The Sin of Unbelief



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Topic: Religions > Bible
User: "Carl"
Date: 06 Jul 2007 03:35:59 PM
Object: The Sin of Unbelief
The following is a great sermon from C.H. Spurgeon that is just as relevent
today as it was in 1855. Definitely worth reading.
May God bless,
Carl
my website -- http://www.nettally.com/saints/
my blog -- http://www.anniemayhem.com/cgi-bin/wordpress/
---
The Sin of Unbelief
January 14, 1855
by C. H. SPURGEON
(1834-1892)
This updated and revised manuscript is copyrighted 2000 by Tony Capoccia.
All rights reserved.
"The officer had said to the man of God, 'Look, even if the LORD should open
the floodgates of the heavens, could this happen?' The man of God had
replied, 'You will see it with your own eyes, but you will not eat any of
it!'" [2 Kings 7:19]
One wise man may deliver a whole city; one good man may be the means of
safety to a thousand others. The holy ones are "the salt of the earth," the
means of the preservation of the wicked. Without the godly as a safeguard,
the race would be utterly destroyed. In the city of Samaria there was one
righteous man--Elisha, the servant of the Lord. Godliness and holiness was
completely extinct in the court. The king was a sinner of the worst kind,
his iniquity was glaring and notorious. Jehoram walked in the ways of his
father Ahab, and worshipped false gods. The people of Samaria were wicked
like their king; they had gone astray from Jehovah; they had forsaken the
God of Israel: they did not remember the words of Jacob, "The Lord your God
is one God;" and in wicked idolatry they bowed before the idols of the
heathens, and therefore the Lord of Hosts allowed their enemies to oppress
them until the curse of Ebal was fulfilled in the streets of Samaria, for
"the most gentle and sensitive woman who would not venture to touch the
ground with the sole of her foot, will begrudge the husband she loves and
her own son or daughter," because of her of intense hunger (Deut 28:56-58).
In this awful situation the one holy man was the means of salvation. The one
grain of salt preserved the entire city; the one warrior for God was the
means of the deliverance of the whole struggling multitude. For Elisha's
sake the Lord sent the promise that the next day, food which could not be
obtained at any price, would be available at the cheapest possible price--at
the very gates of Samaria. We may picture the joy of the multitude when the
prophet first uttered this prediction. They knew him to be a prophet of the
Lord; he had divine credentials; all his past prophecies had been fulfilled.
They knew that he was a man sent from God, and was speaking Jehovah's
message. Surely the king's eyes would glisten with delight, and the starving
multitude would leap for joy at the prospects of so speedy a release from
the famine. "Tomorrow, they would shout, "tomorrow our hunger will be over,
and we will feast until we are full.
However, the officer on whom the king leaned expressed his disbelief. We don't
hear that any of the common people ever doubted; but one of noble position
did. It is strange, that God has seldom chosen the great men of this world.
Elevated positions in life and faith in Christ seldom agree. This great man
said, "Impossible!" and, with an insult to the prophet, he added, "Look,
even if the Lord should open the floodgates of the heavens, could this
happen?" His sin lay in the fact, that after repeated evidences of Elisha's
ministry, yet he disbelieved the assurances uttered by the prophet on God's
behalf. He had, doubtless, seen the marvelous defeat of Moab; he had been
startled at the testimony of the resurrection of the Shunamite's son; he
knew that Elisha had revealed Benhadad's secrets and struck his marauding
hosts with blindness; he had seen the army of Syria decoyed into the heart
of Samaria; and he probably knew the story of the widow, whose oil filled
all the vessels, and redeemed her sons. And the cure of Naaman was common
conversation at all events in the court; and yet, in the face of all this
accumulated evidence, in the teeth of all these credentials of the prophet's
mission, he still doubted, and scornfully told him that heaven must become
an open floodgate, before the promise could be performed. Whereupon God
pronounced his doom by the mouth of the man who had just now proclaimed the
promise: "You will see it with your own eyes, but you will not eat any of
it!" And providence--which always fulfills prophecy--destroyed the man.
Trampled down in the streets of Samaria, he perished at its gates, seeing
the bounty of food, but tasting none of it.
Perhaps he was arrogant in the way that he carried himself, and insulting to
the people; or he tried to restrain their eager rush towards the food; or,
as we would say, it might have been by mere accident that he was crushed to
death; so that he saw the prophecy fulfilled, but never lived to enjoy it.
In his case, seeing was believing, but it was not enjoying.
I will this morning invite your attention to two things--the man's sin and
his punishment. I will only say a little about this man, since I have
already detailed the circumstances, but I will discuss the sin of unbelief
and the punishment for that sin.
I. First, the SIN. His sin was unbelief. He doubted the promise of God.
In this particular case unbelief took the form of a doubt of the divine
reality, or a mistrust of God's power. Either he doubted whether God really
meant what he said, or whether it was within the range of possibility that
God would fulfill his promise. Unbelief has more phases than the moon, and
more colors than the chameleon. Common people, when speaking of the devil,
say, that he is sometimes seen in one shape, and sometimes in another. I am
sure this is true of Satan's first-born child--unbelief, for it has a
multitude of forms.
At one time I see unbelief dressed up as an angel of light. It calls itself
humility, and it says, "I would not be presumptuous; I dare not believe that
God would pardon me; I am too great a sinner." We call that humility, and
thank God that our friend is in such a good condition. I don't thank God for
any such delusion. It is the devil dressed as an angel of light; it is
unbelief after all.
At other times we detect unbelief in the shape of a doubt of God's
immutability: "The Lord has loved me, but perhaps he will cast me away
tomorrow. He helped me yesterday, and under the shadows of his wings I
trust; but perhaps I will receive no help in the next affliction. He may
have thrown me away; he may not remember his covenant, and forget to be
gracious."
Sometimes this infidelity is embodied in a doubt of God's power. Every day
we see new problems, we are involved in a net of difficulties, and we think
"surely the Lord cannot deliver us." We strive to get rid of our burden, and
finding that we can't do it, we think God's arm is as short as ours, and his
power as little as human might.
A fearful form of unbelief is that doubt which keeps men from coming to
Christ; which leads the sinner to distrust the ability of Christ to save
him, to doubt the willingness of Jesus to accept such a great transgressor.
But the most hideous of all is the traitor, in its true colors, blaspheming
God, and madly denying his existence. Infidelity, deism, and atheism, are
the ripe fruits of this deadly tree; they are the most massive eruptions of
the volcano of unbelief. Unbelief has become full mature, when removing the
mask and laying aside the disguise, it profanely stalks the earth, uttering
the rebellious cry, "There is no God," striving in vain to shake the throne
of the divinity, by lifting up its arm against Jehovah, and in its arrogance
would,
"Snatch from his hand the balance and the rod,
Rejudge his justice--be the god of God."
Then truly unbelief has come to its full perfection, and then you see what
it really is, for the least unbelief is of the same nature as the greatest.
I am astonished, and I am sure you will be too, when I tell you that there
are some strange people in the world who do not believe that unbelief is a
sin. I must call them strange people, because they are sound in their faith
in every other respect, but they imagine and they deny that unbelief is
sinful.
I remember a young man joining a circle of friends and ministers, who were
disputing whether it was a sin for men and women not to believe the gospel.
While they were discussing it, he said, "Gentlemen am I in the presence of
Christians? Are you believers in the Bible, or are you not?" They said, "Of
course we are Christians." "Then," he said, "doesn't the Scripture record
Jesus as saying, 'When the Holy Spirit comes, he will convict the world of
guilt in regard to sin . . . . because men do not believe in me?' And isn't
it the damning sin of sinners, that they do not believe on Christ?" I could
not have thought that persons should be so fool-hardy as to venture to
assert that, "it is not a sin for a sinner not to believe in Christ." I
thought that, however far they might wish to push their sentiments, they
would not tell a lie to uphold the truth, and, in my opinion this is what
such men are really doing. Truth is a strong tower and never requires to be
reinforced with error. God's Word will stand against all man's schemes. I
would never invent such an illogical argument to try to prove that it is not
a sin on the part of the ungodly not to believe, for I am sure it is, for I
am taught in the Scriptures that, "This is the verdict: Light has come into
the world, but men loved darkness instead of light," and when I read,
"whoever does not believe stands condemned already because he has not
believed in the name of God's one and only Son," I affirm, and the Word
declares it, unbelief is a sin. Surely with rational and unbiased persons,
it cannot require any reasoning to prove it. Is it not a sin for a creature
to doubt the word of its Maker? Is it not a crime and an insult to the
Divinity, for me, an atom, a particle of dust, to dare to deny his words? Is
it not the very summit of arrogance and extremity of pride for a son of Adam
to say, even in his heart, "God I doubt your grace; God I doubt your love,
God I doubt your power?" Oh! dear friends believe me, if you could roll all
sins into one mass--if you could take murder, and blasphemy, and lust,
adultery, and fornication, and everything that is vile and unite them all
into one vast ball of filthy corruption, they would not, even then, equal
the sin of unbelief. This is the king of all sins, the epitome of guilt; the
mixture of the venom of all crimes; the dregs of the wine of Gomorrah; it is
the number one sin, the masterpiece of Satan, the chief work of the devil.
I will attempt this morning, for a little while, to show the extremely evil
nature of the sin of unbelief.
1. First the sin of unbelief will appear to be extremely heinous when we
remember that it is the parent of every other iniquity.
There is no crime which unbelief will not produce. I think that the fall of
man was surely a result of the sin of unbelief. It was at this point that
the devil tempted Eve. He said to her, "Did God really say, 'You must not
eat from any tree in the garden'?" He whispered and insinuated a doubt, "Did
God really say?" as much as to say, "Are you quite sure he said that?" It
was by means of unbelief--that thin part of the wedge--that the other sin
entered; curiosity and the rest followed; she touched the fruit, and
destruction came into this world. Since that time, unbelief has been the
prolific parent of all guilt. An unbeliever is capable of the vilest crime
that ever was committed. Unbelief, friends! Unbelief! why it hardened the
heart of Pharaoh--it has given liberty to many blaspheming tongues--yes, it
even became a disciple, and murdered Jesus. Unbelief!--it has sharpened the
knife of the suicide; it has mixed many a cup of poison; and many to a
shameful grave, who have murdered themselves and rushed with bloody hands
before their Creator's tribunal, because of unbelief.
Give me an unbeliever--let me know that he doubts God's word--let me know
that he distrusts his promise and his threats; and with that for a premise,
I will conclude that the man will, in time, unless there is amazing
restraining power exerted on him, be guilty of the foulest and blackest
crimes. Ah! this is a Beelzebub sin; like Beelzebub, it is the leader of all
evil spirits. It is said of Jeroboam that he sinned and caused Israel to
sin; and it may be said of unbelief that it not only sins itself, but makes
others sin; it is the egg of all crime, the seed of every offence; in fact,
everything that is evil and vile lies couched in that one word--unbelief.
And let me say here, that unbelief in the Christian is of the identical
nature as unbelief in the sinner.
It is not the same in its final effect, for it will be pardoned in the
Christian; yes, it is pardoned: it was laid on the scapegoat's head; it was
blotted out and atoned for; but it is of the same sinful nature. In fact, if
there can be one sin more monstrous than the unbelief of a sinner, it is the
unbelief of a saint. For a saint to doubt God's word--for a saint to
distrust God after innumerable instances of his love, after ten thousand
proofs of his mercy, exceeds everything.
Furthermore, in a saint, unbelief is the root of other sins.
When I am perfect in faith, I will be perfect in everything else; I would
always fulfill the principle if I always believed the promise. But it is
because my faith is weak, that I sin. Put me in trouble, and if I can fold
my arms and say, Jehovah-Jireh, the Lord will provide, you will not find me
using wrong means to escape from it. But let me be in earthly distress and
difficulty; if I distrust God, what then? Perhaps I will steal, or do a
dishonest act to get out of the hands of my creditors; or if kept from such
a transgression, I may plunge into excess to drown my anxieties. Once faith
is taken away, the reins are broken; and who can ride an wild horse without
rein or bridle? Like the chariot of the sun, with Phaeton for its driver,
such would be our case if we are without faith. Unbelief is the mother of
vice; it is the parent of sin; and, therefore, I say it is a deadly evil--a
master sin.
2. But secondly; unbelief not only gives birth to sin, but it also fosters
sin.
How is it that men can continue in their sin under the thunders of the Sinai
preacher? How is it that, when a thundering preacher stands in the pulpit,
and, by the grace of God, cries aloud, "Cursed is every man that does not
keep all the commands of the law,"--how is it that when the sinner hears of
the coming day of God's justice, he is still hardened, and continues on in
his evil ways? I will tell you; it is because unbelief of the coming
judgment of God prevents it from having any effect on him. There is a firing
range nearby, where soldiers practice firing their weapons. Now when workers
walk by there, they are always careful to stay behind the raised mounds of
dirt, to ensure that they are not hit by the shots; so behind mounds of dirt
they can do what they please. So it is with the ungodly man. The devil gives
him unbelief; he thus puts up an great mound of dirt, and finds refuge
behind it. Ah! sinners, when the Holy Spirit knocks down your unbelief--when
he brings home the truth in a display of power, how the law will work upon
your soul. If man would truly believe that the law is holy, that the
commandments are holy, just, and good, how he would be shaken over hell's
mouth; there would be no sitting and sleeping in church any longer; no
careless listeners; no going away and immediately forgetting what type of
men you are. Oh! once you get rid of unbelief, then every shot from the
canon of the law would fall upon the sinner, and the slain of the Lord would
be many. Again, how is it that men can hear the wooing of the cross of
Calvary, and yet not come to Christ? How is it that when we preach about the
sufferings of Jesus, and conclude by saying, "yet there is room,"--how is it
that when we dwell upon his cross and passion, men are not broken in their
hearts? It is said,
Law and terrors only harden,
All the while they work alone:
But a sense of blood-bought pardon
Will dissolve a heart of stone.
I think the story of Calvary is enough to break a rock. Rocks did split over
when they saw Jesus die. I think the tragedy of Golgotha is enough to make a
rock gush with tears, and to make the most hardened wretch weep with tears
of repentant love; but even though we often repeat to story of Calvary, yet
who weeps over it? Who cares about it? Friends, you sit as unconcerned as if
it did not mean anything to you. Oh! stop and look, all you that walk by
Calvary. Is it nothing to you that Jesus died? You seem to say "It really is
nothing." What is the reason for your attitude? Because there is unbelief
between you and the cross. If there were not that thick veil between you and
the Savior's eyes, his looks of love would melt you. But unbelief is the sin
which keeps the power of the gospel from working in the sinner: and it is
not until the Holy Spirit strikes that unbelief down--it is not till the
Holy Spirit rips away that infidelity and takes it completely out, that we
can find the sinner coming to put his trust in Jesus.
3. But there is a third point. Unbelief hinders a man from performing any
good works.
"Everything that does not come from faith is sin," is a great truth in more
ways than one. "Without faith it is impossible to please God." You will
never hear me say a word against morality; you will never hear me say that
honesty is not a good thing, or that sobriety is not a good thing; on the
contrary, I would say they are commendable things; but I will tell you what
I will say afterwards--I will tell you that they are just like the primitive
currency of India; it may pass for money among the Indians, but it will
never do in England; these virtues may have worth here below, but not above.
If you don't have something better than your own goodness, you will never
get to heaven. Some of the Indian tribes use little strips of cloth instead
of money, and I would not find fault with them if I lived there; but when I
come to England, strips of cloth will not suffice. So honesty, sobriety, and
such things, may be very good among men--and the more you have of them the
better. I exhort you, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely--if anything is
excellent or praiseworthy, have them--but they will not do up in heaven. All
these things put together, without faith, do not please God. Virtues without
faith are whitewashed sins. Obedience without faith, if it is possible, is
