Works of John Bunyan - Volume 01 by Bunyan, John, 1628-1688
Works of John Bunyan - Volume 01 by Bunyan, John, 1628-1688
Works of John Bunyan - Volume 01 by Bunyan, John, 1628-1688
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Edition: 10
Language: English
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, THE WORKS OF JOHN BUNYAN VOLUME 1 ***
WITH AN
AND A
VOLUME FIRST.
EXPERIMENTAL, DOCTRINAL, AND PRACTICAL.
EDITED BY
'For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my
ways, saith the Lord.'--Isaiah 55:8.
A woman that was 'a loose and ungodly wretch' hearing a tinker lad
most awfully cursing and swearing, protested to him that 'he swore
and cursed at that most fearful rate that it made her tremble to
hear him,' 'that he was the ungodliest fellow for swearing that
ever she heard in all her life,' and 'that he was able to spoil
all the youth in a whole town, if they came in his company.' This
blow at the young reprobate made that indelible impression which all
the sermons yet he had heard had failed to make. Satan, by one of
his own slaves, wounded a conscience which had resisted all the
overtures of mercy. The youth pondered her words in his heart;
they were good seed strangely sown, and their working formed one
of those mysterious steps which led the foul-mouthed blasphemer
to bitter repentance; who, when he had received mercy and pardon,
felt impelled to bless and magnify the Divine grace with shining,
burning thoughts and words. The poor profligate, swearing tinker
became transformed into the most ardent preacher of the love of
Christ--the well-trained author of The Jerusalem Sinner Saved, or
Good News to the Vilest of Men.
How often have the Saints of God been made a most unexpected blessing
to others. The good seed of Divine truth has been many times sown
by those who did not go out to sow, but who were profitably engaged
in cultivating their own graces, enjoying the communion of Saints,
and advancing their own personal happiness! Think of a few poor,
but pious happy women, sitting in the sun one beautiful summer's
day, before one of their cottages, probably each one with her
pillow on her lap, dexterously twisting the bobbins to make lace,
the profits of which helped to maintain their children. While
they are communing on the things of God, a traveling tinker draws
near, and, over-hearing their talk, takes up a position where
he might listen to their converse while he pursued his avocation.
Their words distil into his soul; they speak the language of Canaan;
they talk of holy enjoyments, the result of being born again,
acknowledging their miserable state by nature, and how freely and
undeservedly God had visited their hearts with pardoning mercy,
and supported them while suffering the assaults and suggestions
of Satan; how they had been borne up in every dark, cloudy, stormy
day; and how they contemned, slighted, and abhorred their own
righteousness as filthy and insufficient to do them any good. The
learned discourses our tinker had heard at church had casually
passed over his mind like evanescent clouds, and left little or no
lasting impression. But these poor women, 'methought they spake as
actually did make them speak; they speak with such pleasant as of
Scripture language, and with such appearance of grace in all they
said, that they were to me as if they had found a new world, as
if they were people that dwelt alone, and were not to be reckoned
among their neighbors' (Num 23:9).
O! how little did they imagine that their pious converse was to
be the means employed by the Holy Spirit in the conversion of that
poor tinker, and that, by their agency, he was to be transformed
into one of the brightest luminaries of heaven; who, when he had
entered into rest would leave his works to follow him as spiritual
thunder to pierce the hearts of the impenitent, and as heavenly
consolation to bind up the broken-hearted; liberating the prisoners
of Giant Despair, and directing the pilgrims to the Celestial City.
Thus were blessings in rich abundance showered down upon the church
by the instrumentality, in the first instance, of a woman that was
a sinner, but most eminently by the Christian converse of a few
poor but pious women.
As soon as his strength enabled him, he devoted his whole soul and
body to licentiousness--'As for my own natural life, for the time
that I was without God in the world, it was indeed according to
the course of this world, and the spirit that now worketh in the
children of disobedience. It was my delight to be taken captive by
the devil at his will: being filled with all unrighteousness; that
from a child I had but few equals, both for cursing, swearing,
lying, and blaspheming the holy name of God.'[14]
During the period of his open profligacy, his conscience was ill
at ease; at times the clanking of Satan's slavish chains in which
he was hurrying to destruction, distracted him. The stern reality
of a future state clouded and embittered many of those moments
employed in gratifying his baser passions. The face of the eventful
times in which he lived was rapidly changing; the trammels were
loosened, which, with atrocious penalties, had fettered all free
inquiry into religious truth. Puritanism began to walk upright; and
as the restraints imposed upon Divine truths were taken off, in the
same proportion restraints were imposed upon impiety, profaneness,
and debauchery. A ringleader in all wickedness would not long
continue without reproof, either personally, or as seen in the holy
conduct of others. Bunyan very properly attributed to a gracious
God, those checks of conscience which he so strongly felt even while
he was apparently dead in trespasses and sins. 'The Lord, even in
my childhood, did scare and affright me with fearful dreams, and did
terrify me with dreadful visions.'[19] 'I often wished that there
had been no hell, or that I had been a devil to torment others.'
A common childish but demoniac idea. His mind was as 'the troubled
sea, when it cannot rest, whose waters cast up mire and dirt.'
'A while after, these terrible dreams did leave me; and with more
greediness, according to the strength of nature, I did let loose
the reins of my lusts, and delighted in all transgression against
the law of God.' 'I was the very ringleader of all the youth that
kept me company, into ALL MANNER of vice and ungodliness.'[20]
Dr. Southey and others have attempted to whiten this blackamore, but
the veil that they throw over him is so transparent that it cannot
deceive those who are in the least degree spiritually enlightened.
He alleges that Bunyan, in his mad career of vice and folly, 'was
never so given over to a reprobate mind,'[21] as to be wholly
free from compunctions of conscience. This is the case with every
depraved character; but he goes further, when he asserts that
'Bunyan's heart never was hardened.'[22] This is directly opposed
to his description of himself:--'I found within me a great desire
to take my fill of sin, still studying what sin was yet to be
committed; and I made as much haste as I could to fill my belly
with its delicates, lest I should die before I had my desire.' He
thus solemnly adds, 'In these things, I protest before God, I lie
not, neither do I feign this sort of speech; these were really,
strongly, and with all my heart, my desires; the good Lord, whose
mercy is unsearchable, forgive me my transgressions.' The whole
of his career, from childhood to manhood, was, 'According to the
course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the
air, the spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience'
(Eph 2:2).
These reminiscences are alluded to in the prologue of the Holy
War:--
The Laureate had read this, and yet considers it the language of
a heart that 'never was hardened.' He says that 'the wickedness
of the tinker has been greatly overcharged, and it is taking the
language of self-accusation too literally to pronounce of John
Bunyan, that he was at any time depraved. The worst of what he was
in his worst days is to be expressed in a single word, the full
meaning of which no circumlocution can convey; and which, though
it may hardly be deemed presentable in serious composition, I shall
use, as Bunyan himself (no mealy-mouthed writer) would have used
it, had it in his days borne the same acceptation in which it is now
universally understood;--in that word then, he had been a blackguard.
The author of his life, published in 1692, who was one of his
personal friends, gives the following account of Bunyan's profligacy,
and his checks of conscience:--'He himself hath often, since his
conversion, confessed with horror, that when he was but a child or
stripling, he had but few equals for lying, swearing, and blaspheming
God's holy name--living without God in the world; the thoughts of
which, when he, by the light of Divine grace, came to understand his
dangerous condition, drew many showers of tears from his sorrowful
eyes, and sighs from his groaning heart. The first thing that
sensibly touched him in this his unregenerate state, were fearful
dreams, and visions of the night, which often made him cry out in
his sleep, and alarm the house, as if somebody was about to murder
him, and being waked, he would start, and stare about him with
such a wildness, as if some real apparition had yet remained;
and generally those dreams were about evil spirits, in monstrous
shapes and forms, that presented themselves to him in threatening
postures, as if they would have taken him away, or torn him in
pieces. At some times they seemed to belch flame, at other times
a continuous smoke, with horrible noises and roaring. Once he
dreamed he saw the face of the heavens, as it were, all on fire;
the firmament crackling and shivering with the noise of mighty
thunders, and an archangel flew in the midst of heaven, sounding a
trumpet, and a glorious throne was seated in the east, whereon sat
one in brightness, like the morning star, upon which he, thinking
it was the end of the world, fell upon his knees, and, with uplifted
hands towards heaven, cried, O Lord God, have mercy upon me! What
shall I do, the day of judgment is come, and I am not prepared! When
immediately he heard a voice behind him, exceeding loud, saying,
Repent. At another time he dreamed that he was in a pleasant
place, jovial and rioting, banqueting and feasting his senses, when
a mighty earthquake suddenly rent the earth, and made a wide gap,
out of which came bloody flames, and the figures of men tossed
up in globes of fire, and falling down again with horrible cries,
shrieks, and execrations, whilst some devils that were mingled
with them, laughed aloud at their torments; and whilst he stood
trembling at this sight, he thought the earth sunk under him, and
a circle of flame enclosed him; but when he fancied he was just at
the point to perish, one in white shining raiment descended, and
plucked him out of that dreadful place; whilst the devils cried
after him, to leave him with them, to take the just punishment his
sins had deserved, yet he escaped the danger, and leaped for joy
when he awoke and found it was a dream.'
Awful as must have been these impressions upon his imagination, they
were soon thrown off, and the mad youth rushed on in his desperate
career of vice and folly. Is he then left to fill up the measure
of his iniquities? No, the Lord has a great work for him to do.
HIS hand is not shortened that he cannot save. Bunyan has to be
prepared for his work; and if terrors will not stop him, manifested
mercies in judgments are to be tried.
'God did not utterly leave me, but followed me still, not now with
convictions, but judgments; yet such as were mixed with mercy. For
once I fell into a creek of the sea, and hardly escaped drowning.
Another time I fell out of a boat into Bedford river, but mercy
yet preserved me alive. Besides, another time, being in the field
with one of my companions, it chanced that an adder passed over
the highway, so I, having a stick in my hand, struck her over the
back; and having stunned her, I forced open her mouth with my stick,
and plucked her sting out with my fingers; by which act, had not
God been merciful unto me, I might by my desperateness have brought
myself to my end.
'This also have I taken notice of, with thanksgiving. When I was a
soldier, I, with others, were drawn out to go to such a place to
besiege it; but when I was just ready to go, one of the company
desired to go in my room, to which, when I had consented, he took
my place; and coming to the siege, as he stood sentinel, he was
shot into the head with a musket bullet, and died.'[27]
Bunyan adds, 'Here were judgments and mercy, but neither of them
did awaken my soul to righteousness'; wherefore I sinned still,
and grew more and more rebellious against God, and careless of mine
own salvation.'[28]
That such a scape-grace should enter the army can occasion no surprise.
His robust, hardy frame, used to exposure in all weathers--his
daring courage, as displayed in his perilous dealing with the
adder, bordering upon fool-hardiness--his mental depravity and
immoral habits, fitted him for all the military glory of rapine and
desolation. In his Grace Abounding he expressly states that this
took place before his marriage, while his earliest biographer places
this event some years after his marriage, and even argues upon
it, as a reason why he became a soldier, that 'when the unnatural
civil war came on, finding little or nothing to do to support
himself and small family, he, as many thousands did, betook himself
to arms.'[29] The same account states that, 'in June, 1645, being
at the siege of Leicester, he was called out to be one who was to
make a violent attack upon the town, vigorously defended by the
King's forces against the Parliamentarians, but appearing to the
officer who was to command them to be somewhat awkward in handling
his arms, another voluntarily, and as it were thrust himself into
his place, who, having the same post that was designed Mr. Bunyan,
met his fate by a carbine-shot from the wall; but this little or
nothing startled our too secure sinner at that time; for being now
in an army where wickedness abounded, he was the more hardened.'
Lord Clarendon admits the rapine and plunder, and that the king
regretted that some of his friends suffered with the rest.[37]
Humphrey Brown deposed that he was present when the garrison, having
surrendered upon a promise of quarter, he saw the king's soldiers
strip and wound the prisoners, and heard the king say--'cut them
more, for they are mine enemies.' A national collection was made
for the sufferers, by an ordinance bearing date the 28th October,
1645, which states that--'Whereas it is very well known what miseries
befell the inhabitants of the town and county of Leicester, when
the king's army took Leicester, by plundering the said inhabitants,
not only of their wares in their shops, but also all their household
goods, and their apparel from their backs, both of men, women,
and children, not sparing, in that kind, infants in their cradles;
and, by violent courses and tortures, compelled them to discover
whatsoever they had concealed or hid, and after all they imprisoned
their persons, to the undoing of the tradesmen, and the ruin of
many of the country.'
Whether Bunyan left the army when Charles was routed at the battle
of Naseby, or was discharged, is not known. He returned to his
native town full of military ideas, which he used to advantage in
his Holy War. He was not reformed, but hardened in sin, and, although
at times alarmed with convictions of the danger of his soul, yet in
the end, the flesh pleading powerfully, it prevailed; and he made
a resolution to indulge himself in such carnal delights and pleasures
as he was accustomed to, or that fell in his way. 'His neglecting
his business, and following gaming and sports, to put melancholy
thoughts out of his mind, which he could not always do, had rendered
him very poor and despicable.'[44]
The tender and wise efforts of Mrs. Bunyan to reclaim her husband, were
attended by the Divine blessing, and soon led to many resolutions,
on his part, to curb his sinful propensities and to promote an outward
reformation; his first effort was regularly to attend Divine worship.
He says, 'I fell in very eagerly with the religion of the times, to
wit, to go to church twice a-day, and that too with the foremost;
and there should very devoutly both say and sing as others did,
yet retaining my wicked life; but withal, I was so overrun with a
spirit of superstition, that I adored, and that with great devotion,
even all things, both the high-place, priest, clerk, vestment,
service, and what else belonging to the Church; counting all things
holy that were therein contained, and especially, the priest and
clerk most happy, and without doubt greatly blessed, because they
were the servants, as I then thought,[49] of God, and were principal
in the holy temple, to do his work therein. This conceit grew so
strong in little time upon my spirit, that had I but seen a priest,
though never so sordid and debauched in his life,[50] I should find
my spirit fall under him, reverence him, and knit unto him; yea,
I thought, for the love I did bear unto them, supposing they were
the ministers of God, I could have lain down at their feet, and
have been trampled upon by them; their name, their garb, and work
did so intoxicate and bewitch me.'
All this took place at the time when The Book of Common Prayer,
having been said to occasion 'manifold inconveniency,' was, by an
Act of Parliament, 'abolished,'[51] and by a subsequent Act[52]
prohibited, under severe penalties, from being publicly used.
The 'manifold inconveniences' to which the Act refers, arose from
differences of opinion as to the propriety of the form which had
been enforced, heightened by the enormous cruelties practiced upon
multitudes who refused to use it. Opposition to the English Liturgy
as more combined in Scotland, by a covenant entered into, June 20,
1580, by the king, lords, nobles, and people, against Popery; and
upon Archbishop Laud's attempt, in 1637, to impose the service-book
upon our northern neighbours, tumults and bloodshed ensued; until,
in 1643, a new and very solemn league and covenant was entered into,
which, in 1645, extended its influence to England, being subscribed
by thousands of our best citizens, with many of the nobility--'wherein
we all subscribe, and each with his own hands lifted up to the
Most High God, doe swear'; that being the mode of taking an oath,
instead of kissing the cover of a book, as is now practiced. To the
cruel and intemperate measures of Laud, and the zeal of Charles,
for priestly domination over conscience, may be justly attributed
the wars which desolated the country, while the solemn league and
covenant brought an overwhelming force to aid the Parliament in
redressing the grievances of the kingdom. During the Commonwealth
there was substituted, in place of the Common Prayer, A directory
for the Publique Worship of God, and the uniformity which was
enjoined in it was like that of the Presbyterians and Dissenters
of the present day. The people having assembled, and been exhorted
to reverence and humility, joined the preacher in prayer. He then
read portions of Scripture, with or without an exposition, as he
judged it necessary, but not so as to render the service tedious.
After singing a psalm, the minister prayed, leading the people
to mourn under a sense of sin, and to hunger and thirst after the
grace of God, in Jesus Christ; an outline or abstract is given of
the subject of public prayer, and similar instructions are given as
to the sermon or paraphrase. Immediately after the sermon, prayer
was again offered up, and after the outline that is given of this
devotional exercise, it is noted, 'And because the prayer which
Christ taught his disciples, is not only a pattern of prayer, but
itself a most comprehensive prayer, we recommend it also to be
used in the prayers of the Church.' This being ended, a psalm was
sung, and the minister dismissed the congregation with a solemn
blessing.[53] Some of the clergy continued the use of prayers,
contained in the liturgy, reciting, instead of reading them--a
course that was not objected to. This was the form of service which
struck Bunyan with such awe and reverence, leaving a very solemn
impression upon his mind, which the old form of common prayer had
never produced.
'One day, amongst all the sermons our parson made, his subject
was, to treat of the Sabbath-day, and of the evil of breaking that,
either with labour, sports, or otherwise; now I was, notwithstanding
my religion, one that took much delight in all manner of vice, and
especially that was the day that I did solace myself therewith;
wherefore I fell in my conscience under his sermons, thinking and
believing that he made that sermon on purpose to show me my evil
doing. And at that time I felt what guilt was, though never before,
that I can remember; but then I was, for the present, greatly
loaden therewith, and so went home, when the sermon was ended, with
a great burthen upon my spirit.
'This, for that instant, did benumb the sinews of my best delights,
and did imbitter my former pleasures to me; but behold it lasted
not for before I had well dined, the trouble began to go off my
mind, and my heart returned to its old course. But O! how glad was
I, that this trouble was gone from me, and that the fire was put
out, that I might sin again without control! Wherefore, when I had
satisfied nature with my food, I shook the sermon out of my mind,
and to my old custom of sports and gaming I returned with great
delight.
'But the same day, as I was in the midst of a game at cat, and
having struck it one blow from the hole, just as I was about to
strike it the second time, a voice did suddenly dart from heaven
into my soul, which said, "Wilt thou leave thy sins and go to
heaven, or have thy sins and go to hell?" At this I was put to an
exceeding maze; wherefore leaving my cat upon the ground, I looked
up to heaven, and was as if I had, with the eyes of my understanding,
seen the Lord Jesus looking down upon me, as being very hotly
displeased with me, and as if he did severely threaten me with some
grievous punishment for these and other my ungodly practices.
'Thus I stood in the midst of my play, before all that then were
present: but yet I told them nothing. But I say, I having made this
conclusion, I returned desperately to my sport again; and I well
remember, that presently this kind of despair did so possess my
soul, that I was persuaded I could never attain to other comfort
than what I should get in sin; for heaven was gone already; so that
on that I must not think.'[56]
This solemn warning, received in the midst of his sport, was one
of a series of convictions, by which he hardened sinner was to
be fitted to receive the messages of mercy and love. In the midst
of his companions and of the spectators, Bunyan was struck with a
sense of guilt. How rapid were his thoughts--'Wilt thou leave thy
sins and go to heaven, or have thy sins and go to hell?' With the
eye of his understanding he saw the Lord Jesus as 'hotly displeased.'
The tempter suggests it is 'too, too late' to seek for pardon,
and with a desperate resolution which must have cost his heart the
severest pangs, he continued his game. Still the impression remained
indelibly fixed upon his mind.
The next blow which fell upon his hardened spirit was still more
deeply felt, because it was given by one from whom he could the
least have expected it. He was standing at a neighbour's shop-window,
'belching out oaths like the madman that Solomon speaks of, who
scatters abroad firebrands, arrows, and death'[58] 'after his wonted
manner.' He exemplified the character drawn by the Psalmist. 'As
he clothed himself with cursing like as with his garment: so let
it come into his bowels like water, and like oil into his bones.'
Here was a disease that set all human skill at defiance, but the
great, the Almighty Physician, cured it with strange physic. Had
any professor reproved him, it might have been passed by as a matter
of course; but it was so ordered that a woman who was notoriously
'a very loose and ungodly wretch,' protested that she trembled to
hear him swear and curse at that most fearful rate; that he was
the ungodliest fellow she had ever heard, and that he was able to
spoil all the youth in a whole town.[59] Public reproof from the
lips of such a woman was an arrow that pierced his inmost soul;
it effected a reformation marvelous to all his companions, and
bordering upon the miraculous. The walls of a fortified city were
once thrown down by a shout and the tiny blast of rams'-horns (Josh
6:20); and in this instance, the foundations of Heart Castle,
fortified by Satan, are shaken by the voice of one of his own
emissaries. Mortified and convicted, the foul-mouthed blasphemer
swore no more; an outward reformation in words and conduct took
place, but without inward spiritual life. Thus was he making vows
to God and breaking them, repenting and promising to do better next
time; so, to use his own homely phrase, he was 'feeding God with
chapters, and prayers, and promises, and vows, and a great many
more such dainty dishes, and thinks that he serveth God as well as
any man in England can, while he has only got into a cleaner way
to hell than the rest of his neighbours are in.'[60]
Bunyan was now dressed in the garb of a religious professor, and had
become a brisk talker in the matters of religion, when, by Divine
mercy, he was stripped of all his good opinion of himself; his want
of holiness, and his unchanged heart, were revealed to his surprise
and wonder, by means simple and efficacious, but which no human
forethought could have devised. Being engaged in his trade at
Bedford, he overheard the conversation of some poor pious women,
and it humbled and alarmed him. 'I heard, but I understood not; for
they were far above, out of my reach. Their talk was about a new
birth, the work of God on their hearts, also how they were convinced
of their miserable state by nature; how God had visited their souls
with his love in the Lord Jesus, and with what words and promises
they had been refreshed, comforted, and supported against the
temptations of the devil. Moreover, they reasoned of the suggestions
and temptations of Satan in particular; and told to each other by
which they had been afflicted, and how they were borne up under his
assaults. hey also discoursed of their own wretchedness of heart,
of their unbelief; and did contemn, slight, and abhor their own
righteousness, as filthy and insufficient to do them any good. And
methought they spake as if joy did make them speak; they spake with
such pleasantness of Scripture language, and with such appearance
of grace in all they said, that they were to me as if they had found
a new world; as if they were people that dwelt alone, and were not
to be reckoned among their neighbours (Num 23:9).
These humble disciples could have had no conception that the Holy
Spirit was blessing their Christian communion to the mind of the
tinker, standing near them, pursuing his occupation. The recollection
of the converse of these poor women led to solemn heart-searching
and the most painful anxiety; again and again he sought their
company, and his convictions became more deep, his solicitude more
intense. This was the commencement of an internal struggle, the
most remarkable of any upon record, excepting that of the psalmist
David.
By this time he had recovered the art of reading, and its use a
little perplexed him, for he became much puzzled with the opinions
of the Ranters, as set forth in their books. It is extremely
difficult to delineate their sentiments; they were despised by all
the sects which had been connected with the government, because,
with the Quakers and Baptists, they denied any magisterial or state
authority over conscience, and refused maintenance to ministers;
but from the testimony of Bunyan, and that of the early Quakers,
they appear to have been practical Antinomians, or at least very
nearly allied to the new sect called Mormonites. Ross, who copied
from Pagitt, describes them with much bitterness--'The Ranters are
unclean beasts--their maxim is that there is nothing sin but what
a man thinks to be so--they reject the Bible--they are the merriest
of all devils--they deny all obedience to magistrates.'[69]
This temptation must have been severe. The Ranters were like the
black man with the white robe, named Flatterer, who led the pilgrims
into a net,[70] under the pretence of showing them the way to the
celestial city; or like Adam the first, who offered Faithful his
three daughters to wife[71]--the lust of the flesh, the lust of
the eyes, and the pride of life--if he would dwell with him in the
town of Deceit. 'These temptations,' he says, 'were suitable to my
flesh,'[72] I being but a young man, and my nature in its prime;
and, with his characteristic humility, he adds, 'God, who had, as
I hope, designed me for better things, kept me in the fear of his
name, and did not suffer me to accept such cursed principles.' Prayer
opened the door of escape; it led him to the fountain of truth.
'I began to look into the Bible with new eyes. Prayer preserved me
from Ranting errors. The Bible was precious to me in those days.'[73]
His study of the Holy Oracles now became a daily habit, and that
with intense earnestness and prayer. In the mist of the multitude
of sects with which he was on all sides surrounded, he felt the
need of a standard for the opinions which were each of them eagerly
followed by votaries, who proclaimed them to be THE TRUTH, the
way, and the life. He was like a man, feeling that if he erred
in the way, it would be attended with misery, and, but for Divine
interference, with unutterable ruin--possessed of a correct map,
but surrounded with those who, by flattery, or threats, or deceit,
and armed with all human eloquence, strove to mislead him. With an
enemy within to urge him to accept their wily guidance, that they
might lead him to perdition--inspired by Divine grace, like Christian
in his Pilgrim, he 'put his fingers in his ears, and ran on, crying
Life, life, eternal life.' He felt utter dependence upon Divine
guidance, leading him to most earnest prayer, and an implicit obedience
to Holy Writ, which followed him all through the remainder of his
pilgrimage. 'The Bible' he calls 'the scaffold, or stage, that
God has builded for hope to play his part upon in this world.'[74]
Hence the Word was precious in his eyes; and with so immense
a loss, or so magnificent a gain, the throne of grace was all his
hope, that he might be guided by that counsel that cannot err, and
that should eventually insure his reception to eternal glory.
'Now this mountain, and wall, was thus made out to me: The mountain
signified the church of the living God; the sun that shone thereon,
the comfortable shining of his merciful face on them that were
therein; the wall I thought was the Word, that did make separation
between the Christians and the world; and the gap which was in
this wall, I thought, was Jesus Christ, who is the way to God the
Father (John 14:6; Matt 7:14). But forasmuch as the passage was
wonderful narrow, even so narrow that I could not, but with great
difficulty, enter in thereat, it showed me, that none could enter
into life, but those that were in downright earnest, and unless
also they left this wicked world behind them; for here was only
room for body and soul, but not for body and soul and sin.[79]
'This resemblance abode upon my spirit many days; all which time
I saw myself in a forlorn and sad condition, but yet was provoked
to a vehement hunger and desire to be one of that number that did
sit in the sunshine. Now also I should pray wherever I was; whether
at home or abroad, in house or field, and should also often, with
lifting up of heart, sing that of the fifty-first Psalm, "O Lord,
consider my distress."'[80]
'By these things I was driven to my wit's end, not knowing what to
say, or how to answer these temptations. Indeed, I little thought
that Satan had thus assaulted me, but that rather it was my own
prudence thus to start the question: for that the elect only obtained
eternal life; that I without scruple did heartily close withal;
but that myself was one of them, there lay all the question.'[81]
Thus was he for many weeks oppressed and cast down, and near
to 'giving up the ghost of all his hopes of ever attaining life,'
when a sentence fell with weight upon his spirit--'Look at the
generations of old and see; did ever any trust in the Lord and was
confounded' (Ecclesiasticus 2:10). This encouraged him to a diligent
search from Genesis to Revelation, which lasted for above a year,
and although he could not find that sentence, yet he was amply
rewarded for this diligent examination of the Holy Oracles, and
thus he obtained 'yet more experience of the love and kindness of
God.' At length he found it in the Apocrypha, and, although not the
language of inspiration, yet as it contained the sum and substance
of the promises, he took the comfort of it, and it shone before his
face for years. The fear that the day of grace had passed pressed
heavily upon him; he was humbled, and bemoaned the time that he
had wasted. Now he was confronted with that 'grim-faced one, the
Captain Past-hope, with his terrible standard,' carried by Ensign
Despair, red colours, with a hot iron and a hard heart, and
exhibited at Eye-gate.[82] At length these words broke in upon his
mind, 'compel them to come in, that my house may be filled--and yet
there is room.' This Scripture powerfully affected him with hope,
that there was room in the bosom and in the house of Jesus for his
afflicted soul.
His next temptation was to return to the world. This was that
terrible battle with Apollyon, depicted in the Pilgrim's Progress,
and it is also described at some length in the Jerusalem Sinner
Saved. Among many very graphic and varied pictures of his own
experience, he introduces the following dialogue with the tempter,
probably alluding to the trials he was now passing through. Satan
is loath to part with a great sinner. 'This day is usually attended
with much evil towards them that are asking the way to Zion, with
their faces thitherward. Now the devil has lost a sinner; there is
a captive has broke prison, and one run away from his master. Now
hell seems to be awakened from sleep, the devils are come out. They
roar, and roaring they seek to recover their runaway. Now tempt
him, threaten him, flatter him, stigmatize him, throw dust into
his eyes, poison him with error, spoil him while he is upon the
potter's wheel, anything to keep him from coming to Christ.'[83]
'What, my true servant,' quoth he, 'my old servant, wilt thou forsake
me now? Having so often sold thyself to me to work wickedness,
wilt thou forsake me now? Thou horrible wretch, dost not know,
that thou hast sinned thyself beyond the reach of grace, and dost
thou think to find mercy now? Art not thou a murderer, a thief, a
harlot, a witch, a sinner of the greatest size, and dost thou look
for mercy now? Dost thou think that Christ will foul his fingers
with thee? It is enough to make angels blush, saith Satan, to see
so vile a one knock at heaven-gates for mercy, and wilt thou be
so abominably bold to do it?' Thus Satan dealt with me, says the
great sinner, when at first I came to Jesus Christ. And what did
you reply? saith the tempted. Why, I granted the whole charge to
be true, says the other. And what, did you despair, or how? No,
saith he, I said, I am Magdalene, I am Zaccheus, I am the thief,
I am the harlot, I am the publican, I am the prodigal, and one of
Christ's murderers; yea, worse than any of these; and yet God was
so far off from rejecting of me, as I found afterwards, that there
was music and dancing in his house for me, and for joy that I was
come home unto him. O blessed be God for grace (says the other),
for then I hope there is favour for me. Yea, as I told you, such
a one is a continual spectacle in the church, for every one by to
behold God's grace and wonder by.[84] These are the 'things the
angels desire to look into' (1 Peter 1:12), or as Bunyan quaintly
says, this is the music which causes 'them that dwell in the higher
orbs to open their windows, put out their heads, and look down to
see the cause of that glory' (Lev 15:7,10).[85]
Such was the man to whom Bunyan was introduced for religious
advice and consolation; and he assisted in forming those enlarged
and nonsectarian principles which made his ministry blessed, and will
render his Works equally acceptable to all evangelical Christians
in every age of the church. Introduced to such a minister, and
attending social meetings for prayer and Christian converse, he felt
still more painfully his own ignorance, and the inward wretchedness
of his own heart. 'His corruptions put themselves forth, and
his desires for heaven seemed to fail.' In fact, while he compared
himself with his former self, he was a religious giant; in comparison
with these pious, long-standing Christians, he dwindled into a
pigmy; and in the presence of Christ he became, in his own view,
less than nothing, and vanity. He thus describes his feelings:--'I
began to sink--my heart laid me low as hell. I was driven as with
a tempest--my heart would be unclean--the Canaanites would dwell
in the land.'[91] He was like the child which the father brought
to Christ, who, while he was coming to Him, was thrown down by the
devil, and so rent and torn that he lay and wallowed, foaming. His
heart felt so hard, that with many a bitter sigh he cried, 'Good
Lord! break it open. Lord, break these gates of brass, and cut these
bars of iron asunder' (Psa 107:16). Little did he then think that
his bitterness of spirit was a direct answer to such prayers.
Breaking the heart was attended with anguish in proportion as it
had been hardened. During this time he was tender and sensitive
as to the least sin; 'now I durst not take a pin or a stick, my
conscience would smart at every touch.' 'O, how gingerly did I then
go in all I said or did!'[92] 'Still sin would as naturally bubble
out of my heart as water would bubble out of a fountain.' He felt
surprised when he saw professors much troubled at their losses, even
at the death of the dearest relative. His whole concern was for his
salvation. He imagined that he could bear these small afflictions
with patience; but 'a wounded spirit who can bear?'
'About the space of a month after, a very great storm came down
upon me, which handled me twenty times worse than all I had met
with before; it came stealing upon me, now by one piece, then by
another. First, all my comfort was taken from me; then darkness
seized upon me; after which, whole floods of blasphemies, both
against God, Christ, and the Scriptures, were poured upon my spirit,
to my great confusion and astonishment. These blasphemous thoughts
were such as also stirred up questions in me against the very
being of God, and of his only beloved Son. As, whether there were
in truth a God or Christ, or no? And whether the Holy Scriptures
were not rather a fable, and cunning story, than the holy and pure
Word of God.
'These suggestions, with many others, which at this time I may not,
dare not utter, neither by word nor pen, did make such a seizure upon
my spirit, and did so overweigh my heart, both with their number,
continuance, and fiery force, that I felt as if there were nothing
else but these from morning to night within me, and as though indeed
there could be room for nothing else; and also concluded, that God
had, in very wrath to my soul, given me up unto them, to be carried
away with them as with a mighty whirlwind.
'Only by the distaste that they gave unto my spirit, I felt there
was something in me that refused to embrace them.'[94]
Very soon after this, he was harassed with fear lest he should part
with Christ. The tempter, as he did with Christian in the Valley of
the Shadow of Death, suggested blasphemies to him, which he thought
had proceeded from his own mind. 'Satan troubled him with his
stinking breath. How many strange, hideous, and amazing blasphemies
have some that are coming to Christ had injected upon their spirits
against him.'[99] 'The devil is indeed very busy at work during
the darkness of a soul. He throws in his fiery darts to amazement,
when we are encompassed with the terrors of a dismal night; he is
bold and undaunted in his assaults, and injects with a quick and
sudden malice a thousand monstrous and abominable thoughts of God,
which seem to be the motions of our own minds, and terribly grieve
and trouble us.'[100]
What makes those arrows more penetrating and distressing is, that
Satan, with subtle art, tips them with sentences of Scripture. 'No
place for repentance'; 'rejected'; 'hath never forgiveness,' and
other passages which, by the malignant ingenuity of the fiend, are
formed by his skill as the cutting and barbed points of his shafts.
At one time Bunyan concluded that he was possessed of the devil;
then he was tempted to speak and sin against the Holy Ghost. He
thought himself alone in such a tempest, and that no one had ever
felt such misery as he did. When in prayer, his mind was distracted
with the thought that Satan was pulling his clothes; he was even
tempted to fall down and worship him. Then he would cry after God,
in awful fear that eventually Satan would overcome him. During all
this time he was struggling against the tempter; and, at length,
the dayspring visited him in these words, 'I am persuaded that
nothing shall separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus.'
Again he was cast down with a recollection of his former blasphemies.
What reason can I have to hope for an inheritance in eternal life?
The questions was answered with that portion of Scripture, 'If God
be for us, who can be against us?' These were visits which, like
Peter's sheet, of a sudden were caught up to heaven again.[101]
At length the Sun of Righteousness arose, and shone upon him with
healing influence. 'He hath made peace through the blood of his
cross,' came with power to his mind, followed by the consoling words
of the apostle, 'Forasmuch, then, as the children are partakers of
flesh and blood, he also himself likewise took part of the same;
that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death,
that is, the devil, and deliver them who through fear of death were
all their lifetime subject to bondage' (Heb 2:14,15). This was the
key that opened every lock in Doubting Castle. The prisoner escaped
to breathe the air of hope, and joy, and peace. 'This,' said he,
'was a good day to me, I hope I shall not forget it.' 'I thought
that the glory of those words was then so weighty on me, that I
was, both once and twice, ready to swoon as I sat, not with grief
and trouble, but with solid joy and peace.'
His mind was now in a fit state to seek for church fellowship, as a
further means of advance in his knowledge of Divine love. To effect
this object, he was naturally led to the Baptist church at Bedford,
to which those pious women belonged whose Christian communion had
been blessed to him. I sat under the ministry of holy Mr. Gifford,
whose doctrine, by God's grace, was much for my stability.[102]
Although his soul was led from truth to truth, his trials were not
over--he passed through many severe exercises before he was received
into communion with the church.[103]
He longed to compare his experience with that of some old and eminent
convert, and 'God did cast into his hand' Luther On the Galatians,
'so old that it was ready to fall piece from piece, if I did but
turn it over.'[105] The commentary of this enlightened man was
a counterpart to his own feelings. 'I found,' says Bunyan, 'my
condition, in his experience so largely and profoundly handled,
as if his book had been written out of my own heart. I prefer the
book before all others as most fit for a wounded conscience.' This
was the 'voice of a man' that Christian 'heard as going before him
in the Valley of the Shadow of Death,' and was glad that some who
feared God were in this valley as well as himself, who could say,
'I will fear no evil for thou art with me.'[106] In many things
Luther and Bunyan were men of similar temperament. Like Emmanuel's
captains, in the Holy War, they were 'very stout rough-hewn men;
men that were fit to break the ice, and to make their way by dint
of sword.'[107] They were animated by the same principles, and
fought with the same weapons; and although Luther resided in a castle
protected by princes, was furnished with profound scholastic learning,
and became a terror to Popery; yet the voice of the unlettered
tinker, issuing from a dreary prison, bids fair to be far more
extensively heard and blessed than that of this most illustrious
reformer.[108]
Bunyan's happiness was now very great; his soul, with all its
affections, clave unto Christ: but lest spiritual pride should
exalt him beyond measure, and lest he should be scared to renounce
his Saviour, by the threat of transportation and death, his heart
was again wounded, and quickly after this his 'love was tried to
purpose.'
The tempter came in upon him with a most grievous and dreadful
temptation; it was to part with Christ, to exchange him for the
things of this life; he was perpetually tormented with the words
'sell Christ.' At length, he thought that his spirit gave way
to the temptation, and a dreadful and profound state of despair
overpowered him for the dreary space of more than two years.[109]
This is the most extraordinary part of this wonderful narrative, that
he, without apparent cause, should thus be tempted, and feel the
bitterness of a supposed parting with Christ. There was, doubtless,
a cause for every pang; his heavenly Father afflicted him for
his profit. We shall soon have to follow him through fiery trials.
Before the justices, allured by their arguments, and particularly by
the sophistry of their clerk, Mr. Cobb, and then dragged from a
beloved wife and from children to whom he was most fondly attached--all
these fiery trials might be avoided, if he would but 'sell Christ.'
A cold damp dungeon was to incarcerate his body for twelve tedious
years of the prime of his life, unless he would 'sell Christ.' His
ministering brother and friend, John Child, a Bedford man, who had
joined in recommending Bunyan's Vindication of Gospel Truths,[110]
fell under this temptation, and fearing temporal ruin and imprisonment
for life, conformed, and then fell into the most awful state of
despair, suffering such agonies of conscience, that, to get rid of
present trouble, he hurried himself into eternity. Probably Bunyan
alludes to this awful instance of fell despair in his Publican
and Pharisee: 'Sin, when appearing in its monstrous shape and hue,
frighteth all mortals out of their wits, away from God; and if he
stops them not, also out of the world.'[111] To arm Bunyan against
being overcome by a fear of the lions in the way to the house
Beautiful--against giving way, under persecution--he was visited
with terrors lest he should sell or part with Christ. During these
sad years he was not wholly sunk in despair, but had at times some
glimmerings of mercy. In comparing his supposed sin with that of
Judas, he was constrained to find a difference between a deliberate
intention to sell Christ and a sudden temptation.[112] Through
all these searchings of heart and inquiries at the Word, he became
fixed in the doctrine of the final perseverance of God's saints. 'O
what love, what care, what kindness and mercy did I now see mixing
itself with the most severe and dreadful of all God's ways to his
people; he never let them fall into sin unpardonable.' 'But these
thoughts added grief and horror to me; I thought that all things
wrought for my eternal overthrow.' So ready is the tender heart to
write bitter things against itself, and as ready is the tempter to
whisper despairing thoughts. In the midst of this distress he 'saw
a glory in walking with God,' although a dismal cloud enveloped
him.
Bunyan now felt his body and mind shaking and tottering under the
sense of the dreadful judgment of God; and he thought his sin--of
a momentary and unwilling consent to give up Christ--was a greater
sin than all the sins of David, Solomon, Manasseh, and even than
all the sins that had been committed by all God's redeemed ones.
Was there ever a man in the world so capable of describing the
miseries of Doubting Castle, or of the Slough of Despond, as poor
John Bunyan?
His entire relief at last was sudden, while meditating in the field
upon the words, 'Thy righteousness is in heaven.' Hence he drew the
conclusion, that his righteousness was in Christ, at God's right
hand, ever before him, secure from all the powers of sin and
Satan. Now his chains fell off; he was loosed from his affliction
and irons; his temptation fled away. His present supply of grace
he compared to the cracked groats and fourpence half-pennies,[119]
which rich men carry in their pockets, while their treasure is safe
in their trunks at home, as his was in the store-house of heaven.
This dreary night of awful conflict lasted more than two years; but
when the day-spring from on high visited him, the promises spangled
in his eyes, and he broke out into a song, 'Praise ye the Lord.
Praise God in his sanctuary: praise him in the firmament of his
power. Praise him for his mighty acts: praise him according to his
excellent greatness.'[120]
Bunyan was one of those pioneers who are far in advance of the age
in which they live, and the narrative of his birth and education
adds to the innumerable contradictions which the history of man
opposes to the system of Mr. Owen and the Socialists, and to every
scheme for making the offspring of the poor follow in leading-strings
the course of their parents, or for rendering them blindly submissive
to the dictates of the rich, the learned, or the influential. It
incontestably proves the gospel doctrine of individuality, and,
that native talent will rise superior to all impediments. Our
forefathers struggled for the right of private judgment in matters
of faith and worship--their descendants will insist upon it,
as essential to salvation, personally to examine every doctrine
relative to the sacred objects of religion, limited only by Holy
Writ. This must be done with rigorous impartiality, throwing aside
all the prejudices of education, and be followed by prompt obedience
to Divine truth, at any risk of offending parents, or laws, or
resisting institutions, or ceremonies which he discovers to be of
human invention. All this, as we have seen in Bunyan, was attended
with great mental sufferings, with painstaking labour, with a
simple reliance upon the Word of God, and with earnest prayer. If
man impiously dares to submit his conscience to his fellow-man,
or to any body of men called a church, what perplexity must he
experience ere he can make up his mind which to choose! Instead of
relying upon the ONE standard which God has given him in his Word;
should he build his hope upon a human system he could be certain only
that man is fallible and subject to err. How striking an instance
have we, in our day, of the result of education, when the mind does
not implicitly follow the guidance of the revealed Word of God.
Two brothers, named Newman, educated at the same school, trained in
the same university, brought up under the same religious system--all
human arts exhausted to mould their minds into strict uniformity,
yet gradually receding from the same point in opposite directions,
but in equally downward roads; one to embrace the most puerile
legends of the middle ages, the other to open infidelity. Not so
with those who follow the teachings of the Word of God, by which,
and not by any church, they are to be individually judged at the great
day: no pontiff, no priest, no minister, can intervene or mediate
for them at the bar of God. There it will be said, 'I know you, by
your prayers for Divine guidance and your submission to my revealed
will'; or, 'I know you not,' for you preferred the guidance of
frail, fallible men, to me, and to my Word--a solemn consideration,
which, as it proved a source of solid happiness and extensive
usefulness to Bunyan in his pilgrimage, so it insured to him, as
it will to all who follow his course, a solid foundation on which
to stand at the great and terrible day, and thus enable them to
live as well as die in the sure and certain hope of a triumphant
entry into the celestial city.
Of all sects that of the Baptists had been the most bitterly
written against and persecuted. Even their first cousins, the
Quakers, attacked them in language that would, in our peaceful days,
be considered outrageous. 'The Baptists used to meet in garrets,
cheese-lofts, coal-holes, and such like mice walks,'--'theses
tumultuous, blood-thirsty, covenant-breaking, government-destroying
Anabaptists.'[134] The offence that called forth these epithets
was, that in addressing Charles II on his restoration, they stated
that "they were no abettors of the Quakers." Had royal authority
possessed the slightest influence over Bunyan's religious opinions,
the question as to his joining the Baptists would have been settled
without investigation. Among other infatuations of Charles I, had
been his hatred of any sect that professed the right and duty of
man to think for himself in choosing his way to heaven. In 1639
he published his 'Declaration concerning the tumults in Scotland,'
when violence was resorted to against the introduction of the Common
Prayer in which he denounced voluntary obedience because it was not
of constraint, and called it 'damnable'; he calls the principles
of the Anabaptists, in not submitting their consciences to human
laws, 'furious frenzies,' and 'madness'; all Protestants are 'to
detest and persecute them'; 'these Anabaptists raged most in their
madness'; 'the scandal of their frenzies'; 'we are amazed at, and
aggrieved at their horrible impudence'; 'we do abhor and detest
them all as rebellious and treasonable.'[135] This whole volume
is amusingly assuming. The king claims his subjects as personal
chattels, with whose bodies and minds he had a right to do as he
pleased. Bunyan owed no spiritual submission to man, 'whose breath
is in his nostrils'; and risking all hazards, he became one of the
denounced and despised sect of Baptists. To use the language of his
pilgrim, he passed the lions, braving all the dangers of an open
profession of faith in Christ, and entered the house called Beautiful,
which 'was built by the Lord of the hill, on purpose to entertain
such pilgrims in.'[136] He first gains permission of the watchman,
or minister, and then of the inmates, or church members. This
interesting event is said to have taken place about the year
1653.[137] Mr. Doe, in The Struggler, thus refers to it, Bunyan
'took all advantages to ripen his understanding in religion, and
so he lit on the dissenting congregation of Christians at Bedford,
and was, upon confession of faith, baptized about the year 1653,'[138]
when he was in the twenty-fifth year of his age. No minutes of the
proceedings of this church, prior to the death of Mr. Gifford in
1656,[139] are extant, or they would identify the exact period when
Bunyan's baptism and admission to the church took place. The spot
where he was baptized is a creek by the river Ouse, at the end
of Duck Mill Lane. It is a natural baptistery, a proper width and
depth of water constantly fresh; pleasantly situated; sheltered
from the public highway near the High Street. The Lord's Supper was
celebrated in a large room in which the disciples met, the worship
consecrating the place.[140]
May it please your Lordship, and the rest of the council of the
army. We (we trust) servants of Jesus Christ, inhabitants in the
county of Bedford, haveing fresh upon our hearts the sadde oppressions
we have (a long while) groan'd under from the late parlayment, and
now eyeing and owning (through grace) the good hand of God in this
great turne of providence, being persuaded that it is from the Lord
that you should be instrument in his hand at such a time as this,
for the electing of such persons whoe may goe in and out before his
people in righteousnesse, and governe these nations in judgment,
we having sought the Lord for yow, and hopeing that God will still
doe greate things by yow, understanding that it is in your hearte
through the Lord's assistance, to establish an authority consisting
of men able, loveing truth, feareing God, and hateing covetouseness;
and we having had some experience of men with us, we have judged
it our duty to God, to yow, and to the rest of his people, humbly
to present two men, viz., Nathaniell Taylor, and John Croke, now
Justices of Peace in our County, whom we judge in the Lord qualified
to manage a trust in the ensuing government. All which we humbly
referre to your serious considerations, and subscribe our names
this 13th day of May, 1653--
Bunyan's daughter Elizabeth was born at Elstow, April 14, 1654, and
a singular proof of his having changed his principles on baptism
appears in the church register. His daughter Mary was baptized
in 1650, but his Elizabeth in 1654 is registered as born, but no
mention is made of baptism.
The poor harassed pilgrim having been admitted into communion with
a Christian church, enjoyed fully, for a short season, his new
privileges. He thus expresses his feelings:--'After I had propounded
to the church that my desire was to walk in the order and ordinances
of Christ with them, and was also admitted by them: while I thought
of that blessed ordinance of Christ, which was his last supper
with his disciples before his death, that scriptures, "this do in
remembrance of me," was made a very precious word unto me; for by
it the Lord came down upon my conscience with the discovery of his
death for my sins: and as I then felt, did as if he plunged me in
the virtue of the same.'[142]
His pastor, John Gifford, was a remarkably pious and sensible man,
exactly fitted to assist in maturing the mind of his young member.
Bunyan had, for a considerable time, sat under his ministry, and
had cultivated acquaintance with the members of his church; and so
prayerfully had he made up his mind as to this important choice of
a church, with which he might enter into fellowship, that, although
tempted by the most alluring prospects of greater usefulness,
popularity, and emolument, he continued his church fellowship with
these poor people through persecution and distress, imprisonment
and the threats of transportation, or an ignominious death, until
he crossed the river 'which has no bridge,' and ascended to the
celestial city, a period of nearly forty years. Of the labours of
his first pastor, John Gifford, but little is known, except that
he founded the church of Christ at Bedford, probably the first, in
modern times, which allowed to every individual freedom of judgment
as to water baptism; receiving all those who decidedly appeared
to have put on Christ, and had been received by him; but avoiding,
with godly jealousy, any mixture of the world with the church. Mr.
Gifford's race was short, consistent, and successful. Bunyan calls
him by an appellation, very probably common in his neighbourhood
and among his flock, 'holy Mr. Gifford';[143] a title infinitely
superior to all the honours of nobility, or of royalty. He was
a miracle of mercy and grace, for a very few years before he had
borne the character of an impure and licentious man--an open enemy
to the saints of God. His pastoral letter, left upon record in the
church-book, written when drawing near the end of his pilgrimage,
is most admirable; it contains an allusion to his successors, Burton
or Bunyan, and must have had a tendency in forming their views of
a gospel church. Even Mr. Southey praises this puritanic epistle
as exemplifying 'a wise and tolerant and truly Christian spirit':
and as it has not been published in any life of Bunyan, I venture
to introduce it without abridgement:--
To the Church over which God made me an overseer when I was in the
world.
None ought to withdraw from the church if any brother should walk
disorderly, but he that walketh disorderly must bear his own burden,
according to the Scriptures. If any brother should walk disorderly,
he cannot be shut out from any ordinance before church censure.
Study among yourselves what is the nature of fellowship, as the
word,[144] prayer, and breaking of bread; which, whilst few, I
judge, seriously consider, there is much falling short of duty in
the churches of Christ. You that are most eminent in profession,
set a pattern to all the rest of the church. Let your faith, love,
and zeal, be very eminent; if any of you cast a dim light, you will
do much hurt in the church. Let there be kept up among you solemn
days of prayer and thanksgiving; and let some time be set apart, to
seek God for your seeds, which thing hath hitherto been omitted. Let
your deacons have a constant stock by them, to supply the necessity
of those who are in want. Truly, brethren, there is utterly a fault
among you that are rich, especially in this thing, 'tis not that
little which comes from you on the first day of the week that will
excuse you. I beseech you, be not found guilty of this sin any
longer. He that sows sparingly will reap sparingly. Be not backward
in your gatherings-together; let none of you willingly stay till
part of the meeting be come,[145] especially such who should be
examples to the flock. One or two things are omitted about your
comings-together, which I shall here add. I beseech you, forbear
sitting in prayer, except parties be any way disabled; 'tis not a
posture which suits with the majesty of such an ordinance. Would you
serve your prince so? In prayer, let all self-affected expressions
be avoided, and all vain repetitions. God hath not gifted, I judge,
every brother to be a mouth to the church. Let such as have most
of the demonstration of the Spirit and of power, shut up all your
comings-together, that ye may go away with your hearts comforted
and quickened.
Come together in time, and leave off orderly; for God is a God of
order among his saints. Let none of you give offence to his brethren
in indifferent things, but be subject to one another in love. Be
very careful what gifts you approve of by consent for public service.
Spend much time before the Lord, about choosing a pastor, for though
I suppose he is before you,[146] whom the Lord hath appointed, yet
it will be no disadvantage to you, I hope, if you walk a year or
two as you are before election; and then, if you be all agreed, let
him be set apart, according to the Scriptures. Salute the brethren
who walk not in fellowship with you, with the same love and name
of brother or sister as those who do.
That this was written by me, I have set my name to it, in the
presence of two of the brethren of the church.
John Gifford.[148]
Bunyan was now settled under the happiest circumstances, and doubtless
looked forward to much religious enjoyment. A pious wife--peace
in his soul--a most excellent pastor, and in full communion with
a Christian church. Alas! his enjoyments were soon interrupted;
again a tempest was to agitate his mind, that he might be more deeply
humbled and prepared to become a Barnabas or son of consolation to
the spiritually distressed.
'Now was I as one awakened out of some troublesome sleep and dream;
and listening to this heavenly sentence, I was as if I had heard
it thus expounded to me:--"Sinner, thou thinkest, that because of
thy sins and infirmities, I cannot save thy soul; but behold my Son
is by me, and upon him I look, and not on thee, and will deal with
thee according as I am pleased with him." At this I was greatly
lightened in my mind, and made to understand, that God could
justify a sinner at any time; it was but his looking upon Christ,
and imputing of his benefits to us, and the work was forthwith
done.'[153]
'Now was I got on high, I saw myself within the arms of grace and
mercy; and though I was before afraid to think of a dying hour, yet
now I cried, Let me die. Now death was lovely and beautiful in my
sight, for I saw that we shall never live indeed, till we be gone
to the other world. I saw more in those words, "Heirs of God" (Rom
8:17), than ever I shall be able to express. "Heirs of God," God
himself is the portion of his saints.'[154]
As his mental agitation subsided into this delicious calm, his bodily
health was restored; to use his own figure, Captain Consumption,
with all his men of death, were[155] routed, and his strong bodily
health trimphed over disease; or, to use the more proper language
of an eminent Puritan, 'When overwhelmed with the deepest sorrows,
and that for many doleful months, he who is Lord of nature healed
my body, and he who is the Father of mercies and God of all grace
has proclaimed liberty to the captive, and given rest to my weary
soul.'[156] Here we have a key to the most eventful picture in
the Pilgrim's Progress--The Valley of the Shadow of Death--which
is placed in the midst of the journey. When in the prime of life,
death looked at him and withdrew for a season. It was the shadow
of death that came over his spirit.
'A wounded spirit who can bear.' Well might the apostle say, 'If
in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most
miserable' (1 Cor 15:19). Bunyan had enjoyed holy emotions full of
glory, and now the devil was threatening him, not only with the loss
of heaven, but the terrors of hell. The Puritan, Rogers, describes
religious melancholy as 'the worst of all distempers, and those sinking
and guilty fears which it brings along with it are inexpressibly
dreadful; what anguish, what desolation! I dare not look to heaven;
there I see the greatness of God, who is against me. I dare not
look into his Word; for there I see all his threats, as so many
barbed arrows to strike me to the heart. I dare not look into the
grave; because thence I am like to have a doleful resurrection; in
this doleful night the soul hath no evidence at all of its former
grace.'[158] Bunyan's experience reminds us of the impressive
language of Job--a book full of powerful imagery and magnificent
ideas, in which Bunyan delighted, calling it 'that blessed
book.'[159] Job goes on, from step to step, describing his mental
wretchedness, until he rises to a climax, God 'runneth upon me like
a giant' (16:7-22). 'Thou huntest me as a fierce lion' (10:16).
'The arrows of the Almighty are within me; they drink up my spirit:
the terrors of God do set themselves in array against me' (6:4).
Poor Bunyan, in the depth of his distress, cried unto God, and was
heard and relieved from these soul troubles. He recollected the
joyful ascent of Lazarus from the extreme of human misery to the
height of celestial enjoyments. His spirit was sweetly revived, and
he was enabled, with delight, to hope yet in God, when that word
fell with great weight upon his mind, 'O death, where is thy sting?
O grave, where is thy victory?' 'At this he became both well in
body and mind at once; his sickness did presently vanish, and he
again walked comfortably in his work for God.'[160] The words, 'by
grace are ye saved,' followed him through the rest of his pilgrimage.
His consolation was, that 'a little true grace will go a great way;
yea, and do more wonders than we are aware of. If we have but grace
enough to keep us groaning after God, it is not all the world that
can destroy us.'[161] He had now become deeply instructed in the
school of Christ, and was richly furnished with the weapons of
spiritual warfare; 'a scribe instructed into the kingdom of heaven,
like unto a man that is an householder, which bringeth forth out
of his treasure things new and old' (Matt 13:12). Or, as 'the man
of God, perfected, thoroughly furnished unto all good works' (2
Tim 3:17). It was powerfully impressed upon his mind that all his
inward conflicts were to be made use of in preparing him to instruct
others. All the events of his Saviour's life passed before his mind
as if he had stood by as a witness to his birth--his walking with
his disciples; his wondrous parables and stupendous miracles; his
mental and bodily sufferings; his sacrifice, burial, ascension,
intercession, and final judgment; all passed in vivid review before
the eye of his mind; and then, he says, 'as I was musing with myself
what these things should mean, methought I heard such a word in my
heart as this, I have set thee down on purpose, for I have something
more than ordinary for thee to do'; which made me the more to
marvel, saying, 'What, my Lord, such a poor wretch as I?'[162] Such
was his inward call to the ministry; and it being attended with
the three requisites usually insisted on among Dissenters--ability,
inclination, and opportunity--he was sent out as an itinerant
preacher in the surrounding villages in 1655, and laid the foundation
of many churches, which now flourish to the praise of the glory of
Divine grace. In some of these villages the gospel had never before
been preached; they were strongholds of Satan. These were fit places
for the full display of his intrepid energy.
After thus preaching and much suffering, for fifteen years, he was
appointed to the pastoral office, or eldership.[163] Can a man enter
upon the work of the ministry from a better school than this? Deeply
versed in scriptural knowledge; thoroughly humbled by the assaults
of sin and Satan; aware of his devices; with a keen perception of
the value of the soul; its greatness; and, if lost, the causes and
the unspeakable extent of its loss. Solemnly devout and fluent in
prayer; ready in conversation upon heavenly things; speaking the
truth without fear of consequences, yet avoiding unnecessary offence;
first speaking in the church-meeting, and then more extensively in
barns, or woods, or dells, to avoid the informers.[164] Such was
his training; and the result was, that, when permitted to proclaim
the gospel publicly, thousands hung upon his words with intense
feeling; numerous converts were by his means added to the church;
the proud became broken-hearted, and the lowly were raised, and
blessings abounded; the drunkards were made sober; thieves and
covetous were reclaimed; the blasphemers were made to sing the
praises of God; the desert bid fair to blossom and bring forth
fruit as a garden. But, alas! his early labours were contrary to
acts of parliament; the spirit of intolerance and persecution soon
troubled, and eventually consigned him to a prison.
He entered upon the serious work of the ministry with fear and
trembling, with much heart-searching, earnest prayer, and the advice
of the church to which he was united, not with any pledge to abide
by their decision contrary to his own conviction, but to aid him
in his determination. His own account of these important inquiries
is very striking:--'After I had been about five or six years awakened,
and helped myself to see both the want and worth of Jesus Christ
our Lord, and also enabled to venture my soul upon him, some of
the most able among the saints with us, for judgment and holiness
of life, as they conceived, did perceive that God had counted me
worthy to understand something of his will in His holy and blessed
Word, and had given me utterance, in some measure, to express what
I saw to others for edification; therefore they desired me, and that
with much earnestness, that I would be willing at some times to
take in hand, in one of the meetings, to speak a word of exhortation
unto them. The which, though at the first it did much dash and
abash my spirit, yet being still by them desired and entreated, I
consented to their request, and did twice, at two several assemblies
in private, though with much weakness and infirmity, discover my
gift amongst them; at which they did solemnly protest, as in the
sight of the great God, they were both affected and comforted, and
gave thanks to the Father of mercies for the grace bestowed on me.
'After this, sometimes, when some of them did go into the country
to teach, they would also that I should go with them; where, though
as yet I did not, nor durst not, make use of my gift in an open
way, yet more privately, as I came amongst the good people in those
places, I did sometimes speak a word of admonition unto them also,
the which they, as the other, received with rejoicing at the mercy
of God to me-ward, professing their souls were edified thereby.
'By this text I was made to see that the Holy Ghost never intended
that men, who have gifts and abilities, should bury them in the
earth, but rather did command and stir up such to the exercise of
their gift, and also did commend those that were apt and ready so
to do.
We cannot wonder that his time was incessantly employed. His was
no ordinary case. He had to recover and improve upon the little
education he had received, and lost again by dissipated habits. He
must have made every effort, by his diligent study of the Bible,
to gain that spiritual knowledge which alone could enable him
to proclaim the unsearchable riches of Christ, and that profound
internal converse with the throne of God which appears in all his
writings. In addition to all this, he was engaged in continual
controversy with a variety of sects, which, in his sober judgment,
opposed the simplicity of the gospel. Among these the Ranters, or
Sweet Singers, were very conspicuous. It is difficult to discover
what were their opinions, but they appear to have been nearly
like the Dutch Adamites; they were severely persecuted, by public
authority, under the Commonwealth, for blasphemy. George Fox
found some of them in prison at Coventry in 1649, and held a short
disputation with them. They claimed each one to be GOD, founding
their notion on such passages as 1 Corinthians 14:25, 'God is in
you of a truth.' Fox quaintly asked them whether it would rain the
next day; and upon their answering that they could not tell, 'Then
said I unto them, God can tell.'[179] Strange as it may appear,
the Ranters had many followers, while numerous pious people were
troubled by their impudence and perversion of Scripture, but more
especially by their being a persecuted people. Taking advantage of
the inquiries that were excited by these strange doctrines, Bunyan
determined to become an author, that he might set forth more
extensively than he could do by preaching, the truths of the gospel
in their native purity, simplicity, and beauty, as an antidote to
fanaticism. The learned and eloquent looked with contempt upon the
follies of the Ranters, Familists, and some loose Quakers, 'and
only deigned to abuse them with raillery, while the poor unlettered
tinker wrote against them.' To indite a work would be to him a
pleasant recreation, but writing a book must have been extremely
difficult, and have required extraordinary patience. This will be
better seen by a specimen of his handwriting, now in the Bedford
Library, found in Fox's Book of Martyrs, the three volumes of which
beguiled many of his tedious hours when in prison.
At this time the Quakers were not united as a body, and consequently
there was no test of character nor rules of discipline for those
who assumed that name. They were very dissimilar men to their quiet
and unobtrusive descendants. The markets, fairs, and every public
concourse were attended by them, denouncing false weights and
measures, drunkenness and villany, with the curses of the Almighty,
calling upon the people, frequently with furious and fearful energy
and powerful eloquence, to repent, and cry unto God, that his mercy
might be extended to the salvation of their immortal souls. their
zeal led them to many breaches of good manners. They would enter
churches, and after the service, when the quiet folks were thinking
of gratifying their bodies with a substantial dinner, they were
arrested by the violent declamation of a man or woman, frequently
denouncing the priest as being the blind leading the blind.
This naturally led to a scene of riot and confusion, in which the
Quakers were in many cases handled with great barbarity. among these
disturbers were mingled persons of bad character. The violence of
sectarian feeling in the churches thus disturbed, made no discrimination
between bad and good; they were equally subjected to the roughest
treatment. Bunyan attacked those who denied that Christ had appeared
in the world as Emmanuel, God with us 'in fashion as a man,' that
by the infinite merits of his life and death imputed to believers,
they might be made holy. His attack was also directed against those
who refused obedience to the written Word, or who relied upon inward
light in contradistinction and preference to the Bible. The title
to Burrough's answer is a strange contrast to the violence of his
language--The Gospel of Peace Contended for in the Spirit of Meekness
and Love. In this spirit of meekness he calls his opponents 'crafty
fowlers preying upon the innocent'; and lovingly exclaims, 'How
long shall the righteous be a prey to your teeth, ye subtle foxes;
your dens are in darkness, and your mischief is hatched upon your
beds of secret whoredoms.' The unhallowed spirit of the age mistook
abuse for argument, and harsh epithets for faithful dealing.[186]
In those days it was not an uncommon thing for the hearers, at the
close of the sermon, to put questions to the preacher, sometimes
to elicit truth, or to express a cordial union of sentiments, or
to contradict what the minister had said. Upon one occasion, Mr.
Bunyan, after his sermon, had a singular dispute with a scholar.
It is narrated by Mr. C. Doe, who was a personal friend and great
admirer of our author, and who probably heard it from his own mouth,
and will be found in the Struggler, inserted vol. iii., p. 767.
Upon one of his journeys, being upon the road near Cambridge, he
was overtaken by a scholar, who concluded that he was an itinerant
preacher, whether from having heard him, or observing his serious
deportment, or his Bible reading, does not appear, although the
latter was probably the reason. But the student determined to have
a brush with him, and said, 'How dare you preach from the Bible,
seeing you have not the original, being not a scholar?' Then said
Mr. Bunyan, 'Have you the original?' 'Yes, said the scholar.' 'Nay,
but,' said Mr. Bunyan, 'have you the very self-same original copies
that were written by the penmen of the Scriptures, prophets and
apostles?' 'No,' said the scholar, 'but we have the true copies of
these originals.' 'How do you know that?' said Mr. Bunyan. 'How?'
said the scholar. 'Why, we believe what we have is a true copy
of the original.' 'Then,' said Mr. Bunyan, 'so do I believe our
English Bible is a true copy of the original.' Then away rid the
scholar.[198] As neither persecution nor railing, nor temptations,
nor the assaults of Satan, produced any effect upon Bunyan to prevent
his preaching, but rather excited his zeal and energy, means of
a more deadly nature were resorted to, to injure or prevent his
usefulness. As Mr. Gifford said, 'The archers shot sorely at him'
by the most infamous and unfounded slanders, which he thus narrates:--
'These things therefore, upon mine own account, trouble me not. No,
though they were twenty times more than they are, I have a good
conscience; and whereas they speak evil of me, they shall be ashamed
that falsely accuse my good conversation in Christ. Therefore I
bind these lies and slanders to me as an ornament, it belongs to
my Christian profession to be vilified, slandered, reproached, and
reviled. I rejoice in reproaches for Christ's sake. My foes have
missed their mark in this their shooting at me. I am not the man.
If all the fornicators and adulterers in England were hanged by
the neck till they be dead, John Bunyan, the object of their envy,
would be still alive and well. I know not whether there be such
a thing as a woman breathing under the copes of the whole heaven,
but by their apparel, their children, or by common fame, except my
wife.
The justices, if the law had allowed them, would, from the first,
have prevented Bunyan's preaching. When they had the power,
he possessed nothing to excite the cupidity of an informer: this,
with the caution of his friends, saved him, for some months, from
being apprehended; they met privately in barns, milk-houses, and
stables, or in any convenient place in which they were not likely
to be disturbed. In addition to these services, every opportunity was
embraced to visit his friends--praying with them, and administering
consolation, arming them with a steady resolve to be patient
in suffering, and to trust in God for their safety and reward. At
length an information was laid, and he was caught in the very act
of worshipping God with some pious neighbours. Bunyan's account of
this event is deeply interesting; but the want of sufficient space
prevents my giving more than an abstract of it, referring the reader
to his Grace Abounding for fuller details.
On November 12, 1660, as the winter was setting in, having been
invited to preach at Samsell, in Bedfordshire, he prepared a sermon
upon these words--'Dost thou believe in the Son of God?' (John
9:35); from which he intended 'to show the absolute need of faith
in Jesus Christ, and that it was also a thing of the highest concern
for men to inquire into, and to ask their own hearts whether they
had faith or no.'[213] He had then been a preacher of the glorious
gospel of Christ for five or six years, without any interruption;
for, although indicted, he had continued his useful career, and
through grace had received great encouragement and eminent proofs
of the Divine blessing.
When Bunyan and the constable came before Justice Wingate, he inquired
what the meeters did, and what they had with them; suspecting that
they met armed, or for treasonable practices: but when the constable
told him that they were unarmed, and merely assembled to preach and
hear the Word, he could not well tell what to say. Justice Wingate
was not the only magistrate who had felt difficulties as to the
construction of the persecuting acts of 35 Eliz. and 15 Chas. II.
Had he taken an opinion, as one of the justices at that time did,
it might have saved him from the infamy and guilt of punishing an
innocent man. The case was this:--'Two persons of insolent behaviour,
calling themselves informers, demanded, on their evidence of having
been present, without summons or hearing in presence of the accused,
that a fine of �100 should be levied; they were at the meeting and
heard no Common Prayer service.' The opinion was that there must
be evidence showing the intent, and that the meeting was held
under colour and pretence of any exercise of religion to concoct
sedition.[217] Mr. Wingate asked Bunyan why he did not follow his
calling and go to church? to which he replied, that all his intention
was to instruct and counsel people to forsake their sins, and that
he did, without confusion, both follow his calling and preach the
Word. At this the angry justice ordered his commitment to jail,
refusing bail, unless he would promise to give up preaching. While
his mittimus was preparing, he had a short controversy with an
old enemy of the truth, Dr. Lindale, and also with a persecuting
justice, Mr. Foster, who, soon after, sorely vexed the people
of God at Bedford. They tried their utmost endeavours to persuade
him to promise not to preach; a word from him might have saved his
liberty; but it was a word which would have sacrificed his religious
convictions, and these were dearer to him than life itself. This
was a trying moment, but he had been forewarned of his danger by
the extraordinary temptation to sell Christ narrated in his Grace
Abounding. His feelings, while they were conducting him to the
prison, were so cheering as to enable him to forget his sorrows;
he thus describes them--'Verily, as I was going forth of the doors
I had much ado to forbear saying to them, that I carried the peace
of God along with me; and, blessed be the Lord, I went away to
prison with God's comfort in my poor soul.'[218]
Tradition points out the place in which this eminently pious man
was confined, as an ancient prison, built with the bridge over the
river Ouse, supported on one of the piers near the middle of the
river.[219] As the bridge was only four yards and a half wide,
the prison must have been very small. Howard, the philanthropist,
visited the Bedford prison, that which was dignified as the county
jail about 1788, and thus describes it:--'The men and women felons
associate together; their night-rooms are two dungeons. Only one
court for debtors and felons; and no apartment for the jailer.'[220]
Imagination can hardly realize the miseries of fifty or sixty pious
men and women, taken from a place of public worship and incarcerated
in such dens or dungeons with felons, as was the case while Bunyan
was a prisoner. Twelve feet square was about the extent of the
walls; for it occupies but one pier between the center arches of
the bridge. How properly does the poor pilgrim call it a certain
DEN! What an abode for men and women who had been made by God kings
and priests--the heirs of heaven! The eyes of Howard, a Dissenter,
penetrated these dens, these hidden things of darkness, these abodes
of cruelty. He revealed what lay and clerical magistrates ought to
have published centuries before, that they were not fit places in
which to imprison any, even the worst of criminals. He denounced
them, humanity shuddered at the discovery, and they were razed to
their foundations. In this den God permitted his honoured servant,
John Bunyan, to be incarcerated for more than twelve years of the
prime of his life. A man, whose holy zeal for the salvation of
sinners, whose disinterested labours, whose sufferings for Christ
prove his apostolical descent much better than those who claim
descent from popes, and Wolsey or Bonner--those fiends in human
shape.
Bedford bridge was pulled down in the year 1811, when the present
handsome bridge was built. One of the workmen employed upon the
ruins found, among the rubbish, where the prison had stood, a ring
made of fine gold, bearing an inscription which affords strong
presumptive evidence that it belonged to our great allegorist. Dr.
Abbot, a neighbouring clergyman, who had daily watched the labours
of the workmen, luckily saw it, and saved it from destruction. He
constantly wore it, until, drawing near the end of his pilgrimage,
in 1817, he took it off his own finger and placed it upon that of
his friend Dr. Bower, then curate of Elstow,[221] and at present
the dean of Manchester, charging him to keep it for his sake. This
ring must have been a present from some person of property, as a
token of great respect for Bunyan's pious character, and probably
from an indignant sense of his unjust and cruel imprisonment. By
the kind permission of the dean, we are enabled to give a correct
representation of this curious relic.[222][223]
Bunyan was treated with all the kindness which many of his jailers
dared to show him. In his times, imprisonment and fetters were
generally companions. Thus he says--'When a felon is going to be
tried, his fetters are still making a noise on his heels.'[225] So
the prisoners in the Holy War are represented as being 'brought in
chains to the bar' for trial. 'The prisoners were handled by the
jailer so severely, and loaded so with irons, that they died in the
prison.'[226] In many cases, prisoners for conscience' sake were
treated with such brutality, before the form of trial, as to cause
their death. By Divine mercy, Bunyan was saved from these dreadful
punishments, which have ceased as civilization has progressed, and
now cloud the narratives of a darker age.
After having lain in prison about seven weeks, the session was
held at Bedford, for the county; and Bunyan was placed at the bar,
indicted for devilishly and perniciously abstaining from coming to
church to hear Divine service, and as a common upholder of several
unlawful meetings and conventicles, to the great disturbance and
distraction of the good subjects of this kingdom, contrary to the
laws of our sovereign lord the king. In this indictment Bunyan
is not described as 'of Elstow' but 'of Bedford.' Probably he had
removed to Bedford soon after he joined Gifford's church. The bench
was numerous, and presided over by Justice Keelin.[227] If this was
Sergeant Kelynge who, the following year, was made Lord Chief-Justice,
he was a most arbitrary tyrant, equaled or excelled only by Judge
Jeffreys. It was before him that some persons were indicted for
attending a conventicle; but it being only proved that they had
assembled on the Lord's-day with Bibles in their hands without
prayer-books, and there being no proof that their meeting was only
under colour or pretence of religion, the jury acquitted them. Upon
this he fined each of the jury-men one hundred marks, and imprisoned
them till the fines were paid. Again, on a trial for murder, the
prisoner being under suspicion of Dissent, was one whom the judge
had a great desire to hang, he fined and imprisoned all the jury
because, contrary to his direction, they brought in a verdict
of manslaughter! Well was it said, that he was more fit to charge
the Roundheads under Prince Rupert than to charge a jury. After
a short career, he fell into utter contempt.[228] He entered into
a long argument with the poor tinker, about using the liturgy of
the Church of England, first warning him of his danger if he spake
lightly of it. Bunyan argued that prayer was purely spiritual, the
offering of the heart, and not the reading of a form. The justice
declared--'We know the Common Prayer-book hath been ever since the
apostles' time, and is lawful to be used in the church!!' It is
surprising that such a dialogue was ever entered upon; either Keling
was desirous of triumphing over the celebrated tinker, or his
countenance and personal appearance commanded respect. For some
cause he was treated with great liberality for those times; the
extent of it may be seen by one justice asking him, 'Is your God
Beelzebub?' and another declaring that he was possessed with the
devil! 'All which,' says Bunyan, 'I passed over, the Lord forgive
them!' When, however, the justice was worsted in argument, and
acknowledged that he was not well versed in Scripture, he demanded
the prisoner's plea, saying, 'Then you confess the indictment?'
'Now,' says Bunyan, 'and not till now, I saw I was indicted; and
said--"This I confess, we have had many meetings together, both to
pray to God, and to exhort one another; and that we had the sweet
comforting presence of the Lord among us for our encouragement
(blessed be his name!); therefore I confess myself guilty, and
no otherwise."' This was recorded as a plea of guilty, and Keling
resumed his natural ferocity. 'Then,' said he, 'hear your judgment.
You must be had back again to prison, and there lie for three months
following; and then, if you do not submit to go to church to hear
Divine service, and leave your preaching, you must be banished the
realm; and after that, if you shall be found in this realm without
special license from the king, you must stretch by the neck for
it. I tell you plainly'; 'and so he bid my jailer have me away.'
The hero answered--'I am at a point with you: if I were out of
prison to-day, I would preach the gospel again to-morrow, by the
help of God.'[229]
When he entered the prison, his first and prayerful object was to
levy a tax upon his affliction--to endeavour to draw honey from
the carcass of the lion. His care was to render his imprisonment
subservient to the great design of showing forth the glory of God
by patient submission to His will. Before his commitment, he had
a strong presentiment of his sufferings; his earnest prayer, for
many months, was that he might, with composure, encounter all his
trials, even to an ignominious death. This led him to the solemn
consideration of reckoning himself, his wife, children, health,
enjoyments, all as dying, and in perfect uncertainty, and to live
upon God, his invisible but ever-present Father.
The clerk of the peace, Mr. Cobb, was sent by the justices to persuade
him to conform, and had a very long and interesting conference
with him in the prison. This shows that the magistrates were well
convinced that he was a leader in nonconformity, who, if brought
over, would afford them a signal triumph. In fact, he was called,
by a beneficed clergyman, 'the most notorious schismatic in all
the county of Bedford.'[239] It is perhaps to the arguments of Cobb
that he refers in his Advice to Sufferers. 'The wife of the bosom
lies at him, saying, O do not cast thyself away; if thou takest
this course, what shall I do? Thou hast said thou lovest me; now
make it manifest by granting this my small request--Do not still
remain in thine integrity. Next to this come the children, which
are like to come to poverty, to beggary, to be undone, for want of
wherewithal to feed, and clothe, and provide for them for time to
come. Now also come kindred, and relations, and acquaintance; some
chide, some cry, some argue, some threaten, some promise, some
flatter, and some do all to befool him for so unadvised an act as
to cast away himself, and to bring his wife and children to beggary
for such a thing as religion. These are sore temptations.'[240]
It was during this period of his imprisonment that the mad attempt
was made, by Venner and his rabble, to overturn the government.
This was pressed upon Bunyan as a reason why he should not hold
meetings for religious exercises, but rely upon his more private
opportunities of exhorting his neighbours. In reply to this,
Mr. Cobb is reminded of Bunyan's well-known loyalty, which would
become useful in proportion to his public teaching. It was a
pleasing interview, which, while it did not for a moment shake his
determination, led him to thank Mr. Cobb for his civil and meek
discourse, and to ejaculate a heartfelt prayer--'O that we might
meet in heaven.'[241] The whole of it is reprinted at the end of
the Grace Abounding, and it shows that God gave him favour even with
his persecutors. It Is not surprising that such a prisoner should
have won the good opinion of his jailer, so that he was permitted
the consolation of seeing his relatives and friends, who ministered
to his comforts.
When the time arrived for the execution of the bitterest part of
his sentence, God, in his providence, interposed to save the life of
his servant. He had familiarized his mind with all the circumstances
of a premature and appalling death; the gibbet, the ladder, the
halter, had lost much of their terrors; he had even studied the
sermon he would then have preached to the concourse of spectators.
At this critical time the king's coronation took place, on April
23, 1661. To garnish this grand ceremony, the king had ordered the
release of numerous prisoners of certain classes, and within that
description of offences was that for which Bunyan was confined.
The proclamation allowed twelve months' time to sue out the pardon
under the great seal, but without this expensive process thousands
of vagabonds and thieves were set at liberty, while, alas, an
offence against the church was not to be pardoned upon such easy
terms. Bunyan and his friends were too simple, honest, and virtuous,
to understand why such a distinction should be made. The assizes
being held in August, he determined to seek his liberty by a petition
to the judges. The court sat at the Swan Inn, and as every incident
in the life of this extraordinary man excites our interest, we
are gratified to have it in our power to exhibit the state of this
celebrated inn at that time.
Having written his petition, and made some fair copies of it, his
modest, timid wife determined to present them to the judges. Her
heroic achievements--for such they deserve to be called--on behalf
of her husband, are admirably narrated by Bunyan, the whole of
which is reprinted in our first volume,[243] and deserves a most
attentive perusal. Want of space prevents us repeating it here, or
even making extracts from it. She had previously traveled to London
with a petition to the House of Lords, and entrusted it to Lord
Barkwood, who conferred with some of the peers upon it, and informed
her that they could not interfere, the king having committed the
release of the prisoners to the judges. When they came the circuit
and the assizes were held at Bedford; Bunyan in vain besought the
local authorities that he might have liberty to appear in person
and plead for his release. This reasonable request was denied,
and, as a last resource, he committed his cause to an affectionate
wife. Several times she appeared before the judges; love to her
husband, a stern sense of duty, a conviction of the gross injustice
practiced upon one to whom she was most tenderly attached, overcame
her delicate, modest, retiring habits, and forced her upon this
strange duty. Well did she support the character of an advocate.
This delicate, courageous, high-minded woman appeared before Judge
Hale, who was much affected with her earnest pleading for one so
dear to her, and whose life was so valuable to his children. It
was the triumph of love, duty, and piety, over bashful timidity.
Her energetic appeals were in vain. She returned to the prison with
a heavy heart, to inform her husband that, while felons, malefactors,
and men guilty of misdemeanours were, without any recantation or
promise of amendment, to be let loose upon society to grace the
coronation, the poor prisoners for conscience' sake were to undergo
their unjust and savage sentences. Or, in plain words, that refusing
to go to church to hear the Common Prayer was an unpardonable
crime, not to be punished in any milder mode than recantation, or
transportation, or the halter. With what bitter feelings must she
have returned to the prison, believing that it would be the tomb
of her beloved husband! How natural for the distressed, insulted
wife to have written harsh things against the judge! She could not
have conceived that, under the stately robes of Hale, there was
a heart affected by Divine love. And when the nobleman afterwards
met the despised tinker and his wife, on terms of perfect equality,
clothed in more glorious robes in the mansions of the blessed, how
inconceivable their surprise! It must have been equally so with
the learned judge, when, in the pure atmosphere of heaven, he found
that the illiterate tinker, harassed by poverty and imprisonment,
produced books, the admiration of the world. As Dr. Cheever eloquently
writes--'How little could he dream, that from that narrow cell in
Bedford jail a glory would shine out, illustrating the grace of
God, and doing more good to man, than all the prelates and judges
of the kingdom would accomplish.'[244]
Charles Doe, who manifested most laudable anxiety to hand down the
works of Bunyan to posterity, bears honourable testimony to his
conduct while in prison. 'It was by making him a visit in prison
that I first saw him, and became acquainted with him; and I must
profess I could not but look upon him to be a man of an excellent
spirit, zealous for his master's honour, and cheerfully committing
all his own concernments unto God's disposal. When I was there,
there were about sixty Dissenters besides himself there, taken but
a little before at a religious meeting at Kaistoe, in the county
of Bedford; besides two eminent Dissenting ministers, Mr. Wheeler
and Mr. Dun (both very well known in Bedfordshire, though long since
with God[249]), by which means the prison was very much crowded;
yet, in the midst of all that hurry which so many new-comers
occasioned, I have heard Mr. Bunyan both preach and pray with that
mighty spirit of faith and plerophory of divine assistance that
has made me stand and wonder.'[250] Here they could sing, without
fear of being overheard; no informers prowling round. The world was
shut out; and, in communion with heaven, they could forget their
sorrows, and have a rich foretaste of the inconceivable glory of
the celestial city. It was under such circumstances that Bunyan
preached one of his most remarkable sermons, afterwards published
under the title of The Holy City or the New Jerusalem, 1665.
'Upon a certain first-day, being together with my brethren in
our prison-chamber, they expected that, according to our custom,
something should be spoken out of the Word for our mutual edification.
I felt myself, it being my turn to speak, so empty, spiritless, and
barren, that I thought I should not have been able to speak among
them so much as five words of truth with life and evidence. At
last I cast mine eye upon this prophecy, when, after considering
awhile, methought I perceived something of that jasper in whose light
you find this holy city descended; wherefore, having got some dim
glimmering thereof, and finding a desire to see farther thereinto,
I with a few groans did carry my meditations to the Lord Jesus for
a blessing, which he did forthwith grant, and helping me to set
before my brethren, we did all eat, and were well refreshed; and
behold, also, that while I was in the distributing of it, it so
increased in my hand, that of the fragments that we left, after we
had well dined, I gathered up this basketful. Wherefore, setting
myself to a more narrow search, through frequent prayer, what first
with doing and then with undoing, and after that with doing again,
I thus did finish it.'[251] To this singular event the religious
public are indebted for one of Bunyan's ablest treatises, full
of the striking sparkles of his extraordinary imagination. It was
a subject peculiarly adapted to display his powers--the advent of
New Jerusalem, her impregnable walls and gates of precious stones,
golden streets, water of life, temple, and the redeemed from all
nations flocking into it.[252]
Bunyan's popularity and fame for wisdom and knowledge had spread
all round the country, and it naturally brought him visitors, with
their doubts, and fears, and cases of conscience. Among these a
singular instance is recorded in the Life of Badman. 'When I was
in prison,' says the narrator, 'there came a woman to me that was
under a great deal of trouble. So I asked her, she being a stranger
to me, what she had to say to me? She said she was afraid she should
be damned. I asked her the cause of those fears. She told me that
she had, some time since, lived with a shopkeeper at Wellingborough,
and had robbed his box in the shop several times of money, and pray,
says she, tell me what I shall do? I told her I would have her go
to her master, and make him satisfaction. She said she was afraid
lest he should hang her. I told her that I would intercede for her
life, and would make use of other friends to do the like; but she
told me she durst not venture that. Well, said I, shall I send
to your master, while you abide out of sight, and make your peace
with him before he sees you? and with that I asked her master's
name. But all she said in answer to this was, pray let it alone
till I come to you again. So away she went, and neither told me
her master's name nor her own; and I never saw here again.'[253]
He adds, 'I could tell you of another, that came to me with a like
relation concerning herself, and the robbing of her mistress.'
While busily occupied with his Grace Abounding and Pilgrim's Progress,
he wrote a poetical epistle in answer to the kind inquiries of his
numerous friends and visitors. After thanking them for counsel and
advice, he describes his feelings in prison. His feet stood on Mount
Zion; his body within locks and bars, while his mind was free to
study Christ, and elevated higher than the stars. Their fetters
could not tame his spirit, nor prevent his communion with God. The
more his enemies raged, the more peace he experienced. In prison
he received the visits of saints, of angels, and the Spirit of God.
'I have been able to laugh at destruction, and to fear neither the
horse nor his rider. I have had sweet sights of the forgiveness
of my sins in this place, and of my being with Jesus in another
world.'[258] If his ears were to be pierced in the pillory, it would
be only 'to hang a jewel there.' The source of his happy feelings
is well expressed in one of the stanzas:--
Yes, honest John Bunyan, the world at large now gives you credit
for the truth of that saying.
How strange must it seem to the luxurious worldling, with his bed
of down and splendid hangings, but aching heart, to hear of the
exquisite happiness of the prisoner for Christ on his straw pallet!
'When God makes the bed,' as Bunyan says, 'he must needs be easy
that is cast thereon; a blessed pillow hath that man for his head,
though to all beholders it is hard as a stone.'[260] In the whole
course of his troubles, he enjoyed the sympathy of his family and
friends. his food was brought daily, and such was the veneration
in which his memory was embalmed, that the very jug in which his
broth was taken to the prison has been preserved to this day.[261]
In the midst of all his sufferings he murmurs not nor for a moment
gives way to revenge; he leaves the persecutor in the hands of God.
Stand off, Christian; pity the poor wretch that brings down upon
himself the vengeance of God. Your pitiful arm must no strike
him--no, stand by, 'that God may have his full blow at him in his
time. Wherefore he saith avenge not yourself--"Vengeance is mine,
saith the Lord." Give place, leave such an one to be handled by
me.'[262]
The last work that he wrote in prison was the confession of his
faith, and reason of his practice as to mixed communion, not with
the world, but with saints of other denominations. As this plunged him
into a fearful controversy with his Dissenting brethren (Baptists,
Independents, and Presbyterians), a notice of it will more properly be
introduced in our account of that conflict. He had been incarcerated
nearly twelve years, and had determined to suffer to the end. Here
he found time 'to weigh, and pause, and pause again, the grounds
and foundations of those principles for which he suffered,' and
he was a Nonconformist still. 'I cannot, I dare not now revolt or
deny my principles, on pain of eternal damnation,'[267] are his
impressive words. 'Faith and holiness are my professed principles,
with an endeavour to be at peace with all men. Let they themselves be
judges, if aught they find in my writing or preaching doth render
me worthy of almost twelve years' imprisonment, or one that deserveth
to be hanged or banished for ever, according to their tremendous
sentence. If nothing will do unless I make of my conscience a
continual butchery and slaughter-shop, unless putting out my own
eyes, I commit me to the blind to lead me, I have determined, the
Almighty God being my help and shield, yet to suffer, if frail life
might continue so long, even until the moss shall grow over mine
eye-brows, rather than to violate my faith and principles.'[268]
The allusion to moss growing on his eye-brows most probably referred
to the damp state of his den or dungeon.
PERIOD SIXTH.
Bunyan, who had secured the confidence and esteem of his jailer,
now found his prison more like a lodging-house, and enjoyed great
privileges. He frequently, if not regularly, attended the church
meetings, and preached with some degree of publicity. The church at
Bedford was at this time in want of a pastor, and their eyes were
naturally fixed upon Bunyan to succeed to that important office.
There were two weighty considerations that required Divine guidance
in coming to a conclusion. One was, whether it might injuriously
affect the prisoner's comforts, and the other was, the propriety
of making choice of a Christian brother to be their ministering
elder, while incarcerated in a jail. Feeling these difficulties,
the church held several meetings on the subject, the minutes of
which are very interesting. The first was held at Hawnes, on the
24th of the eighth month (October) 1671, when 'the improvement of
the gifts of the church, and their disposal in an orderly way, were
proposed to consideration, that God might be sought for direction
therein; and a time further to consider and debate thereof, was
appointed this day seven-night, at evening, at Bedford, where the
principal brethren were desired for that purpose to come together,
at brother John Fenn's; and a church-meeting was appointed to be
there that day week. The church was also minded to seek God about
the choice of brother, Bunyan to the office of elder, that their
way in that respect may be cleared up to them.' At a meeting held
at Bedford, on the last day of the ninth month (November), there
was appointed another meeting 'to pray and consult about concluding
the affair before propounded, concerning gifts of the brethren
to be improved, and the choice of brother Bunyan to office, at
Gamlingay, on the 14th day, and at Hawnes, the 20th, and at Bedfod,
the 21st of the same instant, which it was desired might be a
general meeting.' After all this jealous care, and these fervent
applications to the throne of grace for divine guidance, the
result was most gratifying. 'At a full assembly of the church at
Bedford, the 21st of the tenth month,[274] after much seeking God
by prayer and sober conference formally had, the congregation did
at this meeting, with joynt consent, signified by solemn lifting
up of their hands, call forth and appoint our brother John Bunyan
to the pastoral office or eldership. And he accepting thereof,
gave himself up to serve Christ and his Church, in that charge, and
received of the elders the right hand of fellowship, after having
preached fifteen years.' The choice thus solemnly made, was ratified
by the abundant blessings of heavenly union and great prosperity--no
stranger or novice, but one whose preaching and writings had
proved most acceptable to them for a series of years--on that had
been owned and blessed of his God, and whom the church delighted
to honour.
How utterly contemptible does any Government become when they tamper
with spiritual worship. At one period they punished Dissenters with
imprisonment, transportation, and, to use Judge Keeling's elegant
expression in his sentence on Bunyan, 'to stretch by the neck for
it'; and anon, the very same Government, under the same king, gives
them license to dissent! Human laws affecting religion can never
be the standard of morality; to read the Bible is considered to be
sin in Tuscany, and righteousness in Britain. The release of this
great and pious man from his tedious imprisonment, has been hitherto
involved in a cloud of mystery, which it will be our happiness
to disperse, while we record that event in a clear, indisputable
narrative of facts. His earlier biographer, Mr. Doe, not having
access to archives which the lapse of time has now rendered available,
attributed his release to the influence of Bishop Barlow, by the
interference of Dr. Owen. It is narrated in the life of Dr. Owen,
published in 1721:--'The doctor had some friends also among the
bishops, Dr. Barlow, formerly his tutor, then bishop of Lincoln,
who yet upon a special occasion failed him, when he might have
expected the service of his professed friendship. The case was this,
Mr. John Bunyan had been confined to a jail twelve years, upon an
excommunication for Nonconformity. Now there was a law, that if
any two persons will go to the bishop of the diocese, and offer
a cautionary bond, that the prisoner shall conform in half a year,
the bishop may release him upon that bond; whereupon a friend
of this poor man desired Dr. Owen to give him his letter to the
bishop in his behalf, which he readily granted. It was soon after
the discovery of the Popish plot, when this letter was carried to
the bishop, who having read it, desired "a little time to consider
of it, and if I can do it, you may be assured of my readiness."
He was waited upon again in about a fortnight, and his answer was,
"I would desire you to move the Lord Chancellor in the case, and,
upon his order, I will do it." To which it was replied, "this method
would be chargeable, and the man was poor, not able to expend so
much money; and, being satisfied he could do it legally, it was hoped
his Lordship would remember his promise, there being no straining
a point in the case. But he would do it upon no other terms, which
at last was done, and the poor man released." And for this we are
told that "Mr. Bunyan returned him his unfeigned thanks, and often
remembered him in his prayers, as, next to God, his deliverer."' The
whole of this story, so far as it relates to Bunyan, is not only
improbable, but utterly impossible. Bunyan was never excommunicated, and
he was certainly released from prison two or three years previous
to Dr. Barlow becoming a bishop. The critical times to which
he alludes, refer doubtless to the Popish plot, which took place
in 1678, Bunyan having been released in 1672. The probability is,
that Dr. Owen did about 1678 apply to the bishop of Lincoln for the
release of some poor prisoner under sentence of excommunication,
it being his province to release such prisoners upon their making
peace with the Church. If this person was a friend of Bunyan's,
his prayers for the bishop, and acknowledgments for this act of
kindness, are readily accounted for. That Barlow had nothing to
do with Bunyan's release is now perfectly clear; because all, even
the minutest particulars relative to it, have been discovered. This
is a very romantic history, and necessarily leads us back to the
battle of Worcester. At this battle, the republicans were numerous,
well disciplined, and led by experienced officers; the royal army
was completely routed, and its leaders, who survived the battle,
were subject to the severest privations. Charles found refuge
at Boscobel House, and, disguised as a woodcutter, was hid in an
oak. His adventures and hair-breadth escapes fill a volume:--the
parliament offered one thousand pounds reward for his apprehension.
At length, after wandering in various disguises forty days, he
arrived at Brighton, then a small fishing town, and here his friends
succeeded in hiring a fishing boat to take him to France. Numerous
histories of this extraordinary escape were published, but no two
of them agree, excepting that, to please the king, all the credit
was given to Roman Catholics. Of these narratives, that by Dr.
Lingard has the strangest blunder. When they left Shoreham, 'The
ship stood with easy sail towards the Isle of Wight, as if she were
on her way to Deal, to which port she was bound'[276]--Deal being
exactly in the contrary direction! Carte has the best account. The
vessel was bound for Poole, coal-laden; they left Shoreham at seven
a.m. under easy sail; and at five, being off the Isle of Wight, with
the wind north, she stood over to France, and returned to Poole,
no one discovering that they had been out of their course. A letter
recently discovered among the archives of the Society of Friends
at Devonshire House solves every difficulty. It is written by Ellis
Hookes to the wife of George Fox, dated January, 1670--
'Yesterday there was a friend (a quaker) wth the king, one that
is John Groves mate, he was the may yt. was mate to the master of
the fisher-boat yt carried the king away when he went from Worcester
fight, and only this friend and the master knew of it in the ship,
and the friend carried him (the king) ashoare on his shoulders.
the king knew him again, and was very friendly to him, and told
him he remembered him and of severall tings yt was done in ye ship
att the same time. the friend told him the reason why he did not
come all this while was yt he was satisfied in yt he had peace and
satisfaction in himself yt he did what he did to releiue a man in
distresse and now he desired nothing of him (the king) but that he
would sett friends at libertie who were great sufferers or to that
purpose and told the king he had a paper of 110 that were premunired
yt had lain in prison about 6 years and none can release ym but him.
Soe the king took the paper and said there was many of ym and yt
they would be in again in a monthes time and yt the country gentlemen
complained to him yt they were so troubled wth the quakers. So he
said he would release him six. but ye friend thinkes to goe to him
again, for he had not fully cleared himselfe.'
'Dear G. F. As for the friend that was with the King, his love is
to thee. He has been with the King lately, and Thomas Moore was with
him, and the King was very loving to them. He had a fair and free
opportunity to open his mind to the King, and the King has promised
to do for him, but willed him to wait a month or two longer. I rest
thy faithful friend to serve thee,
'E.H.'[277]
While the premises occupied by Mr. Roughed were being converted into
a capacious meeting-house, the pastor was indefatigable in visiting
the sick, and preaching from house to house, settling churches in
the villages, reconciling differences, and extending the sacred
influences of the gospel, so that in a very short time he attained
the appellation of Bishop Bunyan--a title much better merited by
him than by the downy prelates who sent him to jail for preaching
that which they ought to have preached.
His spirit was greatly refreshed by finding that his precept and
example had been blessed to his son Thomas. On the 6th of the 11th
month, 1673, he passed the lions, and was welcomed into the house
called Beautiful, uniting in full communion with his father's
church. There doubtless was, as Mercy expresses it, 'music in the
house, music in the heart, and music also in heaven, for joy that
he was here.'[284] He afterwards became a village preacher.
'Grace, mercy, and peace be with you, by Jesus Christ our Lord.
Amen.
'I received your letter, and have presented it to the sight of the
brethren, who, after due consideration of your motion, have jointly
concluded to give you this answer. This for yourself (honoured
sister), you are of high esteem with the church of God in this
place, both because his grace hath been bestowed richly upon you,
and because of your faithful fellowship with us; for you have been
rightly a daughter of Abraham while here, not being afraid with any
amazement. Your holy and quiet behaviour, also, while with patience
and meekness, and in the gentleness of Christ, you suffered yourself
to be robbed for his sake, hath the more united our affections
to you in the bowels of Jesus Christ. Yea, it hath begotten you
reverence, also, in the hearts of them who were beholders of your
meekness and innocency while you suffered; and a stinging conviction,
as we are persuaded, in the consciences of those who made spoil
for themselves; all which will redound to the praise of God our
Father, and to your comfort and everlasting consolation by Christ,
in the day he shall come to take vengeance for his people, and to
be glorified in them that believe. Wherefore we cannot (our honoured
sister) but care for your welfare, and increase of all good in the
faith and kingdom of Christ, whose servant you are, and whose name
is written in your forehead; and do therefore pray God and our
Father, that he would direct your way, and open a door in his temple
for you, that you may eat his fat and be refreshed, and that you
may drink the pure blood of the grape. And be you assured that, with
all readiness, we will help and forward you what we can therein,
for we are not ashamed to own you before all the churches of Christ.
'But, our dearly beloved, you know that, for our safety and your
profit, it is behoofful that we commit you to such, to be fed and
governed in the Word and doctrines as, we are sufficiently persuaded,
shall be able to deliver you up with joy at the coming of our Lord
Jesus Christ with all his saints: otherwise we (that we say not
you) shall receive blushing and shame before him and you; yea, and
you also, our honoured sister, may justly charge us with want of
love, and a due respect for your eternal condition, if, for want
of care and circumspection herein, we should commit you to any
from whom you should receive damage, or by whom you should not be
succoured and fed with the sincere milk of the incorruptible Word
of God, which is able to save your soul. Wherefore we may not,
neither dare give our consent that you feed and fold with such
whose principles and practices, in matters of faith and worship,
we, as yet, are strangers to, and have not received commendations
concerning, either from works of theirs or epistles from others.
Yourself, indeed, hath declared that you are satisfied therein;
but, elect sister, seeing the act of delivering you up is an act
of ours and not yours, it is convenient, yea, very expedient, that
we, as to so weighty a matter, be well persuaded before. Wherefore
we beseech you, that, for the love of our Lord Jesus Christ, you
give us leave to inform ourselves yet better before we grant your
request; and that you also forbear to sit down at the table with
any without the consent of your brethren. You were, while with
us, obedient, and we trust you will not be unruly now. And for the
more quick expedition of this matter, we will propound before you
our further thoughts. 1. Either we shall consent to your sitting down
with brother Cockain, brother Griffith, brother Palmer, or other,
who, of long continuance in the city, have showed forth their faith,
their worship, and good conversation with the Word; 2. Or if you
can get a commendatory epistle from brother Owen, brother Cockain,
brother Palmer, or brother Griffith, concerning the faith and
principles of the person and people you mention, with desire to be
guided and governed by, you shall see our readiness, in the fear of
God, to commit you to the doctrine and care of that congregation.
Choose you whether of these you will consent unto, and let us hear
of your resolution. And we beseech you, for love's sake, you show,
with meekness, your fear and reverence of Christ's institution; your
love to the congregation, and regard to your future good. Finally,
we commit you to the Lord and the Word of his grace, who is able
to build you up, and to give you an inheritance among them that are
sanctified. To God, the only wise, be glory and power everlasting.
Amen.--Your affectionate brethren, to serve you in the faith and
fellowship of the gospel.
John Bunyan
The late Mr. Kilpin of Bedford considered the whole of this letter
to be entered in the minutes in Bunyan's hand-writing.
