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Title:
Second Coming Of Christ
Author:
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
Publisher:
Whitaker House
ISBN: 0883683806
Pages: 192
Book Type: Paperback
Size: 0.53 x 6.91 x 4.21 inches
Released Date: Jun 1996
Stock Status:
Available
Price:
$6.50
Reviews
Table Of Contents
Description:
Christ's first Advent altered the course of all mankind,
forever changing our destiny. His Second Coming will
have an even greater impact as the King of Kings returns
to earth to claim His bride and to judge all humanity.
Find out what His coming will be like and how to prepare
yourself for His glorious return.
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Table
Of Contents
1. He Is Coming with
Clouds --- 7
2. The Reward of the Righteous --- 33
3. The Ascension and the Second Advent Practically
Considered --- 61
4. Coming Judgment of the Secrets of Men --- 89
5. The Two Appearings and the Discipline of Grace
--- 115
6. Preparation for the Coming of the Lord --- 141
7. Watching for Christ's Coming --- 169
Excerpt
Chapter
One He Is Coming with Clouds
Behold, he cometh with clouds; and every eye shall
see him, and they also which pierced him: and all
kindreds of the earth shall wail because of him.
Even so, Amen.
-- Revelation 1:7
In reading the entire first chapter
of Revelation, we observe how the beloved John saluted
the seven churches in Asia with, "Grace be unto
you, and peace" (v. 4). Blessed men scatter blessings.
When the benediction of God rests upon us, we pour
out benedictions upon others.
From this blessing, John's gracious heart rose into
adoration of the great King of Kings. As the hymn
puts it, "The holy to the holiest lead."
They that are good at blessing men will be quick at
blessing God.
It is a wonderful doxology that John has given us:
"Unto him that loved us, and washed us from our
sins in his own blood, And hath made us kings and
priests unto God and his Father; to him be glory and
dominion for ever and ever. Amen" (Revelation
1:5-6). I like the Revised Version for its alliteration
in this case, although I cannot prefer it for other
reasons. It reads: "Unto him that loveth us,
and loosed us from our sins by his blood" (v.
5 RV). Truly our Redeemer has loosed us from sin,
but the mention of His blood suggests washing rather
than loosing. We can keep the alliteration and yet
retain the meaning of cleansing if we read the passage,
"Unto him that loved us, and laved us."
Loved us, and laved us -- carry those two words with
you. Let them lie upon your tongue to sweeten your
breath for prayer and praise. "Unto him that
loved us, and laved us'be glory and dominion for ever
and ever."
Then, John told of the dignity which the Lord has
put upon us in making us kings and priests, and from
this he ascribed royalty and dominion unto the Lord
Himself. John had been extolling the great King, whom
he called, "the prince of the kings of the earth"
(v. 5). Such indeed He was, and is, and is to be (Revelation
4:8). When John had touched upon that royalty which
is natural to our divine Lord, and that dominion which
has come to Him by conquest and by the gift of the
Father as the reward of all His travail, he then went
on to note that Christ has "made us kings."
Our Lord diffuses His royalty among His redeemed.
We praise Him because He is in Himself a king, and
next, because He is a kingmaker, the fountain of honor
and majesty. He has not only enough of royalty for
Himself, but He hands a measure of His dignity to
His people. He makes kings out of such common stuff
as He finds in us poor sinners. Will we not adore
Him for this? Will we not cast our crowns at His feet?
He gave our crowns to us; will we not give them back
to Him?
"To him be glory and dominion for ever and ever.
Amen." King by divine nature! King by filial
right! Kingmaker, lifting up the beggar from the dunghill
to set him among princes! King of Kings by the unanimous
love of all your crowned ones! "Thou art he whom
thy brethren shall praise" (Genesis 49:8)! Reign
forever! Unto You be hosannas of welcome and hallelujahs
of praise. Lord of heaven and earth, let all things
that are, or ever shall be, render unto You all glory
in the highest.
Beloved, do not your souls catch fire as you think
of the praises of Immanuel? Gladly would I fill the
universe with His praises. "Oh, for a thousand
tongues to sing" the glories of the Lord Jesus!