simply gold plated disobedience. Not to believe, nullifies everything. It is
the fly in the ointment; it is the poison in the pot. Without faith, with
all the virtues of purity, with all the benevolence of charity, with all the
kindness of disinterested sympathy, with all the talents of genius, with all
the bravery of patriotism, and with all the decision of principle--"without
faith it is impossible to please God." Don't you see then, how bad unbelief
is, because it prevents men from performing good works. Yes, even in
Christians themselves, unbelief disables them.
Let me just tell you a tale--a story of Christ's life. A certain man had an
afflicted son, possessed with an evil spirit. Jesus was up in Mount of
Transfiguration; so the father brought his demon possessed son to the
disciples. What did the disciples do? They said, "Oh, we will cast him out."
They put their hands on him, and they tried to do it; but they whispered
among themselves and said, "We are afraid we will not be able to do this."
In time the possessed boy began to foam at the mouth; he foamed and
scratched the earth, grabbing at it in his seizures. The demonic spirit
within him was alive. The devil was still there. In vain they repeated their
exorcism, yet the evil spirit remained like a lion in his den, and all their
efforts could not dislodge him. "Go!" they said; but he would not leave. "Go
to the pit!" they cried; but he remained immoveable. The lips of unbelief
cannot frighten the evil one, who might well have said, "Faith I know, Jesus
I know, but who are you? You have no faith." If they had faith, as small as
a grain of mustard seed, they might have been able to cast the devil out;
but their faith was gone, and therefore they could do nothing.
Look at poor Peter's case, too. While he had faith, Peter walked on the
waves of the sea. That was a splendid walk; I almost envy him walking on the
water. Why, if Peter's faith had continued, he might have walked across the
Atlantic to America. But suddenly there came a large wave up behind him, and
he said, "That will sweep me away;" and then another in front of him, and he
cried out, "That will overwhelm me;" and he thought--how could I be so
presumptuous as to be walking on the top of these waves? Down goes Peter.
Faith was Peter's life preserver; faith was Peter's charm--it kept him up;
but unbelief sent him down. Do you know that you and I, all our lifetime,
will have to walk on the water? A Christian's life is always walking on
water--mine is--and every wave could swallow and devour us, but faith makes
us stand. The moment you cease to believe, that moment distress comes in,
and down you go. Oh! why do you doubt, then?
Faith encourages every virtue; unbelief murders every one. Thousands of
prayers have been strangled in their infancy by unbelief. Unbelief has been
guilty of infanticide; it has murdered many an infant prayer; many songs of
praise that would have swelled the chorus of the skies, have been stifled by
an unbelieving murmur; many a noble enterprise conceived in the heart has
been destroyed before it could come forth, by unbelief. Many men would have
been a missionaries; would have stood and preached their Master's gospel
boldly; but they were filled with unbelief. Once a giant stops believing, he
then becomes a dwarf. Faith is like Samson's hair but on the Christian; cut
it off, and you may put out his eyes--and he can do nothing.
4. Our next remark is--unbelief has been severely punished.
Turn to the Scriptures! I see a world all fair and beautiful; its mountains
laughing in the sun, and the fields rejoicing in the golden light. I see
maidens dancing, and young men singing. How beautiful the vision! But look!
a solemn and holy man lifts up his hand, and cries, "A flood is coming to
drown the earth: the fountains of the great deep will be opened, and
everything will be covered. Look at the ark! I have toiled one hundred and
twenty years with these hands to build it; flee to it, and you will be
safe." "No!, you old man; away with your empty predictions! No! let us be
happy while we can! when the flood comes, then we will build an ark; but
there is no flood coming; tell that to fools; we don't believe any such
things."
See the unbelievers pursue their merry dance. Listen! Unbeliever. Don't you
hear rumbling noise? The heart of the earth has begun to move, her rocky
ribs are strained by dire convulsions from within; look! they have broke
open with the enormous strain, and from the openings torrents of water rush
out, water that has been hidden ever since God concealed them in the heart
of our world. Heaven is split apart! it rains. Not drops, but clouds
descend. A waterfall, just like the Niagara Falls, rolls from heaven with
mighty noise. Both deeps--the deep below and deep above--both join their
hands.
Now unbelievers, where are you now! There are the last two unbelievers left.
A man--his wife holding onto him around the waist--he stands on the last
summit that is above the water. See him there? The water is up to his hips
even now. Hear his last shriek! He is floating--he is drowned. And as Noah
looks from the ark he sees nothing. Nothing! It is a profound emptiness.
"Sea monsters lay eggs and make their homes in the palaces of kings."
Everything is overthrown, covered, drowned. What did it? What brought the
flood on the earth? Unbelief. By faith Noah escaped from the flood. By
unbelief the rest were drowned.
And, oh! don't you know that unbelief kept Moses and Aaron out of Canaan?
They did not honor God; they struck the rock when they ought to have spoken
to it. They disbelieved: and therefore the punishment came upon them, that
they would not inherit that good land, for which they had toiled and
labored.
Let me take you where Moses and Aaron lived--to the vast and howling
wilderness. We will walk around it for a while; we will become like the
wandering Bedouins, we will walk through the desert for a while. There lies
a carcass whitened in the sun; there is another, and there is another. What
do these bleached bones mean? What are these bodies--there a man, and there
a woman? What are all these? How did these corpses get here? Surely some
great military camp must have been here cut off in a single night by a
blast, or by bloodshed. Ah; no, no. Those bones are the bones of Israel;
those skeletons are the old tribes of Jacob. They could not enter because of
unbelief. They did not trust in God. Spies said they could not conquer the
land. Unbelief was the cause of their death. It was not the Anakites that
destroyed Israel; it was not the howling wilderness which devoured them; it
was not the Jordan which proved a barrier to Canaan; neither Hivite or
Jebusite killed them; it was unbelief alone which kept them out of Canaan.
What a doom to be pronounced on Israel, after forty years of journeying;
they could not enter because of unbelief!
Not to multiply instances, but remember Zechariah. He doubted, and the angel
struck so that he was silent and unable to speak. His mouth was closed
because of unbelief. But oh! if you want to have the worst picture of the
effects of unbelief--if you want to see how God has punished it, I must take
you to the siege of Jerusalem, that worst massacre which time has ever seen;
when the Romans leveled the walls to the ground, and put all the inhabitants
to the sword, or sold them as slaves in the marketplace. Have you ever read
of the destruction of Jerusalem, by Titus? Did you never turn to the tragedy
of Masada, when the Jews stabbed each other rather than fall into the hands
of the Romans? Don't you know, that to this day the Jew walks through the
earth a wanderer, without a home and without a land? He is cut off, as a
branch is cut from a vine; and why? Because of unbelief. Each time you see a
Jew with a sad and somber face--each time you mark him like a citizen of
another land, treading as an exile in our country--each time you see him,
pause and say, "Ah! it was unbelief which caused you to murder Christ, and
now it has driven you to be a wanderer; and faith alone--faith in the
crucified Nazarene--can bring you back to your country, and restore it to
its ancient grandeur." Unbelief, you see, has the mark of Cain on its
forehead. God hates it; God has dealt hard blows on it: and God will
ultimately crush it. Unbelief dishonors God. Every other crime touches God's
territory; but unbelief aims a blow at his divinity, impeaches his truth,
denies his goodness, blasphemes his attributes, maligns his character;
therefore, God of all things, hates first and chiefly, unbelief, wherever it
is.
5. And now to close this point--for I have already been speaking too long
this morning--let me say that you will observe the atrocious nature of
unbelief in this--that it is the damning sin.
There is one sin for which Christ never died; it is the sin against the Holy
Spirit. There is one other sin for which Christ never made atonement.
Mention every crime in the book of evil, and I will show you persons who
have found forgiveness for it. But ask me whether the man who died in
unbelief can be saved, and I reply there is no atonement for that man. There
is an atonement made for the unbelief of a Christian, because it is
temporary; but the final unbelief--the unbelief with which men die--never
was atoned for. You may look throughout the entire Bible, and you will find
that there is no atonement for the man or woman who died in unbelief; there
is no mercy for them. Had they been guilty of every other sin, if they had
only believed, they would have been pardoned; but this is the damning
exception--they had no faith. Devils seize them! O fiends of the pit, drag
them downward to their doom! They are faithless and unbelieving, and such
are the persons for whom hell was built. It is their place, their prison,
they are the chief prisoners, the chains are engraved with their names, and
they will forever know that, "he that does not believe will be damned."
II. This brings us now to conclude with the PUNISHMENT. "You will see it
with your own eyes, but you will not eat any of it!"
Listen unbelievers! you have heard this morning about your sin; now listen
to your doom: "You will see it with your own eyes, but you will not eat any
of it!" It is so often true with God's saints. When they are unbelieving,
they see the mercy with their eyes, but do not eat it. Now, here is food in
this land of Egypt; but there are some of God's saints who come here on
Sunday, and say, "I don't know whether the Lord will be with me or not."
Some of them say, "Well, the gospel is preached, but I don't know whether it
will be successful." They are always doubting and fearing. Listen to them
when they leave the church, "Well, did you get a good meal this morning?"
"Nothing for me." Of course not. You could see it with your eyes, but did
not eat it, because you had no faith. If you had come here with faith, you
would have had a meal. I have found Christians, who have grown so very
critical, that if the whole portion of the meat they are to have, in due
season, is not cut up exactly into square pieces, and put on some special
porcelain plate, they cannot eat it. Then they ought to go without; and they
will have to go without, until they are brought to their appetites. They
will have some affliction, which will act like quinine on them: they will be
made to eat by means of bitters in their mouths; they will be put in prison
for a day or two until their appetite returns, and then they will be glad to
eat the most ordinary food, off the most common platter, or no platter at
all. But the real reason why God's people do not feed under a gospel
ministry, is, because they don't have faith. If you believed, if you only
listened to one promise, that would be enough; if you only heard one good
thing from the pulpit here it would be food for your soul, for it is not the
quantity we hear, but the quantity we believe, that does us good--it is that
which we receive into our hearts with true and lively faith, that is to our
profit.
But, let me apply this chiefly to the unconverted. They often see great
works of God done with their eyes, but they don't eat of it. A crowd of
people have come here this morning to see with their eyes, but I doubt
whether all of them will eat. Men cannot eat with their eyes, for if they
could, most would be well fed. And, spiritually, persons cannot feed simply
with their ears, nor simply with looking at the preacher; and so we find the
majority of our congregations come just to see and say; "Ah, let us hear
what this babbler would say, this reed shaken in the wind." But they have no
faith; they come, and they see, and see, and see, and never eat. There is
some one down in the front here, who gets converted; and some one else over
there, who is called by sovereign grace; some poor sinner is weeping under a
sense of his blood-guiltiness; another is crying for mercy to God: and
another is saying, "Have mercy on me, a sinner." A great work is going on in
this church, but some of you do not know anything about it; you have no work
going on in your hearts, and why? Because you think it is impossible; you
think God is not at work. He has not promised to work for you who do not
honor him. Unbelief makes you sit here in times of revival and of the
outpouring of God's grace, unmoved, uncalled, unsaved.
But, the worst fulfillment of this doom is yet to come! That great and godly
preacher of the past, George Whitefield, used to sometimes lift up both his
hands and shout, as I wish I could shout, but my voice fails me, he would
shout, "The wrath to come! the wrath to come!" It is not the wrath now you
have to fear, but the wrath to come; and there will be a doom to come, when
"you will see it with your own eyes, but you will not eat any of it!"
I think I see the last great day. The last hour of time has struck. I heard
the funeral bell toll its mournful summon of death--time was, eternity is
ushered in; the sea is boiling; the waves are lit up with supernatural
splendor. I see a rainbow--a flying cloud, and on it there is a throne, and
on that throne sits one like the Son of Man. I know him. In his hand he
holds a pair of scales; just before him are the books--the book of life, the
book of death, the book of remembrance. I see his splendor, and I rejoice at
it; I behold his magnificent appearance, and I smile with gladness that he
is come to be "admired by all his saints." But there stands a throng of
miserable wretches, crouching in horror to conceal themselves, and yet
looking, for their eyes must look on him whom they have pierced; but when
they look they cry, "Hide me from the face." What face? "Rocks, hide me from
the face." What face? "The face of Jesus, the man who died, but now has come
in judgment." But you cannot be hidden from his face; you must see it with
your eyes: but you will not sit on the right hand, dressed in robes of
splendor; and when the victorious procession of Jesus in the clouds comes,
you will not march in it; you will see it, but you will not be there. Oh! I
think I see it now, the mighty Savior in his chariot, riding on the rainbow
to heaven. See how his mighty horses make the sky rattle while he drives
them up heaven's hill. A procession dressed in white follow behind him, and
dragging from his chariot is the devil, death, and hell. Listen, how they
clap their hands. Listen, how they shout. "You have ascended up on high; you
have led captives in your procession." Listen, how they chant the solemn
song, "Hallelujah, the Lord God omnipotent reigns." See the splendor of
their appearance; note the crown upon their heads; see their pure-white
robes; note the look of rapture on their faces; listen how their song rise
up to heaven while the Eternal God joins in their song, saying, "I will
rejoice over them with joy, I will rejoice over them with singing, for I
have taken them to be mine in everlasting loving kindness." But where are
you all the while? You can see them up there, but where are you? You see it
with your eyes, but you cannot eat of it. The marriage banquet is spread;
the good old wines of eternity are brought out; they sit down to the feast
of the king; but there you are, miserable, and starving, and you cannot eat
of it. Oh! how you wring your hands. Oh that you might have just one morsel
from the table--oh that you would be like a dog under the table. You will be
a dog, a dog in hell, but not a dog in heaven.
But to conclude. I think I see you in some part of hell, tied to a rock, the
vulture of remorse gnawing at your heart; and up there is the former beggar
Lazarus sitting next to Abraham. You lift up your eyes and you see who it
is. "That is the poor man who used to sit by my gate and beg, and the dogs
used to licked his sores; there he is in heaven, while I am cast down into
hell. Lazarus--yes, it is Lazarus; and I who was rich in the world of time
am here in hell. Father Abraham, send Lazarus, that he may dip the tip of
his finger in water, to cool my tongue." But no! it cannot be; it cannot be.
And while you lie there, if there is one thing in hell worse than another,
it will be seeing the saints in heaven. Oh, to think of seeing my mother in
heaven while I am cast out! Oh, sinner, only think, to see your brother in
heaven--he who was rocked in the same cradle as you, and played in the same
house--yet you are cast out. And, husband, there is your wife in heaven, and
you are among the damned. And father, look there, see your child is before
the throne; and you! accursed of God and accursed of man, are in hell. Oh,
the hell of hells will be to see our friends in heaven, and ourselves lost.
I beg you, my listeners, by the death of Christ--by his agony and bloody
sweat--by his cross and passion--by all that is holy--by all that is sacred
in heaven and earth--by all that is solemn in time or eternity--by all that
is horrible in hell, or glorious in heaven--by that awful thought,
"forever,"--I beg you to take these to heart, and remember that if you are
damned, it will be unbelief that damns you. If you are lost, it will be
because you did not believe in Christ; and if you perish, this will be the
bitterest part of it all--that you did not trust in the Savior. Amen.
[http://www.biblebb.com/files/spurgeon/0003.htm]
A copy of this sermon, Preached by Tony Capoccia, is available on Audio Tape
Cassette or CD at www.gospelgems.com
Transcribed, English updated, and added to Bible Bulletin Board's "Spurgeon
Collection" by:
Tony Capoccia
Bible Bulletin Board
Box 314
Columbus, New Jersey, USA, 08022
Websites: www.biblebb.com and www.gospelgems.com
Email:

