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<h2> IS SPURGEON IN HEAVEN? </h2>
<p>When Mrs. Booth died, the wife of the famous "General," the "Army"
reported her as "Promoted to Glory from Clacton-on-Sea." It was extremely
funny. Clacton-on-Sea is such a prosaic anti-climax after Glory. One was
reminded of Sir Horace Glendower:</p>
<p>Sprat. But the sense of humor is not acute in religious circles.</p>
<p>Mr. Spurgeon frequently gave expression to his dislike and mistrust of the
antics or the Salvation Army. He was far from prim himself, but he held
that if people were not "won over to Christ" by preaching, it was idle to
bait the hook with mere sensationalism. Yet by a strange irony his closest
friends, in announcing his death to his flock, actually improved on the
extravagance of the Salvationists. Here is a copy of the telegram that was
affixed to the rails of the Metropolitan Tabernacle the morning after his
decease:</p>
<p>Mentone, 11.50.<br/>
Spurgeon's Tabernacle, London.<br/>
<br/>
Our beloved pastor entered heaven 11.5 Sunday night.<br/>
Harrald.<br/></p>
<p>This Harrald was Mr. Spurgeon's private secretary, but he writes like the
private secretary of God Almighty. A leading statesman once said he wished
he was as cocksure of anything as Tom Macaulay was cocksure of everything;
but what was Macaulay's cocksureness to the cocksureness of Harrald? The
gentleman could not have spoken with more assurance if he had been Saint
Peter himself, and had opened the gate for Pastor Spurgeon.</p>
<p>We take it that Spurgeon expired at 11.5 on Sunday night. That is the <i>fact</i>.
All the rest is conjecture.</p>
<p>How could his soul enter heaven at the very same moment? Is heaven in the
atmosphere? He who asserts it is a very bold speculator. Is it out in the
ether? If so, where? And how is it our telescopes cannot detect it? If
heaven is a place, as it must be if it exists at all, it cannot very well
be within the astronomical universe. Now the farthest stars are
inconceivably remote. Our sun is more than 90,000,000 miles distant, and
Sirius is more than 200,000 times farther off than the sun. There are
stars so distant that their light takes more than a thousand years to
reach us, and light travels at the rate of nearly two hundred thousands
miles per second!</p>
<p>It is difficult to imagine Spurgeon's soul travelling faster than that;
and if heaven is somewhere out in the vast void, beyond the sweep of
telescopes or the register of the camera, Spurgeon's soul has so far <i>not</i>
"entered heaven" that its journey thither is only just begun. In another
thousand years, perhaps, it will be nearing the pearly gates. <i>Perhaps</i>,
we say; for heaven may be a million times further off, and Spurgeon's soul
may pull the bell and rouse Saint Peter long after the earth is a frozen
ball, and not only the human race but all life has disappeared from its
surface. Nay, by the time he arrives, the earth may have gone to pot, and
the whole solar system may have vanished from the map of the universe.</p>
<p>What a terrible journey! Is it worth travelling so far to enter the Bible
heaven, and sing hymns with the menagerie of the Apocalypse? Besides, a
poor soul might lose its way, and dash about the billion-billion-miled
universe like a lunatic meteor.</p>
<p>It appears to us, also, that Mr. Harrald and the rest of Mr. Spurgeon's
friends have forgotten his own teaching. He thoroughly believed in the
bodily resurrection of the dead, and an ultimate day of judgment, when
bodv and soul would join together, and share a common fate for eternity.
How is this reconcileable with the notion that Spurgeon's soul "entered
heaven at 11.5" on Sunday evening, the thirty-first of January, 1892? Is
it credible that the good man went to the New Jerusalem, will stay there
in perfect felicity until the day of judgment, and will then have to
return to this world, rejoin his old bodv, and stand his trial at the
great assize, with the possibility of having to shift his quarters
afterwards? Would not this be extremely unjust, nay dreadfully cruel? And
even if Spurgeon, as one of the "elect," only left heaven for form's sake
at the day of judgment, to go through the farce of a predetermined trial,
would it not be a gratuitous worry to snatch him away from unspeakable
bliss to witness the trial of the human species, and the damnation of at
least nine-tenths of all that ever breathed?</p>
<p>As a matter of fact, the Christian Church has never been able to make up
its mind about the state or position of the soul immediately after death.
Only a few weeks ago we saw that Sir G. G. Stokes, unconsciously following
in the wake of divines like Archbishop Whately, holds the view that the
soul on leaving the body will lie in absolute unconsciousness until the
day when it has to wake up and stand in the dock. The controversies on
this subject are infinite, and all sorts of ideas have been maintained,
but nothing has been authoritatively decided. Mr. Spurgeon's friends have
simply <i>cut</i> the Gordian knot; that is, they are only dogmatising.</p>
<p>Laying all such subtle disputes aside, we should like Mr. Harrald to tell
us how he knows that Spurgeon has gone, is going, or ever will go to
heaven. What certainty can they have in the matter? Saint Paul himself
alluded to the possibility of his being "a castaway." How can an inferior
apostle be <i>sure</i> of the kingdom of heaven?</p>
<p>Saint Paul taught predestination, and so did Spurgeon. According to this
doctrine, God knew beforehand the exact number of human beings that would
live on this planet, though Omniscience itself must have been taxed to
decide where the anthropoid exactly shaded off into the man. He also knew
the exact number of the elect who would go to heaven, and the exact number
of the reprobate who would go to hell. The tally was decided before the
spirit of God brooded over the realm of Chaos and old Night. Every child
born into the world bears the stamp of his destiny. But the stamp is
secret. No one can detect it. Lists of saved and damned are not published.
If they were, it would save us a lot of anxiety. Some would say, "I'm all
right." Others would say, "I'm in for it; I'll keep cool while I can." But
we must all die before we ascertain our fate. We may feel confident of
being in the right list, with the rest of the sheep; but confidence is not
proof, and impressions are not facts. When we take the great leap we shall
know. Until then no man has any certitude; not even the most pious
Christian that ever rolled his eyes in prayer to his Maker, or whined out
the confession of his contemptible sins. All are in the same perplexity,
and Spurgeon was no exception to the rule.</p>
<p>When predestination was really believed, the friends of the greatest saint
only <i>hoped</i> he had gone to heaven. When they are <i>sure</i> of it
predestination is dead. Nay, hell itself is extinguished. Spurgeon's
friends think he has gone to heaven because they feel he was too good to
go to hell. They knew him personally, and it is hard to think that a man
whose hand once lay in yours is howling in everlasting fire. Such
exceptions prove a new rule. They show that the human heart has outgrown
the horrible doctrine of future torment, that the human mind has outgrown
foolish creeds, that man is better than his God.</p>
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