Tuesday, January 16, 2018

THE MINISTER'S FAINTING FITS




As it is recorded that David, in the heat of battle, waxed faint, so may it be written of all 
the servants of the Lord. Fits of depression come over the most of us. Usually cheerful 
as we may be, we must at intervals be cast down. The strong are not always vigorous, the 
wise not always ready, the brave not always courageous, and the joyous not always happy. 
There maybe here and there men of iron, to whom wear and tear work no perceptible 
detriment, but surely the rust frets even these; and as for ordinary men, the Lord knows, 
and makes them to know, that they are but dust. Knowing by most painful experience what 
deep depression of spirit means, being visited therewith at seasons by no means few or far 
between, I thought it might be consolatory to some of my brethren if I gave my thoughts 
thereon, that younger men might not fancy that some strange thing had happened to them 
when they became for a season possessed by melancholy; and that sadder men might know 
that one upon whom the sun has shone right joyously did not always walk in the light.

It is not necessary by quotations from the biographies of eminent ministers to prove that 
seasons of fearful prostration have fallen to the lot of most, if not all of them. The life of 
Luther might suffice to give a thousand instances, and he was by no means of the weaker 
sort. His great spirit was often in the seventh heaven of exultation, and as frequently on the 
borders of despair. His very death-bed was not free from tempests, and he sobbed himself 
into his last sleep like a great wearied child. Instead of multiplying Gases, let us dwell upon 
the reasons why these things are permitted why it is that the children of light sometimes 
walk in the thick darkness; why the heralds of the daybreak find themselves at times in 
tenfold night.

Is it not first that they are men? Being men, they are compassed with infirmity, and heirs of 
sorrow. Well said the wise man in the Apocrypha, (Ecclus xl. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5-8) "Great travail is 
created for all men, and a heavy yoke on the sons of Adam, from the day that they go out of 
their mother's womb unto that day that they return to the mother of all things—namely, their 
thoughts and fear of their hearts, and their imagination of things that they wail for, and the 
day of death. From him that sitteth in the glorious throne, to him that sitteth beneath in the 
earth and ashes; from him that is clothed in blue silk, and weareth a crown, to him that is 
clothed in simple linen—wrath, envy, trouble, and unquietness, and fear of death and rigour, 
and such things come to both man and beast, but sevenfold to the ungodly." Grace guards us 
from much of this, but because we have not more of grace we still suffer even from ills 
preventible. Even under the economy of redemption it is most clear that we are to endure 
 infirmities, otherwise there were no need of the promised Spirit to help us in them. It is of 
need be that we are sometimes in heaviness. Good men are promised tribulation in this 
world, and ministers may expect a larger share than others, that they may learn sympathy 
with the Lord's suffering people, and so may be fitting shepherds of an ailing flock. 
Disembodied spirits might have been sent to proclaim the word, but they could not have 
entered into the feelings of those who, being in this body, do groan, being burdened; angels 
 might have been ordained evangelists, but their celestial attributes would have disqualified 
them from having compassion on the ignorant; men of marble  might have been fashioned, 
but their impassive natures would have been a sarcasm upon our feebleness, and a mockery 
of our wants. Men, and men subject to human passions, the all-wise God has chosen to be 
his vessels of grace;  hence these tears, hence these perplexities and castings down.

Moreover, most of us are in some way or other unsound physically. Here and there we meet 
with an old man who could not remember that ever he was laid aside for a day; but the great 
mass of us labour under some form or other of infirmity, either in body or mind. Certain 
bodily maladies, especially those connected with the digestive organs, the liver, and the 
spleen, are time fruitful fountains of despondency; and, let a man strive as he may against 
their influence, there will be hours and circumstances in which they will for awhile 
overcome him. As to mental maladies, is any man altogether sane? Are we not all a little 
off the balance? Some minds appear to have a gloomy tinge essential to their very 
individuality; of them it may be said, "Melancholy marked them for her own;" fine minds 
withal, and ruled by noblest principles, but yet most prone to forget the silver lining, and to 
remember only the cloud. Such men may sing with the old poet (Thomas Washbourne.)

