<h2><SPAN name="PLOUGHING_THE_ROCK" id="PLOUGHING_THE_ROCK">PLOUGHING THE ROCK.</SPAN></h2>
<p class="small">"Shall horses run upon the rock? will one plough there with oxen?"—<span class="smcap">Amos</span> 6:12.</p>
<p class="p2"><span class="smcap">These</span> expressions are proverbs, taken from the
familiar sayings of the east country. A proverb is generally
a sword with two edges, or, if I may so say, it
has many edges, or is all edge, and hence it may be
turned this way and that way, and every part of it will
have force and point. A proverb has often many bearings,
and you cannot always tell what was the precise
meaning of him who uttered it. The connection would
abundantly tolerate two senses in this place. An
ancient commentator asserts that it has seven meanings,
and that any one of them would be consistent with the
context. I cannot deny the assertion, and if it be correct
it is only one among many instances of the manifold
wisdom of the Word of God. Like those curiously
carved Chinese balls in which there is one ball within
another, so in many a holy text there is sense within
sense, teaching within teaching, and each one worthy
of the Spirit of God.</p>
<p>The first sense of the text upon which I would say
just a word or two is this: The prophet is expostulating
with ungodly men upon their <i>pursuit of happiness where
it never can be found</i>. They were endeavoring to grow
rich and great and strong by oppression. The prophet<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</SPAN></span>
says, "Ye have turned judgment into gall, and the fruit
of righteousness into hemlock." Justice was bought and
sold among them, and the book of the law was made the
instrument of fraud. "Yet," says the prophet, "there
is no gain to be gotten in this way—no real profit, no
true happiness. As well may horses run upon a rock,
and oxen plough the sand; it is labor in vain."</p>
<p>If any of you try to content yourselves with this
world, any hope to find a heaven in the midst of your
business and your family without looking upward for
it, you labor in vain. If you hope to find pleasure in
sin, and think that it will go well with you if you despise
the law of God, you will make a great mistake. You
might as well seek for roses in the grottoes of the sea,
or look for pearls on the pavements of the city. You
will find what your soul requires nowhere but in God.
To seek after happiness in evil deeds is to plough a rock
of granite. To labor after true prosperity by dishonest
means is as useless as to till the sandy shore. "Wherefore
do you spend your money for that which is not
bread, and your labor for that which satisfieth not?"
Young man, you are killing yourself with ambition;
you seek your own honor and emolument, and this is a
poor, poor object for an immortal soul. And you, too,
sir, are wearing out your life with care; your mind and
body both fail you in endeavoring to amass riches, as if
a man's life consisted in the abundance of the things
which he possesses; you are ploughing a rock; your
cares will not bring you joy of heart or content of spirit;
your toil will end in failure. And you, too, who labor
to weave a righteousness by your works apart from
Christ and fancy that with the diligent use of outward
ceremonies you may be able to do the work of the Holy<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</SPAN></span>
Spirit upon your own heart, you, too, are ploughing
thankless rock. The strength of fallen nature exerted
at its utmost can never save a soul. Why, then, plough
the rock any longer? Give over the foolish task.</p>
<p>So far, I believe, we have not misread the text, but
have mentioned a very probable meaning of the words;
still another strikes me, which I think equally suitable,
and upon it I shall dwell, by God's help.</p>
<p>It is this. <i>God will not always send his ministers to call
men to repentance.</i> When men's hearts remain obdurate,
and they do not and will not repent, then God
will not always deal with them in mercy. "My Spirit
shall not always strive with man." There is a time of
ploughing, but when it is evident that the heart is
wilfully hardened, then wisdom itself suggests to mercy
that she should give over her efforts. "Shall horses run
upon the rock? will one plough there with oxen?" No,
there is a limit to the efforts of kindness, and in fulness
of time the labor ceases, and the rock remains unploughed
henceforth and for ever.</p>
<p class="p2">I. Taking that sense, we shall speak upon it, and
remark, first, that <span class="smcap">ministers labor to break up men's
hearts</span>; the wise preacher tries by the power of the
Holy Ghost to break up the hard clods of the heart, so
that it may receive the heavenly seed.</p>
<p>Many truths are used like sharp ploughshares to
break up the heart. Men must be made to feel that they
have sinned, and they must be led to repent of sin.