If the Spirit who dictated the words of John has taken
possession of our spirits, we will find adoration
to be our highest delight. Never are we so near to
heaven as when we are absorbed in the worship of Jesus,
our Lord and God. Oh, that I could now adore Him as
I will do when, delivered from this encumbering body,
my soul will behold Him in the fullness of His glory!
It would seem from the chapter that John's adoration
was increased by his expectation of the Lord's Second
Coming, because he cries, "Behold, he cometh
with clouds." John's adoration awoke his expectation,
which all the while was lying in his soul as an element
of the vehement heat of reverent love that he poured
forth in his doxology. "Behold, he cometh,"
he said, and thus he revealed one source of his reverence.
"Behold, he cometh," and this exclamation
was the result of his reverence. He adored until his
faith realized his Lord and became a second and nobler
sight.
I think, too, that his reverence was deepened and
his adoration was rendered more fervent by his conviction
of the speediness of his Lord's coming. "Behold,
he cometh," or is coming: John meant to assert
that He is even now on His way. As workmen are moved
to be more diligent in service when they hear their
master's footfall, so saints are undoubtedly quickened
in their devotion when they are conscious that He
whom they worship is drawing near. He has gone away
to the Father for a while, and so He has left us alone
in this world; but He has said, "I will come
again, and receive you unto myself" (John 14:3).
We are confident that He will keep His word. Sweet
is the remembrance of that loving promise.
That assurance was pouring its savor into John's heart
while he was adoring. It became inevitable, as well
as most right and proper, that his doxology at its
close would have introduced him to the Lord Himself
and caused him to cry out, "Behold, he cometh."
Having worshipped among the pure in heart, he saw
the Lord. Having adored the King, he saw Him assume
the judgment seat and appear in the clouds of heaven.
When once we enter upon heavenly things, we know not
how far we can go nor how high we can climb. John,
who began with blessing the churches, now beholds
his Lord. May the Holy Spirit help us to think reverently
of the wondrous coming of our blessed Lord, when He
will appear to the delight of His people and the dismay
of the ungodly!
There are three points I would like to glean from
the text. They will seem commonplace to some of you.
Indeed, they are the commonplace of our divine faith,
yet nothing can be of greater importance. The first
is that our Lord Jesus is coming: "Behold, he
cometh with clouds." The second is that Christ's
coming will be seen by all: "Every eye shall
see him, and they also which pierced him." Finally,
this coming will cause great sorrow: "All kindreds
of the earth shall wail because of him."
THE LORD JESUS CHRIST IS COMING AGAIN
May the Holy Spirit help us as we
remember that our Lord Jesus Christ is coming! This
announcement is thought worthy of a note of admiration.
As the Latins would say, there is an Ecce placed here:
"Behold, he cometh." As in the old books
the printers put hands in the margin pointing to special
passages, such is this "Behold!" It is a
Nota Bene, calling upon us to note well what we are
reading. Here is something that we are to hold and
behold. We now hear a voice crying, "Come and
see!" The Holy Spirit never uses superfluous
words or redundant notes of exclamation: when He cries,
"Behold," it is because there is reason
for deep and lasting attention.
Will you turn away when He bids you pause and ponder,
linger and look? You who have been beholding vanity,
come and behold the fact that Jesus comes. You who
have been beholding this and looking at that and thinking
of nothing worthwhile, forget these passing sights
and spectacles, and for once behold a scene which
has no parallel. It is not a monarch in her jubilee,
but the King of Kings in His glory. "This same
Jesus" (Acts 1:11) who went up from Olivet into
heaven is coming again to earth in like manner as
His disciples saw Him go up into heaven. Come and
behold this great sight. If ever there were a thing
in the world worth looking at, it is this. Behold!
See if there were ever glory like unto His glory!
Hearken to the midnight cry, "Behold, the bridegroom
cometh!" (Matthew 25:6). It has practical implications
for you. "Go ye out to meet him" (Matthew
25:6). This voice is to you, O sons of men. Do not
carelessly turn aside, for the Lord God Himself demands
your attention. He commands you to "Behold!"
Will you be blind when God bids you to behold? Will
you shut your eyes when your Savior cries, "Behold"?
When the finger of inspiration points the way, will
not your eyes follow where it directs you? "Behold,
he cometh." O beloved, look here, I implore you.
