A Heavenly Pattern for Our Earthly Life
A Sermon
                          (No. 1778)
                          Preached on Wednesday Morning, April 30th, 1884, By
                          C. H. SPURGEON,
                          At Exeter-Hall
                          Being the Annual Sermon of the Baptist Missionary Society.
"Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven."—Matthew 6:10.
OUR Father's will shall certainly be  done, for the Lord "doeth according to his will in the army of heaven, and  among the inhabitants of the earth." Let us adoringly consent that it  shall be so, desiring no alteration therein. That "will" may cost us  dear; yet let it never cross our wills: let our minds be wholly subjugated to  the mind of God. That "will" may bring us bereavement, sickness, and  loss; but let us learn to say, "It is the Lord: let him do what seemeth  him good." We should not only yield to the divine will, but acquiesce in  it so as to rejoice in the tribulation which it ordains. This is a high  attainment, but we set ourselves to reach it. He that taught us this prayer  used it himself in the most unrestricted sense. When the bloody sweat stood on  his face, and all the fear and trembling of a man in anguish were upon him, he  did not dispute the decree of the Father, but bowed his head and cried,  "Nevertheless, not as I will, but as thou wilt." When we are called  to suffer bereavements personally, or when, as a holy brotherhood, we see our  best men taken away, let us know that it is well, and say most sincerely,  "The will of the Lord be done."
God knows what will best minister  to his gracious designs. To us it seems a sad waste of human life that man  after man should go to a malarious region, and perish in the attempt to save  the heathen: but infinite wisdom may view the matter very differently. We ask  why the Lord does not work a miracle, and cover the heads of his messengers  from the death shaft? No reason is revealed to us, but there is a reason, for  the will of the great Father is the sum of wisdom. Reasons are not made known  to us, else were there no scope for our faith; and the Lord loves that this  noble grace should have ample room and verge enough. Our God wastes no  consecrated life: he has made nothing in vain: he ordains all things according  to the counsel of his will, and that counsel never errs. Could the Lord endow  us with his own omniscience, we should not only consent to the deaths of his  servants, but should deprecate their longer life. The same would also be true  of our own living or dying. "Precious in the sight of the Lord is the  death of his saints"; and therefore we are sure that he does not afflict  us by bereavement without a necessity of love. We must still see one missionary  after another cut down in his prime; for there are arguments with God, as  convincing with him as they are obscure to us, which require that by heroic  sacrifice the foundations of the African church should be laid. Lord, we do not  ask thee to explain thy reasons to us. Thou canst screen us from a great  temptation by hiding thyself; for if even now we sin by asking reasons, we  might soon go further, and provoke thee sorely by contending against thy  reasons. He who demands a reason of God is not in a fit state to receive one.  In the case of the honoured men whom the Lord has removed from us this year,  there is assuredly no loss to the great cause as it is viewed by the eye of God.  See the great stones and costly stones laboriously brought from the quarry to  the edge of the sea! Can it be possible that these are deliberately thrown into  the deep? It swallows them up! Wherefore is so much labour thrown away? These  living stones might surely have been built into a temple for the Lord; why  should the waves of death engulf them? Yet more are sought for, and still more:  will the hungry abyss never cease to devour? Alas, that so much precious  material should be lost! It is not lost. No, not a stone of it. Thus the Lord  layeth the foundation of his harbour of refuge among the people. "Mercy  shall be built up for ever." In due time massive walls shall rise out of  the deep, and we shall no longer ask the reason for the losses of early days.
Peace be to the memories of the  heroic dead! Men die that the cause may live. "Father, thy will be  done." With this prayer upon our lips let us bend low in child-like  submission to the will of the great Jehovah, and then gird up our loins anew to  dauntless perseverance in our holy service. Though more should be taken away  next year, and the next, yet we must pray on, "Thy will be done in earth  as it is in heaven."
My heart is grieved for the death  of beloved hartley, and those noble men who preceded him to "the white  man's grave." I had seen him especially, for it had been a joy to  assist him for three years in preparing for missionary service. Alas! the  preparation led to small visible results. He left us, he landed, and he died.  Surely the Lord means to make further use of him; if he did not make him a  preacher to the natives, he must intend that he should preach to us. I may say  of each fallen missionary, "He being dead yet speaketh."  "Faithful unto death," they inspire us by their example. Dying  without regret in the cause of such a Master, they remind us of our own indebtedness  to him. Their spirits rising to his throne are links between this Society and  the glorified assembly above. Let not our thoughts go downward to their graves,  but rise upward to their thrones. Does not our text point with a finger of  flame from earth to heaven? Do not the dear departed ones mark a line of light  between the two worlds?
