White for Harvest
“Do you not say, ‘There are yet four months, and then comes the harvest’? Behold, I say to you,
Lift up your eyes and look at the fields, for they are already white for harvest.”
John 4:35.
MANY unbelieving Christians have a very large stock of reasons for not expecting to see many
conversions. They suppose that any present manifestation of the divine power in connection with the
truth of God is not to be expected. They read the history of past ages and they wonder, and sometimes,
when their eyes are sufficiently clear, they look forward with some sort of hope to the repetition of these
scenes in future years, that is to say, when they themselves are dead and buried, and a new age shall
have come upon the world. But as to God working any wonders in the world now, as to the conversion
of thousands now, they do not expect it; and if it were to happen they would be surprised, and beyond all
measure astonished. They are forever dwelling in the past, or seeking to roost in the future; but as for
now, now seeing God’s arm made bare, now setting to work for the conversion of men, now expecting
that God will win hearts unto Himself, they are not brought up to this mark yet. Their common reason
for expecting nothing now is this; that there are yet four months, and then comes the harvest. They say,
“This is not the time; we must have patience; we must wait; this is not the man; this is not the hour; this
is not the place; we must wait till, under other circumstances, other men being given, we look for
grander results; but we must not expect them now; there are yet four months, and then comes the
harvest.” You know that this is the general feeling at present in the Christian Church—not to expect any
great things now, but to be waiting and watching for something or other which may one of these days, in
the order of providence, “turn up.” Meanwhile, it is true that death does not cease to slay! Meanwhile, it
is a fact that our cemeteries and graveyards are being crowded, and that multitudes are perishing for lack
of knowledge. Meanwhile, it is most true that error stalks like a pestilence through the land. It is true
that, as yet, Christ does not see of the travail of His soul, and that few are the travelers who go through
the strait gate; but these good people seem indifferent to the perishing millions, and only say, “There are
yet four months, and then comes the harvest.” I have noticed that this kind of feeling has crept into the
smaller agencies, to the individual workers, too. In the Sunday school, how many a teacher does not
expect to see the children of his class converted, but fondly hopes that perhaps, when they are grown up,
the benefit of the instruction which he imparts to them may be apparent? “There are yet four months,”
they say, “and then comes the harvest.”
The most of those who teach our young people have become hopeful, that perhaps before those
young persons shall actually die, or before they come to be gray-headed, some truth that has been
dropped into their hearts may perhaps germinate, and bud, and come to perfection; but they do not
expect a present blessing. “There are yet four months, and then comes the harvest.” Take the most of our
ministers, and what are they looking for? They hope that God may visit their congregations; but as to
holding inquirers’ meetings every week, and expecting to find people crying, “sir, what must I do to be
saved?” after their sermons—all this is not according to their notions. “There are yet four months, and
then comes the harvest.” One of these bright sunny days, one of these long-expected months of which
the prophets have talked so long, perhaps in the millennium year, which some say is drawing so near,
they are expecting wonderful things, for “there are yet four months, and then comes the harvest.”
Truly, my brethren, one’s ears have been dinned and dunned with it till one has got sick of hearing
that “there are yet four months, and then comes the harvest.” Patience is a virtue, but sometimes decision
is a greater one. To wait long is well, but not when the harvest is ripe and ready, for then it will lie upon
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the ground and rot. To wait may be well, but not when men are dying, no, when hell is filling; not when
immortal souls are in jeopardy; not when the plague is raging, and we have, today, to stand between the
living and the dead, and wave the censer of the gospel of Jesus Christ, that the plague may be stopped.
Four months, indeed; four months! Have there not been months enough already? We have waited long;
we have waited till our patience may well have exhausted itself. It was to be four months in the days of
our grandfathers; it was to be four months in the days of our fathers; and now it is still to be four months.
Oh that we would learn the Savior’s words, and say no longer that “there are four months, and then
comes the harvest,” but let us do as He says, “Lift up your eyes, and look at the fields; for they are
already white for harvest.” Expect a present blessing; believe that you will have it; go to work to get it,
and do not be satisfied unless you have it! Let me dream dreams of the future, and put you off from
looking for a blessing only in the future; for though it may be true that your words will be blessed after
you are dead, yet do not be content with that hope, but want them to be blessed now. Though, possibly, a
sermon may bring a soul to God 20 years after it is preached, yet do not think of that, but think of those
who are present while it is preached, and be not satisfied unless now, on the spot, you reap some of that
wheat which is already white for harvest.
