betsy in the kitchen should be in heaven along with me. She is so unrefined.
The minister turned round and said, Oh, don't trouble yourself about that, Madam. There is no fear of that. For until you get rid of you accursed pride, you will never enter heaven at all.
We must all get rid of our pride. We must come down and stand on an equality in the sight of God and see in every man a brother before we can hope to be found in glory.
I, we bless God, we thank Him that there will be no separate table for one and for another. The Jew and the Gentile will sit down together. The great and the small shall feed in the same pasture, and we shall sit down with Abraham, but my text hath a yet greater depth of sweetness, for it says that men shall come and shall sit down.
Many Shall Be Saved: The Vastness of Heaven's Population
Some narrow-minded bigots think that heaven will be a very small place where there will be a very few people who went to their chapel or their church. I confess I have no wish for a very small heaven, and love to read in the scriptures that there are many mansions in my father's house. How often do I hear people say, ah, straight is the gate, and narrow is the way, and few there be that find it.
There will be very few in heaven, there will be most lost. My friend, I differ from you. Do you think that Christ will let the devil beat him? That he will let the devil have more in hell than there will be in heaven? No, it is impossible. For then Satan would laugh at Christ. There will be more in heaven than there are among the lost.
God says that there will be a number that no man can number who will be saved, but he never says that there will be a number that no man can number that will be lost. There will be a host beyond all count who will get into heaven. What glad tidings for you and for me. For, if there are so many to be saved, why should not I be saved?
Why should not you? Why should not yawn, man? Over there in the crowd say, Cannot I be one among the multitude? And may not that poor woman there take heart and say, Well, if there were but half a dozen saved, I might fear that I should not be one. But since many are to come, Why should not I also be saved? Cheer up, disconsolate!
Cheer up, son of mourning, child of sorrow, there is hope for thee still. I can never know that any man is past God's grace. There be a few that have sinned, that sin that is unto death, and God gives them up, but the vast host of mankind are yet within the reach of sovereign mercy.
And many of them shall come from the east and from the west, and shall sit down in the kingdom of heaven. Look at my text again, and you will see where these people come from.
From the East and West: Grace Reaches the Most Hopeless
They are to come from the East and West. The Jews said that they would all come from Palestine, every one of them, every man, woman, and child, that they would not be one in heaven that was not a Jew.
And the Pharisees thought that if they were not all Pharisees, they could not be saved. But Jesus Christ said, there will be many that will come from the east and from the west. There will be a multitude from that far off land of China, for God is doing a great work there. And we hope that the gospel will yet be victorious in that land.
There will be a multitude from this western land of England, from the western country beyond the sea in America, and from the south in Australia, and from the north in Canada, Siberia, and Russia. From the uttermost parts of the earth, there shall come many to sit down in the kingdom of God. But I do not think this text is to be understood so much geographically as spiritually.
When it says that they shall come from the East and West, I think it does not refer to nations, particularly, but to different kinds of people. Now, the East and the West signify those who are the very farthest off from religion, yet many of them will be saved and get to heaven. There is a class of persons who will always be looked upon as hopeless.
Many a time have I heard a man or woman say of such a one. He cannot be saved. He is too abandoned. What is he good for? Ask him to go to a place of worship." He was drunk on Saturday night.
What would be the use of reasoning with him? There is no hope for him. He is a hardened fellow. See what he has done these many years. What good will it be to speak to him? Now, here this, ye who think your fellows worse than yourselves, ye who condemn others, whereas ye are often just as guilty, Jesus Christ says, many shall come from the East and West.
There will be many in heaven that would drunkards once. I believe, among that blood-bought throng, there are many who reeled in and out the tavern half their lifetime. But, by the power of divine grace, they were able to dash the liquor cup to the ground. They renounced the riot of intoxication, fled away from it, and served good. Yes, there will be many in heaven who were drunkards on earth, there will be many harlots, some of the most abandoned will be found there.
You remember the story of Whitefields once saying that there would be some in heaven who were the devil's castaways, some that the devil would hardly think good enough for him and yet whom Christ would save.
Lady Huntingdon once gently hinted that such language was not quite proper. But, just at the time, there happened to be heard a ring at the bell and Whitefield went downstairs. Afterwards, he came up and said, your lady ship, what do you think a poor woman had to say to me just now? She was a sad profligate, and she said, oh, Mr. Whitfield, when you were preaching, you told us that Christ would take in the devil's castaways, and I am one of them.