If the prayer of our text had not  been dictated by the Lord Jesus himself, we might think it too bold. Can it  ever be that this earth, a mere drop of a bucket, should touch the great sea of  life and light above and not be lost in it? Can it remain earth and yet be made  like to heaven? Will it not lost its individuality in the process? This earth  is subject to vanity, dimmed with ignorance, defiled with sin, furrowed with  sorrow; can holiness dwell in it as in heaven? Our Divine Instructor would not  teach us to pray for impossibilities; he puts such petitions into our mouths as  can be heard and answered. Yet certainly this is a great prayer; it has the hue  of the infinite about it. Can earth be tuned to the harmonies of heaven? Has  not this poor planet drifted too far away to be reduced to order and made to  keep rank with heaven? Is it not swathed in mist too dense to be removed? Can  its grave-clothes be loosed? Can thy will, O God, be done in earth as it is in  heaven? It can be, and it must be; for a prayer wrought in the soul by the Holy  Spirit is ever the shadow of a coming blessing, and he that taught us to pray  after this manner did not mock us with vain words. It is a brave prayer, which  only heaven-born faith can utter; yet it is not the offspring of presumption,  for presumption never longs for the will of the Lord to be perfectly performed.
I. May the Holy Spirit be with us,  while I first lead you to observe that THE COMPARISON IS NOT FAR FETCHED. That  our present obedience to God should be like to that of holy ones above is not a  strained and fanatical notion. It is not far-fetched, for earth and heaven  were called into being by the same Creator. The empire of the Maker  comprehends the upper and the lower regions. "The heaven, even the heavens  are the Lord's"; and "the earth is the Lord's, and the fulness  thereof." He sustaineth all things by the word of his power both in heaven  above and in the earth beneath. Jesus reigneth both among angels and men, for  he is the Lord of all. If, then, heaven and earth were created by the same God,  and are sustained by the same power, and governed from the same throne, we  believe that the same end will be subserved by each of them, and that both  heaven and earth shall tell out the glory of God. They are two bells of the  same chime, and this is the music that peals forth from them: "The Lord  shall reign for ever and ever. Hallelujah!" If earth were of the devil and  heaven were of God, and two self-existent powers were contending for the  mastery, we might question whether earth would ever be as pure as heaven; but  as our ears have twice heard the divine declaration, "Power belongeth unto  God," we expect to see that power triumphant, and the dragon cast out from  earth as well as heaven. Why should not every part of the great Creator's handiwork  become equally radiant with his glory? He that made can remake. The curse which  fell upon the ground was not eternal; thorns and thistles pass away. God will  bless the earth for Christ's sake even as once he cursed it for man's sake.
"Thy will be done in earth,  as it is in heaven." It was so once. Perfect obedience to the  heavenly upon this earth will only be a return to the good old times which  ended at the gate of Eden.  There was a day when no gulf was digged between earth and heaven; there was  scarce a boundary line, for the God of heaven walked in Paradise  with Adam. All things on earth were then pure, and true, and happy. It was the  garden of the Lord. Alas, that the trail of the serpent has now defiled  everything. Then earth's morning song was heard in heaven, and heaven's  hallelujahs floated down to earth at eventide. Those who desire to set up the kingdom of God are not instituting a new order of  things; they are restoring, not inventing. Earth will drop into the old groove  again. The Lord is king: and he has never left the throne. As it was in the  beginning so shall it be yet again. History shall, in the divinest sense,  repeat itself. The temple of the Lord shall be among men, and the Lord God  shall dwell among them. "Truth shall spring out of the earth; and  righteousness shall look down from heaven."