They must receive Christ, not with the head only, but
with the heart; for with the heart man believeth unto
righteousness. There must be emotion; we must cut
into the heart with the ploughshare of the law. A farmer
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</SPAN></span>
who is too tender-hearted to tear and harrow the land
will never see a harvest. Here is the failing of certain
divines, they are afraid of hurting any one's feelings,
and so they keep clear of all the truths which are likely
to excite fear or grief. They have not a sharp ploughshare
on their premises, and are never likely to have a
stack in their rickyard. They angle without hooks for
fear of hurting the fish, and fire without bullets out of
respect to the feelings of the birds. This kind of love
is real cruelty to men's souls. It is much the same as
if a surgeon should permit a patient to die because he
would not pain him with the lancet, or by the necessary
removal of a limb. It is a terrible tenderness which
leaves men to sink into hell rather than distress their
minds. It is pleasant to prophesy smooth things, but
woe unto the man who thus degrades himself. Is this
the spirit of Christ? Did he conceal the sinner's peril?
Did he cast doubt upon the unquenchable fire and the undying
worm? Did he lull souls into slumber by smooth
strains of flattery? Nay, but with honest love and
anxious concern he warned men of the wrath to come,
and bade them repent or perish. Let the servant of the
Lord Jesus in this thing follow his Master, and plough
deep with a sharp ploughshare, which will not be balked
by the hardest clods. This we must school ourselves to
do. If we really love the souls of men, let us prove it
by honest speech. The hard heart must be broken,
or it will still refuse the Saviour who was sent to bind
up the broken-hearted. There are some things which
men may or may not have, and yet may be saved; but
those things which go with the ploughing of the heart
are indispensable; there must be a holy fear and a humble
trembling before God; there must be an acknowledg<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</SPAN></span>ment
of guilt and a penitent petition for mercy; there
must, in a word, be a thorough ploughing of the soul
before we can expect the seed to bring forth fruit.</p>
<p class="p2">II. But the text indicates to us that <span class="smcap">at times ministers
labor in vain</span>. "Shall horses run upon the rock?
will one plough there with oxen?" In a short time a
ploughman feels whether the plough will go or not,
and so does the minister. He may use the very same
words in one place which he has used in another, but
he feels in the one place great joy and hopefulness in
preaching, while with another audience he has heavy
work, and little hope. The plough in the last case seems
to jump out of the furrow; and a bit of the share is
broken off now and then. He says to himself, "I do not
know how it is, but I do not get on at this," and he finds
that his Master has sent him to work upon a particularly
heavy soil. All laborers for Christ know that
this is occasionally the case. You must have found it so
in a Sunday-school class, or in a cottage meeting, or in
any other gathering where you have tried to teach and
preach Jesus. You have said to yourself every now and
then, "Now I am ploughing a rock. Before, I turned up
rich mould which a yoke of oxen might plough with ease,
and a horse might even run at the work; but now the
horse may tug, and the oxen may wearily toil till they
gall their shoulders, but they cannot cut a furrow; the
rock is stubborn to the last degree."</p>
<p>There are such hearers in all congregations. They
are as iron, and yet they are side by side with a fine plot
of ground. Their sister, their brother, their son, their
daughter, all these have readily felt the power of the
gospel; but <i>they</i> do not feel it. They hear it respect<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</SPAN></span>fully;
and they so far allow it free course that they permit
it to go in at one ear and out at the other, but they
will have nothing more to do with it. They would not
like to be Sabbath-breakers and stop away from worship;
they therefore do the gospel the questionable
compliment of coming where it is preached and then
refusing to regard it. They are hard, hard, hard bits
of rock, the plough does not touch them.</p>
<p>Many, on the other hand, are equally hard; but it
is in another way. The impression made by the word
is not deep or permanent. They receive it with joy, but
they do not retain it. They listen with attention, but it
never comes to practice with them. They hear about
repentance, but they never repent. They hear about
faith, but they never believe. They are good judges of
what the gospel is, and yet they have never accepted it
for themselves. They will not eat; but still they insist
that good bread shall be put on the table. They are
great sticklers for the very things which they personally
reject. They are moved to feeling; they shed tears
occasionally; but still their hearts are not really broken
up by the word. They go their way, and forget what
manner of men they are. They are rocky-hearted
through and through; all our attempts to plough them
are failures.</p>
<p>Now this is all the worse, because certain of these
rocky-hearted people have been ploughed for years, and
have become harder instead of softer. Once or twice
ploughing, and a broken share or two, and a disappointed
ploughman or two, we might not mind, if they would
yield at last; but these have since their childhood known
the gospel and never given way before its power. It is a
good while since their childhood now with some of them.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</SPAN></span>
Their hair is turning gray, and they themselves are getting
feeble with years. They have been entreated
and persuaded times beyond number, but labor has been
lost upon them. In fact, they used to feel the word, in
a certain fashion, far more years ago than they do now.