And that was the means of her salvation. Shall anybody ever check us from preaching to the lowest of the low? I have been accused of getting all the rabble of London around me. God bless the rabble. God save the rabble." Then say I.
But suppose they are the rabble who need the gospel more than they do, who require to have Christ preached to them more than they do. We have lots of those who preach to ladies and gentlemen, and we want someone to preach to the rabble in these degenerate days. Oh, here is comfort for me, for many of the rabbalata come from the east and from the west.
Oh, what would you think if you were to see the difference between some that are in heaven and some that shall be there? There might be found one whose hair hangs across his eyes. His locks are matted. He looks horrible. His bloated eyes start from his face. He grins almost like an idiot. He has drunk away his very brain until life seems to have departed, so far as sense and being are concerned.
Yet I would tell to you, that man is capable of salvation. and in a few years I might say, look up Yonder. See you that bright star, discern you, that man with a crown of pure gold upon his head. Do you notice that being plaid in robes of sapphire and in garments of light? That is the self-same man who sat there, a poor, benighted, almost idiotic being, yet sovereign grace and mercy have saved him.
Luke 14:23 17:00"And the lord said unto the servant, Go out into the highways and hedges, and compel them to come in, that my house may be filled."
There are none except those, as I have said before, who have sinned the unpardonable sin, who are beyond God's mercy. Fetch me out the worst and still I would preach the gospel to them. Fetch me out the violinist, still I would preach to them because I recollect my master said, Go ye out into the highways and hedges and compel them to come in that my house may be filled.
The Power of God's 'Shall': Irresistible Grace
Many shall come from the east and west and shall sit down with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven.
There is one more word I must notice before I have done with this sweet portion. That is the word shall. O! I love God's shells and wills. There is nothing comparable to them. Let a man say, shall, what is it good for? I will, says man, and he never performs. I shall, says he, and he breaks his promise.
But it is never so with God's shells. If he says shall, it shall be, when he says will, it will be. Now he has said here, many shall come. The devil says they shall not come, but they shall come. Their sins say, you can't come. God says you shall come. You yourselves say you won't come. God says you shall come." Yes, there are some here who are laughing at salvation who can scoff at Christ and mock at the gospel, but I tell you
Some of you shall come yet. What, you say, can God make me become a Christian? I tell you, yes, for herein rest the power of the gospel. It does not ask you consent, but it gets it. It does not say, will you have it? But it makes you willing, in the day of God's power, not against your will, but it makes you willing.
It shows you its value, and then you fall in love with it, and straight away you run after it and have it. Many people have said we will not have anything to do with religion, yet they have been converted. I've heard of a man who once went to chapel to hear the singing, and as soon as the minister began to preach, he put his fingers in his ears and would not listen, but by and by some tiny
Insect settled on his face so that he was obliged to take one finger out of his ears to brush it away. Just then, the minister said, he that hath ears to hear, let him hear. the man listened, and God met with him at that moment to his soul's conversion. He went out a new man, a changed character.
He who came into laugh retired to pray. He who came into mock went out to bend his knee in penitence. He who entered to spend an idle hour went home to spend an hour in devotion with his God. The sinner became a saint, the profligate became a penitent. Who know that there may not be some like that here? The gospel wants not your consent, it gets it.
It knocks the enmity out of your heart. You say, I do not want to be saved. Christ says you shall be. He makes your will turn round, and then you cry, Lord save, or I perish."
Ah, might heaven exclaim, I knew I would make you say that, and then he rejoices over you because he has changed your will and made you willing in the day of his power. If Jesus Christ were to stand on the platform tonight, what would many people do with him? Oh, say some. We would make him a king. I do not believe it.
They would crucify him again if they had the opportunity. If he were to come and say, Here I am, I love you. Will you be saved by me? Not one of you would consent if you were left to your will.
If he should look upon you with those eyes, before whose power the lion would have crouched, if he spoke with that voice which poured forth a cataract of eloquence, like a stream of nectar rolling down from the cliffs above, not a single person would come to be his disciple. No, it wants the power of the Spirit to make men come to Jesus Christ.
John 6:44 21:22"No man can come to me, except the Father which hath sent me draw him: and I will raise him up at the last day."