A Vivid Realization
If we read the words of our text carefully,
this "Behold" shows us first that this coming
is to be vividly realized. I think I see John. He
is in the spirit, but suddenly he seems startled into
a keener and more solemn attention. His mind is more
awake than usual, though he was always a man of bright
eyes that saw afar. (We compare him to the eagle for
the height of his flight and the keenness of his vision.)
Yet, all of a sudden, even he seemed startled with
a more astounding vision. He cried out, "Behold!
Behold!" He has caught sight of his Lord. He
said not, "He will come by and by," but,
"I can see Him; He is now coming." He had
evidently realized the Second Advent. He had so conceived
of the Second Coming of the Lord that it had become
a matter of fact to him, a matter to be spoken of
and even to be written down. "Behold, he cometh!"
Have you and I ever realized the coming of Christ
so fully as this? Perhaps we believe that He will
come. I should hope that we all do. If we believe
that the Lord Jesus has come the first time, we believe
also that He will come the second time. But, are these
equally assured truths to us? Perhaps we have vividly
realized the first appearing from Bethlehem to Golgotha,
and we have traced the Lord from Calvary to Olivet,
understanding that blessed cry, "Behold the Lamb
of God, which taketh away the sin of the world!"
(John 1:29). Yes, "the Word was made flesh, and
dwelt among us, (and we beheld his glory, the glory
as of the only begotten of the Father,) full of grace
and truth" (John 1:14). But, have we with equal
firmness grasped the thought that He will "appear
the second time without sin unto salvation" (Hebrews
9:28)? Do we now say to each other when we gather
in happy fellowship, "Yes, our Lord is coming"?
His coming should be to us not only a prophecy assuredly
believed among us, but a scene that is pictured in
our souls and anticipated in our hearts. My imagination
has often set forth that awesome scene; but better
still, my faith has realized it. I have heard the
chariot wheels of the Lord's approach, and I have
endeavored to set my house in order for His reception.
I have felt the shadow of the great cloud that will
attend Him damping the ardor of my worldliness. I
hear even now in my spirit the sound of the last trumpet,
whose tremendous blast startles my soul to serious
action and puts force into my life. I pray to God
that I would live more completely under the influence
of that stately event!
Brothers and sisters, to this realization I invite
you. One of Christ's followers said to his friends
after the Lord had risen, "The Lord is risen
indeed" (Luke 24:34). I want you to feel just
as certain that the Lord is coming indeed. I desire
that, as we meet our fellow Christians, we would say
to one another, "Behold, he cometh!" We
are sure that He will come and that He is on the way,
but the benefit of a more vivid realization would
be incalculable.
A Zealous Proclamation
This coming is to be zealously proclaimed,
for John did not just calmly say, "He cometh,"
but he vigorously cried, "Behold, he cometh!"
Just as the herald of a king prefaces his message
by a trumpet blast that calls attention, so John cries,
"Behold!" As the town crier of old was accustomed
to saying, "O yes! O yes!" or to use some
other striking formula by which he called on men to
pay attention to his announcement, so John has stood
in the midst of us and cried, "Behold, he cometh!"
He called attention by that emphatic word, "Behold!"
It was no ordinary message that John brought, and
he would not have us treat his word as a commonplace
saying. He threw his heart into the announcement.
He proclaimed it loudly, he proclaimed it solemnly,
and he proclaimed it with authority: "Behold,
he cometh."
A Frequent Proclamation
Beloved, no truth ought to be more
frequently proclaimed, next to the first coming of
the Lord, than His Second Coming. You cannot thoroughly
set forth all the ends and bearings of the first advent
if you forget the second. At the Lord's Supper, there
is no discerning the Lord's body unless you discern
His first coming, but there is no drinking of His
cup to its fullness unless you hear Him say, "Till
I come" (Revelation 2:25). You must look forward
as well as backward.
So must it be with all our ministries; we must look
to Christ on the cross and on the throne. We must
vividly realize that He, who has once come, is coming
again, or else our testimonies will be marred and
one-sided. We will make lame work of preaching and
teaching if we leave out either advent.
An Assuring Proclamation
Next, this truth is to be unquestionably
asserted. "Behold, he cometh." It is not,
"Perhaps He will come," or, "Possibly
He may yet appear." "Behold, he cometh"
should be dogmatically asserted as an absolute certainty,
which has been realized by the heart of the man who
proclaims it.