"Our hearts are broke, our harps unstringed be,
Our only music's sighs and groans,
Our songs are to the tune of lachrymœ,
We're fretted all to skin and bones."

These infirmities may be no detriment to a man's career of special usefulness; they may 
even have been imposed upon him by divine wisdom as necessary qualifications for his 
peculiar course of service. Some plants owe their medicinal qualities to the marsh in 
which they grow; others to the shades in which alone they flourish. There are precious 
fruits put forth by the moon as well as by the sun. Boats need ballast as well as sail; a 
drag on the carriage-wheel is no hindrance when the road runs downhill. Pain has, 
probably, in some cases developed genius; hunting out the soul which otherwise might 
have slept like a lion in its den. Had it not been for the broken wing, some might have 
lost themselves in the clouds, some even of those choice doves who now bear the 
olive-branch in their mouths and show the way to the ark. But where in body and mind 
there are predisposing causes to lowness of spirit, it is no marvel if in dark moments the 
heart succumbs to them; the wonder in many cases is—and if inner lives could be written, 
men would see it so—how some ministers keep at their work at all, and still wear a smile 
upon their countenances. Grace has its triumphs still, and patience has its martyrs; 
martyrs none the less to be honoured because the flames kindle about their spirits rather 
than their bodies, and their burning is unseen of human eyes. The ministries of Jeremiahs 
are as acceptable as those of Isaiahs, and even the sullen Jonah is a true prophet of the 
Lord, as Nineveh felt full well. Despise not the lame, for it is written that they take the prey; 
but honour those who, being faint, are yet pursuing. The tender-eyed Leah was more 
fruitful than the beautiful Rachel, and the griefs of Hannah were more divine than the 
boastings of Peninnah. "Blessed are they that mourn," said the Man of Sorrows, and let 
none account them otherwise when their tears are salted with grace. We have the treasure 
of the gospel in earthen vessels, and if there be a flaw in the vessel here and there, let none 
wonder.

Our work, when earnestly undertaken, lays us open to attacks in the direction of depression. 
Who can bear the weight of souls without sometimes sinking to the dust? Passionate 
longings after men's conversion, if not fully satisfied (and when are they?), consume the soul 
with anxiety and disappointment. To see the hopeful turn aside, the godly grow cold, 
professors abusing their privileges, and sinners waxing more bold in sin—are not these 
sights enough to crush us to the earth? The kingdom comes not as we would, the reverend 
name is not hallowed as we desire, and for this we must weep. How can we be otherwise 
than sorrowful, while men believe not our report, and the divine arm is not revealed? All 
mental work tends to weary and to depress, for much study is a weariness of the flesh; but 
ours is more than mental work—it is heart work, the labour of our inmost soul. How often, 
 on Lord's-day evenings, do we feel as if life were completely washed out of us! After 
pouring out our souls over our congregations, we feel like empty earthen pitchers which a 
child might break. Probably, if we were more like Paul, and watched for souls at a nobler 
rate, we should know more of what it is to be eaten up by the zeal of the Lord's house. It is 
our duty and our privilege to exhaust our lives for Jesus. We are not to be living specimens 
 of men in fine preservation, but living sacrifices, whose lot is to be consumed; we are to 
spend and to be spent, not to lay ourselves up in lavender, and nurse our flesh. Such 
soul-travail as that of a faithful minister will bring on occasional seasons of exhaustion, 
when heart and flesh will fail. Moses' hands grew heavy in intercession, and Paul cried out, 
"Who is sufficient for these things?" Even John the Baptist is thought to have had his 
fainting fits, and the apostles were once amazed, and were sore afraid.