He himself said, no man can come to me except the Father who had sent me draw him. Ah, we want that, and here we have it. They shall come, they shall come, ye may laugh, ye may despise us, but Jesus Christ shall not die for nothing.
If some of you reject him, there are some that will not. If there are some that are not saved, others shall be. Christ shall see his seed, he shall prolong his days, and the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hands. Some think that Christ died, and yet that some for whom he died will be lost. I never could understand that doctrine.
If Jesus, my surety, bore my griefs and carried my sorrows, I believe myself to be as secure as the angels in heaven. God cannot ask payment twice. If Christ paid my debt, Shall I have to pay it again?"
The Invitation to the Chief of Sinners
No. Free from sin I walk at large, the Saviour's blood's my full discharge, at his dear feet content I lay, a sinner saved and homage pay. They shall come, they shall come, and not in heaven nor on earth nor in hell can stop them from coming. And now thou chief of sinners list one moment while I call thee to Jesus. There is one person here tonight who thinks himself the worst soul that ever lived.
There is one who says to himself, I do not deserve to be called to Christ, I am sure. Soul, I call thee thou lost most wretched outcast this night by authority given me of God, I call thee to come to my Savior. Some time ago, when I went into the county court to see what they were doing, I heard a man's name called out, and immediately the man said, Make way, make way, they call me,
And up he came. Now I call the chief of sinners tonight and let him say, Make way, make way, doubts, make way, fears, make way sins, Christ calls me. And if Christ calls me, that is enough, I'll to his gracious feet approach, whose scepter mercy gives.
Perhaps he may command me, touch, and then the supplement lives. I can but perish if I go, I am resolved to try, for if I stay away, I know I must forever die.
But should I die with mercy sought when I, the King, have tried, that were to die, delightful thought, as sinner never died. Go and try my savior. Go and try my savior. Go and try my savior.
If he casts you away after you have sought him, tell in the pit that Christ would not hear you. But that you shall never be allowed to do. It would dishonor the mercy of the covenant for God to cast away one penitent sinner, and it never shall be while it is written. Many shall come from the east and west, and shall sit down with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven." 2.
The Terrible Warning: Children of the Kingdom Cast Out
The second part of my text is heart-breaking. I could preach with great delight to myself from the first part, but here is a dreary task to my soul because there are gloomy words here.
But, as I've told you, what is written in the Bible must be preached, whether it be gloomy or cheerful. There are some ministers who never mention anything about hell. I heard of a minister who once said to his congregation, If you do not love the Lord Jesus Christ, you will be sent to that place which it is not polite to mention. He ought not to have been allowed to preach again, I'm sure, if he could not use plain words.
Now, if I saw that house on fire over there, do you think I would stand and say, I believe the operation of combustion is proceeding yonder? No, I would call out fire, fire! And then everybody would know what I meant. So, if the Bible says, the children of the kingdom shall be cast out into outer darkness, am I to stand here and mince the matter at all?
God forbid. We must speak the truth, as it is written. It is a terrible truth, for it says the children of the kingdom shall be cast out. Now, who are those children? I will tell you. The children of the kingdom are those people who are noted for the externals of piety, but who have nothing of the internals of it.
People whom you will see with their Bibles and hymn books marching off to chapel as religiously as possible, or going to church as devoutly and demurely as they can, looking as somber and serious as parish beetles, and fancying that they are quite sure to be saved though their hearts are not in the matter, nothing but their bodies.
These are the persons who are the children of the kingdom. They have no grace, no life, no Christ, and they shall be cast into outer darkness. Again, these people are the children of pious fathers and mothers. There is nothing touches a man's heart, mark you, like talking about his mother.
I have heard of a swearing sailor, whom nobody could manage, not even the police, who was always making some disturbance wherever he went.
Once he went into a place of worship, and no one could keep him still, but a gentleman went up and said to him, Jack, you had a mother once. With that, the tears ran down his cheeks. He said, Ha! Bless you, sir, I had, and I brought her grey hairs with sorrow to the grave, and a pretty fellow I am to be here tonight."
He then sat down, quite sobered, and subdued by the very mention of his mother.
Ah, and there are some of you, children of the kingdom, who can remember your mothers. Your mother took you on her knee and taught you early to pray, your father tutored you in the ways of godliness. And yet you are here tonight without grace in you heart. Without hope of heaven, you are going downwards towards hell as fast as your feet can carry you.