All the prophets said that He will come. From Enoch
down to the last that spoke by inspiration, they declared,
"Behold, the Lord cometh with ten thousands of
his saints" (Jude 1:14). You will not find one
who has spoken by the authority of God who does not,
either directly or by implication, assert the coming
of the Son of Man, when the multitudes born of woman
will be summoned to His bar to receive the recompense
of their deeds. All the promises are travailing with
this prophecy: "Behold, he cometh."
We have His own word for it, and this makes assurance
doubly sure. He has told us that He will come again.
He often assured His disciples that if He went away
from them, He would come again to them (John 14:28).
He left us the Lord's Supper as a parting token to
be observed until He comes (1 Corinthians 11:26).
As often as we break bread, we are reminded of the
fact that, though it is a most blessed ordinance,
yet it is a temporary one that will cease to be celebrated
when our absent Lord is once again present with us.
What, dear ones, is there to hinder Christ from coming?
When I have studied and thought over this word, "Behold,
he cometh," I have said to myself, Yes, indeed
He does: who could hold Him back? His heart is with
His church on earth. In the place where He fought
the battle, He desires to celebrate the victory. His
"delights [are] with the sons of men" (Proverbs
8:31). He and all His saints are waiting for the day
of His appearing. The very earth, in her sorrow and
her groaning, travails for His coming (Romans 8:22),
which is to be her redemption. The creation is made
subject to vanity for a little while; but when the
Lord comes again, the creation itself also "shall
be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the
glorious liberty of the children of God" (Romans
8:21).
We might question whether He would come a second time
if He had not already come the first time. However,
if He came to Bethlehem, be assured that His feet
will yet stand upon Olivet. If He came to die, doubt
not that He will come to reign. If He came to be "despised
and rejected of men" (Isaiah 53:3), why should
we doubt that "He shall come to be admired in
all them that believe" (2 Thessalonians 1:10)?
His sure coming is to be unquestionably asserted.
An Attention-Demanding Proclamation
Dear friends, this fact that He will
come again is to be taught as demanding our immediate
interest. "Behold, he cometh with clouds."
Behold, look at it, meditate on it. It is worth thinking
of. It concerns you personally. Study it again and
again. "He cometh." He will so soon be here
that it is put in the present tense: "He cometh."
That shaking of the earth, that blotting out of sun
and moon, that fleeing of heaven and earth before
His face -- all these are so nearly here that John
described them as accomplished. "Behold, he cometh."
There is a sense hovering in the background that Christ
is already on the way. All that He is doing in providence
and grace is a preparation for His coming. All the
events of human history, all the great decisions of
His stately majesty whereby He rules all things --
all these are tending towards the day of His appearing.
Do not think that He delays His coming and then suddenly
He will rush here in hot haste. He has arranged for
it to take place as soon as wisdom allows. We know
not what may make the present delay imperative, but
the Lord knows, and that suffices.
You grow uneasy because nearly two thousand years
have passed since His Ascension and Jesus has not
yet come; but you do not know what had to be arranged
for and how much a lapse of time was absolutely necessary
for the Lord's designs. Those are no little matters
which have filled up the great pause: the intervening
centuries have teemed with wonders. A thousand things
may have been necessary in heaven itself before the
consummation of all things could be arrived at. When
our Lord comes, it will be seen that He came as quickly
as He could in His infinite wisdom. He cannot behave
Himself otherwise than wisely, perfectly, divinely.
He cannot be moved by fear or passion so as to act
hastily as you and I too often do. He dwells in the
leisure of eternity and in the serenity of omnipotence.
He does not have to measure out days, months, and
years and to accomplish so much in such a space or
else leave His life's work undone. Rather, according
to the power of an endless life, He proceeds steadily
on. To Him a thousand years are but as one day (2
Peter 3:8). Therefore, be assured that the Lord is
even now coming. He is making everything tend that
way. All things are working towards that grand climax.
At this moment, and every moment since He went away,
the Lord Jesus has been coming back again. "Behold,
he cometh!" He is on the way! He is nearer every
hour!