We shall now come directly to our subject, and may we have strength given by God’s grace to stir up
Christian laborers to great and instantaneous diligence.
We shall take our text in three ways—signs of harvest, needs of harvest, and fears of harvest.
I. SIGNS OF HARVEST.
“Do you not say, there are yet four months, and then comes harvest? Behold, I say to you, Lift up
your eyes, and look at the fields; for they are already white for harvest.” What signs were there, when
the Savior uttered these words, from which the disciples might effect an immediate gathering of souls? I
answer, first, that there was this sign—that the Savior had preached a sermon and that the whole of His
congregation had been converted. You will remind me that He had but one hearer. Yes, but that is the
first point to which I want to come. The conversion of one soul by the gospel should be to you a hopeful
sign that God intends to convert others. For look—the cholera is raging in certain towns—say, on the
Continent—and a physician has been studying the disease. He has administered a variety of drugs, but in
every case without success. He has prescribed different methods of treatment, but in no case has he
succeeded in effecting a cure. At last he has hit upon the right drug, and, administering it, he sees his
patient rallying; strength evidently given by the medicine; the struggle ends favorably, and the patient
rises to life and health. “Now,” says the physician, “I know that I shall have a harvest of men who will
be preserved from this disease, because the same medicine which heals one will heal two, will heal
twenty, will heal a thousand, or even twenty thousand; it only has to be administered; that one person
has been healed by this compound, and it is clear that as many more may be healed as are willing to
receive it.” Brothers, we do not lack this sign with regard to the gospel. We have had it; we have it still.
It is clear to you that the gospel has been blessed to the conversion of some. We, as a Church, can show
every week some whom God converts by His divine grace. We have not been left without our witnesses
at any time, but during the last 12 years God’s hand has continually been stretched out. Now we ought to
take this as an omen of good. If some have found the Savior; why not more? Christian soldier, you have
a sword in your hand that has won one battle—why should it not win another, and another, and another?
You have the omnipotence of God with you which has already broken one hard heart; why should it not
break other hard hearts? Already one stronghold of the enemy has been captured by the sounding of the
silver trumpet; why should not the rest fall too, when with the confidence of faith we sound the silver
trumpet yet again? When Napoleon landed on his return from Elba, and one man came and presented
himself as willing to serve the Emperor, “Here,” said Napoleon, “is at least one recruit.” So may we say
when we have converts—“Here is one recruit, and thank God for one; for the same attractive influence
which draws one will draw multitudes more.” We have got the right medicine; we have got the right
power, and therefore let us hope that there is a harvest to be reaped now.
But, again; there was another hopeful sign, namely, that this one convert was at that very moment
diligently engaged in making more converts. “The woman then left her water pot and went her way into
the city, and said to the men, Come, see a man which told me all things that ever I did.” We hear a great
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deal of strategy; it was our Savior’s strategy to bless the men of Samaria through this woman. He said to
her, “Go call your husband, and come here.” This is the blessing about the gospel, that if it gets into one
person’s heart it is sure to run from that one to all those who live in the neighborhood, and who are the
surroundings of that saved one. Just strike the match and let the spark drop in the prairie, and what a
roaring ocean of flame shall soon come from it! Let God’s grace fall into one soul, and who knows what
the end shall be? When this country of ours was all asleep, and religion was at the lowest possible ebb,
six young men at Oxford felt the inspiration of God and they met together to pray. They were expelled
by the college for the horrid crime of meeting together to pray, but what was the result of it? Soon, from
the Land’s End to John O’Groats house that same inspiration which had fallen upon those young men
had descended upon the multitudes, till from peers of the realm down to the black-faced coal miners,
men of all ranks and grades confessed the power of the God of Israel! One of those young men, as you
remember, wrote the hymn we sang just now—
“Saw you not the cloud arise,
Little as a human hand?”
It only needs a beginning; get one soul saved and you have got a preacher of Christ at once. There is not
a plant that grows by the hedge-side but takes care, as it dies, to scatter all down the bank the seeds of
succeeding generations of plants; and you cannot get the grace of God into a soul but it is sure to try to
disseminate the spiritual life, and to bring others to know the holy joy which it itself experiences. Here,
then, were two signs of harvest—there was one saved, and that one was trying to bring others to be
saved.