There are some of you who have broken your poor mother's heart. Oh! If I could tell you what she has suffered for you when you have at night been indulging in you sin. Do you know what your guilt will be, ye children of the kingdom, if ye perish after a pious mother's prayers and tears have fallen upon you? I can conceive of no one entering hell with a worse grace than the man who goes there with drops of his mother's tears on his head, and with his father's prayers following him at his heels.
Some of you will inevitably endure this doom, some of you young men and women shall wake up one day and find yourselves in utter darkness, while your parents shall be up there in heaven, looking down upon you with upbraiding eyes, seeming to say, what? After all we did for you, all we said, are you come to this children of the kingdom? Do not think that a pious mother can save you.
Do not think, because your father was a member of such and such a church, that his godliness will save you. I can suppose someone standing at heaven's gate and demanding, let me in, let me in, what for? Because my mother is in there. Your mother had nothing to do with you. If she was holy, she was holy for herself. If she was evil, she was evil for herself.
But my grandfather prayed for me. That is no use. Did you pray for yourself? No, I did not. Then grandfather's prayers, and grandmother's prayers, and fathers and mother's prayers, maybe piled on the top of one another till they reached the stars, but they never can make a ladder for you to go to heaven by. You must seek God for yourself, or rather God must seek you.
You must have vital experience of God in us in you, heart, or else you are lost even though all your friends were in heaven.
The Mother's Dream: Separated at Judgment
That was a dreadful dream which a pious mother once had, and told to her children. She thought the judgment day was come. The great books were opened. They all stood before God.
And Jesus Christ said, separate the chaff from the wheat, put the goats on the left hand, and the sheep on the right. The mother dreamed that she and her children were standing just in the middle of the Great Assembly.
And the angel came and said, I must take the mother. She is a sheep. She must go to the right hand. The children are goats. They must go on the left. She thought as she went. Her children clutched her and said, Mother, can we part? Must we be separated? She then put her arms around them and seemed to say, My children, I would, if possible, take you with me.
But in a moment the angel touched her, her cheeks were dried, and now overcoming natural affection, being rendered supernatural and sublime, resigned to God's will, she said, My children, I taught you well, I trained you up, and you forsook the ways of God, and now all I have to say is, Amen to you condemnation. They're upon, they were snatched away, and she saw them in perpetual torment while she was in heaven.
Young man, what will you think when the last day comes to hear Christ say, Depart, he cares it, and there will be a voice just behind him saying, Amen. And as you inquire when scanned a voice, you will find it was your mother, or young woman went out cast away into utter darkness. What will you think to hear a voice saying, Amen. And as you look, there sits your father, his lips still moving with the solemn curse.
Ah, children of the kingdom, the penitent reprobates will enter heaven many of them. Publicans and sinners will get there, repenting drunkards and swearers will be saved, but many of the children of the kingdom will be cast out. Oh! To think that you, who have been so well-trained, should be lost while many of the worse, will be saved.
It will be the hell of hells for you to look up and see there, poor Jack the drunkard, lying in Abraham's bosom while you, who have had a pious mother, are cast into hell, simply because you would not believe on the Lord Jesus Christ but put his gospel from you, and lived and died without it. That were the very sting of all to see ourselves cast away when the chief of sinners find salvation.
Cast into Outer Darkness: The Horror of Hell
Now list to me a little while, I will not detain you long whilst I undertake the dull full task of telling you what is to become of these children of the kingdom.
Jesus Christ says they are to be cast into utter darkness where there is weeping and gnashing of teeth. First notice, they are to be cast out. They are not said to go, but when they come to heaven's gates, they are to be cast out.
As soon as hypocrites arrive at the gates of heaven, justice will say, there he comes, there he comes. He spurned a father's prayers and mocked a mother's tears. He has forced his way downward against all the advantages mercy has supplied. and now there he comes. Gabriel, take them in. The angel binding you hand and foot holds you one single moment over the mouth of the chasm.
He bids you look down, down, down, down. There is no bottom, and you hear, coming up from the abyss, Salon moans and hollow groans and screams of tortured ghosts, you quiver, your bones melt like wax and your marrow quakes within you. Where is now thy might?
And where thy boasting and bragging? You shriek and cry, you beg for mercy, but the angel, with one tremendous grasp, ceases you first, and then hurls you down, with the cry, away, away! and down you go to the pit that is bottomless and roll forever downward, downward, downward, downward.