A Manifest Proclamation
And we are told that His coming will
be attended by a peculiar sign: "Behold, he cometh
with clouds." We will have no need to question
whether it is the Son of Man who has come or whether
He is indeed come. This is to be no secret matter:
His coming will be as manifest as yonder clouds. In
the wilderness the presence of Jehovah was known by
a visible pillar of cloud by day and an equally visible
pillar of fire by night (Exodus 13:21-22). That pillar
of cloud was the sure token that the Lord was in His
Holy Place, dwelling between the cherubim. Such is
the token of the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Every eye the cloud shall scan,
Ensign of the Son of man.
It is written, "And then shall
appear the sign of the Son of man in heaven: and then
shall all the tribes of the earth mourn, and they
shall see the Son of man coming in the clouds of heaven
with power and great glory" (Matthew 24:30).
I cannot quote at this time all the passages of Scripture
in which it is indicated that our Lord will come either
sitting upon a cloud (Revelation 14:14, 15, 16), or
"with clouds," or "in the clouds of
heaven," but such expressions are abundant. Is
it not to show that His coming will be majestic? He
makes the clouds His chariots. He comes with hosts
of attendants, and these of a nobler sort than earthly
monarchs can summon to do them homage.
With clouds of angels, cherubim, seraphim, and all
the armies of heaven, He comes. With all the forces
of nature, thundercloud, and blackness of tempest,
the Lord of all makes His triumphant entrance to judge
the world. The clouds are the dust of His feet in
that terrible day of battle when He will rid Himself
of His adversaries, shaking them out of the earth
with His thunder, and consuming them with the devouring
flame of His lightning. All of heaven will gather
with its utmost pomp at the great appearing of the
Lord, and all the terrible grandeur of nature will
then be seen at its fall. Not as the Man of Sorrows,
despised and rejected of men, will Jesus come. Rather,
as Jehovah came upon Sinai in the midst of thick clouds
and a terrible darkness, so will He come, whose coming
will be the final judgment.
A Mighty Proclamation
The clouds are meant to set forth
the might, as well as the majesty, of His coming.
"Ascribe ye strength unto God: his excellency
is over Israel, and his strength is in the clouds"
(Psalm 68:34). This was the royal token given by Daniel
the prophet: "I saw in the night visions, and,
behold, one like the Son of man came with the clouds
of heaven" (Daniel 7:13). Not less than divine
is the glory of the Son of God, who once had nowhere
to lay His head. The most sublime objects in nature
will most aptly minister to the manifest glory of
the returning King. "Behold, he cometh,"
not with the swaddling cloths of His infancy, the
weariness of His manhood, or the shame of His death,
but with all the glorious tapestry of heaven's high
chambers. The hangings of the divine throne room will
aid His stately entrance.
A Terrifying Proclamation
The clouds also denote the terror
of His coming to the ungodly. His saints will be caught
up together with Him in the clouds, to meet the Lord
in the air (1 Thessalonians 4:17); but the clouds
will turn their blackness and horror of darkness to
those that remain on earth. Then will the impenitent
behold this dread vision: "the Son of man coming
in the clouds of heaven." The clouds will fill
them with dread, and the dread will be abundantly
justified, for those clouds are big with vengeance
and will burst in judgment on their heads. His Great
White Throne, though it is bright and lustrous with
hope for His people, will, with its very brightness
and whiteness of immaculate justice, strike dead the
hopes of all those who trusted that they might live
in sin and yet go unpunished. "Behold, he cometh
with clouds."
I am in happy circumstances at present because my
subject requires no effort of imagination from me.
To indulge on such a theme would be a wretched desecration
of so sublime a subject that should come home to all
hearts in its own simplicity. Think clearly for a
moment until the meaning becomes real to you. Jesus
Christ is coming in unmatched, majestic splendor.
When He comes, He will be enthroned far above the
attacks of His enemies, the persecutions of the godless,
and the sneers of skeptics. He is coming in the clouds
of heaven, and we will be among the witnesses of His
appearing. Let us dwell on this truth.
EVERYONE WILL SEE HIS APPEARING
My second observation about the text
is that our Lord's coming will be seen by all. "Behold,
he cometh with clouds; and every eye shall see him,
and they also which pierced him." To my way of
thinking, the word every allows no exceptions, leaving
no one excluded. "Every eye shall see him."
