team. Don't yoke an
ass with an ox (see Deut. xxii, 10). In your motive power see to it
there is no mixture of vanity with duty. You will not succeed in
concealing the fact. A donkey is one of the worst of animals to hide. IT
WILL TALK!
Let there be no stopping at home because the wind is in the east. "The
sluggard will not plough by reason of the cold." If the ploughman means
to succeed he must count on suffering; and if the devil cannot find
anyone on his side to oppose, he will raise up some imbecile Christian to
do so, who by some sneer or cold criticism, will try to keep the plough
idle. Instead of looking which way the wind blows, get to work.
There must be no looking back. Mark the Master's words in Luke ix, 62.
Keep your eye on the mark, just as the ploughman looks at the staff he
has fixed as his guide. Keep looking unto Jesus. Many a preacher, who
could make hell tremble for its own, has, by looking back, become
respectably commonplace. So the fine promise of his youth dies ignobly,
and is laid in the grave of Demas! Whether it be a bag of gold, or a
fair face, or a pillow of down, thou art called to look back upon, do as
the Master did--set thy "face toward Jerusalem."
Keep a good heart on it. "He that ploweth should plow in hope." What is
called success does not mean reaping only. The plough is as honourable
as the sickle, though they may not make a feast, or dress thy team with
flowers! Whistle at the plough, and in time thou shalt be bidden to the
harvest supper. John Baptist was a ploughman, and that was all; yet
there are some reapers who would gladly exchange places with him, badly
paid as he was. In these days too often the honour is paid to the
successful evangelist, and those who ploughed and sowed are forgotten;
but the time is coming when the promise shall be fulfilled--
"THE PLOUGHMAN SHALL OVERTAKE THE REAPER."
IV. A SHORT HOME MISSION SERMON.
"_The Iron did swim_."--2ND KINGS, vi, 6.
DID IT? THEN SUNKEN THINGS MAY RISE.
The axe had fallen into the river, to the great sorrow of the man who had
used it. He was an honest man, for he mourned over the fact that it was
borrowed. "It has sunk to rise no more;" and yet it swam! Why lose hope
of the fallen and degraded? They are no lower down than the axe head was
when at the bottom of the Jordan. "The iron did swim." How? for
SUNKEN THINGS DO NOT RAISE THEMSELVES.
If the axe had been let alone,
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