Not only had Bunyan clear, well-defined, and most decided views of
the ordinances of the gospel, but also of all its doctrines. His
knowledge upon those solemn subjects was drawn exclusively from the
sacred pages; nor dared he swerve in the slightest degree from the
path of duty; still he belonged to no sect, but that of Christian,
and the same freedom which had guided him in forming his principles,
he cheerfully allowed to others. Hitherto, water baptism had been
considered a pre-requisite to the Lord's table by all parties.
The Episcopalians, Presbyterians, and Independents, had denounced
the Baptists as guilty of a most serious heresy, or blasphemy, in
denying the right of infants to baptism; not only did they exclude
the Baptists from communion with their churches, but they persecuted
them with extreme rigour. When the Independents made laws for the
government of their colony in America, in 1644, one of the enactments
was, 'That if any person shall either openly condemn, or oppose the
baptizing of infants, or seduce others, or leave the congregation
during the administration of the rite, they shall be sentenced to
banishment.' The same year a poor man was tied up and whipped, for
refusing to have his child baptized. 'The Rev. J. Clarke, and Mr.
O. Holmes, of Rhode Island, for visiting a sick Baptist brother in
Massachusetts, instead of being admitted to the Lord's table, they
were arrested, fined, imprisoned, and whipped.' At this very time,
the Baptists formed their colony at Rhode Island, and the charter
concludes with these words, 'All men may walk as their consciences
persuade them, every one in the name of his God.' This is probably
the only spot in the world where persecution was never known. The
Baptists considered that immersion in water was the marriage rite
between the believer and Saviour; that to sit at the Lord's table
without it was spiritual adultery, to be abhorred and avoided, and
therefore refused to admit any person to the Lord's table who had
not been baptized in water upon a personal profession of faith
in the Saviour. This was the state of parties when Bunyan, at the
commencement of his pastorate, entered into the controversy. He had
been promised a commendation to his book by the great, the grave,
'the sober' Dr. Owen, but he withdrew his sanction. 'And perhaps it
was more for the glory of God, that truth should go naked into the
world,' said Bunyan, 'than as seconded by so weighty an armour-bearer
as he.'[289] Bunyan denied that water could form a wedding garment,
or that water baptism was a pre-requisite for the Lord's table, or
that being immersed in water was putting on our Lord's livery, by
which disciples may be known. 'Away, fond man, do you forget the
text, "By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples, if ye
have love one to another."'[290] And attempt was made to embroil
Bunyan in a public disputation in London upon this subject, which
he very wisely avoided.[291] This controversy will be found in our
second volume, and is deeply interesting, making allowance for the
esprit de corps manifested on all sides. A verse in the emblems is
very pertinent upon the violence of this dispute:--
A new era was now dawning upon him, which, during the last ten years
of his life, added tenfold to his popularity. For many years his
beautifully simple, but splendid allegory, The Pilgrim's Progress,
lay slumbering in his drawer.[296] Numerous had been his consultations
with his pious associates and friends, and various had been their
opinions, whether it was serious enough to be published. All of them
had a solemn sense of the impropriety of anything like trifling as
to the way of escape from destruction, and the road to the celestial
city. It appears strange to us, who have witnessed the very solemn
impressions, in all cases, made by reading that book, that there
could have been a doubt of the propriety of treating in a colloquial
manner, and even under the fashion of a dream, those most important
truths. Some said, 'John, print it'; others said, 'not so.' Some
said, 'it might do good'; others said, 'no.' The result of all
those consultations was his determination, 'I print it will,' and
it has raised an imperishable monument to his memory. Up to this
time, all Bunyan's popularity arose from his earlier works, and
his sermons. Leaving out of the question those most extraordinary
books, The Pilgrim's Progress and Holy War, his other writings ought
to have handed down his name, with honour and popularity, to the
latest posterity. While the logical and ponderous works of Baxter
and Owen are well calculated to furnish instruction to those who
are determined to obtain knowledge, the works of Bunyan create that
very determination, and furnish that very knowledge, so blended
with amusement, as to fix it in the memory. Let one illustration
suffice. It is our duty to love our enemies, but it is a hard lesson;
we must learn it from the conduct of the Divine Creator--'There
is a man hates God, blasphemes his name, despises his being; yea,
says there is no God. And yet the God that he carrieth it thus
towards doth give me his breakfast, dinner, and supper; clothes him
well, and, when night comes, has him to bed, gives him good rest,
blesses his field, his corn, his cattle, his children, and raises
him to high estate; yea, and this our God doth not only once
or twice, but until these transgressors become old; his patience
is thus extended years after years, that we might learn of him to
do well.'[297] All the works of Bunyan abound with such striking
lessons, as to render them extremely valuable, especially to
Sunday-school teachers and ministers, to enliven their addresses and
sermons. But, in The Pilgrim's Progress, the world has acknowledged
one train of beauties; picture after picture, most beautifully
finished, exhibiting the road from destruction to the celestial
city; our only difficulty in such a display being to decide as to
which is the most interesting and striking piece of scenery.[298]
The editor's introduction to that extraordinary book is intended
to prove that it was written while the author was imprisoned
for refusing to submit his conscience to human laws, and that it
is a perpetual monument to the folly of persecution; the peculiar
qualifications of the author are displayed in its having been
a spontaneous effusion of his own mind, unaided by any previous
writer; an analysis is given of all prior pilgrimages, in which,
more especially in The Pilgrims, The Pylgremage of the Soule,
Grande Amoure, and in The Pilgrim of Loretto, the reader will find
a faithful picture of some of the singularities of Popery drawn by
itself; an account of the editions, forgeries, errors in printing,
versions and translations of this wonderful book; the opinions of
the learned and pious of its merits, principal scenes, and a synopsis.
It has been the source of very numerous courses of lectures by
ministers of all denominations; and has been turned into a handsome
volume of hymns, adapted for public worship, by the late Mr. Purday,
a friend of John Wesley's, and a laborious preacher for more than
half a century.
Great efforts have been made by the most popular artists to enliven the
scenes of the pilgrimage; but no colour glows like the enchanting
words of Bunyan. No figures are so true to nature, and so life-like.
Those eminent engravers, Sturt and Strut, Stothard and Martin,
with the prize efforts excited by the Art Union of England, and
the curious outlines by Mrs. M'Kenzie, the daughter of a British
admiral, have endeavoured to exhaust the scenes in this inexhaustible
work of beautiful scenery. The most elegant and correct edition is
the large-paper, sumptuous volume by Mr. Bogue, admirably illustrated
with new designs, engraved on wood in superior style--a volume
worthy the drawing-room of queens and emperors. The designs, also,
of the late David Scott, recently published at Edinburgh, are new,
and peculiarly striking. His entrance to the Valley of the Shadow
of Death is mysteriously impressive, a fit accompaniment to Bunyan's
description, which is not excelled by any thing in Dante, Spencer,
or Milton. In both parts of The Pilgrim's Progress this scene is
full of terrific sublimity. But we must be excused, if we most warmly
recommend our own offspring--the present edition--as combining
accuracy, elegance, and cheapness, with the addition of very
numerous notes, which, we trust, will prove highly illustrative
and entertaining.
'To all people to whom this present writing shall com, J. Bunyan of
the parish of St. Cuthbirt's, in the towne of Bedford, in the county
of Bedford, Brazier send greeting. Know ye, that I the said John
Bunyan as well for, and in consideration of the natural affection
and loue which I have, and bear vnto my welbeloued wife, Elizabeth
Bunyan, as also for divers other good causes and considerations, me
at this present especially moneing, have given and granted, and by
these presents, do give, grant, and conferm vnto the said Elizabeth
Bunyan, my said wife, all and singuler my goods, chattels, debts,
ready mony, plate, rings, household stuffe, aparrel, vtensills,
brass, peuter, beding, and all other my substance, whatsoever moueable
and immoueable, of what kinde, nature, quality, or condition soever
the same are or be, and in what place or places soever the same be,
shall or may be found as well in mine own custodies, possession, as
in the possession, hands, power, and custody of any other person,
or persons whatsoever. To have and to hold all and singuler the
said goods, chattels, debts, and all other, the aforesaid premises
vnto the said Elizabeth, my wife, her executors, administerators,
and assigns to her and their proper vses and behoofs, freely and
quietly without any matter of challinge, claime, or demand of me
the said John Bunyan, or of any other person, or persons, whatsoever
for me in my name, by my means cavs or procurement, and without any
mony or other thing, therefore to be yeeilded, paid or done vnto
me the said John Bunyan, my executors, administrators or assigns.
And I, the said John Bunyan, all and singular, the aforesaid goods,
chattels, and premises to the said Elizabeth my wife, her executors,
administrators, and assignes to the vse aforesaid, against all
people do warrant and forever defend by these presents. And further,
know ye, that I the said John Bunyan have put the said Elizabeth,
my wife, in peacable and quiet possession of all and singuler the
aforesaid premises, by the delivrye vnto her at the ensealing hereof
one coyned peece of silver, commonly called two pence, fixed on
the seal of these presents.[317]
'In wittnes wherof, I the said John Bunyan have herevnto set my
hand and seall this 23d day of December, in the first year of the
reigne of our soueraigne lord, King James the Second of England,
&c., in the year of our lord and saviour, Jesus Christ, 1685.
John Bunyan
Sealed and delivered in the presence of vs, whos names are here
vnder written:--
Among other opinions which then divided the Christian world, was
a very important one relative to the law of the ten commandments,
whether it was given to the world at large, or limited to the
Jews as a peculiar nation until the coming of Messiah, and whether
our Lord altered or annulled the whole or any part of that law.
This question involves the observance of the seventh-day Sabbath.
An awful curse is denounced upon those who do not continue in ALL
things which are written in the book of the law to do them (Gal
3:10; Deut 27:26). When an innovation upon the almost universal
practice of infant baptism had become an object of inquiry only to
be answered from the New Testament, it is not surprising that the
serious question, why God's Sabbath-day had been altered, should
also be agitated with deep feeling. Generally, those who advocated
the restoration of the Jewish Sabbath were decidedly of opinion
that believers only were fit subjects for baptism, and that the
scriptural mode of administering it was by immersion; hence they
were called Seventh-day Baptists--Sabbatarians, or Sabbath-keepers.
Bunyan entered with very proper and temperate zeal into this
controversy. Popular feeling had no influence over him; nor could
he submit to the opinions of the ancient fathers. His storehouse
of knowledge was limited to the revealed will of God, and there
he found ample material to guide his opinion. His work upon this
subject is called, Questions about the Nature and Perpetuity of
the Seventh-day Sabbath; and proof that the First Day of the Week
is the Christian Sabbath. It is one of the smallest of his volumes,
but so weighty in argument as never to have been answered.
We now arrive at the last year of his eventful and busy life,
during which he published six important volumes, and left twelve
others in manuscript, prepared for publication. A list of these will
be found in The Struggler;[318] they are upon the most important
subjects, which are very admirably treated. We notice among these,
The Jerusalem Sinner Saved, or Good News for the Vilest of Men.
It is a specimen of preaching calculated to excite the deepest
interest, and afford the strongest consolation to a soul oppressed
with the sense of sin. Great sinner! thou art called to mercy by
name. Arise! shoulder thy way into court through any crowd,--'say,
Stand away, devil; stand away all discouragements; my Saviour calls
me to receive mercy.' In this treatise, Bunyan has repeated from
memory what he had read in some book when in prison, four and twenty
years before. It is a curious legend, which he doubtless believed
to be true, and it displays his most retentive memory.[319] His
poetry, like his prose, was not written to gain a name, but to make
a deep impression. One of his professed admirers made a strange
mistake when he called them doggerel rhymes.[320] His Caution to
Watch Against Sin is full of solemn and impressive thoughts, the
very reverse of doggerel or burlesque. his poem on the house of
God is worthy of a most careful perusal; and thousands have been
delighted and improved with his emblems. One rhyme in the Pilgrim
can never be forgotten--
The time was drawing near when, in the midst of his usefulness, and
with little warning, he was to be summoned to his eternal rest. He
had been seriously attacked with that dangerous pestilence which,
in former years, ravaged this country, called the sweating sickness,
a malady as mysterious and fatal as the cholera has been in later
times. The disease was attended by great prostration of strength;
but, under the careful management of his affectionate wife, his
health became sufficiently restored to enable him to undertake a
work of mercy; from the fulfillment of which, as a blessed close
to his incessant earthly labour, he was to ascend to his Father and
his God to be crowned with immortality. A father had been seriously
offended with his son, and had threatened to disinherit him. To
prevent the double mischief of a father dying in anger with his
child, and the evil consequence to the child of his being cut off
from his patrimony, Bunyan again ventured, in his weak state, on
his accustomed work, to win the blessings of the peace-maker. He
made a journey on horseback to Reading, it being the only mode of
travelling at that time, and he was rewarded with success. Returning
home by way of London to impart the gratifying intelligence, he was
overtaken by excessive rains, and, in an exhausted state, he found
a kindly refuge in the house of his Christian friend Mr. Strudwick,
and was there seized with a fatal fever. His much-loved wife, who
had so powerfully pleaded for his liberty with the judges, and to
whom he had been united thirty years, was at a great distance from
him. Bedford was then two days' journey from London. Probably at
first, his friends had hopes of his speedy recovery; but when the
stroke came, all his feelings, and those of his friends, appear to
have been absorbed, by the anticipated blessings of immortality,
to such an extent, that no record is left as to whether his wife,
or any of his children, saw him cross the river of death. There is
abundant testimony of his faith and patience, and that the presence
of God was eminently with him.
He bore his trying sufferings with all the patience and fortitude
that might be expected from such a man. His resignation was most
exemplary; his only expressions were 'a desire to depart, to be
dissolved, to be with Christ.' His sufferings were short, being
limited to ten days. He enjoyed a holy frame of mind, desiring his
friends to pray with him, and uniting fervently with them in the
exercise. His last words, while struggling with death, were, 'Weep
not for me, but for yourselves. I go to the Father of our Lord Jesus
Christ, who will, no doubt, through the mediation of his blessed
Son, receive me, though a sinner; where I hope we ere long shall
meet, to sing the new song, and remain everlastingly happy, world
without end. Amen.' He felt the ground solid under his feet in passing
the black river which has no bridge, and followed his pilgrim into
the celestial city in August, 1688, in the sixtieth year of his age.
There is some uncertainty as to the day of his decease: Charles
Doe, in the Struggler, 1692, has August 31, and this has been copied
in all his portraits. In the life appended to the Grace Abounding,
1692, his death-day is stated as August 12; and in the memoir
appended to the third part of the Pilgrim, also in 1692, the date
is August 17. The circumstances of his peaceful decease are well
compared by Dr. Cheever to the experience of Mr. Standfast, when he
was called to pass the river: the great calm--the firm footing--the
address to by-standers--until his countenance changed, his strong
man bowed under him, and his last words were, 'Take me, for I come
to thee.' Then the joy among the angels while they welcomed the
hero of such spiritual fights, and conducted his wandering soul to
the New Jerusalem, which he had so beautifully described as 'the
holy city'; and then his wonder and amazement to find how infinitely
short his description came to the blissful reality.
The deep affliction that his church was plunged into led to several
special meetings. Wednesday, the 4th of September, 'was kept in
prayer and humiliation for this heavy stroke upon us--the death of
dear brother Bunyan; it was appointed also, that Wednesday next be
kept in prayer and humiliation on the same account. At the meeting
held on the 11th, it was appointed that all the brethren meet
together on the 18th of this month, September, to humble themselves
for this heavy hand of God upon us, and also to pray unto the Lord
for counsel and direction what to do, in order to seek out for a
fit person to make choice of for an elder. On the 18th, when the
whole congregation met to humble themselves before God, by fasting
and prayer, for his heavy and severe stroke upon us in taking away
our honoured brother Bunyan by death, it was agreed by the whole
congregation that care be taken to seek out for one suitably qualified
to be chosen an elder among us, and that care was committed by the
whole to the brethren at Bedford.' Thus did the church manifest
that they had improved in wisdom under his ministry by flying, in
their extreme distress, to the only source of consolation.
How inscrutable are the ways of God! Had Bunyan lived a month longer,
he would have witnessed the glorious Revolution--the escape of
a great nation. The staff and hope of Protestant Europe was saved
from a subtle--a Jesuitical attempt--to introduce Popery and
arbitrary government. The time of his death, as a release from the
incumbrance of a material body, was fixed by infinite wisdom and
love at that juncture, and it ought not to be a cause of regret.
His interest in the welfare of the church ceased not with his mortal
life. How swiftly would his glorified spirit fly to see the landing
of William, and hover with joy over the flight of the besotted
James! He was now in a situation to prove the truth of that saying,
'the angels desire to look into' the truth and spread of the glad
tidings. How he would prove the reality of his opinion, expressed
in The Holy War, of the interest taken by the inhabitants of
heaven in the prosperity of the church on earth. When Mansoul was
conquered, the spirits that witnessed the victory 'shouted with
that greatness of voice, and sung with such melodious notes, that
they caused them that dwell in the highest orbs to open their
windows, and put out their heads and look down to see the cause of
that glory' (Luke 15:7-10).[327] So may we imagine that the happy,
happy, glorified spirit of Bunyan would look down rejoicing, when,
a few years after he had yielded up his pastoral cares, the seed
which he had been instrumental in sowing produced its fruit in
such numbers, that the old meeting-house was pulled down, and in
its place a large and respectable one was erected. And again, on
the 20th February, 1850, with what joy would he look down upon the
opening of a still larger, more commodious, and handsome meeting-house,
bearing his name, and capable of holding 1150 worshippers. One of
Bunyan's pungent, alarming sayings to the careless was, 'Once die,
we cannot come back and die better.'[328] If anything could tempt
him, in his angelic body, to re-visit this earth, it would be to
address the multitude at the new Bunyan Chapel with his old sermon
on The Jerusalem Sinner Saved, or Good News to the Vilest of Men.
But we have Moses and the prophets--Christ and his apostles; if
we shut our ears to them, neither should we listen to a messenger
from the New Jerusalem.
The Revs. Messrs. Chandler and Wilson, bear the following testimony
as eye-witnesses to his character:--'His fancy and invention were
very pregnant and fertile. His wit was sharp and quick--his memory
tenacious, it being customary with him to commit his sermons
to writing after he had preached them,' a proof of extraordinary
industry. 'His understanding was large and comprehensive--his judgment
sound and deep in the fundamentals of the gospel. His experience
of Satan's temptations in the power and policy of them, and of
Christ's presence in, and by his Word and Spirit to succour and
comfort him, was more than ordinary; the grace of God was magnified
in him and by him, and a rich anointing of the Spirit was upon him;
and yet this great saint was always in his own eyes the chiefest
of sinners, and the least of saints. He was not only well furnished
with the helps and endowments of nature, beyond ordinary, but eminent
in the graces and gifts of the Spirit, and fruits of holiness. He
was from first to last established in, and ready to maintain, that
God-like principle of having communion with saints as such, without
any respect to difference in things disputable among the godly. His
carriage was condescending, affable, and meek to all, yet bold and
courageous for Christ. He was much struck at, in the lat times of
persecution; being far from any sinful compliance to save himself,
he did cheerfully bear the cross.' Such was the character given
of him by these two eminent divines, in 1693, while his memory, in
its fullest fragrance, was cherished by all the churches.
He had friends among the rich as well as the poor. Of this his
solid gold ring and handsome cabinet are proofs. From a letter
in the Ellis correspondence, we learn that Bunyan had so secured
the affections of the Lord Mayor of London, as to be called his
chaplain.[333]
'A man there was, though some did count him mad,
The more he cast away, the more he had.'
'Can a beggar be worth ten thousand a-year and not know it?'[348]
We stand upon higher ground than our forefathers; we take our more
solemn stand upon the imperative duty of personal investigation--that
no one can claim the name of Christian, unless he has laid aside
all national, or family, or educational prejudices, and drawn from
the holy oracles alone all his scheme of salvation and rules of
conduct. All the secret of Bunyan's vast usefulness, the foundation
of all his honour, is, that the fear of God swallowed up the fear of
man; that he was baptized into the truths of revelation, and lived
to exemplify them. He was a bright and shining light in a benighted
world; and of him it may be most emphatically said, 'Blessed are the
dead which die in the Lord, that they may rest from their labours;
and their works do follow them.'
GEORGE OFFOR.
FOOTNOTES:
Ann Bonyonn, Widdo, was buried, 12th day of April, 1659. Thos.
Bunyan, buried, Feby. 7th, 1675. Ann Bunyon, Widdo, buried in
Woolen, September 25, 1680.
The marriage here recorded, May 10, 1656, could not be that of John
Bunyan to his second wife Elizabeth; for she declared to Judge Hale
in August, 1661, that she had 'not been married to him yet full
two years.'--Vol. i. 61.
3. This cottage has long ceased to exist, and has been replaced by
another of the poorest description. But from an old print we have
given in the Plate, p. 1, vol. i., a representation of the original,
with the shed at side often mentioned as 'The forge'; thus leading
us to believe, that to the 'tinker's' humble calling might be united
that of the 'smith,' a more manly and honourable trade.
10. Extracted from the first edition in the British Museum. It was
much altered in the subsequent impressions.
11. In 1566, Sir Thomas Harper, Lord Mayor of London, gave �180
for thirteen acres and a rood of meadow land in Holborn. This was
settled, in trust, to promote the education of the poor in and
round Bedford. In 1668, it produced a yearly revenue of �99--a
considerable sum in that day, but not in any proportion to the
present rental, which amounts to upwards of �12,000 a-year.
27. Life appended to the first and second editions of the forged
third part of Pilgrim's Progress.
47. The Pathway to Heaven is the work of that pious puritan Dent,
and is full of those striking illustrations which were admirably
adapted to prepare Bunyan for writing his allegories. A copy with
the name Ma Bunyann, written on the title page, has long been in
the editor's library. We give a facsimile of the writing, as it
has been supposed that of Bunyan. This is very doubtful; it appears
more like a woman's hand; but, if it is the name of Mrs. Bunyan,
then it indicates that his daughter Mary, baptized 20th July, 1650,
was called after her.
88. Addison.
103. The anxiety of this pious teacher was to press upon his
hearers to take special heed, not to receive any truth upon trust
from any man, but to pray over it and search 'the Holy Word.'
This, Mr. Southey designates, 'doctrine of a most perilous kind.'
How happy would it be for society if every religious teacher
pressed this perilous doctrine upon their hearers, that it might
bring forth the same fruit universally, as it did specially in
Bunyan. Compare Grace Abounding, No. 117, and Southey's Life, p.
27, 28.
108. Luther fell into the same mistake as to the Baptists, that
Bunyan did as to the Quakers. Both were keenly alive to the honour
of Christianity, and were equally misled by the loose conduct
of some unworthy professors. Luther charges the Baptists as being
'devils possessed with worse devils' [Preface to Galatians]. 'It is
all one whether he be called a Frank, a Turk, a Jew, or an Anabaptist'
[Com. Gal. iv. 8, 9]. 'Possessed with the devil, seditious, and
bloody men' [Gal. v. 19]. Even a few days before his death, he wrote
to his wife, 'Dearest Kate, we reached Halle at eight o'clock, but
could not get on to Eisleben, for there met us a great Anabaptist,
with waves and lumps of ice, which threatened us with a second
baptism.' Bunyan, in the same spirit, calls the Quakers 'a company
of loose ranters, light notionists, shaking in their principles!' [Vol.
ii., p. 133, 9, 21]. Denying the Scriptures and the resurrection
[Com. Gal. iv. 29]. These two great men went through the same
furnace of the regeneration; and Bunyan, notwithstanding Luther's
prejudices against the Baptists, most affectionately recommended
his Comment on the Galatians, as an invaluable work for binding up
the broken-hearted.
116. The study of those scriptures, in order that the solemn question
might be safely resolved, 'Can such a fallen sinner rise again?'
was like the investigation of the title to an estate upon which a
whole livelihood depended. Every apparent flaw must be critically
examined. Tremblingly alive to the importance of a right decision,
his prayers were most earnest; and at length, to his unspeakable
delight, the word of the law and wrath gave place to that of life
and grace.
140. In the same year, and about the same period, Oliver Cromwell
was made Lord Protector. Upon this coincidence, Mr. Carlisle uses
the following remarkable language:--'Two common men thus elevated,
putting their hats upon their heads, might exclaim, "God enable me
to be king of what lies under this! For eternities lie under it,
and infinities, and heaven also and hell! and it is as big as the
universe, this kingdom; and I am to conquer it, or be for ever
conquered by it. Now, WHILE IT IS CALLED TO-DAY!'"
145. Not to wait for one another, each one to come in good time.
148. This letter was copied into the church records at the time:
the original cannot be found. It was published with Ryland's Funeral
Sermon on Symonds, 1788, and in Jukes' very interesting account of
Bunyan's church, in 1849. The signature is copied from an original
in the Milton State Papers, library of the Antiquarian Society.
Their horses on which they rode, from various parts, were sheltered
in neighbouring friendly farms, while they, to avoid suspicion,
ascended the hill by scarcely visible footpaths. Could fine weather
be insured, it would form a lovely spot for a meeting to celebrate
the third jubilee of religious toleration--there listen to a Bunyan
of our age, and devise measures for religious equality. Then we
might close the service by solemnly objuring every system which
gave power to tyrannise over the rights of conscience. Here, as
in other places where Bunyan founded churches, the cause of Christ
hath spread. At Hitchin, in 1681, about thirty-five Christians
united in the following covenant:--
'We who, through the mercy of God, and our Lord Jesus Christ, have
obtained grace to give ourselves to the Lord, and one to another
by the will of God, to have communion with one another, as saints
in one gospel fellowship:--Do, before God our Father, and our
Lord Jesus Christ, and the holy angels, agree and promise to walk
together in this one gospel communion and fellowship as a church of
Jesus Christ, in love to the Lord and one to another, and endeavour
to yield sincere and hearty obedience to the laws, ordinances, and
appointments of our Lord and Lawgiver in his church. And also do
agree and promise, the Lord assisting, to follow after the things
which make for peace, and things wherewith one may edify another,
that so living and walking in love and peace, the God of love and
peace may be with us. Amen.'
Another of this little band that was set apart with Bunyan, became
so useful a preacher as to have been honoured with a record in the
annals of persecution in the reign of Charles II. John Fenn was
on Lord's-day, May 15, 1670, committed to prison for preaching in
his own house; and on Tuesday, all his goods and stock in trade
were seized and carted away, leaving his family in the most desolate
condition.
Such were the severe trials which these excellent citizens were,
with their families, called to pass through, by the tyranny of the
church; but they were light, indeed, in comparison with those that
awaited the amiable and pious Bunyan.
176. Grace Abounding, vol. i., p. 42. The taunts and revilings of
a poet laureate upon Bunyan's preaching and sufferings need only
a passing notice. No words could be more vile and slanderous than
those of Mr. Southey. He says, 'Peace might be on his lips, and
zeal for the salvation of others in his heart, but he was certainly,
at that time, no preacher of good will, nor of Christian charity.'
How can we judge of a preacher's good will, but by 'peace on his
lips?' and what is the criterion of Christian charity, except it
be 'zeal for the salvation of others in his heart?'
178. Vol. i., p. 59. Eben. Chandler thus describes Bunyan: 'His
wit was sharp and quick, his memory tenacious; it being customary
with him to commit his sermons to writing after he had preached
them.'--Chandler and Wilson's Preface to Bunyan's Works, folio,
1692. All these autographs have unaccountably disappeared.
188. P. 16.
193. Cotton Mather says that these laws were never carried to
extremity, and were soon laid entirely by. Hist. of America.
218. Vol. i., p. 54. How unspeakable the mercy, that the persecutor
cannot plunge his implements of torture into the spirit, nor prevent
its intercourse with heaven!
223. This was not his only ring; he left, inter alia, all his rings
to his wife. See. p. lxxii.
242. The cut, copied from an old drawing of the house taken before
its entire demotion, at the end of last century, exhibits its quaint
characteristics. The bridge foot is to the spectator's right; the
church tower behind is that of St. Mary's, also seen in our view
of the jail, which would, of course, be seen from the bow-windows
of the old inn, in which the Judges met.
245. This valuable set of books came into the possession of my old
friend Mr. Wontner, of the Minories, London; it descended at his
decease, to his widow, who resided on Camberwell Green, and from
her to a daughter, married to Mr. Parnel, an orange merchant in
Botolph Lane. He was tempted to sell it to Mr. Bohn, the bookseller,
from whom it was bought for the Bedford library.
272. Rapin.
'I name thee not, lest so despised a name Should move a sneer at
thy deserved fame.'
326. The chair is engraved above, and it will be seen that it has
suffered some little dilapidation since the last published engraving
of it. The legs have been cut down to suit the height of one of
his successors in the ministry!! With regard to the pulpit, an old
resident in Bedford says--The celebrated John Howard presented a
new pulpit in the room of the old one, which was cut up. Of part
of the wood a table was made, which now belongs to Mrs. Hillyerd.
***
"Come and hear, all ye that fear God, and I will declare what he
hath done for my soul."--Psalm 66:16.
This title page was afterwards altered, and instead of what follows
the first line, he inserted,
Corrected and much enlarged now by the Author, for the benefit of
the tempted and dejected Christian.
'As you read the "Grace Abounding," you are ready to say at every
step, here is the future author of the "Pilgrim's Progress." It
is as if you stood beside some great sculptor, and watched every
movement of his chisel, having seen his design; so that at every
blow some new trait of beauty in the future statue comes clearly
into view.'[1]
Young Christians, you must not imagine that all these terrors are
absolute prerequisites to faith in the Saviour. God, as a sovereign,
calls his children to himself by various ways. Bunyan's was a very
extraordinary case, partly from his early habits--his excitable
mind, at a period so calculated to fan a spark of such feelings
into a flame. His extraordinary inventive faculties, softened down
and hallowed by this fearful experience, became fitted for most
extensive usefulness.
In this edition, the greatest care has been taken to preserve the
exact words of the author, as he first published them; where he
altered or added to the text in subsequent editions, it is marked
with an inverted comma, or inserted in the notes. Obsolete words and
customs are explained; the numbering of his sections is continued,
in addition to which, it is divided into chapters for family reading,
upon the plan of the late Rev. J. Ivimey; double inverted commas
denote quotations of Scripture.
The length of the notes may need some apology; the only one the
editor can make is his veneration for John Bunyan, and his earnest
desire to render this inestimable book more deeply interesting, by
explaining manners, customs, and words not now in use; the note on
No. 232, occupied the time of one whole day.
Most earnestly do I hope that this republication, now for the first
time, for nearly two hundred years, given in its native excellence
and purity, may be attended with the Divine blessing, to the comfort
of many despairing Jerusalem sinners; to the building up of the
church of Christ on earth; to the extension of pure, heart-felt,
genuine Christianity; and to the confusion of the persecutors. They
intended, by shutting the pious pilgrim up in a dungeon, to prevent
his voice from being heard to the comfort of his poor neighbours,
and by which violence, his persecutors have caused his voice to
burst the prison doors and walls, and to be heard over the whole
world. His 'Pilgrim's Progress,' which was written in prison, has
been, and now is, a guide to Christian pilgrims of all nations,
kindreds, tribes, and people, teaching them not to rest content
in any national religion, but personally to search the Scriptures,
with earnest supplications to the God of mercy and truth, that they
may be guided to Christ, as the Alpha and Omega of their salvation.
GEORGE OFFOR.
Children, grace be with you, Amen. I being taken from you in presence,
and so tied up, that I cannot perform that duty that from God doth
lie upon me to youward, for your further edifying and building
up in faith and holiness, &c., yet that you may see my soul hath
fatherly care and desire after your spiritual and everlasting
welfare; I now once again, as before, from the top of Shenir and
Hermon, so 'now' from the lions' dens, from the mountains of the
leopards (Song 4:8), do look yet after you all, greatly longing to
see your safe arrival into the desired haven.[3]
I thank God upon every remembrance of you; and rejoice, even while
I stick between the teeth of the lions in the wilderness, at the
grace, and mercy, and knowledge of Christ our saviour, which God
hath bestowed upon you, with abundance of faith and love. Your
hungerings and thirstings also after further acquaintance with the
Father, in his Son; your tenderness of heart, your trembling at
sin, your sober and holy deportment also, before both God and men,
is great refreshment to me; "For ye are my glory and joy" (1 Thess
2:20).
I have sent you here enclosed, a drop of that honey, that I have
taken out of the carcase of a lion (Judg 14:5-9). I have eaten
thereof myself also, and am much refreshed thereby. (Temptations,
when we meet them at first, are as the lion that roared upon Samson;
but if we overcome them, the next time we see them, we shall find
a nest of honey within them.) The Philistines understand me not. It
is 'something of' a relation of the work of God upon my own soul,
even from the very first, till now; wherein you may perceive
my castings down, and raisings up; for he woundeth, and his hands
make whole. It is written in the Scripture (Isa 38:19), "The father
to the children shall make known the truth of God." Yea, it was
for this reason I lay so long at Sinai (Deut 4:10,11), to see the
fire, and the cloud, and the darkness, that I might fear the Lord
all the days of my life upon earth, and tell of his wondrous works
to my children (Psa 78:3-5).
It was Paul's accustomed manner (Acts 22), and that when tried for
his life (Acts 24), even to open, before his judges, the manner of
his conversion: he would think of that day, and that hour, in the
which he first did meet with grace;[4] for he found it support
unto him. When God had brought the children of Israel through the
Red Sea, far into the wilderness, yet they must turn quite about
thither again, to remember the drowning of their enemies there
(Num 14:25). For though they sang his praise before, yet "they soon
forgat his works" (Psa 106:11-13).
In this discourse of mine you may see much; much, I say, of the
grace of God towards me. I thank God I can count it much, for it
was above my sins and Satan's temptations too. I can remember my
fears, and doubts, and sad months with comfort; they are as the head
of Goliah in my hand. There was nothing to David like Goliah's
sword, even that sword that should have been sheathed in his bowels;
for the very sight and remembrance of that did preach forth God's
deliverance to him. Oh, the remembrance of my great sins, of my
great temptations, and of my great fears of perishing for ever!
They bring afresh into my mind the remembrance of my great help,
my great support from heaven, and that the great grace that God
extended to such a wretch as I.
My dear children, call to mind the former days, "and the years of
ancient times: remember also your songs in the night; and commune
with your own heart" (Psa 73:5-12). Yea, look diligently, and leave
no corner therein unsearched, for there is treasure hid, even the
treasure of your first and second experience of the grace of God
toward you. Remember, I say, the word that first laid hold upon
you; remember your terrors of conscience, and fear of death and
hell; remember also your tears and prayers to God; yea, how you
sighed under every hedge for mercy. Have you never a hill Mizar to
remember? Have you forgot the close, the milk house, the stable,
the barn, and the like, where God did visit your soul?[5] Remember
also the Word--the Word, I say, upon which the Lord hath caused
you to hope. If you have sinned against light; if you are tempted
to blaspheme; if you are down in despair; if you think God fights
against you; or if heaven is hid from your eyes, remember it was
thus with your father, but out of them all the Lord delivered me.
My dear children, the milk and honey is beyond this wilderness. God
be merciful to you, and grant 'that' you be not slothful to go in
to possess the land.
JOHN BUNYAN.
4. As for my own natural life, for the time that I was without God
in the world, it was indeed according to the course of this world,
and "the spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience"
(Eph 2:2,3). It was my delight to be "taken captive by the devil
at his will" (2 Tim 2:26). Being filled with all unrighteousness:
the which did also so strongly work and put forth itself, both in my
heart and life, and that from a child, that I had but few equals,
especially considering my years, which were tender, being few, both
for cursing, swearing, lying, and blaspheming the holy name of God.
7. These things, I say, when I was but a child, 'but nine or ten
years old,' did so distress my soul, that when in the midst of my
many sports and childish vanities, amidst my vain companions, I
was often much cast down and afflicted in my mind therewith, yet
could I not let go my sins. Yea, I was 'also then' so overcome
with despair of life and heaven, that I should often wish either
that there had been no hell, or that I had been a devil--supposing
they were only tormentors; that if it must needs be that I went
thither, I might be rather a tormentor, than 'be' tormented myself.
8. A while after, these terrible dreams did leave me, which also I
soon forgot; for my pleasures did quickly cut off the remembrance
of them, as if they had never been: wherefore, with more greediness,
according to the strength of nature, I did still let loose the
reins to my lusts, and delighted in all transgression against the
law of God: so that, until I came to the state of marriage, I was
the very ringleader of all the youth that kept me company, into
all manner of vice and ungodliness.[8]
9. Yea, such prevalency had the lusts and fruits of the flesh in
this poor soul of mine, that had not a miracle of precious grace
prevented, I had not only perished by the stroke of eternal justice,
but had also laid myself open, even to the stroke of those laws,
which bring some to disgrace and open shame before the face of the
world.
11. Yet this I well remember, that though I could myself sin with the
greatest delight and ease, and also take pleasure in the vileness
of my companions; yet, even then, if I have at any time seen wicked
things, by those who professed goodness, it would make my spirit
tremble. As once, above all the rest, when I was in my height of
vanity, yet hearing one to swear that was reckoned for a religious
man, it had so great a stroke upon my spirit, that it made my heart
to ache.
12. 'But God did not utterly leave me, but followed me still, not
now with convictions, but judgments; yet such as were mixed with
mercy. For once I fell into a creek of the sea, and hardly escaped
drowning. Another time I fell out of a boat into Bedford river,
but mercy yet preserved me alive. Besides, another time, being in
the field with one of my companions, it chanced that an adder passed
over the highway; so I, having a stick in my hand, struck her over
the back; and having stunned her, I forced open her mouth with my
stick, and plucked her sting out with my fingers; by which act, had
not God been merciful unto me, I might, by my desperateness, have
brought myself to mine end.'
14. 'Here, as I said, were judgments and mercy, but neither of them
did awaken my soul to righteousness; wherefore I sinned still, and
grew more and more rebellious against God, and careless of mine
own salvation.'
16. Wherefore these books with this relation, though they did not
reach my heart, to awaken it about my sad and sinful state, yet
they did beget within me some desires to religion: so that, because
I knew no better, I fell in very eagerly with the religion of the
times; to wit, to go to church twice a day, and that too with the
foremost; and there should very devoutly, both say and sing as others
did, yet retaining my wicked life; but withal, I was so overrun
with a spirit of superstition, that I adored, and that with great
devotion, even all things, both the high place, priest, clerk,
vestment, service, and what else belonging to the church; counting
all things holy that were therein contained, and especially the
priest and clerk most happy, and without doubt, greatly blessed,
because they were the servants, as I then thought, of God, and were
principal in the holy temple, to do his work therein.
17. This conceit grew so strong in little time upon my spirit, that
had I but seen a priest, though never so sordid and debauched in
his life, I should find my spirit fall under him, reverence him,
and knit unto him; yea, I thought for the love I did bear unto
them, supposing they were the ministers of God, I could have lain
down at their feet, and have been trampled upon by them; their
name, their garb, and work, did so intoxicate and bewitch me.
18. After I had been thus for some considerable time, another
thought came into my mind; and that was, whether we were of the
Israelites, or no? For finding in the Scriptures that they were
once the peculiar people of God, thought I, if I were one of this
race, my soul must needs be happy.[12] Now again, I found within
me a great longing to be resolved about this question, but could
not tell how I should. At last I asked my father of it; who told
me--No, we were not. Wherefore then I fell in my spirit as to the
hopes of that, and so remained.
19. But all this while, I was not sensible of the danger and evil
of sin; I was kept from considering that sin would damn me, what
religion soever I followed, unless I was found in Christ. Nay, I
never thought of him, nor whether there was one, or no. Thus man,
while blind, doth wander, but wearieth himself with vanity, for he
knoweth not the way to the city of God (Eccl 10:15).
20. But one day, amongst all the sermons our parson made, his subject
was, to treat of the Sabbath-day, and of the evil of breaking that,
either with labour, sports, or otherwise. Now I was, notwithstanding
my religion, one that took much delight in all manner of vice, and
especially that was the day that I did solace myself therewith,[13]
wherefore I fell in my conscience under his sermon, thinking and
believing that he made that sermon on purpose to show me my evil
doing; and at that time I felt what guilt was, though never before,
that I can remember; but then I was, for the present, greatly
loaden therewith, and so went home when the sermon was ended, with
a great burden upon my spirit.
21. This, for that instant, did 'benumb'[14] the sinews of my 'best'
delights, and did imbitter my former pleasures to me; but behold,
it lasted not, for before I had well dined, the trouble began to go
off my mind, and my heart returned to its old course: but oh! How
glad was I, that this trouble was gone from me, and that the fire
was put out, 'that I might sin again without control!' Wherefore,
when I had satisfied nature with my food, I shook the sermon out
of my mind, and to my old custom of sports and gaming I returned
with great delight.
22. But the same day, as I was in the midst of a game at cat,[15]
and having struck it one blow from the hole, just as I was about
to strike it the second time, a voice did suddenly dart from heaven
into my soul, which said, Wilt thou leave thy sins and go to heaven,
or have thy sins and go to hell? At this I was put to an exceeding
maze; wherefore, leaving my cat upon the ground, I looked up to
heaven, and was, as if I had, with the eyes of my understanding,
seen the Lord Jesus looking down upon me, as being very hotly
displeased with me, and as if he did severely threaten me with some
grievous punishment for these and other my ungodly practices.
24. Thus I stood in the midst of my play, before all that then were
present; but yet I told them nothing: but I say, I having made this
conclusion, I returned 'desperately' to my sport again; and I well
remember, that presently this kind of despair did so possess my
soul, that I was persuaded, I could never attain to other comfort
than what I should get in sin; for heaven was gone already, so
that on that I must not think; wherefore I found within me a great
desire to take my fill of sin, still studying what sin was yet to
be committed, that I might taste the sweetness of it; and I made
as much haste as I could to fill my belly with its delicates, lest
I should die before I had my desire; for that I feared greatly. In
these things, I protest before God, I lie not, neither do I feign
this sort of speech; these were really, strongly, and with all
my heart, my desires; the good Lord, whose mercy is unsearchable,
forgive me my transgressions.
27. At this reproof I was silenced, and put to secret shame, and
that too, as I thought, before the God of heaven; wherefore, while
I stood there, and hanging down my head, I wished with all my heart
that I might be a little child again, that my father might learn
me to speak without this wicked way of swearing;[16] for, thought
I, I am so accustomed to it, that it is in vain for me to think of
a reformation, for I thought it could never be.
28. But how it came to pass, I know not; I did from this time
forward so leave my swearing, that it was a great wonder to myself
to observe it; and whereas before, I knew not how to speak unless
I put an oath before, and another behind, to make my words have
authority; now, I could, 'without it,' speak better, and with more
pleasantness, than ever I could before. All this while I knew not
Jesus Christ, neither did I leave my sports and plays.
29. But quickly after this, I fell in company with one poor
man that made profession of religion; who, as I then thought, did
talk pleasantly of the Scriptures, and of the matters of religion;
wherefore, falling into some love and liking to what he said, I
betook me to my Bible, and began to take great pleasure in reading,
but especially with the historical part thereof; for, as for Paul's
epistles, and Scriptures of that nature, I could not away with
them, being as yet but ignorant, either of the corruptions of my
nature, or of the want and worth of Jesus Christ to save me.
31. Thus I continued about a year; all which time our neighbours
did take me to be a very godly man, a new and religious man, and
did marvel much to see such a great and famous alteration in my
life and manners; and, indeed, so it was, though yet I knew not
Christ, nor grace, nor faith, nor hope; and, truly, as I have well
seen since, had then died, my state had been most fearful; well,
this, I say, continued about a twelvemonth or more.
32. 'But, I say, my neighbours were amazed at this my great conversion,
from prodigious profaneness, to something like a moral life; and,
truly, so they well might; for this my conversion was as great, as
for Tom of Bedlam to become a sober man.[17] Now, therefore, they
began to praise, to commend, and to speak well of me, both to my
face, and behind my back. Now, I was, as they said, become godly;
now, I was become a right honest man. But, oh! When I understood
that these were their words and opinions of men, it pleased me
mighty well. For though, as yet, I was nothing but a poor painted
hypocrite, yet I loved to be talked of as one that was truly godly.
I was proud of my godliness, and, indeed, I did all I did, either
to be seen of, or to be well spoken of, by man. And thus I continued
for about a twelvemonth or more.'
33. 'Now, you must know, that before this I had taken much delight
in ringing, but my conscience beginning to be tender, I thought
such practice was but vain, and therefore forced myself to leave it,
yet my mind hankered; wherefore I should go to the steeple house,
and look on it, though I durst not ring. But I thought this did
not become religion neither, yet I forced myself, and would look
on still; but quickly after, I began to think, How, if one of the
bells should fall? Then I chose to stand under a main beam, that
lay overthwart the steeple, from side to side, thinking there I
might stand sure, but then I should think again, should the bell
fall with a swing, it might first hit the wall, and then rebounding
upon me, might kill me for all this beam. This made me stand in the
steeple door; and now, thought I, I am safe enough; for, if a bell
should then fall, I can slip out behind these thick walls, and so
be preserved notwithstanding.'
34. 'So, after this, I would yet go to see them ring, but would not
go further than the steeple door; but then it came into my head,
How, if the steeple itself should fall? And this thought, it may
fall for ought I know, when I stood and looked on, did continually
so shake my mind, that I durst not stand at the steeple door any
longer, but was forced to flee, for fear the steeple should fall
upon my head.'
36. 'But poor wretch as I was, I was all this while ignorant of
Jesus Christ, and going about to establish my own righteousness;
and had perished therein, had not God, in mercy, showed me more of
my state of nature.'
37. But upon a day, the good providence of God did cast me to
Bedford, to work on my calling; and in one of the streets of that
town, I came where there were three or four poor women sitting at
a door in the sun, and talking about the things of God; and being
now willing to hear them discourse, I drew near to hear what they
said, for I was now a brisk talker also myself in the matters of
religion, but now I may say, I heard, but I understood not; for
they were far above, out of my reach; for their talk was about
a new birth, the work of God on their hearts, also how they were
convinced of their miserable state by nature; they talked how God
had visited their souls with his love in the Lord Jesus, and with
what words and promises they had been refreshed, comforted, and
supported against the temptations of the devil. Moreover, they
reasoned of the suggestions and temptations of Satan in particular;
and told to each other by which they had been afflicted, and how
they were borne up under his assaults. They also discoursed of their
own wretchedness of heart, of their unbelief; and did contemn, slight,
and abhor their own righteousness, as filthy and insufficient to
do them any good.
38. And methought they spake as if joy did make them speak; they
spake with such pleasantness of Scripture language, and with such
appearance of grace in all they said, that they were to me, as if
they had found a new world,[18] as if they were people that dwelt
alone, and were not to be reckoned among their neighbours (Num
23:9).
40. Thus, therefore, when I had heard and considered what they
said, I left them, and went about my employment again, but their
talk and discourse went with me; also my heart would tarry with
them, for I was greatly affected with their words, both because
by them I was convinced that I wanted the true tokens of a truly
godly man, and also because by them I was convinced of the happy
and blessed condition of him that was such a one.[19]
42. 'By these things' my mind was now so turned, that it lay like
a horse leech at the vein, still crying out, Give, give (Prov
30:15); yea, it was so fixed on eternity, and on the things about
the kingdom of heaven, that is, so far as I knew, though as yet,
God knows, I knew but little; that neither pleasures, nor profits,
nor persuasions, nor threats, could loosen it, or make it let go
his hold; and though I may speak it with shame, yet it is in very
deed a certain truth, it would then have been as difficult for
me to have taken my mind from heaven to earth, as I have found it
often since to get it again from earth to heaven.'
43. 'One thing I may not omit: There was a young man in our town,
to whom my heart before was knit more than to any other, but he
being a most wicked creature for cursing, and swearing, and whoring,
I now shook him off, and forsook his company; but about a quarter
of a year after I had left him, I met him in a certain lane,
and asked him how he did; he, after his old swearing and mad way,
answered, He was well. But, Harry, said I, why do you swear and
curse thus? What will become of you, if you die in this condition?
He answered me in a great chafe, What would the devil do for company,
if it were not for such as I am?'
44. 'About this time I met with some Ranters' books, that were put
forth by some of our countrymen, which books were also highly in
esteem by several old professors; some of these I read, but was not
able to make a judgment about them; wherefore as I read in them,
and thought upon them, feeling myself unable to judge, I should
betake myself to hearty prayer in this manner: O Lord, I am a fool,
and not able to know the truth from error: Lord, leave me not to
my own blindness, either to approve of, or condemn this doctrine;
if it be of God, let me not despise it; if it be of the devil, let
me not embrace it. Lord, I lay my soul, in this matter, only at
thy foot; let me not be deceived, I humbly beseech thee. I had
one religious intimate companion all this while, and that was the
poor man that I spoke of before; but about this time he also turned
a most devilish Ranter,[20] and gave himself up to all manner of
filthiness, especially uncleanness: he would also deny that there
was a God, angel, or spirit; and would laugh at all exhortations
to sobriety. When I laboured to rebuke his wickedness, he would
laugh the more, and pretend that he had gone through all religions,
and could never light on the right till now. He told me also, that
in a little time I should see all professors turn to the ways of
the Ranters. Wherefore, abominating those cursed principles, I left
his company forthwith, and became to him as great a stranger, as
I had been before a familiar.'
45. 'Neither was this man only a temptation to me; but my calling
lying in the country, I happened to light into several people's
company, who, though strict in religion formerly, yet were also
swept away by these Ranters. These would also talk with me of their
ways, and condemn me as legal and dark; pretending that they only
had attained to perfection that could do what they would, and
not sin. Oh! These temptations were suitable to my flesh, I being
but a young man, and my nature in its prime; but God, who had, as
I hope, designed me for better things, kept me in the fear of his
name, and did not suffer me to accept of such cursed principles.
And blessed be God, who put it into my heart to cry to him to be
kept and directed, still distrusting mine own wisdom; for I have
since seen even the effect of that prayer, in his preserving me not
only from ranting errors, but from those also that have sprung up
since. The Bible was precious to me in those days.'
46. And now, methought, I began to look into the Bible with new
eyes, and read as I never did before; and especially the epistles
of the apostle Paul were sweet and pleasant to me; and, indeed, I
was then never out of the Bible, either by reading or meditation;
still crying out to God, that I might know the truth, and way to
heaven and glory.
47. And as I went on and read, I lighted on that passage, 'To one
is given by the Spirit the word of wisdom; to another the word of
knowledge by the same Spirit; and to another faith,' &c. (1 Cor
12:8,9). And though, as I have since seen, that by this Scripture
the Holy Ghost intends, in special, things extraordinary, yet
on me it did then fasten with conviction, that I did want things
ordinary, even that understanding and wisdom that other Christians
had. On this word I mused, and could not tell what to do, 'especially
this word faith put me to it, for I could not help it, but sometimes
must question, whether I had any faith or no'; for I feared that
it shut me out of all the blessings that other good people had give
them of God;[21] but I was loath to conclude I had no faith in my
soul; for if I do so, thought I, then I shall count myself a very
cast-away indeed.
53. About this time, the state and happiness of these poor people
at Bedford was thus, in a dream or vision, represented to me. I
saw, as if they were set on the sunny side of some high mountain,
there refreshing themselves with the pleasant beams of the sun,
while I was shivering and shrinking in the cold, afflicted with
frost, snow, and dark clouds. Methought, also, betwixt me and them,
I saw a wall that did compass about this mountain; now, through
this wall my soul did greatly desire to pass; concluding, that if
I could, I would go even into the very midst of them, and there
also comfort myself with the heat of their sun.
54. About this wall I thought myself, to go again and again, still
prying as I went, to see if I could find some way or passage, by
which I might enter therein; but none could I find for some time.
At the last, I saw, as it were, a narrow gap, like a little doorway
in the wall, through which I attempted to pass; but the passage
being very strait and narrow, I made many efforts to get in, but
all in vain, even until I was well nigh quite beat out, by striving
to get in; at last, with great striving, methought I at first did
get in my head, and after that, by a sidling striving, my shoulders,
and my whole body; then was I exceeding glad, and went and sat down
in the midst of them, and so was comforted with the light and heat
of their sun.
55. Now, this mountain and wall, &c., was thus made out to me--the
mountain signified the church of the living God; the sun that shone
thereon, the comfortable shining of his merciful face on them that
were therein; the wall, I thought, was the Word, that did make
separation between the Christians and the world; and the gap which
was in this wall, I thought, was Jesus Christ, who is the way to
God the Father (John 14:6; Matt 7:14). But forasmuch as the passage
was wonderful narrow, even so narrow, that I could not, but with
great difficulty, enter in thereat, it showed me that none could
enter into life, but those that were in downright earnest,[22] and
unless also they left this wicked world behind them; for here was
only room for body and soul, but not for body and soul, and sin.[23]
56. This resemblance abode upon my spirit many days; all which time,
I saw myself in a forlorn and sad condition, but yet was provoked
to a vehement hunger and desire to be one of that number that did
sit in the sunshine. Now also I should pray wherever I was, whether
at home or abroad, in house or field, and should also often, with
lifting up of heart, sing that of the 51st Psalm, O Lord, consider
my distress; for as yet I knew not where I was.
58. By these two temptations I was very much afflicted and disquieted;
sometimes by one, and sometimes by the other of them. And first,
to speak of that about my questioning my election, I found at this
time, that though I was in a flame to find the way to heaven and
glory, and though nothing could beat me off from this, yet this
question did so offend and discourage me, that I was, especially
at some times, as if the very strength of my body also had been
taken away by the force and power thereof. This scripture did also
seem to me to trample upon all my desires, "It is not of him that
willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that showeth mercy"
(Rom 9:16).
59. With this scripture I could not tell what to do; for I evidently
saw, that unless the great God, of his infinite grace and bounty,
had voluntarily chosen me to be a vessel of mercy, though I should
desire, and long and labour until my heart did break, no good
could come of it. Therefore, this would still stick with me, How
can you tell that you are elected? And what if you should not? How
then?
62. Thus, therefore, for several days, I was greatly assaulted and
perplexed, and was often, when I have been walking, ready to sink
where I went, with faintness in my mind; but one day, after I had
been so many weeks oppressed and cast down therewith, as I was
now quite giving up the ghost of all my hopes of ever attaining
life, that sentence fell with weight upon my spirit, "Look at the
generations of old and see; did ever any trust in the Lord, and
was confounded?"
64. Well, I looked, but I found it not; only it abode upon me;
then I did ask first this good man, and then another, if they knew
where it was, but they knew no such place. At this I wondered,
that such a sentence should so suddenly, and with such comfort and
strength, seize and abide upon my heart, and yet that none could
find it, for I doubted not but it was in holy Scripture.
65. Thus I continued above a year, and could not find the place;
but at last, casting my eye into the Apocrypha books, I found it
in Ecclesiasticus 2:10. This, at the first, did somewhat daunt me;
but because, by this time, I had got more experience of the love
and kindness of God, it troubled me the less; especially when
I considered, that though it was not in those texts that we call
holy and canonical, yet forasmuch as this sentence was the sum
and substance of many of the promises, it was my duty to take the
comfort of it; and I bless God for that word, for it was of God to
me: that word doth still, at times, shine before my face.
66. After this, that other doubt did come with strength upon me,
But how if the day of grace should be past and gone? How if you
have over-stood the time of mercy? Now, I remember that one day, as
I was walking into the country, I was much in the thoughts of this,
But how if the day of grace be past? And to aggravate my trouble,
the tempter presented to my mind those good people of Bedford, and
suggested thus unto me, That these being converted already, they
were all that God would save in those parts; and that I came too
late, for these had got the blessing before I came.
67. Now was I in great distress, thinking in very deed that this
might well be so; wherefore I went up and down bemoaning my sad
condition, counting myself far worse than a thousand fools, for
standing off thus long, and spending so many years in sin as I had
done; still crying out, Oh, that I had turned sooner; Oh, that I
had turned seven years ago! It made me also angry with myself, to
think that I should have no more wit, but to trifle away my time
till my soul and heaven were lost.
68. But when I had been long vexed with this fear, and was scarce
able to take one step more, just about the same place where I received
my other encouragement, these words broke in upon my mind, "Compel
them to come in, that my house may be filled"; "and yet there is
room" (Luke 14:22,23). These words, but especially them, "And yet
there is room" were sweet words to me; for, truly, I thought that
by them I saw there was place enough in heaven for me; and, moreover,
that when the Lord Jesus did speak these words, he then did think
of me; and that he knowing that the time would come that I should
be afflicted with fear that there was no place left for me in his
bosom, did before speak this word, and leave it upon record, that
I might find help thereby against this vile temptations. 'This, I
then verily believed.'
71. 'I was almost made, about this time, to see something concerning
the beasts that Moses counted clean and unclean. I thought those
beasts were types of men; the clean, types of them that were the
people of God; but the unclean, types of such as were the children
of the wicked one. Now, I read that the clean beasts chewed the
cud; that is, thought I, they show us we must feed upon the Word of
God. They also parted the hoof; I thought that signified we must
part, if we would be saved, with the ways of ungodly men. And also,
in further reading about them I found, that though we did chew the
cud as the hare, yet if we walked with claws like a dog, or if we
did part the hoof like the swine, yet if we did not chew the cud as
the sheep, we were still, for all that, but unclean; for I thought
the here to be a type of those that talk of the Word, yet walk
in the ways of sin; and that the swine was like him that parteth
with his outward pollutions, but still wanteth the Word of faith,
without which there could be no way of salvation, let a man be never
so devout (Deut 14).' After this I found, by reading the Word, that
those that must be glorified with Christ in another world must be
called by him here; called to the partaking of a share in his Word
and righteousness, and to the comforts and first fruits of his
spirit, and to a peculiar interest in all those heavenly things
which do indeed fore fit the soul for that rest and house of glory
which is in heaven above.
72. Here, again, I was at a very great stand, not knowing what to
do, fearing I was not called; for, thought I, if I be not called,
what then can do me good? 'None but those who are effectually
called, inherit the kingdom of heaven.' But oh! how I now loved
those words that spake of a Christian's calling! as when the Lord
said to one, "Follow me," and to another, "Come after me." And oh!
thought I, that he would say so to me too, how gladly would I run
after him!
73. I cannot now express with what longings and breakings in my soul
I cried to Christ to call me. Thus I continued for a time, all on
a flame to be converted to Jesus Christ; and did also see at that
day, such glory in a converted state, that I could not be contented
without a share therein. Gold! could it have been gotten for gold,
what could I have given for it! had I had a whole world it had all
gone ten thousand times over for this, that my soul might have been
in a converted state.
74. How lovely now was every one in my eyes that I thought to be
converted men and women! they shone, they walked like a people that
carried the broad seal of heaven about them. Oh! I saw the lot was
fallen to them in pleasant places, and they had a goodly heritage
(Psa 16:6). But that which made me sick was that of Christ, in
Mark, He went up into a mountain and called to him whom he would,
and they came unto him (Mark 3:13).
75. This scripture made me faint and fear, yet it kindled fire in
my soul. That which made me fear was this, lest Christ should have
no liking to me, for he called "whom he would." But oh! the glory
that I saw in that condition did still so engage my heart that
I could seldom read of any that Christ did call but I presently
wished, Would I had been in their clothes; would I had been born
Peter; would I had been born John; or would I had been by and had
heard him when he called them, how would I have cried, O Lord, call
me also. But oh! I feared he would not call me.
76. And truly the Lord let me go thus many months together and
showed me nothing; either that I was already, or should be called
hereafter. But at last, after much time spent, and many groans to
God, that I might be made partaker of the holy and heavenly calling,
that Word came in upon me--"I will cleanse their blood that I have
not cleansed, for the Lord dwelleth in Zion" (Joel 3:21). These
words I thought were sent to encourage me to wait still upon God,
and signified unto me, that if I were not already, yet time might
come I might be in truth converted unto Christ.[24]
77. About this time I began to break my mind to those poor people
in Bedford, and to tell them my condition, which, when they had
heard, they told Mr. Gifford of me, who himself also took occasion
to talk with me, and was willing to be 'well' persuaded of me, though
I think but from little grounds: but he invited me to his house,
where I should hear him confer with others, about the dealings of
God with the soul; from all which I still received more conviction,
and from that time began to see something of the vanity and inward
wretchedness of my wicked heart, for as yet I knew no great matter
therein; but now it began to be discovered unto me, and also
to work at that rate for wickedness as it never did before. Now I
evidently found that lusts and corruptions would strongly put forth
themselves within me, in wicked thoughts and desires, which I did
not regard before; my desires also for heaven and life began to
fail. I found also, that whereas before my soul was full of longing
after God, now my heart began to hanker after every foolish vanity;
yea, my heart would not be moved to mind that that was good;
it began to be careless, both of my soul and heaven; it would now
continually hang back, both to, and in every duty; and was as a
clog on the leg of a bird to hinder her from flying.
78. Nay, thought I, now I grow worse and worse; now am I further
from conversion than ever I was before. Wherefore I began to sink
greatly in my soul, and began to entertain such discouragement in
my heart as laid me low as hell. If now I should have burned at
a stake, I could not believe that Christ had love for me; alas, I
could neither hear him, nor see him, nor feel him, nor savour any
of his things; I was driven as with a tempest, my heart would be
unclean, the Canaanites would dwell in the land.
80. These things have often made me think of that child which the
father brought to Christ, who, while he was yet a coming to him,
was thrown down by the devil, and also so rent and torn by him that
he lay and wallowed, foaming (Luke 9:42; Mark 9:20).
82. But all this while as to the act of sinning, I never was more
tender than now; I durst not take a pin or a stick, though but so
big as a straw, for my conscience now was sore, and would smart at
every touch; I could not now tell how to speak my words, for fear
I should misplace them. Oh, how gingerly[25] did I then go in all
I did or said! I found myself as on a miry bog that shook if I
did but stir; and 'was' there left both of God and Christ, and the
Spirit, and all good things.
84. 'But my original and inward pollution, that, that was my plague
and my affliction; that, I say, at a dreadful rate, always putting
forth itself within me; that I had the guilt of, to amazement;
by reason of that, I was more loathsome in my own eyes than was a
toad; and I thought I was so in God's eyes too; sin and corruption,
I said, would as naturally bubble out of my heart, as water would
bubble out of a fountain. I thought now that every one had a
better heart than I had; I could have changed heart with any body;
I thought none but the devil himself could equalize me for inward
wickedness and pollution of mind. I fell, therefore, at the sight
of my own vileness, deeply into despair; for I concluded that this
condition that I was in could not stand with a state of grace. Sure,
thought I, I am forsaken of God; sure I am given up to the devil,
and to a reprobate mind; and thus I continued a long while, even
for some years together.'
85. 'While I was thus afflicted with the fears of my own damnation,
there were two things would make me wonder; the one was, when I
saw old people hunting after the things of this life, as if they
should live here always; the other was, when I found professors
much distressed and cast down, when they met with outward losses;
as of husband, wife, child, &c. Lord, thought I, what ado is here
about such little things as these! What seeking after carnal things
by some, and what grief in others for the loss of them! if they so
much labour after, and spend so many tears for the things of this
present life, how am I to be bemoaned, pitied, and prayed for!
My soul is dying, my soul is damning. Were my soul but in a good
condition, and were I but sure of it, ah! how rich should I esteem
myself, though blessed but with bread and water; I should count those
but small afflictions, and should bear them as little burdens. "A
wounded spirit who can bear?"'
86. And though I was thus troubled, and tossed, and afflicted,
with the sight and sense and terror of my own wickedness, yet I
was afraid to let this sight and sense go quite off my mind; for
I found, that unless guilt of conscience was taken off the right
way, that is, by the blood of Christ, a man grew rather worse for
the loss of his trouble of mind, than better. Wherefore, if my
guilt lay hard upon me, then I should cry that the blood of Christ
might take it off; and if it was going off without it (for the sense
of sin would be sometimes as if it would die, and go quite away),
then I would also strive to fetch it upon my heart again, by
bringing the punishment for sin in hell fire upon my spirits; and
should cry, Lord, let it not go off my heart, but the right way,
but by the blood of Christ, and by the application of thy mercy,
through him, to my soul; for that Scripture lay much upon me,
"without shedding of blood is no remission" (Heb 9:22). And that
which made me the more afraid of this was, because I had seen some,
who, though when they were under wounds of conscience, then they
would cry and pray; but they seeking rather present ease from their
trouble, than pardon for their sin, cared not how they lost their
guilt, so they got it out of their mind; and, therefore, having
got it off the wrong way, it was not sanctified unto them; but they
grew harder and blinder, and more wicked after their trouble. This
made me afraid, and made me cry to God 'the more,' that it might
not be so with me.
87. And now was I sorry that God had made me a man, for I feared
I was a reprobate; I counted man as unconverted, the most doleful
of all the creatures. Thus being afflicted and tossed about my
sad condition, I counted myself alone, and above the most of men
unblessed.
90. But I got nothing by what he said at present, only when he came
to the application of the fourth particular, this was the word he
said; If it be so, that the saved soul is Christ's love when under
temptation and desertion; then poor tempted soul, when thou art
assaulted and afflicted with temptation, and the hidings of God's
face, yet think on these two words, "My love," still.
91. So as I was a going home, these words came again into my
thoughts; and I well remember, as they came in, I said thus in my
heart, What shall I get by thinking on these two words? This thought
had no sooner passed through my heart, but the words began thus to
kindle in my spirit, "Thou art my love, thou art my love," twenty
times together; and still as they ran thus in my mind, they waxed
stronger and warmer, and began to make me look up; but being as
yet between hope and fear, I still replied in my heart, But is it
true, but is it true? At which, that sentence fell in upon me, He
"wist not that it was true which was done by the angel" (Acts 12:9).
92. Then I began to give place to the word, which, with power, did
over and over make this joyful sound within my soul, thou art my
love, thou art my love; and nothing shall separate thee from my
love; and with that (Rom 8:39) came into my mind: Now was my heart
filled full of comfort and hope, and now I could believe that my
sins should be forgiven me; 'yea, I was now so taken with the love
and mercy of God, that I remember I could not tell how to contain
till I got home; I thought I could have spoken of his love, and of
his mercy to me, even to the very crows that sat upon the ploughed
lands before me, had they been capable to have understood me';
wherefore I said in my soul, with much gladness, well, I would
I had a pen and ink here, I would write this down before I go any
further, for surely I will not forget this forty years hence; but,
alas! within less than forty days, I began to question all again;
'which made me begin to question all still.'
93. Yet still at times, I was helped to believe that it was a true
manifestation of grace unto my soul, though I had lost much of the
life and savour of it. Now about a week or fortnight after this, I
was much followed by this scripture, "Simon, Simon, behold, Satan
hath desired to have you" (Luke 22:31). And sometimes it would sound
so loud within me, yea, and as it were call so strongly after me,
that once above all the rest, I turned my head over my shoulder,
thinking verily that some man had, behind me, called to me; being at
a great distance, 'methought he called so loud; it came, as I have
thought since, to have stirred me up to prayer, and to watchfulness;
it came to acquaint me that a cloud and a storm was coming down
upon me, but I understood it not.'[26]
95. But so foolish was I, and ignorant, that I knew not the reason
of this sound; which, as I did both see and feel soon after, was
sent from heaven as an alarm, to awaken me to provide for what was
coming; only it would make me muse and wonder in my mind, to think
what should be the reason that this scripture, and that at this
rate, so often and so loud, should still be sounding and rattling
in mine ears; but, as I said before, I soon after perceived the
end of God therein.
96. For about the space of a month after, a very great storm came
down upon me, which handled me twenty times worse than all I had
met with before; it came stealing upon me, now by one piece, then
by another; first, all my comfort was taken from me, then darkness
seized upon me, after which, whole floods of blasphemies, both
against God, Christ, and the Scriptures, were poured upon my spirit,
to my great confusion and astonishment. These blasphemous thoughts
were such as also stirred up questions in me, against the very
being of God, and of his only beloved Son; as, whether there were,
in truth, a God, or Christ, or no? and whether the holy Scriptures
were not rather a fable, and cunning story, than the holy and pure
Word of God?
97. The tempter would also much assault me with this, how can
you tell but that the Turks had as good Scriptures to prove their
Mahomet the Saviour, as we have to prove our Jesus is? And, could I
think, that so many ten thousands, in so many countries and kingdoms,
should be without the knowledge of the right way to heaven; if
there were indeed a heaven, and that we only, who live in a corner
of the earth, should alone be blessed therewith? Every one doth
think his own religion rightest, both Jews and Moors, and Pagans!
and how if all our faith, and Christ, and Scriptures, should be
but a think-so too?
99. These suggestions, with many other which at this time I may
not, nor dare not utter, neither by word nor pen, did make such a
seizure upon my spirit, and did so overweigh my heart, both with
their number, continuance, and fiery force, that I felt as if there
were nothing else but these from morning to night within me; and
as though, indeed, there could be room for nothing else; and also
concluded, that God had, in very wrath to my soul, given me up unto
them, to be carried away with them, as with a mighty whirlwind.
100. Only by the distaste that they gave unto my spirit, I felt
there was something in me, that refused to embrace them. But this
consideration I then only had, when God gave me leave to swallow
my spittle, otherwise the noise, and strength, and force of these
temptations, would drown and overflow; and as it were, bury all
such thoughts or the remembrance of any such thing. While I was
in this temptation, I should often find my mind suddenly put upon
it, to curse and swear, or to speak some grievous thing against
God, or Christ his Son, and of the Scriptures.[27]
103. In these days, when I have heard others talk of what was the
sin against the Holy Ghost, then would the tempter so provoke me
to desire to sin that sin, that I was as if I could not, must not,
neither should be quiet until I had committed that; now, no sin
would serve but that; if it were to be committed by speaking of
such a word, then I have been as if my mouth would have spoken that
word, whether I would or no; and in so strong a measure was this
temptation upon me, that often I have been ready to clap my hand
under my chin, to hold my mouth from opening; and to that end also
I have had thoughts at other times, to leap with my head downward,
into some muck hill hole or other, to keep my mouth from speaking.
104. Now I blessed the condition of the dog and toad, and counted
the estate of everything that God had made far better than this
dreadful state of mine, and such as my companions was; yea, gladly
would I have been in the condition of dog or horse, for I knew
they had no soul to perish under the everlasting weights of hell
for sin, as mine was like to do. Nay, and though I saw this, felt
this, and was broken to pieces with it, yet that which added to
my sorrow was, that I could not find that with all my soul I did
desire deliverance. That scripture did also tear and rend my soul,
in the midst of these distractions, "The wicked are like the troubled
sea when it cannot rest, whose waters cast up mire and dirt. There
is no peace, saith my God, to the wicked" (Isa 57:20,21).
106. While this temptation lasted, which was about a year, I could
attend upon none of the ordinances of God but with sore and great
affliction. Yea, then was I most distressed with blasphemies; if
I have been hearing the Word, then uncleanness, blasphemies, and
despair would hold me as captive there; if I have been reading,
then, sometimes, I had sudden thoughts to question all I read;
sometimes, again, my mind would be so strangely snatched away,
and possessed with other things, that I have neither known, nor
regarded, nor remembered so much as the sentence that but now I
have read.
108. Also, when, because I have had wandering thoughts in the time
of this duty, I have laboured to compose my mind and fix it upon
God, then, with great force, hath the tempter laboured to distract
me, and confound me, and to turn away my mind, by presenting to my
heart and fancy the form of a bush, a bull, a besom, or the like,
as if I should pray to those; to these he would, also, at some
times especially, so hold my mind that I was as if I could think
of nothing else, or pray to nothing else but to these, or such as
they.
110. Then hath the tempter come upon me, also, with such
discouragements as these--You are very hot for mercy, but I will
cool you; this frame shall not last always; many have been as hot
as you for a spirit, but I have quenched their zeal. And with this,
such and such who were fallen off would be set before mine eyes.
Then I should be afraid that I should do so too; but, thought I, I
am glad this comes into my mind. Well, I will watch, and take what
heed I can. Though you do, said Satan, I shall be too hard for you;
I will cool you insensibly, by degrees, by little and little. What
care I, saith he, though I be seven years in chilling your heart
if I can do it at last? Continual rocking will lull a crying child
asleep. I will ply it close, but I will have my end accomplished.
Though you be burning hot at present, yet, if I can pull you from
this fire, I shall have you cold before it be long.
112. Yet I had some supports in this temptation, though they were
then all questioned by me; that in the third of Jeremiah, at the
first, was something to me, and so was the consideration of the
fifth verse of that chapter; that though we have spoken and done
as evil things as we could, yet we should cry unto God, "My Father,
thou art the guide of my youth"; and should return unto him.
114. But afterwards the Lord did more fully and graciously discover
himself unto me; and, indeed, did quite, not only deliver me from
the guilt that, by these things, was laid upon my conscience, but
also from the very filth thereof; for the temptation was removed,
and I was put into my right mind again, as other Christians were.
115. I remember that one day, as I was traveling into the country
and musing on the wickedness and blasphemy of my heart, and
considering of the enmity that was in me to God, that scripture
came in my mind, He hath "made peace through the blood of his cross"
(Col 1:20). By which I was made to see, both again, and again, and
again, that day, that God and my soul were friends by this blood;
yea, I saw that the justice of God and my sinful soul could embrace
and kiss each other through this blood. This was a good day to me;
I hope I shall not forget it.
117. At this time, also, I sat under the ministry of holy Mr. Gifford,
whose doctrine, by God's grace, was much for my stability.[30] This
man made it much his business to deliver the people of God from
all those false and unsound rests that, by nature, we are prone
to take and make to our souls. He pressed us to take special heed
that we took not up any truth upon trust--as from this, or that,
or any other man or men--but to cry mightily to God that he would
convince us of the reality thereof, and set us down therein, by
his own Spirit, in the holy Word; for, said he, if you do otherwise
when temptations come, if strongly, you, not having received them
with evidence from heaven, will find you want that help and strength
now to resist as once you thought you had.
119. But, oh! now, how was my soul led from truth to truth by God!
even from the birth and cradle of the Son of God to his ascension
and second coming from heaven to judge the world.
120. Truly, I then found, upon this account, the great God was very
good unto me; for, to my remembrance, there was not anything that
I then cried unto God to make known and reveal unto me but he was
pleased to do it for me; I mean not one part of the gospel of the
Lord Jesus, but I was orderly led into it. Methought I saw with
great evidence, from the relation of the four evangelists, the
wonderful work of God, in giving Jesus Christ to save us, from
his conception and birth even to his second coming to judgment,
Methought I was as if I had seen him born, as if I had seen him grow
up, as if I had seen him walk through this world, from the cradle
to his cross; to which, also, when he came, I saw how gently he
gave himself to be hanged and nailed on it for my sins and wicked
doings. Also, as I was musing on this, his progress, that dropped
on my spirit, He was ordained for the slaughter (1 Peter 1:19,20).
121. When I have considered also the truth of his resurrection, and
have remembered that word, "Touch me not, Mary," &c., I have seen
as if he leaped at the grave's mouth for joy that he was risen
again, and had got the conquest over our dreadful foes (John 20:17).
I have also, in the spirit, seen him a man on the right hand of
God the Father for me, and have seen the manner of his coming from
heaven to judge the world with glory, and have been confirmed in
these things by these scriptures following, Acts 1:9, 10, 7:56,
10:42; Hebrews 7:24, 8:3; Revelation 1:18; 1 Thessalonians 4:17,
18.
122. Once I was much troubled to know whether the Lord Jesus was
both man as well as God, and God as well as man; and truly, in those
days, let men say what they would, unless I had it with evidence
from heaven, all was as nothing to me, I counted not myself set down
in any truth of God. Well, I was much troubled about this point,
and could not tell how to be resolved; at last, that in the fifth
of the Revelation came into my mind, "And I beheld, and lo, in the
midst of the throne and of the four beasts, and in the midst of
the elders, stood a Lamb." In the midst of the throne, 'thought
I,' there is his Godhead; in the midst of the elders, there is his
manhood; but oh! methought this did glister! it was a goodly touch,
and gave me sweet satisfaction. That other scripture also did help
me much in this, "To us a child is born, unto us a son is given;
and the government shall be upon his shoulder: and his name shall
be called Wonderful, Counsellor, The mighty God, The everlasting
Father, the Prince of Peace," &c. (Isa 9:6).
123. Also, besides these teachings of God in his Word, the Lord
made use of two things to confirm me in these things; the one was
the errors of the Quakers, and the other was the guilt of sin; for
as the Quakers did oppose his truth, so God did the more confirm
me in it, by leading me into the scriptures that did wonderfully
maintain it.[31]
124. 'The errors that this people then maintained were, 1. That the
holy Scriptures were not the Word of God. 2. That every man in the
world had the spirit of Christ, grace, faith, &c. 3. That Christ
Jesus, as crucified, and dying 1600 years ago, did not satisfy
divine justice for the sins of the people. 4. That Christ's flesh
and blood was within the saints. 5. That the bodies of the good
and bad that are buried in the churchyard shall not arise again. 6.
That the resurrection is past with good men already. 7. That that
man Jesus, that was crucified between two thieves on Mount Calvary,
in the land of Canaan, by Jerusalem, was not ascended up above the
starry heavens. 8. That he should not, even the same Jesus that
died by the hands of the Jews, come again at the last day, and as
man judge all nations, &c.'
125. 'Many more vile and abominable things were in those days
fomented by them, by which I was driven to a more narrow search of
the Scriptures, and was, through their light and testimony, not
only enlightened, but greatly confirmed and comforted in the truth';
and, as I said, the guilt of sin did help me much, for still as that
would come upon me, the blood of Christ did take it off again, and
again, and again, and that too, sweetly, according to the Scriptures.
O friends! cry to God to reveal Jesus Christ unto you; there is
none teacheth like him.
127. Only this, as I said before I will say unto you again, that
in general he was pleased to take this course with me; first, to
suffer me to be afflicted with temptation concerning them, and then
reveal them to me: as sometimes I should lie under great guilt for
sin, even crushed to the ground therewith, and then the Lord would
show me the death of Christ; yea, and so sprinkle my conscience
with his blood, that I should find, and that before I was aware,
that in that conscience where but just now did reign and rage the
law, even there would rest and abide the peace and love of God
through Christ.
128. Now had I an evidence, 'as I thought, of my salvation' from
heaven, with many golden seals thereon, all hanging in my sight;
now could I remember this manifestation and the other discovery
of grace, with comfort; and should often long and desire that the
last day were come, that I might for ever be inflamed with the
sight, and joy, and communion with him whose head was crowned with
thorns, whose face was spit on, and body broken, and soul made
an offering for my sins: for whereas, before, I lay continually
trembling at the mouth of hell, now methought I was got so far
therefrom that I could not, when I looked back, scarce discern
it; and, oh! thought I, that I were fourscore years old now, that
I might die quickly, that my soul might be gone to rest.[32]
129. 'But before I had got thus far out of these my temptations,
I did greatly long to see some ancient godly man's experience, who
had writ some hundreds of years before I was born; for those who
had writ in our days, I thought, but I desire them now to pardon
me, that they had writ only that which others felt, or else had,
through the strength of their wits and parts, studied to answer such
objections as they perceived others were perplexed with, without
going down themselves into the deep. Well, after many such longings
in my mind, the God in whose hands are all our days and ways, did
cast into my hand, one day, a book of Martin Luther; it was his
comment on the Galatians--it also was so old that it was ready to
fall piece from piece if I did but turn it over. Now I was pleased
much that such an old book had fallen into my hands; the which,
when I had but a little way perused, I found my condition, in his
experience, so largely and profoundly handled, as if his book had
been written out of my heart. This made me marvel; for thus thought
I, This man could not know anything of the state of Christians now,
but must needs write and speak the experience of former days.'
132. For after the Lord had, in this manner, thus graciously
delivered me from this great and sore temptation, and had set me
down so sweetly in the faith of his holy gospel, and had given me
such strong consolation and blessed evidence from heaven touching
my interest in his love through Christ; the tempter came upon me
again, and that with a more grievous and dreadful temptation than
before.
133. And that was, To sell and part with this most blessed Christ,
to exchange him for the things of this life, for anything. The
temptation lay upon me for the space of a year, and did follow me
so continually that I was not rid of it one day in a month, no,
not sometimes one hour in many days together, unless 'when' I was
asleep.
135. But it was neither my dislike of the thought, nor yet any
desire and endeavour to resist it that in the least did shake or
abate the continuation, or force and strength thereof; for it did
always, in almost whatever I thought, intermix itself therewith in
such sort that I could neither eat my food, stoop for a pin, chop
a stick, or cast mine eye to look on this or that, but still the
temptation would come, Sell Christ for this, or sell Christ for
that; 'sell him, sell him.'
137. This temptation did put me to such scares, lest I should and
some times, I say, consent thereto, and be overcome therewith, that
by the very force of my mind, in labouring to gainsay and resist
this wickedness, my very body also would be put into action or
motion by way of pushing or thrusting 'with my hands or elbows,'
still answering as fast as the destroyer said, Sell him; I will
not, I will not, I will not, I will not; no, not for thousands,
thousands, thousands of worlds. Thus reckoning lest I should in
the midst of these assaults, set too low a value of him, even until
I scarce well knew where I was, or how to be composed began.
138. 'At these seasons he would not let me eat my food at quiet;
but, forsooth, when I was set at table at my meat, I must go hence
to pray; I must leave my food now, and just now, so counterfeit
holy also would this devil be. When I was thus tempted, I should
say in myself, Now I am at my meat, let me make an end. No, said
he, you must do it now, or you will displease God, and despised
Christ. Wherefore I was much afflicted with these things; and because
of the sinfulness of my nature, imagining that these things were
impulses from God, I should deny to do it, as if I denied God; and
then should I be as guilty, because I did not obey a temptation of
the devil, as if I had broken the law of God indeed.'
139. But to be brief, one morning, as I did lie in my bed, I was,
as at other times, most fiercely assaulted with this temptation,
to sell and part with Christ; the wicked suggestion still running
in my mind, sell him, sell him, sell him, sell him, 'sell him,' as
fast as a man could speak; against which also, in my mind, as and
other times, I answered, No, no, not for thousands, thousands,
thousands, at least twenty times together. But at last, after much
striving, even until I was almost out of breath, I felt this thought
pass through my heart, Let him go, if he will! and I thought also,
that I felt my heart 'freely' consent thereto. 'Oh, the diligence
of Satan! [34] Oh, the desperateness of man's heart!'
140. Now was the battle won, and down fell I, as a bird that is
shot from the top of a tree, into great guilt, and fearful despair.
Thus getting out of my bed, I went moping into the field; but God
knows, with as heavy a heart as mortal man, I think, could bear;
where, for the space of two hours, I was like a man bereft of life,
and as now past all recovery, and bound over to eternal punishment.
141. And withal, that scripture did seize upon my soul, "Or profane
person, as Esau, who for one morsel of meat, sold his birthright;
for ye know, how that afterward, when he would have inherited the
blessing, he was rejected; for he found no place of repentance, so
he sought it carefully with tears" (Heb 12:16,17).
142. 'Now was I as one bound, I felt myself shut out unto the
judgment to come; nothing now for two years together would abide
with me, but damnation, and an expectation of damnation; I say,
nothing now would abide with me but this, save some few moments
for relief, as in the sequel you will see.'
146. Sometimes also, [36] I should have a touch from that in Luke
22:32, "I have prayed for the, that thy faith fail not"; but it
would not abide upon me; neither could I indeed, when I considered
my state, find ground to conceive in the least, that there should
be the root of that grace within me, having sinned as I had done.
Now was I tore and rent in heavy case, for many days together.
147. Then began I with sad and careful heart, to consider of the
nature and largeness of my sin, and to search in the Word of God,
if I could in any place espy a word of promise, or any encouraging
sentence by which I might take relief. Wherefore I began to consider
that third of Mark, All manner of sins and blasphemies shall be
forgiven unto the sons of men, wherewith soever they shall blaspheme.
Which place, methought, at a blush, did contain a large and glorious
promise, for the pardon of high offences; but considering the place
more fully, I thought it was rather to be understood as relating
more chiefly to those who had, while in a natural estate, committed
such things as there are mentioned; but not to me, who had not
only received light and mercy, but that had, both after, and also
contrary to that, so slighted Christ as I had done.
148. I feared therefore that this wicked sin of mine, might be that
sin unpardonable, of which he there thus speaketh. "But he they
shall blaspheme against the Holy Ghost hath never forgiveness, but
is in danger of eternal damnation" (Mark 3:29). And I did the rather
give credit to this, because of that sentence in the Hebrews common
"For ye know, how that afterward, when he would have inherited the
blessing, he was rejected; for he found no place of repentance,
though he sought it carefully with tears." 'And this stuck always
with me.'
149. 'And now was I both the burden and a terror to myself, nor
did I ever so know, as now, what it was to be weary of my life,
and yet afraid to die. Oh, how gladly now would I have been anybody
but myself! Anything but a man! and in any condition but mine own!
for there was nothing did pass more frequently over my mind, than
that it was impossible for me to be forgiven my transgression, and
to be saved from wrath to come.'
150. And now began I to labour to call again time that was past;
wishing a thousand times twice told, that the day was yet to come,
when I should be tempted to such a sin! concluding with great
indignation, both against my heart, and all assaults, how I would
rather have been torn in pieces, than found a consenter thereto.
But, alas! these thoughts, and wishings, and resolvings, were now
too late to help me; the thought had passed my heart, God hath let
me go, and I am fallen. Oh! thought I, "that it was with me as in
months past, as in the days when God preserved me!" [Job 29:2]
155. Here again my torment would flame out and afflicte me; yea, it
would grind me, as it were, to powder, to discern the preservation
of God towards others, while I fell into the snare; for in my thus
considering of other men's sins, and comparing of them with my
own, I could evidently see how God preserved them, notwithstanding
their wickedness, and would not let them, as he had let me, to
become a son of perdition.
156. But oh, how did my soul, at this time, prize the preservation
that God did set about his people! Ah, how safely did I see them
walk, whom God had hedge in! They were within his care, protection,
and special providence; though they were full as bad as I by nature;
yet because he loved them, he would not suffer them to fall without
the range of mercy; but as for me, I was gone, I had done it; he
would not preserve me, nor keep me; but suffered me, because I was
a reprobate, to fall as I had done. Now, did those blessed places,
that spake of God's keeping his people, shine like the sun before
me, though not to comfort me, but to show me the blessed state and
heritage of those whom the Lord had blessed.
157. 'Now I saw, that as God had his hand in all providences and
dispensations that overtook his elect, so he had his hand in all
the temptations that they had to sin against him, not to animate
them unto wickedness, but to choose their temptations and troubles
for them; and also to leave them, for a time, to such sins only as
might not destroy, but humble them; as might not put them beyond,
but lay them in the way off the renewing of his mercy. But oh,
what love, what care, what kindness and mercy did I now see, mixing
itself with the most severe and dreadful of all God's ways to his
people! He would let David, Hezekiah, Solomon, Peter, and others
fall, but he would not let them fall into sin unpardonable, nor
into hell for sin. Oh! thought I, these be the men that God hath
loved; these be the men that God, though he chastiseth them, keeps
them in safety by him, and them whom he makes to abide under the
shadow of the Almighty. But all these thoughts added sorrow, grief,
and horror to me, as whatever I now thought on, it was killing to
me. If I thought how God kept his own, that was killing to me. If
I thought of how I was falling myself, that was killing to me. As
all things wrought together for the best, and to do good to them
that were the called, according to his purpose; so I thought that
all things wrought for my damage, and for my eternal overthrow.'
158. Then, again, I began to compare my sin with the sin of Judas,
that, if possible, I might find that mine differed from that which,
in truth, is unpardonable. And, oh! thought I, if it 'should differ
from it,' though but the breadth of an hair, what a happy condition
is my soul in! And, by considering, I found that Judas did his
intentionally, but mine was against my 'prayer and' strivings;
besides, his was committed with much deliberation, but mine in a
fearful hurry, on a sudden; 'all this while' I was tossed to and
fro, like the locusts, and driven from trouble to sorrow; hearing
always the sound of Esau's fall in mine ears, and of the dreadful
consequences thereof.
159. Yet this consideration about Judas, his sin was, for a
while, some little relief unto me; for I saw I had not, as to the
circumstances, transgressed so foully as he. But this was quickly
gone again, for, I thought with myself, there might be more ways
than one to commit the unpardonable sin; 'also I thought' that
there might be degrees of that, as well as of other transgressions;
wherefore, for ought I yet could perceive, this iniquity of mine
might be such, as might never be passed by.
160. 'I was often now ashamed, that I should be like such an ugly
man as Judas; I thought, also, how loathsome I should be unto
all the saints at the day of judgment; insomuch, that now I could
scarce see a good man, that I believed had a good conscience, but
I should feel my heart tremble at him, while I was in his presence.
Oh! now I saw a glory in walking with God, and what a mercy it was
to have a good conscience before him.'
161. 'I was much about this time tempted to content myself, by
receiving some false opinion; as that there should be no such thing
as a day of judgment, that we should not rise again, and that sin
was no such grievous thing; the tempter suggesting thus, For if
these things should indeed be true, yet to believe otherwise, would
yield you ease for the present. If you must perish, never torment
yourself so much before hand; drive the thoughts of damning out of
your mind, by possessing your mind with some such conclusions that
Atheists and Ranters do use to help themselves withal.'
162. 'But, oh! when such thoughts have led through my heart, how,
as it were, within a step, hath death and judgment been in my view!
Methought the judge stood at the door, I was as if it was come
already; so that such things could have no entertainment. But,
methinks, I see by this, that Satan will use any means to keep
the soul from Christ; he loveth not an awakened frame of spirit;
security, blindness, darkness, and error is the very kingdom and
habitation of the wicked one.'
163. 'I found it hard work now to pray to God, because despair was
swallowing me up; I thought I was, as with a tempest, driven away
from God, for always when I cried to God for mercy, this would
come in, It is too late, I am lost, God hath let me fall; not to my
correction, but condemnation; my sin is unpardonable; and I know,
concerning Esau, how that, after he had sold his birthright,
he would have received the blessing, but was rejected. About this
time, I did light on that dreadful story of that miserable mortal,
Francis Spira;[38] a book that was to my troubled spirit as salt,
when rubbed into a fresh wound; every sentence in that book, every
groan of that man, with all the rest of his actions in his dolours,
as his tears, his prayers, his gnashing of teeth, his wringing of
hands, his twining and twisting, languishing and pining away under
that mighty hand of God that was upon him, was as knives and daggers
in my soul; especially that sentence of his was frightful to me,
Man knows the beginning of sin, but who bounds the issues thereof?
Then would the former sentence, as the conclusion of all, fall
like a hot thunderbolt again upon my conscience; "for you know how
that afterward, when he would have inherited the blessing, he was
rejected; for he found no place of repentance, though he sought it
carefully with tears."'
164. Then was I struck into a very great trembling, insomuch that
at sometimes I could, for whole days together, feel my very body, as
well as my mind, to shake and totter under the sense of the dreadful
judgment of God, that should fall on those that have sinned that
most fearful and unpardonable sin. I felt also such a clogging
and heat at my stomach, by reason of this my terror, that I was,
especially at some times, as if my breast bone would have split
in sunder; then I thought of that concerning Judas, who, by his
falling headlong, burst asunder, and all his bowels gushed out
(Acts 1:18).
165. I feared also that this was the mark that the Lord did set on
Cain, even continual fear and trembling, under the heavy load of
guilt that he had charged on him for the blood of his brother Abel.
Thus did I wind, and twine, and shrink, under the burden that was
upon me; which burden also did so oppress me, that I could neither
stand, nor go, nor lie, either at rest or quiet.
168. Again, after I had thus considered the sins of the saints in
particular, and found mine went beyond them, then I began to think
thus with myself: Set the case I should put all theirs together, and
mine alone against them, might I not then find some encouragement?
For if mine, though bigger than any one, yet should but be equal
to all, then there is hopes; for that blood that hath virtue enough
'in it' to wash away all theirs, hath also virtue enough in it to
do away mine, though this one be full as big, if no bigger, than
all theirs. Here, again, I should consider the sin of David, of
Solomon, of Manasseh, of Peter, and the rest of the great offenders;
and should also labour, what I might with fairness, to aggravate
and heighten their sins by several circumstances: but, alas! It
was all in vain.[39]
169. 'I should think with myself that David shed blood to cover his
adultery, and that by the sword of the children of Ammon; a work
that could not be done but by continuance and deliberate contrivance,
which was a great aggravation to his sin. But then this would turn
upon me: Ah! but these were but sins against the law, from which
there was a Jesus sent to save them; but yours is a sin against
the Saviour, and who shall save you from that?'
171. 'I would then add to those men's sins, the sins of Manasseh,
how that he built altars for idols in the house of the Lord; he
also observed times, used enchantment, had to do with wizards, was
a wizard, had his familiar spirits, burned his children in the fire
in sacrifice to devils, and made the streets of Jerusalem run down
with the blood of innocents. These, thought I, are great sins,
sins of a bloody colour; yea, it would turn again upon me: They are
none of them of the nature of yours; you have parted with Jesus,
you have sold your Saviour.'
172. This one consideration would always kill my heart, My sin was
point blank against my Saviour; and that too, at that height, that
I had in my heart said of him, Let him go if he will. Oh! methought,
this sin was bigger than the sins of a country, of a kingdom, or
of the whole world, no one pardonable, nor all of them together,
was able to equal mine; mine outwent them every one.
173. Now I should find my mind to flee from God, as from the face
of a dreadful judge; yet this was my torment, I could not escape his
hand: "It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living
God" (Heb 10:31). But blessed be his grace, that scripture, in these
flying sins,[40] would call as running after me, "I have blotted
out, as a thick cloud, thy transgressions; and, as a cloud, thy
sins: return unto me, for I have redeemed thee" (Isa 44:22). This,
I say, would come in upon my mind, when I was fleeing from the face
of God; for I did flee from his face, that is, my mind and spirit
fled before him; by reason of his highness, I could not endure;
then would the text cry, "Return unto me"; it would cry aloud with
a very great voice, "Return unto me, for I have redeemed thee."
Indeed, this would make me make a little stop, and, as it were,
look over my shoulder behind me, to see if I could discern that the
God of grace did follow me with a pardon in his hand, but I could
no sooner do that, but all would be clouded and darkened again by
that sentence, "For you know how that afterwards, when he would
have inherited the blessing, he found no place of repentance, though
he sought it carefully with tears." Wherefore I could not return,
but fled, though at sometimes it cried, "Return, return," as if
it did holloa after me. But I feared to close in therewith, lest
it should not come from God; for that other, as I said, was still
sounding in my conscience, "For you know how that afterwards, when
he would have inherited the blessing, he was rejected," &c.
177. 'For God, saith he, hath been weary of you for these several
years already, because you are none of his; your bawlings in his
ears hath been no pleasant voice to him; and, therefore, he let you
sin this sin, that you might be quite cut off; and will you pray
still? This the devil urged, and set forth that, in Numbers, when
Moses said to the children of Israel, That because they would not
go up to posses the land when God would have them, therefore, for
ever after, God did bar them out from thence, though they prayed
they might, with tears (Num 14:36,37), &c.'
178. 'As it is said in another place (Exo 21:14), the man that sins
presumptuously shall be taken from God's altar, that he may die;
even as Joab was by King Solomon, when he thought to find shelter
there (1 Kings 2:28), &c. These places did pinch me very sore; yet,
my case being desperate, I thought with myself I can but die; and
if it must be so, it shall once be said, that such an one died
at the foot of Christ in prayer.[42] This I did, but with great
difficulty, God doth know; and that because, together with this,
still that saying about Esau would be set at my heart, even like a
flaming sword, to keep the way of the tree of life, lest I should
taste thereof and live. Oh! who knows how hard a thing I found it
to come to God in prayer.'
179. 'I did also desire the prayers of the people of God for
me, but I feared that God would give them no heart to do it; yea,
I trembled in my soul to think that some or other of them would
shortly tell me, that God had said those words to them that he once
did say to the prophet concerning the children of Israel, "Pray
not thou for this people," for I have rejected them (Jer 11:14).
So, pray not for him, for I have rejected him. Yea, I thought that
he had whispered this to some of them already, only they durst not
tell me so, neither durst I ask them of it, for fear, if it should
be so, it would make me quite besides myself. Man knows the beginning
of sin, said Spira, but who bounds the issues thereof?'
180. About this time I took an opportunity to break my mind to
an ancient Christian, and told him all my case; I told him, also,
that I was afraid that I had sinned the sin against the Holy Ghost;
and he told me he thought so too. Here, therefore, I had but cold
comfort; but, talking a little more with him, I found him, though
a good man, a stranger to much combat with the devil. Wherefore,
I went to God again, as well as I could, for mercy still.
182. Then did that scripture seize upon my soul, He is of one mind,
and who can turn him? Oh! I saw it was as easy to persuade him to
make a new world, a new covenant, or new Bible, besides that we
have already, as to pray for such a thing. This was to persuade him
that what he had done already was mere folly, and persuade with him
to alter, yea, to disannul, the whole way of salvation; and then
would that saying rend my soul asunder, "Neither is there salvation
in any other: for there is none other name under heaven, given
among men, whereby we must be saved" (Acts 4:12).
183. 'Now, the most free, and full, and gracious words of the
gospel were the greatest torment to me; yea, nothing so afflicted
me as the thoughts of Jesus Christ, the remembrance of a Saviour;
because I had cast him off, brought forth the villany of my sin,
and my loss by it to mind; nothing did twinge my conscience like
this. Every time that I thought of the Lord Jesus, of his grace,
love, goodness, kindness, gentleness, meekness, death, blood,
promises and blessed exhortations, comforts and consolations, it
went to my soul like a sword; for still, unto these my considerations
of the Lord Jesus, these thoughts would make place for themselves
in my heart; aye, this is the Jesus, the loving Saviour, the Son
of God, whom thou hast parted with, whom you slighted, despised,
and abused. This is the only Saviour, the only Redeemer, the only
one that could so love sinners as to wash them from their sins in
his own most precious blood; but you have no part nor lot in this
Jesus, you have put him from you, you have said in your heart, Let
him go if he will. Now, therefore, you are severed from him; you
have severed yourself from him. Behold, then, his goodness, but
yourself to be no partaker of it. Oh, thought I, what have I lost!
What have I parted with! What have I disinherited my poor soul of!
Oh! it is sad to be destroyed by the grace and mercy of God; to
have the Lamb, the Saviour, turn lion and destroyer (Rev 6).[43] I
also trembled, as I have said, at the sight of the saints of God,
especially at those that greatly loved him, and that made it their
business to walk continually with him in this world; for they did,
both in their words, their carriages, and all their expressions of
tenderness and fear to sin against their precious Saviour, condemn,
lay guilt upon, and also add continual affliction and shame unto
my soul. The dread of them was upon me, and I trembled at God's
Samuels (1 Sam 16:4).'
184. Now, also, the tempter began afresh to mock my soul another
way, saying that Christ, indeed, did pity my case, and was sorry
for my loss; but forasmuch as I had sinned and transgressed, as
I had done, he could by no means help me, nor save me from what I
feared; for my sin was not of the nature of theirs for whom he bled
and died, neither was it counted with those that were laid to his
charge when he hanged on the tree. Therefore, unless he should come
down from heaven and die anew for this sin, though, indeed, he did
greatly pity me, yet I could have no benefit of him. These things
may seem ridiculous to others, even as ridiculous as they were in
themselves, but to me they were most tormenting cogitations; every
of them augmented my misery, that Jesus Christ should have so much
love as to pity me when he could not help me; nor did I think that
the reason why he could not help me was because his merits were
weak, or his grace and salvation spent on them already, but because
his faithfulness to his threatening would not let him extend his
mercy to me. Besides, I thought, as I have already hinted, that my
sin was not within the bounds of that pardon that was wrapped up
in a promise; and if not, then I knew assuredly, that it was more
easy for heaven and earth to pass away than for me to have eternal
life. So that the ground of all these fears of mine did arise from
a steadfast belief that I had of the stability of the holy Word of
God, and also, from my being misinformed of the nature of my sin.