By Physical Eyes
First, I gather from this expression
that it will be a literal appearing and an actual
sight. If the Second Advent were to be a spiritual
manifestation to be perceived by the minds of men,
the phraseology would have been, "Every mind
shall perceive him." But it is not so; we read,
"Every eye shall see him." Now, the mind
can behold the spiritual, but the eye can only see
that which is distinctly material and visible. The
Lord Jesus Christ will not come spiritually, for in
that sense He is already here; but He will come really
and substantially, for "every eye shall see him,"
even those unspiritual eyes that gazed on Him with
hate and pierced Him. Do not dreamily say to yourself,
"Oh, there is some spiritual meaning about all
this." Do not destroy the teaching of the Holy
Spirit by the idea that there will be a spiritual
manifestation of the Christ of God, but that a literal
appearing is out of the question. That would be altering
the record. The Lord Jesus will come to earth a second
time as literally as He has come a first time. The
same Christ who ate a piece of honeycomb and of broiled
fish after He had risen from the dead; the same Jesus
who said, "Handle me, and see; for a spirit hath
not flesh and bones, as ye see me have" (Luke
24:39) -- "this same Jesus' in like manner"
(Acts 1:11), with a material body, is to come in the
clouds of heaven. In the same manner as He went up,
He will come down. He will be literally seen. The
words cannot be honestly read in any other way.
"Every eye shall see him." Yes, I do literally
expect to see my Lord Jesus with these eyes of mine,
even as that saint Job expected, who long ago fell
asleep, believing that "though after my skin
worms destroy this body, yet in my flesh shall I see
God" (Job 19:26). He believed his eyes, and not
another's, would see for himself. There will be a
real resurrection of the body -- though the moderns
doubt it -- such that we will see Jesus with our own
eyes. We will not find ourselves in a shadowy, dreamy
land of floating fictions where we may perceive but
cannot see. We will not be airy nothings -- mysterious,
vague, and impalpable. Rather, we will literally see
our glorious Lord, whose appearing will be no phantom
show or shadow dance. Never a day will be more real
than the Day of Judgment; never a sight will be more
true than the Son of Man upon the throne of His glory.
Will you take this statement to heart so that you
may feel the force of it? We are getting too far away
from facts nowadays and too much into the realm of
myths and notions. "Every eye shall see him."
In this there will be no delusion.
By All Kinds of Eyes
Note well that He is to be seen by
all kinds of men: "Every eye shall see him"
-- the king and the peasant, the most learned and
the most ignorant. Those who were blind before will
see when He appears. I remember a man born blind who
loved our Lord most intensely, and he was happy to
glory in this, that his eyes had been reserved for
his Lord. Said he, "The first whom I shall ever
see will be the Lord Jesus Christ. The first sight
that greets my newly-opened eyes will be the Son of
Man in His glory." There is great comfort in
this to all who are now unable to behold the sun.
Since "every eye shall see him," you also
will see the King in His beauty.
Small pleasure is this to eyes that are full of filthiness
and pride. You care not for this sight, and yet you
must see it whether you please or do not please. You
have hitherto shut your eyes to good things, but you
must see Him when He comes. All that dwell upon the
face of the earth -- if not all at the same moment,
yet still with the same certainty -- will behold the
once crucified Lord. They will not be able to hide
themselves nor to hide Him from their eyes. They will
dread the sight, but it will come upon them, even
as the sun shines on the thief who delights in the
darkness. They will be obliged to own in dismay that
they behold the Son of Man. So overwhelmed with the
sight, they will not be able to deny it.
He will be seen of those who have been long since
dead. What a sight that will be for Judas, for Pilate,
for Caiaphas, and for Herod! What a sight it will
be for those who, in the course of their lives, said
that there was no Savior and no need of one, or that
Jesus was a mere man and His blood was not a propitiation
for sin! Those that scoffed and reviled Him have long
since died, but they will all rise again to this heritage
among the rest: they will see Him whom they blasphemed
sitting in the clouds of heaven.
Prisoners are troubled at the sight of the judge.
The trumpet of the court brings no music to the ears
of criminals. But you must hear it, O impenitent sinners!
Even in your graves you must hear the voice of the
Son of God and live and come forth from the tombs
to receive the things done in your bodies, whether
they were good or bad (2 Corinthians 5:10). Death
cannot hide you, nor can the vault conceal you, nor
will rottenness and corruption deliver you. You are
bound to see with your own eyes the Lord who will
judge both you and your fellowmen.
