A
Baptist Page Article
BAPTISM ESSENTIAL TO OBEDIENCE
by Charles Spurgeon
THE
METROPOLITAN TABERNACLE,
NEWINGTON ON LORDS-DAY EVENING,
OCT. 13TH, 1889.
"He
that believeth and is baptized shall be saved." Mark 16:16.
IF
our congregations were
what they ought to be, it would be a very simple matter to preach, for
a sermon would then only need to be like the orders given by a commanding
officer to his troops, short, sharp, plain, clear, distinct. Our hearers
would not want illustrations and metaphors; they would ask simply to be
told what they must do to be saved; and the more plainly they could be
told, the better pleased would they be. I am going to try this evening
to preach that kind of sermon, sinking the preacher in the teller of good
news, plainly speaking of the way of salvation. If you want to be saved,
listen to my message. If you do not care for salvation, yet, mayhap, while
you hear of it, you may be set a-longing, and God may bless you.
My text
is preceded and followed by other important words, "Go ye into all
the world, and preach the gospel to every creature. He that believeth
and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned."
The gospel, then, is for "every creature." Wherever there is
a man, woman, or child, an intelligent creature, the gospel is to be preached
to such a person. You who are gathered tonight are clearly within that
description, and therefore the gospel is to be preached to you. But if
we are commanded to preach it, it is implied that you are commanded to
hear it. To hear it without attention, to hear it without resolving to
obey it, will be useless work. Hear it, therefore, as I desire to preach
it, remembering that Christ stands here to hear me preach, and to mark
how you accept the message from himself that I am to deliver.
This
gospel is sent to every creature because every creature needs it. Whether
the creature knows it or not, he is lost, lost by nature, and lost by
practice, too, so much lost that he cannot save himself; he needs to be
saved. Will you all believe that? If you have not believed in Christ,
you are lost, and you cannot save yourself; begin by believing that fact.
But then rejoice that there is sent to you a gospel which can save you,
a gospel which is adapted and meant for the salvation of just such a person
as you are; for to you God says,
"He
that believeth and is baptized shall be saved."
My fellow-Christians,
you who have believed in Christ, it is time for us to bestir ourselves,
for we have not preached the gospel to every creature yet by a very long
way. Some persons have, never preached it to anybody; some, I mean, of
the very persons who are commanded to preach it to every creature. A quaint
preacher says that, if some of Gods people were paid ten dollars
an hour for all that they have done fox their Lord, they have not earned
enough yet to buy a cake of gingerbread; and I am afraid that statement
is true. So very little have some persons done for the spread of the gospel,
that the world is none the better for their being in it. Do I speak too
severely? If I do, you can easily pass over what I say; but if not, if
it be so that any here have never yet fairly and squarely told out the
gospel of Jesus Christ, begin at once. When you get home to-night, tell
out the gospel to your nearest relative; and go out to-morrow to your
next door neighbor, or to the friend whom you can most easily reach, and
tell the good news that your Lord has revealed to you, and so help to
preach the gospel to every creature. An army chaplain once said to the
Duke of Wellington, "Do you think that it is of any use our taking
the gospel to the hill tribes in India? Will they ever receive it?"
The duke replied, "What are your marching orders?" That was
the only answer he gave. Stern disciplinarian as that great soldier was,
he only wanted marching orders, and he obeyed; and he meant that every
soldier of the cross must obey the marching orders of Christ, his great
Commander. Go ye, therefore, as far as ever your position and capabilities
allow you, and tell to every creature the word of the gospel as it is
recorded in my text, "He that believeth and is baptized shall be
saved."
I want
to do my part to-night as far as my feeble voice will permit me; and I
will speak a few words, first, concerning belief; secondly, concerning
baptism; and, thirdly, concerning being saved. We shall get the whole
text clearly in considering those three points.
I.
First, CONCERNING BELIEVING. This is the main point, this is the hinge
of salvation, for he that believeth in Christ is not condemned; he that
believeth in him hath everlasting life.
