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Pictures from Pilgrim's Progress. The Two Pilgrims in a Slough.
Charles Spurgeon. Through their much talking and
little praying, and giving no heed to where they were going,
Christian and pliable all of a sudden found themselves floundering
in a slough despond. John Bunyan says, here therefore
they wallowed for a time. being grievously bedobbed with
the dirt. The Christian, because of the
burden that was on his back, began to sink in the mire. Even
then, had they but known where to look, they might have discovered
that there were, by the direction of the lawgiver, certain good
and substantial steps placed even through the very midst of
the slow. Had they set their feet upon
these steps, in other words, had the pilgrims trusted the
promises of God, They might have gone through to the other side
with scarcely a stain upon their garments. I always feel inclined
to blame evangelists for some of the discomfort the poor Christians
suffered in the slough of this fond. I'm a great lover of John
Bunyan, but I do not believe him infallible. The other day
I met with a story about him which I think a very good one.
There was a young man in Edinburgh who wished to be a missionary.
He was a wise young man, so he thought. If I'm to be a missionary,
there is no need for me to transport myself far away from home. I
may as well be a missionary in Edinburgh. Here's a hint to some
of you ladies who give away tracts in your district and never give
your servant Mary one. Well, this young man started
and determined to speak to the first person he met. He met one
of those old fishwives. Those of us who have seen them
can never forget them. They're extraordinary women indeed. So stepping up to her, he said,
here you are, coming along with your burden on your back. Let
me ask you if you've got another burden, a spiritual burden. What?" she asked. Do you mean
I burdened John Bunyan's pilgrim progress? Because if you do,
young man, I got rid of mine many years ago, probably before
you were born. But I went a better way to work
than the pilgrim did. The evangelist that John Bunyan
talks about was one of your parsons that did not preach the gospel.
For he said, keep that light in thine eye, and run to the
wicked gate. By man alive, that was not the
place for him to run to. He should have said, do you see
that cross? Run there at once. But instead of that, he sent
the poor pilgrim to the wicked gate first. And much good he
got by going there. But did you not, the young man
asked, go through any slough to spawn? Yes, I did. But I found it a great deal easier
going through with my burden off than with it on my back.
The old woman was quite right. John Bunyan put the getting rid
of the burden too far from the commencement of the pilgrimage.
If he had meant to show what usually happens, he was right.
But if he meant to show what ought to have happened, he was
wrong. We must not say to the sinner, now sinner, if you'll
be saved, go to the baptismal pole, go to the wicked gate,
go to the church, do this or that. No, the cross should be
right in front of the wicked gate. And we should say to the
sinner, throw yourself down there, and you are safe. But if you're
not safe till you can cast off your burden and lie at the foot
of the cross, and find peace in Jesus. Now, let us leave Christian
for a little while and turn our thoughts to his companion, Pliable,
just experiencing a slough to spawn with the first child he'd
met with since he had started on pilgrimage. It was comparatively
a slight one. A slough is not likely to swallow
them up. It was not nearly so bad as lying
in Giant Despair's dungeon. or fighting with Apollyon in
a valley of humiliation. It was not much for anyone to
endure, but it was more than Pliable could stand. John Bunyanus
describes what happened to him. It is, Pliable began to be offended. In anguish, he said to his fellow,
is this the happiness you have told me all this while of? If
we have such ill speed at our first setting out, but may we
expect between this and our journey's end, may I get out again with
my life you shall possess the brave country alone for me. And
with that, he gave a desperate struggle or two. and got out
of the mire on that side of the slough which was next to his
own house. So away he went, and Christian
saw him no more. In like fashion, it often comes
to pass that, without any great outward trial, but simply through
this fondnancy of mind, a sudden damper pales aflush of early
joy. and some of those who set out
on the road to heaven turned back, and so proved that they
did not start to write, and never had the work of God the Holy
Ghost truly in their souls. Some of you, dear friends, when
you are attending the services here, or meeting with your companions
in one or other of our many Bible classes, get very warm and excited
and enthusiastic, and then perhaps you have to go away to live in
the country, which is like going out of a hot house into an ice
well, and straightway you forget all about the happy experiences
that you enjoyed amongst us. Or it may be that instead of
your hearing a comforting and soothing sermon, some Sunday