By Eyes That Pierced Him
It is emphasized in the text that
He will be seen by "they also which pierced him."
In this are included all of the company who nailed
Him to the tree, along with those who took the spear
and made the gash in His side -- indeed, all that
had a hand in His cruel crucifixion. It includes all
of these, but it encompasses many more besides. "They
also which pierced him" are by no means a few.
Who have pierced Him? Why, those that once professed
to love Him and have gone back to the world. Those
that once ran well, what has hindered them (Galatians
5:7)? Now they use their tongues to speak against
the Christ whom once they professed to love. They
whose inconsistent lives have brought dishonor upon
the sacred name of Jesus have also pierced Him. Those
who refused His love, stifled their consciences, and
refused His rebukes also have pierced Him. Alas, so
many of you are piercing Him now by your base neglect
of His salvation! They who have gone every Sunday
to hear of Him but have remained "hearers only,
deceiving [them]selves" (James 1:22), destroying
their own souls rather than yield to His infinite
love, have pierced His tender heart.
Dear ones, I wish I could plead effectively with you
so that you would not continue any longer among the
number of those that pierced Him. If you will look
at Jesus now and mourn for your sin, He will put your
sin away. Then you will not be ashamed to see Him
in that day. Even though you did pierce Him, you will
be able to sing, "Unto him that loved us, and
washed us from our sins in his own blood" (Revelation
1:5). But remember, if you persevere in piercing Him
and fight-ing against Him, you will still have to
see Him in that day to your terror and despair. He
will be seen by you and by me, however badly we may
behave. And what horror will that sight cost us!
I am often ill; who knows how soon I will come to
my end? I would use all that remains to me of physical
strength and providential opportunity to spread the
Gos-pel. We never know how soon we may be cut off,
and then we are gone forever from the opportunity
of bene-fiting our fellowmen. It would be a pity to
be taken away with one opportunity of doing good left
unused. Thus, I earnestly plead with you under the
shadow of this great truth: I urge you to be ready,
since we will both behold the Lord in the day of His
appearing. Yes, I will stand in that great throng.
You also will be there. How will you feel? You are
not accustomed, perhaps, to attend a place of worship,
but you will be there. The occasion will be very solemn
to you. You may absent yourself from the assemblies
of the saints now, but you will not be able to absent
yourself from the gathering of that day. You will
be there, one in that great multitude. You will see
Jesus the Lord as truly as if you were the only person
before Him, and He will look upon you as certainly
as if you were the only one who had been summoned
to His bar.
Kindly think about this. Let your heart dwell on it.
Silently repeat to yourself the words, "Every
eye shall see him, and they also which pierced him."
HIS COMING WILL BRING SORROW
My third comment on this text is a
painful one, but it needs to be enlarged upon: His
coming will cause great sorrow. What does the text
say about His coming? "All kindreds of the earth
shall wail because of him."
A General Sorrow
"All kindreds of the earth."
Thus, this sorrow will be very general. You thought,
perhaps, that when Christ came, He would come to a
glad world, welcoming Him with song and music. You
may have thought that there might be a few ungodly
people who would be destroyed with the breath of His
mouth, but that the bulk of mankind would receive
Him with delight. See how different it will be: "all
kindreds of the earth" -- all sorts of men that
belong to the earth, all earthborn men, men out of
all nations, kindreds, and tongues. They will weep
and wail and gnash their teeth at His coming. Oh,
what a sad outlook! There are no smooth things to
prophesy. What do you think of this?
A Great Sorrow
Next, this sorrow will be very great.
They will "wail." I cannot put into English
the full meaning of that most expressive word. Sound
it out at length, and it conveys its own meaning.
It is as when men wring their hands and burst out
into a loud cry, or as when eastern women in their
anguish rend their garments and lift up their voices
with the most mournful notes. "All kindreds of
the earth shall wail," wail as a mother laments
over her dead child, wail as a man might wail who
found himself hopelessly imprisoned and doomed to
die. Such will be the hopeless grief of all the kindreds
of the earth at the sight of Christ in the clouds.