"Thy will be done in earth,  as it is in heaven." It will be so at the last. I shall not venture  far into prophecy. Some brethren are quite at home where I should lose myself.  I have scarcely yet been able to get out of the gospels and the epistles; and  that deep book of Revelation, with its waters to swim in, I must leave to  better instructed minds. "Blessed is he that keepeth the sayings of the  prophecy of that book;" to that blessing I would aspire, but I cannot yet  make claim to interpret it. This much, however, seems plain,—there is to be  "a new heaven and a new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness." This  creation, which now "groaneth and travaileth in pain," in sympathy  with man, is to be brought forth from its bondage into the glorious liberty of  the children of God. Blessed be the Lord Jesus, when he brought his people out  of their bondage, he did not redeem their spirits only, but their bodies also:  hence their material part is the Lord's as well as their spiritual nature, and  hence again this very earth which we inhabit shall be uplifted in connection  with us. The creation itself shall be delivered. Materialism, out of which  there has been once made a vesture for the Godhead in the person of Christ,  shall become a fit temple for the Lord of hosts. The New Jerusalem shall come  down from God out of heaven, prepared as a bride is prepared for her husband.  We are sure of this. Therefore unto this consummation let us strive mightily,  praying evermore, "Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven."
Meanwhile, remember also that there  is an analogy between earth and heaven, so that the one is the type of the  other. You could not describe heaven except by borrowing the things of earth to  symbolize it; and this shows that there is a real likeness between them. What  is heaven? It is Paradise, or a garden. Walk  amid your fragrant flowers and think of heaven's bed of spices. Heaven is a  kingdom: thrones, and crowns, and palms are the earthly emblems of the  heavenlies. Heaven is a city; and there, again, you fetch your metaphor from  the dwelling-places of men. It is a place of "many mansions"—the  homes of the glorified. Houses are of earth, yet is God our dwelling-place.  Heaven is a wedding-feast; and even such is this present dispensation. The  tables are spread here as well as there; and it is our privilege to go forth  and bring in the hedge-birds and the highwaymen, that the banqueting-hall may  be filled. While the saints above eat bread in the marriage supper of the Lamb,  we do the like below in another sense.
Between earth and heaven there is  but a thin partition. The home country is much nearer than we think. I question  if "the land that is very far off" be a true name for heaven. Was it  not an extended kingdom on earth which was intended by the prophet rather than  the celestial home? Heaven is by no means the far country, for it is the  Father's house. Are we not taught to say, "Our Father which art in  heaven"? Where the Father is the true spirit of adoption counts itself  near. Our Lord would have us mingle heaven with earth by naming it twice in  this short prayer. See how he makes us familiar with heaven by mentioning it  next to our usual food, making the next petition to be, "Give us this day  our daily bread." This does not look as if it should be thought of as a  remote region. Heaven, is at any rate, so near that in a moment we can speak  with him that is King of the place, and he will answer to our call. Yea, before  the clock shall tick again you and I may be there. Can that be a far-off  country which we can reach so soon? Oh, brothers, we are within hearing of the  shining ones; we are well-nigh home. A little while and we shall see our Lord.  Perhaps another day's march will bring us within the city gate. And what if  another fifty years of life on earth should remain, what is it but the  twinkling of an eye?
Clear enough is it that the  comparison between the obedience of earth and that of heaven is not  far-fetched. If heaven and heaven's God be, in truth, so near to us, our Lord  has set before us a homely model taken from our heavenly dwelling-place. The  petition only means—let all the children of the one Father be alike in doing  his will.
II. Secondly, THIS COMPARISON IS  EMINENTLY INSTRUCTIVE. Does it not teach us that what we do for God is  not everything, but how we do it is also to be considered? The Lord  Jesus Christ would not only have us do the Father's will, but do it after a  certain model. And what an elevated model it is! Yet is it none too elevated,  for we would not wish to render to our heavenly Father service of an inferior  kind. If none of us dare say that we are perfect, we are yet resolved that we  will never rest until we are. If none of us dare hope that even our holy things  are without a flaw, yet none of us will be satisfied while a spot remains upon  them. We would give to our God the utmost conceivable glory. Let the mark be as  high as possible. If we do not as yet reach it, we will aim higher and yet  higher. We do not desire that our pattern should be lowered, but that our  imitation should be raised.