185. But, oh! how this would add to my affliction, to conceit that
I should be guilty of such a sin for which he did not die. These
thoughts would so confound me, and imprison me, and tie me up from
faith, that I knew not what to do; but, oh! thought I, that he
would come down again! Oh! that the work of man's redemption was
yet to be done by Christ! How would I pray him and entreat him to
count and reckon this sin amongst the rest for which he died! But
this scripture would strike me down as dead, "Christ being raised
from the death dieth no more; death hath no more dominion over him"
(Rom 6:9).[44]
186. Thus, by the strange and unusual assaults of the tempter, was
my soul, like a broken vessel, driven as with the winds, and tossed
sometimes headlong into despair, sometimes upon the covenant of
works, and sometimes to wish that the new covenant, and the conditions
thereof, might, so far forth as I thought myself concerned, be turned
another way and changed. But in all these I was but as those that
justle against the rocks; more broken, scattered, and rent. Oh,
the unthought of imaginations, frights, fears, and terrors that are
affected by a thorough application of guilt, yielded to desperation!
This is the man that hath "his dwelling among the tombs" with the
dead; that is, always crying out and "cutting himself with stones"
(Mark 5:2-5). But I say, all in vain; desperation will not comfort
him, the old covenant will not save him; nay, heaven and earth
shall pass away before one jot or tittle of the Word and law of
grace shall fall or be removed. This I saw, this I felt, and under
this I groaned; yet this advantage I got thereby, namely, a farther
confirmation of the certainty of the way of salvation, and that
the Scriptures were the Word of God! Oh! I cannot now express what
then I saw and felt of the steadiness of Jesus Christ, the rock of
man's salvation; what was done could not be undone, added to, nor
altered. I saw, indeed, that sin might drive the soul beyond Christ,
even the sin which is unpardonable; but woe to him that was so
driven, for the Word would shut him out.
187. Thus was I always sinking, whatever I did think or do. So one
day I walked to a neighbouring town, and sat down upon a settle in
the street, and fell into a very deep pause about the most fearful
state my sin had brought me to; and, after long musing, I lifted
up my head, but methought I saw as if the sun that shineth in the
heavens did grudge to give light, and as if the very stones in the
street, and tiles upon the houses, did bend themselves against me;
methought that they all combined together to banish me out of the
world; I was abhorred of them, and unfit to dwell among them, or
be partaker of their benefits, because I had sinned against the
Saviour. O how happy, now, was every creature over [what] I was; for
they stood fast and kept their station, but I was gone and lost.
189. Now, 'I say,' I was in hopes that my sin was not unpardonable,
but that there might be hopes for me to obtain forgiveness. But,
oh, how Satan did now lay about him for to bring me down again!
But he could by no means do it, neither this day nor the most part
of the next, for this sentence stood like a mill post at my back;
yet, towards the evening of the next day, I felt this word begin
to leave me and to withdraw its supportation from me, and so I
returned to my old fears again, but with a great deal of grudging
and peevishness, for I feared the sorrow of despair; 'nor could my
faith now longer retain this word.'
190. But the next day, at evening, being under many fears, I went
to seek the Lord; and as I prayed, I cried, 'and my soul cried'
to him in these words, with strong cries:--O Lord, I beseech thee,
show me that thou hast loved me with everlasting love (Jer 31:3).
I had no sooner said it but, with sweetness, this returned upon me,
as an echo or sounding again, "I have loved thee with an everlasting
love." Now I went to bed at quiet; also, when I awaked the next
morning, it was fresh upon my soul--'and I believed it.'
191. But yet the tempter left me not; for it could not be so little
as an hundred times that he that day did labour to break my peace.
Oh! the combats and conflicts that I did then meet with as I strove
to hold by this word; that of Esau would fly in my face like to
lightning. I should be sometimes up and down twenty times in an
hour, yet God did bear me up and keep my heart upon this word, from
which I had also, for several days together, very much sweetness
and comfortable hopes of pardon; for thus it was made out to me,
I loved thee whilst thou wast committing this sin, I loved thee
before, I love thee still, and I will love thee for ever.
192. Yet I saw my sin most barbarous, and a filthy crime, and could
not but conclude, and that with great shame and astonishment, that
I had horribly abused the holy Son of God; wherefore I felt my soul
greatly to love and pity him, and my bowels to yearn towards him;
for I saw he was still my Friend, and did reward me good for evil;
yea, the love and affection that then did burn within to my Lord
and Saviour Jesus Christ did work, at this time, such a strong
and hot desire of revengement upon myself for the abuse I had done
unto him, that, to speak as then I thought, had I had a thousand
gallons of blood within my veins, I could freely 'then' have spilt
it all at the command and feet of this my Lord and Saviour.
194. And now was that word fulfilled on me, and I was also refreshed
by it, Then shall they be ashamed and confounded, "and never open
their mouth any more because of their shame, when I am pacified
toward them for all that they have done, saith the Lord God" (Eze
16:63). Thus was my soul at this time, and, as I then did think,
for ever, set at liberty from being again afflicted with my former
guilt and amazement.
195. But before many weeks were over I began to despond again,
fearing lest, notwithstanding all that I had enjoyed, that yet I
might be deceived and destroyed at the last; for this consideration
came strong into my mind, that whatever comfort and peace I thought
I might have from the Word of the promise of life, yet unless there
could be found in my refreshment a concurrence and agreement in the
Scriptures, let me think what I will thereof, and hold it never so
fast, I should find no such thing at the end; "for the Scripture
cannot be broken" (John 10:35).
196. Now began my heart again to ache and fear I might meet with
disappointment at the last; wherefore I began, with all seriousness,
to examine my former comfort, and to consider whether one that
had sinned as I have done, might with confidence trust upon the
faithfulness of God, laid down in those words by which I had been
comforted and on which I had leaned myself. But now were brought
those sayings to my mind, "For it is impossible for those who were
once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were
made partakers of the Holy Ghost, and have tasted the good word of
God, and the powers of the world to come, if they shall fall away,
to renew them again unto repentance" (Heb 6:4-6). "For if we sin
willfully after that we have received the knowledge of the truth,
there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins, but a certain fearful
looking for of judgment and fiery indignation, which shall devour
the adversaries" (Heb 10:26,27). Even "as Esau, who, for one morsel
of meat sold his birthright; for ye know how that afterward, when
he would have inherited the blessing, he was rejected; for he found
no place of repentance, though he sought it carefully with tears"
(Heb 12:16,17).
197. Now was the word of the gospel forced from my soul, so that no
promise or encouragement was to be found in the Bible for me; and
now would that saying work upon my spirit to afflict me, "Rejoice
not, O Israel, for joy as other people" (Hosea 9:1). For I saw
indeed there was cause of rejoicing for those that held to Jesus;
but as for me, I had cut myself off by my transgressions, and left
myself neither foot-hold, nor hand-hold, amongst all the stays and
props in the precious word of life.
198. And truly I did now feel myself to sink into a gulf, as an
house whose foundation is destroyed; I did liken myself, in this
condition, unto the case of a child that was fallen into a mill-pit,
who, though it could make some shift to scrabble and spraul in the
water, yet because it could find neither hold for hand nor foot,
therefore at last it must die in that condition. So soon as this
fresh assault had fastened on my soul, that scripture came into my
heart, "This is for many days" (Dan 10:14). And indeed I found it
was so; for I could not be delivered, nor brought to peace again,
until well nigh two years and an half were completely finished. Wherefore
these words, though in themselves they tended to discouragement,
yet to me, who feared this condition would be eternal, they were
at sometimes as an help and refreshment to me.
199. For, thought I, many days are not, not for ever, many days
will have an end, therefore seeing I was to be afflicted, not a
few, but many days, yet I was glad it was but for many days. Thus,
I say, I could recall myself sometimes, and give myself a help, for
as soon as ever the words came 'into my mind' at first, I knew my
trouble would be long; yet this would be but sometimes, for I could
not always think on this, nor ever be helped 'by it,' though I did.
200. Now, while these Scriptures lay before me, and laid sin
'anew' at my door, that saying in the 18th of Luke, with others,
did encourage me to prayer. Then the tempter again laid at me very
sore, suggesting, That neither the mercy of God, nor yet the blood
of Christ, did at all concern me, nor could they help me for my
sin; 'therefore it was in vain to pray.' Yet, thought I, I will
pray. But, said the tempter, your sin is unpardonable. 'Well, said
I, I will pray. It is to no boot, said he.' Yet, said I, I will pray.
So I went to prayer to God; and while I was at prayer, I uttered
words to this effect, Lord, Satan tells me that neither thy mercy,
nor Christ's blood, is sufficient to save my soul; Lord, shall I
honour thee most, by believing thou wilt and canst? or 'him,' by
believing thou neither wilt nor canst? Lord, I would fain honour
thee, by believing thou wilt and canst.
201. And as I was thus before the Lord, that scripture fastened on
my heart, "O [wo]man, great is thy faith" (Matt 15:28), even as if
one had clapped me on the back, as I was on my knees before God.
Yet I was not able to believe this, 'that this was a prayer of
faith,' till almost six months after; for I could not think that I
had faith, or that there should be a word for me to act faith on;
therefore I should still be as sticking in the jaws of desperation,
and went mourning up and down 'in a sad condition,' crying, Is his
mercy clean gone? Is his mercy clean gone for ever? And I thought
sometimes, even when I was groaning in these expressions, they did
seem to make a question whether it was or no; yet I greatly feared
it was.
202. 'There was nothing now that I longed for more than to be put
out of doubt, as to this thing in question; and, as I was vehemently
desiring to know if there was indeed hopes for me, these words came
rolling into my mind, "Will the Lord cast off for ever? And will
he be a favourable no more? Is his mercy clean gone for ever? Doth
his promise fail for evermore? Hath God forgotten to be gracious?
Hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies?" (Psa 77:7-9). And
all the while they run in my mind, methought I had this still as
the answer, It is a question whether he had or no; it may be he hath
not. Yea, the interrogatory seemed to me to carry in it a sure
affirmation that indeed he had not, nor would so cast off, but
would be favourable; that his promise doth not fail, and that he
had not forgotten to be gracious, nor would in anger shut up his
tender mercy. Something, also, there was upon my heart at the same
time, which I now cannot call to mind; which, with this text, did
sweeten my heart, and made me conclude that his mercy might not be
quite gone, nor clean gone for ever.'[47]
203. At another time, I remember I was again much under the question,
Whether the blood of Christ was sufficient to save my soul? In which
doubt I continued from morning till about seven or eight at night;
and at last, when I was, as it were, quite worn out with fear,
lest it should not lay hold on me, these words did sound suddenly
within my heart, He is able. But methought this word ABLE was
spoke so loud unto me; it showed such a great word, 'it seemed to
be writ in great letters,' and gave such a justle to my fear and
doubt, I mean for the time it tarried with me, which was about a
day, as I never had from that all my life, either before or after
that (Heb 7:25).
204. But one morning, when I was again at prayer, and trembling
under the fear of this, that no word of God could help me, that
piece of a sentence darted in upon me, "My grace is sufficient." At
this methought I felt some stay, as if there might be hopes. But,
oh how good a thing it is for God to send his Word! For about
a fortnight before I was looking on this very place, and then I
thought it could not come near my soul with comfort, 'therefore'
I threw down my book in a pet. 'Then I thought it was not large
enough for me; no, not large enough'; but now, it was as if it had
arms of grace so wide that it could not only enclose me, but many
more besides.
206. Therefore I still did pray to God, that he would come in with
this Scripture more fully on my heart; to wit, that he would help
me to apply the whole sentence, 'for as yet I could not: that he
gave, I gathered; but further I could not go,' for as yet it only
helped me to hope 'there might be mercy for me,' "My grace is
sufficient"; and though it came no farther, it answered my former
question; to wit, that there was hope; yet, because "for thee" was
left out, I was not contented, but prayed to God for that also.
Wherefore, one day as I was in a meeting of God's people, full of
sadness and terror, for my fears again were strong upon me; and as
I was now thinking my soul was never the better, but my case most
sad and fearful, these words did, with great power, suddenly break
in upon me, "My grace is sufficient for thee, my grace is sufficient
for thee, my grace is sufficient for thee," three times together;
and, oh! methought that every word as a mighty word unto me; as
my, and grace, and sufficient, and for thee; they were then, and
sometimes are still, far bigger than others be.
208. Thus I went on for many weeks, sometimes comforted, and sometimes
tormented; and, especially at some times, my torment would be very
sore, for all those scriptures forenamed in the Hebrews, would
be set before me, as the only sentences that would keep me out of
heaven. Then, again, I should begin to repent that ever that thought
went through me, I should also think thus with myself, Why, how
many scriptures are there against me? There are but three or four:
and cannot God miss them, and save me for all them? Sometimes,
again, I should think, Oh! if it were not for these three or four
words, now how might I be comforted? And I could hardly forbear,
at some times, but to wish them out of the book.
209. Then methought I should see as if both Peter, and Paul, and
John, and all the writers, did look with scorn upon me, and hold me
in derision; and as if they said unto me, All our words are truth,
one of as much force as another. It is not we that have cut you
off, but you have cast away yourself; there is none of our sentences
that you must take hold upon but these, and such as these: "It is
impossible; there remains no more sacrifice for sin" (Heb 6). And
"it had been better for them not to have known" the will of God,
"than after they have known it, to turn from the holy commandment
delivered unto them" (2 Peter 2:21). "For the Scriptures cannot
be broken."[48]
211. Thus was I confounded, not knowing what to do, nor how to be
satisfied in this question, Whether the scriptures could agree in
the salvation of my soul? I quaked at the apostles, I knew their
words were true, and that they must stand for ever.
213. Well, about two or three days after, so they did indeed; they
bolted both upon me at a time, and did work and struggle strangely
in me for a while; at last, that about Esau's birthright began to
wax weak, and withdraw, and vanish; and this about the sufficiency
of grace prevailed with peace and joy. And as I was in a muse about
this thing, that scripture came home upon me, "Mercy rejoiceth
against judgment" (James 2:13).
215. This scripture did also most sweetly visit my soul, "And him
that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out" (John 6:37). Oh,
the comfort that I have had from this world, "in no wise"! as who
should say, by no means, for no thing, whatever he hath done. But
Satan would greatly labour to pull this promise from me, telling
of me that Christ did not mean me, and such as I, but sinners of
a lower rank, that had not done as I had done. But I should answer
him again, Satan, here is in this word no such exception; but "him
that comes," HIM, any him; "him that cometh to me I will in no wise
cast out." And this I well remember still, that of all the sleights
that Satan used to take this scripture from me, yet he never did
so much as put this question, But do you come aright? And I have
thought the reason was, because he thought I knew full well what
coming aright was; for I saw that to come aright was to come as I
was, a vile and ungodly sinner, and to cast myself at the feet of
mercy, condemning myself for sin. If ever Satan and I did strive
for any word 'of God in all my life, it was for this good word of
Christ; he at one end and I at the other. Oh, what work did we make!'
It was for this in John, 'I say, that we did so tug and strive';
he pulled and I pulled; but, God be praised, 'I got the better of
him,' I got some sweetness from it.
216. But, notwithstanding all these helps and blessed words of
grace, yet that of Esau's selling of his birthright would still at
times distress my conscience; for though I had been most sweetly
comforted, and that but just before, yet when that came into 'my'
mind, it would make me fear again, I could not be quite rid thereof,
it would every day be with me: wherefore now I went another way
to work, even to consider the nature of this blasphemous thought;
I mean, if I should take the words at the largest, and give them
their own natural force and scope, even every word therein. So when
I had thus considered, I found, that if they were fairly taken,
they would amount to this, that I had freely left the Lord Jesus
Christ to his choice, whether he would be my Saviour or no; for the
wicked words were these, Let him go if he will. Then that scripture
gave me hope, "I will never leave thee nor forsake thee" (Heb 13:5).
O Lord, said I, but I have left thee. Then it answered again, "But
I will not leave thee." For this I thank God also.
218. But above all the scriptures that I yet did meet with, that
in the twentieth of Joshua was the greatest comfort to me, which
speaks of the slayer that was to flee for refuge. And if the avenger
of blood pursue the slayer, then, saith Moses, they that are the
elders of the city of refuge shall not deliver him into his hand,
because he smote his neighbour unwittingly, and hated him not
aforetime. Oh, blessed be God for this word; I was convinced that
I was the slayer; and that the avenger of blood pursued me, that I
felt with great terror; only now it remained that I inquire whether
I have right to enter the city of refuge.[49] So I found that he
must not, who lay in wait to shed blood: 'it was not the willful
murderer,' but he who unwittingly did it, he who did unawares
shed blood; 'not of spite, or grudge, or malice, he that shed
it unwittingly,' even he who did not hate his neighbour before.
Wherefore,
219. I thought verily I was the man that must enter, because I
had smitten my neighbour unwittingly, and hated him not aforetime.
I hated him not aforetime; no, I prayed unto him, was tender of
sinning against him; yea, and against this wicked temptation I had
strove for a twelvemonth before; yea, and also when it did pass
through my heart, it did it in spite of my teeth: wherefore I
thought I had right to enter this city, and the elders, which are
the apostles, were not to deliver me up. This, therefore, was great
comfort to me; and did give me much ground of hope.
220. Yet being very critical, for my smart had made me that I knew
not what ground was sure enough to bear me, I had one question
that my soul did much desire to be resolved about; and that was,
Whether it be possible for any soul that hath indeed sinned the
unpardonable sin, yet after that to receive though but the least
true spiritual comfort from God through Christ? The which, after
I had much considered, I found the answer was, No, they could not;
and that for these reasons:--
221. First, Because those that have sinned that sin, they are debarred
a share in the blood of Christ, and being shut out of that, they
must needs be void of the least ground of hope, and so of spiritual
comfort; for to such "there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins"
(Heb 10:26). Secondly, Because they are denied a share in the
promise of life; they shall never be forgiven, "neither in this
world, neither in that which is to come" (Matt 12:32). Thirdly,
The Son of God excludes them also from a share in his blessed
intercession, being for ever ashamed to own them both before his
holy Father, and the blessed angels in heaven (Mark 8:38).
223. The which, when I began to do, I found their visage changed;
for they looked not so grimly on me as before I thought they did.
And, first, I came to the sixth of the Hebrews, yet trembling for
fear it should strike me; which when I had considered, I found that
the falling there intended was a falling quite away; that is, as
I conceived, a falling from, and an absolute denial of the gospel
of remission of sins by Christ; for from them the apostle begins
his argument (vv 1-3). Secondly, I found that this falling away
must be openly, even in the view of the world, even so as "to put
Christ to an open shame." Thirdly, I found that those he there
intended were for ever shut up of God, both in blindness, hardness,
and impenitency: it is impossible they should be renewed again unto
repentance. By all these particulars, I found, to God's everlasting
praise, my sin was not the sin in this place intended.
'First, I confessed I was fallen, but not fallen away, that is,
from the profession of faith in Jesus unto eternal life. Secondly,
I confessed that I had put Jesus Christ to shame by my sin, but
not to open shame; I did not deny him before men, nor condemn him
as a fruitless one before the world. Thirdly, Nor did I find that
God had shut me up, or denied me to come, though I found it hard
work indeed to come to him by sorrow and repentance. Blessed be
God for unsearchable grace.'
224. Then I considered that in the tenth of the Hebrews, and found
that the willful sin there mentioned is not every willful sin,
but that which doth throw off Christ, and then his commandments
too. Secondly, That must also be done openly, before two or three
witnesses, to answer that of the law (v 28). Thirdly, This sin cannot
be committed, but with great despite done to the Spirit of grace;
despising both the dissuasions from that sin, and the persuasions
to the contrary. But the Lord knows, though this my sin was devilish,
yet it did not amount to these.
227. For many there are who, in the day of grace and mercy, despise
those things which are indeed the birthright to heaven, who yet,
when the deciding day appears, will cry as loud as Esau, "Lord,
Lord, open to us"; but then, as Isaac would not repent, no more will
God the Father, but will say, I have blessed these, yea, and they
shall be blessed; but as for you, depart from me, all ye workers
of iniquity (Gen 27:33; Luke 13:25-27).
228. When I had thus considered these scriptures, and found that
thus to understand them was not against, but according to other
scriptures; this still added further to my encouragement and
comfort, and also gave a great blow to that objection, to wit, that
the scripture could not agree in the salvation of my soul. And now
remained only the hinder part of the tempest, for the thunder was
gone beyond me, only some drops did still remain, that now and then
would fall upon me; but because my former frights and anguish were
very sore and deep, therefore it did oft befall me still, as it
befalleth those that have been scared with fire, I thought every
voice was Fire, fire; every little touch would hurt my tender
conscience.[50]
229. But one day, as I was passing in the field, and that too with
some dashes on my conscience, fearing lest yet all was not right,
suddenly this sentence fell upon my soul, Thy righteousness is
in heaven; and methought withal, I saw, with the eyes of my soul,
Jesus Christ at God's right hand; there, I say, as my righteousness;
so that wherever I was, or whatever I was adoing, God could not
say of me, He wants my righteousness, for that was just before him.
I also saw, moreover, that it was not my good frame of heart that
made my righteousness better, nor yet my bad frame that made my
righteousness worse; for my righteousness was Jesus Christ himself,
the same yesterday, and to-day, and for ever (Heb 13:8).
230. Now did my chains fall off my legs indeed, I was loosed from
my affliction and irons, my temptations also fled away; so that,
from that time, those dreadful scriptures of God left off to trouble
me; now went I also home rejoicing, for the grace and love of God.
So when I came home, I looked to see if I could find that sentence,
Thy righteousness is in heaven; but could not find such a saying,
wherefore my heart began to sink again, only that was brought to my
remembrance, he "of God is made unto us wisdom, and righteousness,
and sanctification, and redemption"; by this word I saw the other
sentence true (1 Cor 1:30).
231. For by this scripture, I saw that the man Christ Jesus, as
he is distinct from us, as touching his bodily presence, so he is
our righteousness and sanctification before God. Here, therefore,
I lived for some time, very sweetly at peace with God through
Christ; Oh methought, Christ! Christ! there was nothing but Christ
that was before my eyes, I was not now only for looking upon this
and the other benefits of Christ apart, as of his blood, burial, or
resurrection, but considered him as a whole Christ! As he in whom
all these, and all other his virtues, relations, offices, and
operations met together, and that 'as he sat' on the right hand of
God in heaven.
233. Further, the Lord did also lead me into the mystery of union
with the Son of God, that I was joined to him, that I was flesh
of his flesh, and bone of his bone, and now was that a sweet word
to me in Ephesians 5:30. By this also was my faith in him, as my
righteousness, the more confirmed to me; for if he and I were one,
then his righteousness was mine, his merits mine, his victory also
mine. Now could I see myself in heaven and earth at once; in heaven
by my Christ, by my head, by my righteousness and life, though on
earth by my body or person.
234. Now I saw Christ Jesus was looked on of God, and should also
be looked upon by us, as that common or public person, [52] in
whom all the whole body of his elect are always to be considered
and reckoned; that we fulfilled the law by him, died by him, rose
from the dead by him, got the victory over sin, death, the devil,
and hell, by him; when he died, we died; and so of his resurrection.
"Thy dead men shall live, together with my dead body shall they
arise," saith he (Isa 26:19). And again, "After two days will he
revive us: in the third day he will raise us up, and we shall live
in his sight" (Hosea 6:2); which is now fulfilled by the sitting
down of the Son of man on the right hand of the Majesty in the
heavens, according to that to the Ephesians, he "hath raised us
up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ
Jesus" (Eph 2:6).
236. Having thus, in few words, given you a taste of the sorrow and
affliction that my soul went under, by the guilt and terror that
this my wicked thought did lay me under! and having given you also
a touch of my deliverance therefrom, and of the sweet and blessed
comfort that I met with afterwards, which comfort dwelt about a
twelve-month with my heart, to my unspeakable admiration; I will
now, God willing, before I proceed any further, give you in a word
or two, what, as I conceive, was the cause of this temptation; and
also after that, what advantage, at the last, it became unto my
soul.
237. For the causes, I conceived they were principally two: of which
two also I was deeply convinced all the time this trouble lay upon
me. The first was, for that I did not, when I was delivered from
the temptation that went before, still pray to God to keep me from
temptations that were to come; for though, as I can say in truth,
my soul was much in prayer before this trial seized me, yet then I
prayed only, or at the most, principally for the removal of present
troubles, and for fresh discoveries of 'his' love in Christ! which
I saw afterwards was not enough to do; I also should have prayed
that the great God would keep me from the evil that was to come.
239. That also was another word that did much condemn me for my
folly, in the neglect of this duty (Heb 4:16), "Let us therefore
come boldly unto the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy,
and find grace to help in time of need." This I had not done, and
therefore was suffered thus to sin and fall, according to what is
written, "Pray that ye enter not into temptation." And truly this
very thing is to this day of such weight and awe upon me, that
I dare not, when I come before the Lord, go off my knees, until
I entreat him for help and mercy against the temptations that are
to come; and I do beseech thee, reader, that thou learn to beware
of my negligence, by the affliction that for this thing I did for
days, and months, and years, with sorrow undergo.
240. Another cause of this temptation was, that I had tempted God;
and on this manner did I do it. Upon a time my wife was great with
child, and before her full time was come, her pangs, as of a woman
in travail, were fierce and strong upon her, even as if she would
have immediately fallen in labour, and been delivered of an untimely
birth. Now, at this very time it was, that I had been so strongly
tempted to question the being of God; wherefore, as my wife lay
crying by me, I said, but with all secrecy imaginable, even thinking
in my heart, Lord, if thou wilt now remove this sad affliction
from my wife, and cause that she be troubled no more therewith this
night, and now were her pangs just upon her, then I shall know that
thou canst discern the most secret thoughts of the heart.
241. I had no sooner said it in my heart, but her pangs were taken
from her, and she was cast into a deep sleep, and so she continued
till morning; at this I greatly marveled, not knowing what to
think; but after I had been awake a good while, and heard her cry
no more, I fell to sleeping also. So when I waked in the morning,
it came upon me again, even what I had said in my heart the
last night, and how the Lord had showed me that he knew my secret
thoughts, which was a great astonishment unto me for several weeks
after.
242. Well, about a year and a half afterwards, that wicked sinful
thought, of which I have spoken before, went through my wicked
heart, even this thought, Let Christ go if he will; so when I was
fallen under guilt for this, the remembrance of my other thought,
and of the effect thereof, would also come upon me with this retort,
which also carried rebuke along with it, Now you may see that God
doth know the most secret thoughts of the heart.[53]
243. And with this, that of the passages that were betwixt the
Lord and his servant Gideon fell upon my spirit; how because that
Gideon tempted God with his fleece, both wet and dry, when he should
have believed and ventured upon his word, therefore the Lord did
afterwards so try him, as to send him against an innumerable company
of enemies; and that too, as to outward appearance, without any
strength or help (Judg 6, 7). Thus he served me, and that justly,
for I should have believed his word, and not have put an IF upon
the all-seeingness of God.
244. And now to show you something of the advantages that I also
gained by this temptation; and first, By this I was made continually
to possess in my soul a very wonderful sense both of the being
and glory of God, and of his beloved Son; in the temptation 'that
went' before, my soul was perplexed with 'unbelief, blasphemy,
hardness of heart, questions about the being of God, Christ, the
truth of the Word, and certainty of the world to come; I say, then
I was greatly assaulted and tormented with' atheism; but now the
case was otherwise, now was God and Christ continually before my
face, though not in a way of comfort, but in a way of exceeding
dread and terror. The glory of the holiness of God did at this
time break me to pieces; and the bowels and compassion of Christ
did break me as on the wheel;[54] for I could not consider him but
as a lost and rejected Christ, the remembrance of which was as the
continual breaking of my bones.
245. The Scriptures now also were wonderful things unto me; I saw
that the truth and verity of them were the keys of the kingdom of
heaven; those 'that' the Scriptures favour they must inherit bliss,
but those 'that' they oppose and condemn must perish evermore. Oh
this word, "For the Scripture cannot be broken": would rend the
caul of my heart; and so would that other, "Whose soever sins ye
remit, they are remitted unto them; and whose soever sins ye retain,
they are retained." Now I saw the apostles to be the elders of the
city of refuge (Josh 20:4), those 'that' they were to receive in,
were received to life; but those that they shut out were to be
slain by the avenger of blood.[55]
246. Oh! one sentence of the Scripture did more afflict and terrify
my mind, I mean those sentences that stood against me, as sometimes
I thought they every one did, more I say, than an army of forty
thousand men that might have come against me. Woe be to him against
whom the Scriptures bend themselves.
247. By this temptation I was made 'to' see more into the nature
of the promises than ever I was before; for I lying now trembling
under the mighty hand of God, continually torn and rent by the
thunderings of his justice; this made me, with careful heart and
watchful eye, with great seriousness, to turn over every leaf,
and with much diligence, mixed with trembling, to consider every
sentence, together with its natural force and latitude.
249. Now therefore I was glad to catch at that word, which yet I
feared I had no ground or right to own; and even to leap into the
bosom of that promise, that yet I feared did shut its heart against
me. Now also I should labour to take the Word as God had laid it
down, without restraining the natural force of one syllable thereof.
O what did I now see in that blessed sixth of John, "And him that
cometh to me, I will in no wise cast out" (v 37). Now I began to
consider with myself, that God had a bigger mouth to speak with
than I had heart to conceive with. I thought also with myself that
he spake not his words in haste, or in unadvised heat, but with
infinite wisdom and judgment, and in very truth and faithfulness
(2 Sam 3:18).
251. Yea, often when I have been making to the promise, I have
seen as if the Lord would refuse my soul for ever. I was often as
if I had run upon the pikes, and as if the Lord had thrust at me
to keep me from him as with a flaming sword. Then I should think
of Esther, who went to petition the king contrary to the law (Esth
4:16). I thought also of Benhadad's servants, who went with ropes
upon their heads to their enemies for mercy (1 Kings 20:31). The
woman of Canaan also, that would not be daunted, though called dog
by Christ (Matt 15:20-28). And the man that went to borrow bread
at midnight (Luke 11:5-8), were great encouragements unto me.
251. I never saw those heights and depths in grace, and love, and
mercy, as I saw after this temptation. Great sins do draw out great
grace; and where guilt is most terrible and fierce there the mercy
of God in Christ, when showed to the soul, appears most high and
mighty. When Job had passed through his captivity, he had "twice
as much as he had before" (Job 42:10). Blessed be God for Jesus
Christ our Lord. Many other things I might here make observation
of, but I would be brief, and therefore shall at this time omit
them, and do pray God that my harms may make others fear to offend,
lest they also be made to bear the iron yoke as I 'did.'
254. Thus I continued for three quarters of a year, and could never
have rest nor ease; but at last the Lord came in upon my soul with
that same scripture by which my soul was visited before; and after
that I have been usually very well and comfortable in the partaking
of that blessed ordinance, and have, I trust, therein discerned
the Lord's body as broken for my sins, and that his precious blood
hath been shed for my transgressions.
258. Now was I as one awakened out of some troublesome sleep and
dream, and listening to this heavenly sentence, I was as if I had
heard it thus expounded to me: Sinner, thou thinkest that because
of thy sins and infirmities I cannot save thy soul, but behold my
Son is by me, and upon him I look, and not on thee, and will deal
with thee according as I am pleased with him. At this I was greatly
lightened in my mind, and made to understand that God could justify
a sinner at any time; it was but 'his' looking upon Christ, and
imputing of his benefits to us, and the work was forthwith done.
259. And as I was thus in a muse that scripture also came with great
power upon my spirit, Not by works of righteousness which we have
done, but according to his mercy he saved us, &c. (Titus 3:5; 2 Tim
1:9). Now was I got on high; I saw myself within the arms of grace
and mercy; and though I was before afraid to think of a dying hour,
yet now I cried, Let me die. Now death was lovely and beautiful
in my sight; for I saw we shall never live indeed till we be gone
to the other world. Oh, methought this life is but a slumber in
comparison of that above; at this time also I saw more in those
words, "Heirs of God" (Rom 8:17), than ever I shall be able to
express while I live in this world. "Heirs of God!" God himself is
the portion of the saints. This I saw and wondered at, but cannot
tell you what I saw.[57]
260. 'Again, as I was at another time very ill and weak, all that
time also the tempter did beset me strongly, for I find he is much
for assaulting the soul when it begins to approach towards the
grave, then is his opportunity, labouring to hide from me my former
experience of God's goodness; also setting before me the terrors of
death and the judgment of God, insomuch that at this time, through
my fear of miscarrying for ever, should I now die, I was as one
dead before death came, and was as if I had felt myself already
descending into the pit; methought, I said, there was no way, but
to hell I must; but behold, just as I was in the midst of those
fears, these words of the angels carrying Lazarus into Abraham's
bosom darted in upon me, as who should say, So it shall be with
thee when thou dost leave this world. This did sweetly revive my
spirit, and help me to hope in God; which, when I had with comfort
mused on a while, that word fell with great weight upon my mind,
"O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory?" (1
Cor 15:55). At this I became both well in body and mind at once,
for my sickness did presently vanish, and I walked comfortably in
my work for God again.'
261. At another time, though just before I was pretty well and
savoury in my spirit, yet suddenly there fell upon me a great cloud
of darkness, which did so hide from me the things of God and Christ,
that I was as if I had never seen or known them in my life; I was
also so overrun in my soul, with a senseless, heartless frame of
spirit, that I could not feel my soul to move or stir after grace
and life by Christ; I was as if my loins were broken, or as if my
hands and feet had been tied or bound with chains. At this time
also I felt some weakness to seize 'upon' my outward man, which
made still the other affliction the more heavy and uncomfortable
'to me.'
262. After I had been in this condition some three or four days,
as I was sitting by the fire, I suddenly felt this word to sound
in my heart, I must go to Jesus; at this my former darkness and
atheism fled away, and the blessed things of heaven were set within
my view. While I was on this sudden thus overtaken with surprise,
Wife, said I, is there ever such a scripture, I must go to Jesus?
she said she could not tell, therefore I sat musing still to see
if I could remember such a place; I had not sat above two or three
minutes but that came bolting in upon me, "And to an innumerable
company of angels," and withal, Hebrews the twelfth, about the
mount Sion was set before mine eyes (vv 22-24).
263. Then with joy I told my wife, O now I know, I know! But that
night was a good night to me, I never had but few better; I longed
for the company of some of God's people that I might have imparted
unto them what God had showed me. Christ was a precious Christ to
my soul that night; I could scarce lie in my bed for joy, and peace,
and triumph, through Christ; this great glory did not continue upon
me until morning, yet that twelfth of the author to the Hebrews
(Heb 12:22,23) was a blessed scripture to me for many days together
after this.
264. The words are these, "Ye are come unto mount Sion, and unto
the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to an
innumerable company of angels, to the general assembly and church
of the firstborn, which are written in heaven, and to God the judge
of all, and to the spirits of just men made perfect, and to Jesus
the mediator of the new covenant, and to the blood of sprinkling,
that speaketh better things than that of Abel." Through this blessed
sentence the Lord led me over and over, first to this word, and
then to that, and showed me wonderful glory in every one of them.
These words also have oft since this time been great refreshment
to my spirit. Blessed be God for having mercy on me.
266. The which, though at the first it did much dash and abash my
spirit, yet being still by them desired and intreated, I consented
to their request, and did twice at two several assemblies, but in
private, though with much weakness and infirmity, discover my gift
amongst them; at which they not only seemed to be, but did solemnly
protest, as in the sight of the great God, they were both affected
and comforted, and gave thanks to the Father of mercies for the
grace bestowed on me.
267. After this, sometimes when some of them did go into the country
to teach, they would also that I should go with them; where, though
as yet I did not, nor durst not, make use of my gift in an open
way, yet more privately still as I came amongst the good people in
those places, I did sometimes speak a word of admonition unto them
also; the which, they as the other received, with rejoicing, at the
mercy of God to me-ward, professing their souls were edified thereby.
269. But yet could not be content, unless I was found in the
exercise of my gift, unto which also I was greatly animated, not
only by the continual desires of the godly, but also by that saying
of Paul to the Corinthians, "I beseech you, brethren (ye know the
household of Stephanus, that it is the first fruits of Achaian, and
that they have addicted themselves to the ministry of the saints)
that ye submit yourselves unto such, and to every one that helpeth
with us, and laboureth" (1 Cor 16:15,16).
270. By this text I was made to see that the Holy Ghost never
intended that men who have gifts and abilities should bury them in
the earth, but rather did command and stir up such to the exercise
of their gift, and also did commend those that were apt and ready
so to do, "They have addicted themselves to the ministry of the
saints." This scripture, in these days, did continually run in my
mind, to encourage me and strengthen me in this my work for God;
I have also been encouraged from several other scriptures and
examples of the godly, both specified in the Word and other ancient
histories (Acts 8:4, 18:24,25; 1 Peter 4:10; Rom 12:6; Foxe's Acts
and Monuments).
272. And I thank God he gave unto me some measure of bowels and
pity for their souls, which also did put me forward to labour with
great diligence and earnestness, to find out such a word as might,
if God would bless it, lay hold of, and awaken the conscience, in
which also the good Lord had respect to the desire of his servant;
for I had not preached long before some began to be touched by the
Word, and to be greatly afflicted in their minds at the apprehension
of the greatness of their sin, and of their need of Jesus Christ.
273. But I at first could not believe that God should speak by me
to the heart of any man, still counting myself unworthy; yet those
who thus were touched would love me and have a peculiar respect for
me; and though I did put it from me, that they should be awakened
by me, still they would confess it and affirm it before the saints
of God; they would also bless God for me, unworthy wretch that I
am! and count me God's instrument that showed to them the way of
salvation.
275. At this therefore I rejoiced, yea, the tears of those whom God
did awaken by my preaching would be both solace and encouragement
to me; for I thought on those sayings, "Who is he that maketh
me glad but the same which is made sorry by me?" (2 Cor 2;2); and
again, Though "I be not an apostle to others, yet, doubtless, I
am to you: for the seal of mine apostleship are ye in the Lord" (1
Cor 9:2). These things, therefore, were as another argument unto
me that God had called me to, and stood by me in this work.
278. Thus I went for the space of two years, crying out against
men's sins, and their fearful state because of them. After which
the Lord came in upon my own soul with some staid peace and comfort
through Christ; for he did give me many sweet discoveries of his
blessed grace through him. Wherefore now I altered in my preaching,
for still I preached what I saw and felt; now therefore I did much
labour to hold forth Jesus Christ in all his offices, relations,
and benefits unto the world; and did strive also to discover, to
condemn, and remove those false supports and props on which the
world doth both lean, and by them fall and perish. On these things
also I staid as long as on the other.
279. After this, God led me into something of the mystery of union
with Christ; wherefore that I discovered and showed to them also.
And when I had traveled through these three chief points of the
Word of God, about the space of five years or more, I was caught
in my present practice and cast into prison, where I have lain[60]
above as long again, to confirm the truth by way of suffering, as
I was before in testifying of it according to the Scriptures in a
way of preaching.
280. When I have been preaching, I thank God, my heart hath often
all the time of this and the other exercise, with great earnestness,
cried to God that he would make the Word effectual to the salvation
of the soul; still being grieved lest the enemy should take the
Word away from the conscience, and so it should become unfruitful.
Wherefore I did labour so to speak the Word, as that thereby, if it
were possible, the sins and person guilty might be particularized
by it.
281. Also, when I have done the exercise, it hath gone to my heart
to think the Word should now fall as rain on stony places, still
wishing from my heart, O that they who have heard me speak this
day did but see as I do what sin, death, hell, and the curse of
God is; and also what the grace, and love, and mercy of God is,
through Christ, to men in such a case as they are, who are yet
estranged from him. And, indeed, I did often say in my heart before
the Lord, That if to be hanged up presently before their eyes would
be a means to awaken them, and confirm them in the truth, I gladly
should be contented.
283. When I went first to preach the Word abroad, the doctors
and priests of the country did open wide against me.[61] But I
was persuaded of this, not to render railing for railing, but to
see how many of their carnal professors I could convince of their
miserable state by the law, and of the want and worth of Christ;
for, thought I, This shall answer for me in time to come, when they
shall be for my hire before their faces (Gen 30:33).
285. I never endeavoured to, nor durst make use of other men's lines
(Rom 15:18)[63], though I condemn not all that do, for I verily
thought, and found by experience, that what was taught me by the
Word and Spirit of Christ, could be spoken, maintained, and stood
to by the soundest and best established conscience; and though I
will not now speak all that I know in this matter, yet my experience
hath more interest in that text of Scripture than many amongst men
are aware (Gal 1:11,12).
287. I have observed, that where I have had a work to do for God,
I have had first, as it were, the going of God upon my spirit to
desire I might preach there. I have also observed that such and
such souls in particular have been strongly set upon my heart,
and I stirred up to wish for their salvation; and that these very
souls have, after this, been given in as the fruits of my ministry.
I have also observed, that a word cast in by the by hath done more
execution in a sermon than all that was spoken besides; sometimes
also when I have thought I did no good, then I did the most of
all; and at other times when I thought I should catch them I have
fished for nothing.
288. 'I have also observed, that where there hath been a work to
do upon sinners, there the devil hath begun to roar in the hearts,
and by the mouths of his servants. Yea, oftentimes when the wicked
world hath raged most, there hath been souls awaked by the Word.
I could instance particulars, but I forbear.'
295. 'But, I thank the Lord, I have been kept from consenting
to these so horrid suggestions, and have rather, as Samson, bowed
myself with all my might, to condemn sin and transgression wherever
I found it, yea, though therein also I did bring guilt upon my own
conscience! "Let me die," thought I, "with the Philistines" (Judg
16:29,30), rather than deal corruptly with the blessed Word of
God, "Thou that teachest another, teachest not thou thyself?" It
is far better that thou do judge thyself, even by preaching plainly
to others, than that thou, to save thyself, imprison the truth in
unrighteousness; blessed be God for his help also in this.'
296. I have also, while found in this blessed work of Christ, been
often tempted to pride and liftings up of heart; and though I dare
not say I have not been infected with this, yet truly the Lord, of
his precious mercy, hath so carried it towards me, that, for the
most part, I have had but small joy to give way to such a thing;
for it hath been my every day's portion to be let into the evil of
my own heart, and still made to see such a multitude of corruptions
and infirmities therein, that it hath caused hanging down of the
head under all my gifts and attainments; I have felt this thorn in
the flesh, the very mercy of God to me (2 Cor 12:7-9).
297. I have had also, together with this, some notable place or
other of the Word presented before me, which word hath contained
in it some sharp and piercing sentence concerning the perishing of
the soul, notwithstanding gifts and parts; as, for instance, that
hath been of great use unto me, "Though I speak with the tongues
of men and of angels, and have not charity, I am become as sounding
brass, and a tinkling cymbal" (1 Cor 13:1,2).
299. Just thus I saw it was and will be with them who have gifts,
but want saving grace, they are in the hand of Christ, as the
cymbal in the hand of David; and as David could, with the cymbal,
make that mirth in the service of God, as to elevate the hearts of
the worshippers, so Christ can use these gifted men, as with them
to affect the souls of his people in his church; yet when he hath
done all, hang them by as lifeless, though sounding cymbals.[65]
302. 'This showed me too, that gifts being alone, were dangerous,
not in themselves, but because of those evils that attend them that
have them, to wit, pride, desire of vain glory, self-conceit, &c.,
all which were easily blown up at the applause and commendation of
every unadvised Christian, to the endangering of a poor creature
to fall into the condemnation of the devil.'
303. 'I saw therefore that he that hath gifts had need be let into
a sight of the nature of them, to wit, that they come short of
making of him to be in a truly saved condition, lest he rest in
them, and so fall short of the grace of God.'
304. 'He hath also cause to walk humbly with God, and be little in
his own eyes, and to remember withal, that his gifts are not his
own, but the church's; and that by them he is made a servant to
the church; and he must give at last an account of his stewardship
unto the Lord Jesus; and to give a good account, will be a blessed
thing.'
305. 'Let all men therefore prize a little with the fear of the
Lord; gifts indeed are desirable, but yet great grace and small
gifts are better than great gifts and no grace. It doth not say,
the Lord gives gifts and glory, but the Lord gives grace and glory;
and blessed is such an one, to whom the Lord gives grace, true
grace, for that is a certain forerunner of glory.'
306. 'But when Satan perceived that his thus tempting and assaulting of
me would not answer his design, to wit, to overthrown my ministry,
and make it ineffectual, as to the ends thereof; then he tried
another way, which was to stir up the minds of the ignorant and
malicious, to load me with slanders and reproaches; now therefore
I may say, That what the devil could devise, and his instruments
invent, was whirled up and down the country against me, thinking,
as I said, that by that means they should make my ministry to be
abandoned.'
307. 'It began therefore to be rumoured up and down among the
people, that I was a witch, a Jesuit, a highwayman, and the like.'
308. 'To all which, I shall only say, God knows that I am innocent.
But as for mine accusers, let them provide themselves to meet
me before the tribunal of the Son of God, there to answer for all
these things, with all the rest of their iniquities, unless God
shall give them repentance for them, for the which I pray with all
my heart.'
309. 'But that which was reported with the boldest confidence,
was, that I had my misses, my whores, my bastards, yea, two wives
at once, and the like. Now these slanders, with the other, I glory
in, because but slanders, foolish, or knavish lies, and falsehoods
cast upon me by the devil and his seed; and should I not be dealt
with thus wickedly by the world, I should want one sign of a saint,
and a child of God. "Blessed are ye [said the Lord Jesus] when men
shall revile you, and persecute you, and shall say all manner of
evil against you falsely for my sake; rejoice, and be exceeding
glad, for great is your reward in heaven; for so persecuted they
the prophets which were before you" (Matt 4:11).'
311. 'So then, what shall I say to those that have thus bespattered
me? shall I threaten them? Shall I chide them? Shall I flatter
them? Shall I intreat them to hold their tongues? No, not I, were
it not for that these things make them ripe for damnation, that
are the authors and abettors, I would say unto them, Report it,
because it will increase my glory.'
313. 'I also calling all those fools, or knaves, that have thus
made it anything of their business, to affirm any of the things
afore-named of me, namely, that I have been naught with other women,
or the like. When they have used to the utmost of their endeavours,
and made the fullest inquiry that they can, to prove against me
truly, that there is any woman in heaven, or earth, or hell, that
can say, I have at any time, in any place, by day or night, so much
as attempted to be naught with them; and speak I thus, to beg mine
enemies into a good esteem of me; no, not I: I will in this beg
relief of no man; believe or disbelieve me in this, all is a case
to me.[68]'
314. 'My foes have missed their mark in this their shooting at me.
I am not the man. I wish that they themselves be guiltless. If all
the fornicators and adulterers in England were hanged by the neck
till they be dead, JOHN BUNYAN, the object of their envy, would be
still alive and well. I know not whether there be such a thing as
a woman breathing under the copes of the whole heaven, but by their
apparel, their children, or by common fame, except my wife.'
315. 'And in this I admire the wisdom of God, that he made me shy
of women from my first conversion until now. Those know, and can also
bear me witness, with whom I have been most intimately concerned,
that it is a rare thing to see me carry it pleasant towards a
woman; the common salutation of a woman I abhor, it is odious to
me in whomsoever I see it. Their company alone, I cannot away with.
I seldom so much as touch a woman's hand, for I think these things
are not so becoming me. When I have seen good men salute those
women that they have visited, or that have visited them, I have at
times made my objection against it, and when they have answered,
that it was but a piece of civility, I have told them, it is not
a comely sight; some indeed have urged the holy kiss; but then I
have asked why they made baulks,[69] why they did salute the most
handsome, and let the ill-favoured go; thus, how laudable soever
such things have been in the eyes of others, they have been unseemly
in my sight.'
316. 'And now for a wind up in this matter, I calling not only
men, but angels, to prove me guilty of having carnally to do with
any woman save my wife, nor am I afraid to do it a second time,
knowing that I cannot offend the Lord in such a case, to call God
for a record upon my soul, that in these things I am innocent.
Not that I have been thus kept, because of any goodness in me more
than any other, but God has been merciful to me, and has kept me;
to whom I pray that he will keep me still, not only from this,
but from every evil way and work, and preserve me to his heavenly
kingdom. Amen.'
321. I never had in all my life so great an inlet into the Word
of God as now; those Scriptures that I saw nothing in before, are
made in this place and state to shine upon me; Jesus Christ also
was never more real and apparent than now; here I have seen him
and felt him indeed: O that word, We have not preached unto you
cunningly devised fables (2 Peter 1:16); and that, God raised Christ
from the dead, and gave him glory, that your faith and hope might
be in God (1 Peter 1:2), were blessed words unto me in this my
imprisoned condition.
322. These three or four scriptures also have been great refreshment
in this condition to me (John 14:1-4, 16:33; Col 3:3,4; Heb 12:22-24).
So that sometimes when I have been in the savour of them, I have
been able to laugh at destruction, and to fear neither the horse nor
his rider (Job 39:18). I have had sweet sights of the forgiveness
of my sins in this place, and of my being with Jesus in another
world: O, "the mount Zion, the heavenly Jerusalem, the innumerable
company of angels, and God the judge of all, and the spirits
of just men made perfect, and to Jesus" (Heb 12:22-24), have been
sweet unto me in this place: I have seen THAT here, that I am
persuaded I shall never, while in this world, be able to express;
I have seen a truth in that scripture, "Whom having not seen, ye
love; in whom, though now ye se him not, yet believing, ye rejoice
with joy unspeakable and full of glory" (1 Peter 1:8).[71]
323. I never knew what it was for God to stand by me at all turns,
and at every offer of Satan 'to afflict me,' &c., as I have found
him since I came in hither; for look how fears have presented
themselves, so have supports and encouragements, yea, when I have
started, even as it were at nothing else but my shadow, yet God,
as being very tender of me, hath not suffered me to be molested,
but would with one scripture and another strengthen me against all;
insomuch that I have often said, Were it lawful, I could pray for
greater trouble, for the greater comfort's sake (Eccl 7:14; 2 Cor
1:5).
324. Before I came to prison, I saw what was a-coming, and had
especially two considerations warm upon my heart; the first was how
to be able to endure, should my imprisonment be long and tedious;
the second was how to be able to encounter death, should that be here
my portion; for the first of these, that scripture (Col 1:11) was
great information to me, namely, to pray to God to be "strengthened
with all might, according to his glorious power, unto all patience
and long-suffering with joyfulness." I could seldom go to prayer
before I was imprisoned, but not for so little as a year together,
this sentence, or sweet petition, would, as it were, thrust itself
into my mind, and persuade me, that if ever I would go through
long-suffering, I must have all patience, especially if I would
endure it joyfully.
325. As to the second consideration, that saying (2 Cor 1:9), was
of great use to me, But we had the sentence of death in ourselves,
that we should not trust in ourselves, but in God which raiseth the
dead. By this scripture I was made to see, that if ever I would
suffer rightly, I must first pass a sentence of death upon everything
that can properly be called a thing of this life, even to reckon
myself, my wife, my children, my health, my enjoyments, and all,
as dead to me, and myself as dead to them. "He that loveth father
or mother, son or daughter, more than me, is not worthy of me"
(Matt 10:37).
326. The second was, to live upon God that is invisible; as Paul
said in another place, the way not to faint, is to "look not at
the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen:
for the things which are seen are temporal; but the things which
are not seen are eternal" (2 Cor 4:18). And thus I reasoned with
myself; if I provide only for a prison, then the whip comes at
unawares; and so does also the pillory; again, if I provide only
for these, then I am not fit for banishment; further, if I conclude
that banishment is the worst, then if death come I am surprised.
So that I see the best way to go through sufferings is to trust in
God through Christ, as touching the world to come; and as touching
this world, to count "the grave my house, to make my bed in darkness,
and to say to corruption, Thou art my father, and to the worm, Thou
art my mother and my sister." That is, to familiarize these things
to me.[72]
328. Poor child, thought I, what sorrow art thou like to have for
thy portion in this world? Thou must be beaten, must beg, suffer
hunger, cold, nakedness, and a thousand calamities, though I cannot
now endure the wind should blow upon thee. But yet recalling myself,
thought I, I must venture you all with God, though it goeth to the
quick to leave you. O, I saw in this condition I was as a man who
was pulling down his house upon the head of his wife and children;
yet thought I, I must do it, I must do it. And now I thought on
those two milch kine that were to carry the ark of God into another
country, and to leave their calves behind them (1 Sam 6:10-12).
331. I had also another consideration, and that was, the dread of
the torments of hell, which I was sure they must partake of, that
for fear of the cross, do shrink from their profession of Christ,
his words, and laws, before the sons of men; I thought also of the
glory that he had prepared for those that, in faith, and love, and
patience, stood to his ways before them. These things, I say, have
helped me, when the thoughts of the misery that both myself and
mine, might for the sake of my profession be exposed to, hath lain
pinching on my mine.
333. I will tell you a pretty business; I was once above all the
rest in a very sad and low condition for many weeks; at which time
also I being but a young prisoner, and not acquainted with the
laws, had this lay much upon my spirit, That my imprisonment might
end at the gallows for aught that I could tell. Now, therefore,
Satan laid hard at me to beat me out of heart, by suggesting thus
unto me, But how if when you come indeed to die, you should be in
this condition; that is, as not to savour the things of God, nor
to have any evidence upon your soul for a better state hereafter?
For indeed at that time all the things of God were hid from my
soul.
335. Wherefore, I prayed to God that he would comfort me, and give
me strength to do and suffer what he should call me to; yet no
comfort appeared, but all continued hid: I was also at this time
so really possessed with the thought of death, that oft I was as if
I was on the ladder with a rope about my neck; only this was some
encouragement to me, I thought I might now have an opportunity
to speak my last words to a multitude, which I thought would come
to see me die; and, thought I, if it must be so, if God will but
convert one soul by my very last words, I shall not count my life
thrown away, nor lost.
336. But yet all the things of God were kept out of my sight, and
still the tempter followed me with, But whither must you go when you
die? What will become of you? Where will you be found in another
world? What evidence have you for heaven and glory, and an inheritance
among them that are sanctified? Thus was I tossed for many weeks,
and knew not what to do; at last this consideration fell with
weight upon me, That it was for the Word and way of God, that I was
in this condition, wherefore I was engaged not to flinch a hair's
breadth from it.
337. I thought also, that God might choose, whether he would give
me comfort now or at the hour of death, but I might not therefore
choose whether I would hold my profession or no: I was bound, but
he was free: yea, it was my duty to stand to his word, whether he
would ever look upon me or no, or save me at the last: wherefore,
thought I, the point being thus, I am for going on, and venturing
my eternal state with Christ, whether I have comfort here or no;
if God doth not come in, thought I, I will leap off the ladder even
blindfold into eternity, sink or swim, come heaven, come hell, Lord
Jesus, if thou wilt catch me, do; 'if not,' I will venture for thy
name.
338. I was no sooner fixed upon this resolution, but that word dropped
upon me, "Doth Job serve God for nought?" As if the accuser had
said, Lord, Job is no upright man, he serves thee for by-respects:
hast thou not made a hedge about him, &c. "But put forth thine
hand now, and touch all that he hath, and he will curse thee to
thy face." How now, thought I, is this the sign of an upright soul,
to desire to serve God, when all is taken from him? Is he a godly
man, that will serve God for nothing rather than give out? blessed
be God, then, I hope I have an upright heart, for I am resolved,
God giving me strength, never to deny my profession, though I have
nothing at all for my pains; and as I was thus considering, that
scripture was set before me (Psa 44:12-26).[76]
339. Now was my heart full of comfort, for I hoped it was sincere:
I would not have been without this trial for much; I am comforted
every time I think of it, and I hope I shall bless God for ever
for the teaching I have had by it. Many more of the dealings of
God towards me I might relate, but these, "Out of the spoils won
in battles have I dedicated to maintain the house of the LORD" (1
Chron 26:27).
THE CONCLUSION.
1. Of all the temptations that ever I met with in my life, to
question the being 'of God,' and truth of his gospel, is the worst,
and the worst to be borne; when this temptation comes, it takes
away my girdle from me, and removeth the foundation from under me:
O, I have often thought of that word, "have your loins girt about
with truth"; and of that, "When the foundations are destroyed, what
can the righteous do?"
3. I have wondered much at this one thing, that though God doth
visit my soul with never so blessed a discovery of himself, yet I
have found again, that such hours have attended me afterwards, that
I have been in my spirits so filled with darkness, that I could not
so much as once conceive what that God and that comfort was with
which I have been refreshed.
5. Of all tears, they are the best that are made by the blood of
Christ; and of all joy, that is the sweetest that is mixed with
mourning over Christ. Oh! it is a goodly thing to be on our knees,
with Christ in our arms, before God. I hope I know something of
these things.
FOOTNOTES:
1. Dr. Cheever.
2. Leicester was only besieged by the royal army, who took it, and
cruelly treated the inhabitants; upon the republicans appearing
before it, the city surrendered at once without a siege.--Ed.
3. This should be the prayer and effort of every Christian for his
brethren and sisters in Christ, and more especially of those who
are called to the public ministry.--Ed.
4. The people of God look back on the day of their espousals with
holy joy and thanksgiving to the God of their mercies; and they
delight in telling his goodness to others. "Come and hear, all ye
that fear God, and I will declare what he hath done for my soul"
(Psa 66:16).--Mason.
5. How unspeakable the mercy that our omnipresent God will hear
the prayer of the heart under all circumstances, at all times, in
all places. Had he limited it to certain forms, in certain buildings,
read by certain men, what fearful merchandise of souls they would
have made.--Ed.
And in the preface to 'The Law and Grace': 'Reader, if thou do find
this book empty of fantastical expressions, and without light, vain,
whimsical, scholar-like terms; thou must understand, it is because
I never went to school to Aristotle or Plato, but was brought up
at my father's house, in a very mean condition, among a company of
poor countrymen.'--Ed.
8. 'I have been vile myself, but have obtained mercy; and I would
have my companions in sin partake of mercy too.'--Preface to
Jerusalem Sinner Saved.--Ed.
10. Bunyan served in the wars between Charles I and his country,
but it is not known on which side. Judging from his 'delight in all
transgressions against the law of God,' as he describes his conduct
to have been at that time, he must have served on the king's side,
as one of his drunken cavaliers. Probably this event took place
when Leicester was besieged by the king's troops.--Ed.
11. The notice of his wife's father being a godly man, and not
mentioning anything of the kind with regard to his own parents,
strengthens my conclusion that they were not professors of religion.
This very copy of the Pathway to Heaven here noticed, with the name
of Bunyan on the title, is in the Editor's possession.--Ed.
12. Asking his father this question, looks a little as if the family
had been connected with the gipsy tribe.--Ed.
13. 'The king (James, 1618) put forth an order to permit everybody,
as he had before given leave in the county of Lancaster, who should
go to evening prayer on the Lord's day, to divertise themselves
with lawful exercises, with leaping, dancing, playing at bowls,
shooting with bows and arrows, as likewise to rear May poles, and
to use May games and Morris dancing; but those who refused coming
to prayers were forbidden to use these sports.'--(Camden's Annals).
The head of the Church of England had wondrous power thus to dispense
with God's laws.--Ed.
14. 'Did cut the sinews,' first edition; properly altered by Bunyan
afterwards to 'did benumb.'
16. This wish looks as if Bunyan's father had not checked him for
this wicked propensity; if so, he could not have pretended to piety
or religion.--Ed.
18. When the Lord, in his blessed work upon the soul, illuminated
the mind, he opens to it a new world; he leads the blind by a way
that they know not, crooked things become straight, rough places
plain, and he never forsakes his charge.--Mason.
19. 'Their talk went with me; my heart would tarry with them';
nothing is so powerfully attractive as a community of feeling
under the teaching of the Holy Spirit. Bunyan's wish to be 'tried
and searched,' reminds me of one who, when alarmed for his soul's
safety, earnestly prayed that he might be made increasingly wretched,
until he had found safety in Jesus, and knew him, whom to know is
joy unspeakable in this life, and felicity in the eternal world.--Ed.
20. That bitter fanatic, Ross, calls the ranters 'a sort of beasts,'
who practiced sin that grace might abound. Many under that name were
openly profligate; they denied the sacraments, but were disowned
by the Quakers. It seems, from Bunyan, that they were infatuated
with some idea that the grossest sins of the flesh did not injure
the sanctity of the spirit!--Ed.
24. The Christian who is found waiting upon God, is the thriving
one; the best way to be assured of our election is to examine our
state with the touchstone of truth, the Scriptures. The elect of God
know Christ savingly, esteem him precious, and obey him cheerfully
from love and gratitude.--Mason.
27. Here we have Christian in the valley of the shadow of death. 'One
thing I would not let slip, I took notice that now poor Christian
was so confounded, that he did not know his own voice; and thus I
perceived it, just when he was come over against the mouth of the
burning pit, one of the wicked ones got behind him, and stept up
softly to him, and whisperingly suggested many grievous blasphemies
to him, which he verily thought had proceeded from his own
mind.'--Pilgrim's Progress.--Ed.
30. John Gifford, Bunyan's pastor, was a Kentish man, and had been
a major in the King's army, a roistering cavalier. For some crimes,
he, with eleven others, was condemned to be hung, but made his
escape to London, and thence to Bedford, where, being unknown, he
practiced physic. Addicted to swearing, drinking, and gambling,
he, in distress at a serious loss, vowed repentance; he became
greatly distressed under conviction of sin; at length his mind was
enlightened, the Holy Spirit led him to forgiveness by the atonement
of Christ, and his heart was filled with a hitherto unknown source
of blessedness. This he imparted to others, and at length, in 1650,
formed a church, with which the soul-harassed pilgrim Bunyan cast
in his lot as a member in 1653. There appears to have been a strong
mutual affection between him and his pastor. In 1658, Mr. Gifford
published a preface to Bunyan's 'Few Sighs from Hell,' in which
he speaks of him with the warmest affection, as one 'that I verily
believe God hath counted faithful, and put him into the ministry--one
that hath acquaintance with God, and taught by his Spirit, and hath
been used to do souls good. Divers have felt the power of the word
delivered by him, and I doubt not but that many more may, if God
continue him in his work.' Judging from Gifford's preface, he must
have been an excellent teacher to train Bunyan for his important
labours as a Christian minister. He uses the same fervid striking
language. Thus, on the value of the soul: 'Consider what an
ill bargain thou will make to sell thy precious soul for a short
continuance in sin and pleasure. If that man drives an ill trade,
who to gain the whole world should lose his own soul, then certainly
thou art far worse that sells thy soul for a very trifle. Oh, 'tis
pity that so precious a thing should be parted withal to be made a
prey for the devouring lion, for that which is worse than nothing.
If they were branded for desperate wretches that caused their
children to pass through the fire to Moloch, surely thou much more
that gives thy soul to devouring flames. What meanest thou, O man!
to truck+ with the devil?'--See Sighs, 1st Edition, and Brooks'
Puritans.--Ed.
31. That persons called Quakers held these heresies, there can be
no doubt; but they were never held by that respectable and useful
body of Christians, the Society of Friends, is equally clear.
Barclay, in his Theses, 1675, says of the Scriptures:--'They are
the doctrine of Christ, held forth in precious declarations, spoken
and written by the movings of God's Spirit.' He goes on to say,
that the same Spirit can alone guide man into these sacred truths.
In all important doctrines, the difference between the Quakers
and evangelical professors is in terms and not in things. Their
distinguishing difference relates to the work of the ministry.--Ed.
32. How natural is it for man to build up vain hopes of long life!
Bunyan's vigorous constitution, had he enjoyed the free air of
liberty, might have prolonged his pilgrimage to extreme old age.
But his long imprisonment shortened his valuable life: it almost
amounted to legal murder.--Ed.
37. 'Racked or broken upon the wheel,' was a horrid mode of torturing
a criminal to death, formerly used in France. The sufferer was
stretched and made fast upon a large wheel, when the executioner,
with a heavy iron bar, proceeded to break every bone in his body;
beginning with the toes and fingers, and proceeding to crush those
bones that the least affected life, and ending by crushing the
skull into the brains. How piercing must have been the convictions
of sin upon Bunyan's soul, to have led him to such a simile!--Ed.
43. How soul-rending a thought! but it can only be the case with
those who continue to their death despising the Saviour. Those
who love him are kept by almighty power, everlasting love, and
irresistible grace.--Ed.
47. Though we may wait long for mercy, yet the hand of faith never
knocked in vain at the door of heaven. Mercy is as surely ours as
if we had it, if it be given us in faith and patience to wait for
it.--Mason.
49. The Holy Spirit is the candle of the Lord, by whose light the
awakened conscience is brought to see something of the mystery
of iniquity lurking in the heart. He first convinces of sin,
righteousness, and judgment; and then points to Jesus as the only
security: 'Behold the Lamb of God.'--Mason.
54. See note on No. 152. The feelings of Bunyan must have been
exceedingly pungent.--Ed.
56. The mode of admitting members into the church, among the
Baptists, appears to have been the same in Bunyan's days as it is
now practiced. It is, first to be introduced to the minister, who
endeavours to ascertain whether there is an earnest desire to flee
from the wrath to come, sincere repentance, and faith in the Lord
Jesus Christ. If so, he mentions it to the church; and visitors are
appointed, to encourage the young convert, and to scrutinize into
moral character. If they are satisfied, he is invited to attend a
private church meeting; and if the members have a good hope that
he is a decided believer in Jesus, they receive him into their
fellowship; and if he requests it, he is publicly baptized in
water, and communicates with the church at the Lord's table. This
appears to have been the mode in which Bunyan was admitted into
the church at Bedford. Most of the Baptist churches now agree with
Bunyan, that the baptism of the Holy Ghost, or inward spiritual
regeneration, is, alone, the essential pre-requisite to the Lord's
table; and they leave members to their own conclusions as to the
validity of their having been sprinkled in infancy, or the necessity
of immersion in water upon a profession of faith.--Ed.
57. Many will be surprised that Bunyan, who was so ready a writer,
should be unable to tell what he saw and felt when in these holy
enjoyments; but all who have had similar feelings will unite with
him in saying, they are inexpressible, great, and full of glory.--Ed.
59. 'With great sense,' means with great feeling, arising from his
own acute experience.--Ed.
60. In the first edition Bunyan says, 'I have lain as long,' (five
years). This was in 1666.--Ed.
61. When God sends forth a zealous ambassador to publish the glad
tidings of salvation to perishing sinners, he will be sure to meet
with the fiercest opposition from proud pharisaical professors:
so it was from the beginning, and will be to the end of time; but
the Lord will work, and none shall hinder. Experimental preaching
will always be offensive to the carnal and profane.--Mason.
65. Gifts are no evidence of God's favour; they are like the gold
which adorned the temple, but grace, the saving grace of the Spirit,
is like the altar which sanctifies the gold.--Mason..
67. One circumstance from which these vile slanders were raised,
is narrated in the thrilling narrative of God's gracious dealings
with Mrs. Agnes Beaumont. She was waiting in hopes of attending
a meeting, when 'at last, quite unexpectedly, came Mr. Bunyan. The
sight of him caused a mixture of joy and grief. I was glad to see
him, but afraid he would not be willing to take me up behind him,
and how to ask him I knew not. At length my brother did; but Mr.
Bunyan answered, with some degree of roughness, "No, I will not carry
her." These words were cutting indeed, and made me weep bitterly.
My brother, perceiving my trouble, said, "Sir, if you do not carry
her, you will break her heart"; but he made the same reply, adding,
"Your father would be grievously angry if I should." "I will venture
that," said I. And thus, with much entreaty, he was prevailed on;
and O how glad was I to think I was going. Soon after we set out,
my father came to my brother's, and asked his men whom his daughter
rode behind? They said, Mr. Bunyan. Upon hearing this, his anger
was greatly inflamed; he ran down the close, thinking to overtake
me, and pull me off the horse, but we were gone out of his reach.
'I had not ridden far, before my heart began to be lifted up with
pride at the thoughts of riding behind this servant of the Lord;
and was pleased if any looked after us, as we rode along. Indeed,
I thought myself very happy that day: first, that it pleased God
to make way for my going; and then, that I should have the honour
to ride behind Mr. Bunyan, who would sometimes be speaking to me
about the things of God. My pride soon had a fall; for, in entering
Gam'gay, we were met by one Mr. Lane, a clergyman who lived at
Bedford, and knew us both, and spoke to us, but looked very hard
at us as we rode along; and soon after raised a vile scandal upon
us, though, blessed be God, it was false.'
68. 'All is a case,' all the same. A case--that which falls, comes,
or happens; an event. See Blackie's Imperial Dictionary.--Ed.
70. 'Above five year and a quarter' are the words in the first
edition, 1666. His imprisonment commenced November 1660; the order
for his release bears date September 13, 1672, but it was some
months before he was discharged.--Ed.
72. Bunyan did well to prepare for the worst. He must have been
familiar with the horrid cruelties practiced upon Dr. Leighton by
that fiend in human shape, Archbishop Laud. The pious and learned
doctor was caught in Bedfordshire; and the story of his unparalleled
sufferings strengthened the Roundheads to deeds of valour,
in putting an end to such diabolical cruelties. The spirit of the
charges against him were his saying that no king may make laws
in the house of God; and that the bishops were ravens and magpies
that prey upon the state. His sufferings are narrated in Brooke's
Puritans, vol. ii. p. 478.--Ed.
75. 'To scrabble,' to go on all fours--'to move along on the hands and
knees, by clawing with the hands.'--Blackie's Imperial Dictionary.--Ed.
***
When, by the good hand of my God, I had for five or six years
together, without any interruption, freely preached the blessed
gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ; and had also, through his blessed
grace, some encouragement by his blessing thereupon; the devil,
that old enemy of man's salvation, took his opportunity to inflame
the hearts of his vassals against me, insomuch that at the last
I was laid out for by the warrant of a justice, and was taken and
committed to prison. The relation thereof is as followeth:
My sureties being ready, I called them in, and when the bond for
my appearance was made, he told them, that they were bound to keep
me from preaching; and that if I did preach, their bonds would
be forfeited. To which I answered, that then I should break them;
for I should not leave speaking the Word of God: even to counsel,
comfort, exhort, and teach the people among whom I came; and I
thought this to be a work that had no hurt in it: but was rather
worthy of commendation than blame.
Now while my mittimus was making, the justice was withdrawn; and
in comes an old enemy to the truth, Dr. Lindale, who, when he was
come in, fell to taunting at me with many reviling terms.
Bun. To whom I answered, that I did not come thither to talk with
him, but with the justice. Whereat he supposed that I had nothing
to say for myself, and triumphed as if he had got the victory;
charging and condemning me for meddling with that for which I could
show no warrant; and asked me, if I had taken the oaths? and if I
had not, it was pity but that I should be sent to prison, &c.
I told him, that if I was minded, I could answer to any sober question
that he should put to me. He then urged me again, how I could prove
it lawful for me to preach, with a great deal of confidence of the
victory.
Bun. To whom, said I, why, to every man that hath received a gift
from God. Mark, saith the apostle, "As every man that hath received
a gift from God," &c. And again, "You may all prophesy one by one."
Whereat the man was a little stopt, and went a softlier pace: but
not being willing to lose the day, he began again, and said:
Bun. To which I answered, that I also had read of very many priests
and Pharisees that had their hands in the blood of our Lord Jesus
Christ.
Lind. Aye, saith he, and you are one of those scribes and Pharisees:
for you, with a pretence, make long prayers to devour widows'
houses.
But as I was going, two of my brethren met with me by the way, and
desired the constable to stay, supposing that they should prevail
with the justice, through the favour of a pretended friend, to let
me go at liberty. So we did stay, while they went to the justice;
and after much discourse with him, it came to this; that if I would
come to him again, and say some certain words to him, I should be
released. Which when they told me, I said if the words were such
that might be said with a good conscience, I should, or, else,
I should not. So through their importunity I went back again, but
not believing that I should be delivered: for I feared their spirit
was too full of opposition to the truth to let me go, unless I should
in something or other dishonour my God, and wound my conscience.
Wherefore, as I went, I lifted up my heart to God for light and
strength to be kept, that I might not do anything that might either
dishonour him, or wrong my own soul, or be a grief or discouragement
to any that was inclining after the Lord Jseus Christ.
Well, when I came to the justice again, there was Mr. Foster of
Bedford, who coming out of another room, and seeing of me by the
light of the candle, for it was dark night when I came thither, he
said unto me, Who is there? John Bunyan? with such seeming affection,
as if he would have leaped in my neck and kissed[4] me, which made
me somewhat wonder, that such a man as he, with whom I had so little
acquaintance, and, besides, that had ever been a close opposer of
the ways of God, should carry himself so full of love to me; but,
afterwards, when I saw what he did, it caused me to remember those
sayings, "Their tongues are smoother than oil, but their words are
drawn swords." And again, "Beware of men," &c. when I had answered
him, that blessed be God I was well, he said, What is the occasion
of your being here? or to that purpose. To whom I answered, that
I was at a meeting of people a little way off, intending to speak
a word of exhortation to them; but the justice hearing thereof, said
I, was pleased to send his warrant to fetch me before him, &c.
Foster. So, said he, I understand; but well, if you will promise
to call the people no more together, you shall have your liberty
to go home; for my brother is very loath to send you to prison, if
you will be but ruled.
Bun. Sir, said I, pray what do you mean by calling the people
together? My business is not anything among them, when they are
come together, but to exhort them to look after the salvation of
their souls, that they may be saved, &c.
Fost. Saith he, We must not enter into explication or dispute now;
but if you will say you will call the people no more together, you
may have your liberty; if not, you must be sent away to prison.
Bun. Sir, said I, I shall not force or compel any man to hear
me; but yet, if I come into any place where there is a people met
together, I should, according to the best of my skill and wisdom,
exhort and counsel them to seek out after the Lord Jesus Christ,
for the salvation of their souls.
Bun. To whom I said, that I could follow my calling and that too,
namely, preaching the Word; and I did look upon it as my duty to
do them both, as I had an opportunity.
Fost. He said, to have any such meetings was against the law; and,
therefore, he would have me leave off, and say I would call the
people no more together.
Bun. To whom I said, that I durst not make any further promise; for
my conscience would not suffer me to do it. And again, I did look
upon it as my duty to do as much good as I could, not only in my
trade, but also in communicating to all people, wheresoever I came,
the best knowledge I had in the Word.
Fost. He told me that I was the nearest the Papists of any, and
that he would convince me of immediately.
Bun. I said this, "he that believeth shall be saved." This was to
be understood just as it is spoken; that whosoever believeth in
Christ shall, according to the plain and simple words of the text,
be saved.
Fost. He said that I was ignorant, and did not understand the
Scriptures; for how, said he, can you understand them when you know
not the original Greek? &c.
Bun. To whom I said, that if that was his opinion, that none could
understand the Scriptures but those that had the original Greek,
&c., then but a very few of the poorest sort should be saved; this
is harsh; yet the Scripture saith, "That God hides these things
from the wise and prudent," that is, from the learned of the world,
"and reveals them to babes and sucklings."
Fost. He said there were none that heard me but a company of foolish
people.
Bun. I told him that there were the wise as well as the foolish
that do hear me; and again, those that are most commonly counted
foolish by the world are the wisest before God; also, that God had
rejected the wise, and mighty, and noble, and chosen the foolish
and the base.
Bun. I told him that it was the duty of people, both rich and poor,
to look out for their souls on those days as well as for their
bodies; and that God would have his people "exhort one another
daily, while it is called to-day."
Fost. He said again that there was none but a company of poor,
simple, ignorant people that came to hear me.
Bun. I told him that the foolish and ignorant had most need of
teaching and information; and, therefore, it would be profitable
for me to go on in that work.
Fost. Well, said he, to conclude, but will you promise that you
will not call the people together any more? and then you may be
released and go home.
Bun. I told him that I durst say no more than I had said; for I
durst not leave off that work which God had called me to.
Bun. I told them there were more ways than one in which a man
might be said to call the people together. As, for instance, if a
man get upon the market place, and there read a book, or the like,
though he do not say to the people, Sirs, come hither and hear;
yet if they come to him because he reads, he, by his very reading,
may be said to call them together; because they would not have been
there to hear if he had not been there to read. And seeing this
might be termed a calling the people together, I durst not say I
would not call them together; for then, by the same argument, my
preaching might be said to call them together.
Wing. and Fost. Then came the justice and Mr. Foster to me again;
we had a little more discourse about preaching, but because the
method of it is out of my mind, I pass it; and when they saw that
I was at a point, and would not be moved nor persuaded,
Mr. Foster, the man that did at the first express so much love to
me, told the justice that then he must send me away to prison. And
that he would do well, also, if he would present all those that
were the cause of my coming among them to meetings. Thus we parted.
And, verily, as I was going forth of the doors, I had much ado to
forbear saying to them that I carried the peace of God along with
me; but I held my peace, and, blessed be the Lord, went away to
prison, with God's comfort in my poor soul.
After I had lain in the jail five or six days, the brethren sought
means, again, to get me out by bondsmen; for so ran my mittimus,
that I should lie there till I could find sureties. They went to
a justice at Elstow, one Mr. Crumpton, to desire him to take bond
for my appearing at the quarter-sessions. At the first he told
them he would; but afterwards he made a demur at the business, and
desired first to see my mittimus, which run to this purpose: That
I went about to several conventicles in this county, to the great
disparagement of the government of the church of England, &c. When
he had seen it, he said that there might be something more against
me than was expressed in my mittimus; and that he was but a young
man, and, therefore, he durst not do it. This my jailer told me;
whereat I was not at all daunted, but rather glad, and saw evidently
that the Lord had heard me; for before I went down to the justice,
I begged of God that if I might do more good by being at liberty
than in prison, that then I might be set at liberty; but if not,
his will be done; for I was not altogether without hopes but that
my imprisonment might be an awakening to the saints in the country,
therefore I could not tell well which to choose; only I, in that
manner, did commit the thing to God. And verily, at my return, I
did meet my God sweetly in the prison again, comforting of me and
satisfying of me that it was his will and mind that I should be
there.[5]
The Clerk. When this was read, the clerk of the sessions said unto
me, What say you to this?
Keelin. But, saith Justice Keelin, who was the judge in that court?
Do you come to church, you know what I mean; to the parish church,
to hear Divine service?
Bun. I said, With the Spirit. As the apostle saith, "I will pray
with the Spirit, and--with the understanding" (1 Cor 14:15).
Keel. He said, We might pray with the Spirit, and with the
understanding, and with the Common Prayer Book also.
Bun. I said that the prayers in the Common Prayer Book were such as
were made by other men, and not by the motions of the Holy Ghost,
within our hearts; and as I said, the apostle saith, he will pray
with the Spirit, and with the understanding; not with the Spirit
and the Common Prayer Book.
Another Justice. What do you count prayer? Do you think it is to
say a few words over before or among a people?
Bun. I said, No, not so; for men might have many elegant, or
excellent words, and yet not pray at all; but when a man prayeth,
he doth, through a sense of those things which he wants, which sense
is begotten by the Spirit, pour out his heart before God through
Christ; though his words be not so many and so excellent as others
are.
Bun. I said, This might be done without the Common Prayer Book.
Bun. I said, It is not our use, to take a pen and paper, and write
a few words thereon, and then go and read it over to a company of
people.
While he was speaking these words, God brought that word into my
mind, in the eighth of the Romans, at the 26th verse. I say, God
brought it, for I thought not on it before: but as he was speaking,
it came so fresh into my mind, and was set so evidently before me,
as if the scripture had said, Take me, take me; so when he had done
speaking,
Bun. I said, Sir, the Scripture saith, that it is the Spirit that
helpeth our infirmities; for we know not what we should pray for as
we ought: but the Spirit itself maketh intercession for us, with
[sighs and] groanings which cannot be uttered. Mark, said I, it
doth not say the Common Prayer Book teacheth us how to pray, but
the Spirit. And it is "the Spirit that helpeth our infirmities,"
saith the apostle; he doth not say it is the Common Prayer Book.
Bun. And I say further, as to your saying that one man may convince
another of sin, and that faith comes by hearing, and that one man
may tell another how he should pray, &c., I say men may tell each
other of their sins, but it is the Spirit that must convince them.
And that though one man may tell another how he should pray; yet,
as I said before, he cannot pray, nor make his condition known to
God, except the Spirit help. It is not the Common Prayer Book that
can do this. It is the Spirit that showeth us our sins, and the
Spirit that showeth us a Saviour (John 16:16); and the Spirit that
stirreth up in our hearts desires to come to God, for such things
as we stand in need of (Matt 11:27), even sighing out our souls
unto him for them with "groans which cannot be uttered." With other
words to the same purpose. At this they were set.
Keel. But, says Justice Keelin, what have you against the Common
Prayer Book?
Bun. I said, Sir, if you will hear me, I shall lay down my reasons
against it.
Keel. He said, I should have liberty; but first, said he, let me
give you one caution; take heed of speaking irreverently of the
Common Prayer Book; for if you do so, you will bring great damage
upon yourself.
Another. One of them said, He will do harm; let him speak no further.
Keel. Justice Keelin said, No, no, never fear him, we are better
established than so; he can do no harm; we know the Common Prayer
Book hath been ever since the apostles' time, and is lawful for it
to be used in the church.
Bun. I said, Show me the place in the epistles where the Common
Prayer Book is written, or one text of Scripture that commands me
to read it, and I will use it. But yet, notwithstanding, said I,
they that have a mind to use it, they have their liberty;[7] that
is, I would not keep them from it; but for our parts, we can pray
to God without it. Blessed be his name.
With that, one of them said, Who is your God? Beelzebub? Moreover,
they often said that I was possessed with the spirit of delusion,
and of the devil. All which sayings I passed over; the Lord
forgive them! And further, I said, blessed be the Lord for it, we
are encouraged to meet together, and to pray, and exhort one another;
for we have had the comfortable presence of God among us. For ever
blessed be his holy name!
Keel. Justice Keelin said, that I ought not to preach; and asked
me where I had my authority? with other such like words.
Bun. I said, that I would prove that it was lawful for me, and such
as I am, to preach the Word of God.
Bun. I said, this: "As every man hath received the gift, even so
minister the same one to another, as good stewards of the manifold
grace of God. If any man speak, let him speak as the oracles of
God," &c.
Keel. He said, Let me a little open that scripture to you: 'As every
man hath received the gift'; that is, said he, as every one hath
received a trade, so let him follow it. If any man have received a
gift of tinkering, as thou hast done, let him follow his tinkering.
And so other men their trades; and the divine his calling, &c.
Bun. Nay, Sir, said I, but it is most clear, that the apostle speaks
here of preaching the Word; if you do but compare both the verses
together, the next verse explains this gift what it is, saying, 'If
any man speak let him speak as the oracles of God.' So that it is
plain, that the Holy Ghost doth not so much in this place exhort
to civil callings, as to the exercising of those gifts that we have
received from God. I would have gone on, but he would not give me
leave.
Keel. Then, said he, hear your judgment. You must be had back again
to prison, and there lie for three months following; and at three
months' end, if you do not submit to go to church to hear Divine
service, and leave your preaching, you must be banished the realm:
and if, after such a day as shall be appointed you to be gone, you
shall be found in this realm, &c., or be found to come over again
without special license from the king, &c.,[8] you must stretch by
the neck for it, I tell you plainly; and so bid my jailer have me
away.
Thus I departed from them; and I can truly say, I bless the Lord
Jesus Christ for it, that my heart was sweetly refreshed in the
time of my examination; and also afterwards, at my returning to
the prison. So that I found Christ's words more than bare trifles,
where he saith, "I will give you a mouth and wisdom, which all your
adversaries shall not be able to gainsay nor resist" (Luke 21:15).
And that his peace no man can take from us.
The Substance of some Discourse had between the Clerk of the Peace
and myself, when he came to admonish me, according to the tenor of
that Law by which I was in Prison.
When I had lain in prison other twelve weeks, and now not knowing
what they intended to do with me, upon the 3rd of April 1661,
comes Mr. Cobb unto me, as he told me, being sent by the justices
to admonish me; and demanded of me submittance to the Church of
England, &c. The extent of our discourse was as followeth:--
Cobb. When he was come into the house he sent for me out of my
chamber; who, when I was come unto him, he said, Neighbour Bunyan,
how do you do?
Bun. I thank you, Sir, said I, very well, blessed be the Lord.
Cobb. Saith he, I come to tell you that it is desired you would submit
yourself to the laws of the land, or else at the next sessions it
will go worse with you, even to be sent away out of the nation, or
else worse than that.
Bun. I said that I did desire to demean myself in the world, both
as becometh a man and a Christian.
Cobb. But, saith he, you must submit to the laws of the land, and
leave off those meetings which you was wont to have; for the statute
law is directly against it; and I am sent to you by the justices
to tell you that they do intend to prosecute the law against you
if you submit not.
Cobb. Every one will say the same, said he; you see the late
insurrection at London, under what glorious pretences they went;
and yet, indeed, they intended no less than the ruin of the kingdom
and commonwealth.[9]
Bun. That practice of theirs I abhor, said I; yet it doth not follow
that, because they did so, therefore all others will do so. I look
upon it as my duty to behave myself under the King's government,
both as becomes a man and a Christian, and if an occasion were
offered me, I should willingly manifest my loyalty to my Prince,
both by word and deed.
Cobb. Well, said he, I do not profess myself to be a man that can
dispute; but this I say, truly, neighbour Bunyan, I would have you
consider this matter seriously, and submit yourself; you may have
your liberty to exhort your neighbour in private discourse, so be
you do not call together an assembly of people; and, truly, you
may do much good to the church of Christ, if you would go this way;
and this you may do, and the law not abridge you of it. It is your
private meetings that the law is against.
Cobb. But, saith he, you may but pretend to do good, and indeed,
notwithstanding, do harm, by seducing the people; you are, therefore,
denied your meeting so many together, lest you should do harm.
Bun. And yet, said I, you say the law tolerates me to discourse
with my neighbour; surely there is no law tolerates me to seduce any
one; therefore, if I may, by the law, discourse with one, surely
it is to do him good; and if I, by discoursing, may do good to one,
surely, by the same law, I may do good to many.
Cobb. The law, saith he, doth expressly forbid your private meetings;
therefore they are not to be tolerated.
Cobb. Very good; therefore the king, seeing that pretences are
usually in and among people, as to make religion their pretence
only, therefore he, and the law before him, doth forbid such private
meetings, and tolerates only public; you may meet in public.
Bun. Sir, said I, let me answer you in a similitude: Set the case
that, at such a wood corner, there did usually come forth thieves,
to do mischief; must there therefore a law be made that every one
that cometh out there shall be killed? May there not come out true
men as well as thieves out from thence? Just thus it is in this
case; I do think there may be many that may design the destruction
of the commonwealth; but it does not follow therefore that all
private meetings are unlawful; those that transgress, let them
be punished. And if at any time I myself should do any act in my
conversation as doth not become a man and Christian, let me bear
the punishment. And as for your saying I may meet in public, if
I may be suffered, I would gladly do it. Let me have but meeting
enough in public, and I shall care the less to have them in private.
I do not meet in private because I am afraid to have meetings in
public. I bless the Lord that my heart is at that point, that if any
man can lay anything to my charge, either in doctrine or practice,
in this particular, that can be proved error or heresy, I am willing
to disown it, even in the very market place; but if it be truth,
then to stand to it to the last drop of my blood. And, Sir, said I,
you ought to commend me for so doing. To err and to be a heretic are
two things; I am no heretic, because I will not stand refractorily
to defend any one thing that is contrary to the Word. Prove anything
which I hold to be an error, and I will recant it.
Cobb. But, Goodman Bunyan, said he, methinks you need not stand so
strictly upon this one thing, as to have meetings of such public
assemblies. Cannot you submit, and, notwithstanding, do as much
good as you can, in a neighbourly way, without having such meetings?
Cobb. He said, that I might come to the public assemblies and hear.
What though you do not preach? you may hear. Do not think yourself
so well enlightened, and that you have received a gift so far above
others, but that you may hear other men preach. Or to that purpose.
Cobb. But, said he, what if you should forbear awhile, and sit
still, till you see further how things will go?
Bun. Sir, said I, Wicliffe saith, that he which leaveth off preaching
and hearing of the Word of God for fear of excommunication of
men, he is already excommunicated of God, and shall in the day of
judgment be counted a traitor to Christ.[11]
Cobb. Ay, saith he, they that do not hear shall be so counted
indeed; do you, therefore, hear.
Bun. But, Sir, said I, he saith, he that shall leave off either
preaching or hearing, &c. That is, if he hath received a gift for
edification, it is his sin, if he doth not lay it out in a way of
exhortation and counsel, according to the proportion of his gift;
as well as to spend his time altogether in hearing others preach.
Cobb. But, said he, how shall we know that you have received a
gift?
Bun. Said I, Let any man hear and search, and prove the doctrine
by the Bible.
Cobb. But will you be willing, said he, that two indifferent persons
shall determine the case, and will you stand by their judgment?
Cobb. But, said he, who shall be judge between you, for you take
the Scriptures one way, and they another?
Cobb. Well, neighbour Bunyan, said he, but indeed I would wish
you seriously to consider of these things, between this and the
quarter-sessions, and to submit yourself. You may do much good if
you continue still in the land; but alas, what benefit will it be
to your friends, or what good can you do to them, if you should be
sent away beyond the seas into Spain, or Constantinople, or some
other remote part of the world? Pray be ruled.
Cobb. You know, saith he, that the Scripture saith, "the powers
that be are ordained of God."
Bun. I said, yes, and that I was to submit to the king as supreme,
also to the governors, as to them that are sent by him.
Cobb. Well then, said he, the King then commands you, that you should
not have any private meetings; because it is against his law, and
he is ordained of God, therefore you should not have any.
Bun. I told him that Paul did own the powers that were in his day,
as to be of God; and yet he was often in prison under them for all
that. And also, though Jesus Christ told Pilate, that he had no
power against him, but of God, yet he died under the same Pilate;
and yet, said I, I hope you will not say that either Paul, or
Christ, were such as did deny magistracy, and so sinned against
God in slighting the ordinance. Sir, said I, the law hath provided
two ways of obeying: The one to do that which I, in my conscience,
do believe that I am bound to do, actively; and where I cannot obey
actively, there I am willing to lie down, and to suffer what they
shall do unto me. At this he sat still, and said no more; which,
when he had done, I did thank him for his civil and meek discoursing
with me; and so we parted.
O that we might meet in heaven!
Farewell. J.B.
Now, at that assizes, because I would not leave any possible means
unattempted that might be lawful, I did, by my wife, present a
petition to the judges three times, that I might be heard, and that
they would impartially take my case into consideration.
The first time my wife went, she presented it to Judge Hale, who
very mildly received it at her hand, telling her that he would
do her and me the best good he could; but he feared, he said, he
could do none. The next day, again, lest they should, through the
multitude of business, forget me, we did throw another petition
into the coach to Judge Twisdon; who, when he had seen it, snapt
her up, and angrily told her that I was a convicted person, and
could not be released, unless I would promise to preach no more,
&c.
Well, after this, she yet again presented another to Judge Hale,
as he sat on the bench, who, as it seemed, was willing to give her
audience. Only Justice Chester being present, stept up and said,
that I was convicted in the court and that I was a hot-spirited
fellow, or words to that purpose, whereat he waived it, and did
not meddle therewith. But yet, my wife being encouraged by the high
sheriff, did venture once more into their presence, as the poor
widow did to the unjust judge, to try what she could do with them
for my liberty, before they went forth of the town. The place where
she went to them was to the Swan Chamber, where the two judges, and
many justices and gentry of the country, were in company together.
She then, coming into the chamber with abashed face, and a trembling
heart, began her errand to them in this manner:--
One of the Justices. Then one of the justices that stood by, whom
she knew not, said, My Lord, he was lawfully convicted.
Wom. It is false, said she; for when they said to him, Do you confess
the indictment? he said only this, that he had been at several
meetings, both where there was preaching the Word, and prayer, and
that they had God's presence among them.
Chest. Only Justice Chester was often up with this, 'He is convicted,'
and 'It is recorded.'
Twis. See here, what should we talk any more about such a fellow?
Must he do what he lists? He is a breaker of the peace.
Wom. She told him again, that he desired to live peaceably, and
to follow his calling, that his family might be maintained; and,
moreover, said, My Lord, I have four small children that cannot
help themselves, of which one is blind, and have nothing to live
upon, but the charity of good people.
Hale. Hast thou four children? said Judge Hale; thou art but a
young woman to have four children.
Twis. But Judge Twisdon told her, that she made poverty her cloak;
and said, moreover, that he understood I was maintained better by
running up and down a preaching, than by following my calling.
Answer. Then some of the company that stood by said, 'A tinker, my
Lord.'
Wom. Yes, said she, and because he is a tinker, and a poor man,
therefore he is despised, and cannot have justice.
Hale. Then Judge Hale answered, very mildly, saying, 'I tell thee,
woman, seeing it is so, that they have taken what thy husband spake
for a conviction; thou must either apply thyself to the King, or
sue out his pardon, or get a writ of error.'
Chest. But when Justice Chester heard him give her this counsel; and
especially, as she supposed, because he spoke of a writ of error,
he chafed,[17] and seemed to be very much offended; saying, 'My
Lord, he will preach and do what he lists.'
Twis. He preach the Word of God! said Twisdon; and withal she thought
he would have struck her; he runneth up and down, and doth harm.
Wom. No, my Lord, said she, it is not so; God hath owned him, and
done much good by him.
Twis. God! said he; his doctrine is the doctrine of the devil.
Wom. My Lord, said she, when the righteous Judge shall appear, it
will be known that his doctrine is not the doctrine of the devil.
Twis. My Lord, said he, to Judge Hale, do not mind her, but send
her away.
Hale. Then said Judge Hale, 'I am sorry, woman, that I can do thee
no good; thou must do one of those three things aforesaid; namely,
either to apply thyself to the King, or sue out his pardon, or get
a writ of error; but a writ of error will be cheapest.'
So, when I departed from them, the Book of Statute was brought,
but what they said of it I know nothing at all, neither did I hear
any more from them.
I shall pass by what befell between these two assizes, how I had,
by my jailer, some liberty granted me, more than at the first, and
how I followed my wonted course of preaching, taking all occasions
that were put into my hand to visit the people of God; exhorting
them to be steadfast in the faith of Jesus Christ, and to take heed
that they touched not the Common Prayer, &c., but to mind the Word
of God, which giveth direction to Christians in every point, being
able to make the man of God perfect in all things through faith in
Jesus Christ, and thoroughly to furnish him unto all good works (2
Tim 3:17).[19] Also, how I, having, I say, somewhat more liberty,
did go to see Christians at London; which my enemies hearing of,
were so angry, that they had almost cast my jailer out of his place,
threatening to indict him, and to do what they could against him.
They charged me also, that I went thither to plot and raise division,
and make insurrection, which, God knows, was a slander; whereupon
my liberty was more straitened than it was before: so that I must
not look out of the door. Well, when the next sessions came, which
was about the 10th of the eleventh month, I did expect to have
been very roundly dealt withal; but they passed me by, and would
not call me, so that I rested till the assizes, which was the 19th
of the first month following; and when they came, because I had a
desire to come before the judge, I desired my jailer to put my name
into the calendar among the felons, and made friends of the judge
and high sheriff, who promised that I should be called; so that I
thought what I had done might have been effectual for the obtaining of
my desire; but all was in vain: for when the assizes came, though
my name was in the calendar, and also though both the judge and
sheriff had promised that I should appear before them, yet the
justices and the clerk of the peace did so work it about, that I,
notwithstanding, was deferred, and might not appear; and although,
I say, I do not know of all their carriages towards me, yet this
I know, that the clerk of the peace did discover himself to be one
of my greatest opposers: for, first, he came to my jailer, and told
him that I must not go down before the judge, and therefore must
not be put into the calendar; to whom my jailer said, that my name
was in already. He bid him put me out again; my jailer told him that
he could not, for he had given the judge a calendar with my name
in it, and also the sheriff another. At which he was very much
displeased, and desired to see that calendar that was yet in my
jailer's hand; who, when he had given it him, he looked on it, and
said it was a false calendar; he also took the calendar and blotted
out my accusation, as my jailer had writ it. Which accusation I
cannot tell what it was, because it was so blotted out; and he himself
put in words to this purpose: 'That John Bunyan was committed to
prison, being lawfully convicted for upholding of unlawful meetings
and conventicles,' &c. But yet, for all this, fearing that what he
had done, unless he added thereto, it would not do; he first run
to the clerk of the assizes, then to the justices, and afterwards,
because he would not leave any means unattempted to hinder me,
he comes again to my jailer, and tells him, that if I did go down
before the judge, and was released, he would make him pay my fees,
which, he said, was due to him; and further told him, that he would
complain of him at the next quarter sessions for making of false
calendars; though my jailer himself, as I afterwards learned, had
put in my accusation worse than in itself it was by far. And thus
was I hindered and prevented, at that time also, from appearing
before the judge, and left in prison. Farewell.
John Bunyan.
***
Reader, the painful and industrious author of this book has already
given you a faithful and very moving relation of the beginning and
middle of the days of his pilgrimage on earth; and since there yet
remains somewhat worthy of notice and regard, which occurred in the
last scene of his life; the which, for want of time, or fear that
some over-censorious people should impute it to him, as an earnest
coveting of praise from men, he has not left behind him in writing.
Wherefore, as a true friend and long acquaintance of Mr. Bunyan's,
that his good end may be known as well as his evil beginning, I
have taken upon me, from my knowledge, and the best account given
by other of his friends, to piece this to the thread, too soon
broke off, and so lengthen it out to his entering upon eternity.
He has told you at large of his birth and education; the evil
habits and corruptions of his youth; the temptations he struggled
and conflicted so frequently with; the mercies, comforts, and
deliverances he found; how he came to take upon him the preaching
of the gospel; the slanders, reproaches, and imprisonments that
attended him; and the progress he notwithstanding made, by the
assistance of God's grace, no doubt to the saving of many souls.
Therefore take these things as he himself has methodically laid them
down in the words of verity; and so I pass on as to what remains.
After his being freed from his twelve years' imprisonment and upwards,
for nonconformity, wherein he had time to furnish the world with
sundry good books, &c.; and, by his patience, to move Dr. Barlow,
the then Bishop of Lincoln,[20] and other churchmen, to pity his
hard and unreasonable sufferings, so far as to stand very much
his friends in procuring his enlargement, or there perhaps he had
died by the noisesomeness and ill usage of the place; being now,
I say, again at liberty, and having, through mercy, shaken off his
bodily fetters, for those upon his soul were broken before, by the
abounding grace that filled his heart, he went to visit those that
had been a comfort to him in his tribulation, with a Christian-like
acknowledgment of their kindness and enlargement of charity; giving
encouragement by his example if it happened to be their hard haps
to fall into affliction or trouble, then to suffer patiently for
the sake of a good conscience, and for the love of God in Jesus
Christ towards their souls; and, by many cordial persuasions,
supported some whose spirits began to sink low through the fear
of danger that threatened their worldly concernment, so that the
people found a wonderful consolation in his discourse and admonitions.
He took great care to visit the sick, and strengthen them against
the suggestions of the tempter, which at such times are very
prevalent; so that they had cause for ever to bless God, who had
put into his heart, at such a time, to rescue them from the power
of the roaring lion, who sought to devour them; nor did he spare any
pains or labour in travel, though to the remote counties, where he
knew, or imagined, any people might stand in need of his assistance,
insomuch that some of these visitations that he made, which was
two or three every year, some, though in jeering manner, no doubt,
gave him the epithet of Bishop Bunyan, whilst others envied him
for his so earnestly labouring in Christ's vineyard, yet the seed of
the Word he, all this while, sowed in the hearts of his congregation,
watered with the grace of God, brought forth in abundance, in
bringing in disciples to the church of Christ.
During these things, there were regulators sent into all cities
and towns corporate, to new-model the government in the magistracy,
&c., by turning out some, and putting in others. Against this,
Mr. Bunyan expressed his zeal with some weariness, as foreseeing
the bad consequence that would attend it, and laboured with his
congregation to prevent their being imposed on in this kind; and
when a great man in those days, coming to Bedford upon some such
errand, sent for him, as it is supposed, to give him a place of
public trust, he would by no means come at him, but sent his excuse.
Thus he spent his latter years, in imitation of his great Lord and
Master, the ever-blessed Jesus; he went about doing good, so that
the most prying critic, or even malice herself, is defied to find,
even upon the narrowest search or observation, any sully or stain
upon his reputation with which he may be justly charged; and this
we note as a challenge to those that have had the least regard for
him, or them of his persuasion, and have, one way or other, appeared
in the front of those that oppressed him, and for the turning whose
hearts, in obedience to the commission and commandment given him
of God, he frequently prayed, and sometimes sought a blessing for
them, even with tears, the effects of which they may, peradventure,
though undeservedly, have found in their persons, friends, relations,
or estates; for God will hear the prayers of the faithful, and
answer them, even for those that vex them, as it happened in the
case of Job's praying for the three persons that had been grievous
in their reproach against him, even in the day of his sorrow.