But there was a third sign that was still better, namely, that the others were coming to hear. There
they came, a whole troop of them from that little town, all anxious to listen to the Savior. Oh, it is a
blessed sign in these times of ours that men are willing to listen to the preaching of Christ. We can
scarcely find places large enough now in which to accommodate the multitude. It is true they will not go
to hear some ministers; who would? Who cares to go to hear where the preaching is dull? Some charity
boy being asked why the eunuch “went on his way rejoicing,” replied that, “It was because Philip had
done preaching to him,” and I do not doubt that there are some now who from the same cause go on
their way rejoicing when the sermon is over. But simple speech, plain talk about Christ, does still win
the ear, and if it is but tried, and it really is the gospel that is preached, there will never be a lack of
hearers. See how Sunday night after Sunday night the theatres have been filled when our brothers have
gone there to preach to the working classes the gospel of Jesus Christ. It is false that the working men of
London do not care to hear the gospel; they do care to hear it. Only preach it so that it can be
understood, take the velvet from your mouths, and speak plainly, and they will be sure to come to listen.
This is always a good sign, and we may fairly expect a harvest when once we get the people to hear.
When the fish get round the net, surely some of them will be taken; and when the furrows lie open,
surely he who scatters good seed may have hope that he shall see it spring up. Brothers and sisters in
Christ, I am persuaded there never was a time when people were more willing to listen to the gospel of
Christ than now. They will hear it if you only preach it so that it can be understood. Do not, of course,
expect them to listen to you if you are not earnest about what you have to say; but if you have something
to tell them that is worth their hearing, never fear but what they will give you the hearing. This was
another sign of harvest.
But there was yet a better one. Our Savior knew that a harvest was approaching because the persons
who were coming to hear were the very people who seemed the least likely to listen to His word. They
were Samaritans who were coming. “Oh!” said the Jew, “a Samaritan!” If he merely heard the word,
“Samaritan,” he turned on his heels and went his way very much in the same style as some of our
gentlemen do if they merely hear the word, “rough,” which is supposed to be the conglomeration of
everything that is horrible; and yet the person who happens to be called a “rough,” may be rough in
nothing but his garments, and may have as gentle a heart as ever beat beneath broadcloth. But so it is;
sometimes the very people come to listen to the gospel whom you would least expect to see listening to
it, and this is a good sign. When the Samaritans will hear, when the giddy multitude are willing to stand
crowded together to listen to the gospel of Jesus Christ, when the working man is not ashamed to come
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to the house of God to hear Christ preached, and will even stand at a corner of the street and listen to it,
it is a good sign, and it is a sign that we see now. The publican and the harlot are willing to receive the
gospel of Jesus, and God blesses them, and they enter into the kingdom of heaven. All these are good
signs of a coming harvest.
It is, moreover, an omen for good when we remember the men who have labored before us. How
much of labor has been spent upon this city! How many earnest men have wept and toiled among our
teeming masses, and have gone back to their Master with, “Who has believed our report, and to whom
has the arm of the Lord been revealed?” Here for three centuries, I may say, since the days of old Hugh
Latimer, right on from the time of the preaching at Paul’s Cross, there has never been a lack of
ministrations of God’s truth in this city of London, and in the surrounding parts of the metropolis. Some
of you can almost look back to the days when John Newton was at St. Mary Woolnoth, and can almost
remember Romaine at St. Ann’s, Blackfriars. We had among Dissenters such men as Dr. Gill, Dr.
Rippon, and afterwards Abraham Booth and others who labored and toiled for Christ, and yet, after all
met with but little comparative success. There must be some good come from all this. Has all this labor
been spent for nothing? Has the ground been watered by the sweat of these men, and have they plowed
it, and sown it, and is there never to come a harvest? Our Savior seems to say, “Those Samaritans over
yonder, they have the Word of God; they have heard something about it; even the Jews could not keep
the light of prophecy away from them; other men have prepared them to receive our teachings.” And,
doubtless, the days that are past have been preparing the population of England to receive the gospel,
and we may hope that when it does come to them it will come with a mighty power, for when the Holy
Spirit is pleased to work mightily we shall see something done, the like of which England has never seen
before, and which shall be the result of the accumulated labors of many years gone by. We have a right
to expect a harvest when we remember what has been done already.