Near to find a resting place for the souls of your feet. Ye shall be cast out. And where are you to be cast to? Ye are to be cast into outer darkness. Ye are to be put in the place where there will be no hope. For by light in Scripture we understand hope and you are to be put into outer darkness where there is no light,
No hope. Is there a man here who has no hope? I cannot suppose such a person. One of you, perhaps, says, I am thirty pounds in debt, and shall be sold up by and by, but I have a hope that I may get alone, and so escape my difficulty." Says another, My business is ruined, but things may take a turn yet. I have a hope." Says another,
I am in great distress, but I hope that God will provide for me. Another says, I am £50 in debt, I am sorry for it, but I will set the strong hands to work and do my best to get out of it.
One of you thinks a friend is dying, but you have a hope that perhaps the fever may take a turn, that he may yell, but in hell there is no hope. They have not even the hope of dying, the hope of being annihilated. They are forever, forever, forever lost. On every chain in hell there is written forever in the fires there blaze out the words forever.
Up above their heads they read forever. Their eyes are galled and their hearts are pained with the thought that it is forever. Oh! If I could tell you tonight that hell would one day be burned out and that those who were lost might be saved. There would be a Jubilee in hell at the very thought of it.
But it cannot be. It is forever. They are cast into utter darkness.
But I want to get over this as quick as I can for who can bear to talk thus to his fellow creatures. What is it that the lost are doing? They are weeping and gnashing their teeth. Do you gnash your teeth now? You would not do it except you were in pain and agony. Well, in hell there is always gnashing of teeth.
And do you know why? There is one gnashing his teeth that his companion and mutters, I was led into hell by you. You led me astray. You taught me to drink the first time." And the other gnashes his teeth and says, What if I did?
You made me worse than I should have been in aftertimes. There is a child who looks at her mother and says, Mother, you trained me up to vice." And the mother nashes her teeth again at the child and says, I have no pity for you, for you excelled me in it and led me into deeper sin. Fathers nash their teeth at their sons and sons at their fathers.
And, me thinks, if there are any who will have to nash their teeth more than others, it will be seduces, when they see those whom they have led from the paths of virtue, and hear them saying, Ah, we are glad you are in hell with us, you deserve it, for you led us here. Have any of you, tonight, upon your consciences, the fact that you have led others to the pit?
Oh, may sovereign grace forgive you. We have gone astray like lost sheep," said David. Now a lost sheep never goes astray alone, if it is one of a flock. I lately read of a sheep that leaped over the parapet of a bridge and was followed by every one of the flock. So if one man goes astray, he leads others with him.
Some of you will have to account for other sins when you get to hell as well as your own.
The Urgency of Repentance: Old, Middle-Aged, and Young
Oh, what weeping and gnashing of teeth. There will be, in that pit, now shock the black book, who wants to say any more about it? I have warned you solemnly. I have told you of the wrath to come. The evening darkens and the sun is setting.
Ah! And the evening's darken with some of you. I can see grey-headed men here. Are your grey hairs a crown of glory, or a fool's cap to you? Are you on the very verge of heaven, or are you tottering on the brink of your grave, and sinking down to perdition?
Let me warn you, grey-headed men, your evening is coming.
Oh poor tottering greyhead, will thou take the last step into the pit? Let a young child step before the unbeg thee to consider. There is thy staff. It has nothing of earth to rest upon. And now, air thou diest, be think thyself this night. Let seventy years of sin start up, that the ghosts of thy forgotten transgressions march before thine eyes. What will thou do with 70 wasted years to answer for?
With 70 years of criminality to bring before God, God give thee grace this night to repent and to put thy trust in Jesus. Indent. And you, middle-aged men, are not safe. The evening lowers with you, too. You may soon die."
A few mornings ago, I was roused early from my bed by the request that I would hasten to see a dying man. I hurried off with all speed to see the poor creature, but when I reached the house, he was dead,
Of course. As I stood in the room, I thought,
Ah! That man little thought he should die so soon. There were his wife and children and friends. They little thought he would die, for he was hailed strong and hearty, but a few days before. None of you have a lease of your lives.