Now,
concerning believing, let me, ask, first, What is to be believed? Well,
you are to believe that you have broken the law of God, and that consequently
you are under condemnation; but that God, in his infinite mercy, has sent
his Son Jesus Christ into the world that you might live through him. His
Divine, Son, his only-begotten Son, was born of Mary, as a man of the
substance of his mother, feeling as we do, and was in all respects most
truly man. Being here, he obeyed his Fathers will; and. when the
time came, he gave himself up as a sacrifice for guilty men. He died,
"the Just for the unjust, that he might bring us to God." Himself
being without sin, he took upon himself the sin of his people: "Who
his own self bare our sins in his own body on the tree." Being found
with human sin imputed to him, he suffered in the room, and place, and
stead of those whose sins he bore. On the cross his blood was shed, for
without the Shedding of blood there is no remission of sin, but by that
shedding of blood he blotted out the iniquity of all those who put their
trust in him. This is what you have to believe, that
"He
bore, that you might never bear, His Fathers righteous ire."
He was
laid in the grave; and on the third day he came forth from the tomb, rising
again for the justification of his people as he was crucified for their
offenses. After a while, he went up into the highest heaven, and he is
now enthroned there, King of kings, and Lord of lords. He sitteth at the
right hand of God, even the Father, and there he pleads and makes intercession
for sinners. Believe this "Through this Man is preached unto you
the forgiveness of sins." He is exalted on high, a Prince and a Savior,
to give repentance and remission of sins. That is what is to be believed.
I might go into a great many details; but I shall not do so tonight. The
essence of what is to be believed is that Jesus Christ is given of God
unto us, that by his death he might put away sin, and we might be reconciled
to God, and that whosoever believeth in him shall not perish, but have
everlasting life.
That
I may answer this question better, let me correct it, or turn it into
another, and then answer that. The question is not so much what is to
be believed, as Who is to be believed? For, in very deed, the believing
of a certain thing to be true, though that maybe helpful, is not the whole
of the matter. I, believing a thing to be true, trust myself to that truth;
there is faith, the act of trust. But if we would be saved, we must trust
a Person, we must trust the Lord Jesus Christ. You are not so much saved
by believing a dogma, as by trusting a Person; you must believe the dogma,
or you will not trust the Person but, believing the doctrine, you then
come, and put your trust in the Person about whom that doctrine is taught.
If you would be saved, trust yourself with Jesus Christ. He, who died,
ever lives, and "he is able to save unto the uttermost them that
come unto God by him." Saving faith is trusting in the Lord Jesus
Christ, trusting him truly, wholly, solely, constantly, trusting him now.
Behold him, then, the Son of God, enthroned in glory; lay your soul and
all its sins at his dear feet, and trust in him to save you, and he will
do it.
Many
will put a third question, Why is he to be trusted? I should like
to answer that by another, Why is he not to be trusted? When one
said to me, the other day, "I cannot trust Christ," I enquired,
"Can you trust me?" And when the quick reply was, as it ought
to be from a hearer to a minister, "Yes, Sir, I do trust you,"
I said, "Well, then, you certainly can trust the Lord Jesus Christ,
for he is infinitely more worthy of being trusted than ever I can be."
Cannot trust Christ? That is a wonderful piece of Satanic delusion. I
can say, to-night, that I can not only trust my soul to Christ, but that,
if I had as many souls as there are grains of sand on the sea-shore, I
could implicitly trust them all to him. Why should I not? He is "God
over all, blessed for ever," and he is Man, tender and gentle; therefore
he ought to be trusted. O my hearer, can you look the crucified Christ
in the face, and say that you cannot trust him? Can you see the bloody
sweat in the garden, can you gaze upon the nailed hands and feet, and
pierced side of this suffering Man, who is at the, same time very God
of very God, and can you then say that it is hard to trust him? Oh, no!
He is so true, so noble, so generous, so faithful, that I beseech you
to trust him, and to trust him now.
