TALK FIFTY-EIGHT. SPONGES AND WATERING-CANS
It was Jesus’ custom to draw
spiritual lessons from the things surrounding him
and by some similitude impress upon his hearers a profitable
truth; so we may get many valuable thoughts from the
simple things of every-day life. The articles
mentioned in the heading bring to my mind pictures
of two classes of people.
The most noticeable feature of a sponge
is its power of absorbing a liquid and retaining it
within itself. If dipped in or placed in contact
with a liquid, it will absorb several times its weight.
Some people are like sponges. They go to meeting
and drink in the truth time after time. They
love it. It delights their hearts. They love
the singing, the preaching, the testimonies, and the
prayers. They absorb and absorb, but, like the
sponge, they give out nothing. The sponge gives
up what it has taken in only when it is subjected
to pressure. So it is with these human sponges.
While they love to listen, they have to be urged to
do anything. They testify only when they feel
duty-bound to do so or when they are urged by somebody
else. They rarely pray in meeting. They are
among the last in all such things. To go where
a congregation are mostly sponges is to find a few
having all to do and to find a dull, insipid meeting.
Wet sponges will not burn. Neither will the fire
of God burn in a congregation of sponges. A preacher
may be full of fire, but he can not set sponges burning.
Do you have to be urged to testify? Are you ready
to pray or do whatever you can in the meeting?
Do you love to talk to people about salvation? or do
you speak of it only when some one else starts the
conversation? Do you have to be constantly urged
to do your duty? Are you a sponge?
A watering-can is different.
It too will take in to its full capacity; but, as
soon as it is turned in the right position, it freely
gives out again. Streams of cooling, refreshing
water fall on the thirsty plants. The drooping
flowers raise again their heads to blush in beauty,
and their fragrance floats out on the balmy air once
more. A delicious coolness surrounds the place,
and we delight to be there. While the sponge
represents the selfish class, the watering-can represents
the open-hearted, cheerful giver one who
is ready to pass on the good things and who in return
reaps the promise, “He that watereth shall be
watered also himself.” If the watering-can
is emptied, does not the gardener fill it again, and
with fresh water? So, if we are pouring out to
others, we shall be filled anew. We shall not
be empty, but fresh and rich in our souls with the
water of life. The great Gardener fills us that
we may pour out to others, not simply that we may
be filled ourselves. It is said of Jesus that
he “emptied himself” (Revised Version.)
He became poor that through his poverty we should
be made rich.
O beloved, God wants us to be “ready
unto every good work.” Do not be a sponge.
Do not have to be pressed into duty. Do not live
in yourself and for yourself. Be no longer content
with drinking in. Begin to pour out. Be
ready to do your part in meeting, yea everywhere.
Be ready to water others. The world is indeed
“thirsty ground.”
A sponge, if left to itself, gives
out by evaporation until it becomes hard and dry;
and in such a state it is useless. Many people
have drunk in the truth and delighted in it, but instead
of pouring out to others, that they might be refilled,
they have just given out by evaporation until they
have become dry and formal and lifeless. That
is the usual result with spiritual sponges. Who
are those who are fat and flourishing, those who have
showers of blessings? Are they the sponges?
Nay, verily. “Give, and it shall be given.”
“It is more blessed to give [to be a watering-can]
than to receive [to be a sponge].”
Now, face the question squarely.
Which of these things are you? Look over the
past year. Have you been ready for duty?
Is your testimony always “ripe” ready
for the opportunity? Are you ready for service
of any kind? If you have been a sponge, quit
being one. Quit now. Get God to make something
better of you. If we are not now sponges, we can
soon become so by neglect of duty. The only safe
way is to keep pouring out.