If you have where is it? Go and see if you have it anywhere in your chest at home. No, ye may die too, morrow. Let me therefore warn you by the mercy of God, let me speak to you as a brother may speak, for I love you, you know I do, and would press them at a home to your hearts. Oh, to be amongst the many who shall be accepted in Christ, how blessed that will be.
And God has said that, whosoever shall call on his name shall be saved, he casts out none that come unto him through Christ. And now ye youths and matins, one word with you. Perhaps you think that religion is not for you. Let us be happy, say you. Let us be merry and joyous.
How long young man? How long? Till I'm 21. Are you sure that you will live till then? Let me tell you one thing.
If you do live till that time, if you have no heart for God now, you will have none then. Men do not get better if left alone. It is with them, as with the garden, if you let it alone, and permit weeds to grow, you will not expect to find it better in six months, but worse. Ah, men talk as if they could repent when they like.
It is the work of God to give us repentance. Some even say, I shall turn to God on such and such a day. Ah! If you felt a right, you would say, I must run to God and ask Him to give me repentance now, lest I should die before I have found Jesus Christ, my Savior. Now one word in conclusion. I have told you of heaven and hell what is the way then, to escape from hell and to be found in heaven.
The Way of Salvation: Look to Christ and Believe
I will not tell you my old tale again tonight. I recollect when I told it you before, a good friend in the crowd said, tell us something fresh, old fellow. Now really, in preaching ten times a week, we cannot always say things fresh.
You have heard John Goth, and you know he tells his tales over again. I have nothing but the old gospel, he that believeth and is baptised shall be saved. There is nothing here of works.
Mark 16:16 41:16"He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned."
It does not say he who is a good man shall be saved, but he who believes and is baptized. Well, what is it to believe it is to put your trust entirely upon Jesus?
Peter once believed, and Jesus Christ said to him, Come on, Peter, walk to me on the water." Peter went stepping along on the tops of the waves without sinking, but when he looked at the waves he began to tremble, and down he went.
Now, poor sinner, Christ says, Come on, walk on your sins, come to me, and if you do, he will give you power. If you believe on Christ, you will be able to walk over your sins, to tread upon them, and overcome them. I can remember the time when my sins first stared me in the face.
I thought myself the most accursed of all men. I had not committed any very great open transgressions against God, but I recollected that I had been well-trained and tutored, and I thought my sins were thus greater than other peoples. I cried to God to have mercy, and I feared that He would not pardon me.
Month after month, I cried to God, and He did not hear me, and I knew not what it was to be saved. Sometimes I was so weary of the world that I desired to die, but then I recollected that there was a worst world after this, and that it would be an ill-matter to rush before my maker unprepared.
At times I wickedly thought God a most heartless tyrant, because he did not answer my prayer, and then, at others, I thought, I deserve his displeasure. If he sends me to hell, he will be just.
But I remember the hour when I stepped into a little place of worship and saw a tall, thin man step into the pulpit. I have never seen him from that day, and probably never shall, till we meet in heaven.
Isaiah 45:22 43:23"Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth: for I am God, and there is none else."
He opened the Bible and read with a feeble voice, Look unto me, and be ye saved all the ends of the earth, for I am God, and beside me there is none else.
Ah, thought I am one of the ends of the earth, and then turning round and fixing his gaze on me as if he knew me. The minister said, look, look, look! Why? I thought I had a great deal to do, but I found it was only to look. I thought I had a garment to spin out for myself, but I found that if I looked, Christ would give me a garment.
Look, sinner, that is to be saved. Look unto him, all he ends of the earth and be saved." That is what the Jews did when Moses held up the brazen serpent. He said, look,
And they looked. The serpent might be twisting round them, and they might be nearly dead, but they simply looked, and the moment they looked, the serpent dropped off, and they were healed. Look to Jesus sinner. None but Jesus can do helpless sinners good.
There is a hymn we often sing, but which I do not think is quite right. It says, Venture on him. Venture holy. Let no other trust intrude. Now, it is no venture to trust in Christ. Not in the least, he who trusts in Christ is quite secure.
I recollect that when dear John Hyatt was dying, Matthew Wilkes said to him in his usual tone, Well, John, could you trust your soul in the hands of Jesus Christ now? Yes, said he, a million. A million souls. I am sure that every Christian that has ever trusted in Christ can say, Amen to that. Trust in him, he will never deceive you.