That
raises another question, When is Christ to be trusted? And the
answer is, Now. He was never more worthy to be trusted than he is tonight,
and you never more needed a Savior than yea do to-night. You are, perhaps,
talking about trusting Christ at some future time. You tell me that you
do not trust So-and-so, but that you hope to trust him one of these days.
I will not give a penny for such a hope as that. No, friend; if at any
future time you should deem Christ worthy of your confidence, he is worthy
of your trust to-night, for he is the same yesterday, and today, and for
ever. Just as you are, in that pew, or sitting in the aisle, Christ deserves
your confidence; and I pray you to give it to him. Cast your guilty soul
on him this very moment; live not another second in unbelief, for that
unbelief is a slander on my Lord, a grievous injury to his dear, faithful
love. Now, while the word is quitting my lip, as it reaches your ear,
say and mean it, "I do believe; I will trust Jesus; I yield myself
to Christ, and take him to be my Savior."
"If
I do that," says one, "When will the blessing come?" The
text says, "He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved,"
and the blessing will come at once. Swift as the lightning flash is the
act which saves the soul. One moment, a man may be black with accumulated
sin; the next moment, he may be white as the driven snow. It takes no
time for God to blot out iniquity. We pass in an instant from death to
life, from darkness into marvellous light. I am praying that, while I
speak to you in feebleness, God may work with his almighty power, with
that right hand that rent the Red Sea in twain, that the ransomed of the
Lord might cross over dryshod. May he come, and save the people made ready
by his grace for this night of his glorious power, leading them immediately
to believe, and giving them at once, as the result of their faith, reconciliation
to God and justification by Christ Jesus!
Here
let me correct a mistake into which some people fall. They say, "Do
you exhort us to believe?" I do, indeed, with all my heart. "But,
sir, faith is the work of the Spirit of God." Yes, did I ever say
that it was not? I insist upon it continually that, wherever there is
any faith, it is wrought in us by the Spirit of God. But listen. Did I
ever tell you the Spirit of God believed for us, or did you ever read
anything in Scripture approximating to that statement? No, the Spirit
of God leads us to believe, but we distinctly believe, and it is our faith
that saves us; it is not that the Holy Spirit believes instead of us,
and we lie still, like a man under the surgeons knife. Oh, dear,
no! Every faculty is awakened and aroused by the Spirit of God. We see
that Christ can save, and we believe it. We believe that he will save,
and we trust him to save us. It is our own act and deed, it cannot be
anybody elses act and deed. You cannot believe for another; there
can be nothing like sponsorship here; and the Holy Ghost himself cannot
believe for you. It is not written, "Let the Holy Ghost believe for
you;" that would be absurd; but it is written,
"Believe
thou," "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be
saved." With thine own proper mind and heart thou must believe in
Jesus Christ if thou wouldst be saved.
I do
not know that I need say more concerning believing. I have often tried
to explain it, I am afraid that I have not always made it as plain as
I have intended. Only let me warn you not to say, "I understand the
plan of salvation very well. Dear Sir, I am sure I do; I do not need it
explained to me, I understand it perfectly." My dear friend, it is
one thing to understand the plan of salvation, and quite another thing
to believe in Jesus Christ to the salvation of your soul. It is a pitiless
night, the rain is pouring down, and hero is a man, Sitting out in the
street, exposed to the ill weather, and he has got a plan of a house down
there on the wet pavement, and he says, "I am all right; I understand
the plan of a house quite well." You see, he is looking at the plan;
he has a view of the front of the house, he knows where the windows and
doors should be; and he has a ground plan, too; he can see where the kitchen
is, and the passage to the kitchen, and he knows the arrangement of all
the rooms. But, my dear fellow, you are getting wet through; the storm
is raging, why do you not go into the house for shelter? "Do not
talk to me," says he, "I understand the plan of a house very
well." The man is a fool if he talks like that; everybody concludes
that he is out of his mind; and what is he who is satisfied with understanding
the plan of salvation, but who does not come to Christ, and put his trust
in him? Come to him now, I beseech you. You who do not know so much about
the plan of salvation, come to Jesus, come and trust him; trust him now.