And beloved, I think it is a sign of some good for the Church of Christ when there is a stir among
the people. The worst thing, perhaps, for true religion is the stagnation of the human mind. When people
are not thoughtful about other things, it is very seldom that you can get them to be thoughtful about
religion. It is generally supposed that our country friends, some of whom seem to vegetate rather than to
live, and who are not so pressed with business from morning till night as we are in London, must have a
great deal of time to give to religion, and that they must, therefore, be the most hopeful of congregations.
My country brothers and sisters do not confirm the supposition, and for myself—for I preach more in the
country than I do in the town, and often spend three or four days a week in addressing country
audiences—for myself I must say that glad as I am to address the assembled crowds in a field or
anywhere else, I do not find that the supposition that their having less to do makes them think more of
divine things is at all correct. I believe that where the intellect is most exerted, above other things, there
is, on the whole, the most hope of sending home some thought about divine things. It is true that thorns
may be a hindrance, and are, but at any rate they prove that the soil will grow something; and I think if I
were going to take a farm, I would sooner take one that was overgrown with thistles than one which
grew nothing at all, and it is better to lay hold of a man who really does think about something than of
one who thinks about nothing at all, and has nothing at all to think about. It was said—I do not know
how truly—that a singular apathy had seized the public mind, and that there was nothing that could stir
it up. Continually it was said that was an age in which nobody cared for anything, and I think it is pretty
nearly the fact. Nobody cared what anyone did or did not do. As long as people could be tolerably easy,
they seemed to be pretty well satisfied. If you did not put on the income-tax too heavily, nothing else
would much concern the people.
But now it is not so. I think I see the beginning of a stir in the public mind. Even the political stir of
the last few days, with all about it which one would deplore, still shows that the public mind is stirring,
for there generally comes a waking up about every 20 years or so. People go to sleep for a long time, but
all of a sudden they begin to rub their eyes, and to inquire about this, and about that, and about
something else. Well now is the time when the spirit is thus awakened to preach the gospel to that
awakened mind. It seems to me that no nobler opportunity could present itself than now. Now is the time
when the corners of the streets should ring with ministers’ voices; when the Word of God should be
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distributed in every house; when you should give away tracts, not such poor tracts as are mostly given
away, but tracts with something solid in them, and these should be given away by the millions, for just
now men are thoughtful, and let them have the grand revealed reality to think about. I believe on this
account, let others think what they will, that there are the signs of a coming harvest.
And, to conclude on this point, it is quite certain that at the present period the old priest-crafts do not
hinder men from hearing the gospel. Time was, I dare say, in Sychar and Samaria, when the people
dared not have come out to hear Christ; they had to ask some Samaritan Rabbi whether it was proper for
them to go to hear the new prophet. You know in half the country towns in England this is the case. The
people there no more dare to think for themselves in religion than they dared to think of old in the days
of serfdom and slavery. Squire-craft and priest-craft still tread the people in the country down. But it is
not so in London. Nobody here thinks of asking the parish priest where he shall go. We can get at the
people; we can bring the gospel to their doors; there is no dominant priest-craft to keep us back, and I
say, brothers and sisters, if Martin Luther could have lived in such an age as this, how he would have
rejoiced to see it; and if John Bunyan, after lying 12 years in Bedford Jail; if Richard Baxter, and
Alleine, and men of that stamp could have lived in days where there is such perfect liberty that every
man may hear the gospel if he cares to hear it, they would have been almost ready to say, “Lord, let
Your servants depart in peace, for our eyes have seen Your salvation.” This is the hour of the flowing of
the tide which taken at its flood leads on to fortune. If the Christian Church does not avail herself of the
present crisis, she deserves to have an age of infidelity to make her mourn over her laxity and her
indolence; if now the Christian Church dares not bestir herself, now when the minds of men are ready,
when their ears are open, when there is nothing to stand between us and the multitude, then I fear she
will have cause to repent and mourn in days of darkness and bitterness which will inevitably follow. Up,
then, believers; if the Bible is worthy of your belief proclaim it to others, and proclaim it especially just
now. Now is the day and now is the hour, for the fields are already white for the harvest.