The sun, which softens wax, hardens clay, and the same
gospel which has brought others to tenderness and repentance
has exercised a contrary effect upon them, and
made them more careless about divine things than they
were in their youth. This is a mournful state of things,
is it not?</p>
<p>Why are certain men so extremely rocky? Some
are so from a <i>peculiar stolidity of nature</i>. There are many
people in the world whom you cannot very well move,
they have a great deal of granite in their constitution, and
are more nearly related to Mr. Obstinate than to Mr.
Pliable. Now, I do not think badly of these people,
because one knows what it is to preach to an excitable
people, and to get them all stirred, and to know that
in the end they are none the better; whereas some of the
more stolid and immovable people when they are moved
are moved indeed; when they do feel they feel intensely,
and they retain any impression that is made. A little
chip made in granite by very hard blows will abide there,
while the lashing of water, which is easy enough, will
leave no trace even for a moment. It is a grand thing
to get hold of a fine piece of rock and to exercise faith
about it. The Lord's own hammer has mighty power to
break, and in the breaking great glory comes to the Most
High.</p>
<p>Worse still, certain men are hard because of their
<i>infidelity</i>—not heart-infidelity all of it, but an infidelity
which springs out of a desire not to believe, which
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</SPAN></span>
has helped them to discover difficulties. These difficulties
exist, and were meant to exist, for there would be no
room for faith if everything were as plain as the nose
on one's face. These persons have gradually come to
doubt, or to think that they doubt, essential truths, and
this renders them impervious to the gospel of Christ.</p>
<p>A much more numerous body are orthodox enough,
but hard-hearted for all that. <i>Worldliness</i> hardens a
man in every way. It often dries up all charity to the
poor, because the man must make money, and he thinks
that the poor-rates are sufficient excuse for neglecting
the offices of charity. He has no time to think of the
next world; he must spend all his thoughts upon the
present one. Money is tight, and therefore he must hold
it tight; and when money brings in little interest, he
finds therein a reason for being the more niggardly. He
has no time for prayer, he <i>must</i> get down to the counting-house.
He has no time for reading his Bible, his ledger
wants him. You may knock at his door, but his heart
is not at home; it is in the counting-house, wherein he
lives and moves and has his being. His god is his gold,
his bliss is his business, his all in all is himself. What
is the use of preaching to him? As well may horses run
upon a rock, or oxen drag a plough across a field sheeted
with iron a mile thick.</p>
<p>With some, too, there is a hardness, produced by what
I might almost call the opposite of stern worldliness,
namely, a <i>general levity</i>. They are naturally butterflies
flitting about and doing nothing. They never think, or
want to think. Half a thought exhausts them, and they
must needs be diverted, or their feeble minds will utterly
weary. They live in a round of amusement. To them
the world is a stage, and all the men and women only
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</SPAN></span>
players. It is of little use to preach to them; there is
no depth of earth in their superficial nature; beneath a
sprinkling of shifting worthless sand lies an impenetrable
rock of utter stupidity and senselessness. I might
thus multiply reasons why some are harder than others,
but it is a well-assured fact that they are so, and there I
leave the matter.</p>
<p class="p2">III. I shall now ask everybody to judge whether the
running of horses upon a rock and the ploughing there
with oxen shall always be continued. I assert that <span class="smcap">it is
unreasonable to expect that God's servants should
always continue to labor in vain</span>. These people have
been preached to, taught, instructed, admonished, expostulated
with, and advised; shall this unrecompensed
work be always performed? We have given them a fair
trial; what do reason and prudence say? Are we bound
to persevere till we are worn out by this unsuccessful
work? We will ask it of men who plough their own
farms; do they recommend perseverance when failure
is certain? Shall horses run upon the rock? Shall one
plough there with oxen? Surely not for ever.</p>
<p>I think we shall all agree that labor in vain cannot
be continued for ever if we consider <i>the ploughman</i>. He
does not want to be much considered; but still his
Master does not overlook him. See how weary he
grows when the work discourages him. He goes to his
Master with, "Who hath believed our report, and to
whom is the arm of the Lord revealed?" "Why hast
thou sent me," says he, "to a people that have ears but
hear not? They sit as thy people sit, and they hear as
thy people hear, and then they go their way and they
forget every word that is spoken, and they obey not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</SPAN></span>
the voice of the Lord." See how disappointed the
preacher becomes. It is always hard work when you
appear to get no forwarder, although you do your
utmost. No man, whoever he may be, likes to be set
upon work which appears to be altogether a waste of
time and effort. To his own mind it seems to have a
touch of the ridiculous about it, and he fears that he
will be despised of his fellows for aiming at the impossible.