II.
Now, in the second place, a little CONCERNING BAPTISM: "He that
believeth and is baptized shall be saved."
Please
observe that I did not make the text. Perhaps, if I had made it, I should
have left out that piece about baptism; but I have had no hand in making
the Bible, I am obliged to take Gods Word as I find it, and here
I read these words of our Lord Jesus Christ, "He that believeth and
is baptized shall be saved." "Do not dwell on the baptism,"
says one; "leave that out." That is what you say, my dear Sir;
I cannot see your face, but I do not believe that you are my master. My
Master is the Lord who taught holy men to write this Book, and I can only
go by the Book; the Book has the baptism in it, so I must stick to the
truth as it is in the Book: "He that believeth and is baptized shall
be saved."
First,
let me remind you that our Saviors words teach us that baptism follows
faith: "He that believeth and is baptized." Never neglect the
order of things in the Bible. If God puts them one, two, three, do not
you put them three, two, one. You never had a servant, I hope, who twisted
your orders out of order. Did you ever say to her, "Mary, now go
and sweep the parlour, and afterwards take the duster, and dust the table,
and the shelves, and the books"? Did she come to you some time after,
and say, "Madam, I have done as you commanded me; I dusted the table,
and the shelves, and the books, and then I swept the room"? Every
good housewife here knows what would happen from turning Tier orders upside
down in that fashion. Now, a great many in the Christian Church at the
present day have put it thus: "He that is baptized and believeth."
I am not one of those maidservants; I dare not turn my Masters orders
upside down. You have no right to baptize people till they have believed
in Christ as their Savior. Remember how Philip put it to the Ethiopian
eunuch when that worthy man said, "See, here is water; what doth
hinder me to be baptized?" Philip answered, "If thou believest
with all thine heart, thou mayest." And if thou dost not believe
with all thine heart, thou oughtest not to be baptized, thou hast no right
to this ordinance of Christ unless thou art a Christian. "He that
believeth and is baptized," that is the Scriptural order.
Read the New Testament impartially, and you will always find that those
who were baptized were believers. They believed in the Lord Jesus Christ,
and then they were baptized into the name of the Father, and of the Son,
and of the Holy Ghost.
Next,
I would have you notice that this matter of baptism is often linked with
faith. Over and over again it is put so in the New Testament; and there
are passages, which I will not quote to-night, in which baptism has a
peculiar prominence given to it in connection with the work of salvation.
It might have been put, "He that believeth and cometh to the communion-table
shall be saved;" but it is not so written. Some churches have exalted
what they call "The Holy Eucharist" into a very elevated position
indeed, far beyond what Scripture has ever accorded to it, yet the Lords
supper has never had given to it in the Word of God the position of being
put side by side with faith, as baptism is in this and other passages.
I am not going to dwell upon that point to-night; I merely tell you what
is the teaching of the New Testament. You shall give your own account
of it if you please; but our appeal is "to the law and to the testimony."
This
much also I must say, that it is not possible that there can be anything
saving in the baptism itself. The act of applying water in any way whatsoever
cannot wash away a single sin. That would be going back to the old covenant
of works, the old ceremonies of the Mosaic law; all the washings under
the law and they were very many never washed one sin away; nor
can any washing in water take away the sin of any man. Even the tears
of Christ are never spoken of as putting away sin; it is his precious
blood alone that cleanses away the sin of men. In my text, while it says,
"He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved," yet, when
the condemnation is announced, it is simply, "He that believeth not
shall be damned," and the matter of baptism is not mentioned, for
there are many who believe, but who are not baptized, and who cannot be,
as the dying thief, for instance, yet are they assuredly saved. Nevertheless,
here stands my text, and I cannot alter it, "He that believeth and
is baptized shall be saved."
Why
do you suppose that baptism is put into this prominent position? I think
that it is for this reason, Baptism is the outward expression of the inward
faith. He who believes in Christ with his heart confesses his faith before
God and before the Church of God by being baptized. Now, the faith that
speaks thus is not a dumb faith; it is not a cowardly faith; it is not
a sneaking faith. Paul puts the matter thus, "If thou shalt confess
with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God
hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved. For with the heart
man believeth unto righteousness; and with the mouth confession is made
unto salvation."