But Mr. Bunyan, after he had disposed all things to the best
for accommodation, returning to London, and being overtaken with
excessive rains, coming to his lodging extreme wet, fell sick of
a violent fever, which he bore with much constancy and patience;
and expressed himself as if he desired nothing more than to
be dissolved, and to be with Christ, in that case esteeming death
as gain, and life only a tedious delaying of felicity expected;
and finding his vital strength decay, having settled his mind and
affairs, as well as the shortness of his time and the violence of
his disease would admit, with a constant and Christian patience,
he resigned his soul into the hands of his most merciful Redeemer,
following his pilgrim from the City of Destruction to the New
Jerusalem; his better part having been all along there, in holy
contemplation, pantings, and breathings after the hidden manna, and
water of life; as by many holy and humble consolations expressed
in his letters to several persons, in prison and out of prison,
too many to be here inserted at present.[22] He died at the house
of one Mr. Straddocks, a grocer, at the Star on Snowhill, in the
parish of St. Sepulchre, London, on the 12th of August 1688, and
in the sixtieth year of his age, after ten days' sickness; and was
buried in the new burying place near the Artillery Ground; where he
sleeps to the morning of the resurrection, in hopes of a glorious
rising to an incorruptible immortality of joy and happiness; where
no more trouble and sorrow shall afflict him, but all tears be
wiped away; when the just shall be incorrupted, as members of Christ
their head, and reign with him as kings and priests for ever.[23]
POSTSCRIPT.
In this his pilgrimage, God blessed him with four children, one
of which, names Mary, was blind, and died some years before; his
other children are Thomas, Joseph, and Sarah; and his wife Elizabeth,
having lived to see him overcome his labour and sorrow, and pass
from this life to receive the reward of his works, long survived
him not, but in 1692 she died; to follow her faithful pilgrim from
this world to the other, whither he was gone before her; while his
works, which consist of sixty books, remain for the edifying of
the reader, and the praise of the author. Vale.
***
OF SIN.
Sin is the great block and bar to our happiness, the procurer of
all miseries to man, both here and hereafter: take away sin and
nothing can hurt us: for death, temporal, spiritual, and eternal,
is the wages of it.
Sin, and man for sin, is the object of the wrath of God. How dreadful,
therefore, must his case be who continues in sin! For who can bear
or grapple with the wrath of God?
Sin turns all God's grace into wantonness; it is the dare of his
justice, the rape of his mercy, the jeer of his patience, the slight
of his power, and the contempt of his love.[24]
Take heed of giving thyself liberty of committing one sin, for that
will lead thee to another; till, by an ill custom, it become natural.
OF AFFLICTION.
If thou canst hear and bear the rod of affliction which God shall
lay upon thee, remember this lesson--thou art beaten that thou
mayest be better.
The Lord useth his flail of tribulation to separate the chaff from
the wheat.
Say not with thyself, To-morrow I will repent; for it is thy duty
to do it daily.
The gospel of grace and salvation is above all doctrines the most
dangerous, if it be received in word only by graceless men; if it
be not attended with a sensible need of a Saviour, and bring them
to him. For such men as have only the notion of it, are of all men
most miserable; for by reason of their knowing more than heathens,
this shall only be their final portion, that they shall have greater
stripes.
OF PRAYER.
Before you enter into prayer, ask thy soul these questions--1. To
what end, O my soul, art thou retired into this place? Art thou not
come to discourse the Lord in prayer? Is he present; will he hear
thee? Is he merciful; will he help thee? Is thy business slight;
is it not concerning the welfare of thy soul? What words wilt thou
use to move him to compassion?
To make thy preparation complete, consider that thou art but dust
and ashes, and he the great God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ,
that clothes himself with light as with a garment; that thou art
a vile sinner, he a holy God; that thou art but a poor crawling
worm, he the omnipotent Creator.
In all your prayers forget not to thank the Lord for his mercies.
When thou prayest, rather let thy hearts be without words, than
thy words without a heart.
Prayer will make a man cease from sin, or sin will entice a man to
cease from prayer.
The spirit of prayer is more precious than treasures of gold and
silver.
Have a special care to sanctify the Lord's day; for as thou keepest
it, so it will be with thee all the week long.
Make the Lord's day the market for thy soul; let the whole day be
spent in prayer, repetitions, or meditations; lay aside the affairs
of the other part of the week; let thy sermon thou hast heard be
converted into prayer: Shall God allow thee six days, and wilt not
thou afford him one?
In the church, be careful to serve God; for thou art in his eyes,
and not in man's.
Thou mayest hear sermons often, and do well in practicing what thou
hearest; but thou must not expect to be told thee in a pulpit all
that thou oughtest to do, but be studious in searching the Scriptures,
and reading good books; what thou hearest may be forgotten, but
what thou readest may better be retained.
Forsake not the public worship of God, lest God forsake thee, not
only in public, but in private.
Nothing more hinders a soul from coming to Christ, than a vain love
of the world; and till a soul is freed from it, it can never have
a true love for God.
What are the honours and riches of this world, when compared to
the glories of a crown of life?
Love not the world; for it [the love of the world] is a moth in a
Christian's life.
To despise the world is the way to enjoy heaven; and blessed are
they who delight to converse with God by prayer.
What folly can be greater than to labour for the meat that perisheth,
and neglect the food of eternal life?
OF SUFFERING.
The devil, nor men of the world, can kill thy righteousness, or
love to it but by thy own hand; or separate that and thee asunder
without thy own act. Nor will he that doth indeed suffer for the
sake of it, or out of love he bears thereto, be tempted to exchange
it, for the good will of all the world.
I have often thought that the best of Christians are found in the
worst of times. And I have thought again that one reason why we are
no better, is because God purges us no more. Noah and Lot, who so
holy as they in the time of their afflictions? And yet who so idle
as they in the time of their prosperity?
As the devil labours by all means to keep out other things that
are good, so to keep out of the heart as much as in him lies,
the thoughts of passing from this life into another world; for he
knows if he can but keep them from the serious thoughts of death,
he shall the more easily keep them in their sins.
Nothing will make us more earnest in working out the work of our
salvation, than a frequent meditation of mortality; nothing hath
greater influence for the taking off our hearts from vanities, and
for the begetting in us desires after holiness.
O sinner, what a condition wilt thou fall into when thou departest
this world; if thou depart unconverted, thou hadst better have
been smothered the first hour thou wast born; thou hadst better
have been plucked one limb from another; thou hadst better have
been made a dog, a toad, a serpent, than to die unconverted, and
this thou wilt find true if thou repent not.
There is no good in this life but what is mingled with some evil;
honours perplex, riches disquiet, and pleasures ruin health. But
in heaven we shall find blessings in their purity, without any
ingredient to embitter, with everything to sweeten them.
How will the heavens echo of joy, when the Bride, the Lamb's wife,
shall come to dwell with her husband for ever?
O! what acclamations of joy will there be, when all the children
of God shall meet together, without fear of being disturbed by the
antichristian and Cainish brood!
Is there not a time coming when the godly may ask the wicked what
profit they have in their pleasure? what comfort in their greatness?
and what fruits in all their labour?
Heaven and salvation is not surely more promised to the godly than
hell and damnation is threatened to, and shall be executed on, the
wicked.
Oh! who knows the power of God's wrath? none but damned ones.
FOOTNOTES:
1. The text from which he intended to preach was 'Dost thou believe
on the Son of God?' (John 9:35). From this he intended to show
the absolute need of faith in Jesus Christ; and that it was also
a thing of the highest concern for men to inquire into, and to ask
their own hearts, whether they had it or no. See Preface to his
Confession of Faith.--Ed.
2. Justice Wingate.
4. A right Judas.--Ed.
5. 'How little could Bunyan dream, that from the narrow cell in which
he was incarcerated, and cut off apparently from all usefulness,
a glory would shine out, illustrating the government and grace
of God, and doing more good to man, than all the prelates of the
kingdom put together had accomplished.'--Dr. Cheever.
8. The statute under which Bunyan suffered is the 35th Eliz., cap.
1, re-enacted with all its rigour in the 16th Charles II, cap. 4,
1662; 'That if any person, above sixteen years of age, shall forbear
coming to church for one month, or persuade any other person to
abstain from hearing Divine service, or receiving the communion
according to law, or come to any unlawful assembly, conventicle,
or meeting--every such person shall be imprisoned, without bail,
until he conform, and do in some church make this open submission
following:--I do humbly confess and acknowledge that I have grievously
offended God in contemning his Majesty's godly and lawful government
and authority, by absenting myself from church, and from hearing
Divine service, contrary to the godly laws and statutes of this realm.
And in using and frequenting disordered and unlawful conventicles
and assemblies, under pretence and colour of exercise of religion;
and I am heartily sorry for the same. And I do promise and protest,
that from henceforth I will, from time to time, obey and perform
his Majesty's laws and statutes, in repairing to the church and
Divine services, and do my uttermost endeavour to maintain and defend
the same. And for the third offence he shall be sent to the jail
or house of correction, there to remain until the next sessions or
assizes, and then to be indicted; and being thereupon found guilty,
the court shall enter judgment of transportation against such
offenders, to some of the foreign plantations (Virginia and New
England only excepted), there to remain seven years; and warrants
shall issue to sequester the profits of their lands, and to distrain
and sell their goods to defray the charges of their transportation;
and for want of such charges being paid, the sheriff may contract
with any master of a ship, or merchant, to transport them; and then
such prisoner shall be a servant to the transporter or his assigns;
that is, whoever he will sell him or her to, for five years. And
if any under such judgment of transportation shall escape, or being
transported, return into any part of England, shall SUFFER DEATH
as felons, without benefit of clergy.' Notwithstanding this edict,
mark well his words on the next leaf, 'Exhorting the people of God
to take heed, and touch not the Common Prayer.' Englishmen, blush!
This is now the law of the land we live in. Roman Catholics alone
are legally exempted from its cruel operations, by an Act passed
in 1844. The overruling hand of God alone saved the pious and holy
Bunyan from having been legally murdered.--Ed.
10. The third section of 16th Charles II, cap. 4, also enacts,
'That any person above sixteen years old, present at any meeting
under pretence of exercise of religion, in other manner than is
allowed by the liturgy or practice of the Church of England, where
there shall be present five persons or more above those of the
household, upon proof thereof made, either by confession of the
party, or oath of witness, or notorious evidence of the fact; the
offence shall be recorded under the hands of two justices, or the
chief magistrate of the place, which shall be a perfect conviction.'--Ed.
11. As Wicliffe wrote in Latin, and his words were of great rarity,
it may excite inquiry how poor Bunyan was conversant with is opinions.
This is easily solved. Foxe gives a translation of Wicliffe's
doctrines in his Martyrology, the favourite book of Bunyan.--Ed.
14. It is very probable that his persecutors knew the heroic spirit
of this young woman, and were afraid to proceed to extremities,
lest their blood-guiltiness should be known throughout the kingdom,
and public execration be excited against them. Such a martyr's
blood would indelibly and most foully have stained both them and
their families to the latest generation.--Ed.
16. Bunyan is silent upon the death of his first wife and marriage
to the second; in fact he forgets his own domestic affairs in his
desire to record the Lord's gracious dealings with his soul. It is
not his autobiography, but his religious feelings and experience,
that he records.--Ed.
19. Nothing daunted by the cruel Statute which was then in force,
Bunyan acted exactly as Peter and John did under similar circumstances,
"We cannot but speak the things which we have seen and heard" (Acts
4:20). If I suffer death for it, I am bound to speak the warning
words of truth, "Touch not the unclean thing."--Ed.
22. All these letters, and nearly all his autographs, have disappeared.
Of his numerous manuscripts, books, and letters, not a line is now
known to exist. If discovered, they would be invaluable.--Ed.
***
These verses, like those called "A Caution to watch against Sin,"
were first printed on a half sheet, and passed through several
editions. The Editor possesses a copy published by the author, a
short time before his decease; it is in an exceedingly rare little
volume, including his poems of "One thing needful" and his "Ebal
and Gerizzim"; with "a catlogue of all his other books." London:
printed for Nath, Ponder, at the Peacock in the Poultry, 1688. On
the reverse of the title is a singular advertisement; "This author
having published many books, which have gone off very well, there
are certain ballad sellers about Newgate, and on London Bridge,
who have put the two first letters of this author's name, and his
effigies, to their rhymes and ridiculous books, suggesting to the
world as if they were his. Now know that this author publisheth his
name at large to all his books, and what you shall see otherwise
he disowns."
Bunyan was imprisoned for teaching the gospel in its purity to the
poor, and for refusing conformity to national creeds and ceremonies.
This was as absurd as it would be, to imprison such of the inhabitants
of a country who refused to swear that all mankind were of one
standard in height; sending those who had consciences to prison,
until they pretended that they had grown taller or shorter, and
were willing to take the oath. Mental decision must be formed on
evidence. God can enlighten the mind to see that he alone can guide
us to spiritual worship--that his will must be personally consulted,
and unreservedly obeyed. Such a man feels that his soul's salvation
depends upon obedience to God, and not to man. If human laws send
him to jail for refusing to disobey God, he will write upon the
prison wall as William Prynne did upon that in the Tower, "The Lord
heareth the poor, and despiseth not HIS prisoners."
GEO. OFFOR.
PRISON MEDIATIONS
***
OR,
BEING A HELP FOR DESPAIRING SOULS, SHOWING THAT JESUS CHRIST WOULD
HAVE MERCY IN THE FIRST PLACE OFFERED TO THE BIGGEST SINNERS.
To those whose souls are invaded by despair, or who fear that they
have committed the sin against the Holy Ghost--to all who pant to
have their faith strengthened, and hopes brightened, this little
work is most earnestly and affectionately commended.
GEORGE OFFOR.
TO THE READER.
COURTEOUS READER,
ONE reason which moved me to write and print this little book was,
because, though there are many excellent heart-affecting discourses
in the world that tend to convert the sinner, yet I had a desire
to try this simple method of mine; wherefore I make bold thus to
invite and encourage the worst to come to Christ for life.
I have been vile myself, but have obtained mercy; and I would have
my companions in sin partake of mercy too: and, therefore, I have
writ this little book.
The nation doth swarm with vile ones now, as ever it did since it
was a nation. My little book, in some places, can scarce go from
house to house, but it will find a suitable subject to spend itself
upon. Now, since Christ Jesus is willing to save the vilest, why
should they not, by name, be somewhat acquainted with it, and bid
come to him under that name?
Wherefore, prithee, profane man, give this little book the reading.
Come; pardon, and a part in heaven and glory, cannot be hurtful to
thee. Let not thy lusts and folly drive thee beyond the door of
mercy, since it is not locked nor bolted up against thee. Manasseh
was a bad man, and Magdalene a bad woman, to say nothing of the thief
upon the cross, or of the murderers of Christ; yet they obtained
mercy; Christ willingly received them.
And dost thou think that those, once so bad, now they are in
heaven, repent them there because they left their sins for Christ
when they were in the world? I cannot believe, but that thou
thinkest they have verily got the best on't. Why, sinner, do thou
likewise. Christ, at heaven gates, says to thee, Come hither; and
the devil, at the gates of hell, does call thee to come to him.
Sinner, what sayest thou? Whither wilt thou go? Don't go into the
fire; there thou wilt be burned! Don't let Jesus lose his longing,
since it is for thy salvation, but come to him and live.
One word more, and so I have done. Sinner, here thou dost hear of
love; prithee, do not provoke it, by turning it into wantonness.
He that dies for slighting love, sinks deepest into hell, and will
there be tormented by the remembrance of that evil, more than by
the deepest cogitation of all his other sins. Take heed, therefore;
do not make love thy tormentor, sinner. Farewell.
OR,
THE whole verse runs thus: 'And that repentance and remission of
sins should be preached in his name among all nations, 'beginning
at Jerusalem.' The words were spoken by Christ, after he rose from
the dead, and they are here rehearsed after an historical manner,
but do contain in them a formal commission, with a special clause
therein. The commission is, as you see, for the preaching of
the gospel, and is very distinctly inserted in the holy record by
Matthew and Mark. 'Go-teach all nations,' &c. (Matt 28:19) 'Go ye
into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature' (Mark
16:15). Only this clause is in special mentioned by Luke, who saith,
that as Christ would have the doctrine of repentance and remission
of sins preached in his name among all nations, so he would have
the people of Jerusalem to have the first proffer thereof. Preach
it, saith Christ, in all nations, but begin at Jerusalem.
First, As to her descent, she was from Abraham, [by] the sons of
Jacob, a people that God singled out from the rest of the nations,
to set his love upon them.
Jerusalem, as I told you, was the place and seat of God's worship,
but now decayed, degenerated, and apostatized.2 The Word, the rule
of worship, was rejected of them, and in its place they had put
and set up their own traditions: they had rejected, also, the most
weighty ordinances, and put in the room thereof their own little
things (Matt 15; Mark 7). Jerusalem was therefore now greatly
backslidden, and become the place where the truth and true religion
were much defaced.
It was also now become the very sink of sin and seat of hypocrisy,
and gulf where true religion was drowned. Here also now reigned
presumption, and groundless confidence in God, which is the bane
of souls. Amongst its rulers, doctors, and leaders, envy, malice,
and blasphemy vented itself against the power of godliness, in all
places where it was espied; as also against the promoters of it;
yea, their Lord and Maker could not escape them.
In a word, Jerusalem was now become the shambles, the very slaughter-shop
for saints. This was the place wherein the prophets, Christ,
and his people, were most horribly persecuted and murdered. Yea,
so hardened at this time was this Jerusalem in her sins, that she
feared not to commit the biggest, and to bind herself, by wish,
under the guilt and damning evil of it; saying, when she had murdered
the Son of God, 'His blood be on us, and on our children.' And
though Jesus Christ did, both by doctrine, miracles, and holiness
of life, seek to put a stop to their villanies, yet they shut
their eyes, stopped their ears, and rested not, till, as was hinted
before, they had driven him out of the world. Yea, that they might,
if possible, have extinguished his name, and exploded his doctrine
out of the world, they, against all argument, and in despite of
heaven, its mighty hand, and undeniable proof of his resurrection,
did hire soldiers to invent a lie, saying, his disciples stole him
away from the grave; on purpose that men might not count him the
Saviour of the world, nor trust in him for the remission of sins.
They were, saith Paul, contrary to all men: for they did not only
shut up the door of life against themselves, but forbade that it
should be opened to any else. 'Forbidding us,' saith he, 'to speak
to the Gentiles, that they might be saved, to fill up their sins
alway' (1 Thess 2:14-16; Matt 23:35; 15:7-9; Mark 7:6-8; Matt 3:7-9;
John 8:33,41; Matt 27:18; Mark 3:30; Matt 23:37; Luke 13:33,34;
Matt 27:25; 20:11-16).
This is the city, and these are the people; this is their character,
and these are their sins: nor can there be produced their parallel
in all this world. Nay, what world, what people, what nation,
for sin and transgression, could or can be compared to Jerusalem?
especially if you join to the matter of fact the light they sinned
against, and the patience which they abused. Infinite was the
wickedness upon this account which they committed.
After all their abusings of wise men, and prophets, God sent unto
them John Baptist, to reduce them, and then his Son, to redeem
them; but they would be neither reduced nor redeemed, but persecuted
both to the death. Nor did they, as I said, stop here; the holy
apostles they afterwards persecuted also to death, even so many as
they could; the rest they drove from them unto the utmost corners.
SECOND, I come not to show you what it was to preach the gospel
to them. It was, saith Luke, to preach to them 'repentance and
remission of sins' in Christ's name; or, as Mark has it, to bid them
'repent and believe the gospel' (Mark 1:15). Not that repentance is
a cause of remission, but a sign of our hearty reception thereof.
Repentance is therefore here put to intimate, that no pretended
faith of the gospel is good that is not accompanied with it; and
this he doth on purpose, because he would not have them deceive
themselves: for with what faith can he expect remission of sins
in the name of Christ, that is not heartily sorry for them? Or how
shall a man be able to give to others a satisfactory account of his
unfeigned subjection to the gospel, that yet abides in his impenitency?
[DOCTRINE.]
That these Jerusalem sinners were the biggest sinners that ever were
in the world, I think none will deny, that believes that Christ was
the best man that ever was in the world, and also was their Lord
God. And that they were to have the first offer of his grace, the
text is as clear as the sun; for it saith, 'Beginning at Jerusalem.'
'Preach,' saith he, 'repentance and remission of sins' to the
Jerusalem sinners: to the Jerusalem sinners in the first place.
One would a-thought, since the Jerusalem sinners were the worst
and greatest sinners, Christ's greatest enemies, and those that
not only despised his person, doctrine, and miracles, but that, a
little before, had had their hands up to the elbows in his heart's
blood, that he should rather have said, Go into all the world, and
preach repentance and remission of sins among all nations; and,
after that, offer the same to Jerusalem; yea, it had been infinite
grace if he had said so. But what grace is this, or what name shall
we give it, when he commands that this repentance and remission
of sins, which is designed to be preached in all nations, should
first be offered to Jerusalem; in the first place to the worst of
sinners!
Nor was this the first time that the grace, which was in the heart
of Christ, thus showed itself to the world. For while he was yet
alive, even while he was yet in Jerusalem, and perceived, even
among these Jerusalem sinners, which was the most vile among them,
he still, in his preaching, did signify that he had a desire that
the worst of these worst should, in the first place, come unto him.
The which he showeth, where he saith to the better sort of them,
'The publicans and the harlots go into the kingdom of God before
you' (Matt 21:31). Also when he compared Jerusalem with the sinners
of the nations, then he commands that the Jerusalem sinners should
have the gospel at present confined to them. 'Go not,' saith he,
'into the way of the Gentiles, and into any of the cities of the
Samaritans enter ye not; but go rather to the lost sheep of the
house of Israel' (Matt 10:5,6; 23:37). But go rather to them, for
they were in the most fearful plight. These, therefore, must have
the cream of the gospel, namely, the first offer thereof, in his
lifetime; yea, when he departed out of the world, he left this as
part of his last will with his preachers, that they also should
offer it first to Jerusalem. He had a mind, a careful mind, as it
seems, to privilege the worst of sinners with the fist offer of
mercy, and to take from among them a people, to be the first fruits
unto God and to the Lamb.
The 15th of Luke also is famous for this, where the Lord Jesus
takes more care, as appears there by three parables, for the lost
sheep, lost groat, and the prodigal son, than for the other sheep,
the other pence, or for the son that said he had never transgressed;
yea, he shows that there is joy in heaven, among the angels of God,
at the repentance of one sinner, more than over ninety and nine
just persons which need no repentance. After this manner, therefore,
the mind of Christ was set on the salvation of the biggest sinners
in his lifetime. But join to this, this clause, which he carefully
put into the apostles' commission to preach, when he departed hence
to the Father, and then you shall see that his heart was vehemently
set upon it; for these were part of his last words with them, Preach
my gospel to all nations, but that you begin at Jerusalem.
Nor did the apostles overlook this clause when their Lord was gone
into heaven; they went first to them of Jerusalem, and preached
Christ's gospel to them; they abode also there for a season and
time, and preached it to nobody else, for they had regard to the
commandment of their Lord. And it is to be observed, namely, that
the first sermon which they preached after the ascension of Christ,
it was preached to the very worst of these Jerusalem sinners, even
to those that were the murderers of Jesus Christ (Acts 2:23), for
these are part of the sermon: 'Ye took him, and by wicked hands
have crucified and slain him.' Yea, the next sermon, and the next,
and also the next to that, was preached to the self-same murderers,
to the end they might be saved (Acts 3:14-16; 4:10,11; 5:30; 7:52).
But we will return to the first sermon that was preached to these
Jerusalem sinners, by which will be manifest more than great grace,
if it be duly considered. For after that Peter, and the rest of
the apostles, had, in their exhortation, persuaded these wretches
to believe that they had killed the Prince of life; and after they
had duly fallen under the guilt of their murder, saying, 'Men and
brethren, what shall we do?' he replies, by an universal tender to
them all in general, considering them as Christ's killers, that if
they were sorry for what they had done, and would be baptized for
the remission of their sins in his name, they should receive the
gift of the Holy Ghost (Acts 2:37,38).
This he said to them all, though he knew that they were such
sinners. Yea, he said it without the least stick or stop, or pause
of spirit, as to whether he had best to say so or no. Nay, so far
off was Peter from making an objection against one of them, that,
by a particular clause in his exhortation, he endeavours, that not
one of them may escape the salvation offered. 'Repent,' saith he,
'and be baptized every one of you.' I shut out never an one of you;
for I am commanded by my Lord to deal with you, as it were, one by
one, by the word of his salvation. But why speaks he so particularly?
Oh! there were reasons for it. The people with whom the apostles
were now to deal, as they were murderers of our Lord, and to be
charged in the general with his blood, so they had their various
and particular acts of villany in the guilt thereof, now lying
upon their consciences. And the guilt of these, their various and
particular acts of wickedness, could not, perhaps, be reached to a
removal thereof but by this particular application. Repent, every
one of you; be baptized, every one of you, in his name, for the
remission of sins, and you shall, every one of you, receive the
gift of the Holy Ghost.
Objector. 'But I was one of them that plotted to take away his
life. May I be saved by him?'
Objector. 'But I was one of them that bare false witness against
him. Is there grace for me?'
Peter. For every one of you.
Objector. 'But I was one of them that cried out, Crucify him,
crucify him; and desired that Barabbas, the murderer, might live,
rather than him. What will become of me, think you?'
Objector. 'But I was one of them that did spit in his face when he
stood before his accusers. I also was one that mocked him, when in
anguish he hanged bleeding on the tree. Is there room for me?'
Objector. 'But I was one of them that, in his extremity, said, Give
him gall and vinegar to drink. Why may not I expect the same when
anguish and guilt is upon me?'
Peter. There is, for every one of you. 'Repent, and be baptized
every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ, for the remission of
sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.' Oh! what
a blessed 'Every one of you,' is here! How willing was Peter, and
the Lord Jesus, by his ministry, to catch these murderers with the
word of the gospel, that they might be made monuments of the grace
of God! How unwilling, I say, was he, that any of these should
escape the hand of mercy! Yea, what an amazing wonder is it to
think, that above all the world, and above everybody in it, these
should have the first offer of mercy! 'Beginning at Jerusalem.'
But was there not something of moment in this clause of the commission?
Did not Peter, think you, see a great deal in it, that he should
thus begin with these men, and thus offer, so particularly, this
grace to each particular man of them?
But, as I told you, this is not all; these Jerusalem sinners must
have this offer again and again; every one of them must be offered
it over and over. Christ would not take their first rejection for
a denial, nor their second repulse for a denial; but he will have
grace offered once, and twice, and thrice, to these Jerusalem
sinners. Is not this amazing grace? Christ will not be put off.
These are the sinners that are sinners indeed. They are sinners of
the biggest sort; consequently, such as Christ can, if they convert
and be saved, best serve his ends and designs upon. Of which more
anon.
'Tis true, after they began to kill again, and when nothing
but killing would serve their turn, then they that were scattered
abroad went everywhere preaching the word. Yet even some of them
so hankered after the conversion of the Jews, that they preached
the gospel only to them. Also the apostles still made their abode
at Jerusalem, in hopes that they might let down their net for
another draught of these Jerusalem sinners. Neither did Paul and
Barnabas, who were the ministers of God to the Gentiles, but offer
the gospel, in the first place, to those of them that, for their
wickedness, were scattered, like vagabonds, among the nations; yea,
and when they rendered rebellion and blasphemy for their service
and love, they replied it was necessary that the word of God should
first have been spoken to them (Acts 1:8; 13:46,47).
Nor was this their preaching unsuccessful among these people: but
the Lord Jesus so wrought with the word thus spoken, that thousands
of them came flocking to him for mercy. Three thousand of them
closed with him at the first; and, afterwards, two thousand more;
for now they were in number about five thousand; whereas, before
sermons were preached to these murderers, the number of the disciples
was not above 'a hundred and twenty' (Acts 1:15; 2:41; 4:4).
Also among these people that thus flocked to him for mercy, there
was a 'great company of the priests' (Acts 6:7). Now, the priests
were they that were the greatest of these biggest sinners; they
were the ringleaders, they were the inventors and ringleaders in the
mischief. It was they that set the people against the Lord Jesus,
and that were the cause why the uproar increased, until Pilate had
given sentence upon him. 'The chief priests and elders,' says the
text, 'persuaded (the people) the multitude, that they should ask
Barabbas, and destroy Jesus' (Matt 27:20). And yet, behold the
priests, yea, a great company of the priests, became obedient to
the faith.6
Was this doctrine well believed, where would there be a place for
a doubt, or a fear of the damnation of the soul, if the sinner be
penitent, how bad a life soever he has lived, how many soever in
number are his sins? But this grace is hid from the eyes of men;
the devil hides it from them; for he knows it is alluring, he knows
it has an attracting virtue in it; for this is it that, above all
arguments, can draw the soul to God. I cannot help it, but must let
drop another word. The first church, the Jerusalem church, from
whence the gospel was to be sent into all the world, was a church
made up of Jerusalem sinners. These great sinners were here the
most shining monuments of the exceeding grace of God.
Thus, you see, I have proved the doctrine; and that not only by
showing you that this was the practice of the Lord Jesus Christ
in his lifetime, but his last will when he went up to God; saying,
Begin to preach at Jerusalem. Yea, it is yet further manifested,
in that when his ministers first began to preach there, he joined
his power to the word, to the converting of thousands of his
betrayers and murderers, and also many of the ringleading priests,
to the faith.
I shall now proceed, and shall show you, FIRST, The reasons of the
point. SECOND, And then make some application of the whole.
The observation, you know, is this: Jesus Christ would have mercy
offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners, to the Jerusalem
sinners: 'Preach repentance, and remission of sins, in my name,
among all nations, beginning at Jerusalem.'
Above, you read that the scribes and Pharisees said to his disciples,
'How is it that he eateth and drinketh with publicans and sinners?'
Alas! they did not know the reason; but the Lord renders them one,
and such an one as is both natural and cogent, saying, These have
need, most need. Their great necessity requires that I should be
most friendly, and show my grace first to them.
Not that the other were sinless, and so had no need of a Saviour;
but the publicans and their companions were the biggest sinners;
they were, as to view, worse than the scribes; and, therefore, in
reason, should be helped first, because they had most need of a
Saviour.
Men that are at the point to die, have more need of the physician
than they that are but now and then troubled with a heart-fainting
qualm. The publicans and sinners were, as it were, in the mouth
of death; death was swallowing of them down:8 and, therefore, the
Lord Jesus receives them first; offers them mercy first. 'The whole
have no need of the physician, but the sick. I came not to call
the righteous, but the sinners to repentance.' The sick, as I said,
is the biggest sinner, whether he sees his disease or not. He is
stained from head to foot, from heart to life and conversation.
This man, in every man's judgment, has the most need of mercy.
There is nothing attends him from bed to board, and from board to
bed again, but the visible characters, and obvious symptoms, of
eternal damnation. This, therefore, is the man that has need, most
need; and, therefore, in reason, should be helped in the first
place. Thus it was with the people concerned in the text; they were
the worst of sinners, Jerusalem sinners, sinners of the biggest
size; and, therefore, such as had the greatest need; wherefore they
must have mercy offered to them, before it be offered to anywhere
else in the world. 'Begin at Jerusalem,' offer mercy first to a
Jerusalem sinner. This man has most need, he is furthest from God,
nearest to hell, and so one that has most need. This man's sins
are in number the most, in cry the loudest, in weight the heaviest,
and, consequently, will sink him soonest; wherefore he has most
need of mercy. This man is shut up in Satan's hand, fastest bound
in the cords of his sins: one that justice is whetting his sword
to cut off; and, therefore, has most need, not only of mercy, but
that it should be extended to him in the first place.
But a little further to show you the true nature of this reason,
to wit, That Jesus Christ would have mercy offered, in the first
place, to the biggest sinners.
First, Mercy ariseth from the bowels and compassion, from pity, and
from a feeling of the condition of those in misery. 'In his love,
and in his pity, he redeemed them.' And again, 'The Lord is pitiful,
very pitiful, and of tender mercy' (Isa 63:9; James 5:11).
'How shall I give thee up, Ephraim?' Ephraim was a revolter from
God, a man that had given himself up to devilism; a company of men,
the ten tribes that worshipped devils, while Judah kept with his
God. But 'how shall I give thee up, Ephraim? How shall I deliver
thee, Israel? How shall I make thee as Admah? How shall I set
thee as Zeboim? [and yet thou art worse than they, nor has Samaria
committed half thy sins (Eze 16:46-51)] Mine heart is turned within
me, my repentings are kindled together' (Hosea 11:8).
But where do you find that ever the Lord did thus rowl9 in his
bowels for and after any self-righteous man? No, no; they are the
publicans and harlots, idolaters and Jerusalem sinners, for whom
his bowels thus yearn and tumble about within him: for, alas! poor
worms, they have most need of mercy.
Had not the good Samaritan more compassion for that man that fell
among thieves (though that fall was occasioned by his going from
the place where they worshipped God, to Jericho, the cursed city),
than we read he had for any other besides? His wine was for him,
his oil was for him, his beast for him; his penny, his care, and
his swaddling bands for him; for, alas! wretch, he had most need
(Luke 10:30-35).
Zaccheus the publican, the chief of the publicans, one that had
made himself the richer by wronging of others; the Lord at that
time singled him out from all the rest of his brother publicans, and
that in the face of many Pharisees, and proclaimed in the audience
of them all, that that day salvation was come to his house (Luke
19:1-8).
The woman, also, that had been bound down by Satan for eighteen
years together, his compassions putting him upon it, he loosed
her, though those that stood by snarled at him for so doing (Luke
13:11-13).
And why the woman of Sarepta, and why Naaman the Syrian, rather
than widows and lepers of Israel, but because their conditions were
more deplorable; for that they were most forlorn, and furthest from
help (Luke 4:25,27).
But I say, why all these, thus named? Why have we not a catalogue
of some holy men that were so in their own eyes, and in the judgment
of the world? Alas! if, at any time, any of them are mentioned,
how seemingly coldly doth the record of scripture present them to
us? Nicodemus, a night professor, and Simon the Pharisee, with his
fifty pence, and their great ignorance of the methods of grace, we
have now and then touched upon.
And here let me ask my reader a question: Suppose that, as thou art
walking by some pond side, thou shouldst espy in it four or five
children, all in danger of drowning, and one in more danger than
all the rest; judge which has most need to be helped out first? I
know thou wilt say, he that is nearest drowning. Why, this is the
case; the bigger sinner, the nearer drowning; therefore, the bigger
sinner, the more need of mercy; yea, of help, by mercy, in the first
place. And to this our text agrees, when it saith, 'Beginning at
Jerusalem.' Let the Jerusalem sinner, says Christ, have the first
offer, the first invitation, the first tender of my grace and mercy;
for he is the biggest sinner, and so has most need thereof.
Second, Christ Jesus would have mercy offered, in the first place,
to the biggest sinners, because when they, any of them, receive
it, it redounds most to the fame of his name.
Christ Jesus, as you may perceive, has put himself under the term
of a physician, a doctor for curing of diseases; and you know that
applause and fame are things that physicians much desire. That
is it that helps them to patients; and that, also, that will help
their patients to commit themselves to their skill, for cure, with
the more confidence and repose of spirit. And the best way for a
doctor or physician to get himself a name, is, in the first place,
to take in hand, and cure, some such as all others have given up
for lost and dead. Physicians get neither name nor fame by pricking
of wheals,10 or picking out thistles, or by laying of plasters
to the scratch of a pin; every old woman can do this. But if they
would have a name and a fame, if they will have it quickly, they
must, as I said, do some great and desperate cures. Let them fetch
one to life that was dead; let them recover one to his wits that
was mad; let them make one that was born blind to see; or let them
give ripe wits to a fool: these are notable cures, and he that can
do thus, and if he doth thus first, he shall have the name and fame
he desires; he may lie a-bed till noon.
Why, Christ Jesus forgiveth sins for a name, and so begets for
himself a good report in the hearts of the children of men. And,
therefore, in reason he must be willing, as, also, he did command,
that his mercy should be offered first to the biggest sinners. I
will forgive their sins, iniquities, and transgressions, says he,
'And it shall be to me a name of joy, a praise and an honour, before
all the nations of the earth' (Jer 33:8,9).
And hence it is, that, at his first appearing, he took upon him to
do such mighty works; he got a fame thereby, he got a name thereby
(Matt 4:23,24).
When Christ had cast the legion of devils out of the man of whom
you read (Mark 5), he bid him go home to his friends, and tell
it. 'Go home,' saith he, 'to thy friends, and tell them how great
things God hath done for thee, and hath had compassion on thee'
(Mark 5:19). Christ Jesus seeks a name, and desireth a fame in the
world; and, therefore, or the better to obtain that, he commands
that mercy should first be proffered to the biggest sinners;
because, by the saving of one of them, he makes all men marvel.
As it is said of the man last mentioned, whom Christ cured towards
the beginning of his ministry. 'And he departed,' says the text,
'and began to publish in Decapolis how great things Jesus had done
for him; and all men did marvel' (Mark 5:20).
When John told Christ, that they saw one casting out devils in
his name, and they forbade him, because he followed not with them,
what is the answer of Christ? 'Forbid him not; for there is no man
which shall do a miracle in my name, that can lightly speak evil
of me' (Mark 9:39). No; they will rather cause his praise to be
heard, and his name to be magnified, and so put glory on the head
of Christ.
What should be the reason, think you, why Christ should so easily
take a denial of the great ones that were the grandeur of the world,
and struggle so hard for hedge-creepers12 and highwaymen, as that
parable seems to import he doth, but to show forth the riches of
the glory of his grace, to his praise? (Luke 14). This, I say, is
one reason, to be sure. They that had their grounds, their yoke of
oxen, and their marriage joys, were invited to come; but they made
the excuse, and that served the turn. But when he comes to deal with
the worst, he saith to his servants, Go ye out and bring them in
hither. 'Go out quickly-and bring in hither the poor, the maimed,
the halt, and the blind.' And they did so. And he said again, 'Go
out into the highways and hedges, and compel them to come in, that
my house may be filled' (Luke 14:18,19,23). These poor, lame,
maimed, blind, hedge-creepers, and highwaymen, must come in, must
be forced in. These, if saved, will make his merit shine.
When Christ was crucified, and hanged up between the earth and
heavens, there were two thieves crucified with him; and, behold,
he lays hold of one of them, and will have him away with him to
glory. Was not this a strange act, and a display of unthought-of
grace? Were there none but thieves there, or were the rest of that
company out of his reach? Could he not, think you, have stooped
from the cross to the ground, and have laid hold on some honester
man, if he would? Yes, doubtless. Oh! but then he would not have
displayed his grace, nor so have pursued his own designs, namely,
to get to himself a praise and a name; but now he has done it to
purpose. For who that shall read this story, but must confess, that
the Son of God is full of grace; for a proof of the riches thereof,
he left behind him, when, upon the cross, he took the thief away
with him to glory. Nor can this one act of his be buried; it will
be talked of, to the end of the world, to his praise. 'Men shall
speak of the might of thy terrible acts; and I will declare thy
greatness. They shall abundantly utter the memory of thy great
goodness, and shall sing of thy righteousness-They shall speak of
the glory of thy kingdom, and talk of thy power; to make known to
the sons of men his mighty acts, and the glorious majesty of his
kingdom' (Psa 145:6-12).
When the Word of God came among the conjurors and those soothsayers,
that you read of (Acts 19), and had prevailed with some of them
to accept of the grace of Christ, the Holy Ghost records it with a
boast, for that it would redound to his praise, saying, 'Many of
them also which used curious arts brought their books together,
and burned them before all men; and they counted the price of them,
and found it fifty thousand pieces of silver. So mightily grew the
Word of God, and prevailed' (Acts 19:19,20). It wrenched out of the
clutches of Satan some of those of whom he thought himself most
sure. 'So mightily grew the Word of God.' It grew mightily, it
encroached upon the kingdom of the devil. It pursued him, and took
the prey; it forced him to let go his hold! It brought away captive,
as prisoners taken by force of arms, some of the most valiant of
his army. It fetched back from, as it were, the confines of hell,
some of those that were his most trusty, and that, with hell, had
been at an agreement. It made them come and confess their deeds,
and burn their books before all men. 'So mightily grew the Word of
God, and prevailed.' Thus, therefore, you see why Christ will have
offered mercy, in the first place, to the biggest sinners; they
have most need thereof; and this is the most ready way to extol
his name 'that rideth upon the heavens' to our help. But,
Third, Christ Jesus would have mercy offered, in the first place,
to the biggest sinners, because, by their forgiveness and salvation,
others, hearing of it, will be encouraged the more to come to him
for life.
For the physician, by curing the most desperate at the first, doth
not only get himself a name, but begets encouragement in the minds
of other diseased folk to come to him for help. Hence you read of
our Lord, that after, through his tender mercy, he had cured many of
great diseases, his fame was spread abroad: 'They brought unto him
all sick people that were taken with divers diseases and torments,
and those which were possessed with devils, and those which were
lunatic, and those that had the palsy, and he healed them. And
there followed him great multitudes of people from Galilee, and
Decapolis, and Jerusalem, and Judea, and from beyond Jordan' (Matt
4:24,25). See here, he first, by working, gets himself a fame, a
name, and renown; and now men take encouragement, and bring, from
all quarters, their diseased to him, being helped, by what they
had heard, to believe that their diseased should be healed.
But what was Paul, and the Ephesian sinners? (of Paul we will speak
anon.) These Ephesian sinners, they were men dead in sins; men
that walked according to the dictates and motions of the devil;
worshippers of Diana, that effeminate goddess; men far off from God,
aliens and strangers to all good things; such as were far off from
that, as I said, and, consequently, in a most deplorable condition.
As the Jerusalem sinners were of the highest sort among the Jews,
so these Ephesian sinners were of the highest sort among the Gentiles
(Eph 2:1-3,11,12; Acts 19:35). Wherefore, as by the Jerusalem
sinners, in saving them first, he had a design to provoke others
to come to him for mercy, so the same design is here set on foot
again, in his calling and converting the Ephesian sinners, 'That in
the ages to come he might show the exceeding riches of his grace,'
says he, 'in his kindness towards us through Christ Jesus.' There
is yet one hint behind. It is said that God saved these 'for his
great love'; that is, as I think, for the setting forth, for the
commendation of his love, for the advance of his love, in the hearts
and minds of them that should come after. As who should say, God
has had mercy upon, and been gracious to you, that he might show
to others, for their encouragement, that they have ground to come
to him to be saved. When God saves one great sinner, it is to
encourage another great sinner to come to him for mercy.
But what was Paul? Why, he tells you himself; I am, says he, the
chief of sinners. I was, says he, a blasphemer, a persecutor, an
injurious person; but I obtained mercy (1 Tim 1:13,14). Ay, that
is well for you, Paul; but what advantage have we thereby? Oh, very
much, saith he; for, 'for this cause I obtained mercy, that in me
first Jesus Christ might show forth all long-suffering, for a pattern
to them which should hereafter believe on him to life everlasting'
(verse 16). Thus, therefore, you see that this third reason is of
strength; namely, that Jesus Christ would have mercy offered, in the
first place, to the biggest sinners, because, by their forgiveness
and salvation, others, hearing of it, will be encouraged the more
to come to him for mercy. It may well, therefore, be said to God,
Thou delightest in mercy, and mercy pleases thee (Micah 7:18).
But who believes that this was God's design in showing mercy of
old--namely, that we that come after might take courage to come to
him for mercy; or that Jesus Christ would have mercy offered, in
the first place, to the biggest sinners, to stir up others to come
to him for life? This is not the manner of men, O God! But David
saw this betimes; therefore he makes this one argument with God,
that he would blot out his transgressions, that he would forgive
his adultery, his murders, and horrible hypocrisy. Do it, O Lord,
saith he, do it, and 'then will I teach transgressors thy ways, and
sinners shall be converted unto thee' (Psa 2:7-13). He knew that
the conversion of sinners would be a work highly pleasing to God,
as being that which he had designed before he made mountain or
hill: wherefore he comes, and he saith, Save me, O Lord; if thou
wilt but save me, I will fall in with thy design; I will help to
bring what sinners to thee I can. And, Lord, I am willing to be
made a preacher myself, for that I have been a horrible sinner;
wherefore, if thou shalt forgive my great transgressions, I shall
be a fit man to tell of thy wondrous grace to others. Yea, Lord, I
dare promise, that if thou wilt have mercy upon me, it shall tend
to the glory of thy grace, and also to the increase of thy kingdom;
for I will tell it, and sinners will hear on't. And there is nothing
so suiteth with the hearing sinner as mercy; and to be informed that
God is willing to bestow it upon him. 'I will teach transgressors
thy ways; and sinners shall be converted unto thee.'
I heard once a story from a soldier, who, with his company, had laid
siege against a fort, that so long as the besieged were persuaded
their foes would show them no favour, they fought like madmen; but
when they saw one of their fellows taken, and received to favour,
they all came tumbling down from their fortress, and delivered
themselves into their enemies' hands. I am persuaded, did men
believe that there is that grace and willingness in the heart of
Christ to save sinners, as the Word imports there is, they would
come tumbling into his arms: but Satan has blinded their minds
that they cannot see this thing. Howbeit, the Lord Jesus has, as
I said, that others might take heart and come to him, given out a
commandment, that mercy should, in the first place, be offered to
the biggest sinners. 'Begin,' saith he, 'at Jerusalem'; and thus
I end the third reason.
Fourth, Jesus Christ would have mercy offered, in the first place,
to biggest sinners, because that is the way, if they receive it,
most to weaken the kingdom of Satan, and to keep it lowest in every
age of the world.
And do you not think now, that if God would but take hold of the
hearts of some of the most notorious in your town, in your family,
or country, that this thing would be verified before your faces?
It would, it would, to the joy of you that are godly, to the making
of hell to sigh, to the great suppressing of sin, the glory of
Christ, and the joy of the angels of God.16 And ministers, should,
therefore, that this work might go on, take advantages to persuade
with the biggest sinners to come into Christ, according to my text,
and their commission, 'Beginning at Jerusalem.'
Fifth, Jesus Christ would have mercy offered, in the first place,
to the biggest sinners, because such, when converted, are usually
the best helps in the church against temptations, and fittest for
the support of the feeble-minded there.
When the churches, saith Paul, that were in Judea, heard this
concerning me, that he which persecuted them in time past, now
preached the faith which once he destroyed, 'they glorified God in
me' (Gal 1:20-24). 'Glorified God.' How is that? Why, they praised
him, and took courage to believe the more in the mercy of God; for
that he had had mercy on such a great sinner as he. They glorified
God 'in me'; they wondered that grace should be so rich, as to take
hold of such a wretch as I was; and for my sake believed in Christ
the more.
There are two things that great sinners are acquainted with, when
they come to divulge them to the saints, that are a great relief
to their faith. 1. The contests that they usually have with the
devil at their parting with him. 2. Their knowledge of his secrets
in his workings.
I might also here tell you of the contests and battles that such
are engaged in, wherein they find the buffetings of Satan, above
any other of the saints. At which time Satan assaults the soul
with darkness, fears, frightful thoughts of apparitions; now they
sweat, pant, cry out, and struggle for life. The angels now come
down to behold the sight, and rejoice to see a bit of dust and ashes
to overcome principalities and powers, and might, and dominions.
But, as I said, when these come a little to be settled, they are
prepared for helps for others, and are great comforts unto them.
Their great sins give encouragement to the devil to assault them;
and by these temptations Christ takes advantage to make them the
more helpful to the churches.
The biggest sinner, when he is converted, and comes into the church,
says to them all, by his very coming in, Behold me, all you that
are men and women of a low and timorous spirit, you whose hearts
are narrow, for that you never had the advantage to know, because
your sins are few, the largeness of the grace of God. Behold, I
say, in me, the exceeding riches of his grace! I am a pattern set
forth before your faces, on whom you may look and take heart. This,
I say, the great sinner can say, to the exceeding comfort of all
the rest. Wherefore, as I have hinted before, when God intends to
stock a place with saints, and to make that place excellently to
flourish with the riches of his grace, he usually begins with the
conversion of some of the most notorious thereabouts, and lays
them, as an example, to allure others, and to build up when they
are converted. It was Paul that must go to the Gentiles, because
Paul was the most outrageous of all the apostles, in the time of
his unregeneracy. Yea, Peter must be he, that after his horrible
fall, was thought fittest, when recovered again, to comfort and
strengthen his brethren (See Luke 22:31,32).
Sixth, Another reason why Jesus Christ would have mercy offered,
in the first place, to the biggest sinners, is, because they, when
converted, are apt to love him most.
This agrees both with scripture and reason. Scripture says so.
To whom much is forgiven, the same loveth much. 'To whom little
is forgiven, the same loveth little' (Luke 7:47). Reason says so:
for as it would be the unreasonablest thing in the world to render
hatred for love, and contempt for forgiveness; so it would be as
ridiculous to think, that the reception of a little kindness should
lay the same obligations upon the heart to love as the reception
of a great deal. I would not disparage the love of Christ; I know
the least drachm of it, when it reaches to forgiveness, is great
above all the world; but comparatively, there are greater extensions
of the love of Christ to one than to another. He that has most sin,
if. forgiven, is partaker of the greatest love, of the greatest
forgiveness.
I know also, that there are some, that from this very doctrine
say, 'Let us do evil that good may come'; and that turn the grace
of our God into lasciviousness. But I speak not of these; these
will neither be ruled by grace nor reason. Grace would teach them,
if they knew it, to deny ungodly courses; and so would reason too,
if it could truly sense the love of God (Titus 2:11,12; Rom 12:1).
Doth it look like what hath any coherence with reason or mercy,
for a man to abuse his friend? Because Christ died for me, shall I
therefore spit in his face? The bread and water that was given by
Elisha to his enemies, that came into the land of Israel to take
him, had so much influence upon their minds, though heathens, that
they returned to their homes without hurting him; yea, it kept them
from coming again in a hostile manner into the coasts of Israel (2
Kings 6:19-23).
But to forbear to illustrate, till anon. One reason why Christ Jesus
shows mercy to sinners, is, that he might obtain their love, that
he may remove their base affections from base objects to himself.
Now, if he loves to be loved a little, he loves to be loved much;
but there is not any that are capable of loving much, save those that
have much forgiven them. Hence it is said of Paul, that he laboured
more than them all; to wit, with a labour of love, because he had
been by sin more vile against Christ than they all (1 Cor 15).
He it was that 'persecuted the church of God, and wasted it' (Gal
1:13). He of them all was the only raving bedlam against the saints.
'And being exceeding mad,' says he, 'against them, I persecuted
them even unto strange cities' (Acts 26:11). This raving bedlam,
that once was so, is he that now says, I laboured more than them
all, more for Christ than them all. But Paul, what moved thee thus
to do? The love of Christ, says he. It was not I, but the grace
of God that was with me. As who should say, O grace! It was such
grace to save me! It was such marvellous grace for God to look down
from heaven upon me, and that secured me from the wrath to come,
that I am captivated with the sense of the riches of it. Hence
I act, hence I labour; for how can I otherwise do, since God not
only separated me from my sins and companions, but separated all
the powers of my soul and body to his service? I am, therefore,
prompted on by this exceeding love to labour as I have done;
yet not I, but the grace of God with me. Oh! I shall never forget
his love, nor the circumstances under which I was, when his love
laid hold upon me. I was going to Damascus with letters from the
high-priest, to make havoc of God's people there, as I had made
havoc of them in other places. These bloody letters were not imposed
upon me. I went to the high-priest and desired them of him, and
yet he saved me! (Acts 9:1,2). I was one of the men, of the chief
men, that had a hand in the blood of his martyr Stephen; yet he
had mercy upon me! When I was at Damascus, I stunk19 so horribly
like a blood-sucker, that I became a terror to all thereabout.
Yea, Ananias, good man, made intercession to my Lord against me;
yet he would have mercy upon me, yea, joined mercy to mercy, until
he had made me a monument of grace. He made a saint of me, and
persuaded me that my transgressions were forgiven me.
When I began to preach, those that heard me were amazed, and said,
'Is not this he that destroyed them that called on this name in
Jerusalem, and came hither for that intent, that he might bring
them bound to the high-priest?' Hell doth know that I was a sinner;
heaven doth know that I was a sinner; the world also knows that I
was a sinner, a sinner of the greatest size; but I obtained mercy
(Acts 9:20,21). Shall not this lay obligation upon me? Is not love
of the greatest force to oblige? Is it not strong as death, cruel
as the grave, and hotter than the coals of juniper? Hath it not
a most vehement flame? Can the waters quench it? can the floods
drown it? I a m under the force of it, and this is my continual
cry, What shall I render to the Lord for all the benefits which he
has bestowed upon me?
Aye, Paul! this is something; thou speakest like a man, like a man
affected, and carried away with the love and grace of God. Now,
this sense, and this affection, and this labour, giveth to Christ
the love that he looks for. But he might have converted twenty
little sinners, and yet not found, for grace bestowed, so much love
in them all. I wonder how far a man might go among the converted
sinners of the smaller size, before he could find one that so much
as looked anything this way ward. Where is he that is thus under
pangs of love for the grace bestowed upon him by Jesus Christ?
Excepting only some few, you may walk to the world's end, and find
none. But, as I said, some there are, and so there have been in
every age of the church, great sinners, that have had much forgiven
them; and they love much upon this account. Jesus Christ, therefore,
knows what he doth, when he lays hold on the hearts of sinners of
the biggest size. He knows that such an one will love more than
many that have not sinned half their sins.
I will tell you a story that I have read of Martha and Mary; the
name of the book I have forgot; I mean of the book in which I found
the relation; but the thing was thus:--
Martha, saith my author, was a very holy woman, much like Lazarus,
her brother; but Mary was a loose and wanton creature; Martha did
seldom miss good sermons and lectures, when she could come at them
in Jerusalem; but Mary would frequent the house of sports, and the
company of the vilest of men for lust. And though Martha had often
desired that her sister would go with her to hear her preachers,
yea, had often entreated her with tears to do it, yet could she
never prevail; for still Mary would make her excuse, or reject her
with disdain, for her zeal and preciseness in religion.
After Martha had waited long, tried many ways to bring her sister
to good, and all proved ineffectual, at last she comes upon her
thus: 'Sister,' quoth she, 'I pray thee go with me to the temple
today, to hear one preach a sermon.' 'What kind of preacher is he?'
said she. Martha replied, 'It is one Jesus of Nazareth; he is the
handsomest man that ever you saw with your eyes. Oh! he shines in
beauty, and is a most excellent preacher.'
Now, what does Mary, after a little pause, but goes up into her
chamber, and, with her pins and her clouts,20 decks up herself as
fine as her fingers could make her. This done, away she goes, not
with her sister Martha, but as much unobserved as she could, to
the sermon, or rather to see the preacher.
The hour and preacher being come, and she having observed whereabout
the preacher would stand, goes and sets herself so in the temple,
that she might be sure to have the full view of this excellent
person. So he comes in, and she looks, and the first glimpse of his
person pleased her. Well, Jesus addresseth himself to his sermon,
and she looks earnestly on him.
Now, at that time, saith my author, Jesus preached about the lost
sheep, the lost groat, and the prodigal child. And when he came to
show what care the shepherd took for one lost sheep, and how the
woman swept to find her piece which was lost, and what joy there
was at their finding, she began to be taken by the ears, and forgot
what she came about, musing what the preacher would make of it.
But when he came to the application, and showed, that by the lost
sheep, was meant a great sinner; by the shepherd's care, was meant
God's love for great sinners; and that by the joy of the neighbours,
was showed what joy there was among the angels in heaven over one
great sinner that repenteth; she began to be taken by the heart. And
as he spake these last words, she thought he pitched his innocent
eyes just upon her, and looked as if he spake what was now said to
her: wherefore her heart began to tremble, being shaken with affection
and fear; then her eyes ran down with tears apace; wherefore she was
forced to hide her face with her handkerchief, and so sat sobbing
and crying all the rest of the sermon.
Sermon being done, up she gets, and away she goes, and withal
inquired where this Jesus the preacher dined that day? and one told
her, At the house of Simon the Pharisee. So away goes she, first to
her chamber, and there strips herself of her wanton attire; then
falls upon her knees to ask God forgiveness for all her wicked life.
This done, in a modest dress she goes to Simon's house, where she
finds Jesus sat at dinner. So she gets behind him, and weeps, and
drops her tears upon his feet like rain, and washes them, and wipes
them with the hair of her head. She also kissed his feet with her
lips, and anointed them with ointment. When Simon the Pharisee
perceived what the woman did, and being ignorant of what it was to
be forgiven much (for he never was forgiven more than fifty pence),
he began to think within himself, that he had been mistaken about
Jesus Christ, because he suffered such a sinner as this woman was,
to touch him. Surely, quoth he, this man, if he were a prophet,
would not let this woman come near him, for she is a town-sinner;
so ignorant are all self-righteous men of the way of Christ with
sinners. But, lest Mary should be discouraged with some clownish
carriage of this Pharisee, and so desert her good beginnings, and
her new steps which she now had begun to take towards eternal life,
Jesus began thus with Simon: 'Simon,' saith he, 'I have somewhat
to say unto thee. And he saith, Master, say on. There was,' said
Jesus, 'a certain creditor which had two debtors; the one owed five
hundred pence, and the other fifty. And when they had nothing to
pay, he frankly forgave them both. Tell me, therefore, which of
them will love him most? Simon answered, and said, I suppose that
he, to whom he forgave most. And he said unto him, Thou hast rightly
judged. And he turned to the woman, and said unto Simon, Seest thou
this woman? I entered into thine house, thou gavest me no water
for my feet; but she hath washed my feet with tears, and wiped
them with the hairs of her head. Thou gavest me no kiss; but this
woman, since the time I came in, hath not ceased to kiss my feet.
My head with oil thou didst not anoint, but this woman hath anointed
my feet with ointment. Wherefore, I say unto her, Her sins, which
are many, are forgiven, for she loved much; but to whom little is
forgiven, the same loveth little. And he said unto her, Thy sins
are forgiven'(Luke 7:36-48).
Alas! Christ Jesus has but little thanks for the saving of little
sinners. 'To whom little is forgiven, the same loveth little.' He
gets not water for his feet, by his saving of such sinners. There
are abundance of dry-eyed Christians in the world, and abundance of
dry-eyed duties too; duties that never were wetted with the tears
of contrition and repentance, nor ever sweetened with the great
sinner's box of ointment. And the reason is, such sinners have not
great sins to be saved from; or, if they have, they look upon them
in the diminishing glass of the holy law of God.22 But, I rather
believe, that the professors of our days want a due sense of what
they are; for, verily, for the generality of them, both before
and since conversion, they have been sinners of a lusty size. But
if their eyes be holden, if convictions are not shown, if their
knowledge of their sins is but like to the eye-sight in twilight;
the heart cannot be affected with that grace that has laid hold on
the man; and so Christ Jesus sows much, and has little coming in.
Wherefore his way is ofttimes to step out of the way, to Jericho,
to Samaria, to the country of the Gadarenes, to the coasts of Tyre
and Sidon, and also to Mount Calvary, that he may lay hold of such
kind of sinners as will love him to his liking (Luke 19:1-11; John
4:3-11; Mark 5:1-20; Matt 15:21-29; Luke 23:33-43).
But thus much for the sixth reason, why Christ Jesus would have
mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners, to wit,
because such sinners, when converted, are apt to love him most.
The Jerusalem sinners were they that outstripped, when they were
converted, in some things, all the churches of the Gentiles. They
'were of one heart, and of one soul: neither said any of them that
aught of the things which he possessed was his own.' 'Neither was
there any among them that lacked: for as many as were possessors
of lands or houses sold them, and brought the prices of the things
that were sold, and laid them down at the apostles' feet,' &c.
(Acts 4:32,35). Now, show me such another pattern, if you can. But
why did these do thus? Oh! they were Jerusalem sinners. These were
the men that, but a little before, had killed the Prince of life;
and those to whom he did, that notwithstanding, send the first offer
of grace and mercy. And the sense of this took them up betwixt the
earth and the heaven, and carried them on in such ways and methods
as could never be trodden by any since. They talk of the church of
Rome, and set her, in her primitive state, as a pattern and mother
of churches; when the truth is, they were the Jerusalem sinners,
when converts, that out-did all the churches that ever were.
Seventh, Christ Jesus would have mercy offered, in the first place,
to the biggest sinners, because grace, when it is received by such,
finds matter to kindle upon more freely than it finds in other
sinners.
Great sinners are like the dry wood, or like great candles, which
burn best and shine with biggest light. I lay not this down, as
I did those reasons before, to show, that when great sinners are
converted, they will be encouragement to others, though that is true;
but to show, that Christ has a delight to see grace, the grace we
receive, to shine. We love to see things that bear a good gloss;
yea, we choose to buy such kind of matter to work upon, as will,
if wrought up to what we intend, cast that lustre that we desire.
Candles that burn not bright, we like not; wood that is green will
rather smother, and sputter, and smoke, and crack, and flounce,
than cast a brave light and a pleasant heat; wherefore great folks
care not much, not so much, for such kind of things, as for them
that will better answer their ends.
Abraham was among the idolaters when in the land of Assyria, and
served idols, with his kindred, on the other side of the flood (Josh
24:2; Gen 11:31). But who, when called, was there in the world, in
whom grace shone so bright as in him? The Thessalonians were idolaters
before the Word of God came to them; but when they had received
it, they became examples to all that did believe in Macedonia and
Achaia (1 Thess 1:6-10).
God the Father, and Jesus Christ his Son, are for having things
seen; for having the Word of life held forth. They light not a
candle that it might be put under a bushel, or under a bed, but on
a candlestick, that all that come in may see the light (Matt 5:15;
Mark 4:21; Luke 8:16; 11:33). and, I say, as I said before, in whom
is it, light, like so to shine, as in the souls of great sinners?
When the Jewish Pharisees dallied with the gospel, Christ threatened
to take it from them, and to give it to the barbarous heathens and
idolaters. Why so? For they, saith he, will bring forth the fruits
thereof in their season. 23 'Therefore say I unto you, The kingdom
of God shall be taken from you, and given to a nation bringing
forth the fruits thereof' (Matt 21:43).
Just before Christ came into the flesh, the world was degenerated
as it is now: the generality of the men in Jerusalem were become
either high and famous for hypocrisy, or filthy, base in their
lives. The devil also was broke loose in hideous manner, and had
taken possession of many: yea, I believe, that there was never
generation before nor since, that could produce so many possessed
with devils, deformed, lame, blind, and infected with monstrous
diseases, as that generation could. But what was the reason thereof,
I mean the reason from God? Why, one--and we may sum up more in
that answer that Christ gave to his disciples concerning him that
was born blind--was, that 'the works of God should be made manifest'
in them, and 'that the Son of God might be glorified thereby' (John
9:2,3; 11:4).
Nor does this speak any great comfort to a decayed and backsliding
sort of Christian; for the next time God rides post with his gospel,
he will leave such Christians behind him. But, I say, Christ is
resolved to set up his light in the world; yea, he is delighted
to see his graces shine; and therefore he commands that his gospel
should, to that end, be offered, in the first place, to the biggest
sinners; for by great sins it shineth most; therefore he saith,
'Begin at Jerusalem.'
God's Word has two edges; it can cut back-stroke and fore-stroke.
If it doth thee no good, it will do thee hurt; it is 'the savour
of life unto life' to those that receive it, but of 'death unto
death' to them that refuse it (2 Cor 2:15,16). But this is not all;
the tender of grace to the biggest sinners, in the first place, will
not only leave the rest, or those that refuse it, in a deplorable
condition, but will also stop their mouths, and cut off all pretence
to excuse at that day. 'If I had not come and spoken unto them,'
saith Christ,' saith Christ, 'they had not had sin; but now they have
no cloke for their sin'--for their sin of persevering in impenitence
(John 15:22). But what did he speak to them? Why, even that which
I have told you; to wit, That he has in special a delight in saving
the biggest sinners. He spake this in the way of his doctrine; he
spake this in the way of his practice, even to the pouring out of
his last breath before them (Luke 23:34).
Now, since this is so, what can the condemned at the judgment say
for themselves, why sentence of death should not be passed upon
them? I say, what excuse can they make for themselves, when they
shall be asked why they did not in the day of salvation come to
Christ to be saved? Will they have ground to say to the Lord, Thou
wast only for saving of little sinners; and, therefore, because
they were great ones, they durst not come unto him; or that thou
hadst not compassion for the biggest sinners, therefore I died in
despair? Will these be excuses for them, as the case now standeth
with them? Is there not everywhere in God's Book a flat contradiction
to this, in multitudes of promises, of invitations, of examples,
and the like? Alas! alas! there will then be there millions of
souls to confute this plea; ready, I say, to stand up, and say,
'O! deceived world, heaven swarms with such as were, when they
were in the world, to the full as bad as you!' Now, this will kill
all plea or excuse, why they should not perish in their sins; yea,
the text says they shall see them there. 'There shall be weeping-when
ye shall see Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, and all the prophets,
in the kingdom of heaven, and you yourselves thrust out. And they
shall come from the east, and from the west, and from the north,
and from the south, and shall sit down in the kingdom of God'
(Luke 13:28,29). Out of which company, it is easy to pick such as
sometimes were as bad people as any [that] now breathe on the face
of [the] earth. What think you of the first man, by whose sins there
are millions now in hell? And so I may say, What think you of ten
thousand more besides?
But if the Word will not stifle and gag them up--I speak now
for amplification's sake--the view of those who are saved shall.
There comes an incestuous person to the bar, and pleads, That the
bigness of his sins was a bar to his receiving the promise. But will
not his mouth be stopped as to that, when Lot, and the incestuous
Corinthians, shall be set before him (Gen 19:33-37; 1 Cor 5:1,2).
Here is Adam, the destroyer of the world; here is Lot, that lay
with both his daughters; here is Abraham, that was sometime an
idolater; and Jacob, that was a supplanter; and Reuben, that lay with
his father's concubine; and Judah, that lay with his daughter-in-law;
and Levi and Simeon, that wickedly slew the Shechemites; and Aaron,
that made an idol to be worshipped, and that proclaimed a religious
feast unto it. Here is also Rahab the harlot, and Bathsheba, that
bare a bastard to David. Here is Solomon, that great backslider;
and Manasseh, that man of blood and a witch. Time would fail to
tell you of the woman of Canaan's daughter, of Mary Magdalene, of
Matthew the publican, and of Gideon and Samson, and many thousands
more.
Alas! alas! I say, what will these sinners do, that have, through
their unbelief, eclipsed the glorious largeness of the mercy of
God, and gave way to despair of salvation, because of the bigness
of their sins? For all these, though now glorious saints in light,
were sometimes sinners of the biggest size, who had sins that were
of a notorious hue; yet now, I say, they are in their shining and
heavenly robes before the throne of God and of the Lamb, blessing
for ever and ever that Son of God for their salvation, who died for
them upon the tree; admiring that ever it should come into their
hearts once to think of coming to God by Christ; but above all,
blessing God for granting of them light to see those encouragements
in his Testament; without which, without doubt, they had been
daunted, and sunk down under guilt of sin and despair, as their
fellow-sinners have done. But now they also are witnesses for God,
and for his grace, against an unbelieving world; for, as I said,
they shall come to convince the world of their speeches, their hard
and unbelieving words, that they have spoken concerning the mercy
of God, and the merits of the passion of his blessed Son, Jesus
Christ.
But will it not, think you, strangely put to silence all such
thoughts, and words, and reasons of the ungodly before the bar
of God? Doubtless it will; yea, and will send them away from his
presence also, with the greatest guilt that possibly can fasten
upon the consciences of men.
For what will sting like this?--'I have, through mine own foolish,
narrow, unworthy, undervaluing thoughts, of the love and ability
of Christ to save me, brought myself to everlasting ruin. It is
true, I was a horrible sinner; not one in a hundred did live so
vile a life as I. But this should not have kept me from closing
with Jesus Christ. I see now that there are abundance in glory
that once were as bad as I have been; but they were saved by faith,
and I am damned by unbelief. Wretch that I am! why did not I give
glory to the redeeming blood of Jesus? Why did I not humbly cast
my soul at his blessed footstool for mercy? Why did I judge of
his ability to save me by the voice of my shallow reason, and the
voice of a guilty conscience? Why betook not I myself to the holy
Word of God? Why did I not read and pray that I might understand,
since now I perceive that God said then, He giveth liberally to
them that pray, and upbraideth not' (James 1:5).
I have often thought of the day of judgment, and how God will
deal with sinners at that day; and I believe it will be managed
with that sweetness, with that equitableness, with that excellent
righteousness, as to every sin, and circumstance and aggravation
thereof, that men that are damned, shall, before the judgment is over,
receive such conviction of the righteous judgment of God upon them,
and of their deserts of hell-fire, that they shall in themselves
conclude, that there is all the reason in the world that they should
be shut out of heaven, and go to hell-fire: 'These shall go away
into everlasting punishment' (Matt 25:46).24
Only this will tear [them,] that they have missed of mercy and
glory, and obtained everlasting damnation, through their unbelief;
but it will tear but themselves, but their own souls; they will
gnash upon themselves, for that mercy was offered to the chief of
them in the first place, and yet they were damned for rejecting of
it; they were damned for forsaking what they had a propriety in;
for forsaking their own mercy.
And thus much for the reasons. Second, I will conclude with a word
of application.
THE APPLICATION.
First, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place,
to the biggest sinners? Then this shows us how to make a right
judgment of the heart of Christ to men. Indeed, we have advantage
to guess at the goodness of his heart by many things; as by his
taking our nature upon him, his dying for us, his sending his Word
and ministers to us, and all that we might be saved. But this of
beginning to offer mercy to Jerusalem, is that which heightens all
the rest; for this doth not only confirm to us, that love was the
use of his dying for us, but it shows us yet more the depth of that
love. He might have died for us, and yet have extended the benefit
of his death to a few, as one might call them, of the best-conditioned
sinners, to those who, though they were weak, and so could not but
sin, yet made not a trade of sinning; to those that sinned not
lavishingly. There are in the world, as one may call them, the
moderate sinners; the sinners that mix righteousness with their
pollutions; the sinners that, though they be sinners, do what
on their part lies--some that are blind would think so--that they
might be saved. I say, it had been love, great love, if he had died
for none but such, and sent his love to such; but that he should
send out conditions of peace to the biggest of sinners; yea, that
they should be offered to them first of all; (for so he means when
he says, 'Begin at Jerusalem';) this is wonderful! this shows his
heart to purpose, as also the heart of God his Father, who sent
him to do thus.
There is nothing more incident to men that are awake in their souls,
than to have wrong thoughts of God--thoughts that are narrow, and
that pinch and pen up his mercy to scanty and beggarly conclusions,
and rigid legal conditions; supposing that it is rude, and an
intrenching upon his majesty to come ourselves, or to invite others,
until we have scraped and washed, and rubbed off as much of our
dirt from us as we think is convenient, to make us somewhat orderly
and handsome in his sight.25 Such never knew what these words meant,
'Begin at Jerusalem.' Yea, such in their hearts have compared the
Father and his Son to niggardly rich men, whose money comes from
them like drops of blood. True, say such, God has mercy, but he
is loath to part with it; you must please him well, if you get any
from him; he is not so free as many suppose, nor is he so willing
to save as some pretended gospellers imagine. But I ask such, if
the Father and Son be not unspeakably free to show mercy, why was
this clause put into our commission to preach the gospel? Yea, why
did he say, 'Begin at Jerusalem': for when men, through the weakness
of their wits, have attempted to show other reasons why they would
have the first proffer of mercy; yet I can prove, by many undeniable
reasons, that they of Jerusalem, to whom the apostles made the first
offer, according as they were commanded, were the biggest sinners
that ever did breathe upon the face of God's earth (set the
unpardonable sin aside); upon which [fact] my doctrine stands like
a rock, that Jesus the Son of God would have mercy, in the first
place, offered to the biggest sinners. And if this doth not show the
heart of the Father and the Son to be infinitely free in bestowing
forgiveness of sins, I confess myself mistaken.
Second, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place,
to the biggest sinners, to the Jerusalem sinners? Then, by this
also, you must learn to judge of the sufficiency of the merits of
Christ; not that the merits of Christ can be comprehended, for that
they are beyond the conceptions of the whole world, being called
'the unsearchable riches of Christ'; but yet they may be apprehended
to a considerable degree. Now, the way to apprehend them most, is,
to consider what offers, after his resurrection, he makes of his
grace to sinners; for to be sure he will not offer beyond the virtue
of his merits; because, as grace is the cause of his merits, so his
merits are the basis and bounds upon and by which his grace stands
good, and is let out to sinners. Doth he then command that his
mercy should be offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners?
It declares, that there is a sufficiency in his blood to save the
biggest sinners. 'The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth from all
sin.' And again, 'Be it known unto you, therefore, men and brethren,
that through this man [this man's merits] is preached unto you
the forgiveness of sins; and by him all that believe are justified
from all things, from which ye could not be justified by the law
of Moses' (Acts 13:38).
Third, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered in the first place to
the biggest sinners? Then here is encouragement for you that think,
for wicked hearts and lives, you have not your fellows in the world,
yet to come to him.
Answer. Well, but this doth but prove thee a biggest sinner.
Answer. Well, stand thou with the number of the biggest sinners.
Objection. But I have not only a base heart, but I have lived a
debauched life.
Answer. Stand thou also among those that are called the biggest
sinners. And what then? Why, the text swoops you all; you cannot
object yourselves beyond the text. It has a particular message to
the biggest sinners. I say, it swoops you all.26
Answer. Now thou talkest like a fool, and meddlest with what thou
understandest not: no sin, but the sin of final impenitence, can
prove a man a reprobate; and I am sure thou hast not arrived as
yet unto that; therefore thou understandest not what thou sayest,
and makest groundless conclusions against thyself. Say thou art
a sinner, and I will hold with thee; say thou art a great sinner,
and I will say so too; yea, say thou art one of the biggest sinners,
and spare not; for the text yet is beyond thee, is yet betwixt hell
and thee; 'Begin at Jerusalem' has yet a smile upon thee; and thou
talkest as if thou wast a reprobate, and that the greatness of
thy sins do prove thee so to be, when yet they of Jerusalem were
not such, whose sins, I dare say, were such, both for bigness and
heinousness, as thou art not capable of committing beyond them;
unless now, after thou hast received conviction that the Lord
Jesus is the only Saviour of the world, thou shouldst wickedly and
despitefully turn thyself from him, and conclude he is not to be
trusted to for life, and so crucify him for a cheat afresh. This,
I must confess, will bring a man under the black rod, and set him
in danger of eternal damnation (Heb 6:7,8; 10:8,9). This is trampling
under foot the Son of God, and counting his blood an unholy thing.
This did they of Jerusalem; but they did it ignorantly in unbelief,
and so were yet capable of mercy; but to do this against professed
light, and to stand to it, puts a man beyond the text indeed (Acts
3:14-17; 1 Tim 1:13).
But I say, what is this to him that would fain be saved by Christ?
His sins did, as to greatness, never yet reach to the nature of
the sins that the sinners intended by the text had made themselves
guilty of. He that would be saved by Christ, has an honourable
esteem of him; but they of Jerusalem preferred a murderer before
him; and as for him, they cried, Away, away with him, it is not fit
that he should live. Perhaps thou wilt object, That thyself hast a
thousand times preferred a stinking lust before him: I answer, Be
it so; it is but what is common to men to do; nor doth the Lord
Jesus make such a foolish life a bar to thee, to forbid thy coming
to him, or a bond to his grace, that it might be kept from thee;
but admits of thy repentance, and offereth himself unto thee freely,
as thou standest among the Jerusalem sinners.
Put in thy name, man, among the biggest, lest thou art made to wait
till they are served. You have some men that think themselves very
cunning, because they put up their names in their prayers among
them that feign it, saying, God, I thank thee I am not so bad as
the worst. But believe it, if they be saved at all, they shall be
saved in the last place. The first in their own eyes shall be served
last; and the last or worst shall be first. The text insinuates
it, 'Begin at Jerusalem'; and reason backs it, for they have most
need. Behold ye, therefore, how God's ways are above ours; we are
for serving the worst last, God is for serving the worst first. The
man at the pool, that to my thinking was longest in his disease,
and most helpless as to his cure, was first healed; yea, he only
was healed; for we read that Christ healed him, but we read not then
that he healed one more there! (John 5:1-10). Wherefore, if thou
wouldst soonest be served, put in thy name among the very worst
of sinners. Say, when thou art upon thy knees, Lord, here is a
Jerusalem sinner! a sinner of the biggest size! one whose burden
is of the greatest bulk and heaviest weight! one that cannot stand
long without sinking into hell, without thy supporting hand! 'Be
not thou far from me, O Lord! O my strength, haste thee to help
me!' (Psa 22:19).
I say, put in thy name with Magdalene, with Manasseh, that thou
mayest fare as the Magdalene and the Manasseh sinners do. The man
in the gospel made the desperate condition of his child an argument
with Christ to haste his cure: 'Sire, come down,' saith he, 'ere
my child die' (John 4:49), and Christ regarded his haste, saying,
'Go thy way; thy son liveth' (verse 50). Haste requires haste. David
was for speed; 'Deliver me speedily'; 'Hear me speedily'; 'Answer
me speedily' (Psa 31:2; 69:17; 102:2). But why speedily? I am in
'the net'; 'I am in trouble'; 'My days are consumed like smoke'
(Psa 31:4; 69:17; 102:3). Deep calleth unto deep, necessity calls
for help; great necessity for present help. Wherefore, I say, be
ruled by me in this matter; feign not thyself another man, if thou
hast been a filthy sinner, but go in thy colours to Jesus Christ,
and put thyself among the most vile, and let him alone to 'put thee
among the children' (Jer 3:19). Confess all that thou knowest of
thyself; I know thou wilt find it hard work to do thus: especially
if thy mind be legal; but do it, lest thou stay and be deferred
with the little sinners, until the great ones have had their alms.
What do you think David intended when he said, his wounds stunk and
were corrupted, but to hasten God to have mercy upon him, and not
to defer his cure? 'Lord,' says he, 'I am troubled; I am bowed
down greatly; I go mourning all the day long.' 'I am feeble and sore
broken: I have roared by reason of the disquietness of my heart'
(Psa 38:3-8). David knew what he did by all this; he knew that his
making the worst of his case, was the way to speedy help, and that
a feigning and dissembling the matter with God, was the next way
to a demur as to his forgiveness.
I have one thing more to offer for thy encouragement, who deemest
thyself one of the biggest sinners; and that is, thou art as it
were called by thy name, in the first place, to come in for mercy.
Thou man of Jerusalem, hearken to thy call; men do so in courts
of judicature, and presently cry out, 'Here, Sire'; and then they
shoulder and crowd, and say, 'Pray give way, I am called into the
court.' Why, this is thy case, thou great, thou Jerusalem sinner;
be of good cheer, he calleth thee (Mark 10:46-49). Why sittest thou
still? arise: why standest thou still? come, man, thy call should
give thee authority to come. 'Begin at Jerusalem,' is thy call and
authority to come; wherefore up and shoulder it, man; say, 'Stand
away, devil, Christ calls me; stand away unbelief, Christ calls me;
stand away, all ye my discouraging apprehensions, for my Saviour
calls me to him to receive of his mercy.' Men will do thus, as I
said, in courts below; and why shouldst not thou approach thus to
the court above? The Jerusalem sinner is first in thought, first
in commission, first in the record of names; and therefore should
give attendance, with the expectation that he is first to receive
mercy of God.
Fourth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place,
to the biggest sinners? Then come, thou profane wretch, and let me
a little enter into an argument with thee. Why wilt thou not come
to Jesus Christ, since thou art a Jerusalem sinner? How canst thou
find in thy heart to set thyself against grace, against such grace
as offereth mercy to thee? What spirit possesseth thee, and holds
thee back from a sincere closure with thy Saviour? Behold, God
groaningly complains of thee, saying, 'But Israel would none of
me.' 'When I called, none did answer' (Psa 81:11; Isa 66:4).
Shall God enter this complaint against thee? Why dost thou put
him off? Why dost thou stop thine ear? Canst thou defend thyself?
When thou art called to an account for thy neglects of so great
salvation, what canst thou answer? or dost thou think that thou
shalt escape the judgment? (Heb 2:3). No more such Christs! There
will be no more such Christs, sinner! Oh, put not the day, the day
of grace, away from thee! if it be once gone, it will never come
again, sinner.
But what is it that has got thy heart, and that keeps it from thy
Saviour? 'Who in the heaven can be compared unto the Lord? who among
the sons of the mighty can be likened unto the Lord?' (Psa 89:6).
Hast thou, thinkest thou, found anything so good as Jesus Christ?
Is there any among thy sins, thy companions, and foolish delights,
that, like Christ, can help thee in the day of thy distress? Behold,
the greatness of thy sins cannot hinder; let not the stubbornness
of thy heart hinder thee, sinner.
Objection. I am ashamed.
Hast thou not reason? Canst thou not so much as once soberly think
of thy dying hour, or of whither thy sinful life will drive thee
then? Hast thou no conscience? or having one, is it rocked so fast
asleep by sin, or made so weary with an unsuccessful calling upon
thee, that it is laid down, and cares for thee no more? Poor man!
thy state is to be lamented. Hast no judgment? Art not able to
conclude, that to be saved is better than to burn in hell? and that
eternal life with God's favour, is better than a temporal life in
God's displeasure? Hast no affection but what is brutish? what,
none at all? No affection for the God that made thee? What! none
for his loving Son that has showed his love, and died for thee?
Is not heaven worth thy affection? O poor man! which is strongest,
thinkest thou, God or thee? If thou art not able to overcome him,
thou art a fool for standing out against him (Matt 5:25,26). 'It
is a fearful thing to fall into the hand of the living God' (Heb
10:29-31). He will gripe hard; his fist is stronger than a lion's
paw; take heed of him, he will be angry if you despise his Son;
and will you stand guilty in your trespasses, when he offereth you
his grace and favour? (Exo 34:6,7).
Fifth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place,
to the biggest sinners? Then, this shows how unreasonable a thing
it is for men to despair of mercy; for those that presume, I shall
say something to them afterward.
I now speak to them that despair. There are four sorts of despair.
There is the despair of devils; there is the despair of souls in
hell; there is the despair that is grounded upon men's deficiency;
and there is the despair that they are perplexed with that are
willing to be saved, but are too strongly borne down with the burden
of their sins.
The despair of devils, the damned's despair, and that despair that
a man has of attaining of life because of his own deficiency, are
all reasonable. Why should not devils and damned souls despair?
yea, why should not man despair of getting to heaven by his own
abilities? I, therefore, am concerned only with the fourth sort
of despair, to wit, with the despair of those that would be saved,
but are too strongly borne down with the burden of their sins. I
say, therefore, to thee that art thus, And why despair? Thy despair,
if it was reasonable, should flow from thee, because found in the
land that is beyond the grave; or because thou certainly knowest
that Christ will not, or cannot save thee.
But, for the first, thou art yet in the land of the living; and,
for the second, thou hast ground to believe the quite contrary;
Christ is able to save to the uttermost them that come to God
by him; and if he were not willing, he would not have commanded
that mercy, in the first place, should be offered to the biggest
sinners. Besides, he hath said, 'And let him that is athirst come.
And whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely'; that
is, with all my heart. What ground now is here for despair? If thou
sayest, The number and burden of my sins; I answer, Nay; that is
rather a ground for faith; because such an one, above all others,
is invited by Christ to come unto him, yea, promised rest and
forgiveness if they come (Matt 11:28). What ground then to despair?
Verily, none at all. Thy despair, then, is a thing unreasonable,
and without footing in the Word.
Also thy desires to be saved by Christ, has put thee under another
promise, so there is two to hold thee up in hope, though thy present
burden be never so heavy (Matt 5:3,6). As for what thou sayest as
to God's silence to thee, perhaps he has spoken to thee once or twice
already, but thou hast not perceived it (Job 33:14,15). However,
thou hast Christ crucified set forth before thine eyes in the Bible,
and an invitation to come unto him, though thou be a Jerusalem sinner,
though thou be a biggest sinner; and so no ground to despair. What
if God will be silent to thee, is that ground of despair? Not at
all, so long as there is a promise in the Bible, that God will in
no wise cast away the coming sinner, and so long as he invites the
Jerusalem sinner to come unto him (John 6:37).
And what if thou waitest upon God all thy days? Is it below thee?
And what if God will cross his book, and blot out the handwriting
that is against thee, and not let thee know it as yet? Is it fit
to say unto God, Thou art hard-hearted? Despair not; thou hast no
ground to despair, so long as thou livest in this world. 'Tis a
sin to begin to despair before one sets his foot over the threshold
of hell-gates. For them that are there, let them despair and spare
not; but as for thee, thou hast no ground to do it. What! despair
of bread in a land that is full of corn! despair of mercy when
our God is full of mercy! despair of mercy, when God goes about,
by his ministers, beseeching of sinners to be reconciled unto him!
(2 Cor 5:18-20). Thou scrupulous fool, where canst thou find that
God was ever false to his promise, or that he ever deceived the
soul that ventured itself upon him? He often calls upon sinners
to trust him, though they walk in darkness, and have no light (Isa
50:10). They have his promise and oath for their salvation, that
flee for refuge to the hope set before them (Heb 6:17,18).
I would say to my soul, 'O my soul! this is not the place of despair;
this is not the time to despair in; as long as mine eyes can find
a promise in the Bible, as long as there is the least mention of
grace, as long as there is a moment left me of breath or life in
this world, so long will I wait or look for mercy, so long will I
fight against unbelief and despair.' This is the way to honour God
and Christ; this is the way to set the crown on the promise; this
is the way to welcome the invitation and inviter; and this is the
way to thrust thyself under the shelter and protection of the word
of grace. Never despair so long as our text is alive, for that doth
sound it out--that mercy by Christ is offered, in the first place,
to the biggest sinner.
'O fools, and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have
spoken!' (Luke 24:25). Mark you, here, slowness to believe is
a piece of folly. Ay! but sayest thou, I do believe some, and I
believe what can make against me. Ay, but sinner, Christ Jesus here
calls thee fool for not believing all. Believe all, and despair if
thou canst! He that believes all, believes that text that saith,
Christ would have mercy preached first to the Jerusalem sinners.
He that believeth all, believeth all the promises and consolations
of the Word; and the promises and consolations of the Word weigh
heavier than do all the curses and threatenings of the law; and
mercy rejoiceth against judgment. Wherefore believe all, and mercy
will, to thy conscience, weigh judgment down, and so minister comfort
to thy soul. The Lord take the yoke from off thy jaws, since he has
set meat before thee (Hosea 11:4). And help thee to remember that
he is pleased, in the first place, to offer mercy to the biggest
sinners.
Sixth, Since Jesus Christ would have mercy offered, in the first
place, to the biggest sinners, let souls see that they lay right
hold thereof, lest they, notwithstanding, indeed, come short thereof.
Faith only knows how to deal with mercy; wherefore, put not in
the place thereof presumption. I have observed, that, as there are
herbs and flowers in our gardens, so there are their counterfeits
in the field; only they are distinguished from the other by the
name of wild ones. Why, there is faith, and wild faith; and wild
faith is this presumption. I call it wild faith, because God never
placed it in his garden--his church; 'tis only to be found in the
field--the world. I also call it wild faith, because it only grows
up and is nourished where other wild notions abound. Wherefore,
take heed of this, and all may be well; for this presumptuousness
is a very heinous thing in the eyes of God. 'The soul,' saith he,
'that doeth ought presumptuously, whether he be born in the land,
or a stranger, the same reproacheth the Lord; and that soul shall
be cut off from among his people' (Num 15:30).
The thoughts of this made David tremble, and pray that God would
hold him back from presumptuous sins, and not suffer them to have
dominion over him (Psa 19:13). Now, this presumption, then, puts
itself in the place of faith, when it tampereth with the promise
for life, while the soul is a stranger to repentance. Wherefore,
you have in the text, to prevent doing thus, both repentance and
remission of sins to be offered to Jerusalem; not remission without
repentance, for all that repent not shall perish, let them presume
on grace and the promise while they will (Luke 13:1-3).
Again, THEN men presume, when they are resolved to abide in their
sins, and yet expect to be saved by God's grace through Christ.
This is as much as to say, God liketh of sin as well as I do, and
careth not how men live, if so be they lean upon his Son. Of this
sort are they 'that build up Zion with blood, and Jerusalem with
iniquity'; that 'judge for reward, and--teach for hire, and--divine
for money, and lean upon the Lord' (Micah 3:10,11). This is doing
things, with an high hand, against the Lord our God, and a taking
him, as it were, at the catch.28 This is, as we say among men, to
seek to put a trick upon God; as if he had not sufficiently fortified
his proposals of grace, by his holy Word, against all such kind of
fools as these. But look to it! Such will be found at the day of
God, not among that great company of Jerusalem sinners that shall
be saved by grace, but among those that have been the great abusers
of the grace of God in the world. Those that say, Let us sin that
grace may abound, and let us do evil that good may come, their
damnation is just. And if so, they are a great way off of that
salvation that is, by Jesus Christ, presented to the Jerusalem
sinners.
When the jailor cried out, 'Sirs, what must I do to be saved?' the
answer was, 'Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be
saved.' He that sees his sins aright, is brought to his wit's end
by them; and he that is so, is willing to part from them, and to
be saved by the grace of God. If this be thy case, fear not, give
no way to despair; thou presumest not, if thou believest to life
everlasting in Jesus Christ; yea, Christ is prepared for such as
thou art. Therefore, take good courage, and believe. The design of
Satan is, to tell the presumptuous that their presuming on mercy is
good; but to persuade the believer, that his believing is impudent,
bold dealing with God. I never heard a presumptuous man, in my life,
say that he was afraid that he presumed; but I have heard many an
honest humble soul say, that they have been afraid that their faith
has been presumption. Why should Satan molest those whose ways he
knows will bring them to him? And who can think that he should be
quiet, when men take the right course to escape his hellish snares?
This, therefore, is the reason why the truly humbled is opposed,
while the presumptuous goes on by wind and tide. The truly humble,
Satan hates; but he laughs to see the foolery of the other.
Does thy hand and heart tremble? Upon thee the promise smiles.
'To this man will I look,' says God, 'even to him that is poor and
of a contrite spirit, and trembleth at my word' (Isa 66:2). What,
therefore, I have said of presumption, concerns not the humble in
spirit at all. I therefore am for gathering up the stones, and for
taking the stumbling-blocks out of the way of God's people; and
forewarning of them, that they lay the stumbling-block of their
iniquity before their faces; and [of those] that are for presuming
upon God's mercy; and let them look to themselves (Eze 14:6-8).
Also, our text stands firm as ever it did, and our observation is
still of force, that Jesus Christ would have mercy offered, in the
first place, to the biggest sinners. So them, let none despair,
let none presume; let none despair that are sorry for their sins,
and would be saved by Jesus Christ; let none presume that abide
in the liking of their sins, though they seem to know the exceeding
grace of Christ; for though the door stands wide open for the reception
of the penitent, yet it is fast29 enough barred and bolted against
the presumptuous sinner. Be not deceived, God is not mocked;
whatsoever a man sows, that he shall reap. It cannot be that God
should be wheedled out of his mercy, or prevailed upon by lips of
dissimulation; he knows them that trust on him, and that sincerely
come to him, by Christ, for mercy (Nahum 1:7).
It is, then, not the abundance of sins committed, but the not
coming heartily to God, by Christ, for mercy, that shuts men out
of doors. And though their not coming heartily may be said to be
but a sin, yet it is such a sin as causeth that all thy other sins
abide upon thee unforgiven. God complains of this. 'They have not
cried unto me with their heart--they return, but not to the most
High.' They turned 'feignedly' (Jer 3:10; Hosea 7:14,16). Thus doing,
his soul hates [them]; but the penitent, humble, broken-hearted
sinner, be his transgressions red as scarlet, red like crimson, in
number as the sand; though his transgressions cry to heaven against
him for vengeance, and seem there to cry louder than do his prayers,
or tears, or groans for mercy; yet he is safe. To this man God will
look (Isa 1:18; 66:2).
Seventh, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place,
to the biggest sinners? Then here is ground for those that, as to
practice, have not been such, to come to him for mercy.
For the grievousness of the cry is a great thing with God; for if
he will hear the widow, if she cries at all, how much more if she
cries most grievously? (Exo 22:22,23). It is not the number, but
the true sense of the abominable nature of sin, that makes the cry
for pardon lamentable. 30 He, as I said, that has many sins, may
not cry so loud in the ears of God as he that has far fewer; he,
in our present sense, that is in his own eyes the biggest sinner,
is he that soonest findeth mercy. The offer, then, is to the
biggest sinner; to the biggest sinner first, and the mercy is first
obtained by him that first confesseth himself to be such an one.
There are men that strive at the throne of grace for mercy, by
pleading the greatness of their necessity. Now their plea, as to
the prevalency of it, lieth not in their counting up of the number,
but in the sense of the greatness of their sins, and in the vehemency
of their cry for pardon. And it is observable, that though the
birthright was Reuben's, and, for his foolishness, given to the
sons of Joseph, yet Judah prevailed above his brethren, and of him
came the Messiah (1 Chron 5:1,2). There is a heavenly subtilty to
be managed in this matter. 'Thy brother came with subtilty, and
hath taken away thy blessing.' The blessing belonged to Esau, but
Jacob by his diligence made it his own (Gen 27:35). The offer is to
the biggest sinner, to the biggest sinner first; but if he forbear
to cry, the sinner that is a sinner less by far than he, both as
to number and the nature of transgression, may get the blessing
first, if he shall have grace to bestir himself well; for the loudest
cry is heard furthest, and the most lamentable pierces soonest.
I therefore urge this head, not because I would have little sinners
go and tell God that they are little sinners, thereby to think to
obtain his mercy; for, verily, so they are never like to have it;
for such words declare, that such an one hath no true sense at all
of the nature of his sins. Sin, as I said, in the nature of it, is
horrible, though it be but one single sin as to act; yea, though
it be but a sinful thought; and so worthily calls for the damnation
of the soul. The comparison, then, of little and great sinners, is
to go for good sense among men. But to plead the fewness of thy
sins, or the comparative harmlessness of their quantity before
God, argueth no sound knowledge of the nature of thy sin, and so
no true sense of the nature or need of mercy.
Eighth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place,
to the biggest sinners? Then this shows the true cause why Satan
makes such head as he doth against him.
The Father and the Holy Spirit are well spoken of by all deluders
and deceived persons; Christ only is the rock of offence. 'Behold,
I lay in Zion a stumbling-stone and rock of offence' (Rom 9:33).
Not that Satan careth for the Father or the Spirit more than he
careth for the Son; but he can let men alone with their notions
of the Father and the Spirit, for he knows they shall never enjoy
the Father or the Spirit, if indeed they receive not the merits
of the Son. 'He that hath the Son, hath life; he that hath not the
Son of God hath not life,' however they may boast themselves of the
Father and the Spirit (1 John 5:12). Again, 'Whosoever transgresseth,
and abideth not in the doctrine of Christ, hath not God. He that
abideth in the doctrine of Christ, he hath both the Father and the
Son' (2 John 9). Christ, and Christ only, is he that can make us
capable to enjoy God with life and joy to all eternity. Hence he
calls himself the way to the Father, the true and living way (John
14:6). For we cannot come to the Father but by him (Heb 10:19,20).
Satan knows this, therefore he hates him. Deluded persons are
ignorant of this, and therefore, they are so led up and down by
Satan by the nose as they are.
There are many things by which Satan has taken occasion to greaten
his rage against Jesus Christ. As, first, His love to man, and
then, the many expressions of that love. He hath taken man's nature
upon him; he hath in that nature fulfilled the law to bring in
righteousness for man; and hath spilt his blood for the reconciling
of man to God; he hath broke the neck of death, put away sin,
destroyed the works of the devil, and got into his own hands the
keys of death; and all these are heinous things to Satan. He cannot
abide Christ for this. Besides, He hath eternal life in himself,
and that to bestow upon us; and we in all likelihood are to possess
the very places from which the Satans by transgression fell, if not
places more glorious. Wherefore he must needs be angry. And is it
not a vexatious thing to him, that we should be admitted to the
throne of grace by Christ, while he stands bound over in chains
of darkness, to answer for his rebellions against God and his Son,
at the terrible day of judgment. Yea, we poor dust and ashes must
become his judges, and triumph over him for ever: and all this long32
of Jesus Christ; for he is the meritorious cause of all this.
And by his wiles and stratagems he undoes a world of men; but there
is a seed, and they shall serve him, and it shall be counted to the
Lord for a generation. These shall see their sins, and that Christ
is the way to happiness. These shall venture themselves, both body
and soul, upon his worthiness. All this Satan knows, and therefore
his rage is kindled the more. Wherefore, according to his ability
and allowance, he assaulteth, tempteth, abuseth, and stirs up
what he can to be hurtful to these poor people, that he may, while
his time shall last, make it as hard and difficult for them to
go to eternal glory as he can. Ofttimes he abuses them with wrong
apprehensions of God, and with wrong apprehensions of Christ. He
also casts them into the mire, to the reproach of religion, the
shame of their brethren, the derision of the world, and dishonour
of God. He holds our hands while the world buffets us; he puts
bear-skins upon us, and then sets the dogs at us. He bedaubeth us
with his own foam, and then tempts us to believe that that bedaubing
comes from ourselves.33
Oh! the rage and the roaring of this lion, and the hatred that he
manifests against the Lord Jesus, and against them that are purchased
with his blood! But yet, in the midst of all this, the Lord Jesus
sends forth his herald to proclaim in the nations his love to the
world, and to invite them to come in to him for life. Yea, his
invitation is so large, that it offereth his mercy in the first
place to the biggest sinners of every age, which augments the
devil's rage the more. Wherefore, as I said before, fret he, fume
he, the Lord Jesus will 'divide the spoil' with this great one; yea,
he shall divide the spoil with the strong, 'because he hath poured
out his soul unto death, and he was numbered with the transgressors;
and he bare the sin of many, and made intercession for the
transgressors' (Isa 53:12).
Ninth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place,
to the biggest sinners? Let the tempted harp upon this string for
their help and consolation.
Were therefore the tempted but aware, he might say, 'Ay, Satan, so
I am, I am a sinner of the biggest size, and therefore have most
need of Jesus Christ; yea, because I am such a wretch, therefore
Jesus Christ calls me; yea, he calls me first; the first proffer
of the gospel is to be made to the Jerusalem sinner; I am he,
wherefore stand back, Satan; make a lane, my right is first to come
to Jesus Christ.' This now would be like for like. This would foil
the devil; this would make him say, I must not deal with this man
thus; for then I put a sword into his hand to cut off my head.
Well, sinner, thou now speakest like a Christian; but say thus,
in a strong spirit, in the hour of temptation, and then thou wilt,
to thy commendation and comfort, quit thyself well. This improving
of Christ, in dark hours, is the life, though the hardest part of
our Christianity. We should neither stop at darkness nor at the
raging of our lusts, but go on in a way of venturing, and casting
the whole of our affairs for the next world at the foot of Jesus
Christ. This is the way to make the darkness light, and also to
allay the raging of corruption.
The first time the Passover was eaten was in the night; and when
Israel took courage to go forward, though the sea stood in their
way like a devouring gulf, and the host of the Egyptians follow
them at the heels; yet the sea gives place, and their enemies were
as still as a stone till they were gone over (Exo 12:8; 14:13,14,21,22;
15:16).
Tenth, Would Jesus Christ have mercy offered, in the first place,
to the biggest sinners? Let those men consider this that have, or
may, in a day of trial, spoken or done what their profession or
conscience told them they should not, and that have the guilt and
burden thereof upon their consciences.
Whether a thing be wrong or right, guilt may pursue him that doth
contrary to his conscience. But suppose a man should deny his God,
or his Christ, or relinquish a good profession, and be under the
real guilt thereof, shall he, therefore, conclude he is gone for
ever? Let him come again with Peter's tears, and no doubt but he
shall obtain Peter's forgiveness; for the text includes the biggest
sinners. And it is observable, that before this clause was put
into this commission, Peter was pardoned his horrible revolt from
his Master. He that revolteth in the day of trial, if he is not
shot quite dead upon the place, but is sensible of his wound, and
calls out for a chirurgeon, shall find his Lord at hand to pour
wine and oil into his wounds, that he may again be healed, and to
encourage him to think that there may be mercy for him; besides
what we find recorded of Peter, you read in the Acts, some were,
through the violence of their trials, compelled to blaspheme, and
yet are called saints (Acts 26:9-11).