"Thy will be done in  earth, as it is in heaven." Mark the words "be done," for  they touch a vital point of the text. God's will is done in heaven. How  very practical! On earth his will is often forgotten, and his rule ignored. In  the church of the present age there is a desire to be doing something for God,  but few enquire what he wills them to do. Many things are done for the  evangelizing of the people which were never commanded by the great Head of the  Church, and cannot be approved of by him. Can we expect that he will accept or  bless that which he has never commanded? Will-worship is as sin in his sight.  We are to do his will in the first place, and then to expect a blessing upon  the doing of that will. My brethren, I am afraid that Christ's will on earth is  very much more discussed than done. I have heard of brethren spending days in  disputing upon a precept which their dispute was breaking. In heaven they have  no disputes, but they do the will of God without discord. We are best employed  when we are actually doing something for this fallen world, and for the glory  of our Lord. "Thy will be done": we must come to actual works of  faith and labours of love. Too often we are satisfied with having approved of  that will, or with having spoken of it in words of commendation. But we must  not stay in thought, resolve, or word; the prayer is practical and  business-like, "Thy will be done in earth, as it is in  heaven." An idle man stretched himself on his bed when the sun had risen  high in heaven, and as he rolled over, he muttered to himself that he wished  this were hard work, for he could do any quantity of it with pleasure. Many  might wish that to think and to speak were to do the will of God; for  them they would have effected it very thoroughly. Up yonder there is no playing  with sacred things: they do his commandments, hearkening unto the voice of his  word. Would God his will were not alone preached and sung below, but actually done as it is in heaven.
In heaven the will of God is done in  spirit, for they are spirits there. It is done in truth with  undivided heart, and unquestioned desire. On earth, too often, it is done and  yet not done; for a dull formality mocks real obedience. Here obedience often  shades off into dreary routine. We sing with the lips, but our hearts are  silent. We pray as if the mere utterance of words were prayer. We sometimes  preach living truth with dead lips. It must no longer be so. Would God we had  the fire and fervour of those burning ones who behold the face of God. We pray  in that sense, "Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven." I hope  there is a revival of spiritual life among us, and that, to a large extent, our  brotherhood is instinct with fervour; but there is room for far more zeal. Ye  that know how to pray, go down upon your knees, and with the warm breath of  prayer arouse the spark of spiritual life until it becomes a flame. With all  the powers of our innermost being, with the whole life of God within us, let us  be stirred up to do the will of the Lord on earth as it is done in heaven.
In heaven they do God's will constantly,  without failure. Would God it could be so here! We are aroused to-day, but  we fall asleep tomorrow. We are diligent for one hour, but sluggish the next.  This must not be, dear friends. We must be steadfast, unmovable—always  abounding in the work of the Lord. We need to pray for sacred perseverance,  that we may imitate the days of heaven upon the earth by doing the Lord's will  without a break.
They do God's will in heaven universally,  without making a selection. Here men pick and choose—take this commandment  to be obeyed, and lay that commandment by as non-essential. We are, I fear, all  tinctured, more or less, with this odious gall. A certain part of obedience is  hard, and therefore we try to forget it. It must no longer be so; but  whatsoever Jesus saith unto us we must do. Partial obedience is actual  disobedience. The loyal subject respects the whole law. If anything be the will  of the Lord, we have no choice in the matter, the choice is made by our Lord.  Let us pray that we may neither misunderstand the Lord's will, nor forget it,  nor violate it. Perhaps we are, as a company of believers, ignorantly omitting  a part of the Lord's will, and this may have been hindering our work these many  years; possibly there is something written by the pen of inspiration which we  have not read, or something read that we have not practised; and this may hold  back the arm of the Lord from working. We should often make diligent search,  and go through our churches to see wherein we differ from the divine pattern.  Some goodly Babylonish garment or wedge of gold may be as an accursed thing in  the camp, bringing disaster to the Lord's armies. Let us not neglect anything  which our God commands lest he withhold his blessing.
His will is done in heaven instantly,  and without hesitation. We, I fear, are given to delays. We plead that we  must look the thing round about. "Second thoughts are best," we say,  whereas the first thoughts of eager love are the prime production of our being.  I would that we were obedient at all hazard, for therein lies the truest  safety. Oh, to do what God bids us, as God bids us, on the spot, and at the  moment! It is not ours to debate, but to perform. Let us dedicate ourselves as  perfectly as Esther consecrated herself when she espoused the cause of her  people, and said, "If I perish, I perish." We must not consult with  flesh and blood, or make a reserve for our own selfishness, but at once most  vigorously follow the divine command.