Shall it always be the lot of God's ministers to
be trifled with? Will the great Husbandman bid his
ploughmen spill their lives for nought? Must his
preachers continue to cast pearls before swine? If the
consecrated workers are so bidden by their Lord they
will persevere in their painful task; but their Master is
considerate of them, and I ask <i>you</i> also to consider
whether it is reasonable to expect a zealous heart to be
for ever occupied with the salvation of those who never
respond to its anxiety? Shall the horses always plough
upon the rock? Shall the oxen always labor there?</p>
<p>Again, there is <i>the Master</i> to be considered. The
Lord—is he always to be resisted and provoked? Many
of you have had eternal life set before you as the result of
believing in Jesus; and you have refused to believe.
It is a wonder that my Lord has not said to me, "You
have done your duty with them; never set Christ before
them again; my Son shall not be insulted." If you offer
a beggar in the street a shilling and he will not have it,
you cheerfully put it into your purse and go your way;
you do not entreat him to have his wants relieved. But,
behold, our God in mercy begs sinners to come to him,
and implores them to accept his Son. In his condescension
he even stands like a salesman in the market, crying,
"Ho, every one that thirsteth, come ye to the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</SPAN></span>
waters, and he that hath no money; come, buy wine
and milk without money and without price." In another
place he says of himself, "All day long have I
stretched out my hands to a disobedient and gainsaying
generation." If the Lord of mercy has been refused
so long in the sight of you who reverence him, does not
some indignation mingle with your pity, and while you
love sinners and would have them saved, do you not
feel in your heart that there must be an end to such
insulting behavior? I ask even the careless to think of
the matter in this light, and if they do not respect the
ploughman, yet let them have regard to his Master.</p>
<p>And then, again, there are so many <i>other people</i> who
are needing the gospel, and who would receive it if
they had it, that it would seem to be wise to leave
off wearying oneself about those who despise it. What
did our Lord say? He said that if the mighty things
which had been done in Bethsaida and Chorazin had been
done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented.
What is more wonderful still, he says that if he had
wrought the same miracles in Sodom and Gomorrah
which were wrought in Capernaum, they would have
repented in sackcloth and ashes. Does it not occur to
us at once to give the word to those who will have it,
and leave the despisers to perish in their own wilfulness?
Does not reason say, "Let us send this medicine
where there are sick people who will value it?"
Thousands of people are willing to hear the gospel. See
how they crowd wherever the preacher goes—how they
tread upon one another in their anxiety to listen to
him; and if these people who hear him every day will
not receive his message, "in God's name," saith he,
"let me go where there is a probability of finding soil<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</SPAN></span>
that can be ploughed." "Shall horses run upon the
rock? Will one plough there with oxen?" Must I
work always where nothing comes of it? Does not
reason say, let the word go to China, to Hindostan, or
to the utmost parts of the earth, where they will receive
it; for those who have it preached in the corners of
their streets despise it?</p>
<p>I shall not lengthen this argument, but shall solemnly
put the question again. Would any of you continue
to pursue an object when it has proved to be hopeless?