Online since 1986
.

User: "Jack Baun"

Title: Re: The Sin of Unbelief 06 Jul 2007 07:04:35 PM
Do you ever talk Carol or just paste sermons ?
there is also the Sin of Belief. jb
"Carl" <saints@nettally.com> wrote in message
news:f6m93h$ebj$1@news.utelfla.com...

The following is a great sermon from C.H. Spurgeon that is just as
relevent today as it was in 1855. Definitely worth reading.

May God bless,
Carl
my website -- http://www.nettally.com/saints/
my blog -- http://www.anniemayhem.com/cgi-bin/wordpress/

---

The Sin of Unbelief
January 14, 1855
by C. H. SPURGEON
(1834-1892)

This updated and revised manuscript is copyrighted 2000 by Tony Capoccia.
All rights reserved.

"The officer had said to the man of God, 'Look, even if the LORD should
open the floodgates of the heavens, could this happen?' The man of God had
replied, 'You will see it with your own eyes, but you will not eat any of
it!'" [2 Kings 7:19]

One wise man may deliver a whole city; one good man may be the means of
safety to a thousand others. The holy ones are "the salt of the earth,"
the means of the preservation of the wicked. Without the godly as a
safeguard, the race would be utterly destroyed. In the city of Samaria
there was one righteous man--Elisha, the servant of the Lord. Godliness
and holiness was completely extinct in the court. The king was a sinner of
the worst kind, his iniquity was glaring and notorious. Jehoram walked in
the ways of his father Ahab, and worshipped false gods. The people of
Samaria were wicked like their king; they had gone astray from Jehovah;
they had forsaken the God of Israel: they did not remember the words of
Jacob, "The Lord your God is one God;" and in wicked idolatry they bowed
before the idols of the heathens, and therefore the Lord of Hosts allowed
their enemies to oppress them until the curse of Ebal was fulfilled in the
streets of Samaria, for "the most gentle and sensitive woman who would not
venture to touch the ground with the sole of her foot, will begrudge the
husband she loves and her own son or daughter," because of her of intense
hunger (Deut 28:56-58). In this awful situation the one holy man was the
means of salvation. The one grain of salt preserved the entire city; the
one warrior for God was the means of the deliverance of the whole
struggling multitude. For Elisha's sake the Lord sent the promise that the
next day, food which could not be obtained at any price, would be
available at the cheapest possible price--at the very gates of Samaria. We
may picture the joy of the multitude when the prophet first uttered this
prediction. They knew him to be a prophet of the Lord; he had divine
credentials; all his past prophecies had been fulfilled. They knew that he
was a man sent from God, and was speaking Jehovah's message. Surely the
king's eyes would glisten with delight, and the starving multitude would
leap for joy at the prospects of so speedy a release from the famine.
"Tomorrow, they would shout, "tomorrow our hunger will be over, and we
will feast until we are full.