Let us pray the Lord that we may  do his will on earth as it is done in heaven; that is, joyfully, without the  slightest weariness. When our hearts are right, it is a glad thing to serve  God, though it be only to unloose the latchets of our Master's shoes. To be employed  by Jesus in service which will bring us no repute, but much reproach, should be  our delight. If we were altogether as we should be, sorrow for Christ's sake  would be joy: ay, we should have joy right along, in dark nights as well as in  bright days. Even as they are glad in heaven, with a felicity born of the  presence of the Lord, so should we be glad, and find our strength in the joy of  the Lord.
In heaven the will of the Lord is  done right humbly. There perfect purity is set in a frame of lowliness.  Too often we fall into self-gratulation, and it defiles our best deeds. We  whisper to ourselves, "I did that very well." We flatter ourselves  that there was no self in our conduct, but while we are laying that flattering  unction to our souls, we are lying, as our self-contentment proves. God might  have allowed us to do ten times as much, had he not known that it would not be  safe. He cannot set us upon the pinnacle, because our heads are weak, and we  grow dizzy with pride. We must not be permitted to be rulers over many things,  for we should become tyrants if we had the opportunity. Brother, pray the Lord  to keep thee low at his feet, for in no other place canst thou be largely used  of him.
The comparison being thus  instructive, I pray that we may be the better for our meditation upon it. I do  not find it an easy thing even to describe the model; but if we essay to copy  it: "this is the work; this is the difficulty." Unless we are girded  with the divine strength we shall never do the will of God as it is done in  heaven. Here is a greater labour than those of Hercules, bringing with it  victories nobler than those of Alexander. To this the unaided wisdom of Solomon  could not attain; the Holy Ghost must transform us, and lead the earthly in us  captive to the heavenly.
 III. Thirdly, I beg you to notice,  dear friends, that THIS COMPARISON of holy service on earth to that which is in  heaven, IS BASED UPON FACTS. The facts will both comfort and stimulate us. Two  places are mentioned in the text which seems very dissimilar, and yet the  likeness exceeds the unlikeness—earth and heaven.
Why should not saints do the will  of the Lord on earth as their brethren do it in heaven? What is heaven but the  Father's house, wherein there are many mansions? Do we not abide in that house  even now? The Psalmist said, "Blessed are they that dwell in thy house,  they will be still praising thee." Have we not often said of our Bethels,  "This is none other but the house of God, and this is the gate of  heaven"? The spirit of adoption causes us to be at home with God even  while we sojourn here below. Let us therefore do the will of God at once.
We have the same fare on earth as  the saints in heaven, for "the Lamb in the midst of the throne doth feed  them:" he is the Shepherd of his flock below, and daily feeds us upon  himself. His flesh is meat indeed, his blood is drink indeed. Whence come the  refreshing draughts of the immortals? The Lamb doth lead them to living  fountains of waters; and doth he not even here below say to us, "If any  man thirst, let him come unto me, and drink"? The same river of the water  of life which makes glad the city of our God above, also waters the garden of  the Lord below.
Brethren, we are in the same  company below as they enjoy above. Up there they are with Christ, and here he  is with us, for he hath said—"Lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end  of the world." There is a difference as to the brightness of his presence;  but not as to the reality of it. Thus you see we are partakers of the same  privileges as the shining ones within the city gates. The church below is a  chamber of the one great house, and the partition which separates it from the  church above is a mere veil, of inconceivable thinness. Wherefore should we not  do the Lord's will on earth as it is done in heaven?
"But heaven is a place of  peace," says one; "there they rest from their labours." Beloved,  our estate here is not without its peace and rest. "Alas," cries one,  "I find it far otherwise." I know it. But whence come wars and  fightings but of our fretfulness and unbelief? "We which have believed do  enter into rest." That is not in all respects a fair allegory which  represents us as crossing the Jordan  of death to enter into Canaan. No, my  brethren, believers are in Canaan now; how  else could we say that the Canaanite is still in the land? We have entered upon  the promised heritage, and we are warring for the full possession of it. We  have peace with God through Jesus Christ our Lord. I for one do not feel like a  lone dove flying over waters dark, seeking rest for the sole of her foot. No, I  have found my Noah: Jesus has given me rest. There is a difference between the  best estate of earth and the glory of heaven, but the rest which every soul may  have that learns to conquer its will, is most deep and real. Brethren, having  rest already, and being participators of the joy of the Lord, why should we not  serve God on earth as they do in heaven?
