SOVEREIGN GRACE
by D.L. Moody
CHAPTER 3.
POSSESSING, AND "WORKING OUT".
(22)
I CAN imagine some one asking: What does that passage mean - "Work, out your own
salvation with fear and trembling?" Well, I want you to emphasize the
word your: Work out your salvation." That is most important. You hear
people talk of working out salvation, when all the time they have not got it. How can you
work out what you do not possess? Paul is here writing to the Christians at Philippi. They
were already saved by the grace of God. Now that they had got this wonderful gift, he
says: "Go, work it out." When you see a person working for salvation, you may
know that he has got a false idea of the teaching of the Scripture. We have salvation as a
gift; and of course we cannot get it by working for it. It is our appreciation of this
gift that makes us work.
Many people are working and working, as Rowland Hill says, like children on a rocking
horse-it is a beautiful motion, but there is no progress. Those who are working for
salvation are like men on a treadmill, going round, and round, and round; toiling, and
toiling, and toiling; but nothing comes of it all. There is no progress, and there cannot
be until you have the motive power within, till the breath of life comes from (23) God, which can alone give you power to work for
others.
Suppose I say to my son: "You are going away from home; and I want you to be very
careful how you spend that $500." "Well," he says," if you will give
me $500, I will be careful about it; but how can I be careful in spending what I have not
got?" And so, unless you have salvation, you cannot work it out.
Take another illustration. One summer my boy asked me to give him a piece of ground
that he might have a garden all to himself. I said I would give it to him; but that I
expected he would keep it clear of weeds, and use it in some way that would make it
pleasant and profitable to him. He was to work out the piece of land; but he could not do
that until I had given it to him. Neither was it his working it out that secured him the
garden. I gave it to him freely, apart from any merit of his own; but I did so on the
under-standing that he should employ it to the best advantage. I think that is a fair
illustration of our working out the salvation that God has given us.
Of course these illustrations fail in some points. I could not impart to my son the
willingness to work out the piece of land, though I could provide him with all the
necessary implements. God not only gives us salvation freely, but he gives us the power to
work it out.
A writer says on this point: "Paul does not command the Philippians to save
themselves. There was no thought in his mind of any meritorious
self-righteousness. Man can by no work of his own either procure salvation or merit
salvation. God worketh the salvation (24) within the
soul-man only worketh that salvation out in the Christian life. To break off from
known sin; to renounce all self-righteousness; to cast ourselves in loving faith on the
merits of Christ crucified; to commence at once a life of self-denial, of prayer, of
obedience; to turn from all that God forbids, resolutely and earnestly, unto all that God
requires-this is what the text implies. But then this is not salvation. Salvation is of
God-of grace-of free grace. From the germ to the fruit, from foundation to top-stone-it is
of grace, free grace, altogether and only. But the working out of salvation-is
man's part in the work of salvation. God will not repent for the man; nor believe for
the man; nor lead a holy life for the man. God worketh inwardly-man worketh outwardly. And
this outward human work is as necessary as the inward Divine work."
GOD WORKS IN US; and then we work for Him. If He has done a work in us, we
certainly ought to go and work for others. A man must have this salvation, and must know
it, before he can work for the salvation of others.
Many of you have tried hard to save yourselves; but what has been the end of it all? I
remember a lady in the North of England who became quite angry when I made this remark
publicly: "No one in this congregation will be saved till they stop trying to save
themselves." Down she came from the gallery, and said to me: "You have made me
perfectly miserable." "Indeed," I said, "how is that?" "Why,
I always thought that if I kept on trying, God would save me at some time; and now you
tell me to stop trying: what, then, (25) am I
to do?" "Why, let the Lord save you." She went oft in something like a
rage. It is not always a bad sign when you see a man or a woman wake up cross, if it is
the Word of God that wakes them up. A day or two afterward,, she came and thanked me. She
said she had been turning over in her mind what I had had; and at last the truth dawned
upon her, that though she had worked long, though she had formed a good many resolutions,
she had made no progress. So she gave up the struggle; and then it was that the Lord Jesus
saved her.
