“When my soul fainted within me, I remembered the Lord.”-Jonah 2:7.
When man was first made, there was no fear of his forgetting God for it was
his highest privilege and delight to have communion with his Maker. “The Lord
God walked in the garden in the cool of the day,” and Adam was privileged to
hold fellowship with God, closer, perhaps, than even the angels had in
heaven. But the spell of that sacred harmony was rudely broken by man’s
disobedience and his dreadful fall. Ever since our first parent tasted of the
forbidden fruit, which brought death into our world, and all its train of
woes, his mortal race has been naturally prone to forget God. The evil
propensities of flesh and blood have made it impossible to persuade man to
remember his Creator. The complaint of God against the Jews is true as an
indictment against the whole human family. “Hear, O heaven, and give ear. O
earth: I have nourished and brought up children, and they have rebelled
against me; the ox knoweth its owner, and the ass its master’s crib, but
Israel doth not know, my people doth not consider.” Man is foolish; he flies
from the highest good. Man is wicked; he turns his back upon supreme
holiness. Man is worldly: he forgets the kingdom of God and the world to
come. Man is wilful; he follows his own vain imaginations, and, with head-
strong rebellion, opposes himself to his God, that he may pursue his own
wayward course, and gratify his wanton passions.
To convince a man of his error, to arrest him in his evil pursuits, to
reclaim him to the paths of righteousness-this is seldom accomplished without
dire trouble and deep affliction. Some men, it is true, are brought to God by
gentle means; they are drawn by soft but mighty bonds; still, a much larger
class of persons remains, upon whom these silken cords would exert no
influence. They must not be handled softly, but must be dealt with heavily.
The picklock will never open their hearts; there must be the crowbar, and
even the battering ram, to give a furious cannonade. Some hearts can never be
captured for God and for truth except by storm. Sword in hand, God’s law must
scale the ramparts. With thundering report, God’s Word must dash down the
walls of their confidence, and make breach after breach in the bastions of
their pride, and even then they will fight it out, and never yield, until,
driven to an awful extremity, they see that they must either yield at once,
or else be lost for ever. It is with such persons that I now particularly
want to deal. There are those who have forgotten God after having once known
him, and they are not likely to be brought back without great trouble; and
there are others who never did know God, and they never will enquire after
him, unless they are driven to their wits’ end by calamity, as when a great
famine in the land where he dwelt compelled the prodigal for very lack of
bread to seek his Father’s house. So I have first to remonstrate:-
I. WITH THE BACKSLIDER.
Let me, however, before I go into the matter with you, describe a little more
minutely the individuals I wish to address. There is no need to call out your
names; it will suffice if we portray your character and describe your
conduct. There are some of you who used to be members of Christian churches
years ago, but you have gradually declined, and so reckless has your career
at length become, that it is a wonder that you have not utterly perished in
your sin. You seemed to run well on the outset, and for a time you held on in
the way; but where are you now? Well, you happen at this present to be in
God’s house, and I do trust that God’s own hour has come, when he will meet
you and bring you back. What we have to say of Jonah, I do entreat you to
apply to yourselves; if the cap seems to fit you, put it on and wear it, even
though it should be a fool’s cap: wear it till you are ashamed of yourselves,
and are led to confess your folly before the God who is able to remove it,
and to make you wise unto salvation.
Observe, dear friends, that though Jonah remembered the Lord, it was not till
he got into the whale’s belly, nor even then till his soul fainted within
him. He did not remember the Lord all the time he was going down to Joppa to
find a ship, nor yet when he got on board that ship. His Master had said to
him, Jonah, go to Nineveh,” but Jonah was a strong-willed, head-strong
fellow. Though a true servant of God, and a prophet, yet he fled from the
presence of the Lord. To Nineveh, he resolved within himself, he would not
go. He could foresee no honour to himself out of the journey, no increase of
his own reputation, no deference that would come to him amongst those proud
Assyrians, so, in direct defiance of the divine command, he set off to Joppa,
to take a ship and to flee from God’s presence. Into the ship he got, paid
the fare, and went sallying down the sea to go to Tarshish; but all this
while he never thought of God. Not unlikely in this assembly there may be a
woman who used to be a member of a Christian church, but she married an
ungodly man; after that there was no going to the house of God, much less
anything like keeping up her church membership. The shop was kept open on
Sunday, or there was a pleasure party to be entertained at home, or an
excursion taken into the country. All this seemed very pleasant. The
disquietude of conscience she might feel at first wore off as habit made it
familiar, until, year after year, this woman, who once seemed to be a true
servant of Christ, lives in carelessness and indifference, not to say
profanity, with hardly any thoughts of God. Perhaps she has not quite given
up prayer; she could not absolutely become an enemy of Christ, or entertain a
dislike to his people. Still, God was forgotten. So long as the business
prospered, the husband was in good health, and the world smiled, God was
never thought of. Can I be mistaken in supposing that there is a man here who
in his youth was a loud talker, a vehement professor of religion, and a
companion of those that fear the Lord? But after a time there seemed to be a
way of getting money rather faster than the ordinary methods of honest labour
or simple merchandise; so he entered into, a speculation, which soon ate out
the vitals of his piety. His new projects involved new companions; in their
fellowship he stifled his old convictions, and, as he would not play the
hypocrite, he ceased to make any profession at all. Perhaps months have
passed since he has been in a place of worship; even now he would rather be
unrecognised, for he has only come here because a friend from the country
asked his company to me the place and to hear the preacher. Ah! my dear sir,
it is strange indeed, if you be a child of God, that you could have walked so
contrary to God as you have. Yet so did Jonah. Do I, then, hold up his case
before your eyes to comfort you? Nay; but let me hope that you will apply the
bitter rebuke to your own soul, and be led to do as Jonah did. All the while
the ship sailed smoothly over the sea, Jonah forgot his God. You could not
have distinguished him from the veriest heathen on board. He was just as bad
as they were. Yet was there a spark of fire among the embers, which God in
due time fanned into a flame. Happy for you if this better part of his
experience should tally with your own.
“This article originally appeared here at Bible Bulletin Board.”