morning I preach an arousing heart-searching one, and you
are offended, are frightened, and give up all desire to tread
the pilgrim pathway. the fearful soul that tires and
faints, and walks the ways of God no more, is but esteemed
almost a saint, and makes his own destruction sure. Beware
and pray you of any religion that merely springs from the
carnal desire of enjoyment of heaven. Both the terrors of hell
and the joys of heaven are insufficient to make the soul seek the Savior
truly. There must be a sense of sin
and a desire after holiness. Because, after all, the essence
of hell is sin, and the essence of heaven is holiness, and you're
not likely to go to God merely because of the external hell
or heaven. You will only be led to trust
in Jesus Christ through the essence of the two external things, namely
sin, pressing upon you. and your soul crying out after
purity and holiness and likeness to God. God grant that we may
not have any pliables in our church. Alas, we do get them
sometimes and they go a great deal further on the pilgrim's
road than Mr. Bunyan describes. They go right
up by the interpreter's house, climb up the hill difficulty,
to even pass a cross. But of course they never feel
the burden roll off their backs. They're not conscious that there
is a burden there. When Christians sing, they also
sing because they think they are to have the same inheritance
by and by. They generally go through the
valley of humiliation. In broad daylight, Apollyon never
fights with them, and they wonder how it is that he does not assail
them. They think what good people they
are. And what bad people they must
be who have those stirrings and smitings of conscience of which
they hear us speak. They cannot understand why we
talk about Christians having such fierce conflicts within. But if they really knew the Lord,
they would soon understand all about it. And until they do know
him, much of our preaching must remain a mystery to them. Pliable
was another stranger to vital godliness. He had converted himself. Or rather, Christian had converted
him by his talk about heaven. And perhaps, if it had not been
for the slave's fond, he would have gone, as ignorance did,
right to the riverside. and been ferried over by vain
hope, only to be refused admission at the gate, and to be carried
by the two shining ones, bound hand and foot, and to be cast
into hell by the back door, for there is a back door to hell
as well as a front one, and some professors who have apparently
gone very far on the road to heaven, will ultimately go to
hell by this door, unless they repent of their sin and believe
on our Lord Jesus Christ. But what became of Pliable after
he struggled out at the Slough Despond? Bunyan says, Now I saw
in my dream that by this time Pliable was got home to his house
again, so that his neighbors came to visit him, and some of
them called him wise man for coming back, and some called
him fool for hazarding himself with Christian. Others again
did mock at his cowardliness, saying, Surely, since you began
to pinch her, I would not have been so basest to give an owl
for a few difficulties. Supplyable sad sneaking among
them. Here's one thing about the world
that I've often admired. We sometimes say, give the devil
his due, and I will give the world its due. I mean that. When a man goes a little way
in religion, and then turns back, Mere worldlings generally despise
him. I believe that the wicked world
has a genuine respect for a true Christian. It hates him, and
that is the only homage it is able to pay him. The reason why
the men of our Savior's day hated and mocked him was because they
had what I may call an awful respect for him, and did not
know how otherwise to express it. They hated and loathed what
they could not rightly appreciate, and thus they showed by their
mockery and scorn how far they were from comprehending the excellence
of the Savior. You must expect similar treatment
from the ungodly. if you're like your lord. But
when a pretended pilgrim turns back, they despise him. They call him a turncoat, and
they could not very well hit upon a more correct name for
him. Oh, say they. A little while ago you were with
the earnest people, and you were apparently as earnest as they
were. But what are you now? And when a man is seen walking
into the alehouse, you know how they greet him. Oh, Mr. Sobersides. So you've come back, have you?
When they track him to the theater, they say to him, a lomp, is it,
since you were at the tabernacle, or make some coarse joke about
him. They know how to handle the whip
of scorn, and I thank them for using it, in the hope they will
always lay on their blows right heavily. But mark you, the little
scorn which Blible finds it so hard to bear in this life is
but a very slight foretaste of what it will have to bear in
hell. Remember, the remarkable description which is given by
the prophet Isaiah of the king of Babylon when he went down
to hell. And all the kings whom he had
destroyed, and whose countries he had ravaged, were lying on
their beds of fire. And as they saw the great conqueror
enter, instead of trembling, to hissed out, were he also become
weak as we. Are you become like unto us?