Our position in the church will also conduce to this. A minister fully equipped for his work, 
will usually be a spirit by himself, above, beyond, and apart from others. The most loving 
of his people cannot enter into his peculiar thoughts, cares, and temptations. In the ranks, 
men walk shoulder to shoulder, with many comrades, but as the officer rises in rank, men 
of his standing are fewer in number. There are many soldiers, few captains, fewer colonels, 
but only one commander-in-chief. So, in our churches, the man whom the Lord raises as a 
leader becomes, in the same degree in which he is a superior man, a solitary man. The 
mountain-tops stand solemnly apart, and talk only with God as he visits their terrible 
solitudes. Men of God who rise above their fellows into nearer communion with heavenly 
things, in their weaker moments feel the lack of human sympathy. Like their Lord in 
Gethsemane, they look in vain for comfort to the disciples sleeping around them; they are 
shocked at the apathy of their little band of brethren, and return to their secret agony with 
all the heavier burden pressing upon them, because they have found their dearest 
companions slumbering. No one knows, but he who has endured it, the solitude of a soul 
which has outstripped its fellows in zeal for the Lord of hosts: it dares not reveal itself, 
lest men count it mad; it cannot conceal itself, for a fire burns within its bones: only before 
the Lord does it find rest. Our Lord's sending out his disciples by two and two manifested 
that he knew what was in men; but for such a man as Paul, it seems to me that no helpmeet 
was found; Barnabas, or Silas, or Luke, were hills too low to hold high converse with such 
Himalayan summit as the apostle of the Gentiles. This loneliness, which if I mistake not 
is felt by many of my brethren, is a fertile source of depression; and our ministers, fraternal 
meetings, and the cultivation of holy intercourse with kindred minds will, with God's
blessing, help us greatly to escape the snare.

There can be little doubt that sedentary habits have a tendency to create despondency in 
some constitutions. Burton, in his "Anatomy of Melancholy," has a chapter upon this cause 
of sadness; and, quoting from one of the myriad authors whom he lays under contribution, 
he says—"Students are negligent of their bodies. Other men look to their tools; a painter 
will wash his pencils; a smith will look to his hammer, anvil, forge; a husbandman will 
mend his plough-irons, and grind his hatchet if it be dull; a falconer or huntsman will have 
an especial care of his hawks, hounds, horses, dogs, &c.; a musician will string and unstring 
his lute; only scholars neglect that instrument (their brain and spirits I mean) which they 
daily use. Well saith Lucan, "See thou twist not the rope so hard that it break." To sit long 
in one posture, poring over a book, or driving a quill, is in itself a taxing of nature; but add 
to this a badly-ventilated chamber, a body which has long been without muscular exercise, 
and a heart burdened with many cares, and we have all the elements for preparing a 
seething cauldron of despair, especially in the dim months of fog—

"When a blanket wraps the day,
When the rotten woodland drips,
And the leaf is stamped in clay."

Let a man be naturally as blithe as a bird, he will hardly be able to bear up year after year 
against such a suicidal process; he will make his study a prison and his books the warders 
of a gaol, while nature lies outside his window calling him to health and beckoning him to 
joy. He who forgets the humming of the bees among the heather, the cooing of the 
 wood-pigeons in the forest, the song of birds in the woods, the rippling of rills among the 
rushes, and the sighing of the wind among the pines, needs not wonder if his heart forgets 
to sing and his soul grows heavy. A day's breathing of fresh air upon the hills, or a few 
hours, ramble in the beech woods? umbrageous calm, would sweep the cobwebs out of 
the brain of scores of our toiling ministers who are now but half alive. A mouthful of sea 
air, or a stiff walk in the wind's face, would not give grace to the soul, but it would yield 
oxygen to the body, which is next best. 

"Heaviest the heart is in a heavy air,
Ev'ry wind that rises blows away despair."

The ferns and the rabbits, the streams and the trouts, the fir trees and the squirrels, the 
primroses and the violets, the farm-yard, the new-mown hay, and the fragrant hops—these 
are the best medicine for hypochondriacs, the surest tonics for the declining, the best 
refreshments for the weary. For lack of opportunity, or inclination, these great remedies are 
neglected, and the student becomes a self-immolated victim.