"But we have not their  victory," cries one, "for they are more than conquerors." Yes,  and "our warfare is accomplished." We have prophetic testimony to  that fact. Moreover, "This is the victory that overcometh the world, even  our faith." In the Lord Jesus Christ the Lord giveth us the victory, and  maketh us to triumph in every place. We are warring; but we are of good cheer,  for Jesus has overcome the world, and we also overcome by his blood. Ever is  this our war-cry, "Victory! Victory!" The Lord will tread Satan under  our feet shortly. Why should we not do the Lord's will on earth as it is done  in heaven?
Heaven is the place of fellowship  with God, and this is a blessed feature in its joy; but in this we are now  participators, for "Truly our fellowship is with the Father, and with his  Son Jesus Christ." The fellowship of the Holy Ghost is with us all; it is  our joy and our delight. Having communion with the triune God, Father, Son, and  Holy Spirit, we are uplifted and sanctified, and it is becoming that by us the  will of the Lord should be done on earth as it is in heaven.
"Up there," says a  brother, "they are all accepted, but here we are in a state of  probation." Did you read that in the Bible? for I never did. A believer is  in no state of probation; he has passed from death unto life, and shall never  come into condemnation. We are already "accepted in the Beloved," and  that acceptance is so given as never to be reversed. The Redeemer brought us up  out of the horrible pit of probation, and he has set our feet on the rock of  salvation, and there he has established our goings. "The righteous shall  hold on his way, and he that hath clean hands shall wax stronger and  stronger." Wherefore should we not, as the accepted of the Lord, do his  will on earth as it is in heaven?
"Ay," saith one,  "but heaven is the place of perfect service; 'for his servants shall serve  him.'" But is not this the place, in some respects, of a more extensive  service still? Are there not many things which perfect saints above and holy  angels cannot do? If we had choice of a sphere in which we could serve God with  widest range, we should choose not heaven but earth. There are no slums and  over-crowded rooms in heaven to which we can go with help, but there are plenty  of them here. There are no jungles and regions of malaria where missionaries  may prove their unreserved consecration by preaching the gospel at the expense  of their lives. In some respects this world has a preference beyond the  heavenly state as to the extent of doing the will of God. Oh, that we were  better men, and then the saints above might almost envy us! If we did but live  as we should live, we might make Gabriel stoop from his throne and cry, "I  wish I were a man!" It is ours to lead the van in daily conflict with sin  and Satan, and at the same time ours to bring up the rear, battling with the  pursuing foe. God help us, since we are honoured with so rare a sphere, to do  his will on earth as it is done in heaven.
"Ay," say you, "but  heaven is the place of overflowing joy." Yes, and have you no joy even  now? A saint who lives near to God is so truly blessed that he will not be much  astonished when he enters heaven. he will be surprised to behold its glories  more clearly; but he will have the same reason for delight as he possesses  to-day. We live below the same life which we shall live above, for we are  quickened by the same Spirit, are looking to the same Lord, and rejoicing in  the same security. Joy! Do you not know it? Your Lord says, "That my joy  might remain in you, and that your joy might be full." You will be larger  vessels in heaven, but you will not be fuller; you will be brighter, doubtless,  but you will not be cleaner than you are when the Lord has washed you and made  you white in his own blood. Do not be impatient to go to heaven. Nay, do not  have a wish about it. Set very loose by the things of earth; yet count it a  great privilege to have a long life in which to serve the Lord on earth. Our  mortal life is but a brief interval between the two eternities, and if we  judged unselfishly, and saw the needs of earth, we might almost say, "Give  us back the antediluvian periods of human life, that through a chiliad we might  serve the Lord in suffering and in reproach, as we cannot do in glory."  This life is the vestibule of glory. Array yourselves in the righteousness of  Jesus Christ, for this is the court-dress of earth and heaven. Manifest at once  the spirit of saints, or else you will never abide with them. Now begin the  song which your lips shall carol in Paradise,  or else you will never be admitted to the heavenly choirs; none can unite in  the music but those who have rehearsed it here below.