II. Supposing all this to be true, we shall now speak of HARVEST NEEDS.
The needs of harvest are, first, many laborers. If many souls are to be converted, there must be many
to preach to them. If we are to expect a great ingathering, as I think we ought, there must be much
energy used and much effort put forth. “Pray you, therefore, the Lord of the harvest that He would send
forth laborers into His harvest,” and ask Him to be pleased to stir up Christian zeal throughout the whole
of Christendom that advantage may be taken of this auspicious hour. You cannot reap without laborers. I
saw a reaping machine the other day doing the work very well and very fast, but somehow or other one
liked the old-fashioned look of the field when the laborers were in it at work. Certainly there is no
machine that can do this work of soul-reaping. It must be done by men, chosen men, who, filled with the
Spirit of God, shall go forth to ingather souls. The first need, then, is more laborers. Who is there among
you who will consecrate himself to God? I do not ask for young men for the College just now, we have
enough; but I do ask for young men, old men, and all sorts of men, and women, too, to be laborers in the
great work of ingathering souls. Many sinners perish, and many saints do nothing. Oh, you who know
Christ, be indifferent no longer!
The next thing that is needed is sharp sickles as well as more laborers. A laborer is no good unless he
has a sickle, and if he can keep his sickle sharp, so much the better. You must get a hold, dear friends, of
God’s truth. You will do nothing without that truth of God, and you must have that truth well
understood. You must grind your sickles—you must go to work with such cutting truths as justification
by faith, as the total ruin of mankind—the hope that is laid up in the Cross, the energy of the Holy Spirit;
and when you know these truths, and know how to use them, you shall then be made great reapers in the
Master’s harvest. It is idle to say, “I will go,” and then go with no tool in your hands. Get the truth; get
hold of it well, get it sharp and in good order, and who knows, under the blessing of God the Holy Spirit,
what you may do!
The next need of harvest is some close binders. When the wheat is cut down you must tie it up with
sheaves. We want some of you who cannot preach, who cannot use the sickle, to go and gather up the
wheat which falls under the sickle when it is used by others. Invite them to come into church fellowship;
talk to them, get them into union with the people of God. And oh, if you happen to be in the church
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yourselves, try to keep the church knit together in love. Bind the sheaves together! We cannot have good
harvest work without loving hands to bind the people of God in one.
Then we need beside these some to take the sheaves home. The church of God is the barn, it is the
Master’s garner here; He has another garner yonder on the hilltop in heaven, but here we want you to
assist in bringing them into the church of Christ. When God has served them, try, if you can, to get them
to practice the ordinances of God, and to be joined with His people. And we need some of you, if you
cannot do anything yourselves either in reaping, or binding, or bringing the sheaves home, at least by
kind words and loving speeches to bring refreshments to the reapers. You can sometimes remind them
of the success you know they have had in certain places; you can cheer them when they begin to grow
uneasy. You can go to those who are working hard and say, “Be not discouraged; God has blessed you
to my soul. God has acknowledged your work in such-and-such cases. Persevere, and God is with you!”
As I look round this congregation I cannot help thinking what a mass of strength there must be here
for the Lord’s cause if it could but be brought out! You, young man, who are full of ability, who would
take the lead in any society into which you choose to enter; oh, young man, how I long for you as a
recruit for my Master and to enlist you in His service! If you were a Christian, or if being a Christian,
you were all on fire with love to Christ, what might you not accomplish! I would desire have that matron
yonder, with her family about her, to enlist for the Savior. Oh, what a position of usefulness she has!
And that great employer of labor there, how influential he is! How a good word from him might be
blessed to hundreds of people! And even you who are servants in families, nurses and so on, you may
not have so wide a sphere of labor, but you still have your place of influence. Oh, if every talent we
possess were but consecrated to Christ! London, you need not be in the dark if all God’s lamps which
are in you were but lit! O you mighty city! You need not be ignorant of the gospel if the tongue of every
child of God would but tell it out. If we were all enlisted, all made soldiers for Christ, might not this
country yet feel the power of Christ? And what are we? A slender few, a handful compared with the
masses of our fellow Christians! Would God that they were all baptized with the Holy Spirit and with
fire, and then we might see such a harvest as would make heaven itself ring as we shouted our harvest
home! I charge you who love the Lord I charge you by the nearness of death, by the shortness of the
time in which you can serve your Master, do not one of you be idle! Oh, my dear Hearers, I would
almost say if you are members of my church here, and are doing nothing, get out! Of what service can
you be? You are drags on the wheels; you are an impediment to the church’s course; you are like the
heavy baggage which impedes the armies of Israel! Do something! In God’s name I charge you, do
something, or else be ashamed of yourselves! Hasn’t Christ done much for you? Do you profess to have
been bought with His blood? Have you dared to sing—
“I love my God with zeal so great
That I could give Him all.”