I want to ask you this question: If sin needs forgiveness-and all sin is against
God-how can you work out your own forgiveness? If I stole $100 from a friend, I could not
forgive myself, could I? No act of mine would bring about forgiveness, unless my friend
forgave me. And so, if I want forgiveness of sin, it must be the work of God. If we look
at salvation as a new life, it must be the work of God. God is the author of life: you
cannot give yourself life. If we consider it as a gift, it must come from some one outside
of ourselves. That is what I read in the Bible-Salvation as a gift. While I am speaking,
you can make up your mind that you will stop trying, and take this gift.
I wish I could get this whole audience to drop the word try, and put the word trust
in its place. The forgiving grace of God is wonderful. He will save you this very
minute, if you are willing to be saved. He delights in mercy. He wants to show that mercy
to every soul. The religion of Christ is not man working his way up to God; it is God
coming down to man. It as Christ coming down to the pit of sin and woe where (26) we are, bringing us out of the pit, putting our feet
upon a rock, and a new song in our mouth. He will do it this minute, while I am speaking,
if you will let Him, Will you let Him? That is the question.
I do not believe much in dreams; but they sometimes illustrate a point. I heard about a
woman who had been trying for a long time, just like many of you, to be better and better.
She tried to save herself, but made no progress. One night she fell asleep, in a very
troubled state of mind, and she had a dream. She thought that she was in a pit striving to
get out-climbing and slipping, climbing and slipping, climbing and slipping; at last she
gave up the struggle, and laid herself down at the bottom of the pit to die. She happened
to look up, and she saw through the mouth of the pit a beautiful star. She fixed her eye
on it; and it seemed as if the star lifted her up till she was almost out. But the thought
of herself came to her mind; she looked off at the sides of the pit: immediately she lost
sight of the star, and down to the bottom of the pit she went. Again she fixed her eye on
the star; and again it seemed to lift her almost out. But once again she took her eye off
the star, and looked at herself; down into the pit she fell again! The third time she
fixed her eye on the star and was lifted higher and higher, until all at once her feet
struck the ground above, and she awoke from her sleep.
God taught her a lesson by the dream. She learned that if ever she was to be saved, she
must give tip the struggle, and let Jesus Christ save her. My friends, give up the
struggle today! You have tried long and hard. It has been a hard battle, has it not ? Give
it (27) up; and repose in the arms of Jesus Christ.
Say "Lord, I come to thee as a poor sinner; wilt Thou not save me and help
me?" "The gift of God is eternal life." It is offered to all: who will have
it?
I see some children here: let me tell you a story. If you have not heard it before,
please do not forget it. A Sunday school teacher wished to show his class how free the
gift of God is. He took a silver watch from his pocket one day, and offered it to the
eldest boy in the class. "It is yours, if you will take it." The little fellow
sat and grinned at the teacher. He thought he was joking. The teacher offered it to the
next boy, and said: "Take that watch -. it is yours." The little fellow thought
he would be laughed at if he held out his hand, and therefore he sat still. In the same
way the teacher went nearly round the class: but not one of them would accept the
proffered gift. At length he came to the smallest boy. When the watch was offered to the
little fellow, he took it and put it into his pocket. All the class laughed at him.
"I am thankful, my boy," said the teacher," that you believe my word. The
watch is yours. Take good care of it. Wind it up every night." The rest of the class
looked on in amazement; and one of them said: " Teacher, you don't mean that the
watch is his? You don't mean that he hasn't to give it back to you?" "No,"
said the teacher, "he hasn't to give it back to me. It is his own now." Oh -h-h
! if I had only known that, wouldn't I have taken it!"
I see you laugh; but my friends you are laughing at yourselves. You need not go far
away to find these boys. Salvation is freely offered to all; but the trouble (28) is that men do not believe God's Word, and do not
accept the gift. Who will accept it now?
I found a few lines the other day on this point that I thought very good. I will close
with them-.
I would not work my soul to save,
For that my Lord hath done;
But I would work like any slave,
For love of God's dear Son."
Chapter 4: Grace Abounding to the
Chief of Sinners
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