But
why is confession so necessary to prove true faith? I answer that it is
necessary to the very existence of the Church of God; for, if I may be
a believer, and never confess my faith, you may be a believer, and never
confess your faith, and all round we should thus have a company of men
believing, and none of them confessing; and where would be the outward
ordinances of the Church of Christ at all? Where would be any minister?
Where would be the setting up and growing of the kingdom of Christ? For
a hundred reasons, it is absolutely needful for Christs kingdom
that the believer should openly confess his faith. Do you not see that?
And hence baptism, being Gods way of our openly confessing our faith,
he requires it to be added to faith, that the faith may be a confessing
faith, not a cowardly faith; that the faith may be an open faith, not
a private faith; that so the faith may be a working faith, influencing
our life, and the life of others, and not a mere secret attempt for self-salvation
by a silent faith which dares not own Christ. Remember those words of
the Lord Jesus, "Whosoever therefore shall confess me before
men, him will I confess also before my Father which is in heaven. But
whosoever shall deny me" (and in that place it means, "he who
does not confess me") "before men, him will I also deny before
my Father which is in heaven." There is, therefore, no regenerating
efficacy about water, or about immersion, or about baptism in any shape
or form; but it is needful as the outward visible expression of the inward
spiritual faith by which the soul is saved.
And,
dear friends, once more, baptism is often the test of obedience. He who
believes in Christ takes him to be his Master as well as his Savior; and
Christ, therefore, says to him, "Go and do so-and-so." If the
man refuses to do it, he thereby proves that he does not intend to be
the disciple of the Master. "Oh!" says one, "you know that
baptism is a nonessential." Have I not begged you to cease such idle
and wicked talk as that? Have you a servant? Do you go to business early
in the morning? Do you like a cup of tea at six oclock, before you
start for the city? The maid does not bring it to you, and you ask, Why
have I not had my tea brought to me?" "Oh!" she answers,
it is non-essential; you can do your business very well without that cup
of tea." Let such a reply as that be repeated, or let it be given
only once, and I will tell you what will be non-essential, it will be
non-essential for you to keep that girl any longer in your house; you
will want another servant, for you will say, "Clearly she is no servant
of mine, she sets herself up as the mistress of the house, for she begins
to judge my commands, and to say that this one is essential, and that
one is not essential." What do you mean by "nonessential"?
"I mean that I can be saved without being baptized." Will you
dare to say that wicked sentence over again? "I mean that I can be
saved without being baptized." You mean creature! So you will do
nothing that Christ commands, if you can be saved without doing it? You
are hardly worth saving at all! A man who always wants to be paid for
what he does, whose one idea of religion is that he will do what is essential
to his own salvation, only cares to save his own skin, and Christ may
go where he likes. Clearly, you are no servant of his; you need to be
saved from such a disreputable, miserable state of mind; and may the Lord
save you! Oftentimes, I do believe that this little matter of believers
baptism is the test of the sincerity of our profession of love to him.
It would have been all the same, it may be, if the Lord Jesus Christ had
said, "Pick Lip six stones off the ground, and carry them in your
pocket, and you shall be saved." Somebody would have said, "That
stone-picking is a non-essential." It becomes essential as soon as
Christ commands it. It is in this way that baptism, if not essential to
your salvation, is essential to your obedience to Christ. If you have
become his disciple, you are bound henceforth to obey all your Masters
commands:
"Whatsoever
he saith unto you, do it."
III. Now, lastly, CONCERNING BEING SAVED: "He that believeth
and is baptized shall be saved."
What
is this being saved? Well, it means, of course, what everyone wants it
to mean, salvation from the punishment of sin. "He that believeth
and is baptized shall be saved." His transgressions shall be forgiven
him, his iniquity shall be blotted out, he shall not be brought into condemnation;
but in the last great day he shall be justified in Christ. Nay, he is
justified now, as the apostle saith, "Therefore, being justified
by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ."