The times most favourable to fits of depression, so far as I have experienced, may be 
summed up in a brief catalogue. First among them I must mention the hour of great success. 
When at last a long-cherished desire is fulfilled, when God has been glorified greatly by 
 our means, and a great triumph achieved, then we are apt to faint. It might be imagined 
that amid special favours our soul would soar to heights of ecstacy, and rejoice with joy 
unspeakable, but it is generally the reverse. The Lord seldom exposes his warriors to the 
perils of exultation over victory; he knows that few of them can endure such a test, and 
therefore dashes their cup with bitterness. See Elias after the fire has fallen from heaven, 
after Baal's priests have been slaughtered and the rain has deluged the barren land For him 
no notes of self-complacent music, no strutting like a conqueror in robes of triumph; he flees 
from Jezebel, and feeling the revulsion of his intense excitement, he prays that he may die, 
lie who must never see death, yearns after the rest of the grave, even as Caesar, the world's 
monarch, in his moments of pain cried like a sick girl. Poor human nature cannot bear such 
strains as heavenly triumphs bring to it; there must come a reaction. Excess of joy or 
excitement must be paid for by subsequent depressions. While the trial lasts, the strength is 
equal to the emergency; but when it is over, natural weakness claims the right to show itself. 
 Secretly sustained, Jacob can wrestle all night, but he must limp in the morning when the 
contest is over, lest he boast himself beyond measure. Paul may be caught up to the third 
heaven, and hear unspeakable things, but a thorn in time flesh, a messenger of Satan to 
buffet him, must be the inevitable sequel. Men cannot bear unalloyed happiness; even good 
men are not yet fit to have "their brows with laurel and with myrtle bound," without 
enduring secret humiliation to keep them in their proper place. Whirled from off our feet by 
revival, carried aloft by popularity, exalted by success in soul-winning, we should be as 
the chaff which the wind driveth away, were it not that the gracious discipline of mercy 
breaks the ships of our vainglory with a strong east wind, and casts us shipwrecked, naked 
and forlorn, upon the Rock of Ages.

Before any great achievement, some measure of the same depression is very usual. 
 Surveying the difficulties before us, our hearts sink within us. The sons of Anak stalk 
before us, and we are as grasshoppers in our own sight in their presence. The cities of 
Canaan are walled up to heaven, and who are we that we should hope to capture them? 
We are ready to cast down our weapons and take to our heels. Nineveh is a great city, 
and we would flee unto Tarshish sooner than encounter its noisy crowds. Already we 
look for a ship which may bear us quietly away from the terrible scene, and only a dread 
of tempest restrains our recreant footsteps. Such was my experience when I first became 
pastor in London. My success appalled me; and the thought of the career which it 
seemed to open up, so far from elating me, cast me into the lowest depth, out of which I 
uttered my miserere and found no room for a gloria in excelsis. Who was I that I should 
continue to lead so great a multitude? I would betake me to my village obscurity, or 
emigrate to America, and find a solitary nest in the backwoods, where I might be sufficient 
for the things which would be demanded of me. It was just then that the curtain was rising 
upon my life-work, and I dreaded what it might reveal. I hope I was not faithless, but I 
was timorous and filled with a sense of my own unfitness. I dreaded the work which a 
gracious providence had prepared for me. I felt myself a mere child, and trembled as I 
heard the voice which said, "Arise, and thresh the mountains, and make them as chaff." 
This depression comes over me whenever the Lord is preparing a larger blessing for my 
ministry; the cloud is black before it breaks, and overshadows before it yields its deluge 
of mercy. Depression has now become to me as a prophet in rough clothing, a John the 
Baptist, heralding the nearer coming of my Lord's richer benison. So have far better men 
found it. The scouring of the vessel has fitted it for the Master's use. Immersion in 
suffering has preceded the baptism of the Holy Ghost. Fasting gives an appetite for the 
banquet. The Lord is revealed in the backside of the desert, while his servant keepeth 
the sheep and waits in solitary awe. The wilderness is the way to Canaan. The low valley 
leads to the towering mountain. Defeat prepares for victory. The raven is sent forth 
before the dove. The darkest hour of the night precedes the day-dawn. The mariners go 
 down to the depths, but the next wave makes them mount to the heaven: their soul is 
melted because of trouble before he bringeth them to their desired haven.