If they remain impenitent, they will not be able to
be silent; they will not be able to repress or conceal
their anguish. Rather, they will wail and openly give
vent to their horror. What a sound that will be that
will go up before high heaven when Jesus sits upon
the cloud and in the fullness of His power summons
them to judgment! Then they "shall wail because
of him."
Will your voice be heard in that wailing? Will your
heart be breaking in that general dismay? How will
you escape? If you are one of the "kindreds of
the earth" and remain impenitent, you will wail
with the rest of them. Unless you now fly to Christ,
hide yourself in Him, and so become one of the kindred
of heaven; unless you repent and become one of His
chosen, blood-washed ones who will praise His name
for washing them from their sins, there will be wailing
at the judgment seat of Christ, and you will be in
it.
From this text it becomes quite clear that men will
not be universally converted when Christ comes, because,
if they were so, they would not wail. Then, they would
lift up the cry, "Welcome, Son of God!"
The coming of Christ would be as the hymn puts it:
Hark, those bursts of acclamation!
Hark, those loud triumphant chords!
Jesus takes the highest station.
Oh, what joy the sight affords!
These acclamations come from His people.
But according to the text, the multitude of mankind
will weep and wail, and therein they will not be among
His people. Do not, therefore, look for salvation
at some future day, but believe in Jesus now, and
find in Him your Savior at once. If you joy in Him
now, you will much more rejoice in Him in that day;
but if you will have cause to wail at His coming,
it will be well to wail at once.
False Expectations
Note one more truth. It is quite certain
that when Jesus comes in these latter days, men will
not be expecting great things of Him. You know the
talk nowadays about "a larger hope." Those
who put forth this vain philosophy deceive the people
with the idle dream of repentance and restoration
after death, a fiction unsupported by the least bit
of Scripture. If the kindreds of the earth expected
that they would die out and cease to be when Christ
comes, they would be rejoicing because they had escaped
the wrath of God instead of wailing. Would not each
unbeliever say, "It were a consummation devoutly
to be wished"? If they thought that at His coming
there would be a universal restoration and a general
delivery of souls long shut up in prison, would they
wail? If Jesus were supposed to come to proclaim a
general restoration, they would not wail but would
shout for joy.
Because His coming to the impenitent is ominous with
black despair, they will wail because of Him. If His
first coming did not give you eternal life, His Second
Coming will not. If you did not hide in His wounds
when He came as your Savior, there will be no hiding
place for you when He comes as your Judge. They will
weep and wail because, having rejected the Lord Jesus,
they have turned their backs on the last possibility
of hope.
Why do they "wail because of him"? Will
it not be because they will see Him in His glory and
they will recollect that they slighted and despised
Him? They will see Him come to judge them, as they
remember that once He stood at their door with mercy
in His hands and said, "Open to me," but
they would not admit Him. They refused His blood;
they refused His righteousness; they trifled with
His sacred name; now, they must give an account for
this wickedness. They put Him away in scorn; now,
when He comes, they find that they can trifle with
Him no longer. The days of child's play and of foolish
delay are over; now, they have solemnly to give an
accounting of their lives. See, the books are opened!
They are covered with dismay as they remember their
sins and know that they are written down by a faithful
pen. They must give an account. Unwashed and unforgiven,
they cannot render that account without knowing that
the sentence will be, "Depart from me, ye cursed"
(Matthew 25:41). This is why they weep and wail because
of Him.
O souls, my natural love of ease makes me wish that
I could present pleasant things to you, but they are
not in my commission. However, I scarcely need to
wish to put forth a soft Gospel, for so many are already
doing it to you at your cost. Since I love your immortal
souls, I dare not flatter you. As I will have to answer
for it in the last great day, I must tell you the
truth.
Ye sinners, seek His face,
Whose wrath you cannot bear.
Seek the mercy of God right now. Although
I am in pain, I have written this to implore you to
be reconciled to God. "Kiss the Son, lest he
be angry, and ye perish from the way, when his wrath
is kindled but a little. Blessed are all they that
put their trust in him" (Psalm 2:12).
However, if you will not have my Lord Jesus, He is
coming all the same. He is on the road now, and when
He comes, you "shall wail because of him."
Oh, that you would make Him your friend, and then
meet Him with joy! Why would you choose eternal death?
He gives life to all those who trust Him. Believe,
and live.
May God save your souls right now, and He will have
the glory. Amen.
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