Do you wonder that when the Lord has sent his
servants to speak kind, gracious, tender words, and
men have not heard, he says to them, "They are joined
unto their idols; let them alone"? There is a boundary
to the patience of men, and we soon arrive at it;
and assuredly there is a limit, though it is long before
we outrun it, to the patience of God. "At length,"
he says, "it is enough. My Spirit shall no longer
strive with them." If the Lord says this can any of us
complain? Is not this the way of wisdom? Does not
prudence itself dictate it? Any thoughtful mind will
say, "Ay, ay, a rock cannot be ploughed for ever."</p>
<p class="p2">IV. Fourthly. <span class="smcap">There must be an alteration</span>, then,
and that speedily. The oxen shall be taken off from
such toil. It can be easily done, and done soon. It can
be effected in three ways.</p>
<p>First, the unprofitable hearer can be removed so
that he shall no more hear the gospel from the lips of his
best approved minister. There is a preacher who has
some sort of power over him; but as he rejects his
testimony, and remains impenitent, the man shall be
removed to another town, where he shall hear monoto<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</SPAN></span>nous
discourses which will not touch his conscience. He
shall go where he shall be no longer persuaded and entreated;
and there he will sleep himself into hell. That
may be readily enough done; perhaps some of you are
making arrangements even now for your own removal
from the field of hope.</p>
<p>Another way is to take away the ploughman. He
has done his work as best he could, and he shall be
released from his hopeless task. He is weary. Let him
go home. The soil would not break up, but he could
not help that; let him have his wage. He has broken
his plough at the work; let him go home and hear his
Lord say, "Well done." He was willing to keep on at
the disheartening labor as long as his Master bade him;
but it is evidently useless, therefore let him go home,
for his work is done. He has been sore sick, let him die,
and enter into his rest. This is by no means improbable.</p>
<p>Or, there may happen something else. The Lord
may say, "That piece of work shall never trouble the
ploughman any more. I will take it away." And he
may take it away in this fashion: the man who has
heard the gospel, but rejected it, will die. I pray my
Master that he will not suffer any one of you to die in
your sins, for then we cannot reach you any more, or
indulge the faintest hope for you. No prayer of ours
can follow you into eternity. There is one name by
which you may be saved, and that name is sounded in
your ears—the name of Jesus; but if you reject him
now, even that name will not save you. If you do not
take Jesus to be your Saviour he will appear as your
judge. I pray you, do not destroy your own souls by
continuing to be obstinate against almighty love.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>God grant that some better thing may happen. Can
nothing else be done? This soil is rock; can we not
sow it without breaking it? No. Without repentance
there is no remission of sin. But is there not a way of
saving men without the grace of God? The Lord Jesus
did not say so; but he said, "He that believeth and is
baptized shall be saved, but he that believeth not shall
be damned." He did not hint at a middle course or
hold out a "larger hope;" but he declared "He that
believeth not shall be damned," <i>and so he must be</i>.
Dream not of a back door to heaven, for the Lord has
provided none.</p>
<p>What then? Shall the preacher continue his fruitless
toil? If there is only half a hope left him, he is
willing to go on and say, "Hear, ye deaf, and see, ye
blind, and live, ye dead." He will even so speak this
day, for his Master bids him preach the gospel to every
creature; but it will be hard work to repeat the word of
exhortation for years to those who will not hear it.</p>
<p>Happily there is one other turn which affairs may
take. There is a God in heaven, let us pray to him to
put forth his power. Jesus is at his side, let us invoke
his interposition. The Holy Ghost is almighty, let us
call for his aid. Brothers who plough and sisters who
pray, cry to the Master for help. The horse and the
ox evidently fail, but there remains One above who is
able to work great marvels. Did he not once speak to
the rock, and turn the flint into a stream of water?
Let us pray him to do the same now.</p>
<p>And, oh, if there is one who feels and mourns that
his heart is like a piece of rock, I am glad he feels it; for
he who feels that his heart is a rock gives some evidence
that the flint is being transformed. O rock, instead of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</SPAN></span>
smiting thee, as Moses smote the rock in the wilderness
and erred therein, I would speak to thee. O rock,
wouldst thou become like wax? O rock, wouldst
thou dissolve into rivers of repentance? Hearken to
God's voice! O rock, break with good desire! O
rock, dissolve with longing after Christ, for God is
working upon thee now. Who knows but at this
very moment thou shall begin to crumble down. Dost
thou feel the power of the Word? Does the sharp
ploughshare touch thee just now? Break and break
again, till by contrition thou art dissolved, for then will
the good seed of the gospel come to thee, and thou
shalt receive it into thy bosom, and we shall all behold
the fruit thereof. And so I will fling one more handful
of good corn, and have done. If thou desirest eternal
life, trust Jesus Christ, and thou art saved at once.
"Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the
earth," says Christ, "for I am God, and beside me there
is none else." He that believeth in him hath everlasting
life. "Like as Moses lifted up the serpent in the
wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up:
that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but
have eternal life."</p>
<p>O Lord, break up the rock, and let the seed drop in
among its broken substance, and get thou a harvest
from the dissolved granite, at this time, for Jesus Christ's
sake. Amen.</p>
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