However, the officer on whom the king leaned expressed his disbelief. We
don't hear that any of the common people ever doubted; but one of noble
position did. It is strange, that God has seldom chosen the great men of
this world. Elevated positions in life and faith in Christ seldom agree.
This great man said, "Impossible!" and, with an insult to the prophet, he
added, "Look, even if the Lord should open the floodgates of the heavens,
could this happen?" His sin lay in the fact, that after repeated evidences
of Elisha's ministry, yet he disbelieved the assurances uttered by the
prophet on God's behalf. He had, doubtless, seen the marvelous defeat of
Moab; he had been startled at the testimony of the resurrection of the
Shunamite's son; he knew that Elisha had revealed Benhadad's secrets and
struck his marauding hosts with blindness; he had seen the army of Syria
decoyed into the heart of Samaria; and he probably knew the story of the
widow, whose oil filled all the vessels, and redeemed her sons. And the
cure of Naaman was common conversation at all events in the court; and
yet, in the face of all this accumulated evidence, in the teeth of all
these credentials of the prophet's mission, he still doubted, and
scornfully told him that heaven must become an open floodgate, before the
promise could be performed. Whereupon God pronounced his doom by the mouth
of the man who had just now proclaimed the promise: "You will see it with
your own eyes, but you will not eat any of it!" And providence--which
always fulfills prophecy--destroyed the man. Trampled down in the streets
of Samaria, he perished at its gates, seeing the bounty of food, but
tasting none of it.

Perhaps he was arrogant in the way that he carried himself, and insulting
to the people; or he tried to restrain their eager rush towards the food;
or, as we would say, it might have been by mere accident that he was
crushed to death; so that he saw the prophecy fulfilled, but never lived
to enjoy it. In his case, seeing was believing, but it was not enjoying.

I will this morning invite your attention to two things--the man's sin and
his punishment. I will only say a little about this man, since I have
already detailed the circumstances, but I will discuss the sin of unbelief
and the punishment for that sin.

I. First, the SIN. His sin was unbelief. He doubted the promise of God.

In this particular case unbelief took the form of a doubt of the divine
reality, or a mistrust of God's power. Either he doubted whether God
really meant what he said, or whether it was within the range of
possibility that God would fulfill his promise. Unbelief has more phases
than the moon, and more colors than the chameleon. Common people, when
speaking of the devil, say, that he is sometimes seen in one shape, and
sometimes in another. I am sure this is true of Satan's first-born
child--unbelief, for it has a multitude of forms.

At one time I see unbelief dressed up as an angel of light. It calls
itself humility, and it says, "I would not be presumptuous; I dare not
believe that God would pardon me; I am too great a sinner." We call that
humility, and thank God that our friend is in such a good condition. I
don't thank God for any such delusion. It is the devil dressed as an angel
of light; it is unbelief after all.

At other times we detect unbelief in the shape of a doubt of God's
immutability: "The Lord has loved me, but perhaps he will cast me away
tomorrow. He helped me yesterday, and under the shadows of his wings I
trust; but perhaps I will receive no help in the next affliction. He may
have thrown me away; he may not remember his covenant, and forget to be
gracious."

Sometimes this infidelity is embodied in a doubt of God's power. Every day
we see new problems, we are involved in a net of difficulties, and we
think "surely the Lord cannot deliver us." We strive to get rid of our
burden, and finding that we can't do it, we think God's arm is as short as
ours, and his power as little as human might.

A fearful form of unbelief is that doubt which keeps men from coming to
Christ; which leads the sinner to distrust the ability of Christ to save
him, to doubt the willingness of Jesus to accept such a great
transgressor. But the most hideous of all is the traitor, in its true
colors, blaspheming God, and madly denying his existence. Infidelity,
deism, and atheism, are the ripe fruits of this deadly tree; they are the
most massive eruptions of the volcano of unbelief. Unbelief has become
full mature, when removing the mask and laying aside the disguise, it
profanely stalks the earth, uttering the rebellious cry, "There is no
God," striving in vain to shake the throne of the divinity, by lifting up
its arm against Jehovah, and in its arrogance would,

"Snatch from his hand the balance and the rod,
Rejudge his justice--be the god of God."

Then truly unbelief has come to its full perfection, and then you see what
it really is, for the least unbelief is of the same nature as the
greatest.

I am astonished, and I am sure you will be too, when I tell you that there
are some strange people in the world who do not believe that unbelief is a
sin. I must call them strange people, because they are sound in their
faith in every other respect, but they imagine and they deny that unbelief
is sinful.

I remember a young man joining a circle of friends and ministers, who were
disputing whether it was a sin for men and women not to believe the
gospel. While they were discussing it, he said, "Gentlemen am I in the
presence of Christians? Are you believers in the Bible, or are you not?"
They said, "Of course we are Christians." "Then," he said, "doesn't the
Scripture record Jesus as saying, 'When the Holy Spirit comes, he will
convict the world of guilt in regard to sin . . . . because men do not
believe in me?' And isn't it the damning sin of sinners, that they do not
believe on Christ?" I could not have thought that persons should be so
fool-hardy as to venture to assert that, "it is not a sin for a sinner not
to believe in Christ." I thought that, however far they might wish to push
their sentiments, they would not tell a lie to uphold the truth, and, in
my opinion this is what such men are really doing. Truth is a strong tower
and never requires to be reinforced with error. God's Word will stand
against all man's schemes. I would never invent such an illogical argument
to try to prove that it is not a sin on the part of the ungodly not to
believe, for I am sure it is, for I am taught in the Scriptures that,
"This is the verdict: Light has come into the world, but men loved
darkness instead of light," and when I read, "whoever does not believe
stands condemned already because he has not believed in the name of God's
one and only Son," I affirm, and the Word declares it, unbelief is a sin.
Surely with rational and unbiased persons, it cannot require any reasoning
to prove it. Is it not a sin for a creature to doubt the word of its
Maker? Is it not a crime and an insult to the Divinity, for me, an atom, a
particle of dust, to dare to deny his words? Is it not the very summit of
arrogance and extremity of pride for a son of Adam to say, even in his
heart, "God I doubt your grace; God I doubt your love, God I doubt your
power?" Oh! dear friends believe me, if you could roll all sins into one
mass--if you could take murder, and blasphemy, and lust, adultery, and
fornication, and everything that is vile and unite them all into one vast
ball of filthy corruption, they would not, even then, equal the sin of
unbelief. This is the king of all sins, the epitome of guilt; the mixture
of the venom of all crimes; the dregs of the wine of Gomorrah; it is the
number one sin, the masterpiece of Satan, the chief work of the devil.

I will attempt this morning, for a little while, to show the extremely
evil nature of the sin of unbelief.

1. First the sin of unbelief will appear to be extremely heinous when we
remember that it is the parent of every other iniquity.

There is no crime which unbelief will not produce. I think that the fall
of man was surely a result of the sin of unbelief. It was at this point
that the devil tempted Eve. He said to her, "Did God really say, 'You must
not eat from any tree in the garden'?" He whispered and insinuated a
doubt, "Did God really say?" as much as to say, "Are you quite sure he
said that?" It was by means of unbelief--that thin part of the wedge--that
the other sin entered; curiosity and the rest followed; she touched the
fruit, and destruction came into this world. Since that time, unbelief has
been the prolific parent of all guilt. An unbeliever is capable of the
vilest crime that ever was committed. Unbelief, friends! Unbelief! why it
hardened the heart of Pharaoh--it has given liberty to many blaspheming
tongues--yes, it even became a disciple, and murdered Jesus. Unbelief!--it
has sharpened the knife of the suicide; it has mixed many a cup of poison;
and many to a shameful grave, who have murdered themselves and rushed with
bloody hands before their Creator's tribunal, because of unbelief.

Give me an unbeliever--let me know that he doubts God's word--let me know
that he distrusts his promise and his threats; and with that for a
premise, I will conclude that the man will, in time, unless there is
amazing restraining power exerted on him, be guilty of the foulest and
blackest crimes. Ah! this is a Beelzebub sin; like Beelzebub, it is the
leader of all evil spirits. It is said of Jeroboam that he sinned and
caused Israel to sin; and it may be said of unbelief that it not only sins
itself, but makes others sin; it is the egg of all crime, the seed of
every offence; in fact, everything that is evil and vile lies couched in
that one word--unbelief.

And let me say here, that unbelief in the Christian is of the identical
nature as unbelief in the sinner.

It is not the same in its final effect, for it will be pardoned in the
Christian; yes, it is pardoned: it was laid on the scapegoat's head; it
was blotted out and atoned for; but it is of the same sinful nature. In
fact, if there can be one sin more monstrous than the unbelief of a
sinner, it is the unbelief of a saint. For a saint to doubt God's
word--for a saint to distrust God after innumerable instances of his love,
after ten thousand proofs of his mercy, exceeds everything.

Furthermore, in a saint, unbelief is the root of other sins.

When I am perfect in faith, I will be perfect in everything else; I would
always fulfill the principle if I always believed the promise. But it is
because my faith is weak, that I sin. Put me in trouble, and if I can fold
my arms and say, Jehovah-Jireh, the Lord will provide, you will not find
me using wrong means to escape from it. But let me be in earthly distress
and difficulty; if I distrust God, what then? Perhaps I will steal, or do
a dishonest act to get out of the hands of my creditors; or if kept from
such a transgression, I may plunge into excess to drown my anxieties. Once
faith is taken away, the reins are broken; and who can ride an wild horse
without rein or bridle? Like the chariot of the sun, with Phaeton for its
driver, such would be our case if we are without faith. Unbelief is the
mother of vice; it is the parent of sin; and, therefore, I say it is a
deadly evil--a master sin.

2. But secondly; unbelief not only gives birth to sin, but it also fosters
sin.

How is it that men can continue in their sin under the thunders of the
Sinai preacher? How is it that, when a thundering preacher stands in the
pulpit, and, by the grace of God, cries aloud, "Cursed is every man that
does not keep all the commands of the law,"--how is it that when the
sinner hears of the coming day of God's justice, he is still hardened, and
continues on in his evil ways? I will tell you; it is because unbelief of
the coming judgment of God prevents it from having any effect on him.
There is a firing range nearby, where soldiers practice firing their
weapons. Now when workers walk by there, they are always careful to stay
behind the raised mounds of dirt, to ensure that they are not hit by the
shots; so behind mounds of dirt they can do what they please. So it is
with the ungodly man. The devil gives him unbelief; he thus puts up an
great mound of dirt, and finds refuge behind it. Ah! sinners, when the
Holy Spirit knocks down your unbelief--when he brings home the truth in a
display of power, how the law will work upon your soul. If man would truly
believe that the law is holy, that the commandments are holy, just, and
good, how he would be shaken over hell's mouth; there would be no sitting
and sleeping in church any longer; no careless listeners; no going away
and immediately forgetting what type of men you are. Oh! once you get rid
of unbelief, then every shot from the canon of the law would fall upon the
sinner, and the slain of the Lord would be many. Again, how is it that men
can hear the wooing of the cross of Calvary, and yet not come to Christ?
How is it that when we preach about the sufferings of Jesus, and conclude
by saying, "yet there is room,"--how is it that when we dwell upon his
cross and passion, men are not broken in their hearts? It is said,

Law and terrors only harden,
All the while they work alone:
But a sense of blood-bought pardon
Will dissolve a heart of stone.