IV. Lastly, THIS COMPARISON, which  I feel I can so feebly bring out, of doing the will of God on earth as it is  done in heaven, OUGHT TO BE BORNE OUT BY HOLY DEEDS. Here is the urgency of the  missionary enterprise. God's will can never be intelligently done where it is  not known; therefore, in the first place, it becomes us as followers of  Jesus to see to it that the will of the Lord is made known by heralds of  peace sent forth from among us. Why has it not been already published in every  land? We cannot blame the great Father, nor impute the fault to the Lord Jesus.  The Spirit of the Lord is not straitened, nor the mercy of God restrained. Is  it not probably true that the selfishness of Christians is the main reason for  the slow progress of Christianity? If Christianity is never to spread in the  world at a more speedy rate than the present, it will not even keep pace with  the growth of the population. If we are going to give to Christ's kingdom no  larger a percentage than we have usually given, I suppose it will require about  an eternity-and-a-half to convert the world; or, in other words, it will never  be done. The progress made is so slow, that it threatens to be like that of the  crab, which is always described in the fable as going backward. What do we  give, brethren? What do we do? A friend exhorts me to say that the Baptist  Missionary Society ought to raise a million a-year. I have my doubts about that;  but he proposes that we should, at least, try to do so for one year. There is  nothing like having a high mark to aim at. A million a-year seems hugely too  much by the general consent of you all, and yet I am not sure. What amount of  property is now held by Baptists? The probable estimate of money now in the  hands of baptized believers in the United Kingdom might make us  ashamed that a million is not put down at once. Far more than that is spent by  a similar number of Englishmen upon strong drink. We do not know how much  wealth lies in the custody of God's stewards; and some of them are not likely  to let us know until we read it in the paper, and then we shall discover that  they died worth so many hundreds of thousands. The world counts men to be worth  what they hoard; but in truth they were not worth much, or else they could not  have retained so much from the work of the Lord when it was needed for the  spread of the gospel. As a denomination we are improving a little. We are  improving a little. I was obliged to repeat that sentence, and place the  emphasis in the right place. We may not congratulate ourselves: considerable  room for improvement yet remains: the income of the Society might be doubled  and no one oppressed in the process. It is not for us to say, "Thy will be  done on earth as it is in heaven: but, Lord. Thou hast many ways and means of  accomplishing that will; I pray thee do it, but let me not be asked to help on  the work." No, when I utter this prayer, if I am sincere I shall be  searching my stores to see what I can give to make known the truth. I shall be  enquiring whether I cannot personally speak the saving word. I shall not  decline to give because the times are very hard, neither shall I fail to speak  because I am of a retiring disposition. An opportunity is a golden gift. Now,  do not offer the prayer of the text if you do not mean it. Better omit the  petition than play the hypocrite with it. You who fail to support missions when  it is in your power to do so should never say, "Thy kingdom come, thy will  be done," but leave out that petition for fear of mocking God.
Our text, dear friends, leads me  to say that as God's will must be known that it may be done, it must be  God's will that we should make it known; because God is love, and the law  under which he has placed us is that we love. What love of God dwelleth in that  man who denies to a benighted heathen that light without which he will be lost?  Love is a grand word to talk of, but it is nobler as a principle to be obeyed.  Can there be love of God in that man's heart who will not help to send the gospel  to those who are without it? We want to bless the world; we have a thousand  schemes by which to bless it, but if ever God's will is done in earth as it is  done in heaven it will be an unmixed and comprehensive blessing. Join the Peace  Society by all means, and be forgiving and peaceable yourself; but there is no  way of establishing peace on the earth except by God's will being done in it,  and that can only be done through the renewing of men's hearts by the gospel of  Jesus Christ. By all manner of means let us endeavour so to control politics,  as Christian men, that oppression shall not remain in the earth; but, after  all, there will be oppression unless the gospel is spread. This is the one balm  for all earth's wounds. They will bleed still until the Christ shall come to  bind them up. Oh, let us then, since this is the best thing that can be, show  our love to God and man by spreading his saving truth.