Hence you have a promise or two that speak concerning such kind of
men, to encourage us to think that, at least, some of them shall
come back to the Lord their God. 'Shall they fall,' saith he, 'and
not arise? Shall he turn away, and not return?' (Jer 8:4). 'and in
that day will I assemble her that halteth, and I will gather her
that is driven out, and her that I have afflicted. And I will make
her that halted a remnant, and her that was cast far off a strong
nation; and the Lord shall reign over them in Mount Zion--for ever.'
What we are to understand by her that halteth, is best expressed
by the prophet Elijah (Micah 4:6,7; Zeph 3:19; 1 Kings 18:21).
I will conclude, then, that for them that have halted, or may halt,
the Lord has mercy in the bank,35 and is willing to accept them if
they return to him again. Perhaps they may never be after that of
any great esteem in the house of God, but if the Lord will admit
them to favour and forgiveness--O exceeding and undeserved mercy!
(See Ezekiel 44:10-14). Thou, then, that mayest be the man, remember
this, that there is mercy also for thee. Return, therefore, to
God, and to his Son, who hath yet in store for thee, and who will
do thee good.
But, perhaps, thou wilt say, He doth not save all revolters, and,
therefore, perhaps not me. Answer. Art thou returning to God?
If thou art returning, thou art the man; 'Return, ye backsliding
children, and I will heal your backslidings' (Jer 3:22).
Some, as I said, that revolt, are shot dead upon the place; and for
them, who can help them? But for them that cry out of their wounds
it is a sign that they are yet alive, and, if they use the means
in time, doubtless they may be healed.
Christ Jesus has bags of mercy that were never yet broken up or
unsealed. Hence it is said, he has goodness laid up; things reserved
in heaven for his. And if he breaks up one of these bags, who can
tell what he can do? Hence his love is said to be such as passeth
knowledge, and that his riches are unsearchable. He has, nobody
knows what; for nobody knows who! He has by him, in store, for
such as seem, in the view of all men, to be gone beyond recovery.
For this, the text is plain. What man or angel could have thought
that the Jerusalem sinners had been yet on this side of an
impossibility of enjoying life and mercy? Hadst thou seen their
actions, and what horrible things they did to the Son of God; yea,
how stoutly they backed what they did with resolves and endeavours
to persevere, when they had killed his person, against his name and
doctrine; and that there was not found among them all that while,
as we read of, the least remorse or regret for these their doings;
couldest though have imagined that mercy would ever have took hold
of them, at least so soon! Nay, that they should, of all the world,
be counted those only meet to have it offered to them in the very
first place! For so my text commands, saying, Preach repentance
and remission of sins among all nations, beginning at Jerusalem.
I tell you the thing is a wonder, and must for ever stand for a
wonder among the sons of men. It stands, also, for an everlasting
invitation and allurement to the biggest sinners to come to Christ
for mercy. Now since, in the opinion of all men, the revolter is
such an one; if he has, as I said before, any life in him, let him
take encouragement to come again, that he may live by Christ.
But would it not become us better, since we have tasted that the
Lord is gracious, to carry it towards them so, that we may give
them convincing ground to believe that we have found that mercy
which also sets open the door for them to come and partake with
us. Ministers, I say, should do thus, both by their doctrine, and
in all other respects. Austerity doth not become us, neither in
doctrine nor in conversation.37 We ourselves live by grace; let
us give as we receive, and labour to persuade our fellow-sinners,
which God has left behind us, to follow after, that they may
partake with us of grace. We are saved by grace; let us live like
them that are gracious. Let all our things, to the world, be done
in charity towards them; pity them, pray for them, be familiar
with them, for their good. Let us lay aside our foolish, worldly,
carnal grandeur; let us not walk the streets, and have such
behaviours as signify we are scarce for touching of the poor ones
that are left behind; no, not with a pair of tongs. It becomes not
ministers thus to do.
[A gentle reproof.]
[The Conclusion.]
Now, we have obligation sufficient thus to do, for that our Lord
loved us, and gave himself for us, to deliver us from death, that
we might live through him. The world, when they hear the doctrine
that I have asserted and handled in this little book; to wit, that
Jesus Christ would have mercy offered, in the first place, to the
biggest sinners, will be apt, because themselves are unbelievers,
to think that this is a doctrine that leads to looseness, and
that gives liberty to the flesh; but if you that believe love your
brethren and your neighbours truly, and as you should, you will
put to silence the ignorance of such foolish men, and stop their
mouths from speaking evil of you. And, I say, let the love of
Christ constrain us to this. Who deserveth our heart, our mouth,
our life, our goods, so much as Jesus Christ, who has bought us to
himself by his blood, to this very end, that we should be a peculiar
people, zealous of good works?
[Answers to Objections.]
Having thus far spoken of the riches of the grace of Christ, and
of the freeness of his heart to embrace the Jerusalem sinners, it
may not be amiss to give you yet, as a caution, an intimation of
one thing, namely, that this grace and freeness of his heart, is
limited to time and day; the which, whoso overstandeth, shall perish
notwithstanding. For, as a king, who, of grace, sendeth out to his
rebellious people an offer of pardon, if they accept thereof by
such a day, yet beheadeth or hangeth those that come not in for
mercy until the day or time be past; so Christ Jesus has set the
sinner a day, a day of salvation, an acceptable time; but he who
standeth out, or goeth on in rebellion beyond that time, is like
to come off with the loss of his soul (2 Cor 6:2; Heb 3:13-19;
4:7; Luke 19:41,42). Since, therefore, things are thus, it may be
convenient here to touch a little upon these particulars.
And this, in the wisdom of God is thus, to the end no man, when
called upon, should put off turning to God to another time. Now,
and TODAY, is that and only that which is revealed in holy Writ
(Psa 50:22; Eccl 12:1; Heb 3:13,15). And this shows us the desperate
hazards which those men run, who, when invitation or conviction
attends them, put off turning to God to be saved till another, and,
as they think, a more fit season and time. For many, by so doing,
defer this to do till the day of God's patience and long-suffering
is ended; and then, for their prayers and cries after mercy, they
receive nothing but mocks, and are laughed at by the God of heaven
(Prov 1:20-30; Isa 65:12-16; 66:4; Zech 7:11-13).
1. The day of God's patience began with Ishmael, and also ended
before he was twenty years old. At thirteen years of age he was
circumcised; the next year after, Isaac was born; and then Ishmael
was fourteen years old. Now, that day that Isaac was weaned, that
day was Ishmael rejected; and suppose that Isaac was three years
old before he was weaned, that was but the seventeenth year of
Ishmael; wherefore the day of God's grace was ended with him betimes
(Gen 17:25; 21:2-11; Gal 4:30).
2. Cain's day ended with him betimes; for, after God had rejected
him, he lived to beget many children, and build a city, and to do
many other things. But, alas! all that while he was a fugitive and
a vagabond. Nor carried he anything with him after the day of his
rejection was come, but this doleful language in his conscience.
'From God's face shall I be hid' (Gen 4:10-15).
Objection. But some man may say unto me, 'Fain I would be saved,
fain I would be saved by Christ; but I fear this day of grace is
past, and that I shall perish, notwithstanding the exceeding riches
of the grace of God.'
(1.) Art thou jogged, and shaken, and molested at the hearing of
the Word? Is thy conscience awakened and convinced then, that thou
art at present in a perishing state, and that thou hast need to cry
to God for mercy? This is a hopeful sign that this day of grace is
not past with thee. For, usually, they that are past grace, are
also, in their conscience, 'past feeling,' b eing 'seared with
a hot iron' (Eph 4:18,19; 1 Tim 4:1,2). Consequently, those past
grace must be such as are denied the awakening fruits of the Word
preached. The dead that hear, says Christ, shall live; at least
wise,40 Christ has not quite done with them; the day of God's
patience is not at an end with them (John 5:25).
(3.) Art thou visited in the night seasons with dreams about thy state,
and that thou art in danger of being lost? Hast thou heart-shaken
apprehensions when deep sleep is upon thee, of hell, death, and
judgment to come? These are signs that God has not wholly left thee,
or cast thee behind his back for ever. 'For God speaketh once, yea
twice, yet man perceiveth it not. In a dream, in a vision of the
night, when deep sleep falleth upon men, in slumberings upon the
bed; then he openeth the ears of men, and sealeth their instruction,
that he may withdraw man from his purpose,' his sinful purposes,
'and hide pride from man' (Job 33:14-17). All this while God has
not left the sinner, nor is come to the end of his patience towards
him, but stands, at least, with the door of grace ajar in his hand,
as being loath, as yet, to bolt it against him.
(4.) Art thou followed with affliction, and dost thou hear God's
angry voice in thy afflictions? Doth he send with the affliction
an interpreter, to show thee thy vileness; and why, or wherefore,
that hand of God is upon thee, and upon what thou hast; to wit,
that it is for thy sinning against him, and that thou mightest be
turned to him? If so, thy summer is not quite ended; thy harvest
is not yet quite over and gone. Take heed, stand out no longer,
lest he cause darkness, and lest thy feet stumble upon the dark
mountains; and lest, while you look for light, he turn it into the
shadow of death, and make it gross darkness (Jer 8:20; 13:15-17).
(6.) Hast thou any enticing touches of the Word of God upon thy
mind? Doth, as it were, some holy word of God give a glance upon
thee, cast a smile upon thee, let fall, though it be but one drop
of its savour upon thy spirit; yea, though it stays but one moment
with thee? O then the day of grace is not past! The gate of heaven
is not shut! nor God's heart and bowels withdrawn from thee as
yet. Take heed, therefore, and beware that thou make much of the
heavenly gift, and of that good word of God of the which he has made
thee taste. Beware, I say, and take heed; there may be a falling
away for all this; but, I say, as yet God has not left thee, as
yet he has not cast thee off (Heb 6:1-9).
Let us, therefore, upon the sight of our wretchedness, fly and
venturously leap into the arms of Christ, which are now as open to
receive us into his bosom as they were when nailed to the cross.
This is coming to Christ for life aright; this is right running away
from thy [old] master to him, as was said before. And for this we
have multitudes of Scriptures to support, encourage, and comfort
us in our so doing.
But now, let him that doth thus be sure to look for it, for Satan
will be with him tomorrow, to see if he can get him again to his
old service; and if he cannot do that, then will he enter into
dispute with him, to wit, about whether he be elect to life, and
called indeed to partake of this Christ, to whom he is fled for
succour, or whether he comes to him of his own presumptuous mind.
Therefore we are bid, as to come, so to arm ourselves with that
armour which God has provided; that we may resist, quench, stand
against, and withstand all the fiery darts of the devil (Eph
6:11-18). If, therefore, thou findest Satan in this order to march
against thee, remember that thou hadst this item about it; and
betake thyself to faith and good courage, and be sober, and hope
to the end.
Answer. If thou hast, thou art lost for ever; but yet before it
is concluded by thee that thou hast so sinned, know that they that
would be saved by Jesus Christ, through faith in his blood, cannot
be counted for such.
2. But, again, he that has sinned the sin against the Holy Ghost
cannot come, has no heart to come, can by no means be made willing
to come to Jesus Christ for life; for that he has received such an
opinion of him, and of his things, as deters and holds him back.
(3.) But further, all this must be done against manifest tokens to
prove the contrary, or after the shining of gospel light upon the
soul, or some considerable profession of him as the Messiah, or
that he was the Saviour of the world.
(b.) It must be done against some shining light of the gospel upon
them. And thus it was with Judas, and with those who, after they
were enlightened, and had tasted, and had felt something of the
powers of the world to come, fell away from the faith of him, and
put him to open shame and disgrace (Heb 6:5,6).
(c.) It must also be done after, and in opposition to one's own open
profession of him. For if, after they have escaped the pollution
of the world, through the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus
Christ, they are again entangled therein, and overcome, the latter
end is worse with them than the beginning; for it had been better
for them not to have know the way of righteousness, than after they
have known it, to turn from the holy commandment, which is the word
of faith delivered unto them.
(d.) All this must be done openly, before witnesses, in the face,
sight, and view of the world, by word and act. This is the sin
that is unpardonable; and he that hath thus done, can never, it
is impossible he ever should, be renewed again to repentance, and
that for a double reason; first, such an one doth say, he will
not; and [second] of him God says, he shall not have the benefit
of salvation by him.
Objection. But if this be the sin unpardonable, why is it called
the sin against the Holy Ghost, and not rather the sin against the
Son of God?
Answer. It is called 'the sin against the Holy Ghost,' because such
count the works he did, which were done by the Spirit of God, the
works of the spirit of the devil. Also because all such as so reject
Christ Jesus the Lord, they do it in despite of that testimony
which the Holy Ghost has given of him in the holy Scriptures; for
the Scriptures are the breathings of the Holy Ghost, as in all
other things, so in that testimony they bear of the person, of the
works, sufferings, resurrection, and ascension of Jesus Christ.
Sinner, this is the sin against the Holy Ghost. What sayest thou?
Hast thou committed it? Nay, I know thou hast not, if thou wouldst
be saved by Christ. Yea, it is impossible that thou shouldst have
done it, if indeed thou wouldst be saved by him. No man can desire
to be saved by him, who he yet judgeth to be an impostor, a magician,
a witch. No man can hope for redemption by that blood which he yet
counteth an unholy thing. Nor will God ever suffer such an one to
repent, who has, after light and profession of him, thus horribly,
and devil-like, contemned and trampled upon him.
True, words, and wars, and blasphemies, against this Son of man,
are pardonable; but then they must be done 'ignorantly, and in
unbelief.' Also, all blasphemous thoughts are likewise such as may
be passed by, if the soul afflicted with them, indeed is sorry for
them (1 Tim 1:13-15; Mark 3:28).
All but this, sinner, all but this! If God had said, he will forgive
one sin, it had been undeserved grace; but when he says he will
pardon all but one, this is grace to the height. Nor is that one
unpardonable otherwise, but because the Saviour that should save
them is rejected and put away. Jacob's ladder; Christ is Jacob's
ladder that reacheth up to heaven; and he that refuseth to go by
this ladder thither, will scarce by other means get up so high.
There is none other name given under heaven, among men, whereby
we must be saved. There is none other sacrifice for sin than this;
he also, and he only, is the Mediator that reconcileth men to God.
And, sinner, if thou wouldst be saved by him, his benefits are
thine; yea, though thou art a great and Jerusalem transgressor.43
FOOTNOTES:
1 Having preached many times, and from various texts, upon this
subject, the whole substance of many sermons is here published.--Ed.
2 The Jews, and their sacred city, are standing monuments of God's
dreadful vengeance against unbelief in rejecting the Lord Christ,
in whom alone is salvation. The Lord give us grace to prize and improve
gospel privileges, lest we also be cut off, through unbelief.--Mason.
3 The higher a people rise under the means, the lower will be
their fall if they slight them. O highly-favoured England! Tyre
and Sidon, Sodom and Gomorrah, will have a milder hell than thy
carnal, hypocritical, Christless children.--Mason.
8 'Death was swallowing of them down.' How very striking and full
of truth is this expression! For, in proportion as the sinner
violates the Divine law, so he rushes into the jaws of death and
destruction. Obedience to the Divine law preserves health, bestows
happiness, and prolongs life.--Ed.
12 'Hedge-creepers'; footpads.--Ed.
15 'A muse'; deep thought. Vulgo` vocatum, 'a brown study.' Bunyan
used this word in the same sense in the first edition of 'The
Pilgrim's Progress,' at the Interpreter's house: 'Now was Christian
somewhat in a muse.' It was afterwards altered, but not improved,
by substituting the words, 'in a maze.'--Ed.
16 Among all the wondrous sights that angels witness, one gives
them peculiar joy--it is the poor penitent prodigal returning to
God, Luke 15:10.--Ed.
24 Bunyan has some striking observations upon this word Go, in his
work on the day of judgment. Those who refused the invitation to
'come' and receive life, when in the world, now irresistibly obey
the awful mandate, 'Go,' and rush into eternal woe.--Ed.
28 'At the catch.' See the dialogue between Faithful and Talkative
in 'The Pilgrim's Progress.'--Ed.
30 The blind men, who implored the mercy of Jesus, would not be
checked even by the multitude, but cried so much the more. When
a true sense of misery urges, neither men nor devils can stop the
cry for mercy, till Jesus has compassion and heals their spiritual
maladies.--Mason.
38 The true branches in Christ, the heavenly vine, are made fruitful
in love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith,
meekness, and temperance. By these it will appear that Christ is
formed within us. Mere 'lick of the tongue' love, without these,
is an unsubstantial shadow.--Ed.
43 The reason why those who are guilty of the blasphemy against the
Holy Ghost are never forgiven, is not for want of any sufficiency
in the blood of Christ, or in the pardoning mercy of God, but
because they never repent of that sin, and never seek to God for
mercy through Christ, but continue obstinate till death.--Mason.
***
AND
FIRST PREACHED AT PINNER'S HALL and now ENLARGED AND PUBLISHED FOR
GOOD.
By JOHN BUNYAN,
London: Printed for Benjamin Alsop, at the Angel and Bible in the
Poultry, 1682
Faithfully reprinted from the Author's First Edition.
Reader, let me no longer keep thee upon the threshold but enter upon
this important treatise with earnest prayer; and may the blessed
Spirit enable us to live under a sense of the greatness of the soul,
the unspeakableness of the loss thereof, the causes of losing it,
and the only way in which its salvation can he found.
'OR WHAT SHALL A MAN GIVE IN EXCHANGE FOR HIS SOUL?'--MARK 8:37.
I HAVE chosen at this time to handle these words among you, and
that for several reasons:--
l. Because the soul, and the salvation of it, are such great, such
wonderful great things; nothing is a matter of that concern as is,
and should be, the soul of each one of you. House and land, trades
and honours, places and preferments, what are they to salvation?
to the salvation of the soul?
The occasion of the words was, for that the people that now were
auditors to the Lord Jesus, and that followed him, did it without
that consideration as becomes so great a work--that is, the generality
of them that followed Him were not for considering first with
themselves, what it was to profess Christ, and what that profession
might cost them.
'And when he had called the people unto him,' the great multitude
that went with him (Luke14:25) 'with his disciples also, he said
unto them, 'Whosoever will come after me, let him deny himself,
and take up his cross, and follow me (Mark 8:34). Let him first sit
down and count up the cost, and the charge he is like to be at, if
he follows me. For following of me is not like following of some
other masters. The wind sits always on my face, and the foaming rage
of the sea of this world, and the proud and lofty waves thereof,
do continually beat upon the sides of the bark of the ship that
myself, my cause, and my followers are in; he therefore that will
not run hazards, and that is afraid to venture a drowning, let him
not set foot into this vessel. So whosever doth not bear his cross,
and come after me, he cannot be my disciple. For which of you,
intending to build a tower, sitteth not down first and counteth
the cost, whether he have sufficient to finish it (Luke 14:27-29).
But, I say, there is not in every man this knowledge of things and
so by consequence not such consideration as can make the cross and
self-denial acceptable to them for the sake of Christ, and of the
things that are where He now sitteth at the right hand of God (Col
3:2-4). Therefore our Lord Jesus doth even at the beginning give
to His followers this instruction. And lest any of them should take
distaste at His saying, He presenteth them with the consideration
of three things together--namely, the cross, the loss of life, and
the soul; and then reasoneth with them from the same, saying, Here
is the cross, the life, and the soul.
1. The cross, and that you must take up, if you will follow Me.
2. The life, and that you may save for a time, if you cast Me off.
3. And the soul, which will everlastingly perish if you come not
to Me, and abide not with Me.
Now consider what is best to be done. Will you take up the cross,
come after Me, and so preserve your souls from perishing? or will
you shun the cross to save your lives, and so run the danger of
eternal damnation? Or, as you have it in John, will you love your
life till you lose it? or will you hate your life, and save it? 'He
that loveth his life shall lose it; and he that hateth his life in
this world shall keep it unto life eternal' (John 12:25). As who
should say, He that loveth a temporal life, he that so loveth it,
as to shun the profession of Christ to save it, shall lose it upon
a worse account, than if he had lost it for Christ and the gospel;
but he that will set light by it, for the love that he hath to
Christ, shall keep it unto life eternal.
Christ having thus discoursed with His followers about their denying
of themselves, their taking up their cross and following of Him,
doth, in the next place, put the question to them, and so leaveth
it upon them for ever, saying, 'For what shall it profit a man, if
he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?' (Mark 8:36).
As who should say, I have bid you take heed that you do not lightly,
and without due consideration, enter into a profession of Me and
of My gospel; for he that without due consideration shall begin to
profess Christ, will also without it forsake Him, turn from Him, and
cast Him behind his back; and since I have even at the beginning,
laid the consideration of the cross before you, it is because you
should not be surprised and overtaken by it unawares, and because
you should know that to draw back from Me after you have laid your
hand to My plough, will make you unfit for the kingdom of heaven
(Luke 9:62).
Now, since this is so, there is no less lies at stake than salvation,
and salvation is worth all the world, yea, worth ten thousand
worlds, if there should be so many. And since this is so also, it
will be your wisdom to begin to profess the gospel with expectation
of the cross and tribulation, for to that are my gospellers1 in
this world appointed (James 1:12; 1 Thess 3:3). And if you begin
thus, and hold it, the kingdom and crown shall be yours; for as God
counteth it a righteous thing to recompense tribulation to them
that trouble you, so to you who are troubled and endure it, for 'we
count them happy,' says James, 'that endure,' (James 5:11), rest
with saints, when the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with
His mighty angels in flaming fire, to take vengeance on them that
know not God, and that obey not the gospel, etc. (2 Thess 1:7, 8).
And if no less lies at stake than salvation, then is a man's soul
and his all at the stake; and if it be so, what will it profit
a man if, by forsaking of Me, he should get the whole world? 'For
what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and
lose his own soul?'
Having thus laid the soul in one balance, and the world in the
other, and affirmed that the soul out-bids the whole world, and is
incomparably for value and worth beyond it; in the next place, he
descends to a second question, which is that I have chosen at this
time for my text, saying, 'Or what shall a man give in exchange
for his soul?'
The first is, That the loss of the soul is the highest, the greatest
loss--a loss that can never be repaired or made up. 'What shall a
man give in exchange for his soul?'--that is, to recover or redeem
his lost soul to liberty?
The second truth is this, That how unconcerned and careless soever
some now be, about the loss or salvation of their souls, yet the day
is coming; but it will then be too late, when men will be willing,
had they never so much, to give it all in exchange for their souls.
For so the question implies--'What will a man give in exchange for
his soul?' What would he not give? What would he not part with at
that day, the day in which he will see himself damned, if he had
it, in exchange for his soul?
DOCTRINE FIRST.
So then, the first truth drawn from the words stands firm--namely,
That the loss of the soul is the highest, the greatest loss; a loss
that can never be repaired or made up.
FOURTH, I shall show you the cause for which men lose their souls;
and by this time the greatness of the loss will be manifest.
FIRST, I shall show you what the soul is, both as to the various
names it goes under, as also, by describing of it by its powers
and properties, though in all I shall be but brief, for I intend
no long discourse.3
4. The soul is often called the life of man, not a life of the
same stamp and nature of the brute; for the life of man--that is,
of the rational creature--is, that, as he is such, wherein consisteth
and abideth the understanding and conscience etc. Wherefore, then,
a man dieth, or the body ceaseth to act, or live in the exercise
of the thoughts, which formerly used to be in him, when the soul
departeth, as I hinted even now--her soul departed from her, for she
died; and, as another good man saith, 'in that very day his thoughts
perish,' etc. (Psa 146:4). The first text is more emphatical; Her
soul was in departing (for she died). There is the soul of a beast,
a bird, etc., but the soul of a man is another thing; it is his
understanding, and reason, and conscience, etc. And this soul,
when it departs, he dies. Nor is this life, when gone out of the
body, annihilate, as is the life of a beast; no, this, in itself,
is immortal, and has yet a place and being when gone out of the
body it dwelt in; yea, as quick, as lively is it in its senses, if
not far more abundant, than when it was in the body; but I call it
the life, because so long as that remains in the body, the body is
not dead. And in this sense it is to be taken where he saith 'He
that loseth his life for my sake shall find it' unto life eternal;
and this is the soul that is intended in the text, and not the
breath, as in some other places is meant. And this is evident,
because the man has a being, a sensible being, after he has lost
the soul. I mean not by the man a man in this world, nor yet in
the body, or in the grave; but by man we must understand, either
the soul in hell, or body and soul there, after the judgment is
over. And for this the text, also, is plain, for therein we are
presented with a man sensible of the damage that he has sustained
by losing of his soul. 'What shall a man give in exchange for his
soul?' But,
First, We will discourse of the powers, I may call them the members
of the soul; for, as the members of the body, being many, do all
go to the making up of the body, so these do go to the completing
of the soul.
1. There is the understanding, which may be termed the head; because
in that is placed the eye of the soul; and this is that which, or
by which the soul, discerning things that are presented to it, and
that either by God or Satan; this is that by which a man conceiveth
and apprehendeth things so deep and great that cannot, by mouth,
or tongue, or pen, be expressed.
5. The mind, another part of the soul, is that unto which this
fancy presenteth its things to be considered of; because without
the mind nothing is entertained in the soul.
6. There is the memory too, another part of the soul; and that
may be called the register of the soul; for it is the memory that
receiveth and keepeth in remembrance what has passed, or has been
done by the man, or attempted to be done unto him; and in this part
of the soul, or from it, will be fed 'the worm that dieth not,' when
men are cast into hell; also, from this memory will flow that peace
at the day of judgment that saints shall have in their service for
Christ in the world.
7. There are the affections too, which are, as I may call them,
the hands and arms of the soul; for they are they that take hold
of, receive, and embrace what is liked by the soul, and it is a hard
thing to make the soul of a man cast from it what its affections
cleave to and have embraced. Hence the affections are called for,
when the apostle bids men 'seek the things above; set your affections
upon them,' saith he (Col 3), or, as you have it in another place,
'Lay hold' of them; for the affections are as hands to the soul,
and they by which it fasteneth upon things.
8. There is the will, which may be called the foot of the soul,
because by that the soul, yea, the whole man, is carried hither
and thither, or else held back and kept from moving.5
These are the golden things of the soul, though, in carnal men,
they are every one of them made use of in the service of sin and
Satan. For the unbelieving are throughout impure, as is manifest,
because their 'mind and conscience (two of the masterpieces of the
soul) is defiled' (Titus 1:15). For if the most potent parts of the
soul are engaged in their service, what, think you, do the more
inferior do? But, I say, so it is the more is the pity; nor can
any help it. 'This work ceaseth for ever,' unless the great God,
who is over all, and that can save souls, shall himself take upon
him to sanctify the soul, and to recover it, and persuade it to
fall in love with another master.
But, I say, what is man without this soul, or wherein lieth this
pre-eminence over a beast? (Eccl 3:19-21). Nowhere that I know of;
for both, as to man's body, go to one place, only the spirit or
soul of a man goes upward--to wit, to God that gave it, to be by
Him disposed of with respect to things to come, as they have been,
and have done in this life, But,
Of sight.
1. Can the body see? hath it eyes? so hath the soul. 'The eyes of
your understanding being enlightened' (Eph 1:18). As, then, the
body can see beasts, trees, men, and all visible things, so the
soul can see God, Christ, angels, heaven, devils, hell, and other
things that are invisible; nor is this property only peculiar to
the souls that are illuminate by the Holy Ghost, for the most carnal
soul in the world shall have a time to see these things, but not
to its comfort, but not to its joy, but to its endless woe and
misery, it dying in that condition. Wherefore, sinner, say not
thou, 'I shall not see Him; for judgment is before Him,' and He
will make thee see Him (Job 35:14).
Of hearing.
2. Can the body hear? hath it ears? so hath the soul (Job 4:12,13).
It is the soul, not the body, that hears the language of things
invisible. It is the soul that hears God when He speaks in and by
His Word and Spirit; and it is the soul that hears the devil when
he speaks by his illusions and temptations. True, there is such an
union between the soul and the body, that ofttimes, if not always,
that which is heard by the ears of the body doth influence the
soul, and that which is heard by the soul doth also influence the
body; but yet as to the organ of hearing, the body hath one of
its own, distinct from that of the soul, and the soul can hear and
regard even then, when the body doth not nor cannot; as in time of
sleep, deep sleep and trances, when the body lieth by as a thing
that is useless. 'For God speaketh once, yea twice, yet man, (as to
his body) perceiveth it not. In a dream, in a vision of the night,
when deep sleep falleth upon men, in slumberings upon the bed; then
he openeth the ears of men, and sealeth their instruction,' etc.
(Job 33:14-16). This must be meant of the ears of the soul, not
of the body; for that at this time is said to be in deep sleep;
moreover this hearing, it is a hearing of dreams, and the visions
of the night. Jeremiah also tells us that he had the rare and
blessed visions of God in his sleep (Jer 21:26). And so doth Daniel
too, by the which they were greatly comforted and refreshed; but
that could not be, was not the soul also capable of hearing. 'I
heard the voice of His words,' said Daniel, 'and when I heard the
voice of His words, then was I in a deep sleep on my face, and my
face toward the ground' (Dan 10:8,9).
Of tasting.
3. As the soul can see and hear, so it can taste and relish, even
as really as doth the palate belonging to the body.6 But then the
things so tasted must be that which is suited to the temper and
palate of the soul. The soul's taste lieth not in, nor is exercised
about meats, the meats that are for the belly. Yet the soul of a
saint can taste and relish God's Word (Heb 6:5), and doth ofttimes
find it sweeter than honey (Psa 19:10) nourishing as milk (1 Peter
2:2), and strengthening like to strong meat (Heb 5:12-14). The soul
also of sinners, and of those that are unsanctified, can taste and
relish, though not the things now mentioned, yet things that agree
with their fleshly minds, and with their polluted, and defiled, and
vile affections. They can relish and taste that which delighteth
them; yea, they can find soul-delight in an alehouse, a whorehouse,
a playhouse. Ay, they find pleasure in the vilest things, in the
things most offensive to God, and that are most destructive to
themselves. This is evident to sense, and is proved by the daily
practice of sinners. Nor is the Word barren as to this: They 'feed
on ashes' (Isa 44:20). They 'spend their money for that which is
not bread' (Isa 55:2). Yea, they eat and suck sweetness out of sin.
'They eat up the sin of My people' as they eat bread (Hosea 4:8).
Of smelling.
4. As the soul can see, hear, and taste, so it can smell, and
brings refreshment to itself that way. Hence the church saith, 'My
fingers dropped with sweet-smelling myrrh;' and again, she saith
of her beloved, that 'his lips dropped sweet-smelling-myrrh' (Song
5:5,13). But how came the church to understand this, but because
her soul did smell that in it that was to be smelled in it, even
in his word and gracious visits? The poor world, indeed, cannot
smell, or savour anything of the good and fragrant scent and sweet
that is in Christ; but to them that believe, 'Thy name is as ointment
poured forth, therefore do the virgins love thee' (Song 1:3).
Of feeling.
5. As the soul can see, taste, hear, and smell, so it hath the
sense of feeling, as quick and as sensible as the body. He knows
nothing that knows not this; he whose soul is 'past feeling,' has
his 'conscience seared with a hot iron' (Eph 4:18, 19; 1 Tim 4:2).
Nothing so sensible as the soul, nor feeleth so quickly the love
and mercy, or the anger and wrath of God. Ask the awakened man, or
the man that is under the convictions of the law, if he doth not
feel? and he will quickly tell you that he faints and dies away by
reason of God's hand, and His wrath that lieth upon him. Read the
first eight verses of the 38th Psalm; if thou knowest nothing of
what I have told thee by experience; and there thou shalt hear the
complaints of one whose soul lay at present under the burden of
guilt, and that cried out that without help from heaven he could
by no means bear the same. They also that know what the peace of
God means, and what an eternal weight there is in glory know well
that the soul has the sense of feeling, as well as the senses of
seeing, hearing, tasting, and smelling. But thus much for the senses
of the soul.
Of love.
1. For that of love. This is a strong passion; the Holy Ghost saith
'it is strong as death, and cruel as the grave' (Song 8:6,7). And
it is then good, when it flows from faith, and pitcheth itself
upon God in Christ as the object, and when it extendeth itself to
all that is good, whether it be the good Word, the good work of
grace, or the good men that have it, and also to their good lives.
But all soul-love floweth not from this principle, neither hath
these for its object. How many are there that make the object of
their love the most vile of men, the most base of things, because
it flows from vile affections, and from the lusts of the flesh?
God and Christ, good laws and good men, and their holy lives, they
cannot abide, because their love wanteth a principle that should
sanctify it in its first motion, and that should steer it to a
goodly object. But that is the first.
Of hatred.
They hate knowledge (Prov 1:22). They hate God (Deu 7:10; Job
21:14). They hate the righteous (2 Chron 29:2; Psa 34:21; Prov
29:10). They hate God's ways (Mal 3:14; Prov 8:12). And all is,
because the grace of filial fear is not the root and principle
from whence their hatred flows. 'For the fear of the Lord is to
hate evil:' wherefore, where this grace is wanting for a root in
the soul, there it must of necessity swerve in the letting out of
this passion; because the soul, where grace in wanting, is not at
liberty to act simply, but is biased by the power of sin; that,
while grace is absent, is present in the soul. And hence it is that
this passion, which, when acted well, is a virtue, is so abused,
and made to exercise its force against that for which God never
ordained it, nor gave it license to act.
Of joy.
3. Another passion of the soul is joy; and when the soul rejoiceth
virtuously, it rejoiceth not in iniquity, 'but rejoiceth in the
truth' (1 Cor 13:6). This joy is a very strong passion, and will
carry a man through a world of difficulties; it is a passion that
beareth up, that supporteth and strengtheneth a man, let the object
of his joy be what it will. It is this that maketh the soul fat in
goodness, if it have its object accordingly; and that which makes
the soul bold in wickedness, if it indeed doth rejoice in iniquity.
Of fear.
Of grief.
Of anger.
And now, from this description of the soul, what follows but
to put you in mind what a noble, powerful, lively, sensible thing
the soul is, that by the text is supposed may be lost, through the
heedlessness, or carelessness, or slavish fear of him whose soul
it is; and also to stir you up to that care of, and labour after,
the salvation of your soul, as becomes the weight of the matter.
If the soul were a trivial thing, or if a man, though he lost it,
might yet himself be happy, it were another matter; but the loss
of the soul is no small loss, nor can that man that has lost his
soul, had he all the world, yea, the whole kingdom of heaven, in
his own power be but in a most fearful and miserable condition.
But of these things more in their place.
[Of the greatness of the soul, when compared with the body.]
First, And the first thing that I shall take occasion to make this
manifest by, will be by showing you the disproportion that is betwixt
that and the body; and I shall do it in these following particulars:--
1. The body is called the house of the soul, a house for the soul
to dwell in. Now everybody knows that the house is much inferior
to him that, by God's ordinance, is appointed to dwell therein;
that it is called the house of the soul, you find in Paul to the
Corinthians: 'For we know,' saith he, 'that if our earthly house of
this tabernacle were dissolved, we have a building of God, a house
not made with hands, eternal in the heavens' (2 Cor 5:1). We have
then, a house for our soul in this world, and this house is the
body, for the apostle can mean nothing else; therefore he calls it
an earthly house. 'If our earthly house'--our house. But who doth
he personate if he says, This is a house for the soul; for the body
is part of him that says, Our house?
2. The body is called the clothing and the soul that which
is clothed therewith. Now, everybody knows that 'the body is more
than raiment,' even carnal sense will teach us this. But read that
pregnant place: 'For we that are in this tabernacle do groan, being
burdened (that is, with mortal flesh); not for that we should be
unclothed, but clothed upon, that mortality might be swallowed up
of life' (2 Cor 5:4). Thus the greatness of the soul appears in
the preference that it hath to the body--the body is its raiment.
We see that, above all creatures, man, because he is the most noble
among all visible ones, has, for the adorning of his body, that
more abundant comeliness. 'Tis the body of man, not of beast, that
is clothed with the richest ornaments. But now what a thing is the
soul, that the body itself must be its clothing! No suit of apparel
is by God thought good enough for the soul, but that which is made
by God himself, and that is that curious thing, the body. But oh!
how little is this considered--namely, the greatness of the soul.
'Tis the body, the clothes, the suit of apparel, that our foolish
fancies are taken with, not at all considering the richness and
excellency of that great and more noble part, the soul, for which
the body is made a mantle to wrap it up in, a garment to clothe
it withal. If a man gets a rent in his clothes, it is little in
comparison of a rent in his flesh; yea, he comforts himself when
he looks on that rent, saying, Thanks be to God, it is not a rent
in my flesh. But ah! on the contrary, how many are there in the
world that are more troubled for that they have a rent, a wound, or
a disease in the body, than for that they have for the souls that
will be lost and cast away. A little rent in the body dejecteth
and casteth such down, but they are not at all concerned, though
their soul is now, and will yet further be, torn in pieces, 'Now
consider this, ye that forget God, lest he tear you in pieces,
and there be none to deliver' (Psa 50:22). But this is the second
thing whereby, or by which, the greatness of the soul appears--to
wit, in that the body, that excellent piece of God's workmanship,
is but a garment, or clothing for the soul.
4. The body is called a tabernacle for the soul. 'Knowing that shortly
I must put off this my tabernacle' (2 Pet 1:14), that is, my body,
'by death' (John 21:18,19). 'For we know that if our earthly house
of this tabernacle were dissolved, we have a building of God,' etc.
(2 Cor 5:1). In both these places, by 'tabernacle,' can be meant
nothing but the body; wherefore both the apostles, in these sentences
do personate their souls, and speak as if the soul was THE ALL of
a man; yea, they plainly tell us, that the body is but the house,
clothes, vessel, and tabernacle for the soul. But what a famous
thing therefore is the soul!
Second, We will now come to other things that show us the greatness
of the soul. And,
4. The soul of men are such as God counts worthy to be the vessels
to hold His grace, the graces of the Spirit, in. The graces of the
Spirit--what like them, or where here are they to be found, save
in the souls of men only? 'Of His fulness have all we received,
and grace for grace' (John 1:16). Received, into what? into 'the
hidden part,' as David calls it (Psa 51:6). Hence the king's daughter
is said to be 'all glorious within,' (Psa 45:15); because adorned
and beautified with the graces of the Spirit. For that which David
calls the hidden part is the inmost part of the soul; and it is,
therefore, called the hidden part, because the soul is invisible,
nor can any one living infallibly know what is in the soul but God
Himself. But, I say, the soul is the vessel into which this golden
oil is poured, and that which holds, and is accounted worthy to
exercise and improve the same. Therefore the soul is it which is
said to love God--'Saw ye him whom my soul loveth?' (Song 3:3);
and, therefore, the soul is that which exerciseth the spirit of
prayer--'With my soul have I desired thee in the night; yea, with
my spirit within me will I seek thee early' (Isa 26:9). With the
soul also men are said to believe and into the soul God is said to
put His fear. This is the vessel into which the virgins got oil,
and out of which their lamps were supplied by the same. But what
a thing, what a great thing therefore is the soul, that that above
all things that God hath created should be the chosen vessel to put
His grace in. The body is the vessel for the soul, and the soul is
the vessel for the grace of God. But,
The soul, then, is immortal, though not eternal. That is eternal that
has neither beginning nor end, and, therefore, eternal is properly
applicable to none but God; hence He is called the 'eternal God'
(Deu 33:27). Immortal is that which, though it hath a beginning,
yet hath no end, it cannot die, nor cease to be; and this is the
state of the soul. It cannot cease to have a being when it is once
created; I mean, a living, sensible being. For I mean by living, only
such a being as distinguishes it from annihilation or incapableness
of sense and feeling. Hence, as the rich man is after death said
to 'lift up his eyes in hell,' so the beggar is said, when he died,
to be 'carried by the angels, into Abraham's bosom' (Luke 16:22,23).
And both these sayings must have respect to the souls of these men;
for, as for their bodies, we know at present it is otherwise with
them. The grave is their house, and so must be till the trumpet
shall sound, and the heavens pass away like a scroll. Now, I say,
the immortality of the soul shows the greatness of it, as the
eternity of God shows the greatness of God. It cannot be said of
any angel but that he is immortal, and so it is, and ought to be
said of the soul. This, therefore, shows the greatness of the soul,
in that it is as to abiding so like unto him.
The soul capable of diving into the depths and mysteries of hell.
Also, we see how quickly the body, when the soul is under a fear
of the rebukes of justice, how soon, I say, it wastes, moulders
away, and crumbleth into the grave; but the soul is yet strong, and
abides sensible to be dealt withal for sin by everlasting burnings.
11. The soul, by God's ordinance, while this world lasts, has a
time appointed it to forsake and leave the body to be turned again
to the dust as it was, and this separation is made by death, (Heb
9:27); therefore the body must cease for a time to have sense, or
life, or motion; and a little thing brings it now into this state;
but in the next world, the wicked shall partake of none of this;
for the body and the soul being at the resurrection rejoined, this
death, that once did rend them asunder, is for ever overcome and
extinct; so that these two which lived in sin must for ever be
yoked together in hell. Now, there the soul being joined to the
body, and death, which before did separate them, being utterly taken
away, the soul retains not only its own being, but also continueth
the body to be, and to suffer sensibly the pains of hell, without
those decays that it used to sustain.
And the reason why this death shall then be taken away is, because
justice in its bestowing its rewards for transgressions may not be
interrupted, but that body and soul, as they lived and acted in sin
together, might be destroyed for sin in hell together (Matt 10:28
Luke 12:5). Destroyed, I say, but with such a destruction, which,
though it is everlasting, will not put a period to their sensible
suffering the vengeance of eternal fire (2 Thess 1:8,9).
This death, therefore, though that also be the wages of sin, would
now, were it suffered to continue, be a hinderance to the making
known of the wrath of God, and also of the created power and might
of the soul. (1.) It would hinder the making known of the wrath
of God, for it would take the body out of the way, and make it
incapable of sensible suffering for sin, and so removing one of
the objects of vengeance the power of God's wrath would be so far
undiscovered. (2.) It would also hinder the manifestation of the
power and might of the soul, which is discovered much by its abiding
to retain its own being while the wrath of God is grappling with
it, and more by its continuing to the body a sensible being with
itself.
Death, therefore, must now be removed, that the soul may be made
the object of wrath without molestation or interruption. That the
soul, did I say? yea, that soul and body both might be so. Death
would now be a favour, though once the fruit of sin, and also the
wages thereof, might it now be suffered to continue, because it
would ease the soul of some of its burden: for a tormented body
cannot but be a burden to a spirit, and so the wise man insinuates
when he says, 'The spirit of a man will sustain his infirmity;' that
is, bear up under it, but yet so as that it feels it a burden. We
see that, because of the sympathy that is between body and soul,
how one is burdened if the other be grieved. A sick body is a
burden to the soul, and a wounded spirit is a burden to the body;
'a wounded spirit who can bear?' (Prov 18:14). But death must not
remove this burden, but the soul must have the body for a burden,
and the body must have the soul for a burden, and both must have
the wrath of God for a burden. Oh, therefore, here will be burden
upon burden, and all upon the soul, for the soul will be the chief
seat of this burden! But thus much to show you the greatness of
the soul.
THIRD, I shall now come to the third thing which was propounded to
be spoken to; and that is, to show you what we are to understand
by losing of the soul, or what the loss of the soul is--'What shall
a man give in exchange for his soul?'
First, The loss of the soul is a loss, in the nature of it, peculiar
to itself. There is no such loss, as to the nature of loss, as is
the loss of the soul; for that he that hath lost his soul has lost
himself. In all other losses, it is possible for a man to save
himself, but he that loseth his soul, loseth himself--'For what is
a man advantaged, if he gain the whole world, and lose himself?'
(Luke 9:25). Wherefore, the loss of the soul is a loss that cannot
be paralleled. He that loseth himself, loseth his all, his lasting
all; for himself is his all--his all in the most comprehensive
sense. What mattereth it what a man gets, if by the getting thereof
he loseth himself? Suppose a man goeth to the Indies for gold, and
he loadeth his ship therewith; but at his return, that sea that
carried him thither swallows him up--now, what has he got? But this
is but a lean similitude with reference to the matter in hand--to
wit, to set forth the loss of the soul. Suppose a man that has been
at the Indies for gold should, at his return, himself be taken by
them of Algiers, and there made a slave of, and there be hunger-bit,
and beaten till his bones are broken, 15 what has he got? what
is he advantaged by his rich adventure? Perhaps, you will say, he
has got gold enough to obtain his ransom. Indeed this may be; and
therefore no similitude can be found that can fully amplify the
matter, 'for what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?' 'Tis
a loss that standeth by itself, there is not another like it, or
unto which it may be compared. 'Tis only like itself--'tis singular,
'tis the chief of all losses--the highest, the greatest loss. 'For
what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?' A man may lose
his wife, his children, his estate, his liberty, and his life, and
have all made up again, and have all restored with advantage, and
may, therefore, notwithstanding all these losses, be far enough off
from losing of himself. (Luke 14:26; Mark 8:35). For he may lose
his life, and save it; yea, sometimes the only way to save that,
is to lose it; but when a man has lost himself, his soul, then all
is gone to all intents and purposes. There is no word says, 'he
that loses his soul shall save it;' but contrariwise, the text
supposeth that a man has lost his soul, and then demands if any can
answer it--'What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?' All,
then, that he gains that loseth his soul is only this, he has gained
a loss, he has purchased the loss of losses, he has nothing left
him now but his loss, but the loss of himself, of his whole self.
He that loseth his life for Christ, shall save it; but he that
loseth himself for sin, and for the world, shall lose himself
to perfection of loss; he has lost himself, and there is the full
point.
There are several things fall under this first head, upon which I
would touch a little.
He that has lost himself will never be more at his own dispose.
(1.) He that has lost his soul has lost himself. Now, he that lost
himself is no more at his own dispose. While a man enjoys himself,
he is at his own dispose. A single man, a free man, a rich man,
a poor man, any man that enjoys himself, is at his own dispose. I
speak after the manner of men. But he that has lost himself is not
at his own dispose. He is, as I may say, now out of his own hands:
he has lost himself, his soul-self, his own self, his whole self,
by sin, and wrath and hell hath found him; he is, therefore, now no
more at his own dispose, but at the dispose of justice, of wrath,
and hell; he is committed to prison, to hell prison, there to
abide, not at pleasure, not as long and as little time as he will,
but the term appointed by his judge: nor may he there choose his
own affliction, neither for manner, measure, or continuance. It
is God that will spread the fire and brimstone under him, it is God
that will pile up wrath upon him, and it is God himself that will
blow the fire. And 'the breathof the Lord, like a stream of brimstone,
doth kindle it' (Isa 30:33). And thus it is manifest that he that
has lost himself, his soul, is no more at his own dispose, but at
the dispose of them that find him.
(2.) Again, as he that has lost himself is not at his own dispose,
so neither is he at liberty to dispose of what he has; for the
man that has lost himself has something yet of his own. The text
implies that his soul is his when lost, yea, when that and his all,
himself is lost; but as he cannot dispose of himself, so he cannot
dispose of what he hath. Let me take leave to make out my meaning.
If he that is lost, that has lost himself, has not, notwithstanding,
something that in some sense may be called his own, then he that
is lost is nothing. The man that is in hell has yet the powers, the
senses, and passions of his soul; for not he nor his soul must be
thought to be stripped of these; for then he would be lower than
the brute; but yet all these, since he is there, are by God improved
against himself; or, if you will, the point of this man's sword is
turned against his own heart, and made to pierce his own liver.
(3.) All therefore that he that has lost himself can do is, to
sit down by the loss. Do I say, he can do this?--oh! if that could
be, it would be to such, a mercy; I must therefore here correct
myself--That they cannot do; for to sit down by the loss implies
a patient enduring; but there will be no such grace as patience in
hell with him that has lost himself; here, will also want a bottom
for patience--to wit, the providence of God; for a providence of God,
though never so dismal, is a bottom for patience to the afflicted;
but men go not to hell by providence, but by sin. Now sin being
the cause, other effects are wrought; for they that go to hell,
and that there miserably perish, shall never say it was God by His
providence that brought them hither, and so shall not have that on
which to lean and stay themselves.
They shall justify God, and lay the fault upon themselves concluding
that it was sin with which their souls did voluntarily work--yea,
which their souls did suck in as sweet milk--that is the cause of
this their torment. Now this will work after another manner, and
will produce quite another thing than patience, or a patient enduring
of their torment; for their seeing that they are not only lost, but
have lost themselves, and that against the ordinary means that of
God was provided to prevent that loss; yea, when they shall see
what a base thing sin is, how that it is the very worst of things,
and that which also makes all things bad, and that for the sake
of that they have lost themselves, this will make them fret, and,
gnash, and gnaw with anger themselves; this will set all the passions
of the soul, save love, for that I think will be stark dead, all
in a rage, all in a self-tormenting fire. You know there is nothing
that will sooner put a man into and manage his rage against himself
than will a full conviction in his conscience that by his own only
folly, and that against caution, and counsel, and reason to the
contrary, he hath brought himself into extreme distress and misery.
But how much more will it make this fire burn when he shall see all
this is come upon him for a toy, for a bauble, for a thing that is
worse than nothing!
Why, this is the case with him that has lost himself; and therefore
he cannot sit down by the loss, cannot be at quiet under the sense
of his loss. For sharply and wonderful piercingly, considering the
loss of himself, and the cause thereof, which is sin, he falls to
a tearing of himself in pieces with thoughts as hot as the coals of
juniper, and to a gnashing upon himself for this; also the Divine
wisdom and justice of God helpeth on this self-tormentor in his
self-tormenting work, by holding the justice of the law against
which he has offended, and the unreasonableness of such offence,
continually before his face. For if, to an enlightened man who
is in the door of hope, the sight of all past evil practices will
work in him 'vexation of spirit,' to see what fools we were, (Eccl
1:14); how can it but be to them that go to hell a vexation only
to understand the report, the report that God did give them of sin,
of His grace, of hell, and of everlasting damnation, and yet that
they should be such fools to go thither? (Isa 28:19). But to pursue
this head no further, I will come now to the next thing.
Secondly, As the loss of the soul is, in the nature of the loss, a
loss peculiar to itself, so the loss of the soul is a double loss;
it is, I say, a loss that is double, lost both by man and God; man
has lost it, and by that loss has lost himself; God has lost it,
and by that loss it is cast away. And to make this a little plainer
unto you, I suppose it will be readily granted that men do lose
their souls. But now how doth God lose it? The soul is God's as
well as man's--man's because it is of themselves; God's because it
is His creature; God has made us this soul, and hence it is that
all souls are His (Jer 38:16; Eze 18:4).
Now the loss of the soul doth not only stand in the sin of man, but
in the justice of God. Hence He says, 'What is a man advantaged, if
he gain the whole world, and lose himself, or be cast away' (Luke
9:25). Now this last clause, 'or be cast away,' is not spoken
to show what he that has lost his soul has done, though a man may
also be said to cast away himself; but to show what God will do to
those that have lost themselves, what God will add to that loss.
God will not cast away a righteous man, but God will cast away the
wicked, such a wicked one as by the text is under our consideration
(Job 8:20; Matt 13:50). This, then, is that which God will add, and
so make the sad state of them that lose themselves double. The man
for sin has lost himself, and God by justice will cast him away;
according to that of Abigail to David, 'The soul of my lord,' said
she, 'shall be bound in the bundle of life with the Lord thy God;
and the souls of thine enemies, them shall He sling out, as out of
the middle of a sling' (1 Sam 25:29). So that here is God's hand as
well as man's; man's by sin, and God's by justice. God shall cast
them away; wherefore in the text above mentioned he doth not say,
or cast away himself, as meaning the act of the man whose soul is
lost; but, 'or be cast away' (Luke 9:25). Supposing a second person
joining with the man himself in the making up of the greatness of
the loss of the soul--to wit, God himself, who will verily cast
away that man who has lost himself. God shall cast them away--that
is, exclude them His favour or protection, and deliver them up to
the due reward of their deed! He shall shut them out of His heaven,
and deliver them up to their hell; He shall deny them a share in
his glory, and shall leave them to their own shame; He shall deny
them a portion in His peace, and shall deliver them up to the torments
of the devil, and of their own guilty consciences; He shall cast
them out of His affection, pity, and compassion, and shall leave
them to the flames that they by sin have kindled, and to the worm,
or biting cockatrice, that they themselves have hatched, nursed, and
nourished in their bosoms. And this will make their loss double,
and so a loss that is loss to the uttermost, a loss above every
loss. A man may cast away himself and not be cast away of God; a
man may be cast away by others, and not be cast away of God; yea,
what way soever a man be cast away, if he be not cast away for sin,
he is safe, he is yet found, and in a sure hand. But for a man so
to lose himself as by that loss to provoke God to cast him away
too, this is fearful.
God all the time of the exercise of His long-suffering and forbearance
towards them, did call upon them, wait upon them, send after them
by His messengers, to turn them from their evil ways; but they
despised at, they mocked, the messengers of the Lord. Also they
shut their eyes, and would not see; they stopped their ears, and
would not understand; and did harden themselves against the beseeching
of their God. Yea, all that day long He did stretch out His hand
towards them, but they chose to be a rebellious and gainsaying
people; yea, they said unto God, 'Depart from us;' and 'what is
the Almighty' that we should pray unto him? (Hosea 6:2; Rev 16:21;
Job 21:14,15; Mal 3:14).
And of all these things God takes notice, writes them down, and seals
them up for the time to come, and will bring them out and spread
them before them, saying, I have called, and you have refused; I
have stretched out Mine hand, and no man regarded; I have exercised
patience, and gentleness, and long-suffering towards you, and in
all that time you despised Me, and cast Me behind your back; and
now the time, and the exercise of My patience, when I waited upon
you, and suffered your manners, and did bear your contempts and
scorns, is at an end; wherefore I will now arise, and come forth
to the judgment that I have appointed.
But now; saith God, turning is out of season; the day of My patience
is ended.
But you did not, says God, behold nor regard My cries.
But, Lord, saith the sinner, let our beseeching find place in Thy
compassions.
But Lord, says the sinner, our sins lie hard upon us.
But I offered you pardon when time was, says God, and then you did
utterly reject it.
But, Lord, says the sinner, let us therefore have it now.
And what then? Why, then, by way of retaliation, God will serve
them as they have served Him; and so the wind-up of the whole will
be this--they shall have like for like. Time was when they would
have none of Him, and now will God have none of them. Time was when
they cast God behind their back, and now He will cast away their
soul. Time was when they would not heed His calls, and now He will
not heed their cries. Time was when they abhorred Him, and now
His soul also abhorreth them (Zech 11:8). This is now by way of
retaliation--like for like, scorn for scorn, repulse for repulse,
contempt for contempt; according to that which is written, 'Therefore
it is come to pass, that as He cried, and they would not hear; so
they cried, and I would not hear, saith the Lord' (Zech 7:13). And
thus I have also showed you that the loss of the soul is double--lost
by man, lost by God.
But oh! who thinks of this? who, I say, that now makes light
of God, of His Word, His servants, and ways, once dreams of such
retaliation, though God to warn them hath even, in the day of His
patience, threatened to do it in the day of His wrath, saying,
'Because I have called, and ye refused; I have stretched out My
hand, and no man regarded; but ye have set at nought all My counsel,
and would none of My reproof: I also will laugh at your calamity;
I will mock when your fear cometh; when your fear cometh as
desolation, and your destruction cometh as a whirlwind; when distress
and anguish cometh upon you. Then shall they call upon Me, but I
will not answer; they shall seek Me early, but they shall not find
Me' (Prov 1:24-28). I will do unto them as they have done unto Me;
and what unrighteousness is in all this? But,
There are three things couched under this last head that will fill
up the punishment of a sinner. 1. The first is, that it is everlasting.
2. The second is, that, therefore, it will be impossible for the
souls in hell ever to say, Now we are got half way through our
sorrows. 3. The third is, and yet every moment they shall endure
eternal punishment.
1. The first I have touched upon already, and, therefore, shall not
enlarge; only I would ask the wanton or unthinking sinner, whether
twenty, or thirty, or forty years of the deceitful pleasures of sin
is so rich a prize, as that a man may well venture the ruin, that
everlasting burnings will make upon his soul for the obtaining
of them, and living a few moments in them. Sinner, consider this
before I go any further, or before thou readest one line more. If
thou hast a soul, it concerns thee; if there be a hell, it concerns
thee; and if there be a God that can and will punish the soul for
sin everlastingly in hell, it concerns thee; because,
(2.) All the workings of the soul under this punishment are such
as cause it, in its sufferings, to endure that which is eternal. It
can have no thought of the end of punishment, but it is presently
recalled by the decreed gulf that bindeth them under perpetual
punishment. The great fixed gulf, they know, will keep them in their
present place, and not suffer them to go to heaven (Luke 16:26).
And now there is no other place but heaven or hell to be in; for
then the earth, and the works that are therein, will be burned up.
Read the text, 'But the day of the Lord will come as a thief in
the night; in which the heavens shall pass away with a great noise,
and the elements shall melt with fervent heat; the earth also
and all the works that are therein, shall be burned up' (2 Peter
3:10). If, then, there will be no third place, it standeth in their
minds, as well as in God's decree, that their punishments shall be
eternal; so, then, sorrows, anguish, tribulation, grief, woe, and
pain, will, in every moment of its abiding upon the soul, not only
flow from thoughts of what has been, and what is, but also from
what will be, and that for ever and ever. Thus every thought that
is truly grounded in the cause and nature of their state will roll,
toss, and tumble them up and down in the cogitations and fearful
apprehensions of the lastingness of their damnation. For, I say,
their minds, their memories, their understandings, and consciences,
will all, and always, be swallowed up with 'for ever;' yea, they
themselves will, by the means of these things, be their own tormentors
for ever.
(3.) There will not be spaces, as days, months, years, and the like,
as now; though we make bold so to speak, the better to present our
thoughts to each other's capacities; for then there shall be time
no longer; also, day and night shall then be come to an end. 'He
hath compassed the waters with bounds, until the day and night
come to an end' (Job 26:10). Until the end of light with darkness.
Now when time, and day, and night, are come to an end, then there
comes in eternity, as there was before the day, and night, or time,
was created; and when this is come, punishment nor glory must none
of them be measured by days, or months, or years, but by eternity
itself. Nor shall those concerned either in misery or glory reckon
of their now new state, as they need to reckon of things in this
world; but they shall be suited in their capacities, in their
understandings and apprehensions, to judge and count of their
condition according as will best stand with their state in eternity.18
1. In its receiving of sin into its bosom, and in its retaining and
entertaining of it there. Sin must first be received before it can
act in, or be acted by, the soul. Our first parents first received
it in the suggestion or motion, and then acted it. Now it is not
here to be disputed when sin was received by the soul, so much
as whether ever the soul received sin; for if the soul has indeed
received sin into itself, then it has sinned, and by doing so,
has made itself an object of the wrath of God, and a fire brand of
hell. I say, I will not here dispute when sin was received by the
soul, but it is apparent enough that it received it betimes, because
in old time every child that was brought unto the Lord was to be
redeemed, and that at a month old, (Exo 13:13; 34:20; Num 18:15,
16); which, to be sure, was very early, and implied that then,
even then, the soul in God's judgment stood before Him as defiled
and polluted with sin. But although I said I will not dispute at
what time the soul may be said to receive sin, yet it is evident
that it was precedent to the redemption made mention of just before,
and so before the person redeemed had attained the age of a month.
And that God might, in the language of Moses, give us to see cause
of the necessity of this redemption, he first distinguisheth, and
saith, 'The firstling of a cow, or the firstling of a sheep, or the
firstling of a goat,' did not need this redemption, for they were
clean, or holy. But the firstborn of men, who was taken in lieu
of the rest of the children, and the 'firstling of unclean beasts,
thou shalt surely redeem,' saith He. But why was the firstborn of
men coupled with unclean beasts, but because they are both unclean?
The beast was unclean by God's ordination, but the other was unclean
by sin. Now, then, it will be demanded, how a soul, before it was
a month old, could receive sin to the making of itself unclean?
I answer, There are two ways of receiving, one active, the other
passive; this last is the way by which the soul at first receiveth
sin, and by so receiving, becometh culpable, because polluted and
defiled by it. And this passive way of receiving is often mentioned
in Scripture. Thus the pans received the ashes, (Exo 27:3); thus
the molten sea received three thousand baths, (2 Chron 4:5); thus
the ground receiveth the seed, (Matt 13:20-23); and this receiving
is like that of the wool which receiveth the dye, either black,
white, or red; and as the fire that receiveth the water till it
be all quenched therewith: or as the water receiveth such stinking
and poisonous matter into it, as for the sake of it, it is poured
out and spilt upon the ground. But whence should the soul thus
receive sin? I answer, from the body, while it is in the mother's
belly; the body comes from polluted man, and therefore is polluted
(Psa 51: 5). 'Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean?' (Job
14:4). The soul comes from God's hand, and therefore as so is pure
and clean: but being put into this body, it is tainted, polluted,
and defiled with the taint, stench, and filth of sin; nor can this
stench and filth be by man purged out, when once from the body got
into the soul; sooner may the blackamoor change his skin, or the
leopard his spots, than the soul, were it willing, might purge
itself of this pollution. 'Though thou wash thee with nitre, and
take thee much soap, yet thine iniquity is marked before Me, saith
the Lord God' (Jer 2:22).
2. But as I said, the soul has not only received sin, but retains
it, holds it, and shows no kind of resistance. It is enough that
the soul is polluted and defiled, for that is sufficient to provoke
God to cast it away; for which of you would take a cloth annoyed
with stinking, ulcerous sores, to wipe your mouth withal, or to
thrust it into your bosoms? and the soul is polluted with far worse
pollution than any such can be. But this is not all; it retains
sin as the wool retains the dye, or as the infected water receives
the stench or poisonous scent; I say, it retains it willingly;
for all the power of the soul is not only captivated by a seizure
of sin upon the soul, but it willingly, heartily, unanimously,
universally falleth in with the natural filth and pollution that
is in sin, to the estranging of itself from God, and an obtaining
of an intimacy and compliance with the devil.
Now this being the state and condition of the soul from the belly,20
yea, from before it sees the light of this world, what can be
concluded but that God is offended with it? For how can it otherwise
be, since there is holiness and justice in God? Hence those that
are born of a woman, whose original is by carnal conception with
man, are said to be as serpents so soon as born. 'The wicked (and
all at first are so) go astray as soon as they be born, speakings
lies. Their poison is like the poison of a serpent: they are like
the deaf adder, that stoppeth her ear' (Psa 58:3,4). They go astray
from the belly; but that they would not do, if aught of the powers
of their soul were unpolluted. 'But their poison is like the poison
of a serpent.' Their poison--what is that? Their pollution, their
original pollution, that is as the poison of a serpent--to wit,
not only deadly, for so poison is, but also hereditary. It comes
from the old one, from the sire and dam; yea, it is also now
become connatural to and with them, and is of the same date with
the child as born into the world. The serpent has not her poison,
in the original of it, either from imitation or from other infective
things abroad, though it may by such things be helped forward and
increased; but she brings it with her in her bowels, in her nature,
and it is to her as suitable to her present condition as it is
that which is most sweet and wholesome to other of the creatures.
So, then, every soul comes into the world as poisoned with sin; nay,
as such which have poison connatural to them; for it has not only
received sin as the wool has received the dye, but it retaineth it.
The infection is got so deep, it has taken the black so effectually,
that the tint, the very fire of hell, can never purge the soul
therefrom.
And that the soul has received this infection thus early, and that
it retains it so surely, is not only signified by children coming
into the world besmeared in their mother's blood, and by the
firstborn's being redeemed at a month old, but also by the first
inclinations and actions of children when they are so come into
the world (Exo 26). Who sees not that lying, pride, disobedience to
parents, and hypocrisy, do put forth themselves in children before
they know that they do either well or ill in so doing, or before
they are capable to learn either of these arts by imitation, or
seeing understandingly the same things done first by others? He
that sees not that they do it naturally from a principle, from an
inherent principle, is either blinded, and has retained his darkness
by the same sin as they, or has suffered himself to be swayed by
a delusion from him who at first infused this spawn of sin into
man's nature.
Now that the soul doth thus entertain sin, is manifest by these
several particulars--
(2.) These shifts the souls of sinners do presently make for the
saving of sin from those things that by the Word men are commanded
to do unto it--
(a) They will, if possible, hide it, and not suffer it to be
discovered. 'He that hideth his sins23 shall not prosper' (Prov
28:13). And again, they hide it, and refuse to let it go (Job
20:12,13). This is an evident sign that the soul has a favour for
sin, and that with liking it, entertains it.
(b) As it will hide it, so it will excuse it, and plead that this
and that piece of wickedness is no such evil thing; men need not
be so nice, and make such a pother24 about it, calling those that
cry out so hotly against it, men more nice than wise. Hence the
prophets of old used to be called madmen, and the world would reply
against their doctrine, Wherein have we been so wearisome to God,
and what have we spoken so much against Him? (Mal 1:6,7; 3:8,13).
(c) As the soul will do this, so to save sin, it will cover it with
names of virtue, either moral or civil; and of this God greatly
complains, yea, breaks into anger for this, saying, 'Woe to them
that call evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light,
and light for darkness; and put bitter for sweet, and sweet for
bitter' (Isa 5:20)!
(e) If God yet pursues, and will see whether this promise of putting
sin out of doors shall be fulfilled by the soul, why then, it will
be partial in God's law; it will put away some, and keep some; put
away the grossest, and keep the finest; put away those that can
best be spared, and keep the most profitable for a help at a pinch
(Mal 2:9).
(f) Yes, if all sin must be abandoned, or the soul shall have no
rest, why then, the soul and sin will part (with such a parting
as it is), even as Phaltiel parted with David's wife, with an ill
will and a sorrowful mind; or as Orpha left her mother, with a kiss
(2 Sam 3:16; Ruth 1:14).
(g) And if at any time they can, or shall, meet with each other
again, and nobody never the wiser, O, what courting will be betwixt
sin and the soul? And this is called doing of things in the dark
(Eze 8:12).
Secondly, That I may yet show you what a great thing sin is with
the soul that is to be damned, I will show how sin, by the help of
the soul, is managed, from the motion of sin, even till it comes
to the very act; for sin cannot come to an act without the help of
the soul. The body doth little here, as I shall further show you
anon.
And hence it is that men are said to inflame themselves with their
idols under every green tree. 'And to be as fed horses, neighing
after their neighbour's wife' (Jer 5:8). For the imagination is such
a forcible power, that if it putteth forth itself to dress up and
present a thing to the soul, whether that thing be evil or good,
the rest of the faculties cannot withstand it. Therefore, when David
prayed for the children of Israel, he said, 'I have seen with joy
thy people, which are present here, to offer willingly unto thee;'
that is, for preparations to build the temple. 'O Lord God,' saith
he, 'keep this for ever in the imagination of the thoughts of the
heart of Thy people, and prepare their heart unto Thee' (1 Chron
29:17, 18). He knew that as the imagination was prepared, so would
the soul be moved, whether by evil or good; therefore as to this,
he prays that their imagination might be engaged always with
apprehensions of the beauteousness of the temple, that they might
always, as now, offer willingly for its building.
But, as I said, when the imagination hath thus set forth sin to the
rest of the faculties of the soul, they are presently entangled,
and fall into a flame of love thereto; this being done, it follows
that a purpose to pursue this motion, till it be brought unto act,
is the next thing that is resolved on. Thus Esau, after he had
conceived of that profit that would accrue to him by murdering
of his brother, fell the next way into a resolve to spill Jacob's
blood. And Rebecca sent for Jacob, and said unto him, 'Behold, thy
brother Esau, as touching thee, doth comfort himself, purposing to
kill thee' (Gen 27:42). See also (Jer 49:30). Nor is this purpose
to do an evil without its fruit, for he comforted himself in his evil
purpose: 'Esau, as touching thee, doth comfort himself, purposing
to kill thee.'
Thus you see how sin is, in the motion of it, handed through the
soul--first, it comes into the fancy or imagination, by which it
is so presented to the soul, as to inflame it with desire to bring
it into act; so from this desire the soul proceedeth to a purpose
of enjoying, and from a purpose of enjoying to inventing how, or
by what means, it had best to attempt the accomplishing of it.
But, further, when the soul has thus far, by its wickedness, pursued
the motion of sin to bring it into action, then to the last thing;
to wit, to endeavours, to take the opportunity, which, by the
invention, is judged most convenient; so to endeavours it goes,
till it has finished sin, and finished, in finishing of that, its
own fearful damnation. 'Then when lust hath conceived, it bringeth
forth sin; and sin, when it is finished, bringeth forth death'
(James 1:15).
And who knows, but God and the soul, how many lets, hindrances,
convictions, fears, frights, misgivings, and thoughts of the
judgment of God, all this while are passing and repassing, turning
and returning, over the face of the soul? how many times the soul
is made to start, look back, and tremble, while it is pursuing the
pleasure, profit, applause, or preferment that sin, when finished,
promiseth to yield unto the soul? for God is such a lover of the
soul, that He seldom lets it go on in sin, but He cries to it, by
His Word and providences, 'Oh! do not this abominable thing that
I hate!' (Jer 44: 4); especially at first, until it shall have
hardened itself, and so provoked Him to give it up in sin-revenging
judgment to its own ways and doings, which is the terriblest
judgment under heaven; and this brings me to the third thing, the
which I now will speak to.
Third, That you may the better perceive that the soul, through sin,
has set itself against God, I will propose, and speak briefly to,
these two things:--
I. For the law. God has given it for a rule of life, either as
written in their natures, or as inserted in the Holy Scriptures; I
say, for a rule of life to all the children of men. But what have
men done, or how have they carried it to this law of their Creator;
let us see, and that from the mouth of God himself.
3. They 'have forsaken Me, and have not kept My law' (Jer 16:11).
6. And, saith God, 'I have written to him the great things of My
law, but they were counted as a strange thing.' (Hos 8:12).
Now, whence should all this disobedience arise? Not from the
unreasonableness of the commandment, but from the opposition that
is lodged in us against God, and the enmity that it entertains
against goodness. Hence the apostle speaks of the emnity, and says,
that men are enemies in their minds, their souls, as is manifest by
wicked works (Col 1:21). This, if men went no further, must needs
be highly provoking to a just and holy God: yea, so highly offensive
is it, that, to show the heat of His anger, He saith, 'Indignation
and wrath, tribulation and anguish, upon every soul of man that
doeth evil,' and this evil with a witness, 'of the Jew first, and
also of the Gentile,' that doth evil (Rom 2:8,9). That breaketh
the law; for that evil He is crying out against now. But,
But, further, the soul despiseth not the gospel in that revelation
of it only, but the great and chief bringer thereof, with the
manner, also, of His bringing of it. The Bringer, the great Bringer
of the gospel, is the good Lord Jesus Christ himself; He 'came and
preached peace to them that the law proclaimed war against; became
and preached peace to them that were afar off, and to them that were
nigh' (Eph 2:17). And it is worth your observation to take notice
how He came, and that was, and still is, as He is set forth in the
word of the gospel; to wit, first, as making peace Himself to God
for us in and by the blood of His cross; and then, as bearing (as
set out by the gospel) the very characters of His sufferings before
our faces in every tender of the gospel of His grace unto us. And
to touch a little upon the dress in which, by the gospel, Christ
presenteth unto us while He offereth unto sinful souls His peace,
by the tenders thereof.
1. He is set forth as born for us, to save our souls (Isa 9:6; Luke
2:9-12).
Dost thou understand me, sinful soul? He wrestled with justice, that
thou mightest have rest; He wept and mourned, that thou mightest
laugh and rejoice; He was betrayed, that thou mightest go free;
was apprehended, that thou mightest escape; He was condemned, that
thou mightest be justified; and was killed, that thou mightest
live; He wore a crown of thorns, that thou mightest wear a crown
of glory; and was nailed to the cross, with His arms wide open,
to show with what freeness all His merits shall be bestowed on the
coming soul; and how heartily He will receive it into His bosom?
Further, all this He did of mere good will, and offereth the benefit
thereof unto thee freely; yea, He cometh unto thee, in the word
of the gospel, with the blood running down from His head upon His
face, with His tears abiding upon His cheeks, with the holes as fresh
in His hands and His feet, and as with the blood still bubbling
out of His side, to pray thee to accept of the benefit, and to
be reconciled to God thereby (2 Cor 5). But what saith the sinful
soul to this? I do not ask what he saith with his lips, for he will
assuredly flatter God with his mouth; but what doth his actions
and carriages declare as to his acceptance of this incomparable
benefit? For 'a wicked man speaketh with his feet, and teacheth
with his fingers' (Prov 6:12,13). With his feet--that is, by the
way he goeth: and with his fingers--that is, by his acts and doings.
So, then, what saith he by his goings, by his sets and doings, unto
this incomparable benefit, thus brought unto him from the Father,
by His only Son, Jesus Christ? What saith he? Why, he saith that
he doth not at all regard this Christ, nor value the grace thus
tendered unto him in the gospel.
I may safely say, that the most of men who are concerned in a trade,
will be more vigilant in dealing with a twelvepenny customer than
they will be with Christ when He comes to make unto them, by the
gospel, a tender of the incomparable grace of God. Hence they are
called fools, because a price is put into their hands to get wisdom,
and they have no heart unto it (Prov 18:16). And hence, again, it
is that that bitter complaint is made, 'But My people would not
hearken to my voice; and Israel would none of Me' (Psa 81:11). Now,
these things being found, as practised by the souls of sinners, must
needs, after a wonderful manner, provoke; wherefore, no marvel that
the heavens are bid to be astonished at this, and that damnation
shall seize upon the soul for this (Jer 2).
And indeed, the soul that doth thus by practice, though with
his mouth--as who doth not? he shall show much love, he doth,
interpretatively, say these things:--
(1.) That he loveth sin better than grace, and darkness better
than light, even as our Lord Jesus Christ hath showed, 'And this
is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men
loved darkness more than light (as is manifest), because their
deeds were evil' (John 3:19).
(2.) They do, also, by their thus rejecting of Christ and grace,
say, that for what the law can do to them, they value it not; they
regard not its thundering threatenings, nor will they shrink when
they come to endure the execution thereof; wherefore God, to deter
them from such bold and desperate ways, that do, interpretatively,
fully declare that they make such desperate conclusions, insinuates
that the burden of the curse thereof is intolerable, saying, 'Can
thine heart endure, or can thine hands be strong, in the days that
I shall deal with thee? I, the Lord, have spoken it, and will do
it' (Eze 22:14).
(3.) Yea, by their thus doing, they do as good as say that they
will run the hazard of a sentence of death at the day of judgment,
and that they will, in the meantime, join issue, and stand a trial
at that day with the great and terrible God. What else means their
not hearkening to Him, their despising of His Son, and the rejecting
of His grace; yea I say again, what else means their slighting of
the curse of the law, and their choosing to abide in their sins
till the day of death and judgment? And thus I have showed you the
causes of the loss of the soul; and, assuredly, these things are
no fables.
Objection. But some may object, and say, But you denounce all against
the soul; the soul, as if the body were in no fault at all; or, as
if there were no punishment assigned for the body.
Answer 1. The soul must be the part punished, because the soul is
that which sins. 'Every sin that a man doeth is without the body,'
fornication or adultery excepted (1 Cor 6:18). 'Is without the
body; that is, as to the wilily inventing, contriving, and finding
out ways to bring the motions of sin into action. For, alas! What
can the body do as to these? It is in a manner wholly passive; yea,
altogether as to the lusting and purposing to do the wickedness,
excepting the sin before excepted; ay, and not excepting that, as
to the rise of that sin; for even that, with all the rest, ariseth
and proceedeth out of the heart--the soul; 'For from within, out of
the heart of men, proceed evil thoughts, adulteries, fornications,
murders, thefts, covetousness, wickedness, deceit, lasciviousness,
an evil eye, blasphemy, pride, foolishness: all these evil things
come from within, and defile the man' (Mark 7:21-23). That is, the
outward man. But a difference must always be put betwixt defiling
and being defiled, that which defileth being the worst; not but
that the body shall have its share of judgment, for body and soul
must be destroyed in hell (Luke 12:4,5; Matt 10:28). The body as
the instrument, the soul as the actor; but oh! the soul, the soul,
the soul is the sinner; and, therefore, the soul, as the principal,
must be punished.
And that God's indignation burneth most against the soul appears in
that death hath seized upon every soul already; for the Scripture
saith, that every natural or unconverted man is dead (Eph 2:1-3).
Dead! How? Is his body dead? No, verily; his body liveth, but his
soul is dead (1 Tim 5:6). Dead! But with what death? Dead to God,
and to all things gospelly good, by reason of that benumbing,
stupifying, and senselessness, that, by God's just judgment for
and by sin, hath swallowed up the soul. Yea, if you observe, you
shall see that the soul goeth first, or before, in punishment, not
only by what has been said already, in that the soul is first made
a partaker of death, but in that God first deals with the soul by
convictions, yea, and terrors, perhaps, while the body is well;
or, in that He giveth up the soul to judicial hardness and further
blindness, while He leaveth the body to do His office in the world;
yea, and also when the day of death and dissolution is come, the
body is spared, while the soul is tormented in unutterable torment
in hell. And so, I say, it shall be spared, and the clods of the
valley shall be sweet unto it, while the soul mourneth in hell for
sin. It is true, at the day of judgment, because that is the last
and final judgment of God on men, then the body and soul shall
be re-united, or joined together again, and shall then, together,
partake of that recompence for their wickedness which is meet. When
I say, the body is spared and the soul tormented, I mean not that
the body is not then, at death, made to partake of the wages of sin,
'for the wages of sin is death' (Rom 3:23). But I mean, the body
partakes then but of temporal death, which, as to sense and feeling,
is sometimes over presently, and then resteth in the grave, while
the soul is tormenting in hell. Yea, and why is death suffered to
slay the body? I dare say, not chiefly for that the indignation
of God most burneth against the body; but the body being the house
for the soul in this world, God even pulls down this body, that
the soul may be stript naked, and being stript, may be carried to
prison, to the place where damned souls are, there to suffer in
the beginning of suffering, that punishment that will be endless.
Answer 4. With the soul by itself are the most quick and suitable
apprehensions of God and His wrath; wherefore, that must needs be
made partaker of the sorest punishment in hell; it is the soul that
now is the most subtle at discerning, and it is the soul that will
be so; then conscience, memory, and understanding, and mind; these
will be the seat of torment, since the understanding will let wrath
immediately upon these, from what it apprehends of that wrath;
conscience will let the wrath of God immediately upon these, from
what it fearfully feels of that wrath; the memory will then, as a
vessel, receive and retain up to the brim of this wrath, even as
it receiveth by the understanding and conscience, the cause of this
wrath, and considers the durableness of it; so, then, the soul is
the seat and the receiver of wrath, even as it was the receiver and
seat of sin; here, then, is sin and wrath upon the soul, the soul
in the body, and so soul and body tormented in hell fire.
Objection. But you say, Doth not this give encouragement to sinners
to give way to the body to be in all its members loose, and vain,
and wicked, as instruments to sin?
Answer. No; forasmuch as the body shall also have his share in
punishment. For though I have said the soul shall have more punishment
than the body, yet I have not said, that the body shall at all be
eased by that; no, the body will have its due. And for the better
making out of my answer further, consider of these following
particulars:--
(1.) The body will be the vessel to hold the tormented soul in; this
will be something; therefore man, damned man, is called a vessel
of wrath, a vessel, and that in both body and soul (Rom 9:22). The
soul receiveth wrath unto itself, and the body holdeth that soul
that has thus received, and is tormented with, the wrath of God.
Now the body being a vessel to hold this soul that is thus possessed
with the wrath of God, must needs itself be afflicted and tormented
with that torment, because of its union with the body; therefore
the Holy Ghost saith, 'His flesh upon him shall have pain, and his
soul within him shall mourn' (Job 14:22). Both shall have their
torment and misery, for that both joined hand in hand in sin, the
soul to bring it to the birth, and the body to midwife it into
the world; therefore it saith again, with reference to the body,
'Let the curse come into his bowels like water, and like oil into
his bones.' Let it be unto him as the garment which covereth him,
and for a girdle, etc. (Psa 109:17-19). The body, then, will be
tormented as well as the soul, by being a vessel to hold that soul
that is now possessed and distressed with the unspeakable wrath and
indignation of the Almighty God, and this will be a great deal, if
you consider,
(2.) That the body, as a body, will, by reason of its union with the
soul, be as sensible, and so as capable in its kind, to receive
correction and torment as ever, nay, I think more; for if the
quickness of the soul giveth quickness of sense to the body, as in
some case, at least, I am apt to think it doth, then forasmuch as
the soul will now be most quick, most sharp in apprehension, so the
body, by reason of union and sympathy with the soul, will be most
quick and most sharp as to sense. Indeed, if the body should not
receive and retain sense, yea, all its senses, by reason of its
being a vessel to hold the soul, the torment of the soul could
not as torment, be ministered to the body, no more than the fire
tormented the king of Babylon's furnace (Dan 3). Or than the king
of Moab's lime kiln was afflicted because the king of Edom's bones
were burnt therein. But now the body has received again its senses,
now therefore it must, yea, it cannot choose but must feel that
wrath of God that is let out, yea, poured out like floods of water
into the soul. 27 Remember also, that besides what the body receiveth
from the soul by reason of its union and sympathy therewith, there
is a punishment, and instruments of punishment, though I will
not pretend to tell you exactly what it is, prepared for the body
for its joining with the soul in sin, therewith to be punished; a
punishment, I say, that shall fall immediately upon the body, and
that such an one as will most fitly suit with the nature of the
body, as wrath and guilt do most fitly suit the nature of the soul.
(3.) Add to these, the durable condition that the body in this state
is now in with the soul. Time was when the soul died, and the body
lived, and the soul was tormented while the body slept and rested
in the dust; but now these things are past; for at the day of
judgment, as I said, these two shall be re-united, and that which
once did separate them, be destroyed; then of necessity they must
abide together, and, as together, abide the punishment prepared
for them; and this will greaten the torment of the body.
Death was once the wages of sin, and a grievous curse; but might the
damned meet with it in hell, they would count it a mercy, because
it would separate soul and body, and not only so, but take away all
sense from the body, and make it incapable of suffering torment;
yea, I will add, and by that means give the soul some ease; for
without doubt, as the torments of the soul extend themselves to the
body, so the torments of the body extend themselves to the soul;
nor can it be otherwise, because of union and sympathy. But death,
natural death, shall be destroyed, and there shall be no more natural
death, no, not in hell (1 Cor 15:26). And now it shall happen to
men, as it hath done in less and inferior judgments. They shall
seek death, and desire to die, and death shall not be found by
them (Job 3:21; Rev 9:6). Thus therefore they must abide together;
death that used to separate them asunder is now slain--1. Because
it was an enemy in keeping Christ's body in the grave; and, 2.
Because a friend to carnal men in that, though it was a punishment
in itself, yet while it lasted and had dominion over the body of
the wicked, it hindered them of that great and just judgment which
for sin was due unto them; and this is the third discovery of the
manner and way of punishing of the body. But,
(4.) There will then be such things to be seen and heard, which
the eye and the ear--to say no more than has been said of the sense
of feeling--will see and hear, that will greatly aggravate the
punishment of the body in hell; for though the eye is the window,
and the ear a door for the soul to look out at, and also to receive
in by, yet whatever goeth in at the ear or the eye leaves influence
upon the body, whether it be that which the soul delighteth in, or
that which the soul abhorreth; for as the eye affecteth the heart,
or soul (Lam 3:51) so the eye and ear, by hearing and beholding,
doth ofttimes afflict the body. 'When I heard, my belly
trembled--rottenness entered into my bones.' (Hab 3:16).
See! why, what shall they see? Why, themselves in hell, with
others like them; and this will be a torment to their body. There
is bodily torment, as I said, ministered to the body by the senses
of the body. What think you? If a man saw himself in prison, in
irons, upon the ladder, with the rope about his neck, would not
this be distress to the body, as well as to the mind? To the body,
doubtless. Witness the heavy looks, the shaking legs, trembling
knees, pale face, and beating and aching heart; 28 how much more,
then, when men shall see themselves in the most dreadful place; it
is a fearful place, doubtless, to all to behold themselves in that
shall come thither (Luke 16:28).
Again; they shall see others there, and shall by them see themselves.
There is an art by which a man may make his neighbour look so
ghastly, that he shall fright himself by looking on him, especially
when he thinks of himself, that he is of the same show also. It is
said concerning men at the downfall of Babylon, that they shall be
amazed one at another, for 'their faces shall be as flames' (Isa
13:8). And what if one should say, that even as it is with a house
set on fire within, where the flame ascends out at the chimneys,
out at the windows, and the smoke out at every chink and crevice
that it can find, so it will be with the damned in hell. That soul
will breathe hell fire and smoke, and coals will seem to hang upon
its burning lips; yea, the face, eyes, and ears will seem all to
be chimneys and vents for the flame and smoke of the burning which
God by His breath hath kindled therein, and upon them, which will
be beheld one in another, to the great torment and distress of each
other.
What shall I say? Here will be seen devils, and here will be heard
howlings and mournings; here will the soul see itself at an infinite
distance from God; yea, the body will see it too. In a word, who
knows the power of God's wrath, the weight of sin, the torments
of hell, and the length of eternity? If none, then none can tell,
when they have said what they can, the intolerableness of the
torments that will swallow up the soul, the lost soul, when it is
cast away by God, and from Him, into outer darkness for sin. But
this much for the cause of the loss of the soul.
DOCTRINE SECOND,
FIRST, That God has undertaken, and will accomplish, the breaking
of the spirits of all the world, either by His grace and mercy to
salvation, or by His justice and severity to damnation. The damned
soul under consideration is certainly supposed, as by the doctrine,
so by the text, to be utterly careless, and without regard of
salvation, so long as the acceptable time did last, and as the white
flag, that signifies terms of peace, did hang out; and, therefore,
it is said to be lost; but, behold, now it is careful, but now it
is solicitous, but now, 'what shall a man give in exchange for his
soul?' He of whom you read in the gospel, that could tend to do
nothing in the days of the gospel but to find out how to be clothed
in purple and fine linen, and to fare sumptuously every day, was
by God brought so down, and laid so low at last, that he could
crouch, and cringe, and beg for one small drop of water to cool
his tongue--a thing, that but a little before he would have thought
scorn to have done, when he also thought scorn to stoop to the grace
and mercy of the gospel (Luke 16:19,24). But God was resolved to
break his spirit, and the pride of his heart, and to humble his
lofty looks, if not by His mercy, yet by His justice; if not by
His grace, yet by hell fire.
Sinner, careless sinner, didst thou take notice of this first inference
that I have drawn from my second doctrine? If thou didst, yet read
it again: it is this, 'God has undertaken, and will accomplish, the
breaking of the spirits of all the world, either by His grace and
mercy unto salvation, or by His justice and severity to damnation.'
The reason for this is this: God is resolved to have the mastery,
He is resolved to have the victory. 'Who would set the briers
and thorns against Me in battle? I would go through them, I would
burn them together' (Isa 27:4). I will march against them. God is
merciful, and is come forth into the world by His Son, tendering
of grace unto sinners by the gospel, and would willingly make a
conquest over them for their good by His mercy. Now He being come
out, sinners like briars and thorns do set themselves against Him,
and will have none of His mercy. Well, but what says God? Saith
He, Then I will march on, I will go through them, and burn them
together. I am resolved to have the mastery one way or another; if
they will not bend to Me, and accept of My mercy in the gospel, I
will bend them and break them by My justice in hell fire. They say
they will not bend; I say they shall; now they 'shall know whose
words shall stand, Mine or theirs.' (Jer 44:25-28). Wherefore the
apostle, when he saw that some of the Corinthians began to be unruly,
and to do those things that did begin to hazard them, saith, 'Do
we provoke the Lord to jealousy? are we stronger than He?' (1 Cor
5:22). As who should say, My brethren, are you aware what you do?
do you not understand that God is resolved to have the mastery
one way or another? and are you stronger than He? if not, tremble
before Him, or He will certainly have you under His feet--'I will
tread them in Mine anger, and trample them in My fury' (Isa 63:3).
Thus He speaks of them that set themselves against Him; therefore
beware. Now the reason of this resolution of God, it flows from a
determination in Him to make all His sayings good, and to verify
them on the consciences of sinners. And since the incredulous
world will not believe now, and fly from wrath, they shall shortly
believe and cry under it; since they will not now credit the Word,
before they see, unto salvation, they shall be made to credit it
by sense and feeling unto damnation.
For then they, will they nill they, shall have to do with God,
though not with Him as merciful, or as one that may be intreated;
yet with Him all just, and as devouring fire (Heb 7:29). Yea, they
shall see that face, and hear that voice, from whom and from which
the heavens and the earth will fly away, and find no place of stay.
And by this appearance, and by such words of His mouth as He then
will speak to them, they shall begin to tremble, and call for the
rocks to fall upon them and cover them; for if these things will
happen at the execution of inferior judgments, what will be done,
what effects will the last, most dreadful, and eternal judgment,
have upon men's souls?
Hence you find, that at the very first appearance of Jesus Christ,
the whole world begins to mourn and lament--'Every eye shall see
Him, and they also which pierced Him: and all kindreds of the earth
shall wail because of Him' (Rev 1:7). And, therefore, you also
find them to stand at the door and knock, saying, 'Lord, Lord, open
unto us' (Luke 14:25; Matt 25:11). Moreover, you find them also
desiring, yea, also so humble in their desires as to be content
with the least degree of mercy--one drop, one drop upon the tip of
one's finger. What stooping, what condescension, what humility is
here! All, and every one of those passages declare, that the hand
of God is upon them, and that the Almighty has got the mastery of
them, has conquered them, broke the pride of their power, and laid
them low, and made them cringe and crouch unto him, bending the
knee, and craving of kindness. Thus, then, will God bow, and bend,
and break them; yea, make them bow, and bend, and break before Him.
And hence also it is they will weep, and mourn, and gnash their
teeth, and cry, and repent that ever they have been so foolish,
so wicked, so traitorous to their souls, such enemies of their own
eternal happiness, as to stand out in the day of their visitation
in a way of rebellion against the Lord.
But here is their hard hap, their dismal lot and portion, that all
these things must be when it is too late. It is, and will be, the
lot and hap of these to bow, bend, and break too late (Matt 25).
You read they come weeping and mourning, and with tears; they knock
and they cry for mercy; but what did tears avail? Why, nothing;
for the door was shut. He answered and said, 'I know not whence you
are.' But they repeat and renew their suit, saying, 'We have eaten
and drunk in Thy presence, and Thou hast taught in our streets.'
What now? Why, He returns upon them His first answer the second
time, saying, 'I know not whence ye are; depart from Me, all ye
workers of iniquity;' then He concludes, 'There shall be weeping and
gnashing of teeth, when ye shall see Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob,
and all the prophets, in the kingdom of God, and you yourselves
thrust out' (Luke 13:26,28). They come weeping, and go weeping
away. They come to Him weeping, for they saw that He had conquered
them; but they departed weeping, for they saw that He would damn
them; yet, as we read in another place, they were very loath to
go from Him, by their reasoning and expostulating with Him--'Lord,
when saw we Thee an hungred, or athirst, or a stranger, or naked,
or sick, or in prison, and did not minister unto Thee?' But all
would not do; here is no place for change of mind--'These shall
go away into everlasting punishment; but the righteous into life
eternal' (Matt 25:44-46). And now what would a man give in exchange
for his soul? So that, as I said before, all is too late; they
mourn too late, they repent too late, they pray too late, and seek
to make an exchange for their soul too late. 'Or what shall a man
give in exchange for his soul?'
Two or three things there may yet be gathered from these words; I
mean, as to the desires of them that have lost their souls, to make
for them an exchange; 'What shall a man give in exchange?'--what
shall, what would, yea, what would not a man, if he had it, give
in exchange for his soul?
First, What would not a man--I mean, a man that is in the condition
that is by the text supposed some men are and will be in--give in
exchange to have another man's virtue instead of their own vices?
'Let me die the death of the righteous;' let my soul be in the
state of the soul of the righteous--that is, in reference to his
virtues, when I die, 'and let my last end be like his' (Num 23:10).
It is a sport now to some to taunt, and squib, and deride at other
men's virtues; but the day is coming when their minds will be
changed, and when they shall be made to count those that have done
those righteous actions and duties which they have scoffed at, the
only blessed men; yea, they shall wish their soul in the blessed
possession of those graces and virtues, that those whom they hated
were accompanied with, and would, if they had it, give a whole world
for this change; but it will not now do, it is now too late. What
then shall a man give in exchange for his soul? And this is more
than intimated in that 25th of Matthew, named before: for you
find by that text how loath they were, or will be, to be counted
for unrighteous people--'Lord,' say they, 'when did we see thee
an hungred, or athirst, naked, or sick, and did not minister unto
thee?' Now they are not willing to be of the number of the wicked,
though hereto-fore the ways of the righteous were an abomination
to them. But, alas! they are before a just God, a just Judge, a
Judge that will give every one according to their ways; therefore,
'Woe unto (the soul of) the wicked now, it shall be ill with him,
for the reward of his hands shall be given him' (Isa 3:11). Thus,
therefore, he is locked up as to this; he cannot now change his vice
for virtues, nor put himself nor his soul in the stead of the soul
of the saved; so that it still, and will, for ever abide a question
unresolved,' Or, what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'
I do not doubt but that a man's state may be such in this world,
that if he had it he would give thousands of gold to be as innocent
and guiltless in the judgment of the law of the land as is the
state of such or such, heartily wishing that himself was not that
he, that he is; how much more then will men wish thus when they
stand ready to receive the last, their eternal judgment. 'But what
shall a man give in exchange for his soul?'
They then that have lost, or shall lose their souls are bound to
their place, as well as to their sins. When Judas went to hell,
he went to his home, 'to his own place' (Acts 1:25). And when the
righteous go hence, they also go home to their house, to their own
place; for the kingdom of heaven is prepared for them (Matt 25:34).
Between heaven and hell 'there is a great gulf fixed' (Luke 26:26).
That is a strange passage: 'There is a great gulf fixed.' What
this gulf is, and how impassable, they that shall lose their souls
will know to their woe; because it is fixed there where it is, on
purpose to keep them in their tormenting place, so that they that
would pass from hell to heaven cannot. But, I say, 'Would they not
change places? would they not have a more comfortable house and
home for their souls?' Yes, verily, the text supposes it, and the
16th of Luke affirms it; yea, and could they purchase for their
souls a habitation among the righteous, would they not? Yes, they
would give all the world to such a change. What shall, what shall
not, a man, if he had it, if it would answer his design, give in
exchange for his soul?
Third, As the damned would change their own vices for virtues, and
the place where they are for that into which they shall not come,
so what would they give for a change of condition? Yea, if an
absolute change may not be obtained, yet what would they give for
the least degree of mitigation of that torment, which now they
know will without any intermission be, and that for ever and ever.
'Tribulation and anguish, indignation and wrath' (Rom 2:8,9), the
gnawing worm, and everlasting destruction from the presence of the
Lord, and from the glory of His power, cannot be borne but with
great horror and grief (2 Thess 1:7-10). No marvel, then, if these
poor creatures would, for ease for their souls, be glad to change
their conditions. Change!--with whom? with an angel, with a saint;
ay, with a dog or a toad; 29 for they mourn not, they weep not,
nor do they bear indignation of wrath; they are as if they had not
been; only the sinful soul abides in its sins, in the place designed
for lost souls, and in the condition that wrath and indignation for
sin and transgression hath decreed them to abide for ever. And this
brings me to the conclusion, which is, 'that seeing the ungodly
do seek good things too late,' therefore, notwithstanding their
seeking, they must still abide in their place, their sins, and
their torment--'For what can a man give in exchange for his soul?'
Therefore, God saith, that they there must still abide and dwell,
no exchange can be made. 'This shall ye have of Mine hand, ye
shall lie down in sorrow;' they shall lie down in it, they shall
make their bed there, there they shall lie (Isa 50:11; Eze 32:25-27).
And this is the bitter pill that they must swallow down at the
last; for, after all their tears, their sorrows, their mournings,
their repentings, their wishings and woundings, and all their
inventings, and desires to change their state for a better, they
must 'lie down in sorrow.' The poor condemned man that is upon the
ladder or scaffold has, if one knew them, many a long wish and long
desire that he might come down again alive, or that his condition
was as one of the spectators that are not condemned and brought
thither to be executed as he. How carefully also doth he look with
his failing eyes, to see if some comes not from the king with a
pardon for him, all the while endeavouring to fumble away as well
as he can, and to prolong the minute of his execution! But at last,
when he has looked, when he has wished, when he has desired, and
done whatever he can, the blow with the axe, or turn with the ladder,
is his lot, so he goes off the scaffold, so he goes from among men;
and thus it will be with those that we have under consideration;
when all comes to all, and they have said, and wished, and done
what they can, the judgment must not be reversed--they must 'lie
down in sorrow.'
They must, or shall lie down! Of old, when a man was to be chastised
for his fault, he was to lie down to receive his stripes; so here,
saith the Lord, they shall lie down--'And it shall be, if the wicked
man be worthy to be beaten, that the judge shall cause him to lie
down, and to be beaten before his face' (Deu 25:2). And this lying
down was to be his lot after he had pleaded for himself what be
could--and the judge shall cause him to be beaten before his face,
while he is present to behold the execution of judgment; and thus
it shall be at the end of the world; the wicked shall lie down, and
shall be beaten with many stripes in the presence of Christ, 'and
in the presence of the holy angels' (2 Thess 1; Rev 14:10). For
there will be His presence, not only at the trial as Judge, but to
see execution done, nay, to do it Himself by the pouring out, like
a river, His wrath as burning brimstone upon the soul of the lost
and cast away sinner.
He shall lie down! These words imply that, at last, the damned soul
shall submit; for to lie down is an act that signifies submission,
especially to lie down to be beaten. 'The wicked shall be silent
in darkness' (1 Sam 2:9). When the malefactor has said and wished
all that be can, yet at last he submits, is silent, and, as it
were, helps to put his head into the halter, or doth lay down his
neck upon the block; so here it is said of the damned--They shall
lie down in sorrow. There is also a place that saith, 'These shall
go away into everlasting punishment' (Matt 25:46). To go, to go
to punishment, is also an act of submission. Now, submission to
punishment doth, or should, flow from full conviction of the merit
of punishment; and I think it is so to be understood here--For
'every mouth shall be stopped, and all the world (of soul losers)
become guilty before God' (Rom 3:4,19; Luke 13:25-28; Matt 25:46).
Every mouth shall be stopped, not at the beginning of the judgment,
for then they plead, and pray, and also object against the Judge;
but at the end, after that by a judicial proceeding He shall
have justified against them His sayings, and have overcome these
His judges, then they shall submit, and also lie down in s orrow;
yea, they shall go away to their punishment as those who know they
deserve it; yea, they shall go away with silence.
How they shall behave themselves in hell, I will not here dispute;
whether in a way of rage and blasphemy, and in rending and tearing
of the name and just actions of God towards them, or whether by
way of submission there; I say, though this is none of this task,
yet a word or two, if you please.
Doubtless they will not be mute there; they will cry and wail, and
gnash their teeth, and, perhaps, too, sometimes at God; but I do not
think but that the justice that they have deserved, and the equal
administration of it upon them, will, for the most part, prevail
with them to rend and tear themselves, to acquit and justify God,
and to add fuel to their fire, by concluding themselves in all the
fault, and that they have sufficiently merited this just damnation;
for it would seem strange to me that just judgment among men shall
terminate in this issue, if God should not justify himself in the
conscience of all the damned. But as here on earth, so He will let
them know that go to hell that He hath not done without a cause,
a sufficient cause, all that He hath done in damning of them (Eze
14:23).
I come now to make some use and application of the whole. And,
Objection 1. But some may say, I cannot believe that God will be
so severe as to cast away into hell fire an immortal soul for a
little sin.