I think the story of Calvary is enough to break a rock. Rocks did split
over when they saw Jesus die. I think the tragedy of Golgotha is enough to
make a rock gush with tears, and to make the most hardened wretch weep
with tears of repentant love; but even though we often repeat to story of
Calvary, yet who weeps over it? Who cares about it? Friends, you sit as
unconcerned as if it did not mean anything to you. Oh! stop and look, all
you that walk by Calvary. Is it nothing to you that Jesus died? You seem
to say "It really is nothing." What is the reason for your attitude?
Because there is unbelief between you and the cross. If there were not
that thick veil between you and the Savior's eyes, his looks of love would
melt you. But unbelief is the sin which keeps the power of the gospel from
working in the sinner: and it is not until the Holy Spirit strikes that
unbelief down--it is not till the Holy Spirit rips away that infidelity
and takes it completely out, that we can find the sinner coming to put his
trust in Jesus.

3. But there is a third point. Unbelief hinders a man from performing any
good works.

"Everything that does not come from faith is sin," is a great truth in
more ways than one. "Without faith it is impossible to please God." You
will never hear me say a word against morality; you will never hear me say
that honesty is not a good thing, or that sobriety is not a good thing; on
the contrary, I would say they are commendable things; but I will tell you
what I will say afterwards--I will tell you that they are just like the
primitive currency of India; it may pass for money among the Indians, but
it will never do in England; these virtues may have worth here below, but
not above. If you don't have something better than your own goodness, you
will never get to heaven. Some of the Indian tribes use little strips of
cloth instead of money, and I would not find fault with them if I lived
there; but when I come to England, strips of cloth will not suffice. So
honesty, sobriety, and such things, may be very good among men--and the
more you have of them the better. I exhort you, whatever is pure, whatever
is lovely--if anything is excellent or praiseworthy, have them--but they
will not do up in heaven. All these things put together, without faith, do
not please God. Virtues without faith are whitewashed sins. Obedience
without faith, if it is possible, is simply gold plated disobedience. Not
to believe, nullifies everything. It is the fly in the ointment; it is the
poison in the pot. Without faith, with all the virtues of purity, with all
the benevolence of charity, with all the kindness of disinterested
sympathy, with all the talents of genius, with all the bravery of
patriotism, and with all the decision of principle--"without faith it is
impossible to please God." Don't you see then, how bad unbelief is,
because it prevents men from performing good works. Yes, even in
Christians themselves, unbelief disables them.

Let me just tell you a tale--a story of Christ's life. A certain man had
an afflicted son, possessed with an evil spirit. Jesus was up in Mount of
Transfiguration; so the father brought his demon possessed son to the
disciples. What did the disciples do? They said, "Oh, we will cast him
out." They put their hands on him, and they tried to do it; but they
whispered among themselves and said, "We are afraid we will not be able to
do this." In time the possessed boy began to foam at the mouth; he foamed
and scratched the earth, grabbing at it in his seizures. The demonic
spirit within him was alive. The devil was still there. In vain they
repeated their exorcism, yet the evil spirit remained like a lion in his
den, and all their efforts could not dislodge him. "Go!" they said; but he
would not leave. "Go to the pit!" they cried; but he remained immoveable.
The lips of unbelief cannot frighten the evil one, who might well have
said, "Faith I know, Jesus I know, but who are you? You have no faith." If
they had faith, as small as a grain of mustard seed, they might have been
able to cast the devil out; but their faith was gone, and therefore they
could do nothing.

Look at poor Peter's case, too. While he had faith, Peter walked on the
waves of the sea. That was a splendid walk; I almost envy him walking on
the water. Why, if Peter's faith had continued, he might have walked
across the Atlantic to America. But suddenly there came a large wave up
behind him, and he said, "That will sweep me away;" and then another in
front of him, and he cried out, "That will overwhelm me;" and he
thought--how could I be so presumptuous as to be walking on the top of
these waves? Down goes Peter. Faith was Peter's life preserver; faith was
Peter's charm--it kept him up; but unbelief sent him down. Do you know
that you and I, all our lifetime, will have to walk on the water? A
Christian's life is always walking on water--mine is--and every wave could
swallow and devour us, but faith makes us stand. The moment you cease to
believe, that moment distress comes in, and down you go. Oh! why do you
doubt, then?

Faith encourages every virtue; unbelief murders every one. Thousands of
prayers have been strangled in their infancy by unbelief. Unbelief has
been guilty of infanticide; it has murdered many an infant prayer; many
songs of praise that would have swelled the chorus of the skies, have been
stifled by an unbelieving murmur; many a noble enterprise conceived in the
heart has been destroyed before it could come forth, by unbelief. Many men
would have been a missionaries; would have stood and preached their
Master's gospel boldly; but they were filled with unbelief. Once a giant
stops believing, he then becomes a dwarf. Faith is like Samson's hair but
on the Christian; cut it off, and you may put out his eyes--and he can do
nothing.

4. Our next remark is--unbelief has been severely punished.

Turn to the Scriptures! I see a world all fair and beautiful; its
mountains laughing in the sun, and the fields rejoicing in the golden
light. I see maidens dancing, and young men singing. How beautiful the
vision! But look! a solemn and holy man lifts up his hand, and cries, "A
flood is coming to drown the earth: the fountains of the great deep will
be opened, and everything will be covered. Look at the ark! I have toiled
one hundred and twenty years with these hands to build it; flee to it, and
you will be safe." "No!, you old man; away with your empty predictions!
No! let us be happy while we can! when the flood comes, then we will build
an ark; but there is no flood coming; tell that to fools; we don't believe
any such things."

See the unbelievers pursue their merry dance. Listen! Unbeliever. Don't
you hear rumbling noise? The heart of the earth has begun to move, her
rocky ribs are strained by dire convulsions from within; look! they have
broke open with the enormous strain, and from the openings torrents of
water rush out, water that has been hidden ever since God concealed them
in the heart of our world. Heaven is split apart! it rains. Not drops, but
clouds descend. A waterfall, just like the Niagara Falls, rolls from
heaven with mighty noise. Both deeps--the deep below and deep above--both
join their hands.

Now unbelievers, where are you now! There are the last two unbelievers
left. A man--his wife holding onto him around the waist--he stands on the
last summit that is above the water. See him there? The water is up to his
hips even now. Hear his last shriek! He is floating--he is drowned. And as
Noah looks from the ark he sees nothing. Nothing! It is a profound
emptiness. "Sea monsters lay eggs and make their homes in the palaces of
kings." Everything is overthrown, covered, drowned. What did it? What
brought the flood on the earth? Unbelief. By faith Noah escaped from the
flood. By unbelief the rest were drowned.

And, oh! don't you know that unbelief kept Moses and Aaron out of Canaan?
They did not honor God; they struck the rock when they ought to have
spoken to it. They disbelieved: and therefore the punishment came upon
them, that they would not inherit that good land, for which they had
toiled and labored.

Let me take you where Moses and Aaron lived--to the vast and howling
wilderness. We will walk around it for a while; we will become like the
wandering Bedouins, we will walk through the desert for a while. There
lies a carcass whitened in the sun; there is another, and there is
another. What do these bleached bones mean? What are these bodies--there a
man, and there a woman? What are all these? How did these corpses get
here? Surely some great military camp must have been here cut off in a
single night by a blast, or by bloodshed. Ah; no, no. Those bones are the
bones of Israel; those skeletons are the old tribes of Jacob. They could
not enter because of unbelief. They did not trust in God. Spies said they
could not conquer the land. Unbelief was the cause of their death. It was
not the Anakites that destroyed Israel; it was not the howling wilderness
which devoured them; it was not the Jordan which proved a barrier to
Canaan; neither Hivite or Jebusite killed them; it was unbelief alone
which kept them out of Canaan. What a doom to be pronounced on Israel,
after forty years of journeying; they could not enter because of unbelief!

Not to multiply instances, but remember Zechariah. He doubted, and the
angel struck so that he was silent and unable to speak. His mouth was
closed because of unbelief. But oh! if you want to have the worst picture
of the effects of unbelief--if you want to see how God has punished it, I
must take you to the siege of Jerusalem, that worst massacre which time
has ever seen; when the Romans leveled the walls to the ground, and put
all the inhabitants to the sword, or sold them as slaves in the
marketplace. Have you ever read of the destruction of Jerusalem, by Titus?
Did you never turn to the tragedy of Masada, when the Jews stabbed each
other rather than fall into the hands of the Romans? Don't you know, that
to this day the Jew walks through the earth a wanderer, without a home and
without a land? He is cut off, as a branch is cut from a vine; and why?
Because of unbelief. Each time you see a Jew with a sad and somber
face--each time you mark him like a citizen of another land, treading as
an exile in our country--each time you see him, pause and say, "Ah! it was
unbelief which caused you to murder Christ, and now it has driven you to
be a wanderer; and faith alone--faith in the crucified Nazarene--can bring
you back to your country, and restore it to its ancient grandeur."
Unbelief, you see, has the mark of Cain on its forehead. God hates it; God
has dealt hard blows on it: and God will ultimately crush it. Unbelief
dishonors God. Every other crime touches God's territory; but unbelief
aims a blow at his divinity, impeaches his truth, denies his goodness,
blasphemes his attributes, maligns his character; therefore, God of all
things, hates first and chiefly, unbelief, wherever it is.

5. And now to close this point--for I have already been speaking too long
this morning--let me say that you will observe the atrocious nature of
unbelief in this--that it is the damning sin.

There is one sin for which Christ never died; it is the sin against the
Holy Spirit. There is one other sin for which Christ never made atonement.
Mention every crime in the book of evil, and I will show you persons who
have found forgiveness for it. But ask me whether the man who died in
unbelief can be saved, and I reply there is no atonement for that man.
There is an atonement made for the unbelief of a Christian, because it is
temporary; but the final unbelief--the unbelief with which men die--never
was atoned for. You may look throughout the entire Bible, and you will
find that there is no atonement for the man or woman who died in unbelief;
there is no mercy for them. Had they been guilty of every other sin, if
they had only believed, they would have been pardoned; but this is the
damning exception--they had no faith. Devils seize them! O fiends of the
pit, drag them downward to their doom! They are faithless and unbelieving,
and such are the persons for whom hell was built. It is their place, their
prison, they are the chief prisoners, the chains are engraved with their
names, and they will forever know that, "he that does not believe will be
damned."

II. This brings us now to conclude with the PUNISHMENT. "You will see it
with your own eyes, but you will not eat any of it!"