That is certainly a part of this being saved.
It means,
next, that he that believeth and is baptized shall have salvation from
the dominion of his old nature. When thou believest in Christ, there shall
suddenly spring up in thee a now life, a new principle; a well shall be
digged within thy being, and a fountain of living water shall begin to
bubble up within thee unto life everlasting. A miracle shall be wrought
upon thee; there shall come into thy heart the Holy Ghost, who shall dwell
there to recreate thee, to set up within thy soul a new throne whereon
shall reign a new King. The old dominion of sin shall be broken as with
a rod of iron; and there shall be a now order of things within thy heart;
and righteousness shall begin to reign there by Jesus Christ.
"He
that believeth and is baptized shall be saved;" that is, he shall
have salvation from his old sins. He shall no longer be the slave of drunkenness;
he shall get the love of swearing by the throat; he shall have his lying,
his anger, his passion, under his feet. "He that believeth and is
baptized" shall see all his old adversaries put to the rout; and
what he could not do, through the weakness of his flesh, shall be done
for him by the power of the Spirit of God; and by divine grace he shall
master his sins. He shall begin to live unto God, under new impulses,
strengthened with a new power, and so he shall be delivered from his old
sins. Listen again, for this is wonderful. "He that believeth and
is baptized shall be saved;" he shall have salvation from going back
to his old sins. If it were not for the final perseverance of the saints,
I should think my gospel a poor gospel to preach; but he who truly believes
in Christ shall have such a change wrought in him that the blessed work
shall never be undone. My Lord shall light such a candle in thy heart
that the devil himself shall never be able to blow it out. Christ shall
come to thee with such power and authority, and set tip his eternal throne
in thy soul with such divine majesty and might, that thou shalt be his
in time and throughout eternity. We preach about no temporary salvation,
no work of grace that by-and-by will grow feeble, and lose its power;
but we tell of a work of grace that shall enable you who believe to go
on from strength to strength, from glory unto glory, till every sin in
you shall be driven out, and you shall be made perfectly like your Lord.
Then shall you behold his face in righteousness, and be with him for ever
and ever.
Once
more, "He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved he shall
have salvation from the age in which he lives. "But," says one,
"I do not want to be saved from that." Do you not? "No."
But if you go with the age, and go with the world, you will go down the
Niagara which this age is just now shooting, down to the destruction to
which this world is doomed. Cherish not the friendship of the world that
slew your Lord, for the world and the works that are in it shall be burned
up. You remember how Peter said, on the day of Pentecost, "Save yourselves
from this untoward generation." That is what I want you to
do tonight. "With many other words did he testify and exhort, saying,
Save yourselves from this untoward generation." A man who wishes
to be a man, and who desires to be a saved man, had need take up arms
against this evil age. He who would prove himself to be alive unto God
must swim against the current of the times. Dead fish go down stream;
can you not see them? I see the white bellies of the dead fish floating
down by myriads; but the living fish goes up the stream, against the current,
and finds his way to purer waters. Beloved, he who believes in Jesus Christ
with all his heart shall be made to play the man where men are now so
few, and to stand fast for God and truth where others yield to the Satanic
power, and to be holy where ungodliness, like a mighty torrent, now sweeps
down our streets. "He that believeth and is baptized" into the
adorable name of Jesus swears, as a Red Cross Knight, to follow Christ,
and Christ alone, believing in him though every man be a liar, and resolving
for him to live, for him to die, and in him to find hope here and eternal
felicity hereafter. He is the man who shall be saved from this present
evil age to the glory of God the Father.
All
this great work is wrought by faith in Christ; that is the one way of
salvation. "He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life."
Believe in him, as men sometimes say, "up to the hilt." Believe
in his Manhood sympathizing with you; believe in his Godhead able to help
you; believe in his blood cleansing you; believe in his eternal life bringing
everlasting life to you. God bless you, every one, for his dear Sons
sake! Amen.
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