In the midst of a long stretch of unbroken labour, the same affliction may be looked for. 
The bow cannot be always bent without fear of breaking. Repose is as needful to the mind 
as sleep to the body. Our Sabbaths are our days of toil, and if we do not rest upon some 
other day we shall break down. Even the earth must lie fallow and have her Sabbaths, and 
so must we. Hence the wisdom and compassion of our Lord, when he said to his disciples, 
"Let us go into the desert and rest awhile." What! when the people are fainting? When the 
multitudes are like sheep upon the mountains without a shepherd? Does Jesus talk of rest? 
When Scribes and Pharisees, like grievous wolves, are rending the flock, does he take his 
followers on an excursion into a quiet resting place? Does some red-hot zealot denounce 
such atrocious forgetfulness of present and pressing demands? Let him rave in his folly. 
The Master knows better than to exhaust his servants and quench the light of Israel. Rest 
time is not waste time. It is economy to gather fresh strength. Look at the mower in the 
summer a day, with so much to cut down ere the sun sets. He pauses in his labour, is he 
a sluggard? He looks for his stone, and begins to draw it up and down his scythe, with 
"rink-a-tink—rink-a-tink—rink-a-tink." Is that idle music? is he wasting precious 
moments? How much he might have mown while he has been ringing out those notes 
on his scythe! But he is sharpening his tool, and he will do far more when once again he 
gives his strength to those long sweeps which lay the grass prostrate in rows before him. 
Even thus a little pause prepares the mind for greater service in the good cause. 
Fishermen must mend their nets, and we must every now and then repair our mental 
waste and set our machinery in order for future service. To tug the oar from day to day, 
hike a galley-slave who knows no holidays, suits not mortal men. Mill-streams go on 
and on for ever, but we must have our pauses and our intervals. Who can help being out 
of breath when the race is continued without intermission? Even beasts of burden must 
be turned out to grass occasionally; the very sea pauses at ebb and flood; earth keeps the 
Sabbath of the wintry months; and man, even when exalted to be God's ambassador, must 
rest or faint; must trim his lamp or let it burn low; must recruit his vigour or grow 
prematurely old. It is wisdom to take occasional furlough. In the long run, we shall do 
more by sometimes doing less. On, on, on for ever, without recreation, may suit spirits 
emancipated from this "heavy clay," but while we are in this tabernacle, we must every 
now and then cry halt, and serve the Lord by holy inaction and consecrated leisure. Let 
no tender conscience doubt the lawfulness of going out of harness for awhile, but learn 
from the experience of others the necessity and duty of taking timely rest.

One crushing stroke has sometimes laid the minister very low. The brother most relied upon 
becomes a traitor. Judas lifts up his heel against the man who trusted him, and the 
preacher's heart for the moment fails him. We are all too apt to look to an arm of flesh, and 
from that propensity many of our sorrows arise. Equally overwhelming is the blow when 
an honoured and beloved member yields to temptation, and disgraces the holy name with 
which lie was named. Anything is better than this. This makes the preacher long for a lodge 
in some vast wilderness, where he may hide his head for ever, and hear no more the 
blasphemous jeers of the ungodly. Ten years of toil do not take so much life out of us as we 
lose in a few hours by Ahithophel the traitor, or Demas the apostate. Strife, also, and 
division, and slander, and foolish censures, have often laid holy men prostrate, and made 
them go "as with a sword in their bones." Hard words wound some delicate minds very 
keenly. Many of the best of ministers, from the very spirituality of their character, are 
exceedingly sensitive—too sensitive for such a world as this. "A kick that scarce would 
move a horse would kill a sound divine." By experience the soul is hardened to the rough 
blows which are inevitable in our warfare; but at first these things utterly stagger us, and 
send us to our homes wrapped in a horror of great darkness. The trials of a true minister are 
not few, and such as are caused by ungrateful professors are harder to bear than the coarsest 
attacks of avowed enemies. Let no man who looks for ease of mind and seeks the quietude 
of life enter the ministry; if he does so he will flee from it in disgust.

To the lot of few does it fall to pass through such a horror of great darkness as that which 
fell upon me after the deplorable accident at the Surrey Music Hall. I was pressed beyond 
measure and out of bounds with an enormous weight of misery. The tumult, the panic, the 
deaths, were day and night before me, anti made life a burden. Then I sang in my sorrow—

"The tumult of my thoughts
Doth but increase my woe,
My spirit languisheth, my heart
Is desolate and low."