Listen unbelievers! you have heard this morning about your sin; now listen
to your doom: "You will see it with your own eyes, but you will not eat
any of it!" It is so often true with God's saints. When they are
unbelieving, they see the mercy with their eyes, but do not eat it. Now,
here is food in this land of Egypt; but there are some of God's saints who
come here on Sunday, and say, "I don't know whether the Lord will be with
me or not." Some of them say, "Well, the gospel is preached, but I don't
know whether it will be successful." They are always doubting and fearing.
Listen to them when they leave the church, "Well, did you get a good meal
this morning?" "Nothing for me." Of course not. You could see it with your
eyes, but did not eat it, because you had no faith. If you had come here
with faith, you would have had a meal. I have found Christians, who have
grown so very critical, that if the whole portion of the meat they are to
have, in due season, is not cut up exactly into square pieces, and put on
some special porcelain plate, they cannot eat it. Then they ought to go
without; and they will have to go without, until they are brought to their
appetites. They will have some affliction, which will act like quinine on
them: they will be made to eat by means of bitters in their mouths; they
will be put in prison for a day or two until their appetite returns, and
then they will be glad to eat the most ordinary food, off the most common
platter, or no platter at all. But the real reason why God's people do not
feed under a gospel ministry, is, because they don't have faith. If you
believed, if you only listened to one promise, that would be enough; if
you only heard one good thing from the pulpit here it would be food for
your soul, for it is not the quantity we hear, but the quantity we
believe, that does us good--it is that which we receive into our hearts
with true and lively faith, that is to our profit.

But, let me apply this chiefly to the unconverted. They often see great
works of God done with their eyes, but they don't eat of it. A crowd of
people have come here this morning to see with their eyes, but I doubt
whether all of them will eat. Men cannot eat with their eyes, for if they
could, most would be well fed. And, spiritually, persons cannot feed
simply with their ears, nor simply with looking at the preacher; and so we
find the majority of our congregations come just to see and say; "Ah, let
us hear what this babbler would say, this reed shaken in the wind." But
they have no faith; they come, and they see, and see, and see, and never
eat. There is some one down in the front here, who gets converted; and
some one else over there, who is called by sovereign grace; some poor
sinner is weeping under a sense of his blood-guiltiness; another is crying
for mercy to God: and another is saying, "Have mercy on me, a sinner." A
great work is going on in this church, but some of you do not know
anything about it; you have no work going on in your hearts, and why?
Because you think it is impossible; you think God is not at work. He has
not promised to work for you who do not honor him. Unbelief makes you sit
here in times of revival and of the outpouring of God's grace, unmoved,
uncalled, unsaved.

But, the worst fulfillment of this doom is yet to come! That great and
godly preacher of the past, George Whitefield, used to sometimes lift up
both his hands and shout, as I wish I could shout, but my voice fails me,
he would shout, "The wrath to come! the wrath to come!" It is not the
wrath now you have to fear, but the wrath to come; and there will be a
doom to come, when "you will see it with your own eyes, but you will not
eat any of it!"

I think I see the last great day. The last hour of time has struck. I
heard the funeral bell toll its mournful summon of death--time was,
eternity is ushered in; the sea is boiling; the waves are lit up with
supernatural splendor. I see a rainbow--a flying cloud, and on it there is
a throne, and on that throne sits one like the Son of Man. I know him. In
his hand he holds a pair of scales; just before him are the books--the
book of life, the book of death, the book of remembrance. I see his
splendor, and I rejoice at it; I behold his magnificent appearance, and I
smile with gladness that he is come to be "admired by all his saints." But
there stands a throng of miserable wretches, crouching in horror to
conceal themselves, and yet looking, for their eyes must look on him whom
they have pierced; but when they look they cry, "Hide me from the face."
What face? "Rocks, hide me from the face." What face? "The face of Jesus,
the man who died, but now has come in judgment." But you cannot be hidden
from his face; you must see it with your eyes: but you will not sit on the
right hand, dressed in robes of splendor; and when the victorious
procession of Jesus in the clouds comes, you will not march in it; you
will see it, but you will not be there. Oh! I think I see it now, the
mighty Savior in his chariot, riding on the rainbow to heaven. See how his
mighty horses make the sky rattle while he drives them up heaven's hill. A
procession dressed in white follow behind him, and dragging from his
chariot is the devil, death, and hell. Listen, how they clap their hands.
Listen, how they shout. "You have ascended up on high; you have led
captives in your procession." Listen, how they chant the solemn song,
"Hallelujah, the Lord God omnipotent reigns." See the splendor of their
appearance; note the crown upon their heads; see their pure-white robes;
note the look of rapture on their faces; listen how their song rise up to
heaven while the Eternal God joins in their song, saying, "I will rejoice
over them with joy, I will rejoice over them with singing, for I have
taken them to be mine in everlasting loving kindness." But where are you
all the while? You can see them up there, but where are you? You see it
with your eyes, but you cannot eat of it. The marriage banquet is spread;
the good old wines of eternity are brought out; they sit down to the feast
of the king; but there you are, miserable, and starving, and you cannot
eat of it. Oh! how you wring your hands. Oh that you might have just one
morsel from the table--oh that you would be like a dog under the table.
You will be a dog, a dog in hell, but not a dog in heaven.

But to conclude. I think I see you in some part of hell, tied to a rock,
the vulture of remorse gnawing at your heart; and up there is the former
beggar Lazarus sitting next to Abraham. You lift up your eyes and you see
who it is. "That is the poor man who used to sit by my gate and beg, and
the dogs used to licked his sores; there he is in heaven, while I am cast
down into hell. Lazarus--yes, it is Lazarus; and I who was rich in the
world of time am here in hell. Father Abraham, send Lazarus, that he may
dip the tip of his finger in water, to cool my tongue." But no! it cannot
be; it cannot be. And while you lie there, if there is one thing in hell
worse than another, it will be seeing the saints in heaven. Oh, to think
of seeing my mother in heaven while I am cast out! Oh, sinner, only think,
to see your brother in heaven--he who was rocked in the same cradle as
you, and played in the same house--yet you are cast out. And, husband,
there is your wife in heaven, and you are among the damned. And father,
look there, see your child is before the throne; and you! accursed of God
and accursed of man, are in hell. Oh, the hell of hells will be to see our
friends in heaven, and ourselves lost. I beg you, my listeners, by the
death of Christ--by his agony and bloody sweat--by his cross and
passion--by all that is holy--by all that is sacred in heaven and
earth--by all that is solemn in time or eternity--by all that is horrible
in hell, or glorious in heaven--by that awful thought, "forever,"--I beg
you to take these to heart, and remember that if you are damned, it will
be unbelief that damns you. If you are lost, it will be because you did
not believe in Christ; and if you perish, this will be the bitterest part
of it all--that you did not trust in the Savior. Amen.

[http://www.biblebb.com/files/spurgeon/0003.htm]

A copy of this sermon, Preached by Tony Capoccia, is available on Audio
Tape Cassette or CD at www.gospelgems.com

Transcribed, English updated, and added to Bible Bulletin Board's
"Spurgeon Collection" by:
Tony Capoccia
Bible Bulletin Board
Box 314
Columbus, New Jersey, USA, 08022
Websites: www.biblebb.com and www.gospelgems.com
Email:


Online since 1986


.
User: "john w"

Title: Re: The Sin of Unbelief 07 Jul 2007 09:33:26 AM
x-no-archive: yes
On Fri, 6 Jul 2007 20:04:35 -0400, "Jack Baun" <bluejay@gwis.com>
wrote:
© 2007 John D Weatherly all rights reserved; no portion of this post
may be used anywhere else without written permission of the author.

Do you ever talk Carol or just paste sermons ?

Yes, Carl talks. He's talked with me on several occasions when I've
had questions, comments, or issues.
john w

there is also the Sin of Belief. jb
"Carl" <saints@nettally.com> wrote in message
news:f6m93h$ebj$1@news.utelfla.com...

The following is a great sermon from C.H. Spurgeon that is just as
relevent today as it was in 1855. Definitely worth reading.

May God bless,
Carl
my website -- http://www.nettally.com/saints/
my blog -- http://www.anniemayhem.com/cgi-bin/wordpress/

---

The Sin of Unbelief
January 14, 1855
by C. H. SPURGEON
(1834-1892)

This updated and revised manuscript is copyrighted 2000 by Tony Capoccia.
All rights reserved.

"The officer had said to the man of God, 'Look, even if the LORD should
open the floodgates of the heavens, could this happen?' The man of God had
replied, 'You will see it with your own eyes, but you will not eat any of
it!'" [2 Kings 7:19]

One wise man may deliver a whole city; one good man may be the means of
safety to a thousand others. The holy ones are "the salt of the earth,"
the means of the preservation of the wicked. Without the godly as a
safeguard, the race would be utterly destroyed. In the city of Samaria
there was one righteous man--Elisha, the servant of the Lord. Godliness
and holiness was completely extinct in the court. The king was a sinner of
the worst kind, his iniquity was glaring and notorious. Jehoram walked in
the ways of his father Ahab, and worshipped false gods. The people of
Samaria were wicked like their king; they had gone astray from Jehovah;
they had forsaken the God of Israel: they did not remember the words of
Jacob, "The Lord your God is one God;" and in wicked idolatry they bowed
before the idols of the heathens, and therefore the Lord of Hosts allowed
their enemies to oppress them until the curse of Ebal was fulfilled in the
streets of Samaria, for "the most gentle and sensitive woman who would not
venture to touch the ground with the sole of her foot, will begrudge the
husband she loves and her own son or daughter," because of her of intense
hunger (Deut 28:56-58). In this awful situation the one holy man was the
means of salvation. The one grain of salt preserved the entire city; the
one warrior for God was the means of the deliverance of the whole
struggling multitude. For Elisha's sake the Lord sent the promise that the
next day, food which could not be obtained at any price, would be
available at the cheapest possible price--at the very gates of Samaria. We
may picture the joy of the multitude when the prophet first uttered this
prediction. They knew him to be a prophet of the Lord; he had divine
credentials; all his past prophecies had been fulfilled. They knew that he
was a man sent from God, and was speaking Jehovah's message. Surely the
king's eyes would glisten with delight, and the starving multitude would
leap for joy at the prospects of so speedy a release from the famine.
"Tomorrow, they would shout, "tomorrow our hunger will be over, and we
will feast until we are full.

However, the officer on whom the king leaned expressed his disbelief. We
don't hear that any of the common people ever doubted; but one of noble
position did. It is strange, that God has seldom chosen the great men of
this world. Elevated positions in life and faith in Christ seldom agree.
This great man said, "Impossible!" and, with an insult to the prophet, he
added, "Look, even if the Lord should open the floodgates of the heavens,
could this happen?" His sin lay in the fact, that after repeated evidences
of Elisha's ministry, yet he disbelieved the assurances uttered by the
prophet on God's behalf. He had, doubtless, seen the marvelous defeat of
Moab; he had been startled at the testimony of the resurrection of the
Shunamite's son; he knew that Elisha had revealed Benhadad's secrets and
struck his marauding hosts with blindness; he had seen the army of Syria
decoyed into the heart of Samaria; and he probably knew the story of the
widow, whose oil filled all the vessels, and redeemed her sons. And the
cure of Naaman was common conversation at all events in the court; and
yet, in the face of all this accumulated evidence, in the teeth of all
these credentials of the prophet's mission, he still doubted, and
scornfully told him that heaven must become an open floodgate, before the
promise could be performed. Whereupon God pronounced his doom by the mouth
of the man who had just now proclaimed the promise: "You will see it with
your own eyes, but you will not eat any of it!" And providence--which
always fulfills prophecy--destroyed the man. Trampled down in the streets
of Samaria, he perished at its gates, seeing the bounty of food, but
tasting none of it.

