INTERNET SOURCE: http://www.godrules.net/library/spurgeon/NEWspurgeon_1q14.htm
CHARLES SPURGEON'S WRITINGS -
CAPITAL PUNISHMENT.
CAPITAL PUNISHMENT.
THE VICARIOUS SACRIFICE.
SOME
time ago an excellent lady sought an interview with me, with the object, as she
said, of enlisting my sympathy upon the question of “Anti- Capital Punishment.” I heard the excellent
reasons she urged against hanging men who had committed murder, and though they did not
convince me, I did not seek to answer them. She proposed
that when a man committed murder, he should be confined for life. My remark was, that a great
many men who had been confined half their lives were not a bit the better for
it; and as for her belief that they would necessarily be brought to repentance,
I was afraid it was but a dream. “Ah!” she said, good soul as she was, “that is because
we have been all wrong about punishments. We punish people because we think
they deserve to be punished. Now, we ought to show
them,” said she, “that we love them; that we only punish to make them better.”
“Indeed, madam,” I said, “I have heard that theory a great many times, and I
have seen much fine writing upon the matter, but I am no believer in it. The design of punishment should be amendment,
but the ground of punishment lies in the positive guilt of the
offender. I believe that when a man does wrong, he ought to be punished for it, and that there is
a guilt in sin which justly merits punishment.” “Oh, no!” she could
not see that. Sin was a very wrong thing, but punishment was not a proper idea.
She thought that people were treated too cruelly in prison, and that they ought to be
taught that we love them. If they were treated
kindly in prison, and tenderly dealt with,
they would grow so much better, she was sure.
With
a view of interpreting her own theory, I said, “I suppose, then, you would give
criminals all sorts of indulgences in prison. Some great vagabond, who has committed burglary dozens of times
— I suppose you would let him sit in an easy chair in the evening before a nice
fire, and mix him a glass of spirits and water, and give him his pipe, and make him happy, to show him how much we love him.” “Well, no, she would
not give him the spirits, but still, all the rest would do him good.” I thought
that was a delightful picture, certainly. It seemed to me to be the most
prolific method of cultivating rogues which ingenuity could invent. I imagine that you could grow any
number of thieves in that way; for it would
be a special means of propagating all manner of roguery and wickedness. These very delightful
theories, to such a simple mind as mine, were the source of
much amusement; the idea of fondling villains, and treating their crimes as if they were the tumbles
and falls of children, made me laugh heartily. I fancied I saw
the Government resigning its functions
to these excellent persons, and the grand results of their marvelously kind experiments. The sword of the magistrate transformed into a gruel-spoon,
and the jail become a sweet retreat for injured reputations.
Little,
however, did I think I should live to see this kind of stuff taught in pulpits; I
had no idea that there would come out a divinity, which would bring down
God’s moral government from the solemn aspect
in which Scripture reveals it, to a namby-pamby sentimentalism, which adores a Deity destitute of every masculine virtue. But we never know to-day
what may occur to-morrow. We have lived to see a certain sort of men — thank God they are not Baptists, though
I am sorry to say there are a great many Baptists who are beginning to follow
in their trail — who seek to teach nowadays that God is a universal Father, and that our ideas of his
dealing with the impenitent as a Judge, and not as a Father, are remnants of antiquated
error. Sin, according to these men, is a
disorder rather than an offense, an error rather than a crime. Love is the only attribute they
can discern, and the full-orbed Deity they have not known. Some of
these men push their way very far into the bogs and mire of falsehood, until they inform us
that eternal punishment is ridiculed as a dream. In fact, books now appear
which teach us that there is no such
thing as the Vicarious Sacrifice of our Lord Jesus Christ. They use the word Atonement, it is true, but in
regard to its meaning they have removed the ancient landmark.
They
acknowledge that the Father has shown his great love to poor sinful man by sending his Son, but
not that God was inflexibly just in the
exhibition of his mercy, not that he punished Christ on the behalf of his
people, nor that, indeed, God ever will punish anybody in his wrath, or that there is such a
thing as justice apart from discipline. Even sin and hell are but old words
employed henceforth in a new and altered sense. Those are old-fashioned
notions, and we poor souls who go on talking about election and imputed righteousness are behind our time.
I
have often thought the best answer for all these new
ideas is, that the true gospel was always preached to the poor — “The poor have the gospel preached to them.” I am sure that
the poor will never learn the gospel of these new divines,
for they cannot make head or tail of it, nor the rich either; for after you have
read through one of their volumes, you have not the least idea of what the book
is about, until you have read it through eight or nine times, and then you
begin to think you are a very stupid being for ever having read such inflated heresy, for it sours your temper
and makes you feel angry, to see the precious truths
of God trodden under foot. Some of us must stand out
against these attacks on truth, although we love not controversy. We rejoice in the liberty of our fellow-men, and
would have them proclaim their convictions; but if
they touch these precious things, they touch the apple of our eye. We can allow a thousand opinions in the world, but that which infringes
upon the precious doctrine of a covenant salvation, through the imputed righteousness of our Lord Jesus Christ, against that we must, and
will, enter our hearty and solemn protest, as long as God spares us. Take away once from
us those glorious doctrines, and where are we, brethren? We may lay us down and die, for nothing remains that is
worth living for. We have come to the valley of the shadow of death, when we find these doctrines to be untrue. If these
things be not the verities of Christ, if they be not true, there
is no comfort left for any poor man under God’s sky, and it were better for us
never to have been born. I may say what Jonathan Edwards says at the end
of his book, “If any man could disprove the doctrines of the gospel, he should then sit down
and weep to think they were not true,
for,” says he, “it would be the most dreadful calamity that could happen to the
world, to have a glimpse of such
truths, and then for them to melt away in the thin air of fiction, as having no
substantiality in them.” Stand up for the truth of Christ; I would not have you be
bigoted, but I would have you be decided. Do not give countenance to any of this trash
and error which is going abroad, but stand firm. Be not turned away from your
steadfastness by any pretense of intellectuality and high philosophy, but
earnestly contend for the faith once delivered to the saints, and hold fast the form of
sound words which you have heard of us, and have been taught, even as ye have
read in the Book, which is the way of everlasting life.
Charles
Spurgeon on 2 evils.
[PHOTO
SOURCE: http://www.azquotes.com/quote/280429]
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AUTHOR: Charles Haddon (CH) Spurgeon (/ˈhædən ˈspɜːrdʒən/; 19 June 1834 – 31 January 1892) was a British Particular Baptist preacher. Spurgeon remains highly influential among Christians of various denominations, among whom he is known as the "Prince of Preachers". He was a strong figure in the Reformed Baptist tradition, defending the Church in agreement with the 1689 London Baptist Confession of Faith understanding, and opposing the liberal and pragmatic theological tendencies in the Church of his day.Spurgeon was the pastor of the congregation of the New Park Street Chapel (later the Metropolitan Tabernacle) in London for 38 years. He was part of several controversies with the Baptist Union of Great Britain and later he left the denomination over doctrinal convictions. In 1867, he started a charity organisation which is now called Spurgeon's and works globally. He also founded Spurgeon's College, which was named after him posthumously.Spurgeon was a prolific author of many types of works including sermons, an autobiography, commentaries, books on prayer, devotionals, magazines, poetry, hymns and more. Many sermons were transcribed as he spoke and were translated into many languages during his lifetime. Spurgeon produced powerful sermons of penetrating thought and precise exposition. His oratory skills held his listeners spellbound in the Metropolitan Tabernacle and many Christians have discovered Spurgeon's messages to be among the best in Christian literature.
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