And are you doing nothing? Some of you drink in the doctrines of grace, but if they are, indeed, true to
you, show the grace of the doctrines by spending and being spent in the Master’s cause! These, then, are
the needs of harvest.
III. And now, lastly, THE FEARS OF HARVEST.
The farmer sometimes fears that through lack of laborers he may be obliged to leave the wheat out
in the field till it is considerably damaged. After a certain time the wheat spears out, and there is a loss
sustained; birds, also, will feast upon it, and the farmer’s gains are going. My dear friends and fellow
reapers, this great city is the field that is white for the harvest, and every hour in which men are not
saved there are capabilities of usefulness that are falling out, and Satan is running away with
opportunities for good. Supposing those souls to be saved in a few years, yet there are all the years
between now and then lost for God. I am jealous, not only to have souls saved, but to have them saved
while young. Why should Satan have so much of their time? Why should so many years of their
influence be thrown into the wrong scale? The wheat, even if you do not get it in before it perishes, is
losing part of its value every hour. Oh, should we not be moved by this to take the sickle and go at once
to the work?
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But there is a worse fear than this, namely, that some other wheat may remain unharvested and so be
destroyed. It may rot in the place where it grows, and instead of gladdening the farmer, it may be there
to become a mere mass of rottenness—the very thing which might have been so useful. Ah, how much
of London may be destroyed for lack of laborers to go and take in the harvest! Ah, the millions that
never enter a place of worship! I speak within bounds, for even if they all wished to enter, there is hardly
room for one million out of three, and a great mass never come at all—but how few of us there are who
go after them! They perish, my brothers and sisters, they perish! They perish with an overwhelming
destruction; you know how they perish; you know how you were once on the brink of perishing, and
how divine mercy snatched you from it. You have read in that old Book of everlasting destruction which
is the portion of the men who die unwashed in the blood, and unforgiven. I charge you, if you would not
see souls lost, rise, and with the sickle get to the harvest, for meanwhile do you not know that there are
other reapers at work? If the Christian does not work, there are others who will labor. If the truth of God
does not now spread among the masses, error is spreading. You cannot silence the tongue of infidelity if
you shut your own mouth. You cannot stop the voice of priest-craft if you are quiet yourselves. You
know that the messengers of Satan are busy. As Hugh Latimer said, “The busiest bishop in England is
the devil; he is always traveling up and down his diocese; he neither neglects town nor village, nor
hamlet, nor so much as one of those who live in his see. He is seeking both by night and by day the ruin
of souls.” Other hands—they are gathering the harvest—but it belongs to your Master, and will you
endure it, will you endure it? You servants of Christ, will you allow it? Shall the harvest be taken away?
No, by the love you bear your Master, take the prey from the mighty.
And now, lastly, perhaps the most solemn reflection is, that whether we gather in the harvest or not,
there is a reaper who is silently gathering it every hour. Just now it is whispered that he is sharpening
his sickle. That reaper is DEATH! You may look upon this great city as the harvest field, and every
week the bills of mortality tell us how steadily and how surely the scythe of death moves to and fro, and
how a lane is made through our population, and those who were once living men are taken like sheaves
to the garner, taken to the graveyard and laid aside. You cannot stop their dying, but oh, that God might
help you to stop their being damned! You cannot stop the breath from going out of their bodies, but oh,
if the gospel could but stop their souls from going down to destruction! It can do it, and nothing else can
take its place. Just now this cholera has come. There can be little doubt, I suppose, about it being here
already in some considerable force, and probably it may be worse. The Christian cannot dread it, he has
nothing to lose, and everything to gain. Still, for the sake of others he may well pray that God would
avert His hand and not let His anger burn. But since it is coming, I think it ought to be a motive for
active exertion. If there ever is a time when the mind is sensitive it is when death is abroad. I remember
when first I came to London how anxiously people listened to the gospel, for the cholera was raging
terribly. There was little scoffing then. All day and sometimes all night long I went about from house to
house and saw men and women dying, and oh, how glad they were to see one’s face, and when many
were afraid to enter their houses for fear of disease, we who had no fear about such things found
ourselves most gladly listened to when we spoke of Christ and of divine things. And now, again, is the
minister’s time; now is the time for all of you who love souls. You may see men more alarmed than
now, I hope they may not be; I pray to God that they may not be; but if they should, avail yourselves of
it. You have the balm of Gilead—when their wounds smart, pour it in. You know of Him who died to
save, tell them of Him. Lift high the cross before their eyes. Tell them that God became man that man
might be lifted up to God. Tell them of Calvary, and its groans, and cries, and sweat of blood. Tell them
of Jesus hanging on the cross to save sinners. Tell them that there is life for a look at the Crucified One.