My blessed master will never cast you away. I cannot speak much longer, and I have only to thank you for your kindness. I never saw so larger number so still and quiet. I do really think after all the hard things that have been said, that the English people know who loves them, and that they will stand by the man who stands by them.
I thank every one of you, and above all I beg you, if there be reason or sense in what I've said, be think yourselves of what you are, and may the blessed Spirit reveal to you your state. May he show you that you are dead, that you are lost, ruined. May he make you feel what a dreadful thing it would be to sink into hell.
May he point you to heaven. May he take you as the angel did of old, and put his hand upon you and say, flee, flee, flee. Look to the mountain, look not behind thee, stay not in all the plain. And may we all meet in heaven at last, and there we shall be happy forever.
This sermon was watered by many prayers of the faithful in Zion. The preacher did not intend it for publication, but seeing that it is now in print, he will not apologize for its faulty composition or rambling style, but instead thereof he would beg the prayers of his readers, that this feeble sermon may more exalt the honour of God by the salvation of many who shall read it.
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Referenced Scriptures
Major Points
Heaven is a land of perfect rest and joyful fellowship where the redeemed will know and recognize one another, sitting with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob as equals
God's sovereign grace reaches even the most abandoned sinners — drunkards, outcasts, and those the world considers hopeless — because God's 'shall' never fails
External religion and godly parentage cannot save — the children of the kingdom who lack genuine heart-faith will be cast into outer darkness
Salvation comes not by working or willing but by simply looking to Christ in faith, as Spurgeon himself discovered when a minister told him to look unto Jesus and be saved
Discussion Questions
- 1
Spurgeon describes heaven as primarily a place of rest for the working man. How does this picture of heaven compare with other biblical descriptions, and what does it reveal about God's heart for those who labor?
- 2
Spurgeon argues there will be more people in heaven than in hell. What scriptural evidence does he cite, and how does this challenge common assumptions about the scope of salvation?
- 3
What does Spurgeon mean by 'children of the kingdom' who will be cast out? How can someone possess all the externals of religion yet lack its internal reality?
- 4
Spurgeon shares the story of a man who put his fingers in his ears during a sermon yet was converted. What does this illustrate about the relationship between human resistance and divine grace?
- 5
How does Spurgeon's own conversion testimony — simply being told to 'look' — serve as both a theological argument and a pastoral invitation? What makes this so powerful as a closing appeal?
Word Studies
To recline at table, as at a banquet feast. In the ancient Near East, reclining indicated honored guests at a celebration — far more than merely sitting. It conveys intimate fellowship and joyful feasting.
Matthew 8:11 — “...and shall sit down with Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, in the kingdom of heaven”
The comparative form of 'outer' — meaning the outermost, farthest removed from light and warmth. It describes not merely darkness but the extreme remoteness from God's presence, emphasizing total exclusion.
Matthew 8:12 — “...shall be cast out into outer darkness”
Gnashing or grinding of the teeth, expressing extreme anguish, rage, and self-reproach. In the Septuagint and New Testament it consistently denotes the tormented response of those who recognize their loss is irreversible.
Matthew 8:12 — “...there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth”
This Week's Reading Plan
Go deeper this week with the passages from this sermon.
Read Matthew 8 for the full context
What stands out to you in this passage? How does it connect to the sermon?
Read Luke 14 for the full context
Is there a promise, command, or truth here that applies to your life this week?
Read John 6 for the full context
How does this passage shape the way you see God's character?
Read Isaiah 45 for the full context
What would change in your daily life if you took this passage seriously?
Read Mark 16 for the full context
As you finish the week, what one truth from this series of readings will you carry forward?
Cross References
A parallel passage where Jesus makes the same point: those who assumed they would be in the kingdom see Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob inside while they themselves are thrust out
Confirms Spurgeon's argument that the redeemed are a vast, innumerable multitude from every nation, tribe, people, and tongue
Paul's argument that not all who are descended from Israel belong to Israel — being a physical child of the kingdom does not guarantee salvation
Jesus' declaration to Nicodemus that one must be born again to see the kingdom of God — supporting Spurgeon's insistence that personal regeneration, not religious heritage, is required
Salvation is by grace through faith, not of works — reinforcing Spurgeon's emphasis that looking to Christ, not laboring, is the way of salvation
Further Reading
The Soul Winner
by Charles Spurgeon
Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God
by Jonathan Edwards
Holiness
by J.C. Ryle