- Mar 21, 2003
- 21,119
- 17,842
- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Christian
- Marital Status
- Married
- Politics
- US-Republican
An Address to Seamen!
From Timeless Grace Gems
Edward Payson, October 28, 1821
At the request of the Portland Marine Bible Society
From Timeless Grace Gems
Edward Payson, October 28, 1821
At the request of the Portland Marine Bible Society
We rejoice, my seafaring friends, to see so many of you assembled here, on this occasion. Most cordially do we bid you welcome. A thousand times welcome, weary, weather-beaten sailor — to the place where rest is offered to the weary in the name of Jesus Christ.
And why have we invited and welcomed you here this evening? Because you are our fellow creatures, our fellow-immortals. Because you are our shipmates in the great ship of this world; and are sailing with us to the shores of eternity! Because you have something within you which thinks and feels; and that something is an immortal soul — a soul worth infinitely more than all the merchandise which you ever assisted in conveying across the seas — a soul worth more than all the stars which twinkle above you, while keeping your evening watch on deck — a soul which will continue to live, and to be happy or miserable, when all those stars are quenched in everlasting night!
Yes, mark me, shipmates — you each have such an eternal soul within you — and for the loss of which, the whole world, could you gain it, would be no compensation. This precious freight, these immortal souls, are embarked in frail vessels, on the dangerous voyage of life — a voyage which you are even now pursuing, and which will terminate, either in the Port of Heaven, or in the Gulf of Perdition!
To one or the other of these places, you are all bound. In one or the other of them, you will all land at death. In which of them you shall land, will depend on the course you steer. These are the reasons why we feel concerned for you, and why we address you.
We wish you to steer a safe course. We know there is but one such course.
We wish you to make sure of a good harbor, in which you may rest quietly after the toilsome voyage of life is ended. We know there is but one such harbor. We know that this harbor is not easy to find. We know that the sea over which you sail is full of sunken rocks and quicksands, on which many a brother sailor has made shipwreck of his soul.
Your voyage is, therefore, exceedingly dangerous. We meet you pursuing this voyage, and wish to speak you. When you speak of a ship, one of the first questions you ask is, "Where are you bound?" Allow me to ask the same question.
Ho, there, creature of God, immortal spirit, voyager to Eternity! Where are you bound? Did I hear your answer aright? Was it, "I don't know!"
Not know where you are bound! Heard you ever such an answer to this question before? Should you hear such an answer concerning a ship — would you not conclude its crew to be either drunk or mad? And would you not soon expect to hear of its loss?
Not know where you are bound! And have you then, for so many years, been beating about in the fogs of ignorance and uncertainty — with no port in view; the sport of storms and sea-currents; driven hither and thither as the winds change, without any hope of ever making a harbor; and liable, every moment, to strike upon a lee shore?
Not know where you are bound! Alas, then, I fear that you are bound to the Gulf of Perdition! I fear that you will be driven on the rocks of Despair, which are now right ahead of you, and which, sooner or later, wreck all who know not where they are bound, and who care not what course they steer.
If I have taken my observation correctly, you are in the Lee Current, which sets directly into a Gulf where you will find no bottom with a thousand fathoms of line!
Not know where you are bound! You must then be in distress. You have either cast off your rudder, or you have no compass, chart, or quadrant on board — nor any pilot who can carry you into the port of Heaven.
And what pilot, you will perhaps ask in reply, can carry us there? Who can tell us, with certainty, that there is any such port? On what chart is it laid down? And how do we know — how do you know — how can any man know, that what you have now told us is true?
These are fair questions, shipmates — and you shall have an answer. But allow me, first to ask you a few questions.
Should you see a ship, well built, handsomely rigged, and completely equipped for a voyage — could any man make you believe that she built herself? Or that she was built by chance? Or that she sprang, like a bubble, out of the sea? Would you not feel as certain, that she was the work of some builder, as if you had stood by, and seen him shape every timber, and drive every bolt?
And can you, then, believe, that this great ship, the world, built itself? Or that it was built by chance? Or that it sprang out of nothing without any cause? Do you not feel as certain, that it was made by some great, and wise, and powerful builder — as if you had stood by and seen him make it?
Yes, you will say, every ship is built by some man. But he who built all things must be more than man — he must be God.
Another question. Should you see a vessel go every year, for many years successively to a distant port, and return at a set time; performing all her voyages with perfect regularity — and never going a cable's length out of her course, nor being a day out of her time — could you be made to believe that she had no commander, pilot, or helmsman on board; that she went and came of her own accord; or that she had nothing to steer her but the wind? Would you have any more doubt that she was under the command of some skillful navigator, than if you were on board, and saw him?
Look then, once more, at this great ship, the world. See how regularly she makes her annual voyage round the sun, without ever getting out of her course, or being a day out of her time. Should she gain or lose a single day in making this voyage, what would all your nautical Tables be good for? Now, could she go and come with such perfect regularity and exactness, with no one to regulate her course? Can you any more doubt that she is under the direction of some skillful commander, than if you saw him regulating all her motions?
But if the world has a pilot, a commander — then who is he? Ay, shipmates — who is he? Is it any of her crew? You know, that if they should all unite their strength, they could neither move her, nor alter her course a hair's breadth. Who then can it be? But why need I ask? Who can regulate all the motions of the world, except He who made the world? And remember, shipmates, if God is here to regulate her course — he must be here to see how the crew behave.
Once more. Would a wise owner put a crew on board a vessel, and send her to sea, bound on a long voyage — without a compass, chart, quadrant, or pilot — to be driven just where the winds and waves might carry her, until she foundered, or went to pieces on some rocky shore?
No, you reply. No wise owner who cared anything either for the ship or the ship's company, would act in this manner.
And would the good, the all-wise God then, who made the world, and placed us in it — act in such manner? Certainly not. It would be insulting him to think so.
You may be certain, therefore, that he has taken care to provide a safe harbor, in which, when the voyage of life is ended, we may ride secure from every danger. You may be certain that he has furnished us with everything necessary to assist us in shaping our course for that harbor; and that he has provided a skillful pilot, who will carry us into it, if we put ourselves under his care. And shipmates, we can tell you, for God has told us — that he actually has done all this.
As a harbor, he has prepared Heaven for us — a place so glorious, that the sun is not fit to be a lamp in it. Could you grasp the world like an orange, and squeeze all the happiness it affords into a single cup — it would be nothing to one drop of the waters of life, which flow there like a river.
For a commander and pilot, he has given us his own Son, Jesus Christ — the Captain of salvation. Beyond all comparison, He the most skillful, kind, and careful commander, that seaman ever sailed under. He can carry you, and he alone can carry you safely into the Port of Heaven. No soul ever found its way into that port without him. No soul which put itself under his care, was ever lost.
Finally, for a compass, chart, and quadrant — God has given us the Bible. Most completely does it answer the purpose of all three.
By this book, as a compass, you may shape your course correctly — for it will always traverse freely, and it has no variation.
By this book, as a quadrant, you may at any time, by night or by day, take an observation, and find out exactly where you are.
And in this book, as on a chart, not only the Port of Heaven, but your whole course, with every rock, shoal, and breaker, on which you can possibly strike — is most accurately laid down.