Spurgeon on Weeping For Jesus
“You need not weep because Christ died one-tenth so much as because your sins rendered it necessary that He should die. You need not weep over the crucifixion, but weep over your transgression, for your sins nailed the Redeemer to the accursed tree. To weep over a dying Saviour is to lament the remedy; it were wiser to bewail the disease. To weep over the dying Saviour is to wet the surgeon’s knife with tears; it were better to bewail the spreading polyps which that knife must cut away. To weep over the Lord Jesus as He goes to the cross is to weep over that which is the subject of the highest joy that ever heaven and earth have known; your tears are scarcely needed there; they are unnatural, but a deeper wisdom will make you brush them all away and chant with joy His victory over death and the grave. If we must continue our sad emotions, let us lament that we should have broken the law which He thus painfully vindicated; let us mourn that we should have incurred the penalty which He even to the death was made to endure … O brethren and sisters, this is the reason why we souls weep: because we have broken the divine law and rendered it impossible that we should be saved except Jesus Christ should die.”




Comments (2) »
1. Tim
April 3, 2004
5:59 PM
Spurgeon had a God given insight, didn’t he? I look forward to meeting him.
2. maryanne helms
April 4, 2004
9:00 PM
Tim-
THis is such a great passage…and fits so well with all the hype about the Passion. People are rarely stopping to consider the sorrow of sin, rather than the emotion of Jesus being killed. WE are the sorrowful reason for the Passion.
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