The text says, "Thy will be  done on earth, as it is in heaven." Suppose any one of you had come from  heaven. It is but a supposition; but let it stand for a minute: suppose that a  man here has come fresh from heaven. Some would be curious to see what his  bodily form would be like. They would expect to be dazzled by the radiance of  his countenance. However, we will let that pass. We want to see how he would  live. Coming newly from heaven, how would he act? Oh, sirs, if he came here to  do the same as all men do on earth, only after a heavenly sort, what a father  he would be, what a husband, what a brother, what a friend! I would sit down  and let him preach this morning, most assuredly; and when he had done  preaching, I would go home with him, and have a chat. I should be very careful  to observe what he would do with his substance. His first thought would be, if  he had a shilling, to lay it out for God's glory. "But," says one,  "I have to go to shop with my shilling." Be it so, but when you go  say, "Oh! Lord, help me to lay it out to thy glory." There should be  as much piety in buying your necessaries as in going to a place of worship. I  do not think this man coming fresh from heaven would say, "I must have  this luxury; I must have this goodly raiment; I must have this grand  house." But he would say, "How much can I save for the God of heaven?  How much can I invest in the country I came from?" I am sure he would be  pinching and screwing to save money to serve God with; and he himself, as he  went about the streets, and mingled with ungodly men and women, would be sure  to find out ways of getting at their consciences and hearts; he would be always  trying to bring others to the felicity he had enjoyed. Think that over, and  live so—so as he did who really did come down from heaven. For after  all, the best rule of life is, what would Jesus do if he were here to-day, and  the world still lying in the wicked one? If Jesus were in your business, if he  had your money, how would he spend it? For that is how you ought to  spend it. Now think, my brother, you will be in heaven very soon. Since last  year a great number have gone home: before next year many more will have  ascended to glory. Sitting up in those celestial seats, how shall we wish that  we had lived below? It will not give any man in heaven even a moment's joy to  think that he gratified himself while here. It will give him no reflections  suitable to the place to remember how much he amassed, how much he left behind  to be quarrelled over after he was gone; he will say to himself, "I wish I  had saved more of my capital by sending it on before me, for what I saved on  earth was lost, but what I spent for God was really laid up where thieves do  not break through and steal."
Oh, brothers, let us live as we  shall wish we had lived when life is over; let us fashion a life which will  bear the light eternal. Is it life to live otherwise? Is it not a sort of  fainting fit, a coma, out of which life may not quite have gone, but all that  is worth calling life has oozed away? Unless we are striving mightily to honour  Jesus, and bring home his banished, we are dead while we live. Let us aim at a  life which will outlast the fires which shall try every man's work.
If I may have moved any person  here to resolve, "I will so live," I have not spoken in vain. I have  at least stirred myself with the intense desire to cast off the mere outsides  and husks of life, and to ripen the real kernel of my being. Thy will by me be  done on earth, as yet, my Lord, I hope to do it in the skies. May I begin here  a life worthy to be perpetuated in eternity. God bless you, for Christ's sake.  Amen. 
 
	      
   John Calvin (1507-1564) was part of the reformation movement of the sixteenth century. His most notable theological stance is the belief that God is sovereign in the matters of salvation and election.
John Calvin (1507-1564) was part of the reformation movement of the sixteenth century. His most notable theological stance is the belief that God is sovereign in the matters of salvation and election.
 
Alexander Maclaren (1826-1910) was a English Baptist minister. He is most famous for his expository style, drawing on examples from life and nature to develop biblical truths. The commentaries in this section are taken from his writings on the version of the Lord's prayer in Luke's Gospel. 
 Charles Haddon Spurgeon (1834-92) is one of the most famous preachers of the nineteenth century. The two sermons found in this section record some fascinating insights into the Lord's prayer.
           
                       Charles Haddon Spurgeon (1834-92) is one of the most famous preachers of the nineteenth century. The two sermons found in this section record some fascinating insights into the Lord's prayer. 
                       
					    John Wesley (born 1703, died aged 87 in 1791) is the founder of the modern day Methodist movement. His most famous theological insight is "Christian Perfection", a belief that the love of God can reign supreme in the believers heart.
						
						John Wesley (born 1703, died aged 87 in 1791) is the founder of the modern day Methodist movement. His most famous theological insight is "Christian Perfection", a belief that the love of God can reign supreme in the believers heart.
					   
find out more about the Lord's Prayer in our Line-by-line commentary section
A beautiful reading of this famous prayer:-