From that dream of horror I was awakened in a moment by the gracious application to 
my soul of the text, "Him hath God the Father exalted." The fact that Jesus is still great, 
let his servants suffer as they may, piloted me back to calm reason and peace. Should so 
 terrible a calamity overtake any of my brethren, let them both patiently hope and quietly 
wait for the salvation of God.

When troubles multiply, and discouragements follow each other in long succession, like 
Job's messengers, then, too, amid the perturbation of soul occasioned by evil tidings, 
despondency despoils the heart of all its peace. Constant dropping wears away stones, 
and the bravest minds feel the fret of repeated afflictions. If a scanty cupboard is rendered 
a severer trial by the sickness of a wife or the loss of a child, and if ungenerous remarks 
of hearers are followed by the opposition of deacons and the coolness of members, then, 
like Jacob, we are apt to cry, "All these things are against me." When  David returned to 
Ziklag and found the city burned, goods stolen, wives carried off, and his troops ready 
to stone him, we read, "he encouraged himself in his God;" and well was it for him that 
he could do so, for he would then have fainted if he had not believed to see the goodness 
of the Lord in the land of the living. Accumulated distresses increase each other's weight; 
they play into each other's hands, and, like bands of robbers, ruthlessly destroy our comfort. 
Wave upon wave is severe work for the strongest swimmer. The place where two seas 
meet strains the most seaworthy keel. If there were a regulated pause between the 
buffetings of adversity, the spirit would stand prepared; but when they come suddenly and 
heavily, like the battering of great hailstones, the pilgrim may well be amazed. The last 
ounce breaks the camel's back, and when that last ounce is laid upon us, what wonder if 
we for awhile are ready to give up the ghost!

This evil will also come upon us, we know not why, and then it is all the more difficult to 
drive it away. Causeless depression is not to he reasoned with, nor can David's harp 
charm it away by sweet discoursings. As well fight with the mist as with this shapeless, 
undefinable, yet all-beclouding hopelessness. One affords himself no pity when in this 
case, because it seems so unreasonable, and even sinful to be troubled without manifest 
cause; and yet troubled the man is, even in the very depths of his spirit. If those who 
laugh at such melancholy did but feel the grief of it for one hour, their laughter would be 
sobered into compassion. Resolution might, perhaps, shake it off, but where are we to find 
the resolution when the whole man is unstrung? The physician and the divine may unite 
their skill in such cases, and both find their hands full, and more than full. The iron bolt 
which so mysteriously fastens the door of hope and holds our spirits in gloomy prison, 
needs a heavenly hand to push it back; and when that hand is seen we cry with the apostle, 
"Blessed be God, even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies, and the 
God of all comfort; who comforteth us in all our tribulation, that we may be able to 
comfort them which are in any trouble, by the comfort wherewith we ourselves are 
comforted of God." 2 Cor. i. 3, 4. It is the God of all consolation who can—

"With sweet oblivious antidote
Cleanse our poor bosoms of that perilous stuff
Which weighs upon the heart."

Simon sinks till Jesus takes him by the hand. The devil within rends and tears the poor 
child till time word of authority commands him to come out of him. When we are ridden 
with horrible fears, and weighed down with an intolerable incubus, we need but the Sun 
of Righteousness to rise, and the evils generated of our darkness are driven away; but 
nothing short of this will chase away time nightmare of the soul. Timothy Rogers, the 
 author of a treatise on Melancholy, and Simon Browne, the writer of some remarkably 
sweet hymns, proved in their own cases how unavailing is the help of man if the Lord 
withdraw the light from the soul.