Answer. I know thou canst not believe it, for if thou couldst, thou
wouldst sooner eat fire than run this hazard; and hence all they
that go down to the lake of fire are called the unbelievers; and
the Lord shall cut thee, that makest this objection, asunder, and
shall appoint thee thy portion with such, except thou believe the
gospel, and repent (Luke 12:46).
The time of showing pity and compassion will then be at an end; for
that as to acting towards sinners will last but till the glass of
the world is run, and when that day is past, mark what God saith
shall follow, 'I will laugh at your calamity; I will mock when
your fear cometh; when your fear cometh as desolation, and your
destruction cometh as a whirlwind; when distress and anguish cometh
upon you' (Prov 1:26,27). Mark you how many pinching expressions
the Lord Jesus Christ doth threaten the refusing sinner with; the
sinner with, that refuseth Him now--I will laugh at him, I will
mock at him. But when, Lord, wilt thou laugh at, and mock at, the
impenitent? The answer is, 'I will laugh at their calamities, and
mock when their fear cometh; when their fear cometh as desolation,
and their destruction like a whirlwind; when distress and anguish
cometh upon them.'
Answer. Poor besotted sinner, is this thy last shift? wilt thou
comfort thyself with this? Are thy sins so dear, so sweet, so
desireable, so profitable to thee, that thou wilt venture a burning
in hell fire for them till thou art burnt out? Is there nothing
else to be done but to make a covenant with death, and to maintain
thy agreement with hell? (Isa 28:15). Is it not better to say now
unto God, Do not condemn me? and to say now, Lord, be merciful
to me, a sinner? Would not tears, and prayers, and cries, in this
acceptable time, to God for mercy, yield thee more benefit in the
next world than to lie and burn out in hell will do?
But to come more close to thee. Have not I told thee already that
there is no such thing as a ceasing to be? that the damned shall
never be burned out in hell? there shall be no more such death,
or cause of dissolution for ever. This one thing, well considered,
breaks not only the neck of that wild conceit on which thy foolish
objection is built, but will break thy stubborn heart in pieces.
For then it follows, that unless thou canst conquer God, or with
ease endure to conflict with His sin-revenging wrath, thou wilt be
made to mourn while under His everlasting wrath and indignation;
and to know that there is not such a thing as a burning out in hell
fire.
Thus also it was with the fool first mentioned; his ground did
bring forth plentifully, wherefore he must of necessity forget his
soul, and, as he thought, all the reason of the world he should.
Wherefore, he falls to crying out, What shall I do? Now, had one
said, Mind the good of thy soul, man; the answer would have been
ready, But where shall I bestow my goods. If it had been replied,
Stay till harvest; he returns again, But I have no room where
to bestow my goods. Now, tell him of praying, and he answers, he
must go to building. Tell him, he should frequent sermons, and he
replies, he must mind his workmen. 'He cannot deliver his soul,
nor say, Is there not a lie in my right hand?' (Isa 44:20).
And see if, in the end, he did not become a fool; for though he
accomplished the building of his barns, and put in there all his
fruits and his goods, yet even till now his soul was empty, and
void of all that was good; nor did he, in singing of that requiem
which he sung to his soul at last, saying, 'Soul, take thine ease,
eat, drink, and be merry,' show himself ever the wiser; for, in
all his labours he had rejected to get that food that indeed is
meat and drink for the soul. Nay, in singing this song he did but
provoke God to hasten to send to fetch his soul to hell; for so
begins the conclusion of the parable--'Thou fool, this night thy
soul shall be required of thee; then whose shall those things be
which thou hast provided?' So that, I say, it is the greatest folly
in the world for a man, upon any pretence what ever, to neglect to
make good the salvation of his soul.
There are six signs of a fool, and they do all meet in that same
man that concerns not himself, and that to good purpose, for the
salvation of his soul. 1. A fool has not an heart, when the price
is in his hand, to get wisdom. (Prov 17:16). 2. 'It is a sport to
a fool to do mischief.' and to set light by the commission of sin
(Prov 10:23). 3. 'Fools despise wisdom;' 'fools hate knowledge'
(Prov 1:7,22). 4. 'A fool,' after restraint, 'returneth to his
folly' (Prov 26:11). 5. 'The way of a fool is right in his own
eyes' (Prov 7:15). 6. The fool goes merrily 'to the correction of
the stocks' (Prov 7:22).
I might add many more, but these six shall suffice at this time,
by which it appears that the fool has no heart for the heavenly
prize, yet he has to sport himself in sin; and when he despises
wisdom, the way is yet right before him; yea, if he be for some
time restrained from vice, he greedily turneth again thereto, and
will, when he has finished his course of folly and sin in this world,
go as heedlessly, as carelessly, as unconcernedly, and quietly,
down the steps to hell, as the ox goeth to the slaughter-house,
This is a soul fool, a fool of the biggest size; and so is every
one also that layeth up treasure for himself on earth, 'and is not
rich towards God' (Luke 7:21).
Objection 1. But would you not have us mind our worldly concerns?
Answer. Mind them, but mind them in their place; mind thy soul first
and most; the soul is more than the body, and eternal life better
than temporal; first seek the kingdom of God, and prosper in thy
health and thy estate as thy soul prospers (Matt 6:33; 3 John 2).
But as it is rare to see this command obeyed, for the kingdom of God
shall be thought of last, so if John's wish was to light upon, or
happen to some people, they would neither have health nor wealth in
this world. To prosper and be in health, as their soul prospers--what,
to thrive and mend in outwards no faster? then we should have them
have consumptive bodies and low estates; for are not the souls of
most as unthrifty, for grace and spiritual health, as is the tree
without fruit that is pulled up by the roots?
Answer. And must you needs be upon the extremes? must you mind
this world to the damning of your souls? or will you not mind your
callings at all? Is there not a middle way? may you not, must you
not, get your bread in a way of honest industry; that is, caring
most for the next world, and so using of this as not abusing the
same? (1 Cor 7: 20-31). And then a man doth so, and never but
then, when he sets this world and the next in their proper places,
in his thoughts, in his esteem, and judgment, and dealeth with
both accordingly (2 Cor 4:18). And is there not all the reason in
the world for this? are not the things that are eternal best? Will
temporal things make thy soul to live? or art thou none of those
that should look after the salvation of their soul? (Deu 8:3; Matt
5:4; Heb10:39).
Objection 3. But the most of men do that which you forbid, and why
may not we?
Answer. First, surrender up thy soul unto God, by Christ, and choose
Christ to be the chief Shepherd of thy soul; and He will direct
thee to His shepherds, and He will, of His mercy, set such shepherds
over thee 'as shall feed thee with knowledge and understanding' (1
Peter 2:25; 4:19; John 10:4,5; Song 1:7, 8; Jer 3:15; 23:4). Before
thou hast surrendered up thy soul to Christ, that He may be thy
chief Shepherd, thou canst not find out, nor choose to put thy
soul under the teaching and guidance of His under shepherds, for
thou canst not love them; besides, they are so set forth by false
shepherds, in so many ugly guises, and under so many false and
scandalous dresses, that, should I direct thee to them while thou
art a stranger to Christ, thou wilt count them deceivers, devourers,
and wolves in sheeps' clothing, rather than the shepherds that
belong to the great and chief Shepherd, who is, also, the Bishop
of the soul.
Yet this I will say unto thee, take heed of that shepherd that
careth not for his own soul, that walketh in ways, and doth such
things, as have a direct tendency to damn his own soul; I say,
take heed of such an one, come not near him, let him have nothing
to do with thy soul; for if he be not faithful to that which be his
own soul, be sure he will not be faithful to that which is another
man's. He that feeds his own soul with ashes, will scarce feed thine
with the bread of life; wherefore, take heed of such an one; and
many such there are in the world (Isa 44:20). 'By their fruits you
shall know them;' they are for flattering of the worst, and frowning
upon the best; they are for promising of life to the profane, and
for slaying the souls that God would have live; they are also men
that hunt souls that fear God, but for sewing pillows under those
arm holes which God would have to lean upon that which would
afflict them. These be them 'that, with lies, do make the heart of
the righteous sad, whom I have not made sad;' saith God; and that
have 'strengthened the hands of the wicked, that he shall not return
from his wicked way, by promising of him life' (Eze 13:18-22).
And as thou shouldest, for thy soul's sake, choose for thyself good
soul shepherds, so also, for the same reason, you should choose
for yourself a good wife, a good husband, a good master, a good
servant; for in all these things the soul is concerned. Abraham
would not suffer Isaac to take a wife of the daughters of Canaan,
(Gen 24:3); nor would David suffer a wicked servant to come into
his house, or to tarry in his sight (Psa 101:7). Bad company is,
also, very destructive to the soul, and so is evil communication;
wherefore, be diligent to shun all these things, that thou mayest
persevere in that way, the end of which will be the saving of thy
soul (Prov 13:20; 1 Cor 15:33).
And since, under this head, I am fallen upon cautions, let me add
these to those which I have presented to thee already:
Caution 2. Take heed of the good things of bad men, for in them
there lies a snare also; their 'good words and fair speeches' tend
to deceive (Rom 16:17, 18). Learn to be good, by the Word of God
and by the holy lives of them that be good; envy not the wicked,
'nor desire to be with them;' 'choose none of his ways' (Prov 3:31;
24:1). Thy soul lies at stake.
Caution 5. Boast not thyself of thy flocks and thy herds, of thy gold
and thy silver, of thy sons and of thy daughters. What is a house
full of treasures, and all the delights of this world, if thou be
empty of grace, 'if thy soul be not filled with good?' (Eccl 6:3).
But,
1. What hast thou thought of thy soul? What ponderous thoughts hast
thou had of the greatness and of the immortality of thy soul? This
must be the first inquiry: for he that hath not had his thoughts
truly exercised, ponderously exercised, about the greatness and the
immortality of his soul, will not be careful, after an effectual
manner, to make provision for his soul, for the life and world
to come. The soul is a man's all, whether he knows it or no, as I
have already showed you. Now a man will be concerned about what
he thinks is his all. We read of the poor servant that 'setteth
his heart upon' his wages (Deu 24:14,15). But it is because it is
his all, his treasure, and that wherein his worldly worth lieth.
Why, thy soul is thy all; it is strange if thou dost not think so!
and more strange if thou dost think so, and yet hast light, seldom,
and trivial thoughts about it. These two seem to be inconsistent,
therefore let thy conscience speak; either thou hast very great
and weighty thoughts about the excellent greatness of thy soul, or
else thou dost not count that thy soul is so great a thing as it
is, else thou dost not count it thy all.
2. What judgment hast thou made of the present state of thy soul?
I speak now to the unconverted. Thy soul is under sin, under the
curse, and an object of wrath; this is that sentence that by the
Word is passed upon it--'Woe unto their soul,' saith God, 'for
they have rewarded evil unto themselves.' (Isa 3:9). This is the
sentence of God. Well, but what judgment hast thou passed upon it
while thou livest in thy debaucheries? Is it not that which thy
fellows have passed on theirs before thee, saying, 'I shall have
peace, though I walk in the imagination of mine heart, to add
drunkenness to thirst' (Deu 29:19). If so, know thy judgment is
gross, thy soul is miserable, and turn, or in little time thine
eyes will behold all this.
3. What care hast thou had of securing of thy soul, and that it
might be delivered from the danger that by sin it is brought into?
if a man has a horse, a cow, or a swine that is sick, or in danger
by reason of this or that casualty, he will take care for his beast,
that it may not perish; he will pull it out of the ditch on the
Sabbath day. But, oh! that is the day on which many men do put their
soul into the ditch of sin; that is the day that they set apart to
pursue wickedness in. 32 But, I say, what care hast thou taken to
get thy soul out of this ditch?--a ditch out of which thou canst never
get it without the aid of an omnipotent arm. In things pertaining
to this life, when a man feels his own strength fail, he will
implore the help and aid of another; and no man can, by any means,
deliver by his own arm his soul from the power of hell, which thou
also wilt confess, if thou beest not a very brute; but what hast
thou done with God for help? hast thou cried? hast thou cried
out? yea, dost thou still cry out, and that day and night before
him--'Deliver my soul' (Psa 17:13) 'Save my soul, preserve my soul'
(Psa 25:20) 'Heal my soul,' (Psa 42:4), and, 'I pour out my soul
unto thee?' (Psa 62:5). Yea, canst thou say, My soul, my soul waiteth
upon God, my soul thirsteth for Him, my soul followeth hard after
him? (Psa 63:1,8). I say, dost thou this, or dost thou hunt thine
own soul to destroy it? The soul, with some, is the game, their
lusts are the dogs, and they themselves are the huntsmen, and
never do they more halloo, and lure, and laugh, and sing, than when
they have delivered up their soul, their darling, to these dogs--a
thing that David trembled to think of, when he cried, 'Dogs have
compassed me. Deliver my darling,' my soul, 'from the power of the
dog' (Psa 22:16,20). Thus, I say, he cried, and yet these dogs were
but wicked men. But, oh! how much is a sin, a lust, worst than a
man to do us hurt; yea, worse than is a dog, (or) a lion, to hurt
a lamb!
4. What are the signs and tokens that thou bearest about thee,
concerning how it will go with thy soul at last? There are signs
and tokens of a good, and signs and tokens of a bad end that the
souls of sinners will have; there are signs of the salvation of the
soul, (Heb 6:9); evident tokens of salvation; and there are signs
of the damnation of the soul, evident signs of damnation (Phil
1:27,28; Job 21:29,30; 1 Sam 3:9). Now, which of these hast thou?
I cannot stand here to show thee which are which; but thy soul and
its salvation lieth before thee, and thou hast the book [the Holy
Bible] of signs about these matters by thee; thou hast also men of
God to go to, and their assemblies to frequent. Look to thyself;
heaven and hell are hard by, and one of them will swallow thee up;
heaven, into unspeakable and endless glory, or hell, into unspeakable
and endless torment. Yet,
5. What are the pleasures and delights of thy soul now? Are they
things Divine, or things natural? Are they things heavenly, or
things earthly? Are they things holy, or things unholy? For look
what think thou delightest in now, to those things the great God
doth count thee a servant, and for and of those thou shalt receive
thy wages at the day of judgment--'His servants ye are to whom ye
obey; whether of sin unto death, or of obedience unto righteousness'
(Rom 16:16).
Wicked men talk of heaven, and say they hope and desire to go
to heaven, even while they continue wicked men; but, I say, what
would they do there? If all that desire to go to heaven should come
thither, verily they would make a hell of heaven; for, I say, what
would they do there? why, just as they do here, scatter their
filthiness quite over the face of heaven, and make it as vile
as the pit that the devils dwell in. 33 Take holiness away out of
heaven, and what is heaven? I had rather be in hell, were there
none but holy ones there, than be in heaven itself with the children
of iniquity. If heaven should be filled with wicked men, God would
quickly drive them out, or forsake the place for their sakes. It
is true, they have been sinners, and none but sinners, that go to
heaven; but they are washed--' Such were some of you; but ye are
washed, but ye are sanctified, but ye are justified, in the name
of the Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God' (1 Cor 6:11). When
the maidens were gathered together for the great king Ahasuerus,
before they were brought to him into his royal presence, they were to
be had to the house of the women, there to be purifed with things
for purification, and that for twelve months together--to wit,
six months with oil of myrrh, and six months with sweet odours,
and other things, and so came every maiden to the king (Esth
2:3,9,12,13). God also hath appointed that those that come into
His royal presence should first go to the house of the women, the
church, 34 and there receive of the eunuchs things for purification,
things to make us 'meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the
saints in light' (Col 1:12). None can go from a state of nature
to glory but by a state of grace, the Lord gives grace and glory;
hence he that goeth to heaven is said to be wrought for it, fitted,
prepared for it (1 Cor 5:5; Rom 19:23).
1. Because they reject what God hath rejected and that is sin.
2. Because they esteem but little of that which, by the Word, is
counted but of little esteem, and that is the world. 3. Because
they choose for a portion that which God commendeth unto us for
that which is the most excellent thing--viz., Himself, His Christ,
His heaven, His Word, His grace, and holiness; these are the great
and most excellent things, and the things that He has chosen that
is truly wise for his soul (and all other wise men are fools in
God's account, and in the judgment of His Word), and if it be so,
glory and bliss must needs be their portion, though others shall
miss thereof--'The wise shall inherit glory, but shame shall be
the promotion of fools' (Prov 3:35).
Let me, then, encourage those that are of this mind to be strong,
and hold on their way. Soul, thou hast pitched right; I will say of
thy choice as David said of Goliath's sword, 'There is none like
that; give it me.' 'Hold that fast which thou hast, that no man
take thy crown' (Rev 3:11). Oh! I admire this wisdom; this is by the
direction of the Lawgiver; this is by the teaching of the blessed
Spirit of God: not the wisdom which this world teacheth, nor the
wisdom which the world doth choose, which comes to nought (1 Cor
2: 6). Surely thou hast seen something of the world to come, and
of the glory of it, through faith; surely God has made thee see
emptiness in that wherein others find a fulness, and vanity in
that which by others is counted for a darling. Blessed are thine
eyes, for they see; and thine ears, for they hear.
But who told thee that thy soul was such an excellent thing as
by thy practice thou declarest thou believest it to be? What! set
more by thy soul than by all the world? What! cast a world behind
thy back for the welfare of a soul? Is not this to play the fool,
in the account of sinners, while angels wonder at and rejoice for
thy wisdom? What a thing is this, that thy soul and its welfare
should be more in thy esteem than all those glories wherewith the
eyes of the world are dazzled! Surely thou hast looked upon the
sun, and that makes gold look like a clod of clay in thine eyesight.
But who put the thoughts of the excellencies of the things that are
eternal--I say, who put the thoughts of the excellency of those
things into thy mind in this wanton age?--in an age wherein the
thoughts of eternal life, and the salvation of the soul, are with
and to many like the Morocco ambassador and his men, men of strange
faces, in strange habit, with strange gestures and behaviour,
monsters to behold. But where hadst thou that heart that gives
entertainment to these thoughts, these heavenly thoughts? These
thoughts are like the French Protestants, banished thence where
they willingly would have harbour.35 How came they to thy house,
to thy heart, and to find entertainment in thy sou1? The Lord keep
them in every imagination of the thoughts of thy heart for ever,
and incline thine heart to seek Him more and more.
And since the whole world have slighted and despised, and counted
foolish the thoughts and cogitations wherewith thy soul is exercised,
what strong and mighty supporter is it upon and with which thou
bearest up thy spirit, and takest encouragement in this thy forlorn,
unoccupied, and singular way? for so, I daresay, it is with the
most; but certainly it is something above thyself, and that is more
mighty to uphold thee than is the power, rage, and malice of all
the world to cast thee down, or else thou couldst not bear up, now
wind and weather, now the stream and the force thereof are against
thee.
But, brave soul, pray tell me what the things are that discourage
thee, and that weaken thy strength in the way?
Answer. The greatness of thy undertaking does but show the nobleness
of thy soul, in that it cannot, will not, be content with such low
and dry as the baseborn spirits that are of the world can and do
content themselves withal. And as to the greatness of the things
thou aimest at, though they be, err they are indeed, things that
have not their like, yet they are not too big for God to give, and
He has promised to give them to the soul that seeketh Him; yea, He
hath prepared the kingdom, given the kingdom, and laid up in the
kingdom of heaven, the things that thy soul longeth for, presseth
after, and cannot be content without (Luke 7:32; Matt 25:14; Col
1:5; 1 Peter 1:4). As for thy making a trial of the successfulness
of thy endeavours upon things more interim and base, that is but
a trick of the old deceiver. God has refused to give His children
the great, the brave, and glorious things of this world, a few
only excepted, because He has prepared some better thing for them
(1 Cor 1:27; Heb 11:36-40). Wherefore faint not, but let thy hand
be strong, for thy work shall be rewarded (Gal 6:9). And since thy
soul is at work for soul-things, for divine and eternal things,
God will give them to thee; thou art not of the number of them that
draw back unto perdition, but of them that believe to the saving
of the soul; thou shalt receive the end of thy faith, the salvation
of thy soul (Heb 10:39; 1 Peter 1:8,9).
Answer 1. Weak graces are graces, weak graces may grow stronger;
but if the iron be blunt, put to the more strength (Eccl 10:10).
2. Christ seems to be most tender of the weak: 'He shall gather the
lambs with His arm, and carry them in His bosom, and shall gently
lead those that are with young.' (Isa 40:11). And again, 'I will
seek that which was lost, and bring again that which was driven
away, and will bind up that which was broken, and will strengthen
that which was sick' (Eze 34:16). Only here will thy wisdom
be manifested--to wit, that thou grow in grace, and that thou use
lawfully and diligently the means to do it (2 Peter 3:18; Phil
2:10,11; 1 Thess 3:11-13).
The lowest hell. How many hells there are above that, or more
tolerable tormenting places than the most exquisite torments there,
God, and they that are there, know best; but degrees without doubt
there are; and the term 'lowest' shows the utmost and most exquisite
distress; so the chambers of death, the second death in hell, for
so I think the words should be understood--'Her house is the way to
hell, going down to the chambers of death' (Prov 7:27). These are
the chambers that the chambers in the temple, or that the dwelling
places in the house in heaven, are opposed to: and this opposition
shows, that as there will be degrees of glory in heaven, so there
will of torments in hell; and there is all reason for it, since
the punishment must be inflicted by God, the infinitely just. Why
should a poor, silly, ignorant man, though damned, be punished
with the same degree of torment that he that has lived a thousand
times worse shall be punished with? It cannot be; justice will not
admit it; guilt, and the quality of the transgression, will not
admit it; yea, the tormenting fire of hell itself will not admit
it; for if hell fire can kindle upon nothing but sin, and the sinner
for the sake of it, and if sin be as oil to that fire, as the Holy
Ghost seems to intimate, saying, 'Let it come into his bowels like
water, and like oil into his bones' (Psa 109:18). Then as the
quantity of the oil is, so will the fire burn, and so will the
flaming flame ascend, and the smoke of their torment, for ever and
ever. Suppose a piece of timber a little bedaubed with oil, and
another that has been soaking in it many a year, which of these two,
think you, would burn fiercest? and from whence would the flaming
flame ascend highest, and make the most roaring noise? Suppose
two vessels filled with oil, one containing the quantity of a pint,
the other containing the quantity of a hogshead, and suppose that
in one place they were both set on fire, yet so that they might
not intermix flames; nay, though they did, yet all would conclude
that the most amazing roaring flame would be upon the biggest
vessel, and would be the effect of the greatest quantity of oil;
so it will be with the wicked in hell. The lowest hell is for the
biggest sinners, and theirs will be the greater damnation, and the
more intolerable torment, though he that has least of this oil of
sin in his bones, and of the kindlings of hell fire upon him, will
find he has hell enough, and will be weary enough thereof, for
still he must struggle with flames that are everlasting; for sin
is such a thing, that it can never be burned out of the soul and
body of a damned sinner.
But again; having treated thus of hell, we will now speak a word
or two of sin, for that is it upon which hell fire seizes, and so
on the soul by that. Sin! it is the sting of hell--the sting of
death is sin (1 Cor 15:56). By 'death' in this place we must not
understand that which is natural, but that which is in hell, the
second death, even everlasting damnation; for natural death the
saints die, yea, and also many sinners, without the least touch of
a sting from that; but here is a death that has a sting to hurt,
to twinge, and wound the sinner with, even then when it has the
utmost mastery of him. And this is the death that the saved are
delivered from; not that which is natural, for that is the end
of them as of others (1 Cor 15:55; Eccl 2:15, 16). But the second
death, the death in hell, for that is the portion of the damned, and
it is from that that the saints have a promise of deliverance--'He
that overcometh shall not be hurt of the second death' (Rev 2:11).
And again, 'Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first
resurrection; on such the second death hath no power' (Rev 20:6).
It is this death, then, that hath the chambers to hold each damned
soul in: and sin is the twining, winding, biting, poisoning sting
of this death, or of these chambers of hell, for sinners to be
stricken, stung, and pierced with. 'The sting of death is sin.' Sin,
the general of it, 37 is the sting of hell, for there would be no
such thing as torment even there, were it not that sin is there
with sinners; for, as I have hinted already, the fire of hell, the
indignation and wrath of God, can fasten and kindle upon nothing
but for or because of sin; sin, then, as sin, is the sting and the
hell of hells, of the lowest and upmost hells. Sin, I say, in the
nature of it, simply as it is concluded both by God and the damned
to be a breach of His holy law, so it is the sting of the second
death, which is the worm of hell. But then, as sin is such a sting
in itself, so it is heightened, sharpened, and made more keen and
sharp by those circumstances that as concomitants attend it in
every act: for there is not a sin at any time committed by man,
but there is some circumstance or other attends it, that makes it,
when charged home by God's law, bigger and sharper, and more venom
and poisonous to the soul than if it could be committed without
them; and this is the sting of the hornet, the great sting. I sinned
without a cause to please a base lust, to gratify the devil; here
is the sting! Again, I preferred sin before holiness, death before
life, hell before heaven, the devil before God, and damnation before
a Saviour; here is the sting! Again, I preferred moments before
everlastings, temporals before eternals, to be racked and always
slaying before the life that is blessed and endless; here is the
sting! Also, this I did against light, against convictions, against
conscience, against persuasion of friends, ministers, and the godly
lives which I beheld in others; here is the sting! Also, this I
did against warnings, forewarnings, yea, though I saw others fall
before my face by the mighty hand of God for committing of the
same; here is the sting!
I will yet add to all this; how will the fairness of some for heaven,
even the thoughts of that, sting them when they come to hell! It
will not be so much their fall into the pit, as from whence they
fell into it, that will be to them the buzzing noise and sharpened
sting of the great and terrible hornet. 'How art thou fallen from
heaven, O Lucifer!' there is the sting (Isa 14:12). Thou that art
exalted up to heaven shalt be thrust down to hell, though thou hast
made 'thy nest among the stars,' from thence I will fetch thee down;
there is a sting (Matt 11:23; Oba 4). To be pulled, for and through
love to some vain lust, from the everlasting gates of glory, and
caused to be swallowed up for it in the belly of hell, and made
to lodge for ever in the darksome chambers of death, there is the
piercing sting!
This, therefore, will put great strength and force into sin to sting
the soul, and to strike it with the lashes of a scorpion. Add yet
to these the abiding life of God, the Judge and God of this law,
will never die. When princes die, the law may be altered by the
which at present transgressors are bound in chains; but oh! here
is also that which will make this sting so sharp and keen, the God
that executes it will never die. 'It is a fearful thing to fall
into the hands of the living God' (Heb 10:30, 31).
FOOTNOTES:
1 'Gospellers,' a term of reproach given to our reformers under
Henry VIII; changed to 'Puritan' under Elizabeth and the Stuarts;
and to 'Methodist,' or 'Evangelical' in more recent times. All these
terms were adopted by the reformers as an honorable distinction
from the openly profane.--Ed.
3 Many have been the attempts to define the qualities, nature, and
residence of the soul. The sinful body is the sepulchre in which
it is entombed, until Christ giveth it life. The only safe guide,
in such inquiries, is to follow Bunyan, and ascertain 'what saith
the Lord' upon a subject so momentous and so difficult for mortal
eyes to penetrate.--Ed.
8 This is perfectly true, but is only felt by those who are taught
of the Holy Spirit rightly to appreciate Divine worship. How many
pay undue respect to buildings in which public prayer is offered
up? It is the worship that consecrates the place and solemnizes the
mind. Very remarkably was this the case with Jacob while wandering
in the open wilderness. He put stones for his pillow, and in a dream
saw the angels visiting the earth, and said, THIS is the house of
God, and the gate of heaven.--Ed.
10 One of the first revelations to our race was, that 'God breathed
into his nostrils the breath of life, and man became a living soul.'
And this great and important fact has, by tradition, extended over
the whole of the human family.--Ed.
21 Bunyan having been engaged in the civil war, accounts for his
using this military idea.--Ed.
22 God hates not the sinner, but the sin; the glorious provision
made for salvation, proves His good will to sinful souls. This
will be 'the worm that dieth not,' to sinners to reflect, that,
in rejecting the inviting promises of God, they have sealed their
own condemnation.--Mason.
29 This wish has been felt while in a desponding state, under the
terrors of the law, and a fearful looking for of fiery indignation.
Thus Bunyan says, 'I blessed the condition of the dog and toad,
and counted the estate of everything that God had made far better
than this dreadful state of mine.' Grace Abounding, No. 104.--Ed.
33 How solemn, nay, awful is the thought that heaven's gates must
be shut against all impurity. None who live and die in the love of
sin can enter heaven, lest they should defile it--'And there shall
in no wise enter into it anything that defileth, neither worketh
abomination, or a lie' (Rev 21: 27).--Ed.
36 Great allowance must be made for the times in which Bunyan lived.
Baxter, and all the great divines, Sir M. Hale, and the judges,
believed in witches, ghosts, and other chimeras; in fact, any one
professing unbelief in these wild fancies, would have been counted
among infidels and atheists.--Ed.
***
The whole work is a rich treat to those who love experimental divinity,
and are safe in Christ as Noah was in the ark; but, Oh! how woeful
must those be, who are without an interest in the Saviour; and
that have none to plead their cause. "They are left to be ground
to powder between the justice of God and the sins which they have
committed. It is sad to consider their plight. This is the man
that is pursued by the law, and by sin, and by death, and has none
to plead his cause. Terrors take hold on him as waters; a stone
hurleth him out of his place" (Job 27). p. 200. Reader, this is
a soul-searching subject-may it lead us to a solemn trial of our
state, and to the happy conclusion, that the Saviour is our Advocate,
and that our eternal inheritance is safe in heaven.
GEORGE OFFOR.
COURTEOUS READER,
Of all the excellent offices which God the Father has conferred
upon Jesus Christ our Lord, this of his being an Advocate with him
for us is not the least, though, to the shame of saints it may be
spoken, the blessed benefits thereof have not with that diligence
and fervent desire been inquired after as they ought.
Christ, as sacrifice, priest, and king, with the glories in, and
that flow from, him as such, has, God be thanked, in this our day,
been much discovered by our seers, and as much rejoiced in by those
who have believed their words; but as he is an Advocate with the
Father, an Advocate for us, I fear the excellency of that doth still
too much lie hid; though I am verily of opinion that the people
of God in this age have as much need of the knowledge thereof, if
not more need, than had their brethren that are gone before them.
These words, "if not more need," perhaps may seem to some to be
somewhat out of joint; but let the godly wise consider the decays
that are among us as to the power of godliness, and what abundance
of foul miscarriages the generality of professors now stand guilty
of, as also how diligent their great enemy is to accuse them at
the bar of God for them, and I think they will conclude, that, in
so saying, I indeed have said some truth. Wherefore, when I thought
on this, and had somewhat considered also the transcendent excellency
of the advocateship of this our Lord; and again, that but little
of the glory thereof has by writing been, in our day, communicated
to the church, I adventured to write what I have seen thereof, and
do, by what doth follow, present it unto her for good.
I count not myself sufficient for this, or for any other truth
as it is in Jesus; but yet, I say, I have told you somewhat of
it, according to the proportion of faith. And I believe that some
will thank God for what I here have said about it; but it will be
chiefly those, whose right and title to the kingdom of heaven and
glory, doth seem to themselves to be called in question by their
enemy, at the bar of the Judge of all.
These, I say, will read, and be glad to hear, that they have an
Advocate at court that will stand up to plead for them, and that
will yet secure to them a right to the heavenly kingdom. Wherefore,
it is more particularly for those that at present, or that hereafter,
may be in this dreadful plight, that this my book is now made
public; because it is, as I have showed, for such that Jesus Christ
is Advocate with the Father.
Here is also showed to those herein concerned, how they indeed may
know that Jesus is their Advocate; yea, and how their matters go
before their God, the Judge; and particularly that they shall well
come off at last, yea, though their cause, as it is theirs, is
such, in justification of which, themselves do not dare to show
their heads.
Nor have I left the dejected souls without directions how to entertain
this Advocate to plead their cause; yea, I have also shown that he
will be with ease prevailed with, to stand up to plead for such,
as one would think, the very heavens would blush to hear them named
by him. Their comfort also is, that he never lost a cause, nor a
soul, for whom he undertook to be an Advocate with God.
But, reader, I will no longer detain thee from the perusal of the
discourse. Read and think; read, and compare what thou readest with
the Word of God. If thou findest any benefit by that thou readest,
give the Father, and his Son the glory; and also pray for me. If
thou findest me short in this, or to exceed in that, impute all
such things to my weakness, of which I am always full. Farewell.
I am thine to serve thee what I may,
JOHN BUNYAN.
This brings to the text, in which are two great truths contained:
I. A supposition, viz., That men in Christ may sin. II. An expression,
by way of consolation, in case of sin, viz., We have an Advocate
with the Father
Two things for inquiry in these truths: First. An inquiry into what
our apostle means by sin; in which is considered, A difference in
the person and in the sin. And, Second, An inquiry into what it
is for Christ to be an Advocate, viz., To plead for another in a
court of judicature
THIRD HEAD.-TO SHOW WHO HAVE CHRIST FOR AN ADVOCATE; WHEREIN ARE
THREE THINGS CONTAINED
Sixth.-Our evidences are oft out of our hand, and we recover them
by our Advocate
SIXTH.-OBJECTIONS REMOVED
Third Object.-But who shall pay the Advocate his fee?-Answ. There
is law, and lawyers too, without money.-Christ pleads for the
poor.-David's strange gift to God
Use First.-To consider the dignity God hath put upon Christ, by
offices, places of trust, and titles of honour, in general
Use Fifth.-If Christ pleads for us before God, we should plead for
him before men.-Nine considerations to that end.-The last reserve
for a dead lift
"AND IF ANY MAN SIN, WE HAVE AN ADVOCATE WITH THE FATHER, JESUS
CHRIST THE RIGHTEOUS."---I JOHN 2:1.
THAT the apostle might obtain due regard from those to whom
he wrote, touching the things about which he wrote, he tells them
that he received not his message to them at second or third hand,
but was himself an eye and ear witness thereof-That which was from
the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with our
eyes, which we have looked upon, and our hands have handled, of
the word of life, (for the life was manifested, and we have seen
it, and bear witness and show unto you that eternal life, which was
with the Father, and was manifested unto us;) that which we have
seen and heard, declare we unto you.3
Having thus told them of his ground for what he said, he proceeds
to tell them also the matter contained in his errand-to wit, that
he brought them news of eternal life, as freely offered in the word
of the gospel to them; or rather, that that gospel which they had
received would certainly usher them in at the gates of the kingdom
of heaven, were their reception of it sincere and in truth--for,
saith he, then "the blood of Jesus Christ the Son of God cleanseth
you from all sin."
Having thus far told them what was his errand, he sets upon
an explication of what he had said, especially touching our being
cleansed from all sin--"Not," saith he, "from a being of sin; for
should we say so, we should deceive ourselves," and should prove
that we have no truth of God in us, but by cleansing, I mean
a being delivered from all sin, so as that none at all shall have
the dominion over you, to bring you down to hell; for that, for
the sake of the blood of Christ, all trespasses are forgiven you.
This done, he exhorts them to shun or fly sin, and not to consent
to the motions, workings, enticings, or allurements thereof, saying,
"I write unto you that ye sin not." Let not forgiveness have so
bad an effect upon you as to cause you to be remiss in Christian
duties, or as to tempt you to give, way to evil. Shall we sin because
we are forgiven? or shall we not much matter what manner of lives
we live, because we are set free from the law of sin and death? God
forbid. Let grace teach us another lesson, and lay other obligations
upon our spirits. "My little children," saith he, "these things
write I unto you, that ye sin not." What things? Why, tidings of
pardon and salvation, and of that nearness to God, to which you
are brought by the precious blood of Christ. Now, lest also by this
last exhortation he should yet be misunderstood, he adds, "And if
any man sin, we have an Advocate with the rather, Jesus Christ the
righteous." I say, he addeth this to prevent desponding in those
weak and sensible Christians that are so quick of feeling and
of discerning the corruptions of their natures; for these cry out
continually that there is nothing that they do but it is attended
with sinful weaknesses.
First, For the first of these--to wit, what the apostle should here
mean by sin--, "If any man sin."
1. The sins of God's people are said to be sins which men commit,
and for which they have an Advocate, though they who sin after the
example of the wicked one have none. "When a man or woman," saith
Moses, "shall commit any sin that men commit--they shall confess
their sin--and an atonement shall be made for him" (Num 5:5-7).
Mark, it is when they commit a sin which men commit; or, as Hosea
has it, when they transgress the commandment like Adam (Hosea 6:7).
Now, these are the sins under consideration by the apostle, and to
deliver us from which, "we have an Advocate with the Father."
2. But for the sins mentioned in the third chapter, since the
persons sinning go here under another character, they also must be
of another stamp-to wit, a making head against the person, merits,
and grace of Jesus Christ. These are the sins of devils in the
world, and for these there is no remission. These, they also that
are of the wicked one commit, and therefore sin after the similitude
of Satan, and so fall into the condemnation of the devil.
And this leads me first to inquire into what, by these words the
apostle must, of necessity, presuppose? For making use here of the
similitude or office of an advocate, thereby to show the preservation
of the sinning Christian, he must,
2. The text also supposeth that the saints as well as sinners are
concerned at that bar; for the apostle saith plainly that there
"we have an Advocate." And the saints are concerned at that bar;
because they transgress as well as others, and because the law
is against the sin of saints as well as against the sins of other
men. If the saints were not capable of committing of sin, what need
would they have of an advocate (I Chron 21:3-6. I Sam 12:13,14)?4
Yea, though they did sin, yet if they were by Christ so set free
from the law as that it could by no means take cognizance of their
sins, what need would they have of an advocate? None at all. If
there be twenty places where there are assizes kept in this land,
yet if I have offended no law, what need have I of an advocate?
Especially if the judge be just, and knows me altogether, as the
God of heaven does? But here is Judge that is just; and here is an
Advocate also, an Advocate for the children, an Advocate to plead;
for an advocate as such is not of use but before a bar to plead;
therefore, here is an offence, and so a law broken by the saints
as well as others. That is the second thing.
These things, I say, we readily think of, and forget them not. Our
conscience puts us in mind of these, our guilt puts us in mind of
these, the devil puts us in mind of these, and our reason and sense
hold the knowledge and remembrance of these close to us. All that
we forget is, that we have an Advocate, "an Advocate with the
Father"-that is, one that is appointed to take in hand in open
court, before all the angels of heaven, my cause, and to plead it
by such law and arguments as will certainly fetch me off, though
I am clothed with filthy garments; but this, I say, we are apt
to forget, as Job when he said, "O that one might plead for a man
with God, as a man pleadeth for his neighbour!" (Job 16:21). Such
an one Job had, but he had almost at this time forgot it; as he
seems to intimate also where he wisheth for a daysman that might
lay his hand upon them both (Job 9:33). But our mercy is, we have
one to plead our cause, "an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ
the righteous," who will not suffer our soul to be spilt and spoiled
before the throne, but will surely plead our cause.
6. Another thing that the apostle would have us learn from the words
is this, that to remember and to believe that Jesus Christ is an
Advocate for us when we have sinned, is the next way to support
and strengthen our faith and hope. Faith and hope are very apt to
faint when our sins in their guilt do return upon us; nor is there
any more proper way to relieve our souls than to understand that
the Son of God is our Advocate in heaven. True, Christ died for our
sins as a sacrifice, and as a priest he sprinkleth with his blood
the mercyseat; ay, but here is one that has sinned after profession
of faith, that has sinned grievously, so grievously that his sins
are come up before God; yea, are at his bar pleaded against him
by the accuser of the brethren, by the enemy of the godly. What
shall he do now? Why, let him believe in Christ. Believe, that is
true; but how now must he conceive in his mind of Christ for the
encouraging of him so to do? Why, let him call to mind that Jesus
Christ is an Advocate with the Father, and as such he meeteth the
accuser at the bar of God, pleads for this man that has sinned
against this accuser, and prevaileth for ever against him. Here
now, though Satan be turned lawyer, though he accuseth, yea, though
his charge against us is true, (for suppose that we have sinned,)
"yet our Advocate is with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous."
Thus is faith encouraged, thus is hope strengthened, thus is the
spirit of the sinking Christian revived, and made to wait for a good
deliverance from a bad cause and a cunning adversary; especially
if you consider,
7. That the apostle doth also further suppose by the text that
Jesus Christ, as Advocate, if he will but plead our cause, let
that be never so black, is able to bring us off, even before God's
judgment-seat, to our joy, and the confounding of our adversary;
for when he saith, "We have an Advocate," he speaks nothing if he
means not thus. But he doth mean thus, he must mean thus, because
he seeketh here to comfort and support the fallen. "Has any man
sinned? We have an Advocate." But what of that, if yet he be unable
to fetch us off when charged for sin at the bar, and before the
face of a righteous judge?
But having thus briefly passed through that in the text which I think
the apostle must necessarily presuppose, I shall now endeavour to
enter into the bowels of it, and see what, in a more particular
manner, shall be found therein. And, for my more profitable doing
of this work, I shall choose to observe this method in my discourse-
Second. And now to treat of the order or place that this office of
Christ hath among the rest of his offices, which he doth execute
for us while we are here in a state of imperfection; and I think
it is an office that is to come behind as a reserve, or for a help
at last, when all other means shall seem to fail. Men do not use
to go to law upon every occasion; or if they do, the wisdom of the
judge, the jury, and the court will not admit that every brangle
and foolish quarrel shall come before them; but an Advocate doth
then come into place, and then to the exercise of his office, when
a cause is counted worthy to be taken notice of by the judge and
by the court. Wherefore he, I say, comes in the last place, as a
reserve, or help at last, to plead; and, by pleading, to set that
right by law which would otherwise have caused an increase to more
doubts, and to further dangers.
I know that a bad man may have a good cause depending before the
judge, and so also good men have (Job 31). But then they are bold
in their own cause, and fear not to make mention of it, and in
Christ to plead their innocency before the God of heaven, as well
as before men (Psa 71:3-5. II Cor 1:23. Gal 1:10. Phil 1:8). But
we have in the text a cause that all men are afraid of-a cause that
the apostle concludes so bad that none but Jesus Christ himself can
save a Christian from it. It is not only sinful, but sin itself-"If
any man sin, we have an Advocate with the Father."
The best saints are most sensible of their sins, and most apt to
make mountains of their mole hills. Satan also, as has been already
hinted, doth labour greatly to prevail with them to sin, and to
provoke their God against them, by pleading what is true, or by
surmising evilly of them, to the end they may be accused by him
(Job 2:9). Great is his malice toward them, great is his diligence
in seeking their destruction; wherefore greatly doth he desire
to sift, to try, and winnow them, if perhaps he may work in their
flesh to answer his design-that is, to break out in sinful acts,
that he may have by law to accuse them to their God and Father.
Wherefore, for their sakes this text abides, that they may see
that, when they have sinned, "they have an Advocate with the Father,
Jesus Christ the righteous." And thus have I showed you the nature,
the order, and occasion of this office of our blessed Lord Jesus.
II. I come now to show you how Jesus Christ doth manage this
his office of an Advocate for us. And that I may do this to your
edification, I shall choose this method for the opening of it-First.
Show you how he manages this office with his Father. Second. I
shall show you how he manages it before him against our adversary.
First. How he manages this his office of Advocate with his Father.
Again; if God should admit of more advocates than one, and yet
make mention of never an one but Jesus Christ; or if John should
allow another, and yet speak nothing but of Jesus only; yea, that
an advocate under that title should be mentioned but once, but
once only in all the book of God, and yet that divers should be
admitted, stands neither with the wisdom or love of God, nor with
the faithfulness of the apostle. But saints have but one Advocate,
if they will use him, or improve their faith in that office for
their help, so; if not, they must take what follows. This I thought
good to hint at, because the times are corrupt, and because ignorance
and superstition always wait for a countenance with us, and these
things have a natural tendency to darken all truth, so especially
this, which bringeth to Jesus Christ so much glory, and yieldeth
to the godly so much help and relief.
And thus far there is, in some kind, a harmony betwixt his being
a sacrifice, a priest, and an Advocate. As a sacrifice, our sins
were laid upon him (Isa 53). As a priest, he beareth them (Exo
28:38). And as an Advocate, he acknowledges them to be his own (Psa
69:5). Now, having acknowledged them to be his own, the quarrel is
no more betwixt us and Satan, for the Lord Jesus has espoused our
quarrel, and made it his. All, then, that we in this matter have
to do, is to stand at the bar by faith among the angels, and see
how the business goes. O blessed God! what a lover of mankind
art thou! and how gracious is our Lord Jesus, in his thus managing
matters for us.
(2.) The Lord Jesus having thus taken our sins upon himself, next
pleads his own goodness to God on our behalf, saying, "Let not them
that wait on thee, O Lord God of hosts, be ashamed for my sake: let
not those that seek thee be confounded for my sake, O God of Israel:
because for thy sake I have borne reproach; shame hath covered my
face" (Psa 69:6,7). Mark, let them not be ashamed for my sake,
let them not be confounded for my sake. Shame and confusion are
the fruits of guilt, or of a charge for sin, (Jer 3:25), and are
but an entrance into condemnation (Dan 12:2. John 5:29). But behold
how Christ pleads, saying, Let not that be for my sake, for the
merit of my blood, for the perfection of my righteousness, for the
prevalency of my intercession. Let them not be ashamed for my sake,
O Lord God of hosts. And let no man object, because this text is
in the Psalms, as if it were not spoken by the prophet of Christ;
for both John and Paul, yea, and Christ himself, do make this psalm
a prophecy of him. Compare verse 9 with John 2:17, and with Romans
15:3; and verse 21 with Matthew 27:48, and Mark 15:25. But is not
this a wonderful thing, that Christ should first take our sins,
and account them his own, and then plead the value and worth of his
whole self for our deliverance? For by these words, "for my sake,"
he pleads his own self, his whole self, and all that he is and has;
and thus he put us in good estate again, though our cause was very
bad.
And who can now object against the deliverance of the child of God?
God cannot; for he, for Christ's sake, according as he pleaded,
hath forgiven us all trespasses (Col 2:13, Eph 4:32). The devil
cannot; his mouth is stopped, as is plain in the case of Joshua
(Zech 3). The law cannot; for that approveth of what Christ has
done. This, then, is the way of Christ's pleading. You must know,
that when Christ pleads with God, he pleads with a just and righteous
God, and therefore he must plead law, and nothing but law; and this
he pleaded in both these pleas-First, in confessing of the sin he
justified the sentence of the law in pronouncing of it evil; and
then in his laying of himself, his whole self, before God for that
sin, he vindicated the sanction and perfection of the law. Thus,
therefore, he magnifies the law, and makes it honourable, and yet
brings off his client safe and sound in the view of all the angels
of God.
(3). The Lord Jesus having thus taken our sins upon himself, and
presented God with all the worthiness that is in his whole self for
them, in the next place he calleth for justice, or a just verdict
upon the satisfaction he hath made to God and to his law. Then
proclamation is made in open court, saying, "Take away the filthy
garments from him," from him that hath offended, and clothe him
with change of raiment (Zech 3).
Thus the soul is preserved that hath sinned; thus the God of heaven
is content that he should be saved; thus Satan is put to confusion,
and Jesus applauded and cried up by the angels of heaven, and by the
saints on earth. Thus have I showed you how Christ doth advocate it
with God and his Father for us; and I have been the more particular
in this, because the glory of Christ, and the comfort of the
dejected, are greatly concerned and wrapped up in it. Look, then,
to Jesus, if thou hast sinned; to Jesus, as an Advocate pleading
with the Father for thee. Look to nothing else; for he can tell
how, and that by himself, to deliver thee; yea, and will do it in
a way of justice, which is a wonder; and to the shame of Satan,
which will be his glory; and also to thy complete deliverance,
which will be thy comfort and salvation.
Second, But to pass this and come to the second thing, which is, to
show you how the Lord Jesus manages this his office of an Advocate
before his Father against the adversary; for he pleadeth with the
Father, but pleadeth against the devil; he pleadeth with the Father
law and justice, but against the adversary he letteth out himself.
Christ, when he died, died not to satisfy Satan, but his Father;
not to appease the devil, but to answer the demands of the justice
of God; nor did he design, when he hanged on the tree, to triumph
over his Father, but over Satan; "He redeemed us," therefore, "from
the curse of the law," by his blood (Gal 3:13). And from the power
of Satan, by his resurrection (Heb 2:14). He delivered us from
righteous judgment by price and purchase; but from the rage of hell
by fight and conquest.
And though this, to some, may seem but an indifferent plea; for what
engagement lieth, may they say, upon God to be so much concerned
with them, for they sin against him, and often provoke him most
bitterly? Besides, in their best state, they are altogether vanity,
and a very thing of nought-"What is man (sorry man), that thou art
mindful of him," or that thou shouldest be so?
Now, put all these things together, and then feel if there be not
weight in this plea of Christ against the devil. He pleads God's
choice and interest in his saints against him-an interest that is
secured by the wisdom of heaven, by the grace of heaven, by the
power, will, and mercy of God, in Christ-an interest in which all
the three Persons in the Godhead have engaged themselves, by mutual
agreement and operation, to make good when Satan has done his all.
I know there are some that object against this doctrine as false;
but such, perhaps, are ignorant of some things else as well as of
this. However, they object against the wisdom of God, whose truth
it is, and against Christ our Advocate, whose argument, as he is
such, it is; yea, they labour, what in them lieth, to wrest that
weapon out of his hand, with which he so cudgelleth the enemy
when, as Advocate, he pleadeth so effectually against him for the
rescuing of us from the danger of judgment, saying, "The Lord rebuke
thee, O Satan, even the Lord that hath chosen Jerusalem, rebuke
thee."
Suppose so many cattle in such a pound, and one goes by whose they
are not, doth he concern himself? No; he beholds them, and goes his
way. But suppose that at his return he should find his own cattle
in that pound, would he now carry it toward them as he did unto the
other? No, no; he has interest here, they are his that are in the
pound; now he is concerned, now he must know who put them there,
and for what cause too they are served as they are; and if he
finds them rightfully there, he will fetch them by ransom; but if
wrongfully, he will replevy7 them, and stand a trial at law with
him that has thus illegally pounded his cattle. And thus it is
betwixt Jesus Christ and his. He is interested in them; the cattle
are his own, "his own sheep," (John 10:3,4), but pounded by some
other, by the law, or by the devil. If pounded by the law, he
delivereth them by ransom; if pounded by the devil, he will replevy
them, stand a trial at law for them, and will be, against their
accuser, their Advocate himself. Nor can Satan withstand his plea,
though he should against them join argument with the law; forasmuch,
as has been proved before, he can and will, by what he has to produce
and plead of his own, save his from all trespasses, charges, and
accusations. Besides, all men know that a man's proper goods are
not therefore forfeited, because they commit many, and them too
great transgressions-"And if any man sin, we have an Advocate with
the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous." Now, the strength of this
plea thus grounded upon Christ's interest in his people is great,
and hath many weighty reasons on its side; as-
2. They cost him dear; and that which is dear bought is not easily
parted with (I Cor. 6:20). They were bought with "his blood" (Eph
1:7; I Peter 1:18,19). They were given him for his blood, and
therefore are "dear children" (Eph 5:1); for they are his by the
highest price; and this price he, as Advocate, pleadeth against the
enemy of our salvation; yea, I will add, they are his, because he
gave his all for them (II Cor 8:9). When a man shall give his all
for this or that, then that which he so hath purchased is become
his all. Now Christ has given his all for us; he made himself poor
for us, wherefore we are become his all, his fullness; and so the
church is called (Eph 1:23). Nay, further, Christ likes well enough
of his purchase, though it hath cost him his all-"The lines," says
he, "are fallen to me in pleasant places; I have a goodly heritage"
(Psa 16:6). Now, put all these things together, and there is a
strong plea in them. Interest, such an interest, will not be easily
parted with. But this is not all; for,
(b.) As they are called his spouse, so they are called his flesh,
and members of his body. Now, said Paul to the church, "Ye are the
body of Christ, and members in particular" (I Cor 12:27; Eph 5:30).
This relation also makes a man plead hard. Were a man to plead for
a limb, or a member of his own, how would he plead? What arguments
would he use? And what sympathy and feeling would his arguments
flow from? I cannot lose a hand, I cannot lose a foot, cannot lose
a finger; why, saints are Christ's members, his members are of himself.
With what strength of argument would a man plead the necessariness
of his members to him, and the unnaturalness of his adversary in
seeking the destruction of his members, and the deformity of his
body! Yea, a man would shuck and cringe, and weep, and entreat,
and make demurs, and halts, and delays, to a thousand years, if
possible, before he would lose his members, or any one of them.
But, I say, how would he plead and advocate it for his members,
if judge, and law, and reason, and equity, were all on his side,
and if, by the adversary, there could be nothing urged, but that
against which the Advocate had long before made provision for the
effectual overthrow thereof? And all this is true as to the case
that lies before us. Thus we see what strength there lieth in this
second argument, that our Advocate bringeth for us against the
enemy. They are his flesh and bones, his members; he cannot spare
them; he cannot spare this, because, nor that, because, nor any,
because, they are his members. As such, they are lovely to him; as
such, they are useful to him; as such, they are an ornament to him;
yea, though in themselves they are feeble, and through infirmity
weak, much disabled from doing as they should. Thus, "If any man sin,
we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous."
But,
"I will," saith Christ; "I will," saith Satan; but whose will shall
stand? It is true, Christ in the text speaks more like an arbitrator
than an Advocate; more like a judge than one pleading at a bar.
I will have it so; I judge that so it ought to be, and must. But
there is also something of plea in the words both before his Father,
and against our enemy; and therefore he speaketh like one that can
plead and determine also; yea, like one that has power so to do.
But shall the will of heaven stoop to the will of hell? Or the
will of Christ to the will of Satan? Or the will of righteousness
to the will of sin? Shall Satan, who is God's enemy, and whose charge
wherewith he chargeth us for sin, and which is grounded, not upon
love to righteousness, but upon malice against God's designs of
mercy, against the blood of Christ, and the salvation of his people-I
say, shall this enemy and this charge prevail with God against the
well-grounded plea of Christ, and against the salvation of God's
elect, and so keep us out of heaven? No, no; Christ will have it
otherwise, he is the great donator, 8 and his eye is good. True,
Satan was turned out of heaven for that he sinned there, and we
must be taken into heaven, though we have sinned here; this is the
will of Christ, and, as Advocate, he pleads it against the face
and accusation of our adversary. Thus, "If any man sin, we have an
Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous." But,
I will further suppose that which may be supposed, and that which
is suitable to our purpose. Suppose, therefore, that a father that
has a child whom he loveth, but the child has not half that wit
that some of the family hath, and I am sure that we have less wit
than angels; and suppose, also, that some bad-minded neighbour, by
tampering with, tempting of, and by unwearied solicitations, should
prevail with this child to steal something out of his father's house
or grounds, and give it unto him; and this he doth on purpose to
set the father against the child; and suppose, again, that it comes
to the father's knowledge that the child, through the allurements
of such an one, has done so and so against his father; will he
therefore disinherit this child? Yea, suppose, again, that he that
did tempt this child to steal, should be the first that should come
to accuse this child to its father for so doing, would the father
take notice of the accusation of such an one?-No, verily, we that
are evil can do better than so; how then should we think that the
God of heaven should do such a thing, since also we have a brother
that is wise, and that will and can plead the very malice of our enemy
that doth to us all these things against him for our advantage?-I
say, this is the sum of this fifth plea of Christ our Advocate,
against Satan. O Satan, says he, thou art an enemy to my people;
thou pleadest not out of love to righteousness, not to reform, but
to destroy my beloved and inheritance. The charge wherewith thou
chargest my people is thine own (Job 8:4-6). Not only as to a matter
of charge, but the things that thou accusest them of are thine,
thine in the nature of them. Also, thou hast tempted, allured,
flattered, and daily laboured with them, to do that for which now
thou so willingly would have them destroyed. Yea, all this hast
thou done of envy to my Father, and to godliness; of hatred to me
and my people; and that thou mightest destroy others besides (I Chron
21:1). And now, what can this accuser say? Can he excuse himself?
Can he contradict our Advocate? He cannot; he knows that he is a
Satan, an enemy, and as an adversary has he sown his tares among
the wheat, that it might be rooted up; but he shall not have his
end; his malice has prevented9 him, and so has the care and grace
of our Advocate. The tares, therefore, he shall have returned unto
him again; but the wheat, for all this, shall be gathered into
God's barn (Matt 13:25-30).
Thus, therefore, our Advocate makes use, in his plea against Satan,
of the rage and malice that is the occasion of the enemy's charge
wherewith he accuseth the children of God. Wherefore, when thou
readest these words, "O Satan," say with thyself, thus Christ our
Advocate accuseth our adversary of malice and envy against God and
goodness, while he accuseth us of the sins which we commit, for
which we are sorry, and Christ has paid a price of redemption-"And
(thus) if any man sin, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus
Christ the righteous." But,
Also, when Abraham said, "I am but dust and ashes," (Gen 18:27),
he means he was but what sin had left; yea, he had something of
the smutch and besmearings of sin yet upon him. Wherefore it was
a custom with Israel, in days of old, when they set days apart
for confession of sin, and humiliation for the same, to sprinkle
themselves with, or to wallow in dust and ashes, as a token that
they did confess they were but what sin had left, and that they
also were defiled, weakened, and polluted by it (Esth 4:1,3; Jer
6:26; Job 30:19, 42:6).
This, then, is the next plea of our goodly Advocate for us: O Satan,
this is "a brand plucked out of the fire." As who should say, Thou
objected against my servant Joshua that he is black like a coal,
or that the fire of sin at times is still burning in him. And what
then? The reason why he is not totally extinct, as tow; is not thy
pity, but my Father's mercy to him; I have plucked him out of the
fire, yet not so out but that the smell thereof is yet upon him;
and my Father and I, we consider his weakness, and pity him; for
since he is as a brand pulled out, can it be expected by my Father
or me that he should appear before us as clear, and do our biddings
as well, as if he had never been there? This is "a brand plucked
out of the fire," and must be considered as such, and must be
borne with as such. Thus, as Mephibosheth pleaded for his excuse,
his lameness,(II Sam 19:24-26), so Christ pleads the infirm and
indigent condition of his people, against Satan, for their advantage.
Wherefore Christ, by such pleas as these for his people, doth yet
further show the malice of Satan (for all this burning comes through
him), yea, and by it he moveth the heart of God to pity us, and yet
to be gentle, and long-suffering, and merciful to us; for pity and
compassion are the fruits of the yearning of God's bowels towards
us, while he considereth us as infirm and weak, and subject to
slips, and stumbles, and falls, because of weakness.
And that Christ our Advocate, by thus pleading, doth turn things
to our advantage, consider, (1.) That God is careful, that through
our weakness, our spirits do not fail before him when he chides
(Isa 57:16-18). (2.) "He stayeth his rough wind in the day of the
east wind," and debates about the measure of affliction, when, for
sin, we should be chastened, lest we should sink thereunder (Isa
27:7-9). (3.) He will not strictly mark what is done amiss, because
if he should, we cannot stand (Psa 130:3). (4.) When he threateneth
to strike, his bowels are troubled, and his repentings are kindled
together (Hosea 11:8,9). (5.) He will spin out his patience to the
utmost length, because he knows we are such bunglers at doing (Jer
9:24). (6.) He will accept of the will for the deed, because he
knows that sin will make our best performances imperfect (II Cor
8:12). (7.) He will count our little a very great deal, for that
he knows we are so unable to do anything at all (Job 1:21). (8.) He
will excuse the souls of his people, and lay the fault upon their
flesh, which has greatest affinity with Satan, if through weakness
and infirmity we do not do as we should (Matt 26:41; Rom 7). Now,
as I said, all these things happen unto us, both infirmities and
pity, because and for that we were once in the fire, and for that
the weakness of sin abides upon us to this day. But none of this
favour could come to us, nor could we, by any means, cause that
our infirmities should work for us thus advantageously; but that
Christ our Advocate stands our friend, and pleads for us as he
doth.
But again, before I pass this over, I will, for the clearing of this,
present you with a few more considerations, which are of another
rank-to wit, that Christ our Advocate, as such, makes mention of
our weaknesses so, against Satan, and before his Father, as to turn
all to our advantage.
I have seen men (and yet they are worse than God) take most care
of, and, also, best provide for, those of their children that have
been most infirm and helpless; 10 and our Advocate "shall gather
his lambs with his arms, and carry them in his bosom"; yea, and
I know that there is such an art in showing and making mention of
weaknesses as shall make the tears stand in a parent's eyes, and as
shall make him search to the bottom of his purse to find out what
may do his weakling good. Christ, also, has that excellent art, as
he is an Advocate with the Father for us; he can so make mention
of us and of our infirmities, while he pleads before God, against
the devil, for us, that he can make the bowels of the Almighty yearn
towards us, and to wrap us up in their compassions. You read much
of the pity, compassion, and of the yearning of the bowels of the
mighty God towards his people; all which, I think, is kindled and
made burn towards us, by the pleading of our Advocate. I have seen
fathers offended with their children; but when a brother had turned
a skillful advocate, the anger has been appeased, and the means
have been concealed. We read but little of this Advocate's office
of Jesus Christ, yet much of the fruit of it is extended to the
churches; but as the cause of smiles, after offences committed,
is made manifest afterwards, so at the day when God will open
all things, we shall see how many times our Lord, as an Advocate,
pleaded for us, and redeemed us by his so pleading, unto the
enjoyments of smiles and embraces, who, for sin, but a while before,
were under frowns and chastisements. And thus much for the making
out how Christ doth manage his office of being an Advocate for
us with the Father-"If any man sin, we have an Advocate with the
Father, Jesus Christ the righteous."
THIRDLY, And I shall come now to the third head; to wit, to show
you more particularly who they are that have Jesus Christ for their
Advocate.
Second, I come next to show you how far this office of an Advocate
is extended. I hinted at this before, so now shall be the more
brief. 1. By this office he offereth no sacrifice; he only, as to
matter of justice, pleads the sacrifice offered. 2. By this office
he obtains the conversion of none; he only thereby secureth the
converted from the damnation which their adversary, for sins after
light and profession, endeavoureth to bring them to. 3. By this
office he prevents not temporal punishment, but by it he chiefly
preserveth the soul from hell. 4. By this office he brings in
no justifying righteousness for us, he only thereby prevaileth to
have the dispose of that brought in by himself, as Priest, for the
justifying of those, by a new and fresh act, who had made their
justification doubtful by new falls into sin. And this is plain
in the history of our Joshua, so often mentioned before (Zech 3).
5. As Priest, he hath obtained eternal redemption for us; and as
Advocate, he by law, maintaineth our right thereto, against the
devil and his angels.
Third, I come now to show you who they are that have Jesus Christ
for their Advocate. And this I shall do-first, more generally, and
then shall be more particular and distinct about it.
1. More generally. They are all the truly gracious; those that are
the children by adoption; and this the test affirmeth-"My little
children, these things write I unto you, that ye sin not. And if
any man sin, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the
righteous." They are, then, the children, by adoption, that are
the persons concerned in the advocateship of Jesus Christ. The
priesthood of Christ extendeth itself to the whole body of the
elect, but the advocateship of Christ doth not so. This is further
cleared by this apostle; and in this very text, if you consider
what immediately follows-"We have an Advocate," says he, "and he
is the propitiation for our sins." He is our Advocate, and also
our Priest. As an Advocate, ours only; but as a propitiation, not
ours only, but also for the sins of the whole world; to be sure,
for the elect throughout the world, and they that will extend it
further, let them.
And I say again, had he not intended that there should have been
a straiter limit put to the Advocateship of Christ than he would
have us put to his priestly office, what needed he, when he speaketh
of the propitiation which relates to Christ as Priest, have added-"And
not for ours only"? As an Advocate, then, he engageth for us that
are children; and as a Priest, too, he hath appeased God's wrath
for our sins; but as an Advocate his offices are confined to the
children only, but as a Priest he is not so. He is the propitiation
for our sins, and not for ours only. The sense, therefore, of the
apostle should, I think, be this-That Christ, as a Priest, hath
offered a propitiatory sacrifice for all; but as an Advocate he
pleadeth only for the children. Children, we have an Advocate to
ourselves, and he is also our Priest; but as he is a Priest, he is
not ours only, but maketh, as such, amends for all that shall be
saved. The elect, therefore, have the Lord Jesus for their Advocate
then, and then only, when they are by calling put among the children;
because, as Advocate, he is peculiarly the children's-"My little
children, WE have an Advocate."
Objection. But he also saith, "If any man sin, we have an Advocate";
any man that sinneth seems, by the text, notwithstanding what you
say, "to have an Advocate with the Father."
Answer. By any man, must not be meant any of the world, nor any
of the elect, but any man in faith and grace; for he still limits
this general term, "any man," with this restriction, "we"-Children,
"if any man sin, we have an Advocate." We, any man of us. And this
is yet further made appear, since he saith that it is to them he
writes, not only here, but further in this chapter-"I write unto
YOU, little children; I write unto you, fathers; I write unto you,
young men" (I John 2: 12,13). These are the persons intended in
the text, for under these three heads are comprehended all men;
for they are either children, and so men in nature, or young men,
and so men in strength; or else they are fathers, and so aged, and
of experience. Add to this, by "any man," that the apostle intendeth
not to enlarge himself beyond the persons that are in grace; but to
supply what was wanting by that term "little children"; for since
the strongest saint may have heed of an Advocate, as well as the
most feeble of the flock, why should the apostle leave it to be
so understood as if the children, and the children only, had an
interest in that office? Wherefore, after he had said, "My little
children, I write unto you, that ye sin not"; he then adds, with
enlargement, "If any man sin, we have an Advocate with the Father."
Yet the little children may well be mentioned first, since they most
want the knowledge of it, are most feeble, and so by sin may be
forced most frequently to act faith on Christ, as Advocate. Besides,
they are most ready, through temptation, to question whether they
have so good a right to Christ in all his offices as have better and
more well-grown saints; and, therefore, they, in this the apostle's
salutation, are first set down in the catalogue of names-"My little
children, I write unto you, that ye sin not. If any man sin, we
have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous." So,
then, the children of God are they who have the Lord Jesus, an
Advocate for them with the Father. The least and biggest, the oldest
and youngest, the feeblest and the strongest; ALL the children have
an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous.
(1.) Since, then, the children have Christ for their advocate, art
thou a child? Art thou begotten of God by his Word? (James 1:18).
Hast thou in thee the spirit of adoption? (Gal 4:1-6). Canst thou
in faith say, Father, Father, to God? Then is Christ thy Advocate,
thine Advocate, "now to appear in the presence of God for thee"
(Heb 9:24). To appear there, and to plead there, in the face of the
court of heaven, for thee; to plead there against thine adversary,
whose accusations are dreadful, whose subtlety is great, whose
malice is inconceivable, and whose rage is intolerable; to plead
there before a just God, a righteous God, a sin-revenging God:
before whose face thou wouldst die if thou wast to show thyself,
and at his bar to plead thine own cause. But,
2. But some may object, that what has been said as to discovering
for whom Christ is an Advocate has been too general, and, therefore,
would have me come more to particulars, else they can get no
comfort. Well, inquiring soul, so I will; and, therefore, hearken
to what I say.
Answer. I answer, Art thou sensible that thou hast an action commenced
against thee in that high court of justice that is above? I say,
Art thou sensible of this? For the defendants-and all God's people
are defendants-do not use to entertain their lawyers, but from
knowledge, that an action either is, or may be, commenced against
them before the God of heaven. If thou sayest yea, then I ask, Who
told thee that thou standest accused for transgression before the
judgment-seat of God? I say, Who told thee so? Hath the Holy Ghost,
hath the world, or hath thy conscience? For nothing else, as I know
of, can bring such tidings to thy soul.
Again; Hast thou found a failure in all others that might have
been entertained to plead thy cause? Some make their sighs, their
tears, their prayers, and their reformations, their advocates-"Hast
thou tried these, and found them wanting?" Hast thou seen thy state
to be desperate, if the Lord Jesus doth not undertake to plead thy
cause? for Jesus is not entertained so long as men can make shift
without him. But when it comes to this point I perish for ever,
notwithstanding the help of all, if the Lord Jesus steps not in.
Then Lord Jesus, Lord Jesus, good Lord Jesus! undertake for me.
Hast thou therefore been with Jesus Christ as concerned in thy
soul, as heartily concerned about the action that thou perceivest
to be commenced against thee?
Answer. I answer, Hast thou well considered the nature of the crime
wherewith thou standest charged at the bar of God? Hast thou also
considered the justness of the Judge? Again I ask, Hast thou considered
what truth, as to matter of fact, there is in the things whereof
thou standest accused? Also, Hast thou considered the cunning, the
malice, and diligence of thy adversary, with the greatness of the
loss thou art like to sustain, shouldst thou with Ahab, in the book
of Kings, (I Kings 22:17-23), or with the hypocrites in Isaiah, (Isa
6:5-10), have the verdict of the Lord God go out from the throne
against thee? I ask thee these questions, because if thou art in
the knowledge of these things to seek, or if thou art not deeply
concerned about the greatness of the damage that will certainly
overtake thee, and that for ever, shouldest thou be indeed accused
before God, and have none to plead thy cause, thou hast not, nor
canst not, let what will come upon thee, have been with Jesus Christ
to plead thy cause; and so, let thy case be never so desperate,
thou standest alone, and hast no helper (Job 30:13, 9:13) Or if
thou hast, they, not being the advocate of God's appointing, must
needs fall with thee, and with thy burden. Wherefore, consider of
this seriously, and return thy answer to God, who can tell if truth
shall be found in thy answers, better by far than any; for it is
he that tries the reins and the heart, and therefore to him I refer
thee. But,
(2.) Wouldst thou know whether Jesus Christ is thine advocate? Then
I ask again, Hast thou revealed thy cause unto him?-I say, Hast
thou revealed thy cause unto him? For he that goeth to law for his
right, must not only go to a lawyer, and say, Sir, I am in trouble,
and am to have a trial at law with mine enemy, pray undertake my
cause; but he must also reveal to his lawyer his cause. He must
go to him and tell him what is the matter, how things stand, where
the shoe pinches, and so. Thus did the church of old, and thus doth
every true Christian now; for though nothing can be hid from him,
yet he will have things out of thine own mouth; he will have thee
to reveal thy matters unto him (Matt 20:32). "O Lord of hosts,"
said Jeremiah, "that judgest righteously, that triest the reins and
the heart, let me see thy vengeance on them: for unto thee have I
revealed my cause" (Jer 11:20). And again; "But, O Lord of hosts,
that triest the righteous, and seest the reins and the heart, let
me see thy vengeance on them; for unto thee have I opened my cause"
(Jer 20:12). Seest thou here, how saints of old were wont to do?
how they did, not only in a general way, entreat Christ to plead
their cause, but in a particular way, go to him and reveal, or open
their cause unto him?
(a.) Thou must know him to be a friend, and not an enemy, unto whom
thou openest thy heart; and until thou comest to know that Christ
is a friend to thee, or to souls in thy condition, thou wilt never
reveal thy cause unto him, not thy whole cause unto him. And it
is from this that so many that have soul causes hourly depending
before the throne of God, and that are in danger every day of eternal
damnation, forbear to entertain Jesus Christ for their Advocate,
and so wickedly conceal their matters from him; but "he that hideth
his sins shall not prosper" (Prov 28:13)
(3.) Hast thou Jesus Christ for thine Advocate? or wouldst thou
know if thou hast? Then I ask again, Hast thou committed thy cause
to him? When a man entertains12 his lawyer to stand for him and
to plead his cause, he doth not only reveal, but commit his cause
unto him. "I would seek unto God," says Eliphaz to Job, "and unto
God would I commit my cause" (Job 5:8). Now there is a difference
betwixt revealing my cause and committing of it to a man. To reveal
my cause is to open it to one; and to commit it to him is to trust
it in his hand. Many a man will reveal his cause to him unto whom
he will yet be afraid to commit it; but now, he that entertains a
lawyer to plead his cause, doth not only reveal but commit his cause
into him. As, suppose right to his estate be called in question;
why, then, he not only reveals his cause to his lawyer, but puts
into his hands his evidences, deeds, leases, mortgages, bonds, or
what else he hath, to show a title to his estate by. And thus doth
Christians deal with Christ; they deliver up all unto him-to wit,
all their signs, evidences, promises, and assurances, which they
have thought they had for heaven and the salvation of their souls,
and have desired him to peruse, to search, and try them every one.
"And see if there be any wicked way in me, and lead me in the way
everlasting" (Psa 139:23-24). This is committing of thy cause to
Christ, and this is the hardest task of all, for the man that doth
thus, he trusteth Christ with all; and it implieth, that he will
live and die, stand and fall, lose and win, according as Christ
will manage his business. Thus did Paul, (II Tim 1:12), and thus
Peter admonishes us to do. Now he that doth this must be convinced,
(a.) Of the ability of Jesus Christ to defend him; for a man will
not commit so great a concern as his all is to his friend. No; not
to his friend, be he never so faithful, if he perceives not in
him ability to save him, and to preserve what he hath, against all
the cavils of an enemy. And hence it is that the ability of Jesus
Christ, as to the saving of his people, is so much insisted on in
the Scripture; as, "I have laid help upon one that is mighty" (Psa
89:19). "I that speak in righteousness, mighty to save" (Isa 63:1).
And again, "He shall send them a Saviour, and a great one" (Isa
19:20).
Perhaps when thy cause is tried, things for the present are upon
this issue; thy adversary, indeed, is cast, but whether thou shalt
have an absolute discharge, as Peter had, or a conditional one,
as David, and as the Corinthians had, that is the question (II Sam
12:10-14). True, thou shalt be completely saved at last; but yet
whether it is not best to leave to thee a memento of God's displeasure
against thy sin, by awarding that the sword shall never depart from
thy house, or that some sore sickness or other distresses shall
haunt thee as long as thou livest, or, perhaps, that thou shalt
walk without the light of God's countenance for several years and
a day. Now, if any of these three things happen unto thee, thou must
exercise patience, and wait; thus did David-"I waited patiently";
and again he exercises his soul in this virtue, saying "My soul,
wait thou only upon God; for my expectation is from him" (Psa 62:5).
For now we are judged of the Lord, that we may not be condemned
with the world. And by this judgment, though it sets us free from
their damnation, yet we are involved in many troubles, and, perhaps,
must wait many a day before we can know that, as to the main, the
verdict hath gone on our side. Thus, therefore, in order to thy
waiting upon him without fainting, it is meet that thou shouldest
know the methods of him that manages thy cause for thee in heaven;
and suffer not mistrust to break in and bear sway in thy soul, for
"he will" at length "bring thee forth to the light, and thou shalt
behold his righteousness. She, also, that is thine enemy shall see
it, and shame shall cover her which saith unto thee, Where is the
Lord thy God?" (Micah 7: 9-10).
(b.) To wait upon him is to keep his way, to walk humbly in his
appointments. "Wait on the Lord, and keep his way, and he shall
exalt thee to inherit the land" (Psa 37:34).
(e.) Also, if it tarry long, wait for it. Do not conclude that thy
cause is lost because at present thou dost not hear from court.
Cry, if thou wilt, O, when wilt thou come unto me? But never let
such a wicked thought pass through thy heart, saying, "This evil
is of the Lord; what should I wait for the Lord any longer?" (II
Kings 6:33).
(f.) But take heed that thou turnest not thy waiting into sleeping.
Wait thou must, and wait patiently too; but yet wait with much
longing and earnestness of spirit, to see or hear how matters go
above. You may observe, that when a man that dwells far down in
the country, and has some business at the term, in this or another
of the king's courts, though he will wait his lawyer's time and
convenience, yet he will so wait as still to inquire at the post
house, or at the carrier's, or if a neighbour comes down from term,
at his mouth, for letters, or any other intelligence, if possibly he
may arrive to know how his cause speeds, and whether his adversary,
or he, has the day. Thus, I say, thou must wait upon thine Advocate.
His ordinances are his post house, his ministers are his carriers,
where tidings from heaven are to be had, and where those that are
sued in that court by the devil may, at one time or another, hear
from their lawyer, their advocate, how things are like to go. Wherefore,
I say, wait at the posts of wisdom's house, go to ordinances with
expectation to hear from thy Advocate there; for he will send in
due time; "though it tarry, wait for it; because it will surely
come, it will not tarry" (Hab 2:1-3). And now, soul, I have answered
thy request, and let me hear what thou sayest unto me.
Soul.-Truly, says the soul, methinks that by what you have said,
I may have this blessed Jesus to be mine Advocate; for I think,
verily, I have entertained him to be mine Advocate. I have also
revealed my cause unto him, yea, committed both it and myself unto
him; and, as you say, I wait; oh! I wait! and my eyes fail with
looking upward. Fain would I hear how my soul standeth in the sight
of God, and whether my sins, which I have committed since light
and grace were given unto me, be by mine Advocate, taken out of the
hand of the devil, and by mine Advocate removed as far from me as
the ends of the earth are asunder; whether the verdict has gone
on my side, and what a shout there was among the angels when they
saw it went well with me! But alas! I have waited, and that a long
time, and have, as you advise, run from ordinance to minister, and
from minister to ordinance, or, as you phrase it, from the post to
the carrier, and from the carrier to the post house, to see if I
could hear aught from heaven how matters went about my soul there. I
have also asked those that pass by the way, "if they saw him whom
my soul loveth," and if they had anything to communicate to me? But
nothing can I get or find but generals; as, that I have an Advocate
there, and that he pleadeth the cause of his people, and that he
will thoroughly plead their cause. But what he has done for ME,
of that as yet I am ignorant. I doubt if my soul shall by him be
effectually secured, that yet a conditional verdict will be awarded
concerning me, and that much bitter will be mixed with my sweet,
and that I must drink gall and wormwood for my folly; for if David,
and Asa, and Hezekiah and such good men, were so served for their
sins, (II Chron 16:7,12), why should I look for other dealing
at the hand of God? But as to this, I will endeavour to "bear the
indignation of the Lord, because I have sinned against him," (Micah
7:9), and shall count it an infinite mercy, if this judgment comes
to me from him, that I may "not be condemned with the world" (I
Cor 11:32). I know it is dreadful walking in darkness; but if that
also shall be the Lord's lot upon me; I pray God I may have faith
enough to stay upon him till death, and then will the clouds blow
over, and I shall see him in the light of the living.
But although I say these things now, and to you, yet I have
my solitary hours, and in them I have other strange thoughts; for
thus I think, my cause is bad, I have sinned, and I have been vile.
I am ashamed myself of mine own doings, and have given mine enemy
the best end of the staff. The law, and reason, and my conscience,
plead for him against me, and all is true; he puts into his charge
against me, that I have sinned more times than there be hairs on
my head. I know not anything that ever I did in my life but it had
flaw, or wrinkle, or spot, or some such thing in it. Mine eyes have
seen vileness in the best of my doings; what, then, think you, must
God needs see in them? Nor can I do anything yet, for all I know
that I am accused by my enemy before the judgment-seat of God,
better than what already is imperfect. "I lie down in my shame,
and my confusion covers my face." "I have sinned, what shall I do
unto thee, O thou preserver of men" (Jer 3:25, Job 7:20).
Reply.-Well, soul, I have heard what thou hast said, and if all be
true which thou hast said, it is good, and gives me ground of hope
that Jesus Christ is become thine Advocate; and if that be so,
no doubt but thy trial will come to a good conclusion. And be not
afraid because of the holiness of God; for thine Advocate has this
for his advantage, that he pleads before a judge that is just, and
against an enemy that is unholy and rejected. Nor let the thoughts
of the badness of thy cause terrify thee overmuch. Cause thou hast
indeed to be humble, and thou dost well to cover thy face with shame;
and it is no matter how base and vile thou art in thine own eyes,
provided that it comes not by renewed acts of rebellion, but through
a spiritual sight of thine imperfections. Only let me advise thee
here to stop. Let not thy shame nor thy self-abasing apprehension
of thyself, drive thee from the firm and permanent ground of hope,
which is the promise, and the doctrine of an Advocate with the
Father. No; let not the apprehension of the badness of thy cause
do it, forasmuch as he did never yet take cause in hand that was
good, perfectly good of itself; and his excellency is, to make a
man stand that has a bad cause; yea, he can make a bad cause good,
in a way of justice and righteousness.
Now, set the case again, that some ill-conditioned man should take
notice that these poor men live all upon the spend (and saints do
so), and should come to the good man's house, and complain to him
of the spending of his sons, and that while their elder brother
stands by, what do you think the elder brother would reply, if he
was as good-natured as Christ? Why, he would say, I have yet with
my father in store for my brethren, wherefore then seekest thou to
stop his hand? As he is just, he must give them for their convenience;
yea, and as for their extravagances, I have satisfied for them
so well, that, however he afflicteth them, he will not disinherit
them. I hope you will read and hear this, not like them that say,
"Let us do evil that good may come," but like those whom the love
of Christ constrains to be better. However, this is the children's
bread, that which they have need of, and without which they cannot
live; and they must have it, though Satan should put pins into
it, therewith to choke the dogs.17 And for the further clearing of
this, I will present you with these few considerations:
1. Those that are most sanctified have yet a body of sin and death
in them, and so also it will be, while they continue in this world
(Rom 7:24). 2. This body of sin strives to break out, and will
break out, to the polluting of the conversation, if saints be not
the more watchful (Rom 6:12). Yea, it has broken out in a most
sad manner, and that in the strongest saints (Gal 5:17). 3. Christ
offereth no new sacrifice for the salvation of these his people.
"For, being raised from the dead, he dieth no more" (Rom 6:9). So
then, if saints sin, they must be saved, if saved at all, by virtue
of the offering already offered; and if so, then all Christ's pleas,
as an Advocate, are grounded upon that one offering which before,
as a Priest, he presented God with, for the taking away of sin.
So then, Christians live upon this old stock; their transgressions
are forgiven for the sake of the worth, that yet God finds in the
offering that Christ hath offered. And all Christ's pleadings, as
an Advocate, are grounded upon the sufficiency and worth of that
one sacrifice; I mean, all his pleadings with his Father, as to the
charge which the accuser brings in against them. For though thou
art a man of infirmity, and so incident to nothing [so much] as to
stumble and fall, if grace doth not prevent, and it doth not always
prevent; yet the value and worth of the price that was once paid
for thee is not yet worn out; and Christ, as an Advocate, still
pleadeth, as occasion is given, that, with success, to thy salvation.
And this privilege they have, who indeed have Christ for their
Advocate; and I put it here, in the first place, because all other
do depend upon it.
1. Christ pleads the value and virtue of the price of his blood and
sacrifice for us. And admit of this horrible supposition a little,
for argument's sake, that though Christ pleads the worth of what,
as Priest, he offereth, yet the soul for whom he so pleads perishes
eternally. Now, where lieth the fault? In sin, you say: true; but
it is because there was more virtue in sin to damn, than there was
in the blood pleaded by Christ to save; for he pleaded his merit,
he put it into the balance against sin; but sin hath weighed down
the soul of the sinner to hell, notwithstanding the weight of merit
that he did put in against it. Now, what is the result, but that
the Advocate goes down, as well as we; we to hell, and he in esteem?
Wherefore, I say, he is concerned with us; his credit, his honour,
his glory and renown, flies all away, if those for whom he pleads
as an Advocate perish for want of worth in his sacrifice pleaded.
But shall this ever be said of Christ? Or will it be found that
any, for whom Christ as Advocate pleads, yet perish for want of
worth in the price, or of neglect in the Advocate to plead it? No,
no; himself is concerned, and that as to his own reputation and
honour, and as to the value and virtue of his blood; nor will he
lose these for want of pleading for them concerned in this office.
Objection. O, but I am but one, and a very sorry one, too; and what
is one, especially such an one as I am? Can there be a miss of the
loss of such an one?
Answer. One and one makes two, and so ad infinitum. Christ cannot
lose one, but as he may lose more, and so, in conclusion, lose
all: but of all that God has given him, he will lose nothing (John
6:38,39). Besides, to lose one would encourage Satan, disparage
his own wisdom, make him incapable of giving in, at the day of
account, the whole tale19 to God of those that he has given him.
Further, this would dishearten sinners, and make them afraid of
venturing their cause and their souls in his hand; and would, as I
said before, either prove his propitiation in some sense ineffectual,
or else himself defective in his pleading on it; but none of these
things must be supposed. He will thoroughly plead the cause of his
people, execute judgment for them, bring them out to the light,
and cause them to behold his righteousness (Micah 7:9).
Indeed, when God admits not, when Christ wills not to be an Advocate,
and when Satan is bid stand at the right hand of one accused, to
enforce, by pleading against him, the things charged on him by the
law, then he can prevail-prevail for ever against such a wretched
one (Psa 109: 6, 7). But when Christ stands up to plead, when
Christ espouses this or that man's cause, then Satan must retreat,
then he must go down. And this necessarily flows from the text,
"We have an Advocate," a prevailing one, one that never lost cause,
one that always puts the children's enemy to the rout before the
judgment-seat of God. 22
This, therefore, is another privilege that they have, who have Jesus
Christ for their Advocate; their enemy must needs be overthrown,
because both law and justice are on their side.
Fifth Privilege. Thine advocate has pity for thee, and great indignation
against thine accuser: and these are two excellent things. When a
lawyer hath pity for a man whose cause he pleadeth, it will engage
him much; but when he has indignation also against the man's accuser,
this will yet engage him more. Now, Christ has both these, and that
not of humour, but by grace and justice; grace to us, and justice
to our accuser. He came down from heaven that he might be a Priest,
and returned thither again to be Priest and Advocate for his; and
in both these offices he levelleth his whole force and power against
thine accuser: "For this purpose the Son of God was manifested,
that he might destroy the works of the devil" (I John 3:8).
A mention of the judge's son goes far with countrymen; and great
striving there is with them who have great enemies and bad causes
to get the judge's son to plead, promising themselves that the
judge is as like to hear him, and to yield a verdict to his plea,
as to any other lawyer. But what now shall we say concerning our
Judge's Son, who takes part, not only with his children, but with
him, and with law and justice, in pleading against our accuser?
Yea, what shall we say when both Judge, and Advocate, and law, are
all bent to make our persons stand and escape, whatever, and how
truly soever, the charge and accusation is by which we are assaulted
of the devil. And yet all this is true; wherefore, here is another
privilege of them that have Jesus for their Advocate.
Seventh Privilege. Another privilege that they have who have Jesus
Christ for their Advocate is, that he is undaunted, and of a good
courage, as to the cause that he undertakes; for that is a requisite
qualification for a lawyer, to be bold and undaunted in a man's
cause. Such an one is coveted, especially by him that knows he
has a brazen-faced antagonist. Wherefore, he saith that "he will
set his face like a flint," when he stands up to plead the cause
of his people (Isa 50:5-7). Lawyers, of all men, need this courage,
and to be above others, men of hard foreheads, because of the
affronts that sometimes they meet with, be their cause never so
good, in the face sometimes, of the chief of a kingdom. Now Christ
is our lawyer, and stands up to plead, not only sometimes, but
always, for his people, before the God of gods, and that not in
a corner, but while all the host of heaven stands by, both on the
right hand and on the left. Nor is it to be doubted but that our
accuser brings many a sore charge against us into the court; but,
however, we have an Advocate that is valiant and courageous, one
that will not fail nor be discouraged till he has brought judgment
unto victory. Hence John asserts his name, saying, "If any man sin,
we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ."
Men love to understand a man before they commit their cause unto
him-to wit, whether he be fitly qualified for their business. Well,
here is an Advocate propounded, an Advocate to plead our cause
against our foe. But what is he? What is his name? Is he qualified
for my business? The answer is, It is Jesus Christ. How? Jesus Christ,
what! That old friend of publicans and sinners? Jesus Christ! He
used never to fail, he used to set his face like a flint against
Satan when he pleaded the cause of his people. Is it Jesus Christ?
says the knowing soul; then he shall be mine Advocate.
Eighth Privilege. Another privilege that they have who have Jesus
Christ to be their Advocate is this, He is always ready, always
in court, always with the judge, then and there to oppose, if our
accuser comes, and to plead against him what is pleadable for his
children. And this the text implies where it saith, "We have an
Advocate with the Father," always with the Father. Some lawyers,
though they are otherwise able and shrewd, yet not being always
in court and ready, do suffer their poor clients to be baffled and
nonsuited23 by their adversary; yea, it so comes to pass because
of this neglect, that a judgment is got out against them for whom
they have undertaken to plead, to their great perplexity and damage:
but no such opportunity can Satan have of our Advocate, for he is
with the Father, always with the Father; as to be a Priest, so to
be an Advocate-"We have an Advocate with the Father." It is said of
the priests, they wait at the altar, and that they give attendance
there, (I Cor 9:13); also of the magistrate, that as to his office,
he should attend "continually on this very thing" (Rom 13:6).
And as these, so Christ, as to his office of an Advocate, attends
continually upon that office with his Father. "We have an Advocate
with the Father," always with the Father. And truly such an
Advocate becomes the children of God, because of the vigilance of
their enemy; for it is said of him, that "he accuseth us day and
night," so unweariedly doth he both seek and pursue our destruction
(Rev 12:10). But behold how we are provided for him-"We have an
Advocate with the Father." If he come a-days, our Advocate is with
the Father; if he come a-nights, our Advocate is with the Father24
Ninth Privilege. Another privilege that they have who have Jesus
Christ to be their Advocate is this, he is such an one that will
not, by bribes, by flattery, nor fair pretenses, be turned aside
from pursuing of his client's business. This was the fault of
lawyers in old time, that they would wrest judgment for a bribe.
Hence the Holy One complained, that a bribe did use to blind the
eyes of the wise, and pervert the judgment of the righteous (I Sam
12:3; Amos 5:12; Deut 16:19).
There are three things in judgment that a lawyer must take heed
of-one is the nature of the offence, the other is the meaning and
intendment of the law-makers, and a third is to plead for them in
danger, without respect to affection or reward; and this is the
excellency of our Advocate, he will not, cannot be biased to turn
aside from doing judgment. And this the apostle intendeth when
he calleth our Advocate "Jesus Christ the righteous." "We have
an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous"; or, as
another prophet calls him, to wit, "The just Lord-one that will not
do iniquity"-that is, no unrighteousness in judgment (Zeph 3:5). He
will not be provoked to do it, neither by the continual solicitations
of thine enemy; nor by thy continual provocations wherewith, by
reason of thy infirm condition, thou dost often tempt him to do
it. And remember that thy Advocate pleads by the new covenant, and
thine adversary accuses by the old; and again, remember that the
new covenant is better and more richly provided with grounds of
pleading for our pardon and salvation, than the old can be with
grounds for a charge to be brought in by the devil against us, suppose
our sin be never so heinous. It is a better covenant, established
upon better promises.
Tenth Privilege. Another privilege that they have who have Jesus
Christ to be their Advocate, is this, the Father has made him, even
him that is thine Advocate, the umpire and judge in all matters
that have, do, or shall fall out betwixt him and us. Mark this
well; for when the judge himself, before whom I am accused, shall
make mine Advocate, the judge of the nature of the crime for which
I am accused, and of matter of law by which I am accused-to wit,
whether it is in force against me to condemnation, or whether by
the law of grace I am set free, especially since my Advocate has
espoused my cause, promised me deliverance, and pleaded my right
to the state of eternal life-must it not go well with me? Yes,
verily. The judge, then, making thine Advocate the judge, for he
"hath committed all judgment unto the Son," hath done it also for
thy sake who hast chosen him to be thine Advocate (John 5:22) It
was a great thing that happened to Israel when Joseph was become
their advocate, and when Pharaoh had made him a judge. "Thou,"
says he, "shalt be over my house, and according unto thy word shall
all my people be ruled. See, I have set thee over all the land of
Egypt-and without thee shall no man lift up his hand or foot in all
the land of Egypt-only in the throne will I be greater than thou"
(Gen 41:40,44). Joseph in this was a type of Christ, and his
government here of the government of Christ for his church. Kings
seldom make a man's judge his advocate; they seldom leave the issue
of the whole affair to the arbitration of the poor man's lawyer;
but when they do, methinks it should even go to the heart's desire
of the client whose the advocate is, especially when, as I said
before, the cause of the client is become the concern of the advocate,
and that they are both wrapped up in the self-same interest; yea,
when the judge himself also is therein concerned; and yet thus it
is with that soul who has Jesus Christ for his Advocate. What sayest
thou, poor heart, to this? The judge-to wit, the God of heaven,
has made thy Advocate, arbitrator in thy business; he is to judge;
God has referred the matter to him, and he has a concern in thy
concern, an interest in thy good speed. Christian man, dost thou
hear? Thou hast put thy cause into the hand of Jesus Christ, and
hast chosen him to be thine Advocate to plead for thee before God
and against thy adversary; and God has referred the judgment of
that matter to thy Advocate, so that he has power to determine the
matter. I know Satan is not pleased with this. He had rather things
should have been referred to himself, and then woe had been to the
child of God; but, I say, God has referred the business to Jesus
Christ, has made him umpire and judge in thine affair. Art thou
also willing that he should decide the matter? Canst thou say unto
him as David, "Judge me, O God, and plead my cause" (Psa 43:1)?
Oh, the care of God towards his people, and the desire of their
welfare! He has provided them an Advocate, and he has referred
all causes and things that may by Satan be objected and brought in
against us, to the judgment and sentence of Christ our Advocate.
But to come to a conclusion for this; and therefore,
Eleventh Privilege. The advantage that he has that has the Lord
Jesus for his Advocate is very great. Thy Advocate has the cause,
has the law, has the judge, has the purse, and so consequently has
all that is requisite for an Advocate to have, since together with
these he has heart, he has wisdom, he has courage, and loves to
make the best improvement of his advantages for the benefit of his
client; and that which adds to all is, he can prove the debt paid,
about which Satan makes such ado-a price given for the ransom of my
soul and for the pardon of my sins. Lawyers do use to make a great
matter of it, when they can prove, that that very debt is paid for
which their client is sued at law. Now this Christ Jesus himself
is witness to; yea, he himself has paid it, and that out of his own
purse, for us, with his own hands, before and upon the mercy-seat,
according as the law requireth (Lev 16:13-15; Heb 9:11-24). What
then can accrue to our enemy? or what advantage can he get by his
thus vexing and troubling the children of the Most High? Certainly
nothing, but, as has been said already, to be cast down; for the
kingdom of our God, which is a kingdom of grace, and the power of his
Christ will prevail. Samson's power lay in his hair, but Christ's
power, his power to deliver us from the accusation and charge
of Satan, lieth in the worth of his undertakings. And hence it is
said again, "And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb," and
he was cast out and down (Rev 12:10-12). And thus much for the
privileges that those are made partakers of, who have Jesus Christ
to be their Advocate.
Fifthly, I come now to the fifth thing, which is, to show you what
necessity there is that Christ should be our Advocate.
That the fallen angels are bold enough to charge God to his face
with unjustness of language, is evident in the 1st and 2nd of Job;
and that they should not be as bold to charge him with unjustness
of actions, nothing can be showed to the contrary. Further, that
God seeks to clear himself of this unjust charge of Satan is as
manifest; for all the troubles of his servant Job were chiefly for
that purpose. And why he should have one also in heaven to plead
for the justness of his doing in the forgiveness and salvation of
sinners appears also as necessary, even because there is one, even
an Advocate with the Father, or on the Father's side, seeking to
vindicate his justice, while he pleadeth with him for us, against
the devil and his objections. God is wonderfully pleased with his
design in saving of sinners; it pleases him at the heart. And since
he also is infinitely just, there is need that an Advocate should
be appointed to show how, in a way of justice as well as mercy, a
sinner may be saved.
The good angels did not at first see so far into the mysteries of
the gospel of the grace of God, but that they needed further light
therein for the vindication of their Lord as servants. Wherefore
they yet did pry and look narrowly into it further, and also bowed
their heads and hearts to learn yet more, by the church, of "the
manifold wisdom of God" (I Peter 1:12; Eph 3:9,10). And if the
standing angels were not yet, to the utmost, perfect in the knowledge
of this mystery, and yet surely they must know more thereof than
those that fell could do, no wonder if those devils, whose enmity
could not but animate their ignorance, made, and do make, their
cavils against justice, insinuating that it is not impartial and
exact, because it, as it is just, justifieth the ungodly.
That Satan will quarrel with God I have showed you, and that he
will also dispute against his works with the holy angels, is more
than intimated by the apostle Jude, verse 9, and why not quarrel
with, and accuse the justice of God as unrighteous, for consenting
to the salvation of sinners, since his best qualifications are
most profound and prodigious attempts to dethrone the Lord God of
his power and glory.
Nay, all this is evident, since "we have an Advocate with the Father,
Jesus Christ the righteous." And again, I say, it is evident that
one part of his work as an Advocate, is to vindicate the justice
of God while he pleadeth for our salvation, because he pleadeth a
propitiation; for a propitiation respects God as well as us; the
appeasing his wrath, and the reconciling of his justice to us, as
well as the redeeming us from death and hell; yea, it therefore
doth the one, because it doth the other. Now, if Christ, as an
Advocate, pleadeth a propitiation with God, for whose conviction
doth he plead it? Not for God's; for he has ordained it, allows
it, and gloriously acquiesces therein, because he knows the whole
virtue thereof. It is therefore for the conviction of the fallen
angels, and for the confounding of all those cavils that can be
invented and objected against our salvation by those most subtle
and envious ones. But,
And that the mighty God suffereth the prince of the devils to do
with the law what he can, against this most wholesome and godly
doctrine; it is to show the truth, goodness, and permanency thereof;
for this is as who should say, Devil, do thy worst! When the law is
in the hand of an easy pleader, though the cause that he pleadeth
be good, a crafty opposer may overthrow the right; but here is the
salvation of the children in debate, whether it can stand with law
and justice; the opposer of this is the devil, his argument against
it is the law; he that defends the doctrine is Christ the Advocate,
who, in his plea, must justify the justice of God, defend the
holiness of the law, and save the sinner from all the arguments,
pleas, stops and demurs that Satan is able to put in against it.
And this he must do fairly, righteously, simply, pleading the voice
of the self-same law for the justification of what he standeth for,
which Satan pleads against it; for though it is by the new law that
our salvation comes, yet by the old law is the new law approved of
and the way of salvation thereby by it consented to.
This shows, therefore, that Christ is not ashamed to own the way
of our justification and salvation, no, not before men and devils.
It shows also that he is resolved to dispute and plead for the same,
though the devil himself shall oppose it. And since our adversary
pretends a plea in law against it, it is meet that there should be
an open hearing before the Judge of all about it; but, forasmuch as
we neither can nor dare appear to plead for ourselves, our good God
has thought fit we should do it by an advocate: "We have an Advocate
with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous." This, therefore, is
the second thing that shows the need that we have of an Advocate-to
wit, our adversary pretends that he has a plea in law against us,
and that by law we should be otherwise disposed of than to be made
possessors of the heavenly kingdom. But,
Third. There are many things relating to the promise, to our life,
and to the threatenings, that minister matter of question and
doubt, and give the advantage of objections unto him that so eagerly
desireth to be putting in cavils against our salvation, all which
it hath pleased God to repel by Jesus Christ our Advocate.
2. There are many things relating to our lives that minister to our
accuser occasions of many objections against our salvation; for,
besides our daily infirmities, there are in our lives gross sins,
many horrible backslidings; also we ofttimes suck and drink in
many abominable errors and deceitful opinions, of all which Satan
accuseth us before the judgment-seat of God, and pleadeth hard that
we may be damned for ever for them. Besides, some of these things
are done after light received, against present convictions and
dissuasions to the contrary, against solemn engagements to amendment,
when the bonds of love were upon us (Jer 2:20). These are crying
sins; they have a loud voice in themselves against us, and give
to Satan great advantage and boldness to sue for our destruction
before the bar of God; nor doth he want skill to aggravate and to
comment profoundly upon all occasions and circumstances that did
attend us in these our miscarriages-to wit, that we did it without
a cause, also, when we had, had we had grace to have used them,
many things to have helped us against such sins, and to have kept
us clean and upright. "There is also a sin unto death," (I John
5:16), and he can tell how to labour, by argument and sleight of
speech, to make our transgressions, not only to border upon, but
to appear in the hue, shape, and figure of that, and thereto make
his objection against our salvation. He often argueth thus with
us, and fasteneth the weight of his reasons upon our consciences,
to the almost utter destruction of us, and the bringing of us down
to the gates of despair and utter destruction; the same sins, with
their aggravating circumstances, as I said, he pleadeth against
us at the bar of God. But there he meeteth with Jesus Christ, our
Lord and Advocate, who entereth his plea against him, unravels
all his reasons and arguments against us, and shows the guile and
falsehood of them. He also pleadeth as to the nature of sin, as also
to all those high aggravations, and proveth that neither the sin in
itself, nor yet as joined with all its advantageous circumstances,
can be the sin unto death, (Col 2:19), because we hold the head,
and have not "made shipwreck of faith," (I Tim 1:19), but still,
as David and Solomon, we confess, and are sorry for our sins. Thus,
though we seem, through our falls, to come short of the promise,
with Peter, (Heb 4:1-3), and leave our transgressions as stumbling
blocks to the world, with Solomon, and minister occasion of a question
of our salvation among the godly, yet our Advocate fetches us off
before God, and we shall be found safe and in heaven at last, by
them in the next world, who were afraid they had lost us in this.