Perhaps he was arrogant in the way that he carried himself, and insulting
to the people; or he tried to restrain their eager rush towards the food;
or, as we would say, it might have been by mere accident that he was
crushed to death; so that he saw the prophecy fulfilled, but never lived
to enjoy it. In his case, seeing was believing, but it was not enjoying.

I will this morning invite your attention to two things--the man's sin and
his punishment. I will only say a little about this man, since I have
already detailed the circumstances, but I will discuss the sin of unbelief
and the punishment for that sin.

I. First, the SIN. His sin was unbelief. He doubted the promise of God.

In this particular case unbelief took the form of a doubt of the divine
reality, or a mistrust of God's power. Either he doubted whether God
really meant what he said, or whether it was within the range of
possibility that God would fulfill his promise. Unbelief has more phases
than the moon, and more colors than the chameleon. Common people, when
speaking of the devil, say, that he is sometimes seen in one shape, and
sometimes in another. I am sure this is true of Satan's first-born
child--unbelief, for it has a multitude of forms.

At one time I see unbelief dressed up as an angel of light. It calls
itself humility, and it says, "I would not be presumptuous; I dare not
believe that God would pardon me; I am too great a sinner." We call that
humility, and thank God that our friend is in such a good condition. I
don't thank God for any such delusion. It is the devil dressed as an angel
of light; it is unbelief after all.

At other times we detect unbelief in the shape of a doubt of God's
immutability: "The Lord has loved me, but perhaps he will cast me away
tomorrow. He helped me yesterday, and under the shadows of his wings I
trust; but perhaps I will receive no help in the next affliction. He may
have thrown me away; he may not remember his covenant, and forget to be
gracious."

Sometimes this infidelity is embodied in a doubt of God's power. Every day
we see new problems, we are involved in a net of difficulties, and we
think "surely the Lord cannot deliver us." We strive to get rid of our
burden, and finding that we can't do it, we think God's arm is as short as
ours, and his power as little as human might.

A fearful form of unbelief is that doubt which keeps men from coming to
Christ; which leads the sinner to distrust the ability of Christ to save
him, to doubt the willingness of Jesus to accept such a great
transgressor. But the most hideous of all is the traitor, in its true
colors, blaspheming God, and madly denying his existence. Infidelity,
deism, and atheism, are the ripe fruits of this deadly tree; they are the
most massive eruptions of the volcano of unbelief. Unbelief has become
full mature, when removing the mask and laying aside the disguise, it
profanely stalks the earth, uttering the rebellious cry, "There is no
God," striving in vain to shake the throne of the divinity, by lifting up
its arm against Jehovah, and in its arrogance would,

"Snatch from his hand the balance and the rod,
Rejudge his justice--be the god of God."

Then truly unbelief has come to its full perfection, and then you see what
it really is, for the least unbelief is of the same nature as the
greatest.

I am astonished, and I am sure you will be too, when I tell you that there
are some strange people in the world who do not believe that unbelief is a
sin. I must call them strange people, because they are sound in their
faith in every other respect, but they imagine and they deny that unbelief
is sinful.

I remember a young man joining a circle of friends and ministers, who were
disputing whether it was a sin for men and women not to believe the
gospel. While they were discussing it, he said, "Gentlemen am I in the
presence of Christians? Are you believers in the Bible, or are you not?"
They said, "Of course we are Christians." "Then," he said, "doesn't the
Scripture record Jesus as saying, 'When the Holy Spirit comes, he will
convict the world of guilt in regard to sin . . . . because men do not
believe in me?' And isn't it the damning sin of sinners, that they do not
believe on Christ?" I could not have thought that persons should be so
fool-hardy as to venture to assert that, "it is not a sin for a sinner not
to believe in Christ." I thought that, however far they might wish to push
their sentiments, they would not tell a lie to uphold the truth, and, in
my opinion this is what such men are really doing. Truth is a strong tower
and never requires to be reinforced with error. God's Word will stand
against all man's schemes. I would never invent such an illogical argument
to try to prove that it is not a sin on the part of the ungodly not to
believe, for I am sure it is, for I am taught in the Scriptures that,
"This is the verdict: Light has come into the world, but men loved
darkness instead of light," and when I read, "whoever does not believe
stands condemned already because he has not believed in the name of God's
one and only Son," I affirm, and the Word declares it, unbelief is a sin.
Surely with rational and unbiased persons, it cannot require any reasoning
to prove it. Is it not a sin for a creature to doubt the word of its
Maker? Is it not a crime and an insult to the Divinity, for me, an atom, a
particle of dust, to dare to deny his words? Is it not the very summit of
arrogance and extremity of pride for a son of Adam to say, even in his
heart, "God I doubt your grace; God I doubt your love, God I doubt your
power?" Oh! dear friends believe me, if you could roll all sins into one
mass--if you could take murder, and blasphemy, and lust, adultery, and
fornication, and everything that is vile and unite them all into one vast
ball of filthy corruption, they would not, even then, equal the sin of
unbelief. This is the king of all sins, the epitome of guilt; the mixture
of the venom of all crimes; the dregs of the wine of Gomorrah; it is the
number one sin, the masterpiece of Satan, the chief work of the devil.

I will attempt this morning, for a little while, to show the extremely
evil nature of the sin of unbelief.

1. First the sin of unbelief will appear to be extremely heinous when we
remember that it is the parent of every other iniquity.

There is no crime which unbelief will not produce. I think that the fall
of man was surely a result of the sin of unbelief. It was at this point
that the devil tempted Eve. He said to her, "Did God really say, 'You must
not eat from any tree in the garden'?" He whispered and insinuated a
doubt, "Did God really say?" as much as to say, "Are you quite sure he
said that?" It was by means of unbelief--that thin part of the wedge--that
the other sin entered; curiosity and the rest followed; she touched the
fruit, and destruction came into this world. Since that time, unbelief has
been the prolific parent of all guilt. An unbeliever is capable of the
vilest crime that ever was committed. Unbelief, friends! Unbelief! why it
hardened the heart of Pharaoh--it has given liberty to many blaspheming
tongues--yes, it even became a disciple, and murdered Jesus. Unbelief!--it
has sharpened the knife of the suicide; it has mixed many a cup of poison;
and many to a shameful grave, who have murdered themselves and rushed with
bloody hands before their Creator's tribunal, because of unbelief.

Give me an unbeliever--let me know that he doubts God's word--let me know
that he distrusts his promise and his threats; and with that for a
premise, I will conclude that the man will, in time, unless there is
amazing restraining power exerted on him, be guilty of the foulest and
blackest crimes. Ah! this is a Beelzebub sin; like Beelzebub, it is the
leader of all evil spirits. It is said of Jeroboam that he sinned and
caused Israel to sin; and it may be said of unbelief that it not only sins
itself, but makes others sin; it is the egg of all crime, the seed of
every offence; in fact, everything that is evil and vile lies couched in
that one word--unbelief.

And let me say here, that unbelief in the Christian is of the identical
nature as unbelief in the sinner.

It is not the same in its final effect, for it will be pardoned in the
Christian; yes, it is pardoned: it was laid on the scapegoat's head; it
was blotted out and atoned for; but it is of the same sinful nature. In
fact, if there can be one sin more monstrous than the unbelief of a
sinner, it is the unbelief of a saint. For a saint to doubt God's
word--for a saint to distrust God after innumerable instances of his love,
after ten thousand proofs of his mercy, exceeds everything.

Furthermore, in a saint, unbelief is the root of other sins.

When I am perfect in faith, I will be perfect in everything else; I would
always fulfill the principle if I always believed the promise. But it is
because my faith is weak, that I sin. Put me in trouble, and if I can fold
my arms and say, Jehovah-Jireh, the Lord will provide, you will not find
me using wrong means to escape from it. But let me be in earthly distress
and difficulty; if I distrust God, what then? Perhaps I will steal, or do
a dishonest act to get out of the hands of my creditors; or if kept from
such a transgression, I may plunge into excess to drown my anxieties. Once
faith is taken away, the reins are broken; and who can ride an wild horse
without rein or bridle? Like the chariot of the sun, with Phaeton for its
driver, such would be our case if we are without faith. Unbelief is the
mother of vice; it is the parent of sin; and, therefore, I say it is a
deadly evil--a master sin.

2. But secondly; unbelief not only gives birth to sin, but it also fosters
sin.

How is it that men can continue in their sin under the thunders of the
Sinai preacher? How is it that, when a thundering preacher stands in the
pulpit, and, by the grace of God, cries aloud, "Cursed is every man that
does not keep all the commands of the law,"--how is it that when the
sinner hears of the coming day of God's justice, he is still hardened, and
continues on in his evil ways? I will tell you; it is because unbelief of
the coming judgment of God prevents it from having any effect on him.
There is a firing range nearby, where soldiers practice firing their
weapons. Now when workers walk by there, they are always careful to stay
behind the raised mounds of dirt, to ensure that they are not hit by the
shots; so behind mounds of dirt they can do what they please. So it is
with the ungodly man. The devil gives him unbelief; he thus puts up an
great mound of dirt, and finds refuge behind it. Ah! sinners, when the
Holy Spirit knocks down your unbelief--when he brings home the truth in a
display of power, how the law will work upon your soul. If man would truly
believe that the law is holy, that the commandments are holy, just, and
good, how he would be shaken over hell's mouth; there would be no sitting
and sleeping in church any longer; no careless listeners; no going away
and immediately forgetting what type of men you are. Oh! once you get rid
of unbelief, then every shot from the canon of the law would fall upon the
sinner, and the slain of the Lord would be many. Again, how is it that men
can hear the wooing of the cross of Calvary, and yet not come to Christ?
How is it that when we preach about the sufferings of Jesus, and conclude
by saying, "yet there is room,"--how is it that when we dwell upon his
cross and passion, men are not broken in their hearts? It is said,

Law and terrors only harden,
All the while they work alone:
But a sense of blood-bought pardon
Will dissolve a heart of stone.

I think the story of Calvary is enough to break a rock. Rocks did split
over when they saw Jesus die. I think the tragedy of Golgotha is enough to
make a rock gush with tears, and to make the most hardened wretch weep
with tears of repentant love; but even though we often repeat to story of
Calvary, yet who weeps over it? Who cares about it? Friends, you sit as
unconcerned as if it did not mean anything to you. Oh! stop and look, all
you that walk by Calvary. Is it nothing to you that Jesus died? You seem
to say "It really is nothing." What is the reason for your attitude?
Because there is unbelief between you and the cross. If there were not
that thick veil between you and the Savior's eyes, his looks of love would
melt you. But unbelief is the sin which keeps the power of the gospel from
working in the sinner: and it is not until the Holy Spirit strikes that
unbelief down--it is not till the Holy Spirit rips away that infidelity
and takes it completely out, that we can find the sinner coming to put his
trust in Jesus.