If it be enquired why the Valley of the Shadow of Death must so often be traversed by the 
servants of King Jesus, the answer is not far to find. All this is promotive of the Lord's 
mode of working, which is summed up in these words—"Not by might nor by power, but 
by my Spirit, saith the Lord." Instruments shall be used, but their intrinsic weakness shall 
be clearly manifested; there shall be no division of the glory, no diminishing the honour 
due to the Great Worker. The man shall be emptied of self, and then filled with the Holy 
Ghost. In his own apprehension he shall be like a sere leaf driven of the tempest, and then 
shall be strengthened into a brazen wall against the enemies of truth. To hide pride from 
the worker is the great difficulty. Uninterrupted success and unfading joy in it would be 
more than our weak heads could bear. Our wine must needs be mixed with water, lest it 
turn our brains. My witness is, that those who are honoured of their Lord in public, have 
usually to endure a secret chastening, or to carry a peculiar cross, lest by any means they 
exalt themselves, and fall into the snare of the devil. How constantly the Lord calls 
Ezekiel "Son of man"! Amid his soarings into the superlative splendours, just when with 
eye undimmed he is strengthened to gaze into the excellent  glory, the word "Son of man" 
falls on his ears, sobering the heart which else might have been intoxicated with the 
honour conferred upon it. Such humbling but salutary messages our depressions whisper 
in our ears; they tell us in a manner not to be mistaken that we are but men, frail, feeble, 
apt to faint.

By all the castings down of his servants God is glorified, for they are led to magnify him 
when again he sets them on their feet, and even while prostrate in the dust their faith yields 
him praise. They speak all time more sweetly of his faithfulness, and are the more firmly 
 established in his love. Such mature men as sonic elderly preachers are, could scarcely 
have been produced if they had not been emptied from vessel to vessel, and made to see 
their own emptiness and the vanity of all things round about them. Glory be to God for 
the furnace, the hammer, and the file. Heaven shall be all the fuller of bliss because we 
have been filled with anguish here below, and earth shall be better tilled because of our 
training in the school of adversity.

The lesson of wisdom is, be not dismayed by soul-trouble. Count it no strange thing, but 
part of ordinary ministerial experience. Should the power of depression be more than 
ordinary, think not that all is over with your usefulness. Cast not away your confidence, 
for it hath great recompense of reward. Even if the enemy's foot be on your neck, expect 
to rise amid overthrow him. Cast the burden of the present, along with the sin of the past 
and the fear of the future, upon the Lord, who forsaketh not his saints. Live by the day—
ay, by the hour. Put no trust in frames and feelings. Care more for a grain of faith than a 
ton of excitement. Trust in God alone, and lean not on the reeds of human help. Be not 
surprised when friends fail you: it is a failing world. Never count upon immutability in 
man: inconstancy you may reckon upon without fear of disappointment. The disciples of 
Jesus forsook him; be not amazed if your adherents wander away to other teachers: as they 
were not your all when with you, all is not gone from you with their departure. Serve God 
with all your might while the candle is burning, and then when it goes out for a season, 
you will have the less to regret. Be content to be nothing, for that is what you are. When 
your own emptiness is painfully forced upon your consciousness, chide yourself that you 
ever dreamed of being full, except in the Lord. Set small store by present rewards; be 
grateful for earnests by the way, but look for the recompensing joy hereafter. Continue, 
with double earnestness to serve your Lord when no visible result is before you. Any 
simpleton can follow the narrow path in the light: faith?s rare wisdom enables us to march 
on in the dark with infallible accuracy, since she places her hand in that of her Great Guide. 
Between this and heaven there may be rougher weather yet, but it is all provided for by our 
covenant Head. In nothing let us be turned aside from the path which the divine call has 
urged us to pursue. Come fair or come  foul, the pulpit is our watch-tower, and the ministry 
our warfare; be it ours, when we cannot see the face of our God, to trust under 
THE SHADOW OF HIS WINGS.

Charles Haddon Spurgeon (1834 - 1892) was a noted English Baptist minister who 
preached to throngs of people in the Metropolitan Tabernacle in London, which seated six 
thousand people. His success and popularity were due in a large measure to his natural gift 
of oratory and his thoroughly Biblical expository sermons.

This article is taken from Spurgeon's marvelous book, Lectures to My Students which is a 
compilation of his addresses delivered to the students of The Pastors' College, Metropolitan 
Tabernacle from 1856.


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