But all these points must be managed by Christ for us, against
Satan, as a lawyer, an advocate, who to that end now appears in the
presence of God for us, and wisely handleth the very crisis of the
word, and of the failings of his people, together with all those
nice and critical juggles by which our adversary laboureth to bring
us down, to the confusion of his face.
3. There are also the threatenings that are annexed to the gospel,
and they fall now under our consideration. They are of two sorts-such
as respect those who altogether neglect and reject the gospel, or
those that profess it, yet fall in or from the profession thereof.
Ay, but Satan, here is also matter sufficient for a plea for our
Advocate against thee, forasmuch as the next words distinguish
betwixt drawing back, and drawing back "unto perdition"; every
one that draws back, doth not draw back unto perdition (Heb 10:38,
39). Some of them draw back from, and some in the profession of,
the gospel. Judas drew back from, and Peter in the profession of
his faith; wherefore Judas perishes, but Peter turns again, because
Judas drew back unto perdition, but Peter yet believed to the saving
of the soul.26 Nor doth Jesus Christ, when he sees it is to no boot,
at any time step in to endeavour to save the soul. Wherefore, as
for Judas, for his backsliding from the faith, Christ turns him up
to Satan, and leaveth him in his hand, saying, "When he shall be
judged, let him be condemned: and let his prayer become sin" (Psa
109:7) But he will not serve Peter so-"The Lord will not leave
him in his hand, nor condemn him when he is judged" (Psa 37:33).
He will pray for him before, and plead for him after, he hath been
in the temptation, and so secure him, by virtue of his advocation,
from the sting and lash of the threatening that is made against
final apostasy. But,
The man in Israel that, by waxing poor, did sell his land in
Canaan, was surely a type of the Christian who, by sin and decays
in grace, has forfeited his place and inheritance in heaven; but
as the ceremonial law provided that the poor man in Canaan should
not, by his poverty, lose his portion in Canaan for ever, but that
it should return to him in the year of jubilee; so the law of grace
has provided that the children shall not, for their sin, lose their
inheritance in heaven for ever, but that it shall return to them
in the world to come (I Cor 11:32)28
All therefore that happeneth in this case is, they may live without
the comfort of it here, as he that had sold his house in Canaan
might live without the enjoyment of it till the jubilee. They may
also seem to come short of it when they die, as he in Canaan did
that deceased before the year of jubilee; but as certainly as he
that died in Canaan before the jubilee did yet receive again his
inheritance by the hand of his relative survivor when the jubilee
came, so certainly shall he that dieth, and that seemeth in his dying
to come short of the celestial inheritance now, be yet admitted,
at his rising again, to the repossession of his old inheritance at
the day of judgment. But now here is room for a caviler to object,
and to plead against the children, saying, They have forfeited
their part of paradise by their sin; what right, then, shall they
have to the kingdom of heaven? Now let the Lord stand up to plead,
for he is Advocate for the children; yea, let them plead the
sufficiency of their first title to the kingdom, and that it is
not their doings can sell the land for ever. The reason why the
children of Israel could not sell the land for ever was, because
the Lord, their head, reserved to himself a right therein-"The land
shall not be sold for ever, for the land is mine." Suppose two or
three children have a lawful title to such an estate, but they are
all profuse and prodigal, and there is a brother also that has by
law a chief right to the same estate: this brother may hinder the
estate from being sold for ever, because it is his inheritance,
and he may, when the limited time that his brethren had sold their
share therein is out, if he will, restore it to them again. And in
the meantime, if any that are unjust should go about utterly and
for ever to deprive his brethren, he may stand up and plead for
them; that in law the land cannot be sold for ever, for that it
is his as well as theirs, he being resolved not to part with his
right. O my brethren! Christ will not part with his right of the
inheritance unto which you are also born; your profuseness and
prodigality shall not make him let go his hold that he hath for you
of heaven; nor can you, according to law, sell the land for ever,
since it is his, and he hath the principal and chief title thereto.
This also gives him ground to stand up to plead for you against
all those that would hold the kingdom from you for ever; for let
Satan say what he can against you, yet Christ can say, "The land is
mine," and consequently that his brethren could not sell it. Yes,
says Satan, if the inheritance be divided.
O but, says Christ, the land is undivided; no man has his part set
out and turned over to himself; besides, my brethren yet are under
age, and I am made their guardian; they have not power to sell the
land for ever; the land is mine; also my Father has made me feoffee
in trust for my brethren, that they may have what is allotted them
when they are all come to a perfect man, "unto the measure of the
stature of the fulness of Christ" (Eph 4:13). And not before, and I
will reserve it for them till then; and thus to do is the will of
my Father, the law of the Judge, and also my unchangeable resolution.
And what can Satan say against this plea? Can he prove that Christ
has no interest in the saints' inheritance? Can he prove that we
are at age, or that our several parts of the heavenly house are
already delivered into our own power? And if he goes about to do
this, is not the law of the land against him? Doth it not say that
our Advocate is "Lord of all," (Acts 10:36), that the kingdom is
Christ's, that it is laid up in heaven for us, (Eph 5:5, Col 1:5);
yea, that the "inheritance which is incorruptible, undefiled, and
that fadeth not away, is reserved in heaven for us, who are kept
by the power of God, through faith unto salvation" (I Peter 1:4,
5). Thus therefore is our heavenly inheritance made good by our
Advocate against the thwartings and branglings29 of the devil; nor
can our new sins make it invalid, but it abideth safe to us at last,
notwithstanding our weaknesses; though, if we sin, we may have but
little comfort of it, or but little of its present profits, while
we live in this present world. A spendthrift, though he loses not
his title, may yet lose the present benefit, but the principal
will come again at last; for "we have an Advocate with the Father,
Jesus Christ the righteous."
Now when writings and evidences are out of the hand of the owners, and
laid up in the court, where in justice they ought to be kept, they
are not ordinarily got thence again but by the help of a lawyer-an
Advocate. Thus it is with the children of God. We do often forfeit
our interest in eternal life, but the mercy is, the forfeit falls
into the hand of God, not of the law nor of Satan, wherefore
he taketh away also our evidences, if not all, yet some of them,
as he saith-"I have taken away my peace from this people, even
loving-kindness and mercies" (Jer 16:5). This he took from David,
and he entreats for the restoration of it, saying, "Restore unto
me the joy of thy salvation, and uphold me with thy free Spirit"
(I Chron 17:13; Psa 51:12). And, "Lord, turn us again, cause thy
face to shine, and we shall be saved" (Psa 80:3, 7, 19.)
[OBJECTIONS REMOVED.]
First Objection. But what need all these offices of Jesus Christ?
or, what need you trouble us with these nice distinctions? It is
enough for us to believe in Christ in the general, without considering
him under this and that office.
Second Objection. But notwithstanding what you have said, this sin
is a deadly stick in my way; it will not out of my mind, my cause
being bad, but Christ will desert me.
Answer. It is true, sin is, and will be, a deadly stick and stop to
faith, attempt to exercise it on Christ as considered under which
of his offices or relations you will; and, above all, the sin of
unbelief is "the sin that doth so," or most "easily beset us" (Heb
12:1, 2). And no marvel; for it never acteth alone, but is backed,
not only with guilt and ignorance, but also with carnal sense and
reason. He that is ignorant of this knows but little of himself,
or what believing is. He that undertakes to believe sets upon the
hardest task that ever was proposed to man; not because the things
imposed upon us are unreasonable or unaccountable, but because the
heart of man, the more true anything is, the more it sticks and
stumbles thereat; and, says Christ, "Because I tell you the truth,
ye believe me not" (John 8:45). Hence believing is called labouring,
(Heb 4:11); and it is the sorest labour, at times that any man can
take in hand, because assaulted with the greatest oppositions; but
believe thou must, be the labour never so hard, and that not only
in Christ in a general way, but in him as to his several offices,
and to this of his being an Advocate in particular, else some sins
and some temptations will not, in their guilt or vexatious trouble,
easily depart from thy conscience; no, not by promise, nor by thy
attempts to apply the same by faith. And this the text insinuateth
by its setting forth of Christ as Advocate, as the only or best
and most speedy way of relief to the soul in certain cases.
2. This, when thou hast done as well as thou canst, thou must, in
the next place, keep thine eye upon the Lord Christ as improving,
as Priest in heaven, the sacrifice which he offered on earth for
the continuing thee in a state of justification in thy lifetime,
notwithstanding those common infirmities that attend thee, and to
which thou art incident in all thy holy services or best performances
(Rom 5:10; Exo 28:31-38). For therefore is he a Priest in heaven,
and by his sacrifices interceding for thee.
4. And as to the badness of thy cause, let nothing move thee, save
to humility and self-abasement, for Christ is glorified by being
concerned for thee; yea, the angels will shout aloud to see him
bring thee off. For what greater glory can we conceive Christ to
obtain ad Advocate, than to bring off his people when they have
sinned, notwithstanding Satan so charging of them for it as he
doth?
5. And, I say again, for thee to think that Christ will reject thee
for that thy cause is bad, is a kind of thinking blasphemy against
this his office and his Word; for what doth such a man but side
with Satan, while Christ is pleading against him? I say, it is as
the devil would have it, for it puts strength into his plea against
us, by increasing our sin and wickedness. But shall Christ take
our cause in hand, and shall we doubt of good success?
This is to count Satan stronger than Christ; and that he can longer
abide to oppose, than Christ can to plead for us. Wherefore, away
with, it, not only as to the notion, but also as to the heart and
root thereof. Oh! When shall Jesus Christ our Lord be honoured by
us as he ought? This dastardly heart of ours, when shall it be more
subdued and trodden under foot of faith? When shall Christ ride
Lord, and King, and Advocate, upon the faith of his people, as he
should? He is exalted before God, before angels, and above all the
power of the enemy; there is nothing comes behind but the faith of
his people.
Hence Christ is said to plead the cause, not of the rich and wealthy,
but of the poor and needy; not of those that have many friends, but
of the fatherless and widow; not of them that are fat and strong,
but of those under sore afflictions (Prov 22:22, 23; 23:10, 11;
31:9). "He shall stand at the right hand of the poor, to save him
from those that condemn his soul," or, as it is in the margin, "from
the judges of his soul" (Psa 109:31). This, then, is the manner of
Jesus Christ with men; he doth freely what he doth, not for price
nor reward. "I have raised him up," says God, "and I will direct all
his ways; he shall build my city, and he shall let go my captives,
not for a price nor reward" (Isa 45:13). [This scripture speaks of
Cyrus, a type of Christ.]
They know but little that talk of giving to Christ, except they mean
they would give him blessing and praise. He bids us come freely,
take freely, and tells us that he will give and do freely (Rev
22:17; 21:6). Let him have that which is his own-to wit, thyself;
for thou art the price of his blood. David speaks very strangely
of giving to God for mercy bestowed on him; I call it strangely,
because indeed it is so to reason. "What," says he, "shall I render
to the Lord for all his benefits? I will take the cup of salvation,
and call upon the name of the Lord" for more (Psa 116:12, 13).
God has no need of thy gift, nor Christ of thy bribe, to plead thy
cause; take thankfully what is offered, and call for more; that
is the best giving to God. God is rich enough; talk not then of
giving, but of receiving, for thou art poor. Be not too high, nor
think thyself too good to live by the alms of heaven; and since
the Lord Jesus is willing to serve thee freely, and to maintain
thy right to heaven against thy foe, to the saving of thy soul,
without price or reward, "let the peace of God rule in your hearts,
to the which also ye are called," as is the rest of "the body,
and be ye thankful" (Col 3:15). This, then, is the privilege of a
Christian-"We have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the
righteous"; one that pleadeth the cause of his people against those
that rise up against them, of his love, pity, and mere good-will.
Lord, open the eyes of dark readers, of disconsolate saints, that
they may see who is for them, and on what terms!
Fourth Objection. But if Christ doth once begin to plead for me,
and shall become mine Advocate, he will always be troubled with me,
unless I should, of myself, forsake him; for I am ever in broils
and suits of law, action after action is laid upon me, and I am
sometimes ten times in a day summoned to answer my doings before
God.
Use First. I would exhort the children to consider the dignity that
God hath put upon Jesus Christ their Saviour; for by how much God
hath called his Son to offices and places of trust, by so much he
hath heaped dignities upon him. It is said of Mordecai, that he was
next to the king Ahasuerus. And what then? Why, then the greatness
of Mordecai, and his high advance, must be written in the book of
the Chronicles of the kings of Media and Persia, to the end his
fame might not be buried nor forgotten, but remembered and talked
of in generations to come (Esth 10). Why, my brethren, God exalted
Jesus of Nazareth, hath made him the only great one, having given
him a name above every name-a name, did I say?-a name and glory
beyond all names, and above all names, as doth witness both his being
set above all, and the many offices which he executeth for God on
behalf of his people. It is counted no little addition to honour
when men are not only made near to the king, but also entrusted
with most, if not almost with all the most weighty affairs of the
kingdom. Why, this is the dignity of Christ; he is, it is true,
the natural Son of God, and so high, and one that abounds with
honour. But this is not all; God has conferred upon him, as man, all
the most mighty honours of heaven; he hath made him Lord Mediator
betwixt him and the world. This in general. And particularly, he
hath called him to be his High Priest for ever, and hath sworn he
shall not be changed for another (Heb 7:21-24). He hath accepted
of his offering once for ever, counting that there is wholly enough
in what he did once "to perfect for ever them that are sanctified";
to wit, set apart to glory (Heb 10:11-14).
How will men stand for that honour that, by superiors, is given to
them, expecting and using all things; to wit, actions and carriages,
so as that thereby their grandeur may be maintained; and saith Christ,
"Ye call me Master and Lord: and ye say well; for so I am" (John
13:13). Christ Jesus our Lord would have us exercise ourselves in
the knowledge of his glorious offices and relative titles, because
of the advantage that we get by the knowledge of them, and the
reverence of, and love to, him that they beget in our hearts. "That
disciple," saith the text, "whom Jesus loved saith unto Peter, It
is the Lord. Now when Simon Peter heard that it was the Lord, he
girt his fisher's coat unto him (for he was naked), and did cast
himself into the sea. And the other disciples came in a little
ship": to wit, to shore, to wait upon their Lord (John 21). The
very naming of him under the title of Lord, bowed their hearts
forthwith to come with joint readiness to wait upon him. Let this
also teach us to distinguish Christ's offices and titles, not to
confound them, for he exerciseth those offices, and beareth those
titles, for great reason, and to our commodity. Every circumstance
relating both to Christ's humiliation and exaltation ought to be
duly weighed by us, because of that mystery of God, and of man's
redemption that is wrapped therein; for as there was not a pin,
nor a loop, nor a tack in the tabernacle but had in it use of
instruction to the children of Israel, so there is not any part,
whether more near or more remote to Christ's suffering and exaltation,
but is, could we get into it, full of spiritual advantage to us.
1. This will give thee to see that thou art not forsaken when
thou hast sinned; and this has not in it a little relief only, but
yieldeth consolation in time of need. There is nothing that we are
more prone unto than to think we are forsaken when we have sinned,
when for this very thing-to wit, to keep us from thinking so,
is the Lord Jesus become our Advocate-"If any man sin, we have
an Advocate." Christian, thou that hast sinned, and that with the
guilt of thy sin art driven to the brink of hell, I bring thee news
from God-thou shalt not die, but live, for thou hast "an Advocate
with the Father." Let this therefore be considered by thee, because
it yieldeth this fruit.
2. The study of this truth will give thee ground to take courage to
contend with the devil concerning the largeness of grace by faith,
since thy Advocate is contending for thee against him at the bar
of God. It is a great encouragement for a man to hold up his head
in the country, when he knows he has a special friend at court.
Why, our Advocate is a friend at court, a friend there ready to
give the onset to Satan, come he when he will. "We have an Advocate
with the Father"; an Advocate, or one to plead against Satan for
us.
(2.) Study this office in the nature of it; for therein lies the
excellency of anything, even in the nature of it. Wrong thoughts of
this or that abuses it, and takes its natural glory from it. Take
heed, therefore, of misapprehending, while thou art seeking to
apprehend Christ as thy Advocate. Men judge of Christ's offices
while they are at too great a distance from them; but "let them
come near," says God, "then let them speak," (Isa 41:1); or as
Elihu said to his friends, when he had seen them judge amiss, "Let
us choose to us judgment, let us know among ourselves what is
good" (Job 34:4). So say I; study to know, rightly to know, the
Advocate-office of Jesus Christ. It is one of the easiest things
in the world to miss of the nature, while we speak of the name and
offices of Jesus Christ; wherefore look to it, that thou study the
nature of the office of his advocateship, of his advocateship for,
for so you ought to consider it. There is an Advocate for, not
against, the children of God-"Jesus Christ the righteous."
(3.) Study this office with reference to its efficacy and prevalency.
Job says, "After my words, they spake not again" (Job 29:22). And
when Christ stands up to plead, all must keep silence before him.
True, Satan had the first word, but Christ the last, in the business
of Joshua, and such a last as brought the poor man off well, though
"clothed with filthy garments" (Zech 3). Satan must be speechless
after a plea of our Advocate, how rampant soever he is afore; or as
Elihu has it, "They were amazed; they answered no more; they left
off speaking." Shall he that speaks in righteousness give place,
and he who has nothing but envy and deceit be admitted to stand
his ground? Behold, the angels cover their faces when they speak
of his glory, how then shall not Satan bend before him? In the days
of his humiliation, he made him cringe and creep, how much more,
then, now he is exalted to glory, to glory to be an Advocate, an
Advocate for his people! "If any man sin, we have an Advocate with
the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous."
(5.) Study also the need that thou hast of a share in the execution
of the advocateship of Jesus Christ. Christians find that they have
need of washing in the blood of Christ, and that they have need
of being clothed with the righteousness of Christ; they also find
that they have need that Christ should make intercession for them,
and that by him, of necessity, they must approach God, and present
their prayers and services to him; but they do not so well see
that they need that Christ should also be their Advocate. And the
reason thereof is this: they forget that their adversary makes it
his business to accuse them before the throne of God; they consider
not the long scrolls and many crimes wherewith he chargeth them in
the presence of the angels of God. I say, this is the cause that
the advocateship of Christ is so little considered in the churches;
yea, many that have been relieved by that office of his, have not
understood what he has thereby done for them. But perhaps this is
to be kept from many till they come to behold his face, and till
all things shall be revealed, that Christ might have glory given him
in the next world for doing of that for them which they so little
thought of in this. But do not thou be content with this ignorance,
because the knowledge of his advocating it for thee will yield thee
present relief. Study, therefore, thine own weakness, the holiness
of the judge, the badness of thy cause, the subtlety, malice, and
rage, of thine enemy; and be assured that whenever thou sinnest,
by and by thou art for it accused before God at his judgment seat.
These things will, as it were, by way of necessity, instill into
thy heart the need that thou hast of an advocate, and will make thee
look as to the blood and righteousness of Jesus Christ to justify
thee, so to Christ as an Advocate to plead thy cause, as did holy
Job in his distresses (Job 16:21).
Use Third. Is Christ Jesus not only a priest of, and a King over,
but an Advocate for his people? Let this make us stand and wonder,
and be amazed at his humiliation and condescension. We read of his
humiliation on earth when he put himself into our flesh, took upon
him our sins, and made them as his own unto condemnation and death.
And to be an advocate is an office reproachful to the malicious,
if any man be such an one, for those that are base and unworthy.
Yea, and the higher and more honourable the person is that pleads
for such, the more he humbles himself. The word doth often in effect
account him now in heaven as a servant for us, and acts of service
are acts of condescension; and I am sure some acts of service have
more of that in them than some; and I think when all things are
considered, that Christ neither doth nor can do anything for us
there, of a more condescending nature, than to become our Advocate.
True, he glories in it; but that doth not show that the work is
excellent in itself. It is also one of his titles of honour; but
that is to show how highly God esteems of, and dignifies all his
acts; and though this shall tend at last to the greatening of his
honour and glory in his kingdom, yet the work itself is amazingly
mean.
1. With a holy and just God; for he is the judge of all, and his
eyes are purer than to behold iniquity; yea, his very essence and
presence is a consuming fire; yet, before and with this God, and
that for such a people, Jesus Christ, the King, will be an Advocate.
For one mean man to be an Advocate for the base, with one that is
not considerable, is not so much; but for Christ to be an Advocate
for the base, and for the base, too, under the basest consideration,
this is to be wondered at. When Bathsheba, the queen became an
advocate for Adonijah unto king Solomon, you see how he flounced at
her, for that his cause was bad. "And why," saith he, "dost thou
ask Abishag for Adonijah? Ask for him the kingdom also" (I Kings
2:16-23). I told you before, that to be an advocate did run one
upon hazards of reproach; and it may easily be thought that the
queen did blush, when, from the king, her son, she received such a
repulse; nor do we hear any more of her being an advocate; I believe
she had enough of this. But oh! This Christ of God, who himself is
greater that Solomon, he is become an Advocate, "an Advocate with
the Father," who is the eternally just, and holy, and righteous
God; and that for a people, with respect to him, far worse than
could be Adonijah in the eyes of his brother Solomon. Majesty and
justice are dreadful in themselves, and much more so when approached
by any, especially when the cause, as to matter of fact, is bad,
that the man is guilty of who is concerned in the advocateship of
his friend; and yet Jesus Christ is still an Advocate for us, "an
Advocate with the Father."
4. Join to these the greatness and gravity, the highness and glorious
majesty of the Man that is become our Advocate. Says the text, it
is Jesus Christ-"We have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ."
Now, that he should become an Advocate, that he should embrace such
an employ as this of his advocateship, let this be a wonderment,
and so be accounted. But let us come to the fourth use.
Use Fourth. Is it so? Is Jesus Christ the Saviour also become our
Advocate? Then let us labour to make that improvement of this doctrine
as tendeth to strengthen our graces, and us, in the management of
them. Indeed, this should be the use that we should make of all
the offices of Christ; but let us, at this time, concern ourselves
about this; let, I say, the poor Christian thus expostulate with
himself-
1. Is Christ Jesus the Lord mine Advocate with the Father? Then
awake, my faith, and shake thyself like a giant; stir up thyself,
and be not faint; Christ is the Advocate of his people, and pleadeth
the cause of the poor and needy. And as for sin, which is one great
stumble to thy actings, O my faith, Christ has not only died for
that as a sacrifice, nor only carried his sacrifice unto the Father,
in the holiest of all, but is there to manage that offering as
an Advocate, pleading the efficacy and worth thereof before God,
against the devil, for us. Thus, I say, we should strengthen our
faith; for faith has to do not only with the Word, but also with
the offices of Christ. Besides, considering how many the assaults
are that are made upon our faith, we find all little enough to
support it against all the wiles of the devil.
Use Fifth. Doth Jesus Christ stand up to plead for us with God, to
plead with him for us against the devil? Let this teach us to stand
up to plead for him before men, to plead for him against the enemies
of his person and gospel. This is but reasonable; for if Christ
stands up to plead for us, why should not we stand up to plead for
him? He also expects this at our hands, saying, "Who will rise up
for me against the evil doers? Who will stand up for me against the
workers of iniquity?" (Psa 94:16). The apostle did it, and counted
himself engaged to do it, where he saith, he preached "the gospel
of God with much contention" (I Thess 2:2). Nor is this the duty of
apostles or preachers only, but every child of God should "earnestly
contend for the faith which was once delivered unto the saints"
(Jude 3).
Use Sixth. Doth Jesus Christ stand up to plead for us, and that of
his mere grace and love? Then this should teach Christians to be
watchful and wary how they sin against God. This inference seems to
run retrograde; but whoso duly considers it, will find it fairly
fetched from the premises. Christianity teaches ingenuity, 36
and aptness to be sensible of kindnesses, and doth instruct us to
a loathness to be overhard upon him from whom we have all at free
cost. "Shall we-sin that grace may abound? God forbid. Shall we do
evil that good may come? God forbid. Shall we sin because we are
not under the law, but under grace? God forbid" (Rom 6:1, 2, 15).
Use Seventh. Is it so? Is Jesus Christ an Advocate with the Father for
us? Then this should encourage strong Christians to tell the weak
ones where, when they are in their temptations and fears through
sin, they may have one to plead their cause. Thus the apostle doth
by the text; and thus we should do one to another. Mark, he telleth
the weak of an Advocate: "My little children, I write unto you
that ye sin not; though if any man sin, we have an Advocate with
the Father."
Thus we should do, and deliver our brother from death. There is
nothing that Satan more desires than to get good men in his sieve
to sift them as wheat, that if possible he may leave them nothing
but bran; no grace, but the very husk and shell of religion. And
when a Christian comes to know this, should Christ as Advocate be
hid, what could bear him up? But let him now remember and believe
that "we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the
righteous," and he forthwith conceiveth comfort; for an advocate
is to plead for me according as has been showed afore, that I may
be delivered from the wrath and accusation of my adversary, and
still be kept safe under grace.
Nor has Satan so good a right to plead justice against us, though
we have sinned, that we might be damned, as Christ has to plead
it, though we have sinned, that we might be saved; for sin cannot
cry so loud to justice as can the blood of Christ; and he pleads
his blood as Advocate, by which he has answered the law; wherefore
the law having nothing to object, must needs acquit the man for whom
the Lord Jesus pleads. I conclude this with that of the Psalmist,
"Surely his salvation is nigh them that fear him; that glory may
dwell in our land. Mercy and truth are met together; righteousness
and peace have kissed each other. Truth shall spring out of the
earth; and righteousness shall look down from heaven. Yea, the
Lord shall give that which is good; and our land shall yield her
increase. Righteousness shall go before him; and shall set us in
the way of his steps" (Psa 85:9-13).
Use Eighth. But what is all this to you that are not concerned
in this privilege? The children, indeed, have the advantage of an
advocate; but what is this to them that have none to plead their
cause? (Jer 30:12, 13); they are, as we say, left to the wide world,
or to be ground to powder between the justice of God and the sins
which they have committed. This is the man that none but the devil
seeks after; that is pursued by the law, and sin, and death, and
has none to plead his cause. It is sad to consider the plight
that such an one is in. His accuser is appointed, yea, ordered to
bring in a charge against him-"Let Satan stand at his right hand,"
in the place where accusers stand. "And when he shall be judged, let
him be condemned," let there be none to plead for his deliverance.
If he cries, or offereth to cry out for mercy or forgiveness, "let
his prayer become sin" (Psa 109:6-7). This is the portion of a
wicked man: "terrors take hold on him as waters, a tempest stealeth
him away in the night, the east wind carrieth him away, and he
departeth, and as a storm hurleth him out of his place; for God
shall cast upon him, and not spare; he would fain flee out of his
hand. Men shall clap their hands at him, and shall hiss him out
of his place" (Job 27:20-23). And what shall this man do? Can he
overstand the charge, the accusation, the sentence, and condemnation?
No, he has none to plead his cause. I remember that somewhere I
have read, as I think, concerning one who, when he was being carried
upon men's shoulders to the grave, cried out as he lay upon the
bier, I am accused before the just judgment of God; and a while
after, I am condemned before the just judgment of God. Nor was this
man but strict as the religion that was then on foot in the world;
but all the religion of the world amounts to no more than nothing.
I mean as to eternal salvation, if men be denied an Advocate to
plead their cause with God. Nor can any advocate save Jesus Christ
the righteous avail anything at all, because there is none appointed
but him to that work, and therefore not to be admitted to enter a
plea for their client at the bar of God.
Objection. But some may say, There is God's grace, the promise,
Christ's blood, and his second part of priesthood now in heaven.
Can none of these severally, nor all of them jointly, save a man
from hell, unless Christ also become our Advocate?
Answer. All these, his Advocate's office not excluded, are few
enough, and little enough, to save the saints from hell; for the
righteous shall scarcely be saved (I Peter 4:18). There must, then,
be the promise, God's grace, Christ's blood, and him to advocate
too, or we cannot be saved. What is the promise without God's grace,
and what is that grace without a promise to bestow it on us? I say,
what benefit have we thereby? Besides, if the promise and God's
grace, without Christ's blood, would have saved us, wherefore
then did Christ die? Yea, and again I say, if all these, without
his being an Advocate, would have delivered us from all those
disadvantages that our sins and infirmities would bring us to and
into; surely in vain and to no purpose was Jesus made an Advocate.
But, soul, there is need of all; and therefore be not thou offended
that the Lord Jesus is of the Father made so much to his, but
rather admire and wonder that the Father and the Son should be so
concerned with so sorry a lump of dust and ashes as thou art. And
I say again, be confounded to think that sin should be a thing so
horrible, of power to pollute, to captivate, and detain us from
God, that without all this ado (I would speak with reverence of
God and his wisdom) we cannot be delivered from the everlasting
destruction that it hath brought upon the children of men.
But, I say, what is this to them that are not admitted to a privilege
in the advocate-office of Christ? Whether he is an Advocate or
no, the case to them is the same. True, Christ as a Saviour is not
divided; he that hath him not in all, shall have him in none at
all of his offices in a saving manner. Therefore, he for whom he
is not an Advocate, he is nothing as to eternal life.
You may remember that I have already told you that there are several
who have not the Lord Jesus for their Advocate-to wit, those that
are still in their sins, pursuing of their lusts; those that are
ashamed of him before men; and those that are never otherwise but
lukewarm in their profession. And let us now, for a conclusion,
make further inquiry into this matter.
Is it likely that those should have the Lord Jesus for their
Advocate to plead their cause; who despise and reject his person,
his Word, and ways? or those either who are so far off from sense
of, and shame for, sin, that it is the only thing they hug and
embrace? True, he pleadeth the cause of his people both with the
Father and against the devil, and all the world besides; but open
profaneness, shame of good, and without heart or warmth in religion,
are no characters of his people. It is irrational to think that
Christ is an Advocate for, or that he pleadeth the cause of such,
who, in the self-same hour, and before his enemies, are throwing
dirt in his face by their profane mouths and unsanctified lives
and conversations.
Answer.-He died for all his elect, he prayeth for all his elect
as a Priest, but as an Advocate he pleadeth only for the children,
the called only. Satan objecteth not against God's election, for he
knows it not; but he objecteth against the called-to wit, whether
they be truly godly or no, or whether they ought not to die for
their transgressions (Job 1:9, 10; Zech 3). And for these things
he has some colour to frame an accusation against us, and now it
is time enough for Christ to stand up to plead. I say, for these
things he has some colour to frame a plea against us; for there is
sin and a law of works, and a judge too, that has not respect of
persons. Now to overthrow this plea of Satan, is Jesus Christ our
Advocate; yea, to overthrow it by pleading law and justice; and
this must be done with respect to the children only-"My little
children, these things write I unto you, that ye sin not. And if
any man sin, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the
righteous."
FOOTNOTES:
4 The sin here referred to was numbering the people of Israel; see
I Chronicles 21:1-ED..
26 To draw back from, or in, our dependence upon Christ for salvation,
is a distinction which every despairing backslider should strive
to understand. The total abandonment of Christianity is perdition,
while he who is overcome of evil may yet repent to the salvation
of the soul.-ED.
30 The poor backslider "is blind and cannot see afar off"; this
does not affect his title, but is fatal to any present prospect of
the enjoyment of his inheritance.-ED.
33 In the form of a pauper, one who has nothing to pay with, but
is living upon alms.-ED.
OR,
BY JOHN BUNYAN
GEORGE OFFOR.
FIRST, We will begin with HIS INTERCESSION, and will show you,
First, What that is; Second, For what he intercedes; and, Third,
What is also to be inferred from Christ's making intercession for
us.
First, I begin, then, with the first; that is, to show you what
intercession is. Intercession is prayer; but all prayer is not
intercession. Intercession, then, is that prayer that is made by
a third person about the concerns that are between two. And it may
be made either to set them at further difference, or to make them
friends; for intercession may be made against, as well as for, a
person or people. 'Wot ye not what the Scripture saith of Elias?
how he maketh intercession to God against Israel.' (Rom 11:2) But
the intercession that we are now to speak of is not an intercession
of this kind, not an intercession against, but an intercession for
a people. 'He ever liveth to make intercession for them.' The high
priest is ordained for, but not to be against the people. 'Every
high priest taken from among men is ordained for men in things
pertaining to God,' to make reconciliation for the sins of the
people; or 'that he may offer both gifts and sacrifices for sins.'
(Heb 5:1) This, then, is intercession; and the intercession of
Christ is to be between two, between God and man, for man's good.
And it extendeth itself unto these: 1. To pray that the elect may
be brought all home to him; that is, to God. 2. To pray that their
sins committed after conversion may be forgiven them. 3. To pray
that their graces which they receive at conversion may be maintained
and supplied. 4. To pray that their persons may be preserved unto
his heavenly kingdom.
1. He prays for all the elect, that they may be brought home to
God, and so into the unity of the faith, &c. this is clear, for
that he saith, 'Neither pray I for these alone'; that is, for those
only that are converted; 'but for them also which shall believe on
me through their word'; for all them that shall, that are appointed
to believe; or, as you have it a little above, 'for them which
thou hast given me.' (John 17:9,20, Isa 53:12) And the reason is,
for that he hath paid a ransom for them. Christ, therefore, when
he maketh intercession for the ungodly, and all the unconverted
elect are such, doth but petitionarily ask for his own, his purchased
ones, those for whom he died before, that they might be saved by
his blood.
2. When any of them are brought home to God, he yet prays for
them; namely, that the sins which through infirmity they, after
conversion, may commit, may also be forgiven them.
(1.) He prays that their persons may come to glory, for that they
are his, and that by the best of titles: 'Thine they were, and
thou gavest them me.' (John 17:6) Father, I will have them; Father,
I will have them, for they are mine: 'Thine they were, and thou
gavest them me.' What is mine, my wife, or my child, or my jewel,
or my joy, sure I may have it with me. Thus, therefore, he pleads
or cries in his intercession, that our persons might be preserved
to glory: They are mine, 'and thou gavest them me.'2
(3.) He pleads in his interceding that they might have glory; his
own resolution to have it so. 'Father, I will that they also, whom
thou hast given me, be with me where I am.' (John 17:24) Behold
ye here, he is resolved to have it so. It must be so. It shall be
so. I will have it so. We read of Adonijah, that his father never
denied him in anything. He never said to him, 'Why hast thou
done so?' (1 Kings 1:6) Indeed, he denied him the kingdom; for his
brother was heir of that from the Lord. How much more will our
Father let our Lord Jesus have his mind and will in this, since he
also is as willing to have it so as is the Son himself. 'Fear not,
little flock; for it is your Father's good pleasure to give you the
kingdom.' (Luke 12:32) Resolution will drive things far, especially
resolution to do that which none but they that cannot hinder shall
oppose. Why this is the case, the resolution of our Intercessor is,
that we be preserved to glory; yea, and this resolution he pleads
in his intercession: 'Father, I will that they also, whom thou hast
given me, be with me where I am,' &c. (John 17:24) Must it not,
therefore, now be so?
Third, I come now to the third thing, namely, to show you what is
to be inferred from Christ's making intercession for us.
He that intercedes for another with a holy and just God had need
be clean himself, lest he with whom he so busieth himself say to
him, First clear thyself, and then come and speak for thy friend.
Wherefore, this is the very description and qualification of this
our High Priest and blessed Intercessor, 'For such an high priest
became us, who is holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners,
and made higher than the heavens; who needeth not daily, as those
high priests, to offer up sacrifice, first for his own sins,' &c.
(Heb 7:26,27) Had we not had such an Intercessor, we had been but
in a very poor case; but we have one that becomes us; one that
fits us to the purpose; one against whom our God hath nothing, can
object nothing; one in whose mouth no guile could be found.3
Why, this is our case; to be sure, thus far it is, we have offended
a just and a holy God, and Jesus Christ is become Intercessor. He
also knows full well, that for our parts, if it would save us from
hell, we cannot produce towards a peace with God so much as poor
two farthings; that is, not anything that can by law and justice be
esteemed worth a halfpenny; yet he makes intercession. It follows,
therefore, that he has wherewith of his own, if that question afore
is propounded, to answer to every reasonable demand. Hence, it is
said, that he has gifts as well as sacrifice for sin. 'Every high
priest is ordained to offer gifts and sacrifices: wherefore it is
of necessity that this man have somewhat also to offer.' (Heb 8:3)
And, observe it, the apostle speaks here of Christ as in heaven,
there ministering in the second part of his office; 'For if he
were on earth, he should not be a priest.' (verse 4) These gifts,
therefore, and this sacrifice, he now offereth in heaven by way of
intercession, urging and pleading as an Intercessor, the valuableness
of his gifts for the pacifying of that wrath that our Father hath
conceived against us for the disobediences that we are guilty of.
'A gift in secret pacifieth anger; and a reward in the bosom strong
wrath.' (Prov 21:14)
[SECOND.] And thus have I spoken to the first thing--to wit, of the
intercession of Christ; and now I come more particularly to speak
to the second, THE BENEFITS OF HIS INTERCESSION; namely, that we
are saved thereby. Wherefore he is able also to save them, seeing
he maketh intercession for them. 'He is able to save them to the
uttermost.'
In my handling of this head, I must show you, First, What the apostle
means here by 'save'--'Wherefore he is able to save.' Second, What
he means here by saving to the 'uttermost'--'He is able to save to
the uttermost.' Third, And then, thirdly, we shall do as we did in
the foregoing--to wit, gather some inferences from the whole, and
speak to them.
Now, saving thus comes to us by what Christ did for us in this world,
by what Christ did for us as suffering for us. I say, it comes to
us thus; that is, it comes to us by grace through the redemption
that is in Christ. And thus to be saved is called justification,
justification to life, because one thus saved is, as I said,
acquitted from guilt, and that everlasting damnation to which for
sin he had made himself obnoxious by the law. (1 Cor 15:1-4, Rom
5:8-10)
Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law. Whatever the law
can take hold of to curse us for, that Christ has redeemed us from,
by being made a curse for us. But this curse that Christ was made
for us, must be confined to his sufferings, not to his exaltation,
and, consequently, not to his intercession, for Christ is made no
curse but when he suffered; not in his intercession: so then, as
he died he took away the curse, and sin that was the cause thereof,
by the sacrifice of himself, (Gal 3:13), and by his life, his
intercession, he saveth us from all those things that attempt to
bring us into that condemnation again.
Object. 1. Perhaps some may say, we are not saved from all punishment
of sin by the death of Christ; and if so, so not from all danger
of damnation by the intercession of Christ.
Answ. We are saved from all punishment in hell fire by the death of
Christ. Jesus has 'delivered us from the wrath to come.' (1 Thess
1:10) So that as to this great punishment, God for his sake has
forgiven us all trespasses. (Col 2:13) But we being translated
from being slaves to Satan to be sons of God, God reserveth yet
this liberty in his hand to chastise us if we offend, as a father
chastiseth his son. (Deut 8:5) But this chastisement is not in legal
wrath, but in fatherly affection; not to destroy us, but that still
we might be made to get advantage thereby, even be made partakers
of his holiness. This is, that we might 'not be condemned with the
world.' (Heb 12:5-11, 1 Cor 11:32) As to the second part of the
objection; there do, as we say, many things happen betwixt or between
the cup and the lip; many things attempt to overthrow the work
of God, and to cause that we should perish through our weakness,
notwithstanding the price that hath by Christ been paid for us. But
what saith the Scripture? 'Who shall separate us from the love of
Christ? shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine,
or nakedness, or peril, or sword? As it is written, For thy sake
we are killed all the day long; we are accounted as sheep for the
slaughter. Nay, in all these things we are more than conquerors
through him that loved us. For I am persuaded, that neither death,
nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things
present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other
creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which
is in Christ Jesus our Lord.' (Rom 8:35-39)
And this is the cause why some that belong to God are yet so under
the afflicting hand of God; they have sinned, and God, who is
their Father, punisheth; yea, and this is the reason why some who
are dear to God have this kind of punishment never forgiven, but
it abides with them to their lives' end, goes with them to the
day of their death, yea, is the very cause of their death. By this
punishment they are cut off out of the land of the living. But all
this is that they might 'not be condemned with the world.' (1 Cor
11:32)
The hidings of God's face, the harshness of his providences, the severe
and sharp chastisements that ofttimes overtake the very spirits of
his people, plainly show that Christ died not to save from temporal
punishments, prays not to save from temporal punishments--that
is, absolutely. God has reserved a power to punish, with temporal
punishments, the best and dearest of his people, if need be.5 And
sometimes he remits them, sometimes not, even as it pleases him.
I come now to the second thing.
Two sorts of men seem to be far, very far from God. (1.) The town
sinner. (2.) The great backslider. (Neh 1:9) But both these, if they
come, he is able to save to the uttermost. He is able to save them
from all those dangers that they fear will prevent their obtaining
of that grace and mercy they would have to help them in time of
need. The publicans and harlots enter into the kingdom of heaven.
(2.) Nay, to help forward his calamity, Satan [and his] angels will
not be wanting, both to trouble his head with the fumes of their
stinking breath, nor to throw up his heels in their dirty places--'And
as he was yet a-coming, the devil threw him down and tare him.'
(Luke 9:42) How many strange, hideous, and amazing blasphemies have
those, some of those, that are coming to Christ, had injected and
fixed upon their spirits against him. Nothing so common to such,
as to have some hellish wish or other against God they are coming
to, and against Christ, by whom they would come to him. These
blasphemies are like those frogs that I have heard of, that will
leap up, and catch hold of, and hang by their claws. Now help,
Lord; now, Lord Jesus, what shall I do? Now, Son of David, have
mercy upon me! I say, to say these words is hard work for such an
one. But he is able to save to the uttermost this comer to God by
him.
(3.) There are also the oppositions of sense and reason hard
at work for the devil, against the soul; the men of his own house
are risen up against him. One's sense and reason, one would think,
should not fall in with the devil against ourselves, and yet
nothing more common, nothing more natural, than for our own sense
and reason to turn the unnatural, and are both against our God and
us. And now it is hard coming to God. Better can a man hear and
deal with any objections against himself, than with those that
himself doth make against himself. They lie close, stick fast,
speak aloud, and will be heard; yea, will haunt and hunt him, as
the devil doth some, in every hole and corner. But come, man, come;
for he is able to save to the uttermost!
(4.) Now guilt is the consequence and fruit of all this; and what
so intolerable a burden as guilt! They talk of the stones, and of
the sands of the sea; but it is guilt that breaks the heart with
its burden. And Satan has the art of making the uttermost of every
sin; he can blow it up, make it swell, make every hair of its head
as big as a cedar. He can tell how to make it a heinous offence,
and unpardonable offence, an offence of that continuance, and
committed against so much light, that, says he, it is impossible
it should ever be forgiven. But, soul, Christ is able to save to
the uttermost, he can 'do exceeding abundantly above all that we
ask or think.' (Eph 3:20)
(5.) Join to all this the rage and terror of men, which thing of
itself is sufficient to quash and break to pieces all desires to
come to God by Christ; yea, and it doth do so to thousands that are
not willing to go to hell. Yet thou art kept, and made to go panting
on; a whole world of men, and devils, and sin, are not able to
keep thee from coming. But how comes it to pass that thou art so
hearty, that thou settest thy face against so much wind and weather? I
dare say it arises not from thyself, nor from any of thine enemies.
This comes from God, though thou art not aware thereof; and is
obtained for thee by the intercession of the blessed Son of God,
who is also able to save thee to the uttermost, that comest to God
by him.
When Moses said, 'I beseech thee, show me thy glory,' the answer
was, 'I will make all my goodness pass before thee, and I will
proclaim the name of the Lord before thee.' (Exo 33:18,19) And when
he came indeed to make proclamation, then he proclaimed, 'The Lord,
The Lord God, merciful and gracious, long-suffering, and abundant
in goodness and truth, keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving
iniquity and transgression and sin, and that will by no means clear
the guilty.' (Exo 34:6,7) That will by no means clear them that
will not come to me that they may be saved.
But some may say, What is the meaning of this word able? 'Wherefore
he is able to save.' He is able to save the uttermost. How comes it
to pass that his power to save is rather put in than his willingness;
for willingness, saith the soul, would better have pleased me. I
will speak two or three words to this question. And,
When Moses prayed for the people of Israel, thus he said, 'And
now, I beseech thee, let the power of my Lord be great, according
as thou hast spoken.' But what had he spoken? 'The Lord is long-suffering,
and of great mercy, forgiving iniquity and transgression, and by
no means clearing the guilty--Pardon, I beseech thee, the iniquity
of this people according unto the greatness of thy mercy, and as
thou hast forgiven this people, from Egypt even until now.' (Num
14:17-19)
Third. And now I come to the third thing that I told you I should
speak to, and that is, to those inferences that may be gathered
from these words.
1. Are they that are justified by Christ's blood such as have need
yet to be saved by his intercession? Then from hence it follows that
justification will stand with imperfection. It doth not therefore
follow that a justified man is without infirmity; for he that is
without infirmity--that is, perfect with absolute perfection, has
no need to be yet saved by an act yet to be performed by a mediator
and his mediation.
Answ. Why, I mean that justified men are yet sinners in themselves,
are yet full of imperfections; yea, sinful imperfections. Justified
Paul said, 'I know that in me, that is, in my flesh, dwelleth no
good thing.' (Rom 7:18) While we are yet sinners, we are justified
by the blood of Christ. Hence, again, it is said, 'he justifieth
the ungodly.' (Rom 4:5, 5:8,9) Justification, then, only covereth
our sin from the sight of God; it maketh us not perfect with inherent
perfection. But God, for the sake of that righteousness which by
his grace is imputed to us, declareth us quit and discharged from
the curse, and sees sin in us no more to condemnation.
And this is the reason, or one reason, why they that are justified
have need of an intercessor--to wit, to save us from the evil of
the sin that remains in our flesh after we are justified by grace
through Christ, and set free from the law as to condemnation.
Therefore, as it is said, we are saved; so it is said, 'He is able
also to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him, seeing
he ever liveth to make intercession for them.' The godly, for now
we will call them the godly, though there is yet abundance of sin
in them, feel in themselves many things even after justification
by which they are convinced they are still attended with personal,
sinful imperfections.
(1.) Faith, which is the root-grace, the grand grace, its shortness
is sufficiently manifest by its shortness of apprehension of things
pertaining to the person, offices, relations, and works of Christ,
now in the heavenly place for us. It is also very defective in its
fetching of comfort from the Word to us, and in continuing of it
with us, when at any time we attain unto it; in its receiving of
strength to subdue sin, and in its purifyings of the heart, though
indeed it doth what it doth in reality, yet how short is it of doing
of it thoroughly? Oftentimes, were it not for supplies by virtue
of the intercession of Christ, faith would fail of performing its
office in any measure. (Luke 22:31,32)
(2.) There is hope, another grace of the Spirit bestowed upon us;
and how often is that also, as to the excellency of working, made
to flag? 'I shall perish,' saith David; 'I am cut off from before
thine eyes,' said he. (Psa 31:22) And now where was his hope, in the
right gospel discovery of it? Also all our fear of men, and fears
of death, and fears of judgment, they arise from the imperfections
of hope. But from all those faults Christ saves us by his intercessions.
(4.) The grace of humility, when is it? who has a thimbleful thereof?
Where is he that is 'clothed with humility,' and that does what he
is commanded 'with all humility of mind'? (1 Peter 5:5, Acts 20:19)
(5.) For zeal, where is that also? Zeal for God against sin,
profaneness, superstition, and idolatry. I speak now to the godly,
who have this zeal in the root and habit; but oh, how little of it
puts forth itself into actions in such a day as this is!
(7.) Simplicity and godly sincerity also, with how much dirt is it
mixed in the best; especially among those of the saints that are
rich, who have got the poor and beggarly art of complimenting? For
the more compliment, the less sincerity. Many words will not fill
a bushel. But 'in the multitude of words there wanteth not sin.'
(Prov 10:19) Plain men are thin come up in this day; to find a
mouth without fraud and deceit now is a rare thing. Thus might one
count up all the graces of the Spirit, and show wherein every one
of them are scanty and wanting of perfection. Now look, what they
want of perfection is supplied with sin and vanity; for there is a
fullness of sin and flesh at hand to make up all the vacant places
in our souls. There is no place in the souls of the godly but it
is filled up with darkness when the light is wanting, and with sin
so far forth as grace is wanting. Satan, also, diligently waiteth
to come in at the door, if Careless has left it a little achare.7
But, oh! the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, who ever liveth to
make intercession for us, and that, by so doing, saves us from all
the imperfect acts and workings of our graces, and from all the
advantages that flesh, and sin, and Satan getteth upon us thereby.
(1.) Our prayers, how imperfect are they! With how much unbelief
are they mixed! How apt is our tongue to run, in prayer, before
our hearts! With how much earnestness do our lips move, while our
hearts lie within as cold as a clod! Yea, and ofttimes, it is to
be feared, we ask for that with out mouth that we care not whether
we have or no. Where is the man that pursues with all his might
what but now he seemed to ask for with all his heart? Prayer is
become a shell, a piece of formality, a very empty thing, as to the
spirit and life of prayer at this day. I speak now of the prayers
of the godly. I once met with a poor woman that, in the greatest of
her distresses, told me she did use to rise in the night, in cold
weather, and pray to God, while she sweat with fears of the loss
of her prayers and desires that her soul might be saved. I have
heard of many that have played, but of few that have prayed, till
they have sweat, by reason of their wrestling with God for mercy
in that duty.
(3.) There is hearing of the Word; but, alas! the place of hearing
is the place of sleeping with many a fine professor. I have often
observed that those that keep shops can briskly attend upon a
twopenny customer; but when they come themselves to God's market,
they spend their time too much in letting their thoughts to wander
from God's commandments, or in a nasty drowsy way. The heads,
also, and hearts of most hearers are to the Word as the sieve is
to water; they can hold no sermons, remember no texts, bring home
no proofs, produce none of the sermon to the edification and profit
of others. And do not the best take up too much in hearing, and
mind too little what, by the Word, God calls for at their hands,
to perform it with a good conscience?
2. Are those that are justified by the blood of Christ such, after
that, as have need also of saving by Christ's intercession? From
hence, then, we may infer, that as sin, so Satan will not give over
from assaulting the best of the saints.
(1.) He knows not who are elect; for all that profess are not, and,
therefore, he will make trial, if he can get them into his sieve,
whether he can cause them to perish. And great success he hath had
this way. Many a brave professor has he overcome; he has cast some
of the stars from heaven to earth; he picked one out from among the
apostles, and one, as it is thought, from among the seven deacons,8
and many from among Christ's disciples; but how many, think you,
nowadays, doth he utterly destroy with his net?
3. Are those that are justified by the blood of Christ such as,
after that, have need to be saved by Christ's intercession? Then,
hence I infer that it is dangerous going about anything in our own
name and strength. If we would have helps from the intercession of
Christ, let us have a care that we do what we do according to the
word of Christ. Do what he bids us as well as we can, as he bids
us, and then we need not doubt to have help and salvation in those
duties by the intercession of Christ. 'Do all,' says the apostle,
'in the name of the Lord Jesus.' (Col 3:17) Oh, but then the devil
and the world will be most of all offended! Well, well, but if you
do nothing but as in his fear, by his Word, in his name, you may
be sure of what help his intercession can afford you, and that can
afford you much help, not only to begin, but to go through with
your work in some good measure, as you should; and by that also you
shall be secured from those dangers, if not temptations to dangers,
that those that go out about business in their own names and strength
shall be sure to meet withal.
4. Are those that are justified by the blood of Christ such as,
after that, have need of being saved by Christ's intercession? Then,
hence I infer again, that God has a great dislike of the sins of
his own people, and would fall upon them in judgment and anger much
more severely than he doth, were it not for Christ's intercession.
The gospel is not, as some think, a loose and licentious doctrine,
nor God's discipline of his church a negligent and careless discipline;
for, though those that believe already have also an intercessor,
yet God, to show his detestation against sin, doth often make them
feel to purpose the weight of his fingers. The sincere, that fain
would walk oft with God, have felt what I say, and that to the
breaking of their bones full oft. The loose ones, and those that
God loves not, may be utter strangers as to this; but those that
are his own indeed do know it is otherwise.9
'You only have I known' above all others, says God, 'therefore I
will punish you for all your iniquities.' (Amos 3:2) God keeps a
very strict house among his children. David found it so, Haman found
it so, Job found it so, and the church of God found it so; and I
know not that his mind is ever the less against sin, notwithstanding
we have an Intercessor. True, our Intercessor saves us from damning
evils, from damning judgments; but he neither doth nor will secure
us from temporal punishment, from spiritual punishment, unless we
watch, deny ourselves, and walk in his fear. I would to God that
those who are otherwise minded did but feel, for three or four
months, something of what I have felt for several years together
for base sinful thoughts! I wish it, I say, if it might be for
their good, and for the better regulating of their understandings.
But whether they obtain my wish or no, sure I am that God is no
countenancer of sin; no, not in his own people; nay, he will bear
it least of all in them. And as for others, however he may for
a while have patience towards them, if, perhaps, his goodness may
lead them to repentance; yet the day is coming when he will pay the
carnal and hypocrites' home with devouring fire for their offences.
5. Are those that are already justified by the blood of Christ yet
such as have need of being saved by his intercession? Then, hence,
I infer that Christ is not only the beginner, but the completer
of our salvation; or, as the Holy Ghost calls him, 'the author and
finisher of our faith,' (Heb 12:2); or, as it calls him again, 'the
author of eternal salvation.' (Heb 5:9) Of salvation throughout,
from the beginning to the end, from first to last. His hands have
laid the foundation of it in his own blood, and his hands shall
finish it by his intercession. (Zech 4:9) As he has laid the beginning
fastly, so he shall bring forth the headstones with shoutings, and
we shall cry, Grace, grace, at the last, salvation only belongeth
to the Lord. (Zech 4:7, Psa 3:8, Isa 43:11)
Many there be that begin with grace, and end with works, and
think THAT is the only way. Indeed works will save from temporal
punishments, when their imperfections are purged from them by the
intercession of Christ; but to be saved and brought to glory, to
be carried through this dangerous world, from my first moving after
Christ till I set my foot within the gates of paradise, this is the
work of my Mediator, of my high priest and intercessor; it is he
that fetches us again when we are run away; it is he that lifteth
us up when the devil and sin has thrown us down; it is he that
quickeneth us when we grow cold; it is he that comforteth us when
we despair; it is he that obtains fresh pardon when we have contracted
sin; and he that purges our consciences when they are loaden with
guilt. (Eze 34:16, Psa 145:14)
I know also, that rewards do wait for them in heaven that do believe
in Christ, and shall do well on earth; but this is not a reward of
merit, but of grace. We are saved by Christ; brought to glory by
Christ; and all our works are no otherwise made acceptable to God
but by the person and personal excellencies and works of Christ;
therefore, whatever the jewels are, and the bracelets, and the
pearls, that thou shalt be adorned with as a reward of service done
to God in the world, for them thou must thank Christ, and, before
all, confess that he was the meritorious cause thereof. (1 Peter
2:5, Heb 13:15) He saves us, and saves our services too. (Rev 5:9-14)
They would be all cast back as dung in our faces, were they not
rinsed and washed in the blood, were they not sweetened and perfumed
in the incense, and conveyed to God himself through the white hand
of Jesus Christ; for that is his golden-censer; from thence ascends
the smoke that is in the nostrils of God of such a sweet savour.
(Rev 7:12-14, 8:3,4)
7. Are those that are already justified by the blood of Christ such
as do still stand in need of being saved by his intercession? Then
is this also to be inferred from hence, that saints should look to
him for that saving that they shall yet have need of betwixt this
and the day of their dissolution; yea, from henceforward, even to
the day of judgment. I say, they should still look to him for the
remaining part of their salvation, or for that of their salvation
which is yet behind; and let them look for it with confidence, for
that it is in a faithful hand; and for thy encouragement to look and
hope for the completing of thy salvation in glory, let me present
thee with a few things--
(1.) The hardest or worst part of the work of thy Saviour is over;
his bloody work, his bearing of thy sin and curse, his loss of the
light of his Father's face for a time; his dying upon the cursed
tree, that was the worst, the sorest, the hardest, and most difficult
part of the work of redemption; and yet this he did willingly,
cheerfully, and without thy desires; yea, this he did, as considering
those for whom he did it in a state of rebellion and enmity to him.
(2.) Consider, also, that he has made a beginning with thy soul
to reconcile thee to God, and to that end has bestowed his justice
upon thee, put his Spirit within thee, and began to make the
unweldable mountain and rock,10 thy heart, to turn towards him,
and desire after him; to believe in him, and rejoice in him.
(4.) Thou mayest consider, also, that what remains behind of the
work of thy salvation in his hands, as it is the most easy part,
so the most comfortable, and that part which will more immediately
issue in his glory, and therefore he will mind it.
(5.) That which is behind is also more safe in his hand than if
it were in thine own; he is wise, he is powerful, he is faithful,
and therefore will manage that part that is lacking to our salvation
well, until he has completed it. It is his love to thee that has
made him that 'he putteth no trust in thee'; he knows that he can
himself bring thee to his kingdom most surely; and therefore has
not left that work to thee, no, not any part thereof. (Job 5:18,
15:15)
THIRD, The third particular is to show WHO ARE THE PERSONS INTERESTED
IN THIS INTERCESSION OF CHRIST; and they are those that come to
God by him. The words are very concise, and distinctly laid down;
they are they that come, that come to God, that come to God by him.
'Wherefore he is able also to save them, to save to the uttermost
them that come to God by him, seeing he ever liveth to make
intercession for them.'
There are that come unto God, but not 'by him'; and these are not
included in this text, have not a share in this privilege. Thus the
Jews came to God, the unbelieving Jews, 'who had a zeal of God, but
not according to knowledge.' (Rom 9:30-34, 10:1-4) These submitted
not to Christ, the righteousness of God, but thought to come to
him by works of their own, or at least, as it were, by them, and
so came short of salvation by grace, for that reigns to salvation
only in Christ. To these Christ's person and undertaking were a
stumbling stone; for at him they stumbled, and did split themselves
to pieces, though they indeed were such as came to God for life.
As there are that come to God, but not by Christ, so there are that
come to Christ, but not to God by him:11 of this sort are they, who
hearing that Christ is Saviour, therefore come to him for pardon,
but cannot abide to come to God by him, for that he is holy, and
so will snub their lusts, and will change their hearts and natures.
Mind me what I say. There are a great many that would be saved
by Christ, but love not to be sanctified by God through him. These
make a stop at Christ, and will go no further. Might such have
pardon, they care not whether ever they went to heaven or no. Of
this kind of coming to Christ I think it is, of which he warneth
his disciples when he saith, 'In that day ye shall ask me nothing.
Verily, verily, I say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall ask the Father
in my name, he will give it you.' (John 16:23) As who should say,
when you ask for anything, make not a stop at me, but come to
my Father by me; for they that come to me, and not to my Father,
through me, will have nothing of what they come for. Righteousness
shall be imputed to us, 'if we believe on him that raised up
Jesus our Lord from the dead.' (Rom 4:24,25) To come to Christ for
a benefit, and stop there, and not come to God by him, prevaileth
nothing. Here the mother of Zebedee's children erred; and about
this it was that the Lord Jesus cautioned her. Lord, saith she,
'Grant that these my two sons may sit, the one on thy right hand,
and the other on the left, in thy kingdom.' But what is the answer
of Christ? 'To sit on my right hand and on my left, is not mine to
give, but for whom it is prepared of my Father.' (Matt 20:21-23)
As who should say, Woman, of myself I do nothing, my Father worketh
with me. Go therefore to him by me, for I am the way to him; what
thou canst obtain of him by me thou shalt have; that is to say,
what of the things that pertain to eternal life, whether pardon or
glory.
It is true, the Son has power to give pardon and glory, but he
gives it not by himself, but by and according to the will of his
Father. (Matt 9:6, John 17:22) They, therefore, that come to him
for an eternal good, and look not to the Father by him, come short
thereof; I mean, now, pardon and glory. And hence, though it be
said the Son of man hath power on earth to forgive sins--to wit,
to show the certainty of his Godhead, and of the excellency of his
mediation; yet forgiveness of sin is said to lie more particularly
in the hand of the Father, and that God for Christ's sake forgiveth
us. (Eph 4:32)
1. They whose utmost design in coming is only that guilt and fear
of damning may be removed from them. And there are three signs of
such an one--(1.) He that takes up in a belief of pardon, and so
goes on in his course of carnality as he did before. (2.) He whose
comfort in the belief of pardon standeth alone, without other
fruits of the Holy Ghost. (3.) He that, having been washed, can
be content to tumble in the mire, as the sow again, or as the dog
that did spue to lick up his vomit again.
2. They may be said to come to Christ, but not to God by him, who
do pick and choose doctrines, itching only after that which sounds
of grace,12 but secretly abhorring of that which presseth to moral
goodness. These did never see God, what notions soever they may
have of the Lord Jesus, and of forgiveness from him. (Matt 5:8)
3. They surely did never come to God by Christ, however they may
boast of the grace of Christ, that will from the freeness of gospel
grace plead an indulgence for sin.
Before, therefore, God has been with a man, and has left some
impression of his glory upon him, that man cannot be willing to
come to him aright. Hence it is said concerning Abraham, that, in
order to his coming to God, and following of him aright, the Lord
himself did show himself unto him--'Men, brethren, and fathers,
hearken; The God of glory appeared unto our father Abraham, when
he was in Mesopotamia, before he dwelt in Charran, and said unto
him, Get thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred, and come
into the land which I shall show thee.' (Acts 7:2,3, Gen 12:1)
It was this God of glory, the sight and visions of this God
of glory, that provoked Abraham to leave his country and kindred
to come after God. The reason why men are so careless of, and
so indifferent about, their coming to God, is because they have
their eyes blinded, because they do not perceive his glory. God is
so blessed a one, that did he not hide himself and his glory, the
whole world would be ravished with him. But he has, I will not
say reasons of state, but reasons of glory, glorious reasons why
he hideth himself from the world, and appeareth but to particular
ones. Now by his thus appearing to Abraham, down fell Abraham's
vanity, and his idolatrous fancies and affections, and his heart
began to turn unto God, for that there was in this appearance an
alluring and soul-instructing voice. Hence that which Moses calls
here an appearing, Christ calls a hearing, and a teaching, and a
learning--'It is written in the prophets, And they shall be all taught
of God. Every man, therefore, that hath heard and hath learned of
the Father, cometh unto me,' that is, to God by me. But, I say, what
must they hear and learn of the Father but that Christ is the way
to glory, the way to the God of glory. This is a drawing doctrine;
wherefore that which in this verse is called teaching and learning,
is called, in the verse before, the drawing of the Father--'No
man can come to me except the Father which hath sent me draw him';
that is, with powerful proposals, and alluring conclusions, and
heart-subduing influences. (John 6:44,45)
Having thus touched upon this, we will now proceed to show you
what kind of people they are that come to God by Christ; and then
shall draw some inferences from this also.
A man that will come to God by Christ aright must needs, precedent
to his so coming, have a competent knowledge of things of this
kind.
It is not in the power of all the men on earth to make one man come
to God by Christ, because it is not in their power to make men see
their state by nature. And what should a man come to God for, that
can live in the world without him? Reason says so, experience says
so, the Scripture beareth witness that so it is of a truth. It is
a sight of what I am that must unroost me, that must shake my soul,
and make me leave my present rest. No man comes to God by Christ
but he that knows himself, and what sin hath done to him; that is
the first. (Job 21:7-15)
There are four things in the world that have a tendency to lull an
awakened man asleep, if God also makes him not afraid of the world.
(1.) There is the bustle and cumber of the world, that will call
a man off from looking after the salvation of his soul. This is
intimated by the parable of the thorny ground. (Luke 8:14) Worldly
cumber is a devilish thing; it will hurry a man from his bed without
prayer; to a sermon, and from it again, without prayer; it will
choke prayer, it will choke the Word, it will choke convictions,
it will choke the soul, and cause that awakening shall be to no
saving purpose.
(3.) There are the terrors of the world, if a man stands in fear
of them, he also will not come to God by Christ. The fear of man
brings a snare. How many have, in all ages, been kept from coming
to God aright by the terrors of the world? Yea, how many are there
to one's thinking have almost got to the gates of heaven, and have
been scared and driven quite back again by nothing but the terrors
of this world? This is that which Christ so cautioneth his disciples
about, for he knew it was a deadly thing. Peter also bids the
saints beware of this as of a thing very destructive. (Luke 12:4-6,
1 Peter 3:14,15)
3. As a man must know himself, how vile he is, and know the world,
how empty it is, so he must know the law, how severe it is; else
he will not come to God by Jesus Christ our Lord.
But would they do thus if they knew the severity of the law?
they would as soon eat fire. The severity of the law would be an
intolerable, insupportable burden to their consciences; it would
drive them, and make them fly for refuge, to lay hold on the hope
set before them.
(a.) The law charges thee with its curse, as well for the pollution
of thy nature, as for the defilements of thy life; yea, and if
thou hadst never committed sinful act, thy pollution of nature must
stand in thy way to life, if thou comest not to God for mercy by
Christ.
(b.) The law takes notice of, and chargeth thee with its curse,
as well for sinful thoughts as for vile and sinful actions. 'The
[very] thought of foolishness is sin,' (Prov 24:9), though it never
breaks out into act, and will as surely merit the damnation of the
soul as will the greatest transgression in the world.
(c.) If now thou couldst keep all the commandments, that will do
thee no good at all, because thou hast sinned first: 'The soul that
sinneth shall die.' Unless, then, thou canst endure the curse, and
so in a legal way overcome it for the sins that thou hast committed,
thou art gone, if thou comest not to God by Christ for mercy and
pardon.
Now if death should surprise and seize thee before thou art fit
to die, all is lost; for there is no repentance in the grave, or
rather, as the wise man has it, 'Whatsoever thy hand findeth to
do, do it with thy might; for there is no work, nor device, nor
knowledge, nor wisdom, in the grave, whither thou goest.' (Eccl
9:10)
But thou must take heed of all these, for he justifies us by none
of these means, and thou dost need to be justified. I say, he
justifieth us, not either by giving laws unto us, or by becoming our
example, or by our following of him in any sense, but by his blood
shed for us. His blood is not laws, nor ordinances, nor commandments,
but a price, a redeeming price. (Rom 5:7-9, Rev 1:5) He justifies
us by bestowing upon us, not by expecting from us; he justifies us
by his grace, not by our works. (Eph 1:7) In a word, thou must be
well grounded in the knowledge of what Christ is, and how men are
justified by him, or thou wilt not come unto God by him.
As thou must know him, and how men are justified by him, so thou
must know the readiness that is in him to receive and to do for
those what they need that come unto God by him. Suppose his merits
were never so efficacious, yet if it could be proved that there is
a loathness in him that these merits should be bestowed upon the
coming ones, there would but few adventure to wait upon him. But
now, as he is full, he is free. Nothing pleases him better than to
give what he has away; than to bestow it upon the poor and needy.
And it will be convenient that thou who art a coming soul shouldst
know this for thy comfort to encourage thee to come to God by him.
Take two or three sayings of his, for the confirming of what is
now said. 'Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden,
and I will give you rest.' (Matt 11:28) 'All that the Father giveth
me shall come to me; and him that cometh to me I will in no wise
cast out.' (John 6:37) 'I came not to call the righteous, but sinners
to repentance.' (Mark 2:17) 'This is a faithful saying, and worthy
of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save
sinners; of whom I am chief.' (1 Tim 1:15)
But, I say again, who will propound God for his end that knows him
not, that knows him not aright? yea, that knows him not, to be worth
being propounded as my end in coming to Jesus Christ; and he that
thus knows him must know him to be above all, best of all, and him
in whom the soul shall find that content, that bliss, that glory
and happiness that can by no means be found elsewhere. And, I
say, if this be not found in God, the soul will never propound him
to itself as the only, highest, and ultimate end in its coming to
Jesus Christ. But it will propound something else, even what it
shall imagine to be the best good; perhaps heaven, perhaps ease
from guilt, perhaps to be kept out of hell, or the like. I do not
say but a man may propound all these to himself, in his coming
to Jesus Christ; but if he propound these as his ultimate end, as
the chiefest good that he seeks; if the presence and enjoyment of
God, of God's glorious majesty, be not his chief design, he is not
concerned in the salvation that is propounded in our text--'He is
able,' and so will 'save to the uttermost them that come unto God
by him.'
What is heaven without God? what is ease without the peace and
enjoyment of God? what is deliverance from hell without the enjoyment
of God? The propounding, therefore, these, and only these, to thyself
for thy happiness in thy coming to Jesus Christ is a proposal not
a hair's breadth higher than what a man without grace can propound.
What or who is he that would not go to heaven? What or who is he
that would not also have ease from the guilt of sin? And where is
the man that chooseth to go to hell? But many there be that cannot
abide God; no, they like not to go to heaven, because God is
there. If the devil had a heaven to bestow upon men, a vicious and
a beastly heaven, if it be lawful thus to speak, I durst pawn my
soul upon it, were it a thousand times better than it is, that,
upon a bare invitation, the foul fiend would have twenty to God's
one. They, I say, cannot abide God; nay, for all, the devil has
nothing but a hell for them; yet how thick men go to him, but how
thinly to God Almighty. The nature of God lieth cross to the lusts
of men. A holy God, a glorious holy God, an infinitely holy God,
this spoils all. But to the soul that is awakened, and that is made
to see things as they are; to him God is what he is in himself,
the blessed, the highest, the only eternal good, and he without the
enjoyment of whom all things would sound but emptily in the ears
of that soul.
Now, then, I advise thee that hast a mind to come to God by Christ,
that thou seek the knowledge of God--'If thou seekest wisdom as
silver, and searchest for her as for hid treasures, then shalt thou
understand the fear of the Lord, and find the knowledge of God.'
(Prov 2:4,5) And to encourage thee yet further, he is so desirous
of communion with men, that he pardoneth sins for that. Hence
he is called not only loving, but love. 'God is love; and he that
dwelleth in love dwelleth in God, and God in him.' (1 John 4:16)
And, I say, thou that art for coming to God by Christ must know
this, and be well assured of this, or thou wilt never come to God
by him.
What of the glory of God shall be put upon them that do indeed
come to him will also help in this spiritual journey, if it be well
considered by thee. But, perhaps, terror and unbelief will suffer
thee to consider but little of that. However, the things afore-mentioned
will be goads, and will serve to prick thee forward; and if they
do so, they will be God's great blessing unto thee, and that for
which thou wilt give him thy thanks for ever. (Eccl 12:10,11)
Second, I shall now come to the second man mentioned; to wit, the
man that is turning back from his backsliding, and speak something
also about his coming again to God by Christ.
This man has the second time also had a proof of God's goodness
in his Christ unto him, a proof which the standing Christian has
not--I would not tempt him that stands to fall; but the good that
a returning backslider has received at God's hands, and at the hand
of Christ, is a double good, he has been converted twice, fetched
from the world, and from the devil, and from himself twice; oh,
grace! and has been made to know the stability of God's covenant,
the unchangeableness of God's mind, the sure and lasting truth
of his promise in Christ, and of the sufficiency of the merits of
Christ, over and over.
Third, I come now to the third man--to wit, to the sincere and
upright man that cometh to God by Christ. And although this may,
in some sense, be applicable to the two former, for his coming is
not worthy to be counted coming to God, that is, not in sincerity
and uprightness, yet by such an one I now mean, one that has been
called to the faith, and that has in some good measure of sincerity
and uprightness therein abode with God.
1. He then comes to God with that access and godly boldness that
is only proper to such as himself, that is, to them that walk with
God. (Rom 5:2) Thus every one that shall be saved doth not do;
thus every one that shall be saved cannot do--to instance the two
spoken of before.
4. These good men come to God upon other accounts also; for so it
is that they have many concerns with God.
(2.) They come to God by Christ for the weakening of their lusts
and corruptions; for they are a sore, yea, a plague to a truly
sanctified soul. Those, to be rid of which, if it might be, a godly
man chooseth rather to die than to live. This David did mean when
he cried. 'Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right
spirit within me,' (Psa 51:10); and Paul, when he cried out, 'O
wretched man that I am, who shall deliver me from the body of this
death?' (Rom 7:24)
(3.) They come to God by Christ for the renewing and strengthening
of their graces. The graces that the godly have received are, and
they feel they are, subject to decay; yea, they cannot live without
a continual supply of grace. This is the meaning of that, 'Let us
have grace,' and, 'Let us therefore come boldly unto the throne of
grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of
need.' (Heb 4:16)
(5.) They come to God by Christ for a blessing upon that means of
grace which God has afforded for the succour of the soul, and the
building of it up in the faith; knowing that as the means, so a
blessing upon it, is from God. (2 Thess 3:1) And for this they have
encouragement, because God has said, 'I will abundantly bless her
provision: I will satisfy her poor with bread.' (Psa 132:15)
[Concern for the church and others.]--(1.) This man also comes to
God to beseech him for the flourishing of Christ's kingdom, which he
knows will never be until Antichrist is dead, and till the Spirit
be more plentifully poured upon us from on high. Therefore he also
cries to God for the downfall of the first, and for the pouring
out of the other.
(2.) He comes to God for the hastening the gathering in of his elect;
for it is an affliction to him to think that so many of those for
whom Christ died should be still in a posture of hostility against
him. (Psa 122:6)
(4.) He comes to God to pray for magistrates, and that God would
make speed to set them all to that work that is so desirable to his
church--that is, to 'hate the whore,' 'to eat her flesh,' to 'make
her desolate,' 'and burn her with fire.' (1 Tim 2:1, Rev 17:16)
(5.) He comes to God to beg that he would hasten that great and
notable day, the day of the coming of our Lord Jesus, for he knows
that Christ will never be exalted as he must be till then; yea, he
also knows that God's church will never be as she would, and shall,
till then. (Rev 22:20)
(6.) But the main meaning, if I may so call it, of this high text
is this, that they that come to God by him--that is, by Christ, are
those that come by Christ to God to enjoy him by faith and spirit
here, and by open vision and unspeakable possession of him in the
next world. This is the great design of the soul in its coming to
God by Jesus Christ, and it comes to him by Jesus Christ because
it dares not come by itself, and because God himself has made him
the way, the new and living way. Here, as I said, the Father meets
with that which pleaseth him, and the soul with that which saveth
her. Here is righteousness and merits to spare, even righteousness
that can justify the ungodly. Here is always, how empty soever we
be, a fullness of merit always presented to God by Christ for my
obtaining of that which at any time I want, whether wisdom, grace,
Spirit, or any good thing soever; only, since I was upon this
subject, I thought a little to touch upon things in this order, for
the enlarging of thy thoughts, for the conviction of thy spirit,
for the stirring of thee up to God, and for the showing of thee
the good signs of grace where it is, where is abused, and where
any are seeking after it.
And now I come to draw some inferences from this point also, as I
have already done from those going before it. You see that I have
now been speaking to you of the man that cometh to God, both with
respect to the way he comes, as also with respect to the manner of
spirit in which he comes; and hence I may well infer,
1. For that he now seeketh and intermeddleth with all wisdom. He has
chosen to be concerned with the very head and fountain of wisdom;
for Christ is the wisdom of God, and the way to the Father by Christ,
is the greatest of mysteries; and to choose to walk in that way,
the fruits of the most sage advice; wherefore he is not a fool that
thus concerns himself. (Prov 18:1, 1 Cor 1)
Was the unjust steward a fool in providing for himself for hereafter?
for providing friends to receive him to harbour when others should
turn him out of their doors? (Luke 16:8,9) No more is he that gets
another house for his harbour before death shall turn him out of
doors here.
(1.) Then he is a man concerned for his soul, for his immortal soul.
The soul is a thing, though of most worth, least minded by most.
The souls of most lie waste while all other things are enclosed.
But this man has got it by the end, that his soul is of more value
than the world, wherefore he is concerned for his soul. Soul concerns
are concerns of the highest nature, and concerns that arise from
thoughts most deep and ponderous. He never yet knew what belonged
to great and deep thoughts that is a stranger to soul concerns.
Now the man that comes to God by Christ, is a man that is engaged
in soul concerns.
(1.) A false faith has done great things; it has made men believe
lies, plead for them, and stand to them, to the damnation of their
souls. 'God shall send them strong delusion, that they should
believe a lie,' to their damnation. (2 Thess 2:11,12) Hence it is
said, men make lies 'their refuge.' Why? Because they 'trust in
a lie.' (Jer 28:15) A lie, if believed, if a man has faith in it,
it will do great things, because faith is of a forcible quality.
Suppose thyself to be twenty miles from home, and there some man
comes and possesses thee that thy house, thy wife and children,
are all burned with the fire. If thou believest it, though indeed
there should be nothing of truth in what thou hast heard, yet will
this lie 'drink up thy spirit,' even as if the tidings were true.
How many are there in the world whose heart Satan hath filled with
a belief that their state and condition for another world is good?
and these are made to live by lying hope that all shall be well
with them, and so are kept from seeking for that which will make
them happy indeed. Man is naturally apt and willing to be deceived,
and therefore a groundless faith is the more taking and forcible.
Fancy will help to confirm a false faith, and so will conceit and
idleness of spirit. There is also in man a willingness to take things
upon trust, without searching into the ground and reason of them.
Nor will Satan be behind hand to prompt and encourage to thy believing
of a lie, for that he knows will be a means to bring thee to that
end to which he greatly desireth thou shouldst come. Wherefore let
men beware, and, oh, that they would, of a false and lying faith!
Shall God speak to man's soul, and shall not man believe? Shall
man believe what God says, and nothing at all regard it? It cannot
be. 'Faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God.' And
we know that when faith is come, it purifies the heart of what is
opposite to God, and the salvation of the soul.
So, then, those men that are at ease in a sinful course, or that
come not to God by Christ, they are such as have no faith, and must
therefore perish with the vile and unbelievers. (Rev 21:8)
This therefore further evidences that they that come not, have no
faith, are not believers, belong not to the household of faith,
and must perish--'For he that believes not, shall be damned.'
1. That is the world which God commendeth, but this that that
he slighteth and contemneth. (2 Thess 1:5,6) Hence that is called
the kingdom of God, but this an 'evil world.' (Gal 1:4) Now let
us conclude, that since God made both, he is able to judge which
of the two are best; yea, best able so to judge thereof. I choose
the rather to refer you to the judgment of God in this matter, for
should I put you upon asking of him as to this, that is, coming to
God by Christ, perhaps you would say, he is as little able to give
an account of this matter as yourselves. But I hope you think God
knows, and therefore I refer you to the judgment of God, which you
have in the Scriptures of truth--'Heaven is his throne, and the
earth is his footstool.' I hope you will say here is some difference.
The Lord is the God of that, the devil the god and prince of this.
Thus also it appears there is some difference between them.
2. That world, and those that are counted worthy of it, shall all
be everlasting; but so shall not this, nor the inhabiters of it.
The earth with the works thereof shall be burned up, and the men
that are of it shall die in like manner. (2 Peter 3) 'But Israel
shall be saved in the Lord with an everlasting salvation: ye shall
not be ashamed nor confounded world without end.' (Isa 45:17) This
world, with the lovers of it, will end in a burning hell; but the
world to come fadeth not away. (1 Peter 1:3,4)
3. The world that we are now in, has its best comforts mixed either
with crosses or curses; but that to come with neither. There shall
be no more curse: and as for crosses, all tears shall be wiped
from the eyes of them that dwell there. There will be nothing but
ravishing pleasures, and holy; there will be no cessation of joys,
nor any speck of pollution. 'In thy presence is fullness of joy,
at thy right hand there are pleasures for evermore.' (Psa 16:11)
4. There men shall be made like angels, 'neither can they die any
more.' (Luke 20:35,36) There shall they behold the face of God and
his Son, and swim in the enjoyment of them for ever.
5. There men shall see themselves beyond all misery, and shall
know that it will be utterly impossible that either anything like
sorrow, or grief, or sickness, or discontent, should touch them
more.
6. There men shall be rewarded of God for what they have done
and suffered according to his will for his sake; there they shall
eat and drink their comforts, and wear them to their everlasting
consolation.
I know the wise men of this world will scorn one should think of
them that they are mad; but verily it is so, the more wise for this
world, the more fool in God's matters; and the more obstinately
they stand in their way, the more mad. When Solomon gave himself to
backsliding, he saith he gave himself to folly and madness. (Eccl
1:17, 2:12) And when he went about to search out what man is since
the fall, he went about to search out foolishness and madness.
(Eccl 7:25-29) And is it not said, that when the Jews were angry
with Jesus for that he did good on the Sabbath, that that anger
did flow from their being filled with madness? Doth not Paul also,
while he opposed himself against Christ, the gospel, and professors
thereof, plainly tell us that he did it even from the highest pitch
of madness? 'And being exceedingly mad against them, I persecuted
them even unto strange cities.' (Acts 26:11) Now if it is exceeding
madness to do thus, how many at this day must be counted exceeding
mad, who yet count themselves the only sober men? They oppose
themselves, they stand in their own light, they are against their
own happiness, they cherish and nourish cockatrices in their own
bosoms; they choose to themselves those paths which have written
upon them in large characters, These are the ways of death and
damnation. They are offended with them that endeavour to pull them
out of their ditch, and choose rather to lie and die there than to
go to God by Christ that they may be saved from wrath through him;
yea, so mad are they, that they count the most sober, the most
godly, the most holy man, the mad one; the more earnest for life,
the more mad; the more in the Spirit, the more mad; the more desirous
to promote the salvation of others, the more mad. But is not this
a sign of madness, of madness unto perfection? And yet thus mad are
many, and mad are all they that while it is called to-day, while
their door is open, and while the golden sceptre of the golden
grace of the blessed God is held forth, stand in their own light,
and come not to God by Christ. (John 10:20, Acts 26:24) That is
the fourth inference.
Fifth, A fifth inference that I gather from this text is, that the
end that God will make with men will be according as they come or
come not to God by Christ. They that come to God by Christ have
taken shelter and have hid themselves; but they that come not to
God by Christ lay themselves open to the windy storm and tempest
that will be in that day. And the wind then will be high, and the
tempest strong, that will blow upon them that shall be found in
themselves; 'Our God shall come, and shall not keep silence: a fire
shall devour before him, and it shall be very tempestuous round
about him. He shall call to the heavens from above, and to the
earth, that he may judge his people.' (Psa 50:3,4) And now, what
will be found in that day to be the portion of them that in this
day do not come to God by Christ? None knows but God, with whom
the reward of unbelievers is.
But writing and preaching is in vain as to such; let men say what
they will, what they can, to persuade to come, to dissuade from
neglecting to come, they are resolved not to stir. They will try
if God will be so faithful to himself and to his Word, as to dare
to condemn them to hell fire that have refused to hear and comply
with the voice of him that speaketh from heaven.
But what a surprise will it be to them that now have come to God
by Christ to see themselves in heaven indeed, saved indeed, and
possessed of everlasting life indeed. For alas! what is faith to
possession? Faith that is mixed with many fears, that is opposed with
many assaults, and that seems sometimes to be quite extinguished;
I say, what is that to a seeing of myself in heaven? Hence it is
said, that he shall then come to be admired in them that now believe,
because they did here believe the testimony; then they shall admire
that it was their lot to believe when they were in the world. (2
Thess 1:10) They shall also admire to think, to see, and behold,
what believing has brought them to, while the rest, for refusing to
come to God by Christ, drink their tears mixed with burning brimstone.
Then will their hearts and mouths be full of, 'Lord, Lord, open
unto us.' But the answer will be, Ye shut me out of doors; 'I was
a stranger, and ye took me not in'; besides, you refused to come
to my Father by me, wherefore now you must go from my Father by
me. (Matt 25)
Now they will bless those whom formerly they have despised, and
commend those they once contemned. Now would the rich man willingly
change places with poor Lazarus, though he preferred his own
condition before his in the world. The day of judgment will bring
the worst to rights in their opinions; they will not be capable
of misapprehending any more. They will never after that day put
bitter for sweet, or darkness for light, or evil for good any more.
Their madness will now be gone. Hell will be the unbeliever's bedlam
house, and there God will tame them as to all those bedlam tricks
and pranks which they played in this world, but not at all to
their profit nor advantage; the gulf that God has placed and fixed
betwixt heaven and hell will spoil all as to that. (Luke 16:23-26)
But what a joy will it be to the truly godly to think now that they
are come to God by Christ! It was their mercy to begin to come,
it was their happiness that they continued coming; but it is their
glory that they are come, that they are come to God by Christ.
To God! why, he is all! all that is good, essentially good, and
eternally good. To God! the infinite ocean of good. To God, in
friendly-wise, by the means of reconciliation; for the other now
will be come to him to receive his anger, because they come not
to him by Jesus Christ. Oh! that I could imagine; oh! that I could
think, that I might write more effectually to thee of the happy
estate of them that come to God by Christ.
But thus have I passed through the three former things, namely,
1. That of the intercession of Christ. 2. That of the benefit of
intercession. 3. That of the persons that are interested in this
intercession.
Wherefore now I come to the fourth and last head, and that is, TO
SHOW YOU THE CERTAINTY OF THEIR REAPING THE BENEFIT OF HIS INTERCESSION.
'Wherefore he is able also to save them to the uttermost that come
unto God by him, seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for
them.'
1. We will speak to the first, and for the better setting of it forth
we will show what life it is of which the apostle here speaks; and
then how, as to life, it comes to be so advantageous, both with
respect to his office of priesthood and us.
So, then, the life that he now hath is a life once laid down as the
price of our redemption; a life obtained and taken to him again as
the effect of the merit that was in the laying down thereof; a life
by the virtue of which death, and sin, and the curse is overcome;
and so a life that is above them for ever. This is the life that
he liveth--to wit, this meriting, purchasing, victorious life--and
that he improveth while he ever so lives to make intercession for
us.
This life, then, is a continual plea and argument with God for them
that come to him by Christ, should he make no other intercession,
but only show to God that he liveth; because his thus living saith,
that he has satisfied for the sins of them that come unto God by
him. It testifies, moreover, that those--to wit, death, the grave,
and hell--are overcome by him for them; because indeed he liveth,
and hath their keys. But now, add to life, to a life meritorious,
intercession, or an urging of this meritorious life by way of
prayer for his, and against all those that seek to destroy them,
since they themselves also have been already overcome by his death,
and what an encouraging consideration is here for all them that
come to God by him, to hope for life eternal. But,
His cause; what is his cause? but that the death that he died when
he was in the world was and is of merit sufficient to secure all
those from hell, or, as the text has it, to save them that come
unto God by him, to save them to the uttermost. Now, if this cause
be faulty, why doth he live? yea, he liveth by the power of God,
by the power of God towards us; or with a respect to our welfare,
for he liveth to make intercession, intercession against Satan our
accuser, for us. (2 Cor 13:4) Besides, he liveth before God, and
to God, and that after he had given his life a ransom for us. What
can follow more clearly from this, but that amends were made by him
for those souls for whose sins he suffered upon the tree? Wherefore,
since his Father has given him his life and favour, and that after
he died for our sins, it cannot be thought but that the life he
now liveth, is a life that he received as the effect of the merit
of his passion for us.
God is just, and yet Christ liveth, and yet Christ liveth in heaven!
God is just, and yet Christ our passover liveth there, do what our
foes can to the contrary!
And this note, by the way, that though the design of Satan against
us, in his labouring continually to accuse us to God, and to prevail
against our salvation, seems to terminate here, yet indeed it is
also laid against the very life of Christ, and that his priesthood
might be utterly overthrown; and, in conclusion, that God also
might be found unjust in receiving of such whose sins have not
been satisfied for, and so whose souls are yet under the power of
the devil. For he that objects against him for whom Christ intercedes,
objects against Christ and his merits; and he that objects against
Christ's intercession, objects against God, who has made him a
priest for ever. Behold you, therefore, how the cause of God, of
Christ, and of the souls that come to God by him are interwoven;
they are all wrapt up in one bottom. Mischief one, and you mischief
all; overthrow that soul, and you overthrow his intercessor; and
overthrow him, and you overthrow even him that made him a priest
for ever. For the text is without restriction: 'He is able to save
to the uttermost them that come unto God by him.' He saith not,
now and then one, or sinners of an inferior rank in sin, but them
that come to God by him, how great soever their transgressions are,
as is clear in that it addeth this clause, 'to the uttermost.' 'He
is able to save them to the uttermost.' But if he were not, why did
the King send, yea, come and loose him, and let him go free; yea,
admit him into his presence; yea, make him Lord over all his people,
and deliver all things into his hand?
Now if he lives, and outlives all, and if his intercession has the
casting voice, since also he pleadeth in his prayers a sufficient
merit before a just God, against a lying, malicious, clamorous,
and envious adversary, he must needs carry the cause, the cause for
himself and his people, to the glory of God and their salvation.
So, then, his life and intercession must prevail, there can be no
withstanding of it. Is not this, then, a demonstration clear as
the sun, that they that come to God by him shall be saved, seeing
he ever liveth to make intercession for them?
And that you may see it yet more for your comfort, God did, at
Christ's resurrection, to show what a price he set upon his blood,
bid him ask of him the heathen, and he would give him the uttermost
parts of the earth for his possession. (Psa 2:8) His blood, then,
has value enough in it to ground intercession upon; yea, there is
more worth in it than Christ will plead or improve for men by way
of intercession. I do not at all doubt but that there is virtue
enough in the blood of Christ, would God Almighty so apply it, to
save the souls of the whole world. But it is the blood of Christ,
his own blood; and he may do what he will with his own. It is also
the blood of God, and he also may restrain its merits, or apply
it as he sees good. But the coming soul, he shall find and feel
the virtue thereof, even the soul that comes to God by Christ;
for he is the man concerned in its worth, and he ever liveth to
make intercession for him. Now, seeing the intercession of Christ
is grounded upon a covenant, an oath, a life, and also upon the
validity of his merits, it must of necessity be prevalent, and so
drive down all opposition before it. This, therefore, is the last
part of the text, and that which demonstrateth that he that comes
to God by Christ shall be saved, seeing 'he ever liveth to make
intercession for him.'
I have now done what I intend upon this subject when I have drawn
a few inferences from this also.
First, then, hence I infer that the souls saved by Christ are in
themselves in a most deplorable condition. Oh, what ado, as I may
say, is here before one sinner can be eternally saved! Christ must
die; but that is not all; the Spirit of grace must be given to
us; but that is not all;--but Christ must also ever live to make
intercession for us. And as he doth this for all, so he doth it for
each one. He interceded for me, before I was born, that I might in
time, at the set time, come into being. After that, he also made
intercession for me, that I might be kept from hell in the time of
my unregenerate state, until the time of my call and conversion.
Yet again, he then intercedes that the work now begun in my soul
may be perfected, not only to the day of my dissolution, but unto
the day of Christ; that is, until he comes to judgment. (Phil 1:6)
So that, as he began to save me before I had being, so he will go
on to save me when
I am dead and gone, and will never leave off to save me until he
has set me before his face for ever.
But, I say, what a deplorable condition has our sin put us into,
that there must be all this ado to save us. Oh, how hardly is sin
got out of the soul when once it is in! Blood takes away the guilt;
inherent grace weakens the filth; but the grave is the place, at
the mouth of which, sin, as to the being of sin, and the saved,
must have a perfect and final parting. (Isa 38:10) Not that the
grave of itself is of a sin-purging quality, but God will follow
Satan home to his own door; for the grave is the door or gate of
hell, and will there, where the devil thought to have swallowed
us up, even there by the power of his mercy make us, at our coming
thence, shine like the sun, and look like angels. Christ, all this
while, ever liveth to make intercession for us.
1. Not only by his first attempt upon our first parents, but behold,
when the Deliverer came into the world, how he roared. He sought
his death while he was an infant; he hated him in his cradle; he
persecuted him while he was but a bud and blossom. (Matt 2) When
he was come to riper years, and began to manifest his glory, yet,
lest the world should be taken with him, how politicly did this
old serpent, called the Devil and Satan, work? He possessed people
that he had a devil, and was mad, and a deceiver; that he wrought
his miracles by magic art and by the devil; that the prophets spake
nothing of him, and that he sought to overthrow the government
which was God's ordinance. And, not being contented with all this,
he pursued him to the death, and could never rest until he had
spilt his blood upon the ground like water. Yea, so insatiable was
his malice, that he set the soldiers to forge lies about him to the
denial of his resurrection, and so managed that matter that what
they said has become a stumblingblock to the Jews to this very day.
(John 10:20, 7:12, Matt 9:34, John 7:52, Luke 23:2, Matt 28:11-15)
2. When he was ascended to God, and so was out of his reach, yet
how busily went he about to make war with his people. (Rev 12)
Yea, what horrors and terrors, what troubles and temptations, has
God's church met with from that day till now! Nor is he content
with persecutions and general troubles; but oh! how doth he haunt
the spirits of the Christians with blasphemies and troubles, with
darkness and frightful fears; sometimes to their distraction, and
often to the filling the church with outcries.
3. Yet his malice is in the pursuit, and now his boldness will try
what it can do with God, either to tempt him to reject his Son's
mediation, or to reject them that come to God by him for mercy. And
this is one cause among many why 'he ever liveth to make intercession
for them that come to God by him.'
For do but consider what sin is from which they must be saved; do
but consider what the devil and the curse is from which they must
be saved; and it will easily be concluded by you that it is he that
full rightly deserveth to have his name called Wonderful, and his
love such as verily passeth knowledge.
Consider, again, by what means these souls are saved, even with
the loss of his life, and, together with it, the loss of the light
of his Father's face. I pass by here and forbear to speak of the
matchless contradiction of sinners which he endured against himself,
which could not but be a great grief, or, as himself doth word it, a
breaking of heart unto him; but all this did not, could not, hinder.
Join to all this, his everlasting intercession for us, and the
effectual management thereof with God for us; and, withal, the
infinite number of times that we by sin provoke him to spue us out
of his mouth, instead of interceding for us, and the many times also
that his intercession is repeated by the repeating of our faults,
and this love still passes knowledge, and is by us to be wondered
at. What did, or what doth, the Lord Jesus see in us to be at all
this care, and pains, and cost to save us? What will he get of us
by the bargain but a small pittance of thanks and love? for so it
is, and ever will be, when compared with his matchless and unspeakable
love and kindness towards us.
Oh, how unworthy are we of this love! How little do we think of it!
But, most of all, the angels may be astonished to see how little
we are affected with that of which we pretend to know. But neither
can this prevail with him to put us out of the scroll in which all
the names of them are written for whom he doth make intercession
to God. Let us cry, Grace, grace unto it.
Fourth, Hence again I infer that they shall be saved that come to
God by Christ, when the devil and sin have done what they can to
hinder it. This is clear, for that the strife is now, who shall
be lord of all, whether Satan, the prince of this world, or Christ
Jesus, the Son of God; or which can lay the best claim to God's
elect, he that produceth their sins against them, or he that laid
down his heart's blood a price of redemption for them. Who, then,
shall condemn when Christ has died, and doth also make intercession?
Stand still, angels, and behold how the Father divideth his Son 'a
portion with the great'; and how he divideth 'the spoil with the
strong: because he hath poured out his soul unto death, and was
numbered with the transgressors, and bare the sin of many, and made
intercession for the transgressors.' (Isa 53:12) The grace of God
and blood of Christ will, before the end of the world, make brave
work among the sons of men! They shall come to a wonderment to God
by Christ, and be saved by a wonderment for Christ's sake--'Behold
these shall come from far: and lo, these from the north and from
the west, and these from the land of Sinim.' (Isa 49:12)
Behold, these, and these, and these shall come, and lo, these,
and these, and these from the land of Sinim! This is to denote the
abundance that shall come in to God by Christ towards the latter end
of the world--namely, when Antichrist is gone to bed in the sides
of the pit's mouth; then shall nations come in and be saved, and
shall walk in the light of the Lord.17 But, I say, what encouragement
would there be for sinners thus to do if that the Lord Jesus by
his intercession were not able to save 'even to the uttermost' them
that come unto God by him.
Sixth, Hence also I infer that Christ ought to bear and wear the
glory of our salvation for ever. He has done it, he has wrought it
out. 'Give unto the Lord, O ye kindreds of the people, give unto the
Lord glory and strength.' Do not sacrifice to your own inventions,
do not give glory to the work of your own hands. Your reformations,
your works, your good deeds, and all the glory of your doing,
cast them at the feet of this High Priest, and confess that glory
belongs unto him--'Worthy is the Lamb that was slain, to receive
power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honour, and
glory, and blessing.' (Rev 5:12) 'And they shall hang upon him all
the glory of his Father's house, and offspring and the issue, all
vessels of small quantity, from the vessels of cups, even to all
the vessels of flagons.' (Isa 22:24) Oh! the work of our redemption
by Christ is such as wanteth not provocation to us to bless,
and praise, and glorify Jesus Christ. Saints, set to the work and
glorify him in your body and in your souls; him who has bought us
with a price, and glorify God and the Father by him. (1 Cor 6:20)
THE USE.
USE FIRST, Let me exhort you to the study of this, as of other the
truths of our Lord Jesus Christ. The priestly office of Christ is
the first and great thing that is presented to us in the gospel--namely,
how that he died for our sins, and gave himself to the cross, that
the blessing of Abraham might come upon us through him. (1 Cor
15:1-6, Gal 3:13-16) But now because this priestly office of his
is divided into two parts, and because one of them--to wit, this
of his intercession--is to be accomplished for us within the veil,
therefore, as we say among men, out of sight out of mind, he is
too much as to this forgotten by us. We satisfy ourselves with the
slaying of the sacrifice; we look not enough after our Aaron as he
goes into the holiest, there to sprinkle the mercy-seat with blood
upon our account. God forbid that the least syllable of what I say
should be intended by me, or construed by others, as if I sought
to diminish the price paid by Christ for our redemption in this
world. But since his dying is his laying down his price, and his
intercession the urging and managing the worthiness of it in the
presence of God against Satan, there is glory to be found therein,
and we should look after him into the holy place. The second part
of the work of the high priests under the law, had great glory and
sanctity put upon it; forasmuch as the holy garments were provided
for him to officiate in within the veil, also it as there that
the altar stood on which he offered incense; also there was the
mercy-seat and the cherubims of glory, which were figures of the
angels, that love to be continually looking and prying into the
management of this second part of the priesthood of Christ in the
presence of God; for although themselves are not the persons so
immediately concerned therein as we, yet the management of it, I
say, is with so much grace, and glory, and wisdom, and effectualness,
that it is a heaven to the angels to see it. Oh! to enjoy the
odorous scent, and sweet memorial, the heart-refreshing perfumes,
that ascend continually from the mercy-seat to the 'above' where
God is; and also to behold how effectual it is to the end for which
it is designed, is glorious; and he that is not somewhat let into
this by the grace of God, there is a great thing lacking to his
faith, and he misseth of many a sweet bit that he might otherwise
enjoy. Wherefore, I say, be exhorted to the study of this part
of Christ's work in the managing of our salvation for us. And the
ceremonies of the law may be a great help to you as to this, for
though they be out of use now as to practice, yet the signification
of them is rich, and that from which many gospellers18 have got
much. Wherefore I advise that you read the five books of Moses
often; yea, read, and read again, and do not despair of help to
understand something of the will and mind of God therein, though
you think they are fast locked up from you. Neither trouble your
heads though you have not commentaries and expositions; pray and
read, and read and pray; for a little from God is better than a
great deal from men. Also, what is from men is uncertain, and is
often lost and tumbled over and over by men; but what is from God
is fixed as a nail in a sure place. I know there are [peculiar]
times of temptation, but I speak now as to the common course of
Christianity. There is nothing that so abides with us as what we
receive from God; and the reason why Christians at this day are
at such a loss as to some things is, because they are content with
what come from men's mouths, without searching and kneeling before
God, to know of him the truth of things. Things that we receive
at God's hand come to us as things from the minting house, though
old in themselves, yet new to us. Old truths are always new to us
if they come to us with the smell of heaven upon them. I speak
not this because I would have people despise their ministers, but
to show that there is nowadays so much idleness among professors
as hinders them from a diligent search after things, and makes them
take up short of that that is sealed by the Spirit of testimony
to the conscience. Witness the great decays at this day among us,
and that strange revolting from truth once professed by us.