3. But there is a third point. Unbelief hinders a man from performing any
good works.

"Everything that does not come from faith is sin," is a great truth in
more ways than one. "Without faith it is impossible to please God." You
will never hear me say a word against morality; you will never hear me say
that honesty is not a good thing, or that sobriety is not a good thing; on
the contrary, I would say they are commendable things; but I will tell you
what I will say afterwards--I will tell you that they are just like the
primitive currency of India; it may pass for money among the Indians, but
it will never do in England; these virtues may have worth here below, but
not above. If you don't have something better than your own goodness, you
will never get to heaven. Some of the Indian tribes use little strips of
cloth instead of money, and I would not find fault with them if I lived
there; but when I come to England, strips of cloth will not suffice. So
honesty, sobriety, and such things, may be very good among men--and the
more you have of them the better. I exhort you, whatever is pure, whatever
is lovely--if anything is excellent or praiseworthy, have them--but they
will not do up in heaven. All these things put together, without faith, do
not please God. Virtues without faith are whitewashed sins. Obedience
without faith, if it is possible, is simply gold plated disobedience. Not
to believe, nullifies everything. It is the fly in the ointment; it is the
poison in the pot. Without faith, with all the virtues of purity, with all
the benevolence of charity, with all the kindness of disinterested
sympathy, with all the talents of genius, with all the bravery of
patriotism, and with all the decision of principle--"without faith it is
impossible to please God." Don't you see then, how bad unbelief is,
because it prevents men from performing good works. Yes, even in
Christians themselves, unbelief disables them.

Let me just tell you a tale--a story of Christ's life. A certain man had
an afflicted son, possessed with an evil spirit. Jesus was up in Mount of
Transfiguration; so the father brought his demon possessed son to the
disciples. What did the disciples do? They said, "Oh, we will cast him
out." They put their hands on him, and they tried to do it; but they
whispered among themselves and said, "We are afraid we will not be able to
do this." In time the possessed boy began to foam at the mouth; he foamed
and scratched the earth, grabbing at it in his seizures. The demonic
spirit within him was alive. The devil was still there. In vain they
repeated their exorcism, yet the evil spirit remained like a lion in his
den, and all their efforts could not dislodge him. "Go!" they said; but he
would not leave. "Go to the pit!" they cried; but he remained immoveable.
The lips of unbelief cannot frighten the evil one, who might well have
said, "Faith I know, Jesus I know, but who are you? You have no faith." If
they had faith, as small as a grain of mustard seed, they might have been
able to cast the devil out; but their faith was gone, and therefore they
could do nothing.

Look at poor Peter's case, too. While he had faith, Peter walked on the
waves of the sea. That was a splendid walk; I almost envy him walking on
the water. Why, if Peter's faith had continued, he might have walked
across the Atlantic to America. But suddenly there came a large wave up
behind him, and he said, "That will sweep me away;" and then another in
front of him, and he cried out, "That will overwhelm me;" and he
thought--how could I be so presumptuous as to be walking on the top of
these waves? Down goes Peter. Faith was Peter's life preserver; faith was
Peter's charm--it kept him up; but unbelief sent him down. Do you know
that you and I, all our lifetime, will have to walk on the water? A
Christian's life is always walking on water--mine is--and every wave could
swallow and devour us, but faith makes us stand. The moment you cease to
believe, that moment distress comes in, and down you go. Oh! why do you
doubt, then?

Faith encourages every virtue; unbelief murders every one. Thousands of
prayers have been strangled in their infancy by unbelief. Unbelief has
been guilty of infanticide; it has murdered many an infant prayer; many
songs of praise that would have swelled the chorus of the skies, have been
stifled by an unbelieving murmur; many a noble enterprise conceived in the
heart has been destroyed before it could come forth, by unbelief. Many men
would have been a missionaries; would have stood and preached their
Master's gospel boldly; but they were filled with unbelief. Once a giant
stops believing, he then becomes a dwarf. Faith is like Samson's hair but
on the Christian; cut it off, and you may put out his eyes--and he can do
nothing.

4. Our next remark is--unbelief has been severely punished.

Turn to the Scriptures! I see a world all fair and beautiful; its
mountains laughing in the sun, and the fields rejoicing in the golden
light. I see maidens dancing, and young men singing. How beautiful the
vision! But look! a solemn and holy man lifts up his hand, and cries, "A
flood is coming to drown the earth: the fountains of the great deep will
be opened, and everything will be covered. Look at the ark! I have toiled
one hundred and twenty years with these hands to build it; flee to it, and
you will be safe." "No!, you old man; away with your empty predictions!
No! let us be happy while we can! when the flood comes, then we will build
an ark; but there is no flood coming; tell that to fools; we don't believe
any such things."

See the unbelievers pursue their merry dance. Listen! Unbeliever. Don't
you hear rumbling noise? The heart of the earth has begun to move, her
rocky ribs are strained by dire convulsions from within; look! they have
broke open with the enormous strain, and from the openings torrents of
water rush out, water that has been hidden ever since God concealed them
in the heart of our world. Heaven is split apart! it rains. Not drops, but
clouds descend. A waterfall, just like the Niagara Falls, rolls from
heaven with mighty noise. Both deeps--the deep below and deep above--both
join their hands.

Now unbelievers, where are you now! There are the last two unbelievers
left. A man--his wife holding onto him around the waist--he stands on the
last summit that is above the water. See him there? The water is up to his
hips even now. Hear his last shriek! He is floating--he is drowned. And as
Noah looks from the ark he sees nothing. Nothing! It is a profound
emptiness. "Sea monsters lay eggs and make their homes in the palaces of
kings." Everything is overthrown, covered, drowned. What did it? What
brought the flood on the earth? Unbelief. By faith Noah escaped from the
flood. By unbelief the rest were drowned.

And, oh! don't you know that unbelief kept Moses and Aaron out of Canaan?
They did not honor God; they struck the rock when they ought to have
spoken to it. They disbelieved: and therefore the punishment came upon
them, that they would not inherit that good land, for which they had
toiled and labored.

Let me take you where Moses and Aaron lived--to the vast and howling
wilderness. We will walk around it for a while; we will become like the
wandering Bedouins, we will walk through the desert for a while. There
lies a carcass whitened in the sun; there is another, and there is
another. What do these bleached bones mean? What are these bodies--there a
man, and there a woman? What are all these? How did these corpses get
here? Surely some great military camp must have been here cut off in a
single night by a blast, or by bloodshed. Ah; no, no. Those bones are the
bones of Israel; those skeletons are the old tribes of Jacob. They could
not enter because of unbelief. They did not trust in God. Spies said they
could not conquer the land. Unbelief was the cause of their death. It was
not the Anakites that destroyed Israel; it was not the howling wilderness
which devoured them; it was not the Jordan which proved a barrier to
Canaan; neither Hivite or Jebusite killed them; it was unbelief alone
which kept them out of Canaan. What a doom to be pronounced on Israel,
after forty years of journeying; they could not enter because of unbelief!

Not to multiply instances, but remember Zechariah. He doubted, and the
angel struck so that he was silent and unable to speak. His mouth was
closed because of unbelief. But oh! if you want to have the worst picture
of the effects of unbelief--if you want to see how God has punished it, I
must take you to the siege of Jerusalem, that worst massacre which time
has ever seen; when the Romans leveled the walls to the ground, and put
all the inhabitants to the sword, or sold them as slaves in the
marketplace. Have you ever read of the destruction of Jerusalem, by Titus?
Did you never turn to the tragedy of Masada, when the Jews stabbed each
other rather than fall into the hands of the Romans? Don't you know, that
to this day the Jew walks through the earth a wanderer, without a home and
without a land? He is cut off, as a branch is cut from a vine; and why?
Because of unbelief. Each time you see a Jew with a sad and somber
face--each time you mark him like a citizen of another land, treading as
an exile in our country--each time you see him, pause and say, "Ah! it was
unbelief which caused you to murder Christ, and now it has driven you to
be a wanderer; and faith alone--faith in the crucified Nazarene--can bring
you back to your country, and restore it to its ancient grandeur."
Unbelief, you see, has the mark of Cain on its forehead. God hates it; God
has dealt hard blows on it: and God will ultimately crush it. Unbelief
dishonors God. Every other crime touches God's territory; but unbelief
aims a blow at his divinity, impeaches his truth, denies his goodness,
blasphemes his attributes, maligns his character; therefore, God of all
things, hates first and chiefly, unbelief, wherever it is.

5. And now to close this point--for I have already been speaking too long
this morning--let me say that you will observe the atrocious nature of
unbelief in this--that it is the damning sin.

There is one sin for which Christ never died; it is the sin against the
Holy Spirit. There is one other sin for which Christ never made atonement.
Mention every crime in the book of evil, and I will show you persons who
have found forgiveness for it. But ask me whether the man who died in
unbelief can be saved, and I reply there is no atonement for that man.
There is an atonement made for the unbelief of a Christian, because it is
temporary; but the final unbelief--the unbelief with which men die--never
was atoned for. You may look throughout the entire Bible, and you will
find that there is no atonement for the man or woman who died in unbelief;
there is no mercy for them. Had they been guilty of every other sin, if
they had only believed, they would have been pardoned; but this is the
damning exception--they had no faith. Devils seize them! O fiends of the
pit, drag them downward to their doom! They are faithless and unbelieving,
and such are the persons for whom hell was built. It is their place, their
prison, they are the chief prisoners, the chains are engraved with their
names, and they will forever know that, "he that does not believe will be
damned."

II. This brings us now to conclude with the PUNISHMENT. "You will see it
with your own eyes, but you will not eat any of it!"

Listen unbelievers! you have heard this morning about your sin; now listen
to your doom: "You will see it with your own eyes, but you will not eat
any of it!" It is so often true with God's saints. When they are
unbelieving, they see the mercy with their eyes, but do not eat it. Now,
here is food in this land of Egypt; but there are some of God's saints who
come here on Sunday, and say, "I don't know whether the Lord will be with
me or not." Some of them say, "Well, the gospel is preached, but I don't
know whether it will be successful." They are always doubting and fearing.
Listen to them when they leave the church, "Well, did you get a good meal
this morning?" "Nothing for me." Of course not. You could see it with your
eyes, but did not eat it, because you had no faith. If you had come here
with faith, you would have had a meal. I have found Christians, who have
grown so very critical, that if the whole portion of the meat they are to
have, in due season, is not cut up exactly into square pieces, and put on
some special porcelain plate, they cannot eat it. Then they ought to go
without; and they will have to go without, until they are brought to their
appetites. They will have some affliction, which will act like quinine on
them: they will be made to eat by means of bitters in their mouths; they
will be put in prison for a day or two until their appetite returns, and
then they will be glad to eat the most ordinary food, off the most common
platter, or no platter at all. But the real reason why God's people do not
feed under a gospel ministry, is, because they don't have faith. If you
believed, if you only listened to one promise, that would be enough; if
you only heard one good thing from the pulpit here it would be food for
your soul, for it is not the quantity we hear, but the quantity we
believe, that does us good--it is that which we receive into our hearts
with true and lively faith, that is to our profit.

But, let me apply this chiefly to the unconverted. They often see great
works of God done with their eyes, but they don't eat of it. A crowd of
people have come here this morning to see with their eyes, but I doubt
whether all of them will eat. Men cannot eat with their eyes, for if they
could, most would be well fed. And, spiritually, persons cannot feed
simply with their ears, nor simply with looking at the preacher; and so we
find the majority of our congregations come just to see and say; "Ah, let
us hear what this babbler would say, this reed shaken in the w