A great inventor is to make bread without flour, and he is preparing the
plan of a house which is to have no foundations. Wonderful! Isn't it?
We are no longer to eat grapes as they come from the vines—they are so
old-fashioned: we are to have them after they have been squeezed in a
patent press, and have been fashioned into cakes of mathematical shape.
We should not be at all surprised to hear that our steam-boats are all a
mistake, and have become things of the past, being in fact superseded
by electrified table-cloths, which each man withdraws from his
dining-table, spreads on the top of the water, and then uses as an
instantaneously-prepared raft, which he steers with his knife and fork.
When this comes about, we shall still be found sticking to the unchanged
and unchangeable Word of God. There will be no new God, nor a new
devil, and we shall never have a new Savior, nor a new atonement: why
should we then be either attracted or alarmed by the error and nonsense
which everywhere plead for a hearing because they are new? What is their
newness to us; we are not children, nor frequenters of playhouses?
Truly, to such a new toy or a new play has immense attractions; but men care less about the age of a thing than about its intrinsic value. To suppose that theology can be new
is to imagine that the Lord himself is of yesterday. A doctrine which
is said to have lately become true must of necessity be a lie. Falsehood
has no beard, but truth is hoary with an age immeasurable.
The old
gospel is the only gospel. Pity is our only feeling towards those young
preachers who cry, "See my new theology," in just the same spirit as
little Mary says, "See my pretty new frock."
=== by Charles Spurgeon ===
Awesome... I love the fact that you pointed out the unique attribute of God: unchangeability. He remains unchanged no matter the generation you find yourself. He was the same yesterday, today and forever. Although he is unchangeable, he can change his mind on some certain thing. If he decides to enrich you and you choose to leave him for Satan, he will leave you to yourself. More so, his Mercy endureth forever doesnt mean he won't punish righteous people who commit sin.
ReplyDelete