19 -- THE MOUNTAIN TOP OF SIN
We have been talking of the
mountain-top of the saint, and it is surely beautiful. Nothing on
earth to be compared to the life of full salvation. The life of the
sinner is like the dark, rainy,
drizzling night, and the life of the justified is like the beautiful
moonshine on a lovely moonlight
night, but the sanctified life is like the noon hour of a bright,
sunshiny day.
But for a little while we
want to look at the mountain-top life of sin. If there is a life of
faith and love that God could compare to a mountain top of glory, and
of love, and of peace, and of
joy, and of rest, the other has a mountain of sorrow, and sadness, and
misery, and woe, and
dissatisfaction, and unrest, and his condemnation is piled up around
him like a mountain.
He can look back over
his past life and see many sins that he has committed that look like
hills, and others that look like great mountains to him. At another
time his sins look like an ocean
of black ink, and as he sees them he gives up all hope and sinks down
into dark despair. At another
time he looks at his sins and they look like a herd of savage beasts,
every one of them with fiery
eyes just ready to tear him to pieces. As he listens to their awful
growls the blood will almost
freeze in his veins, and the devil will tell him that there is no hope
for him in the world. At another
time his sins are like a flock of vultures, and they flap their black,
skinny wings in his poor face by
day and by night, and when he works all day they will sit over his bed
at night, and as he tries to
sleep the devil will give him a few horrible nightmares. As he wakes
out of his awful stupor the
devil will tell him that the thing he needs is some more drink and that
if he will get on one more
big drunk his troubles will all disappear. Under the delusion of the
devil he goes out to get on
another drunk in order to drown his troubles. Then as he sobers up his
sins will crawl around him
and over him and entwine themselves about him like a herd of awful
serpents, and while the doctor
tells him that it is not real snakes but only the tremens, the poor man
can feel a thousand awful
snakes crawling up his back, and over his bare body, and while he
groans in awful agony, the
Methodist stewards and Baptist deacons and the Presbyterian elders have
voted to one of their
neighbors what they call high license, and the bartender sends word up
to the poor fellow with the
tremens that he has a fine supply of the best whiskey that was ever in
town, and that if he could just
get down to his place of business he could fix him up all O. K. They
don't seem to know that the
poor fellow is already fixed up for a home in the pit.
As the poor fellow
sobers up, his sins take another turn on him, and now they are like lead
balls around his neck and are about to pull him into an awful hell. He
sees no way out of his sins,
and up comes the devil and says to him, "You are mine anyhow and if I
were you I would just go in
to have a good time while I did live; I have got you bound and you know
it, and everybody else
knows it. What is the use of ever trying to reform? You won't hold out
a month. You know that you
can't live a Christian if you were to try." And the poor fellow listens
to the devil and says, "Well,
that is so and I will never try again to do the right thing."
So he goes a little deeper
into the life of sin, and now his sins are more like worlds than
they are like mountains. He can't even see over the top of them. He can
see over the top of a
mountain, but here is a pile of sins that rises so high that no living
man can see over the top of
them. Now despair seizes him, and the next thing you hear of that man
will be a funeral over in one
end of the town. His sins were like a mountain, and at the last his
sins were greater than all the
others put together. He dies a murderer at his own hand, and goes out
without one ray of hope.
A life of sin is like the awful
storm cloud; it rises higher and higher and becomes blacker
and blacker, and darker and darker, and at last it will burst through
on the poor victim and sweep
him off his feet, and sweep away every ray of hope and every vestige of
manhood. Now love is
gone, and honor is gone, and family is gone, and salvation is gone, and
God is gone, and Christ is
gone, and there is nothing in sight but the Judgment Day, and he is not
ready for that. And the men
who voted the license will give fifty cents each to bury him.
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