ted, or it may have
gone out! It is not a question of John Keble, or General Booth, but is
the singing from the heart? The "Amen" may be shouted or intoned, but if
not real, it is worse than smouldering wick.
II.--We may as well be without oil as not have enough to endure to the
end.
All ten lamps were at one time burning. In the margin of verse 10, we
read, "Our lamps are going out." What a lesson to the backslider! You
once were a burning and a shining light, but you did not seek grace to
help in time of need, and your lamp is gone out. Better never have made
a profession if there be not grace to sustain the flame. Aye, and
perhaps you, with a lamp which has gone out, you have been a preacher, or
a teacher, and have, before now, enforced this very lesson on your
hearers. If there is a sight in this world over which angels might weep,
it is a preacher without a light. Better go to hell from a race-course
than a pulpit!
III.--The gates or the palace may be shut while we are calling on the oil
seller.
"While they went to buy, the Bridegroom came." There is an old saying,
that "praying breath was never wasted." But this parable does not teach
that lesson. There are not a few who think they can atone for the sins
of a long life by crying with their dying breath, "Lord, have mercy on
me!" But the truth is, there may be the fear of punishment without any
penitence, and cries for dread of hell may not be the sacrifice of a
broken and a contrite heart.
Let us not put off our repentance too long, or while we are sending for
the minister to instruct us, death may claim us for his prey. Or while
we are saying to the teacher of religion, "What must I do to escape
hell?" the fetters may be fastened on our soul. The palace-gate may
swing to before we can make the oil-man hear.
IV.--That which lets the five wise in to the palace, keeps out the five
foolish.
"The door was shut." The five were in, and then came the other five, to
find the gate closed. Then they begin to cry "Open to us!" but in vain.
The door makes all the difference. If you enter, it is by the door; if
you are shut out, it is the door that closes against you. "I am the
door," said Jesus, and it is yet true. "No man cometh to the Father but
by Me." Yes, Jesus is the True and Living way, and the only one. But if
we are lost, it will be the aspect of Jesus which will slay our last
hope. It is the wrath of the Lamb
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