This is an excerpt from a sermon delivered by C.H. Spurgeon a long time ago. Spurgeon was preaching on Jesus' well known parable the Prodigal Son. The whole sermon can be read here. Enjoy reading about the love of God in Christ for you. Be encouraged in the gospel!
Spurgeon:
This poor young man, in his hungry, faint, and wretched
state, having come a very long way, had not much heart in him. His hunger had
taken all energy out of him, and he was so conscious of his guilt that he had
hardly the courage to face his father; so his father gives him a kiss, as much
as to say, “Come, boy, do not be cast down; I love you.”
“Oh, the
past, the past, my father!” he
might moan, as he thought of his wasted years; but he had no sooner said that
than he received another kiss, as if his father said, “Never mind the past; I
have forgotten all about that.” This is the Lord’s way with His saved ones.
Their past lies hidden under the blood of atonement. The Lord saith by His
servant Jeremiah, “The iniquity if Israel shall be sought for, and there shall
be none; and the sins of Judah, and they shall not be found: for I will pardon
them whom I reserve.”
But then, perhaps, the young man looked down on his foul
garments, and said, “The
present, my father, the present, what a dreadful state I am in!” And with another kiss would come the
answer, “Never mind the present, my boy. I am content to have you as you are. I
love you.” This, too, is God’s word to those who are “accepted in the Beloved.”
In spite of all their vileness, they are pure and spotless in Christ, and God
says of each one of them, “Since you were precious in My sight, you have been
honourable, and I have loved you. Therefore, though in yourself you are
unworthy, through My dear Son you are welcome to My home.”
“Oh, but,” the boy might have said, “the
future, my father, the future! What would you think if I should ever go astray
again?”Then would come another holy kiss, and his father would say,
“I will see to the future, my boy; I will make home so bright for you that you
will never want to go away again.” But God does more than that for us when we
return to Him. He not only surrounds us with tokens of His love, but He says
concerning us, “They shall be My people, and I will be their God: and I will
give them one heart, and one way, that they may fear Me for ever, for the good
of them, and of their children after them: and I will make an everlasting
covenant with them, that I will not turn away from them, to do them good; but I
will put My fear in their hearts, that they shall not depart from me.”
Furthermore, He says to each returning one, “A new heart also will I give you,
and a new spirit will I put within you: and I will take away the stony heart
out of your flesh and I will give you an heart of flesh. And I will put My
spirit within you, and cause you to walk in My statutes, and ye shall keep My
judgments, and do them.”
Whatever there was to trouble the son, the father gave him
a kiss to set it all right; and, in like manner, our God has a love-token for
every time of doubt and dismay which may come to His reconciled sons. Perhaps
one whom I am addressing says, “Even though I confess my sin, and seek God’s
mercy, I shall still be in sore trouble, for through my sin, I have brought
myself down to poverty.” “There is a kiss for you,” says the Lord: “Your bread
shall be given to you, and your water shall be sure.” “But I have even brought
disease upon myself by sin,” says another. “There is a kiss for you, for I am
Jehovah-Rophi, the Lord that heals you, who forgives all your iniquities, who
heals all your diseases.” “But I am dreadfully down at the heel,” says another.
The Lord gives you also a kiss, and says, “I will lift you up, and provide for
all your needs. No good thing will I withhold from them that walk uprightly.”
All the promises in this Book belong to every repentant sinner, who returns to
God believing in Jesus Christ, His Son.
The father of the prodigal kissed his son much, and thus
made him feel happy there and then. Poor souls, when they come to Christ, are
in a dreadful plight, and some of them hardly know where they are I have known
them talk a lot of nonsense in their despair, and say hard and wicked things of
God in their dreadful doubt. The Lord gives no answer to all that, except a
kiss, and then another kiss. Nothings puts the penitent so much at rest as the
Lord’s repeated assurance of His unchanging love. Such a one the Lord has often
received, “and kissed him much,” that He might fetch him up even from the
horrible pit, and set his feet upon a rock, and establish his goings.
HT: Timmy Brister
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