How are you fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning?
How are you cut down to the ground? Which did weaken the nations?
If any of you turn back, as Pliebel did, this will be the worst element
in your everlasting torment, that you did after a fashion
set out on the road to heaven, that you did pretend to be a
Christian, that you said you had enlisted under the banner
of the cross. Did you talk a good deal about
your experience? Did you went to the prayer meeting?
and perhaps even prayed audibly, that you gave away tracts, and
yet that you were, after all, only a hypocrite, and therefore
found yourself at the last amid the flames of hell. If I must
perish, let it be as a sinner who has never professed to be
a saint, rather than as Pliable who started for the Celestial
City, and then returned to his home in the City of Destruction.
It would have been better for those who have had a taste of
heavenly things in their mouths, And yet have not tasted that
the Lord is gracious, if they had never known anything at all
about the way of righteousness. Some of you, dear friends, must
be either pliables or Christians. You have naturally such a disposition
that you cannot help being easily influenced by your associates.
And unless the grace of God shall make you a child of God, you
will be led astray from Him. You cannot be obstinate. You
are too good. Yes, we use the word good in
a common way. You are too kind, too affectionate,
and altogether too tender-hearted to act as that man did towards
Christian. You could not bring yourself
down to drink or swear, your mother's influence and your father's
example of too much power over you for you to become an obstinate.
You cannot sin as others can. You cannot sin in ignorance.
I was almost going to say, I wish you could. If you are to be lost,
if you do not mean to believe in our Lord Jesus Christ, if
you are determined to perish, it were far better for you to
perish as Tyre and Zidane than as Bethsaida or Chorazin or Capernaum. I believe that, when some of
you get into this tabernacle, you feel that you must be pliable. There are a few in this congregation
whom I happen to know personally who cannot help coming to hear
me, though they remain unsaved. I preach at them, and they know
I do, and respect me for it, and even thank me for it, and
sometimes say that they hope they'll be converted one day,
but they are so pliable that they will weep under a sermon
and after a fashion pray. But when they get away from here,
There is a stronger hand than mine that lays hold of them.
Some companions say to them, Come along. Never mind what Spurgeon
says. Come along with me. And they
cannot say no. They have not the moral courage
to say. They will not go where the ungodly
lead them. Whenever they are tempted to
sin, they yelled. They wished there were no tempters,
and that they could get into a world where goodness was in
the ascendant. They are like a sailing vessel,
which depends on every wind, and is blown here and there by
every breeze. They have no inward force to
enable them to resist. This is not the way to get to
heaven. You need, as it were, a divine
engine mightily at work, with all its heaving, panting energy,
that you may make headway against winds and waves, and keep straight
on at the same rate, always steadily advancing towards the far-off
port. May God, by His grace, bring
you to this blessed condition. Should have liked to have spoken
to you so effectively that you could not have forgotten what
I said, but would have gone home to think about it and to pray
about it and to believe it. Should like you even to wish
that you had never been born, because then I should hope that
you would wish to be born again. There is no hope for you elsewhere.
You have been born once. There is no possibility of your
getting over the fact that you have your being. Ask the Lord
that you may have your being in Christ Jesus. You are a creature
and the only hope for you is to be made a new creature in
Christ Jesus. May the Holy Spirit bring you
to this point. Ask him to do so. The best place
to get a sense of sin is at the foot of the cross. May my blessed
master meet you there. and draw you to himself. And
so may you be saved and not be found amongst the pliables until
last. Amen.
2 Pilgrims In The Slough - Pictures From Pilgrim's Progress
Series Pilgrim's Progress
Pliable. This experience in the Slough of Despond was the first trial he had met with since he had started on pilgrimage. It was, comparatively, a slight one. The Slough was not likely to swallow them up. It was not nearly so bad as lying in Giant Despair's dungeon, or fighting with Apollyon in the Valley of Humiliation. It was not much for anyone to endure, but it was more than Pliable could stand.
| Sermon ID | 711231135117848 |
| Duration | 16:50 |
| Date | |
| Category | Audiobook |
| Language | English |
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