Tell them that He is able to save to the uttermost all them who come unto God by Him. Tell them that
He is able to save at the eleventh hour, and to say to the dying thief, “Today shall you be with Me in
Paradise.”
Oh, dear hearers, while I am exhorting you who are Christians to look after strangers, I may well ask
you to look over those who are sitting in the pews with you, for there are some of you who, if you were
to die tonight—if, instead of going down yonder steps beneath the columns you were to die in your
seats, where would your souls go? If you reached your home and staggered into your bed, and found it
Fields White for Harvest Sermon #706
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your tomb, what would be your eternal fate? Will not conscience tell you that you could not plead a
Savior’s blood? You have never trusted it. You cannot expect a living Savior to meet you in a dying
moment, for you have never loved Him. Oh, may God’s grace make you love Him now tonight! Sinner,
look to Jesus, and you shall be saved. Trust Christ now; trust Him only; trust Him wholly; trust Him
earnestly; and you shall rejoice, even tonight, and you shall be a part of that wheat which is white
already unto harvest.
Oh, my hearers, I am concerned for your souls, I would gladly reap, myself, and bind up some
sheaves to be carried into our earthly sheltering place in prospect of our heavenly home. I cannot bear
the thought that any of you should ever be bound in bundles to be burned! What? Will any of you be
lost, and be borne into the flame which never can be quenched? It must not be. Turn! Turn! Why will
you die? Are there any reasons you can urge for your choice when you select companionship with
sinners here and devils hereafter, and despise the gospel of salvation, and reject the overtures of grace?
There are none! You know you are wrong! You are persuaded that your present position is false, and
you are not without some dread of the result at last. Are there not at times fears which sting like
serpents, and poison your peace of mind so that you would gladly be free from them if you could? Well,
listen to me, or rather listen to God’s Word as spoken by me—“Come unto Me all you that labor and are
heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” I speak of no untried remedy, I have myself tasted it; I am a
witness of the efficacy and power of the blood of Christ to cleanse from all sin. I am surrounded by
thousands who are all so many proofs of its value and unchanging might—
“Venture on Him, venture wholly,
Let no other trust intrude;
None but Jesus
Can do helpless sinners good.”
He is waiting to be gracious, near at hand, and not afar off. There are, in some parts of the Continent
where I have traveled, places so sparsely inhabited and the people so poor, that no medical man resides
in the district. And in such cases, if anyone falls sick, he must write to the nearest wayside inn to have a
notice put up that if any doctor or medical man is passing by, they would be glad if he would in kindness
stay and pay them a visit, so as to give them a chance of being healed, if human help can avail in their
case. Should no physician pass that way, then the man must die, there is no help for him. The ignorance
of his friends and their poverty cannot help him, he must go to his grave. But here, my dear Hearers, is
the difference in your case. The Physician knocks at your door, and tells you of your disease, explains to
you the remedy, assures you of a complete and of an immediate cure. And you—oh madness and
unspeakable folly!—you hesitate to welcome Him, and you reject, it may be, all His offered care. Then
you must perish, for your ignorance and poverty are such that no help of man can avail. You cannot
effect your own cure, and therefore you will go down to the pit of hell with your blood upon your own
head. May this folly soon cease, and you be inclined to listen to Him whose touch gives health, yes, life
from the dead! In His name I proclaim salvation; look, then, to Him; believe, and life everlasting shall
be yours.
May God Almighty bless you, and may we meet in heaven. Amen.
P
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