"Those who love the world have a religion they had better get rid of."
By: Charles Spurgeon
There are other persons who profess to be Christians, but who spend all
the week round without ever brushing against their religion. They expect
it to call upon them as the postman does, at regular hours; it may
knock them up on Sunday morning, but it must mind it does not intrude
upon the Monday.
What are the books they read? Those yellow volumes of one shilling or
two shilling trash, which abound at the railway book-stalls? What is
their talk about? Well, anything you like, except what it should be.
What do they do during the week? Oh, they do twenty things. But what do
they attempt for Christ?
Do for Christ, sir! With what surprise they look at you, when you
put the question. What did they do all the week? Well, let us see;
beginning with Monday and going on to Saturday—hear it all—
and what is its sum total? As far as the Church or the world is
concerned, these people might just as well have been in bed and asleep
all the time; they do nothing whatever; they have a name to live, and
practically they are dead.
If a young man joins a rifle corps, there he is; he stands in the rank;
he learns his practice and drill; and tries to get a prize by hitting
the target. But when a man joins the Christian Church, where is he? I do
not know where he is. You may find his name seven hundred and something
in the attendance book. He is there, but what is he?
You find him at chapel on Sunday, but where is he, and what is he doing
for the cause of Christ during the week? The smallest scrap of paper
would be too large to record his deeds of faith. He thinks he adorns his
profession; but what kind of adornment it is, or who ever sees that
adornment, I cannot tell.
I believe that the man who does not make his religion his first and last
thought, who does not subject all his actions, his eating and drinking
too, to the cause of Christ, has not the work of God in his soul.
“Whether therefore ye eat, or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to the
glory of God.”
The man who has not consecrated the lapstone—who has not dedicated the
counter to God—who has not made the desk and the pen holiness unto the
Lord, has yet to learn what the Christian religion is. It is not a
uniform to be worn one day and cast away the next; it ought to be a part
of the woof and warp of your being; it ought to run in your blood,
penetrate the marrow of your bones, work in the arms, gaze from the
eyes, and speak from the tongue.
O to be baptized, saturated, immersed in the Spirit of God, and so,
wherever we go, to say to men who put our Lord at the bottom of the
scale, “For us to live is Christ;” only such, I say, will ever be able
to add, “For me to die is gain.”
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