USE SECOND, As I would press you to an earnest study and search after
this great truth, so I would press you to a diligent improvement
of it to yourselves and to others. To know truth for knowledge
sake is short of a gracious disposition of soul; and to communicate
truth out of a desire of praise and vain-glory for so doing is
also a swerving from godly simplicity; but to improve what I know
for the good of myself and others is true Christianity indeed. Now
truths received may be improved with respect to myself and others,
and that several ways--
Lastly, Let this doctrine give thee boldness to come to God. Shall
Jesus Christ be interceding in heaven? Oh, then, be thou a praying
man on earth; yea, take courage to pray. Think thus with thyself--I
go to God, to God, before whose throne the Lord Jesus is ready to
hand my petitions to him; yea, 'he ever lives to make intercession
for me.' This is a great encouragement to come to God by prayers
and supplications for ourselves, and by intercessions for our
families, our neighbours, and enemies. Farewell.
FOOTNOTES:
4 What can withstand the will of Christ, that all his should
behold and partake of his glory? He is the Captain of salvation,
has subdued all our enemies for us, and will destroy their power in
us, and, ere long, put our last enemy, death, under his feet.--Mason.
13 Nothing can be more solemn and awful than are these warnings. O
that we may feel the spurs, the condemning curse of a broken law,
and a sense of the jaws of hell, urging us on in coming to, and
cleaving to Christ.--Ed.
14
17 Bunyan saw that time very far off, which much more nearly
approaches us: when Antichrist will find a grave in the side of
the pit's mouth; when no national barriers, either Pagan, Popish,
or Protestant, shall exist to prevent the glorious spread of pure
and vital Christianity. And, however abundant that harvest of souls
shall be, there will prove a superabundance of grace in Christ to
supply all their wants. He was, is now, and ever will be, 'a complete
Saviour.'--Ed.
***
OR,
London, 1681.
"ALL THAT THE FATHER GIVETH ME SHALL COME TO ME; AND HIM THAT COMETH
TO ME I WILL IN NO WISE CAST OUT."--JOHN 6:37.
A little before, in this chapter, you may read that the Lord Jesus
walked on the sea to go to Capernaum, having sent his disciples
before in a ship, but the wind was contrary; by which means the
ship was hindered in her passage. Now, about the fourth watch of
the night, Jesus came walking upon the sea, and overtook them; at
the sight of whom they were afraid.
Note, When providences are black and terrible to God's people, the
Lord Jesus shows himself to them in wonderful manner; the which
sometimes they can as little bear, as they can the things that
were before terrible to them. They were afraid of the wind and the
water; they were also afraid of their Lord and Saviour, when he
appeared to them in that state.
Note, That the end of the appearing of the Lord Jesus unto his
people, though the manner of his appearing be never so terrible,
is to allay their fears and perplexities.
Then they received him into the ship, and immediately the ship was
at land whither it went.
Note, When Christ is absent from his people, they go on but slowly,
and with great difficulty; but when he joineth himself unto them,
oh! how fast they steer their course! how soon are they
at their journey's end! 1
The people now among whom he last preached, when they saw that both
Jesus was gone and his disciples, they also took shipping, and came
to Capernaum, seeking for Jesus. And when they had found him, they
wonderingly asked him, "Rabbi, when camest thou hither?" but the
Lord Jesus, slighting their compliment, answered, "Verily, verily,
ye seek me, not because ye saw the miracles, but because ye did
eat of the loaves, and were filled."
Note, A people may follow Christ far for base ends, as these went
after him beyond sea for loaves. A man's belly will carry him
a great way in religion; yea, a man's belly will make him venture
far for Christ.
Yet observe again, He doth not refuse to give, even to these, good
counsel: he bids them labour for the meat that endureth to eternal
life. Oh! how willingly would Jesus Christ have even those professors
that come to him with pretences only, come to him sincerely, that
they may be saved.
The text, you will find, is, after much more discourse with and about
this people, and it is uttered by the Lord Jesus as the conclusion
of the whole, and intimateth that, since they were professors in
pretence only, and therefore such as his soul could not delight
in, as such, that he would content himself with a remnant that his
Father had bestowed upon him. As who should say, I am not like to
be honoured in your salvation; but the Father hath bestowed upon
me a people, and they shall come to me in truth, and in them will
I be satisfied. The text, therefore, may be called Christ's repose;
in the fulfilling whereof he resteth himself content, after much
labour and many sermons spent, as it were, in vain. As he saith
by the prophet, "I have laboured in vain, I have spent my strength
for nought, and in vain" (Isa 49:4).
But as there he saith, "My judgment is with the LORD, and my work
with my God;" so in the text he saith, "All that the Father giveth
me shall come to me; and him that cometh to me I will in no wise
cast out." By these words, therefore, the Lord Jesus comforteth
himself under the consideration of the dissimulation of some
of his followers. He also thus betook himself to rest under the
consideration of the little effect that his ministry had in Capernaum,
Chorazin, and Bethsaida: "I thank thee, O Father," said he, "Lord
of heaven and earth, because thou has hid these things from the wise
and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes; even so, Father,
for so it seemed good in thy sight" (Matt 11:25; Luke 10:21).
The text, in the general, standeth of TWO PARTS, and hath special
respect to the Father and the Son; as also to their joint management
of the salvation of the people: "All that the Father giveth me
shall come to me; and him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast
out." The first part of the text, as is evident, respecteth the
Father and his gift; the other part the Son and his reception of
that gift.
SECOND, Next you have the Son's reception of this gift, and that showeth
itself in these particulars:--1. In his hearty acknowledgement of
it to be a gift: "The Father giveth me." 2. In his taking notice,
after a solemn manner, of all and every part of the gift: "All
that the Father giveth me." 3. In his resolution to bring them to
himself: "All that the Father giveth me shall come to me." 4. And
in his determining that not anything shall make him dislike them
in their coming: "And him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast
out."
"All that the Father giveth me." This word all, is often used in
Scripture, and is to be taken more largely, or more strictly, even
as the truth or argument, for the sake of which it is made use of,
will bear. Wherefore, that we may the better understand the mind of
Christ in the use of it here, we must consider, that it is limited
and restrained only to those that shall be saved, to wit, to those
that shall come to Christ; even to those whom he will "in no wise
cast out." Thus, also, the words all Israel, is sometimes to be
taken, although sometimes it is taken for the whole family of Jacob.
"And so all Israel shall be saved" (Rom 11:26). By all Israel here,
he intendeth not all of Israel, in the largest sense; "for they are
not all Israel which are of Israel;" "neither because they are of
the seed of Abraham, are they all children; but, In Isaac shall thy
seed be called. That is, they which are the children of the flesh,
these are not the children of God; but the children of the promise
are counted for the seed" (Rom 9:6-8).
First, [ALL cannot be intended in its largest sense.] That ALL that
are given to Christ, if you take the gift of the Father to him in
the largest sense, cannot be intended in the text, is evident--
1. Because, then, all the men, yea, all the things in the world,
must be saved. "All things," saith he, "are delivered unto me of my
Father" (Matt 11:27). This, I think, no rational man in the world
will conclude. Therefore, the gift intended in the text must be
restrained to some, to a gift that is given by way of speciality
by the Father to the Son.
2. It must not be taken for ALL, that in any sense are given by
the Father to him, because the Father hath given some, yea, many
to him, to be dashed in pieces by him. "Ask of me," said the Father
to him, "and I shall give thee the heathen for thine inheritance,
and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy possession." But what
must be done with them? must he save them all? No. "Thou shalt
break them with a rod of iron; thou shalt dash them in pieces like a
potter's vessel" (Psa 2). This method he useth not with them that
he saveth by his grace, but with those that himself and saints shall
rule over in justice and severity (Rev 2:26,27). Yet, as you see,
"they are given to him." Therefore, the gift intended in the text
must be restrained to some, to a gift that is given by way of
speciality by the Father to the Son.
3. Some are given to Christ, that he by them might bring about some
of his high and deep designs in the world. Thus Judas was given
to Christ, to wit, that by him, even as was determined before, he
might bring about his death, and so the salvation of his elect by
his blood. Yea, and Judas must so manage this business, as that
he must lose himself for ever in bringing it to pass. Therefore
the Lord Jesus, even in his losing of Judas, applies himself to
the judgment of his Father, if he had not in that thing done that
which was right, even in suffering of Judas so to bring about his
Master's death, as that he might, by so doing, bring about his own
eternal damnation also.
"Those," said he, "that thou gavest me, I have kept, and none of
them is lost, but the son of perdition; that the Scripture might be
fulfilled" (John 17:12). Let us, then, grant that Judas was given
to Christ, but not as others are given to him, not as those made
mention of in the text; for then he should have failed to have
been so received by Christ, and kept to eternal life. Indeed, he
was given to Christ; but he was given to him to lose him, in the
way that I have mentioned before; he was given to Christ, that he
by him might bring about his own death, as was before determined;
and that in the overthrow of him that did it. Yea, he must bring
about his own death, as was before determined, and that in the
overthrow of him that did it. Yea, he must bring about his dying
for us in the loss of the instrument that betrayed him, that he
might even fulfil the Scripture in his destruction, as well as in
the salvation of the rest. "And none of them is lost, but the son
of perdition; that the Scripture might be fulfilled."
Those, therefore, intended as the gift in the text, are those that
are given by covenant to the Son; those that in other places are
called "the elect," "the chosen," "the sheep," and "the children
of the promise," &c. These be they that the Father hath given to
Christ to keep them; those that Christ hath promised eternal life
unto; those to whom he hath given his word, and that he will have
with him in his kingdom to behold his glory.
"This is the Father's will which hath sent me, that of all which he
hath given me I should lose nothing, but should raise it up again
at the last day" (John 6:39). "And I give unto them eternal life;
and they shall never perish, neither shall any man pluck them out
of my hand. My Father which gave them me, is greater than all; and
no man is able to pluck them out of my Father's hand" (John 10:28).
"As thou hast given him power over all flesh, that he should give
eternal life to as many as thou hast given him. Thine they were,
and thou gavest them me, and they have kept thy word; I pray for
them: I pray not for the world, but for them which thou hast given
me; for they are thine. And all mine are thine, and thine are mine;
and I am glorified in them." "Keep through thine own name those
whom thou hast given me, that they may be one, as we are." "Father,
I will that they also, whom thou hast given me, be with me where I
am; that they may behold my glory, which thou hast given me: for thou
lovedst me before the foundation of the world" (John 17:1,6,9,10,24).
All these sentences are of the same import with the text; and the
alls and manies, those, they, &c., in these several sayings of
Christ, are the same with all the given in the text. "All that the
Father giveth."
So that, as I said before, the word ALL, as also other words, must
not be taken in such sort as our foolish fancies or groundless
opinions will prompt us to, but do admit of an enlargement or a
restriction, according to the true meaning and intent of the text.
We must therefore diligently consult the meaning of the text, by
comparing it with other the sayings of God; so shall we be better
able to find out the mind of the Lord, in the word which he has
given us to know it by.
[THE PERSON GIVING, THE FATHER.]
"All that the Father giveth." By this word "Father," Christ describeth
the person giving; by which we may learn several useful things.
First, That the Lord God, and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, is
concerned with the Son in the salvation of his people. True, his
acts, as to our salvation, are diverse from those of the Son; he
was not capable of doing that, or those things for us, as did the
Son; he died not, he spilt not blood for our redemption, as the
Son; but yet he hath a hand, a great hand, in our salvation too.
As Christ saith, "The Father himself loveth you," and his love is
manifest in choosing of us, in giving of us to his Son; yea, and
in giving his Son also to be a ransom for us. Hence he is called,
"The Father of mercies, and the God of all comfort." For here even
the Father hath himself found out, and made way for his grace to
come to us through the sides and the heart-blood of his well-beloved
Son (Col 1:12-14). The Father, therefore, is to be remembered and
adored, as one having a chief hand in the salvation of sinners. We
ought to give "thanks unto the Father, which hath made us meet to
be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light" (Col 1:12).
For "the Father sent the Son to be the Saviour of the world" (John
4:14). As also we see in the text, the "Father giveth" the sinner
to Christ to save him.
1. That though the act of giving among men doth admit of the time
past, or the time to come, and is to be spoken of with reference
to such time; yet with God it is not so. Things past, or things to
come, are always present with God, and with his Son Jesus Christ:
He "calleth those things which be not," that is, to us, "as though
they were" (Rom 4:17). And again, "Known unto God are all his works
from the beginning of the world." All things to God are present,
and so the gift of the Father to the Son, although to us, as is
manifest by the word, it is an act that is past (Acts 15:16).
2. Christ may express himself thus, to show, that the Father hath
not only given him this portion in the lump, before the world was,
but that those that he had so given, he will give him again; that
is, will bring them to him at the time of their conversion; for
the Father bringeth them to Christ (John 6:44). As it is said, "She
shall be brought unto the king in raiment of needle-work;" that
is, in the righteousness of Christ; for it is God that imputeth
that to those that are saved (Psa 45:14; 1 Cor 1). A man giveth
his daughter to such a man, first in order to marriage, and this
respects the time past, and he giveth her again at the day appointed
in marriage. And in this last sense, perhaps, the text may have a
meaning; that is, that all that the Father hath, before the world
was, given to Jesus Christ, he giveth them again to him in the day
of their espousals.
Things that are given among men, are ofttimes best at first; to wit,
when they are new; and the reason is, because all earthly things
wax old; but with Christ it is not so. This gift of the Father is
not old and deformed, and unpleasant in his eyes; and therefore to
him it is always new. When the Lord spake of giving the land of
Canaan to the Israelites, he saith not, that he had given, or would
give it to them, but thus: "The Lord thy God giveth thee--this good
land" (Deut 9:6). Not but that he had given it to them, while they
were in the loins of their fathers, hundreds of years before. Yet
he saith now he giveth it to them; as if they were now also in the
very act of taking possession, when as yet they were on the other
side Jordan. What then should be the meaning? Why, I take it to be
this. That the land should be to them always as new; as new as if
they were taking possession thereof but now. And so is the gift
of the Father, mentioned in the text, to the Son; it is always new,
as if it were always new.
"All that the Father giveth me." In these words you find mention
made of two persons, the Father and the Son; the Father giving,
and the Son receiving or accepting of this gift. This, then, in the
first place, clearly demonstrateth, that the Father and the Son,
though they, with the Holy Ghost, are one and the same eternal God;
yet, as to their personality, are distinct. The Father is one, the
Son is one, the Holy Spirit is one. But because there is in this
text mention made but of two of the three, therefore a word about
these two. The giver and receiver cannot be the same person in
a proper sense, in the same act of giving and receiving. He that
giveth, giveth not to himself, but to another; the Father giveth
not to the Father, to wit, to himself, but to the Son: the Son
receiveth not of the Son, to wit, of himself, but of the Father:
so when the Father giveth commandment, he giveth it not to himself,
but to another; as Christ saith, "He gave me a commandment" (John
12:49). So again, "I am one that bear witness of myself, and the
Father that sent me beareth witness of me" (John 8:18).
God gave them to Moses, that he might carry them in his bosom, that
he might show gentleness and patience towards them, under all the
provocations wherewith they would provoke him from that time till
he had brought them to their land; but he failed in the work;
he could not exercise it, because he had not that sufficiency of
patience towards them. But now it is said of the person speaking in
the text, "That he shall gather the lambs with his arm, and carry
them in his bosom, and shall gently lead those that are with young"
(Isa 40:11). Intimating, that this was one of the qualifications
that God looked for, and knew was in him, when he gave his elect
to him to save them.
Now these things thus concluded on do show us also the great and
wonderful love of the Father, in that he should choose out one
every way so well prepared for the work of man's salvation.
"All that the Father giveth me SHALL COME." In these last words
there is closely inserted an answer unto the Father's end in giving
of his elect to Jesus Christ. The Father's end was, that they might
come to him, and be saved by him; and that, says the Son, shall
be done; neither sin nor Satan, neither flesh nor world, neither
wisdom nor folly, shall hinder their coming to me. "They shall come
to me; and him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out."
But to speak more distinctly to the words, THEY "SHALL COME," two
things I would show you from these words--FIRST, What it is to come
to Christ. SECOND, What force there is in this promise, to make
them come to him.
Of the true coming to Christ, the four lepers were a famous semblance,
of whom you read, (2 Kings 7:3), &c. The famine in those days was
sore in the land, there was no bread for the people; and as for
that sustenance that was, which was asses' flesh and doves' dung,
that was only in Samaria, and of these the lepers had no share, for
they were thrust without the city. Well, now they sat in the gate
of the city, and hunger was, as I may say, making his last meal of
them; and being, therefore, half dead already, what do they think
of doing? Why, first they display the dismal colours of death before
each other's faces, and then resolve what to do, saying, "If we
say we will enter into the city, then famine is in the city, and we
shall die there: if we sit still here, we die also. Now, therefore,
come, let us fall unto the host of the Syrians: if they save us
alive, we shall live; if they kill us, we shall but die." Here,
now, was necessity at work, and this necessity drove them to go
thither for life, whither else they would never have gone for it.
Thus it is with them that in truth come to Jesus Christ. Death
is before them, they see it and feel it; he is feeding upon them,
and will eat them quite up, if they come not to Jesus Christ; and
therefore they come, even of necessity, being forced thereto by that
sense they have of their being utterly and everlastingly undone,
if they find not safety in him. These are they that will come.
Indeed, these are they that are invited to come. "Come unto me,
all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest"
(Matt 11:28).
Take two or three things to make this more plain; to wit, That
coming to Christ floweth from a sound sense of the absolute need
that a man hath of him, as afore.
Answ. My end is, that I might have life, and be saved by Jesus
Christ.
This is the objection; well, let me tell thee, that to come to Christ
for life, and to be saved, although at present thou hast no other
end, is a lawful and good coming to Jesus Christ. This is evident,
because Christ propoundeth life as the only argument to prevail
with sinners to come to him, and so also blameth them because they
come not to him for life. "And ye will not come to me, that ye might
have life" (John 5:40). Besides, there are many other scriptures
whereby he allureth sinners to come to him, in which he propoundeth
nothing to them but their safety. As, "whosoever believeth in him
should not perish;" he that believeth is "passed from death unto
life." "He that believeth--shall be saved." "He that believeth on
him is not condemned." And believing and coming are all one. So
that you see, to come to Christ for life, is a lawful coming and
good. In that he believeth, that he alone hath made atonement for
sin (Rom 2). And let me add over and above, that for a man to come
to Christ for life, though he comes to him for nothing else but
life, it is to give much honour to him.
5. Further, He that cometh to Jesus Christ for life, taketh part with
him against sin, and against the ragged and imperfect righteousness
of the world; yea, and against false Christs, and damnable errors,
that set themselves against the worthiness of his merits and
sufficiency. This is evident, for that such a soul singleth Christ
out from them all, as the only one that can save.
Thou, then, that art indeed the coming sinner, believest all this.
True, perhaps thou dost not believe with that full assurance, nor
hast thou leisure to take notice of thy faith as to these distinct
acts of it; but yet all this faith is in him coming to Christ for
life. And the faith that thus worketh, is the faith of the best
and purest kind; because this man comes alone as a sinner, and as
seeing that life is, and is to be had only in Jesus Christ.
1st. [Consider] that the cities of refuge were erected for those
that were dead in law, and that yet would live by grace; even for
those that were to fly thither for life from the avenger of blood
that pursueth after them. And it is worth your noting, that those
that were upon their flight thither, are in a peculiar manner called
the people of God: "Cast ye up, cast ye up," saith God; "prepare
the way; take up the stumblingblock out of the way of my people"
(Isa 57:14). This is meant of preparing the way to the city of
refuge, that the slayers might escape thither; which flying slayers
are here, by way of specialty, called the people of God; even those
of them that escaped thither for life.
2dly. [Consider] that of Ahab, when Benhadad sent to him for life,
saying, "Thus saith thy servant Benhadad, I pray thee let me live."
Though Benhadad had sought the crown, kingdom, yea, and also the
life of Ahab, yet how effectually doth Benhadad prevail with him!
Is Benhadad yet alive? saith Ahab; He is my brother; yea, go ye,
bring him to me. So he made him ride in his chariot (1 Kings 20).
Object. 2. When I say I only seek myself, I mean I do not find that
I do design God's glory in mine own salvation by Christ, and that
makes me fear I do not come aright.
Answ. Where doth Christ Jesus require such a qualification of those
that are coming to him for life? Come thou for life, and trouble
not thy head with such objections against thyself, and let God and
Christ alone to glorify themselves in the salvation of such a worm
as thou art. The Father saith to the Son, "Thou art my servant,
O Israel, in whom I will be glorified." God propoundeth life to
sinners, as the argument to prevail with them to come to him for
life; and Christ says plainly, "I am come that they might have
life" (John 10:10). He hath no need of thy designs, though thou
hast need of his. Eternal life, pardon of sin, and deliverance from
wrath to come, Christ propounds to thee, and these be the things
that thou hast need of; besides, God will be gracious and merciful
to worthless, undeserving wretches; come then as such an one, and
lay no stumblingblocks in the way to him, but come to him for life,
and live (John 5:34; 10:10; 3:36; Matt 1:21; Prov 8:35,36; 1 Thess
1:10; John 11:25,26).
When the jailer said, "Sirs, What must I do to be saved?" Paul did
not so much as once ask him, What is your end in this question?
do you design the glory of God, in the salvation of your soul? He
had more wit; he knew that such questions as these would have been
but fools' babbles about, instead of a sufficient salve5 "Which
Cambell seeing, though he could not salve, to so weighty a question
as this. Wherefore, since this poor wretch lacked salvation by Jesus
Christ, I mean to be saved from hell and death," which he knew, now,
was due to him for the sins that he had committed, Paul bids him,
like a poor condemned sinner as he was, to proceed still in this
his way of self-seeking, saying, "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ,
and thou shalt be saved" (Acts 16:30-32). I know that afterwards
thou wilt desire to glorify Christ by walking in the way of his
precepts; but at present thou wantest life; the avenger of blood
is behind thee, and the devil like a roaring lion is behind thee;
well, come now, and obtain life from these; and when thou hast
obtained some comfortable persuasion that thou art made partaker
of life by Christ, then, and not till then, thou wilt say, "Bless
the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me bless his holy
name. Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits:
6 who forgiveth all thine iniquities, who healeth all thy diseases;
who redeemeth thy life from destruction; who crowneth thee with
lovingkindness and tender mercies" (Psa 103:1-4).
1. Dost thou like these wicked blasphemies? Answ. No, no, their
presence and working kills me.
2. Dost thou mourn for them, pray against them, and hate thyself
because of them? Answ. Yes, yes; but that which afflicts me is, I
do not prevail against them.
3. Dost thou sincerely choose, mightest thou have thy choice, that
thy heart might be affected and taken with the things that are
best, most heavenly, and holy? Answ. With all my heart, and death
the next hour, if it were God's will, rather than thus to sin
against him.
Well then, thy not liking of them, thy mourning for them, thy
praying against them, and thy loathing thyself because of them,
with thy sincere choosing of those thoughts for thy delectation
that are heavenly and holy, clearly declares, that these things are
not countenanced either with thy will, affections, understanding,
judgment, or conscience; and so, that thy heart is not in them, but
that rather they come immediately from the devil, or arise from the
body of death that is in thy flesh, of which thou oughtest thus to
say, "Now, then, it is no more I that do it, but sin that dwelleth
in me" (Rom 7:17).
Thou art this damsel. The man that forced thee with these blasphemous
thoughts, is the devil; and he lighteth upon thee in a fit place,
even in the field, as thou art wandering after Jesus Christ; but
thou criest out, and by thy cry did show, that thou abhorrest such
wicked lewdness. Well, the Judge of all the earth will do right;
he will not lay the sin at thy door, but at his that offered the
violence. And for thy comfort take this into consideration, that he
came to heal them "that were oppressed of the devil" (Acts 10:38).
But, saith the soul, my dullness and indifferency in all holy duties,
demonstrate my heartlessness in coming; and to come, and not with
the heart, signifies nothing at all.
4. Get thy heart warmed with the sweet promise of Christ's acceptance
of the coming sinner, and that will make thee make more haste unto
him. Discouraging thoughts they are like unto cold weather, they
benumb the senses, and make us go ungainly about our business;
but the sweet and warm gleads8 of promise are like the comfortable
beams of the sun, which liven and refresh. 9 You see how little
the bee and fly do play in the air in winter; why, the cold hinders
them from doing it; but when the wind and sun is warm, who so busy
as they?
5. But again, he that comes to Christ, flies for his life. Now,
there is no man that flies for his life, that thinks he speeds
fast enough on his journey; no, could he, he would willingly take
a mile at a step. O my sloth and heartlessness, sayest thou! "Oh
that I had wings like a dove! for then would I fly away, and be
at rest. I would hasten my escape from the windy storm and tempest"
(Psa 55:6,8).
Poor coming soul, thou art like the man that would ride full
gallop, whose horse will hardly trot! Now, the desire of his mind
is not to be judged of by the slow pace of the dull jade he rides
on, but by the hitching, and kicking, and spurring, as he sits
on his back. Thy flesh is like this dull jade; it will not gallop
after Christ; it will be backward, though thy soul and heaven lie
at stake. 10 But be of good comfort, Christ judgeth not according
to the fierceness of outward motion (Mark 10:17) but according to
the sincerity of the heart and inward parts (John 1:47; Psa 51:6;
Matt 26:41).
8. Hadst thou seen those that came to the Lord Jesus in the days of
his flesh, how slowly, how hobblingly, they came to him, by reason
of their infirmities; and also how friendly, and kindly, and
graciously, he received them, and gave them the desire of their
hearts, thou wouldest not, as thou dost, make such objections
against thyself, in thy coming to Jesus Christ.
Answ. Thou canst never come too late to Jesus Christ, if thou dost
come. This is manifest by two instances.
1. By the man that came to him at the eleventh hour. This man was
idle all the day long. He had a whole gospel day to come in, and
he played it all away save only the last hour thereof. But at last,
at the eleventh hour, he came, and goes into the vineyard to work
with the rest of the labourers, that had borne the burden and
heat of the day. Well, but how was he received by the lord of the
vineyard? Why, when pay-day came, he had even as much as the rest;
yea, had his money first. True, the others murmured at him; but
what did the Lord Jesus answer them? "Is thine eye evil, because
I am good? I will give unto this last, even as unto thee" (Matt
20:14,15).
2. The other instance is, the thief upon the cross. He came late
also, even as at an hour before his death; yea, he stayed from
Jesus Christ as long as he had liberty to be a thief, and longer
too; for could he have deluded the judge, and by lying words have
escaped his just condemnation, for ought I know, he had not come
as yet to his Saviour; but being convicted, and condemned to die,
yea, fastened to the cross, that he might die like a rogue, as he
was in his life; behold the Lord Jesus, when this wicked one, even
now, desireth mercy at his hands, tells him, and that without the
least reflection upon him, for his former misspent life, "To-day
shalt thou be with me in paradise" (Luke 23:43). Let no man turn
this grace of God into wantonness. My design is now to encourage
the coming soul.
Object. But is not the door of mercy shut against some before they
die?
Answ. Yea; and God forbids that prayers should be made to him for
them (Jer 6:16; Jude 22).
Quest. Then, why may not I doubt that I may be one of these?
Object. But it is said, that some knocked when the door was shut.
Answ. Yes; but the texts in which these knockers are mentioned, are
to be referred unto the day of judgment, and not to the coming of
the sinner to Christ in this life. See the texts, Matthew 15:11, Luke
13:24,25. These, therefore, concern thee nothing at all, that art
coming to Jesus Christ, thou art coming NOW! "Now is the accepted
time; behold, now is the day of salvation" (2 Cor 6:2). Now God is
upon the mercy-seat; now Christ Jesus sits by, continually pleading
the victory of his blood for sinners; and now, even as long as this
world lasts, this word of the text shall still be free, and fully
fulfilled; "And him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out."
Sinner, the greater sinner thou art, the greater need of mercy thou
hast, and the more will Christ be glorified thereby. Come then, come
and try; come, taste and see how good the Lord is to an undeserving
sinner!
Answ. Falls are dangerous, for they dishonour Christ, wound the
conscience, and cause the enemies of God to speak reproachfully.
But it is no good argument, I am fallen, therefore I was not coming
aright to Jesus Christ. If David, and Solomon, and Peter, had thus
objected against themselves, they had added to their griefs; and
yet, at least they had as much cause as thou. A man whose steps
are ordered by the Lord, and whose goings the Lord delights in,
may yet be overtaken with a temptation that may cause him to fall
11 (Psa 37:23,24). Did not Aaron fall; yea, and Moses himself?
What shall we say of Hezekiah and Jehosaphat? There are, therefore,
falls and falls; falls pardonable and falls unpardonable. Falls
unpardonable are falls against light, from the faith, to the despising
of, and trampling upon Jesus Christ and his blessed undertakings
(Heb 6:2-5; 10:28,29). Now, as for such, there remains no more
sacrifice for sin. Indeed, they have no heart, no mind, no desire
to come to Jesus Christ for life, therefore they must perish. Nay,
says the Holy Ghost, "It is impossible that they should be renewed
again unto repentance." Therefore these God had no compassion for,
neither ought we; but for other falls though they be dreadful,
and God will chastise his people for them, they do not prove thee
a graceless man, one not coming to Jesus Christ for life.
It is said of the child in the gospel, that while "he was yet a
coming, the devil threw him down, and tare him" (Luke 9:42). Dejected
sinner, it is no wonder that thou hast caught a fall in coming to
Jesus Christ. Is it not rather to be wondered at, that thou hast not
caught before this a thousand times a thousand falls? considering,
1. What fools we are by nature. 2. What weaknesses are in us. 3.
What mighty powers the fallen angels, our implacable enemies, are.
4. Considering also how often the coming man is benighted in his
journey; and also what stumblingblocks do lie in his way. 5. Also
his familiars, that were so before, now watch for his halting, and
seek by what means they may to cause him to fall by the hand of
their strong ones.
SECOND, "Shall come to me." Now we come to show WHAT FORCE THERE
IS IN THIS PROMISE TO MAKE THEM COME TO HIM. "All that the Father
giveth me shall come to me." I will speak to this promise, First,
In general. Second, In particular.
2. This word, shall come, maketh thy coming not only the fruit of
the gift of the Father, but also of the purpose of the Son; for these
words are a Divine purpose; they show us the heavenly determination
of the Son. "The Father hath given them to me, and they shall;
yea, they shall come to me." Christ is as full in his resolution to
save those given to him as is the Father in giving of them. Christ
prizeth the gift of his Father; he will lose nothing of it; he is
resolved to save it every whit by his blood, and to raise it up
again at the last day; and thus he fulfills his Father's will, and
accomplisheth his own desires (John 6:39).
3. These words, shall come, make thy coming to be also the effect
of an absolute promise; coming sinner, thou art concluded in a
promise; thy coming is the fruit of the faithfulness of an absolute
promise. It was this promise, by the virtue of which thou at first
receivedst strength to come; and this is the promise, by the virtue
of which thou shalt be effectually brought to him. It was said to
Abraham, "At this time will I come, and Sarah shall have a son."
This son was Isaac. Mark! "Sarah shall have a son;" there is
the promise. And Sarah had a son; there was the fulfilling of the
promise; and, therefore, was Isaac called the child of the promise
(Gen 17:19; 18:10; Rom 9:9).
Sarah shall have a son. But how, if Sarah be past age? Why, still
the promise continues to say, Sarah shall have a son. But how, if
Sarah be barren? Why, still the promise says, Sarah shall have a
son. But Abraham's body is now dead? Why, the promise is still the
same, Sarah shall have a son. Thus, you see what virtue there is
in an absolute promise; it carrieth enough in its own bowels to
accomplish the thing promised, whether there be means or no in us
to effect it. Wherefore, this promise in the text, being an absolute
promise, by virtue of it, not by virtue of ourselves, or by our
own inducements, do we come to Jesus Christ: for so are the words
of the text: "All that the Father giveth me shall come to me."
Therefore is every sincere comer to Jesus Christ called also a child
of the promise. "Now we, brethren, as Isaac was, are the children
of promise," (Gal 4:28); that is, we are the children that God hath
promised to Jesus Christ, and given to him; yea, the children that
Jesus Christ hath promised shall come to him. "All that the Father
giveth me shall come."
(3.) The absolute promises therefore engage God, the other engage
us: I mean, God only, us only.
Thus do the promises gloriously serve one another and us, in this
their harmonious agreement.
Object. 1. But they are dead, dead in trespasses and sins, how
shall they then come?
Answ. Why, Shall-come can raise them from this death. "The hour is
coming, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son
of God, and they that hear shall live." Thus, therefore, is this
impediment by Shall-come removed out of the way. They shall heal,
they shall live.
Answ. Why, Shall-come hath also provided an help for this. Satan
had bound that daughter of Abraham so, that she could by no means
lift up herself; but yet Shall-come set her free both in body and
soul. Christ will have them turned from the power of Satan to God.
But what! Must it be, if they turn themselves, or do something to
merit of him to turn them? No, he will do it freely, of his own good
will. Alas! Man, whose soul is possessed by the devil, is turned
whithersoever that governor listeth, is taken captive by him,
notwithstanding its natural powers, at his will; but what will he
do? Will he hold him when Shall-come puts forth itself, will he
then let12 him, for coming to Jesus Christ? No, that cannot be!
His power is but the power of a fallen angel, but Shall-come is
the Word of God. Therefore Shall-come must be fulfilled; "and the
gates of hell shall not prevail against it."
There were seven devils in Mary Magdalene, too many for her to get
from under the power of; but when the time was come that Shall-come
was to be fulfilled upon her, they give place, fly from her, and
she comes indeed to Jesus Christ, according as it is written, "All
that the Father giveth me shall come to me."
The man that was possessed with a legion, (Mark 5), was too much
by them captivated for him by human force to come; yea, had he had,
to boot, all the men under heaven to help him, had he that said,
He shall come, withheld his mighty power: but when this promise
was to be fulfilled upon him, then he comes; nor could all their
power hinder his coming. It was also this Shall-come that preserved
him from death; when by these evil spirits he was hurled hither
and thither; and it was by the virtue of Shall-come that at last
he was set at liberty from them, and enabled indeed to come to
Christ. "All that the Father giveth me shall come to me."
Object. 3. They shall, you say; but how if they will not; and, if
so, then what can Shall-come do?
Answ. True, there are some men say, "We are lords; we will come
no more unto thee" (Jer 2:31). But as God says in another case,
if they are concerned in Shall-come to me, they "shall know whose
words shall stand, mine or theirs" (Jer 41:28). Here, then, is the
case; we must now see who will be the liar, he that saith, I will
not; or he that saith, He shall come to me. You shall come, says
God; I will not come, saith the sinner. Now, as sure as he is
concerned in this Shall-come, God will make that man eat his own
words; for I will not, is the unadvised conclusion of a crazy-headed
sinner; but Shall-come was spoken by him that is of power to perform
his word. "Son, go work to-day in my vineyard," said the Father.
But he answered, and said, I will not come. What now? will he be
able to stand to his refusal? will he pursue his desperate denial?
No, "he afterwards repented and went." But how came he by that
repentance? Why, it was wrapped up for him in the absolute promise;
and therefore, notwithstanding he said, "I will not, he afterwards
repented and went." By this parable Jesus Christ sets forth the
obstinacy of the sinners of the world, as touching their coming
to him; they will not come, though threatened: yea, though life be
offered them upon condition of coming.
He that had seen Paul in the midst of his outrages against Christ,
his gospel, and people, would hardly have thought that he would
ever have been a follower of Jesus Christ, especially since he went
not against his conscience in his persecuting of them. He thought
verily that he ought to do what he did. But we may see what
Shall-come can do, when it comes to be fulfilled upon the soul of
a rebellious sinner: he was a chosen vessel, given by the Father to
the Son; and now the time being come that Shall-come was to take
him in hand, behold, he is over-mastered, astonished, and with
trembling and reverence, in a moment becomes willing to be obedient
to the heavenly call (Acts 9).
And were not they far gone, that you read of, (Acts 2) who had
their hands and hearts in the murder of the Son of God; and to show
their resolvedness never to repent of that horrid fact, said, "His
blood be on us and on our children?" But must their obstinacy rule?
Must they be bound to their own ruin, by the rebellion of their
stubborn wills? No, not those of these the Father gave to Christ;
wherefore, at the times appointed, Shall-come breaks in among
them; the absolute promise takes them in hand; and then they come
indeed, crying out to Peter, and the rest of the apostles, "Men
and brethren, what shall we do?" No stubbornness of man's will can
stand, when God hath absolutely said the contrary; Shall-come can
make them come "as doves to their windows," that had afore resolved
never to come to him.
The Lord spake unto Manasseh, and to his people, by the prophets,
but would he hear? No, he would not. But shall Manasseh come off
thus? No, he shall not. Therefore, he being also one of those whom
the Father had given to the Son, and so falling within the bounds
and reach of Shall-come, at last Shall-come takes him in hand,
and then he comes indeed. He comes bowing and bending; he humbles
himself greatly, and made supplication to the Lord, and prayed unto
him; and he was entreated of him, and had mercy upon him (2 Chron
30:10).
The thief upon the cross, at first, did rail with his fellow upon
Jesus Christ; but he was one that the Father had given to him, and,
therefore, Shall-come must handle him and his rebellious will. And
behold, so soon as he is dealt withal, by virtue of that absolute
promise, how soon he buckleth, leaves his railing, falls to supplicating
of the Son of God for mercy; "Lord," saith he, "Remember me when
thou comest into thy kingdom" (Matt 27:44; Luke 23:40-42).
Object. 4. They shall come, say you, but how if they be blind, and
see not the way? For some are kept off from Christ, not only by the
obstinacy of their will, but by the blindness of their mind. Now,
if they be blind, how shall they come?
Answ. The question is not, Are they blind? But, Are they within the
reach and power of Shall-come? If so, that Christ that said, they
shall come, will find them eyes, or a guide or both, to bring them
to himself. "Must is for the king." If they shall come, they shall
come. No impediment shall hinder.
The Thessalonians' darkness did not hinder them from being the
children of light; "I am come," said Christ, "that they which see
not might see." And if he saith, See, ye "blind that have eyes,"
who shall hinder it? (Eph 5:8; John 9:39; Isa 29:18; 43:8).
Mark, I will bring them, though they be blind; I will bring them
by a way they know not; I will--I will; and therefore "they shall
come to me."
Object. 5. But how, if they have exceeded many in sin, and so made
themselves far more abominable? They are the ringleading sinners
in the county, the town, or family.
Object. 6. But how, if they have not faith and repentance? How
shall they come then?
Answ. Why, he that saith, They shall come, shall he not make it
good? If they shall come, they shall come; and he that hath said,
they shall come, if faith and repentance be the way to come, as
indeed they are, then faith and repentance shall be given to them!
for Shall-come must be fulfilled on them.
1. Faith shall be given them. "I will also leave in the midst of
thee an afflicted and poor people, and they shall trust in the name
of the Lord." "There shall be a root of Jesse, and he that shall
rise to reign over the Gentiles; in him shall the Gentiles trust"
(Zeph 3:12; Rom 15:12).
So then the present want of faith and repentance cannot make this
promise of God of none effect; because that this promise hath in
it to give what others call for and expect. I will give them an
heart, I will give them my Spirit, I will give them repentance, I
will give them faith. Mark these words: "If any man be in Christ,
he is a new creature." But how came he to be a "new creature,"
since none can create but God? Why, God indeed doth make them "new
creatures." "Behold," saith he, "I make all things new." And hence
it follows, even after he had said they are "new creatures," "and
all things are of God;" that is, all this new creation standeth
in the several operations, and special workings of the Spirit of
grace, who is God (2 Cor 5:17,18).
Object. 7. But how shall they escape all those dangerous and damnable
opinions, that, like rocks and quicksands, are in the way in which
they are going?
Indeed, errors are like that whore of whom you read in the Proverbs,
that sitteth in her seat in the high places of the city, "to call
passengers who go right on their ways" (Prov 9:13-16). But the
persons, as I said, that by the Father are given to the Son to save
them, are, at one time or other, secured by "shall come to me."
And therefore of such it is said, God will guide them with his eye,
with his counsels, by his Spirit, and that in the way of peace;
by the springs of water, and into all truth (Psa 32:8; 73:24; John
16:13; Luke 1:79; Isa 49:10). So then he that hath such a guide,
and all that the Father giveth to Christ shall have it, he shall
escape those dangers, he shall not err in the way; yea, though
he be a fool, he shall not err therein, (Isa 35:8), for of every
such an one it is said, "Thine ears shall hear a word behind thee,
saying, This is the way, walk ye in it, when ye turn to the right
hand, and when ye turn to the left" (Isa 30:21).
Further, The very plain sentence of the text makes provision against
all these things; for, saith it, "All that the Father giveth me
shall come to me;" that is, shall not be stopped, or be allured to
take up anywhere short of ME, nor shall they turn aside, to abide
with any besides ME.
There is also life for those that come to him, to be had by faith
in his flesh and blood. "He that eateth me, even he shall live by
me" (John 6:57). And this is a life against that death that comes
by the guilt of sin, and the curse of the law, under which all men
are, and for ever must be, unless they eat the ME that speaks in
the text. "Whoso findeth ME," saith he, "findeth life;" deliverance
from that everlasting death and destruction, that, without me, he
shall be devoured by (Prov 8:35). Nothing is more desirable than
life, to him that hath in himself the sentence of condemnation;
and here only is life to be found. This life, to wit, eternal life,
this life is in his Son; that is, in him that saith in the text,
"All that the Father hath given me shall come to me" (1 John 5:10).
The person speaking in the text is HE, and only HE, that can give
stable and everlasting peace; therefore, saith he, "My peace I give
unto you." My peace, which is a peace with God, peace of conscience,
and that of an everlasting duration. My peace, peace that cannot
be matched, "not as the world giveth, give I unto you;" for the
world's peace is but carnal and transitory, but mine is Divine and
eternal. Hence it is called the peace of God, and that passeth all
understanding.
4. The person speaking in the text hath enough of all things truly
spiritually good, to satisfy the desires of every longing soul.
"Jesus stood and cried, saying, If any man thirst, let him come
unto me, and drink." And to him that is athirst, "I will give of
the fountain of the water of life freely" (John 7:37, Rev 21:6).
2. It is evident also, in that while they keep their eyes upon him,
they never desire to change him for another, or to add to themselves
some other thing, together with him, to make up their spiritual
joy. "God forbid," saith Paul, "that I should glory, save in the
cross of our Lord Jesus Christ." "Yea, doubtless, and I count all
things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus
my Lord: for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and do
count them but dung, that I may win Christ, and be found in him,
not having mine own righteousness, which is of the law, but that
which is through the faith of Christ, the righteousness which is
of God by faith" (Phil 3:8,9).
4. It is evident also, by the triumph that such men make over all
their enemies, both bodily and ghostly: "Now thanks be unto God,"
said Paul, "which always causeth us to triumph in Christ." And,
"who shall separate us from the love of Christ" our Lord? and again,
"O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory? The
sting of death is sin, and the strength of sin is the law; but
thanks be to God, which giveth us the victory through our Lord
Jesus Christ" (2 Cor 2:14; Rom 8:35; 1 Cor 15:55,56).
5. It is evident also, for that they are made by the glory of that
which they have found in him, to suffer and endure what the devil
and hell itself hath or could invent, as a means to separate them
from him. Again, "Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?
Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine,
or nakedness, or peril, or sword? as it is written, For thy sake
we are killed all the day long, we are accounted as sheep for the
slaughter. Nay, in all these things we are more than conquerors,
through him that loved us. For I am persuaded, that neither death,
nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things
present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other
creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God which
is in Christ Jesus our Lord" (Rom 8:35-39).
Moses was the adopted son of Pharaoh's daughter; and for aught I
know, had been king at last, had he now conformed to the present
vanities that were there at court; but he could not, he would not
do it. Why? What was the matter? Why! he saw more in the worst of
Christ (bear with the expression), than he saw in the best of all
the treasures of the land of Egypt. He "refused to be called the
son of Pharaoh's daughter; choosing rather to suffer affliction
with the people of God, than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a
season; esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches than the
treasures in Egypt; for he had respect unto the recompence of the
reward. He forsook Egypt, not fearing the wrath of the king." But
what emboldened him thus to do? Why, "he endured;" for he had a
sight of the person speaking in the text. "He endured, as seeing
him who is invisible." But I say, would a sight of Jesus have thus
taken away Moses' heart from a crown, and a kingdom, &c., had he
not by that sight seen more in him than was to be seen in them?
(Heb 11:24-26).
Moses, of whom we spake before, was no child when he was thus taken
with the beauteous glory of his Lord. He was forty years old, and
so consequently was able, being a man of that wisdom and opportunity
as he was, to make the best judgment of the things, and of the
goodness of them that was before him in the land of Egypt. But he,
even he it was, that set that low esteem upon the glory of Egypt,
as to count it not worth the meddling with, when he had a sight of
this Lord Jesus Christ. This wicked world thinks, that the fancies
of a heaven, and a happiness hereafter, may serve well enough to
take the heart of such, as either have not the world's good things
to delight in; or that are fools, and know not how to delight
themselves therein. But let them know again, that we have had men
of all ranks and qualities, that have been taken with the glory
of our Lord Jesus, and have left all to follow him. As Abel, Seth,
Enoch, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, Samuel, David, Solomon;
and who not, that had either wit or grace, to savour heavenly
things? Indeed none can stand off from him, nor any longer hold
out against him to whom he reveals the glory of his grace.
By these words our Lord Jesus doth set forth yet more amply the
great goodness of his nature towards the coming sinner. Before, he
said, They shall come; and here he declareth, That with heart and
affections he will receive them. But, by the way, let me speak
one word or two to the seeming conditionality of this promise with
which now I have to do. "And him that cometh to me I will in no
wise cast out." Where it is evident, may some say, that Christ's
receiving us to mercy depends upon our coming, and so our salvation
by Christ is conditional. If we come, we shall be received; if
not, we shall not; for that is fully intimated by the words. The
promise of reception is only to him that cometh. "And him that
cometh." I answer, that the coming in these words mentioned, as
a condition of being received to life, is that which is promised,
yea, concluded to be effected in us by the promise going before.
In those latter words, coming to Christ is implicitly required of
us; and in the words before, that grace that can make us come is
positively promised to us. "All that the Father giveth me shall
come to me; and him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out"
thence. We come to Christ, because it is said, We shall come;
because it is given to us to come. So that the condition which is
expressed by Christ in these latter words is absolutely promised in
the words before. And, indeed, the coming here intended is nothing
else but the effect of "shall come to me. They shall come, and I
will not cast them out."
He saith not, and him that is come, but him that cometh. To speak
to these words, First, In general. Second, More particularly.
1. That Jesus Christ doth build upon it, that since the Father gave
his people to him, they shall be enabled to come unto him. "And him
that cometh." As who should say, I know that since they are given
to me, they shall be enabled to come unto me. He saith not, if they
come, or I suppose they will come; but, "and him that cometh." By
these words, therefore, he shows us that he addresseth himself to
the receiving of them whom the Father gave to him to save them. I
say, he addresseth himself, or prepareth himself to receive them.
By which, as I said, he concludeth or buildeth upon it, that they
shall indeed come to him. He looketh that the Father should bring
them into his bosom, and so stands ready to embrace them.
"And him." Christ Jesus, also, by his thus dividing the gift of
his Father into hims, and by his speaking of them in the singular
number, shows what a particular work shall be wrought in each one,
at the time appointed of the Father. "And it shall come to pass in
that day," saith the prophet, "that the Lord shall beat off from
the channel of the river unto the stream of Egypt, and ye shall be
gathered one by one, O ye children of Israel." Here are the hims,
one by one, to be gathered to him by the Father (Isa 27:12).
AND HIM. There are divers sorts of persons that the Father hath
given to Jesus Christ; they are not all of one rank, of one quality;
some are high, some are low; some are wise, some fools; some are
more civil, and complying with the law; some more profane, and
averse to him and his gospel. Now, since those that are given to
him are, in some sense, so diverse; and again, since he yet saith,
"And him that cometh," &c., he, by that, doth give us to understand
that he is not, as men, for picking and choosing, to take a best
and leave a worst, but he is for him that the Father hath given
him, and that cometh to him. "He shall not alter it, nor change
it, a good for a bad, or a bad for a good," (Lev 27:10); but will
take him as he is, and will save his soul.
AND HIM. Let him be as red as blood, let him be as red as crimson.
Some men are blood-red sinners, crimson-sinners, sinners of a double
die; dipped and dipped again, before they come to Jesus Christ.
Art thou that readest these lines such an one? Speak out, man! Art
thou such an one? and art thou now coming to Jesus Christ for the
mercy of justification, that thou mightest be made white in his
blood, and be covered with his righteousness? Fear not; forasmuch
as this thy coming betokeneth that thou art of the number of them
that the Father hath given to Christ; for he will in no wise cast
thee out. "Come now," saith Christ, "and let us reason together;
though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow;
though they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool" (Isa 1:18).
AND HIM. There was many a strange HIM came to Jesus Christ, in the
days of his flesh; but he received them all, without turning any
away; speaking unto them "of the kingdom of God, and healed them
that had need of healing" (Luke 9:11; 4:40). These words, AND HIM,
are therefore words to be wondered at. That not one of them who,
by virtue of the Father's gift, and drawing, are coming to Jesus
Christ, I say, that not one of them, whatever they have been,
whatever they have done, should be rejected or set by, but admitted
to a share in his saving grace. It is said in Luke, that the people
"wondered at the gracious words which proceeded out of his mouth"
(4:22). Now this is one of his gracious words; these words are like
drops of honey, as it is said, "Pleasant words are as an honey-comb,
sweet to the soul, and health to the bones" (Prov 16:24). These
are gracious words indeed, even as full as a faithful and merciful
High-priest could speak them. Luther saith, "When Christ speaketh,
he hath a mouth as wide as heaven and earth." That is, to speak
fully to the encouragement of every sinful him that is coming to
Jesus Christ. And that his word is certain, hear how himself confirms
it: "Heaven and earth," saith he, "shall pass away; but my words
shall not pass away" (Isa 51:6; Matt 24:35).
Do you think, I say, that the Lord Jesus did not think before he
spake? He speaks all in righteousness, and therefore by his word
we are to judge how mighty he is to save (Isa 63:1). He speaketh
in righteousness, in very faithfulness, when he began to build this
blessed gospel-fabric, the text; it was for that he had first sat
down, and counted the cost; and for that, he knew he was able to
finish it! What, Lord, any him? any him that cometh to thee? This
is a Christ worth looking after, this is a Christ worth coming to!
2. The other thing that I told you is showed from these words, is
this: The willingness of Christ's heart to impute his merits for
life to the great, if coming sinner. "And him that cometh to me I
will in no wise cast out."
The awakened coming sinner doth not so easily question the power of
Christ, as his willingness to save him. Lord, "if thou wilt, thou
canst," said one (Mark 1:40). He did not put the if upon his power,
but upon his will. He concluded he could, but he was not as fully
of persuasion that he would. But we have the same ground to believe
he will, as we have to believe he can; and, indeed, ground for both
is the Word of God. If he was not willing, why did he promise? Why
did he say he would receive the coming sinner? Coming sinner, take
notice of this; we use to plead practices with men, and why not
with God likewise? I am sure we have no more ground for the one
than the other; for we have to plead the promise of a faithful
God. Jacob took him there: "Thou saidst," said he, "I will surely
do thee good" (Gen 32:12). For, from this promise he concluded,
that it followed in reason, "He must be willing."
The text also gives some ground for us to draw the same conclusion.
"And him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out." Here is his
willingness asserted, as well as his power suggested. It is worth
your observation, that Abraham's faith considered rather God's
power than his willingness; that is, he drew his conclusion, "I
shall have a child," from the power that was in God to fulfil the
promise to him. For he concluded he was willing to give him one,
else he would not have promised one. "He staggered not at the promise
of God through unbelief; but was strong in faith, giving glory to
God; and being fully persuaded that what he had promised he was able
also to perform" (Rev 4:20,21). But was not his faith exercised,
or tried, about his willingness too? No, there was no show of
reason for that, because he had promised it. Indeed, had he not
promised it, he might lawfully have doubted it; but since he had
promised it, there was left no ground at all for doubting, because
his willingness to give a son was demonstrated in his promising him
a son. These words, therefore, are sufficient ground to encourage
any coming sinner that Christ is willing to his power to receive
him; and since he hath power also to do what he will, there is no
ground at all left to the coming sinner any more to doubt; but to
come in full hope of acceptance, and of being received unto grace
and mercy. "And him that cometh." He saith not, and him that is
come; but, and him that cometh; that is, and him whose heart begins
to move after me, who is leaving all for my sake; him who is looking
out, who is on his journey to me. We must, therefore, distinguish
betwixt coming, and being come to Jesus Christ. He that is come to
him has attained of him more sensibly what he felt before that he
wanted, than he has that but yet is coming to him.
A man that is come to Christ hath the advantage of him that is but
coming to him; and that in seven things.
1. That Jesus Christ hath his eye upon, and takes notice of, the
first moving of the heart of a sinner after himself. Coming sinner,
thou canst not move with desires after Christ, but he sees the
working of those desires in thy heart. "All my desire," said David,
"is before thee; and my groaning is not hid from thee" (Psa 38:9).
This he spake, as he was coming, after he had backslidden, to the
Lord Jesus Christ. It is said of the prodigal, that while he was
yet a great way off, his father saw him, had his eye upon him, and
upon the going out of his heart after him (Luke 15:20).
When Nathanael was come to Jesus Christ, the Lord said to them
that stood before him, "Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom is no
guile." But Nathanael answered him, "Whence knowest thou me?" Jesus
answered, "Before that Philip called thee, when thou wast under
the fig-tree, I saw thee." There, I suppose, Nathanael was pouring
out of his soul to God for mercy, or that he would give him good
understanding about the Messias to come; and Jesus saw all the
workings of his honest heart at that time (John 1:47,48).
Zaccheus also had some secret movings of heart, such as they were,
towards Jesus Christ, when he ran before, and climbed up the tree
to see him; and the Lord Jesus Christ had his eye upon him: therefore,
when he was come to the place, he looked up to him, bids him come
down, "For today," said he, "I must abide at thy house;" to wit,
in order to the further completing the work of grace in his soul
(Luke 19:1-9). Remember this, coming sinner.
2. As Jesus Christ hath his eye upon, so he hath his heart open
to receive, the coming sinner. This is verified by the text: "And
him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out." This is also
discovered by his preparing of the way, in his making of it easy
(as may be) to the coming sinner; which preparation is manifest by
those blessed words, "I will in no wise cast out;" of which more
when we come to the place. And while "he was yet a great way off,
his Father saw him, and had compassion, and ran, and fell on his
neck, and kissed him" (Luke 15:20). All these expressions do strongly
prove that the heart of Christ is open to receive the coming sinner.
3. As Jesus Christ has his eye upon, and his heart open to receive,
so he hath resolved already that nothing shall alienate his heart
from receiving the coming sinner. No sins of the coming sinner,
nor the length of the time that he hath abode in them, shall by
any means prevail with Jesus Christ to reject him. Coming sinner,
thou art coming to a loving Lord Jesus!
"And him that COMETH." There are two sorts of sinners that are
coming to Jesus Christ. First, Him that hath never, while of late,
14 at all began to come. Second, Him that came formerly, and after
that went back; but hath since bethought himself, and is now coming
again. Both these sorts of sinners are intended by the HIM in the
text, as is evident; because both are now the coming sinners. "And
him that cometh."
(1.) For that he is sent to by name, "Go, tell his disciples and
Peter" (Mark 16:7). But Peter was a godly man. True, but he was also
a backslider, yea, a desperate backslider: he had denied his Master
once, twice, thrice, cursing and swearing that he knew him not.
If this was not backsliding, if this was not an high and eminent
backsliding, yea, a higher backsliding than thou art capable of,
I have thought amiss.
Again, when David had backslidden, and had committed adultery and
murder in his backsliding, he must be sent to by name: "And," saith
the text, "the Lord sent Nathan unto David." And he sent him to
tell him, after he had brought him to unfeigned acknowledgment,
"The Lord hath also put away, or forgiven thy sin" (2 Sam 12:1,13).
This man also was far gone: he took a man's wife, and killed her
husband, and endeavoured to cover all with wicked dissimulation. He
did this, I say, after God had exalted him, and showed him great
favour; wherefore his transgression was greatened also by the
prophet with mighty aggravations; yet he was accepted, and that
with gladness, at the first step he took in his returning to Christ.
For the first step of the backslider's return is to say, sensibly
and unfeignedly, "I have sinned;" but he had no sooner said thus,
but a pardon was produced, yea, thrust into his bosom: "And Nathan
said unto David, The Lord hath also put away thy sin."
(3.) Nay, further, thou art not only mentioned by name, and thy
sin by the nature of it, but thou thyself, who art a returning
backslider, put, (a) Amongst God's Israel, "Return, thou backsliding
Israel, saith the Lord; and I will not cause mine anger to fall
upon you; for I am merciful, saith the Lord, and I will not keep
anger for ever" (Jer 3:12). (b) Thou art put among his children;
among his children to whom he is married. "Turn, O backsliding
children, for I am married unto you" (verse 14). (c) Yea, after
all this, as if his heart was so full of grace for them, that he
was pressed until he had uttered it before them, he adds, "Return,
ye backsliding children, and I will heal your backslidings" (verse
22).
(4.) Nay, further, the Lord hath considered, that the shame of thy
sin hath stopped thy mouth, and made thee almost a prayerless man;
and therefore he saith unto thee, "Take with you words, and turn
to the Lord: say unto him, Take away all iniquity, and receive
us graciously." See his grace, that himself should put words of
encouragement into the heart of a backslider; as he saith in another
place, "I taught Ephraim to go, taking him by the arms." This is
teaching him to go indeed, to hold him up by the arms; by the chin,
as we say (Hosea 14:2; 11:3).
From what has been said, I conclude, even as I said before, that
the him in the text, and him that cometh, includeth both these
sorts of sinners, and therefore both should freely come.
Quest. 1. But where doth Jesus Christ, in all the word of the New
Testament, expressly speak to a returning backslider with words
of grace and peace? For what you have urged as yet, from the New
Testament, is nothing but consequences drawn from this text. Indeed
it is a full text for carnal ignorant sinners that come, but to
me, who am a backslider, it yieldeth but little relief.
Answ. How! but little encouragement from the text, when it is said,
"I will in now wise cast out"! What more could have been said? What
is here omitted that might have been inserted, to make the promise
more full and free? Nay, take all the promises in the Bible, all
the freest promises, with all the variety of expressions of what
nature or extent soever, and they can but amount to the expressions
of this very promise, "I will in no wise cast out;" I will for
nothing, by no means, upon no account, however they have sinned,
however they have backslidden, however they have provoked, cast
out the coming sinner. But,
Quest. 2. Thou sayest, Where doth Jesus Christ, in all the words
of the New Testament, speak to a returning backslider with words
of grace and peace, that is under the name of a backslider?
3. The man that after a large profession lay with his father's
wife, committed a high transgression, even such a one that at that
day was not heard of, no, not among the Gentiles. Wherefore this
was a desperate backsliding; yet, at his return, he was received,
and accepted again to mercy (1 Cor 5:1,2; 2 Cor 2:6-8).
4. The thief that stole was bid to steal no more; not at all doubting
but that Christ was ready to forgive him this act of backsliding
(Eph 4:28).
But again, the Lord Jesus hath added to these, for the encouragement
of returning backsliders, to come to him. (1.) A call to come,
and he will receive them (Rev 2:1-5; 14-16; 20-22; 3:1-3; 15-22).
Wherefore New Testament backsliders have encouragement to come.
(2.) A declaration of readiness to receive them that come, as here
in the text, and in many other places, is plain. Therefore, "Set
thee up waymarks, make thee high heaps," of the golden grace of
the gospel, "set thine heart toward the highway, even the way which
thou wentest." When thou didst backslide; "turn again, O virgin of
Israel, turn again to these thy cities" (Jer 31:21).
"And him that cometh." He saith not, and him that talketh, that
professeth, that maketh a show, a noise, or the like; but, him that
cometh. Christ will take leave to judge, who, among the many that
make a noise, they be that indeed are coming to him. It is not him
that saith he comes, nor him of whom others affirm that he comes;
but him that Christ himself shall say doth come, that is concerned
in this text. When the woman that had the bloody issue came to
him for cure, there were others as well as she, that made a great
bustle about him, that touched, yea, thronged him. Ah, but Christ
could distinguish this woman from them all; "And he looked round
about" upon them all, "to see her that had done this thing" (Mark
5:25-32). He was not concerned with the thronging, or touchings of
the rest; for theirs were but accidental, or at best, void of that
which made her touch acceptable. Wherefore Christ must be judge
who they be that in truth are coming to him; Every man's ways are
right in his own eyes, "but the Lord weigheth the spirits" (Prov
16:2). It standeth therefore every one in hand to be certain of
their coming to Jesus Christ; for as thy coming is, so shall thy
salvation be. If thou comest indeed, thy salvation shall be indeed;
but if thou comest but in outward appearance, so shall thy salvation
be; but of coming, see before, as also afterwards, in the use and
application.
"And him that cometh TO ME." These words to me are also well to
be heeded; for by them, as he secureth those that come to him, so
also he shows himself unconcerned with those that in their coming
rest short, to turn aside to others; for you must know, that every
one that comes, comes not to Jesus Christ; some that come, come to
Moses, and to his law, and there take up for life; with these Christ
is not concerned; with these his promise hath not to do. "Christ
is become of no effect unto you; whosoever of you are justified
by the law, ye are fallen from grace" (Gal 5:4). Again, some that
came, came no further than to gospel ordinances, and there stay;
they came not through them to Christ; with these neither is he
concerned; nor will their "Lord, Lord," avail them anything in the
great and dismal day. A man may come to, and also go from the place
and ordinances of worship, and yet not be remembered by Christ.
"So I saw the wicked buried," said Solomon, "who had come and gone
from the place of the holy, and they were forgotten in the city
where they had so done; this is also vanity" (Eccl 8:10).
"TO ME." These words, therefore, are by Jesus Christ very warily put
in, and serve for caution and encouragement; for caution, lest we
take up in our coming anywhere short of Christ; and for encouragement
to those that shall in their coming, come past all; till they come
to Jesus Christ. "And him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast
out."
Reader, if thou lovest thy soul, take this caution kindly at the
hands of Jesus Christ. Thou seest thy sickness, thy wound, thy
necessity of salvation. Well, go not to king Jareb, for he cannot
heal thee, nor cure thee of thy wound (Hosea 5:13). Take the caution,
I say, lest Christ, instead of being a Saviour unto thee, becomes
a lion, a young lion, to tear thee, and go away (Hosea 5:14).
"And him that cometh TO ME;" Christ as a Saviour will stand alone,
because his own arm alone hath brought salvation unto him. He will
not be joined with Moses, nor suffer John Baptist to be tabernacled
by him. I say they must vanish, for Christ will stand alone (Luke
9:28-36). Yea, God the Father will have it so; therefore they must
be parted from him, and a voice from heaven must come to bid the
disciples hear only the beloved Son. Christ will not suffer any
law, ordinance, statute, or judgment, to be partners with him in
the salvation of the sinner. Nay, he saith not, and him that cometh
to my WORD; but, and him that cometh to ME. The words of Christ,
even his most blessed and free promises, such as this in the text,
are not the Saviour of the world; for that is Christ himself,
Christ himself only. The promises, therefore, are but to encourage
the coming sinner to come to Jesus Christ, and not to rest in them,
short of salvation by him. "And him that cometh TO ME." The man,
therefore, that comes aright, casts all things behind his back,
and looketh at, nor hath his expectations from ought, but the Son
of God alone; as David said, "My soul, wait thou only upon God; for
my expectation is from him. He only is my rock, and my salvation;
he is my defence; I shall not be moved" (Psa 62:5,6). His eye is
to Christ, his heart is to Christ, and his expectation is from him,
from him only.
Therefore the man that comes to Christ, is one that hath had deep
considerations of his own sins, slighting thoughts of his own
righteousness, and high thoughts of the blood and righteousness
of Jesus Christ; yea, he sees, as I have said, more virtue in the
blood of Christ to save him, than there is in all his sins to damn
him. He therefore setteth Christ before his eyes; there is nothing
in heaven or earth, he knows, that can save his soul and secure
him from the wrath of God, but Christ; that is, nothing but his
personal righteousness and blood.
"Thus saith the Lord, If heaven above can be measured, and the
foundations of the earth searched out beneath, I will also cast
off all the seed of Israel, for all that they have done, saith
the Lord" (Jer 31:37). "Thus saith the Lord, If my covenant be not
with day and night, and if I have not appointed the ordinances of
heaven and earth, then will I cast away the seed of Jacob" (Jer
33:25,26). But heaven cannot be measured, nor the foundations of
the earth searched out beneath; his covenant is also with day and
night, and he hath appointed the ordinances of heaven; therefore
he will not cast away the seed of Jacob, who are the coming ones,
but will certainly save them from the dreadful wrath to come (Jer
50:4,5). By this, therefore, it is manifest, that it was not the
greatness of sin, nor the long continuance in it, no, nor yet the
backsliding, nor the pollution of thy nature, that can put a bar
in against, or be an hindrance of, the salvation of the coming
sinner. For, if indeed this could be, then would this solemn and
absolute determination of the Lord Jesus, of itself, fall to the
ground, and be made of none effect. But his "counsel shall stand,
and he will do all his pleasure;" that is, his pleasure in this;
for his promise, as to this irreversible conclusion, ariseth of
his pleasure; he will stand to it, and will fulfil it, because it
is his pleasure (Isa 46:10,11).
Suppose that one man had the sins, or as many sins as an hundred,
and another should have an hundred times as many as he; yet, if
they come, this word, "I will in no wise cast out," secures them
both alike.
Second, That which is implied in the words is, 1. The coming souls
have those that continually lie at Jesus Christ15 to cast them off.
2. The coming souls are afraid that those will prevail with Christ
to cast them off. For these words are spoken to satisfy us, and to
stay up our spirits against these two dangers: "I will in no wise
cast out."
1. For the first, Coming souls have those that continually lie at
Jesus Christ to cast them off. And there are three things that thus
bend themselves against the coming sinner.
(1.) There is the devil, that accuser of the brethren, that accuses
them before God, day and night (Rev 12:10). This prince of darkness
is unwearied in this work; he doth it, as you see, day and night;
that is, without ceasing. He continually puts in his caveats against
thee, if so be he may prevail. How did he ply16 it against that
good man Job, if possibly he might have obtained his destruction
in hell-fire? He objected against him, that he served not God for
nought, and tempted God to put forth his hand against him, urging,
that if he did it, he would curse him to his face; and all this,
as God witnesseth, "he did without a cause" (Job 1:9-11; 2:4,5).
How did he ply it with Christ against Joshua the high-priest? "And
he showed me Joshua," said the prophet, "the high-priest, standing
before the angel of the Lord, and Satan standing at his right hand
to resist him" (Zech 3:1).
To resist him; that is, to prevail with the Lord Jesus Christ
to resist him; objecting the uncleanness and unlawful marriage of
his sons with the Gentiles; for that was the crime that Satan laid
against them (Ezra 10:18). Yea, and for aught I know, Joshua was
also guilty of the fact; but if not of that, of crimes no whit
inferior; for he was clothed with filthy garments, as he stood
before the angel. Neither had he one word to say in vindication of
himself, against all that this wicked one had to say against him.
But notwithstanding that, he came off well; but he might for it thank
a good Lord Jesus, because he did not resist him, but contrariwise,
took up his cause, pleaded against the devil, excusing his infirmity,
and put justifying robes upon him before his adversary's face.
"And the Lord said unto Satan, The Lord rebuke thee, O Satan, even
the Lord that hath chosen Jerusalem, rebuke thee. Is not this a
brand plucked out of the fire? And he answered and spoke to those
that stood before him, saying, Take away the filthy garments from
him; and unto him he said, Behold, I have caused thine iniquity
to pass from thee, and I will clothe thee with change of raiment"
(Zech 3:2-4).
Again, how did Satan ply it against Peter, when he desired to have
him, that he might sift him as wheat? that is, if possible, sever
all grace from his heart, and leave him nothing but flesh and filth,
to the end that he might make the Lord Jesus loathe and abhor him.
"Simon, Simon," said Christ, "Satan hath desired to have you, that
he may sift you as wheat." But did he prevail against him? No: "But
I have prayed for thee, that thy faith fail not." As who should
say, Simon, Satan hath desired me that I would give thee up to him,
and not only thee, but all the rest of thy brethren--for that the
word you imports--but I will not leave thee in his hand: I have
prayed for thee, thy faith shall not fail; I will secure thee to
the heavenly inheritance (Luke 22:30-32).
The sins of the old world cried them down to hell; the sins of Sodom
fetched upon them fire from heaven, which devoured them; the sins
of the Egyptians cried them down to hell, because they came not
to Jesus Christ for life. Coming sinner, thy sins are no whit less
than any; nay, perhaps, they are as big as all theirs. Why is it
then, that thou livest when they are dead, and that thou hast a
promise of pardon when they had not? "Why, thou art coming to Jesus
Christ;" and therefore sin shall not be thy ruin.
The coming sinner is not saved, because there is none that comes
in against him; but because the Lord Jesus will not hear their
accusations, will not cast out the coming sinner. When Shimei came
down to meet king David, and to ask for pardon for his rebellion,
up starts Abishai, and puts in his caveat, saying, Shall not Shimei
die for this? This is the case of him that comes to Christ. He hath
this Abishai, and that Abishai, that presently steps in against
him, saying, Shall not this rebel's sins destroy him in hell? Read
further. But David answered, "What have I to do with you, ye sons
of Zeruiah, that ye should this day be adversaries unto me? Shall
there any man be put to death this day in Israel, for do not I know,
that I am king this day over Israel?" (2 Sam 19:16-22). That is
Christ's answer by the text, to all that accuse the coming Shimeis.
What have I to do with you, that accuse the coming sinners to me?
I count you adversaries, that are against my showing mercy to them.
Do not I know that I am exalted this day to be king of righteousness,
and king of peace? "I will in no wise cast them out."
2. But again, these words do closely imply, that the coming souls
are afraid that these accusers will prevail against them, as is
evident, because the text is spoken for their relief and succour.
For that need not be, if they that are coming were not subject to
fear and despond upon this account. Alas, there is guilt, and the
curse lies upon the conscience of the coming sinner!
Now, we have yet to inquire into two things that lie in the words,
to which there hath yet been nothing said. As, FIRST, What it is
to cast out. SECOND, How it appears that Christ hath power to save
or cast out?
[First, Generally.]
I. For the things that are now, they are either, 1. More general:
Or, 2. More particular.
1. More general, thus:
(2.) "To be cast out," is to be cast out of God's sight. God will
look after them no more, care for them no more; nor will he watch
over them any more for good (2 Kings 17:20; Jer 7:15). Now they
that are so, are left like blind men, to wander and fall into the
pit of hell. This, therefore, is also a sad judgment! therefore
here is the mercy of him that cometh to Christ. He shall not be
left to wander at uncertainties. The Lord Jesus Christ will keep
him, as a shepherd doth his sheep (Psa 23). "Him that cometh to me
I will in no wise cast out."
These words, therefore, "I will not cast out," will prove great
words one day to them that come to Jesus Christ (2 Peter 2:4; John
20:31; Luke 20:35).
(1.) Christ hath everlasting life for him that cometh to him, and
he shall never perish; "For he will in no wise cast him out;" but
for the rest, they are rejected, "cast out," and must be damned
(John 10:27,28).
(3.) Christ hath precious blood, that, like an open fountain, stands
free for him to wash in, that comes to him for life; "And he will
in no wise cast him out;" but they that come not to him are rejected
from a share therein, and are left to ireful vengeance for their
sins (Zech 13:1; 1 Peter 1:18,19; John 13:8; 3:16).
(4.) Christ hath precious promises, and they shall have a share in
them that come to him for life; for "he will in no wise cast them
out." But they that come not can have no share in them, because
they are true only in him; for in him, and only in him, all the
promises are yea and amen. Wherefore they that come not to him,
are no whit the better for them (Psa 50:16; 2 Cor 1:20,21).
(5.) Christ hath also fullness of grace in himself for them that
come to him for life: "And he will in no wise cast them out." But
those that come not unto him are left in their graceless state;
and as Christ leaves them, death, hell, and judgment finds them.
"Whoso findeth me," saith Christ, "findeth life, and shall obtain
favour of the Lord. But he that sinneth against me wrongeth his
own soul: all they that hate me love death" (Prov 8:35,36).
(7.) Christ hath wonderful love, bowels, and compassions, for those
that come to him; for "he will in no wise cast them out." But the
rest will find him a lion rampant; he will one day tear them all
to pieces. "Now consider this," saith he, "ye that forget God, lest
I tear you in pieces, and there be none to deliver" (Psa 50:22).
(8.) Christ is one by and for whose sake those that come to him
have their persons and performances accepted of the Father: "And
he will in no wise cast them out;" but the rest must fly to the
rocks and mountains for shelter, but all in vain, to hide them from
his face and wrath (Rev 6:15-17).
II. But again, These words, CAST OUT, have a special look to what
will be hereafter, even at the day of judgment. For then, and not
till then, will be the great anathema and casting out made manifest,
even manifest by execution. Therefore here to speak to this, and
that under these two heads. As, First, Of the casting out itself.
Second, Of the place into which they shall be cast, that shall then
be cast out.
(3.) Then will Christ proceed to conviction of those that came not
to him, and will say, "I was a stranger, and ye took me not in,"
or did not come unto me. Their excuse of themselves he will slight
as dirt, and proceed to their final judgment.
(2.) In the presence of all them that in their lifetime came to him,
by saying unto them, "Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting
fire, prepared for the devil and his angels": with the reason annexed
to it. For you were cruel to me and mine, particularly discovered
in these words, "For I was an hungered, and ye gave me no meat; I
was thirsty, and ye gave me no drink; I was a stranger, and ye took
me not in; naked, and ye clothed me not: sick, and in prison, and
ye visited me not" (Matt 25:41-43).
Second, Now it remains that we speak of the place into which these
shall be cast, which, in the general, you have heard already,
to wit, the first prepared for the devil and his angels. But, in
particular, it is thus described:--
(2.) To fire.
(5.) It is called unquenchable fire; "He will gather his wheat into
the garner; but he will burn up the chaff with unquenchable fire"
(Matt 3:12; Luke 3:17).
(8.) It is called the second death. "And death and hell were cast
into the lake of fire. This is the second death. Blessed and holy
is he that hath part in the first resurrection: on such the second
death hath no power" (Rev 20:6,14).
(9.) It is called eternal damnation. "But he that shall blaspheme
against the Holy Ghost, hath never forgiveness, but is in danger of
eternal damnation." Oh! these three words! Everlasting punishment!
Eternal damnation! And For ever and ever! How will they gnaw and
eat up all the expectation of the end of the misery of the cast-away
sinners. "And the smoke of their torment ascendeth up for ever
and ever; and they have no rest day nor night," &c., (Rev 14:11).
3. Moses gave testimony of him by the types and shadows, and bloody
sacrifices, that he commanded from the mouth of God to be in use for
the support of his people's faith, until the time of reformation;
which was the time of this Jesus his death (Heb 9, 10).
(3.) He did the works of a Saviour. As, (a.) He fulfilled the law,
and became the end of it for righteousness, for them that believe
in him (Rom 10:3,4). (b.) He laid down his life as a Saviour; he
gave his life as "a ransom for many" (Matt 20:28; Mark 10:45; 1 Tim
2:6). (c.) He hath abolished death, destroyed the devil, put away
sin, got the keys of hell and death, is ascended into heaven; is
there accepted of God, and bid sit at the right hand as a Saviour;
and that because his sacrifice for sins pleased God (2 Tim 1:10;
Heb 2:14,15; 10:12,13; Eph 4:7,8; John 16:10,11; Acts 5:30,31).
(4.) God hath sent out and proclaimed him as a Saviour, and tells
the world that we have redemption through his blood, that he will
justify us, if we believe in his blood, and that he can faithfully
and justly do it. Yea, God doth beseech us to be reconciled to
him by his Son; which could not be, if he were not anointed by him
to this very end, and also if his works and undertakings were not
accepted of him considered as a Saviour (Rom 3:24,25; 2 Cor 5:18-21).
(5.) God hath received already millions of souls into his paradise,
because they have received this Jesus for a Saviour; and is resolved
to cut them off, and to cast them out of his presence, that will
not take him for a Saviour (Heb 12:22-26).
Second, How it appears that he hath power to cast out. This appears
also by what follows:--
1. The Father, for the service that he hath done him as Saviour,
hath made him Lord of all, even Lord of quick and dead. "For to
this end Christ both died, and rose, and revived, that he might be
Lord both of the dead and living" (Rom 14:9).
3. The Father hath made him judge of quick and dead, hath committed
all judgment unto the Son, and appointed that all should honour
the Son, even as they honour the Father (John 5:22,23).
4. God will judge the world by this man: the day is appointed for
judgment, and he is appointed for judge. "He hath appointed a day
in the which he will judge the world in righteousness by that man"
(Acts 17:31). Therefore we must all appear before the judgment
seat of Christ, that every one may receive for the things done in
the body, according to what they have done. If they have closed with
him, heaven and salvation; if they have not, hell and damnation!
And for these reasons he must be judge:--
(2.) That all men might honour the Son, even as they honour the
Father. "For the Father judgeth no man, but hath committed all
judgment unto the Son; that all men should honour the Son, even as
they honour the Father" (John 5:22,23).
These observations lie all of them in the words, and are plentifully
confirmed by the Scriptures of truth; but I shall not at this time
speak to them all, but shall pass by the first, second, third,
fourth, and sixth, partly because I design brevity, and partly
because they are touched upon in the explicatory part of the text.
I shall therefore begin with the fifth observation, and so make
that the first in order, in the following discourse.
That the text carrieth this truth in its bosom, you will find if
you look into the explication of the first part thereof before. I
shall, therefore, here follow the method propounded, viz: show,
(1.) In the wisdom of God it pleased him, that the world by wisdom
should not know him. Now, if by their wisdom they cannot know him,
it follows, by that wisdom, they cannot come unto him; for coming
to him is not before, but after some knowledge of him (1 Cor 1:21;
Acts 13:27; Psa 9:10).
(4.) God counted the wisdom of this world one of his greatest enemies;
therefore, by that wisdom no man can come to Jesus Christ. For it
is not likely that one of God's greatest enemies should draw a man
to that which best of all pleaseth God, as coming to Christ doth.
Now, that God counteth the wisdom of this world one of his greatest
enemies, is evident, (a.) For that it casteth the greatest contempt
upon his Son's undertakings, as afore is proved, in that it counts
his crucifixion foolishness; though that be one of the highest
demonstrations of Divine wisdom (Eph 1:7,8). (b.) Because God hath
threatened to destroy it, and bring it to nought, and cause it to
perish; which surely he would not do, was it not an enemy, would
it direct men to, and cause them to close with Jesus Christ (Isa
29:14; 1 Cor 1:19). (c.) He hath rejected it from helping in the
ministry of his Word, as a fruitless business, and a thing that
comes to nought (1 Cor 2:4,6,12,13). (d.) Because it causeth to
perish, those that seek it, and pursue it (1 Cor 1:18,19). (e.)
And God has proclaimed, that if any man will be wise in this world,
he must be a fool in the wisdom of this world, and that is the way
to be wise in the wisdom of God. "If any man seemeth to be wise
in this world, let him become a fool that he may be wise. For the
wisdom of this world is foolishness with God" (1 Cor 3:18-20).
(1.) From that which goeth before. For man's power in the putting
forth of it, in this matter, is either stirred up by love, or sense
of necessity; but the wisdom of this world neither gives man love
to, or sense of a need of, Jesus Christ; therefore, his power lieth
still, as from that.
(2.) What power has he that is dead, as every natural man spiritually
is, even dead in trespasses and sins? Dead, even as dead to God's
New Testament things as he that is in his grave is dead to the
things of this world. What power hath he, then, whereby to come to
Jesus Christ? (John 5:25; Eph 2:1; Col 2:13).
(3.) God forbids the mighty man's glorying in his strength; and
says positively, "By strength shall no man prevail;" and again,
"Not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit, saith the Lord" (Jer
9:23,24; 1 Sam 2:9; Zech 4:6; 1 Cor 1:27-31).
Second, I should now come to the proof of the second part of the
observation [namely, the coming to Christ is by the gift, promise,
and drawing of the Father], but that is occasionally done already,
in the explicatory part of the text, to which I refer the reader;
for I shall here only give thee a text or two more to the same
purpose, and so come to the use and application.
1. It is expressly said, "No man can come to me, except the Father
which hath sent me draw him" (John 6:44). By this text, there is
not only insinuated that in man is want of power, but also of will,
to come to Jesus Christ: they must be drawn; they come not if they
be not drawn. And observe, it is not man, no, nor all the angels
in heaven, that can draw one sinner to Jesus Christ. No man cometh
to me, except the Father which hath sent me draw him.
2. Again, "No man can come unto me, except it were given unto him
of my Father" (John 6:65). It is an heavenly gift that maketh man
come to Jesus Christ.
3. Again, "It is written in the prophets, And they shall be all
taught of God. Every man, therefore, that hath heard, and hath
learned of the Father, cometh unto me" (John 6:45).
I shall not enlarge, but shall make some use and application, and
so come to the next observation.
There are some men who think they may not be contradicted, when
they plead for the will, wisdom, and power of man in reference to
the things that are of the kingdom of Christ; but I will say to
such a man, he never yet came to understand, that himself is what
the Scripture teacheth concerning him; neither did he ever know
what coming to Christ is, by the teaching, gift, and drawing of the
Father. He is such a one that hath set up God's enemy in opposition
to him, and that continueth in such acts of defiance; and what his
end, without a new birth, will be, the Scripture teacheth also;
but we will pass this.
1. This is a man with whom God is, in whom God works and walks; a
man whose motion is governed and steered by the mighty hand of God,
and the effectual working of his power. Here is a man!
2. This man, by the power of God's might, which worketh in him,
is able to cast a whole world behind him, with all the lusts and
pleasures of it, and to charge through all the difficulties that
men and devils can set against him. Here is a man.
4. This man can look upon death with comfort, can laugh at destruction
when it cometh, and longs to hear the sound of the last trump,
and to see his Judge coming in the clouds of heaven. Here is a man
indeed!
Let Christians, then, esteem each other as such. I know you do it;
but do it more and more. And that you may, consider these two or
three things. (1.) These are the objects of Christ's esteem (Matt
12:48,49; 15:22-28; Luke 7:9). (2.) These are the objects of the
esteem of angels (Dan 9:12; 10:21,22; 13:3,4; Heb 2:14). (3.) These
have been the objects of the esteem of heathens, when but convinced
about them (Dan 5:10,11; Acts 5:15; 1 Cor 14:24,25). "Let each [of
you, then,] esteem [each] other better than themselves" (Phil 2:2).
But, I say, why offended at this? Is he ever the worse for coming
to Jesus Christ, or for his loving and serving of Jesus Christ? Or
is he ever the more a fool, for flying from that which will drown
thee in hell-fire, and for seeking eternal life? Besides, pray,
Sirs, consider it; this he doth, not of himself, but by the drawing
of the Father. Come, let me tell thee in thine ear, thou that wilt
not come to him thyself, and him that would, thou hinderest--
1. Thou shalt be judged for one that hath hated, maligned, and
reproached Jesus Christ, to whom this poor sinner is coming.
2. Thou shalt be judged, too, for one that hath hated the Father,
by whose powerful drawing this sinner doth come.
3. Thou shalt be taken and judged for one that has done despite to
the Spirit of grace in him that is, by its help, coming to Jesus
Christ. What sayest thou now? Wilt thou stand by thy doings? Wilt
thou continue to contemn and reproach the living God? Thinkest thou
that thou shalt weather it out well enough at the day of judgment?
"Can thine heart endure, or can thine hands be strong, in the days
that I shall deal with thee," saith the Lord? (Eze 22:14, John
15:18-25; Jude 15; 1 Thess 4:8).
Use Fifth. Is it so, that no man comes to Jesus Christ by the will,
wisdom, and power of man, but by the gift, promise, and drawing of
the Father? Then this showeth us how it comes to pass, that weak
means are so powerful as to bring men out of their sins to a hearty
pursuit after Jesus Christ. When God bid Moses speak to the people,
he said, "I will give thee counsel, and God shall be with thee"
(Exo 18:19). When God speaks, when God works, who can let it?
None, none; then the work goes on! Elias threw his mantle upon
the shoulders of Elisha; and what a wonderful work followed! When
Jesus fell in with the crowing of a cock, what work was there! O
when God is in the means, then shall that means--be it never so
weak and contemptible in itself--work wonders (1 Kings 19:19; Matt
26:74,75; Mark 14:71,72; Luke 22:60-62). The world understood not,
nor believed, that the walls of Jericho should fall at the sound of
rams' horns; but when God will work, the means must be effectual.
A word weakly spoken, spoken with difficulty, in temptation, and in
the midst of great contempt and scorn, works wonders, if the Lord
thy God will say so too.
Use Sixth. Is it so? Doth no man come to Jesus Christ by the will,
wisdom, and power of man, but by the gift, promise, and drawing of
the Father? Then here is room for Christians to stand and wonder
at the effectual working of God's providences, that he hath made
use of, as means to bring them to Jesus Christ.
For although men are drawn to Christ by the power of the Father,
yet that power putteth forth itself in the use of means: and these
means are divers, sometimes this, sometimes that; for God is at
liberty to work by which, and when, and how he will; but let the
means be what they will, and as contemptible as may be, yet God
that commanded the light to shine out of darkness, and that out
of weakness can make strong, can, nay, doth oftentimes make use
of very unlikely means to bring about the conversion and salvation
of his people. Therefore, you that are come to Christ--and that
by unlikely means--stay yourselves, and wonder, and, wondering,
magnify almighty power, by the work of which the means hath been
made effectual to bring you to Jesus Christ.
What was the providence that God made use of as a means, either
more remote or more near, to bring thee to Jesus Christ? Was it the
removing of thy habitation, the change of thy condition, the loss
of relations, estate, or the like? Was it thy casting of thine eye
upon some good book, thy hearing of thy neighbours talk of heavenly
things, the beholding of God's judgments as executed upon others,
or thine own deliverance from them, or thy being strangely cast under
the ministry of some godly man? O take notice of such providence or
providences! They were sent and managed by mighty power to do thee
good. God himself, I say, hath joined himself unto this chariot:
yea, and so blessed it, that it failed not to accomplish the thing
for which he sent it.
God blesseth not to every one his providences in this manner. How
many thousands are there in this world, that pass every day under
the same providences! but God is not in them, to do that work by
them as he hath done for thy poor soul, by his effectually working
with them. O that Jesus Christ should meet thee in this providence,
that dispensation, or the other ordinance! This is grace indeed!
At this, therefore, it will be thy wisdom to admire, and for this
to bless God.
(2.) What providence was it that there should be a tree in the way
for Zaccheus to climb, thereby to give Jesus opportunity to call
that chief of the publicans home to himself, even before he came
down therefrom (Luke 19).
(3.) Was it not also wonderful that the thief, which you read of in
the gospel, should, by the providence of God, be cast into prison,
to be condemned even at that session that Christ himself was to
die; nay, and that it should happen, too, that they must be hanged
together, that the thief might be in hearing and observing of
Jesus in his last words, that he might be converted by him before
his death! (Luke 23).
Nay, I have myself known some that have been made to go to hear the
Word preached against their wills; others have gone not to hear,
but to see and to be seen; nay, to jeer and flout others, as also
to catch and carp at things. Some also to feed their adulterous
eyes with the sight of beautiful objects; and yet God hath made use
even of these things, and even of the wicked and sinful proposals
of sinners, to bring them under the grace that might save their
souls.
Use Seventh. Doth no man come to Jesus Christ but by the drawing,
&c., of the Father? Then let me here caution those poor sinners,
that are spectators of the change that God hath wrought in them that
are coming to Jesus Christ, not to attribute this work and change
to other things and causes.
There are some poor sinners in the world that plainly see a change,
a mighty change, in their neighbours and relations that are coming
to Jesus Christ. But, as I said, they being ignorant, and not
knowing whence it comes and whither it goes, for "so is every one
that is born of the Spirit," (John 3:8), therefore they attribute
this change to others causes: as melancholy; to sitting alone; to
overmuch reading; to their going to too many sermons; to too much
studying and musing on what they hear.
Also they conclude, on the other side, that it is for want of merry
company; for want of physic; and therefore they advise them to
leave off reading, going to sermons, the company of sober people;
and to be merry, to go a gossiping, to busy themselves in the
things of this world, not to sit musing alone, &c. But come, poor
ignorant sinner, let me deal with thee. It seems thou art turned
counsellor for Satan: I tell thee thou knowest not what thou dost.
Take heed of spending thy judgment after this manner; thou judgest
foolishly, and sayest in this, to every one that passeth by, thou
art a fool. What! count convictions for sin, mournings for sin,
and repentance for sin, melancholy? This is like those that on the
other side said, "These men are [drunk with] full of new wine," &c.
Or as he that said Paul was mad (Acts 2:13, 26:24). Poor ignorant
sinner! canst thou judge no better? What! is sitting alone, pensive
under God's hand, reading the Scriptures, and hearing of sermons,
&c., the way to be undone? The Lord open thine eyes, and make thee
to see thine error! Thou hast set thyself against God, thou hast
despised the operation of his hands, thou attemptest to murder
souls. What! canst thou give no better counsel touching those whom
God hath wounded, than to send them to the ordinances of hell for
help? Thou biddest them be merry and lightsome; but dost thou not
know that "the heart of fools is in the house of mirth?" (Eccl
7:4).
And wilt thou judge him that doth thus? Art thou almost like Elymas
the sorcerer, that sought to turn the deputy from the faith? Thou
seekest to pervert the right ways of the Lord. Take heed lest some
heavy judgment overtake thee (Acts 13:8-13). What! teach men to
quench convictions; take men off from a serious consideration of
the evil of sin, of the terrors of the world to come, and how they
shall escape the same? What! teach men to put God and his Word
out of their minds, by running to merry company, by running to the
world, by gossiping? &c. This is as much as to bid them to say to
God, "Depart from us, for we desire not the knowledge of thy ways;"
or, "What is the Almighty that we should serve him? or what profit
have we if we keep his ways?" Here is a devil in grain! What! bid
man walk "according to the course of this world, according to the
prince of the power of the air, the spirit that now worketh in the
children of disobedience" (Eph 2:2).
Object. 1. But we do not know that such are coming to Jesus Christ;
truly we wonder at them, and think they are fools.
Answ. Do you not know that they are coming to Jesus Christ? then
they may be coming to him, for aught you know; and why will ye be
worse than the brute, to speak evil of the things you know not?
What! are ye made to be taken and destroyed? must ye utterly perish
in your own corruptions? (2 Peter 2:12). Do you not know them? Let
them alone then. If you cannot speak good of them, speak not bad.
"Refrain from these men, and let them alone; for if this counsel or
this work be of men, it will come to nought; but if it be of God,
ye cannot overthrow it, lest haply ye be found even to fight against
God" (Acts 5:38,39). But why do you wonder at a work of conviction
and conversion? Know you not that this is the judgment of God
upon you, "ye despisers, to behold, and wonder, and perish?" (Acts
13:40,41). But why wonder, and think they are fools? Is the way of
the just an abomination to you? See that passage, and be ashamed,
"He that is upright in the way is abomination to the wicked"
(Prov 29:27). Your wondering at them argues that you are strangers
to yourselves, to conviction for sin, and to hearty desires to be
saved; as also to coming to Jesus Christ.
Object. 2. But how shall we know that such men are coming to Jesus
Christ?
Answ. Who can make them see that Christ has made blind? (John 2:8,9).
Nevertheless, because I endeavour thy conviction, conversion, and
salvation, consider: Do they cry out of sin, being burthened with
it, as of an exceeding bitter thing? Do they fly from it, as from
the face of a deadly serpent? Do they cry out of the insufficiency
of their own righteousness, as to justification in the sight of
God? Do they cry out after the Lord Jesus, to save them? Do they
see more worth and merit in one drop of Christ's blood to save them,
than in all the sins of the world to damn them? Are they tender of
sinning against Jesus Christ? Is his name, person, and undertakings,
more precious to them, than is the glory of the world? Is this word
more dear unto them? Is faith in Christ (of which they are convinced
by God's Spirit of the want of, and that without it they can never
close with Christ) precious to them? Do they savour Christ in his
Word, and do they leave all the world for his sake? And are they
willing, God helping them, to run hazards for his name, for the
love they bear to him? Are his saints precious to them? If these
things be so, whether thou seest them or no, these men are coming
to Jesus Christ (Rom 7:914; Psa 38:3-8; Heb 6:18-20; Isa 64:6; Phil
3:7,8; Psa 54:1; 109:26; Acts 16:30; Psa 51:7,8; 1 Peter 1:18,19;
Rom 7:24; 2 Cor 5:2; Acts 5:41; James 2:7; Song 5:10-16; Psa 119;
John 13:35; 1 John 4:7; 3:14; John 16:9; Rom 14:23; Heb 11:6; Psa
19:10,11; Jer 15:16; Heb 11:24-27; Acts 20:22-24; 21:13; Titus
3:15; 2 John 1; Eph 4:16; Phile 7; 1 Cor 16:24).
But I am a great sinner, sayest thou. "I will in no wise cast out,"
says Christ. But I am an old sinner, sayest thou. "I will in no wise
cast out," says Christ. But I am a hard-hearted sinner, sayest thou.
"I will in no wise cast out," says Christ. But I am a backsliding
sinner, sayest thou. "I will in no wise cast out," says Christ. But
I have served Satan all my days, sayest thou. "I will in no wise
cast out," says Christ. But I have sinned against light, sayest
thou. "I will in no wise cast out," says Christ. But I have sinned
against mercy, sayest thou. "I will in no wise cast out," says
Christ. But I have no good thing to bring with me, sayest thou. "I
will in no wise cast out," says Christ.
Thus I might go on to the end of things, and show you, that still
this promise was provided to answer all objections, and doth answer
them. But I say, what need it be, if they that are coming to Jesus
Christ are not sometimes, yea, oftentimes, heartily afraid, "that
Jesus Christ will cast them out?"
Second, I will give you now two instances that seem to imply the
truth of this observation.
That about the Prodigal seems pertinent also to this matter: "When
he came to himself, he said, How many hired servants of my father's
have bread enough and to spare, and I perish with hunger! I will
arise and go to my father." Heartily spoken; but how did he perform
his promise? I think not so well as he promised to do; and my ground
for my thoughts is, because his father, so soon as he was come to
him, fell upon his neck and kissed him; implying, methinks, as if
the prodigal by this time was dejected in his mind; and therefore
his father gives him the most sudden and familiar token of
reconciliation. And kisses were of old time often used to remove
doubts and fears. Thus Laban and Esau kiss Jacob. Thus Joseph
kissed his brethren; and thus also David kissed Absalom (Gen 31:55;
33:1-4; 48:9,10; 2 Sam 14:33). It is true, as I said, at first
setting out, he spake heartily, as sometimes sinners also do in
their beginning to come to Jesus Christ; but might not he, yea,
in all probability he had, between the first step he took, and the
last, by which he accomplished that journey, many a thought, both
this way and that; as whether his father would receive him or no?
As thus: I said, "I would go to my Father." But how, if when I come
at him he should ask me, Where I have all this while been? What
must I say then? Also, if he ask me, What is become of the portion
of goods that he gave me? What shall I say then? If he asks me, Who
have been my companions? What shall I say then? If he also shall
ask me, What hath been my preferment in all the time of my absence
from him? What shall I say then? Yea, and if he ask me, Why I came
home no sooner? What shall I say then? Thus, I say, might he reason
with himself, and being conscious to himself, that he could give
but a bad answer to any of these interrogatories, no marvel if he
stood in need first of all of a kiss from his father's lips. For
had he answered the first in truth, he must say, I have been a
haunter of taverns and ale-houses; and as for my portion, I spent
it in riotous living; my companions were whores and drabs; as for
my preferment, the highest was, that I became a hog-herd; and as
for my not coming home till now, could I have made shift to have
staid abroad any longer, I had not lain at thy feet for mercy now.
Quest. But what should be the reason? I will answer to this question
thus:
Coming sinner, Christ inviteth thee to dine and sup with him. He
inviteth thee to a banquet of wine, yea, to come into his wine-cellar,
and his banner over thee shall be love (Rev 3:20; Song 2:5). But
I doubt it, says the sinner: but, it is answered, he calls thee,
invites thee to his banquet, flagons, apples; to his wine, and to
the juice of his pomegranate. "O, I fear, I doubt, I mistrust, I
tremble in expectation of the contrary!" Come out of the man, thou
dastardly ignorance! Be not afraid, sinner, only believe; "He that
cometh to Christ he will in no wise cast out."
Let the coming sinner, therefore, seek after more of the good
knowledge of Jesus Christ. Press after it, seek it as silver, and
dig for it as for hid treasure. This will embolden thee; this will
make thee wax stronger and stronger. "I know whom I have believed,"
I know him, said Paul; and what follows? Why, "and I am persuaded
that he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him,
against that day" (2 Tim 1:12). What had Paul committed to Jesus
Christ? The answer is, He had committed to him his soul. But why
did he commit his soul to him? Why, because he knew him. He knew
him to be faithful, to be kind. He knew he would not fail him, nor
forsake him; and therefore he laid his soul down at his feet, and
committed it to him, to keep against that day. But,
Second, Thy fears that Christ will not receive thee may be also a
consequent of thy earnest and strong desires after thy salvation by
him. For this I observe, that strong desires to have, are attended
with strong fears of missing. What man most sets his heart upon,
and what his desires are most after, he ofttimes most fears he shall
not obtain. So the man, the ruler of the synagogue, had a great
desire that his daughter should live; and that desire was attended
with fear, that she should not. Wherefore, Christ saith unto him,
"Be not afraid" (Mark 5:36).
Suppose a young man should have his heart much set upon a virgin
to have her to wife, if ever he fears he shall not obtain her, it
is when he begins to love; now, thinks he, somebody will step in
betwixt my love and the object of it; either they will find fault
with my person, my estate, my conditions, or something! Now thoughts
begin to work; she doth not like me, or something. And thus it is
with the soul at first coming to Jesus Christ, thou lovest him,
and thy love produceth jealousy, and that jealousy ofttimes begets
fears.
Now thou fearest the sins of thy youth, the sins of thine old age,
the sins of thy calling, the sins of thy Christian duties, the sins
of thine heart, or something; thou thinkest something or other will
alienate the heart and affections of Jesus Christ from thee; thou
thinkest he sees something in thee, for the sake of which he will
refuse thy soul. But be content, a little more knowledge of him
will make thee take better heart; thy earnest desires shall not be
attended with such burning fears; thou shalt hereafter say, "This
is my infirmity" (Psa 77:10).
Thou art sick of love, a very sweet disease, and yet every disease
has some weakness attending of it: yet I wish this distemper, if it
be lawful to call it so, was more epidemical. Die of this disease
I would gladly do; it is better than life itself, though it be
attended with fears. But thou criest, I cannot obtain: well, be
not too hasty in making conclusions. If Jesus Christ had not put
his finger in at the hole of the lock, thy bowels would not have
been troubled for him (Song 5:4). Mark how the prophet hath it,
"They shall walk after the Lord; he shall roar like a lion; when
he shall roar, then the children shall tremble from the west, they
shall tremble as a bird out of Egypt, and as a dove out of the land
of Assyria" (Hosea 11:10,11). When God roars (as ofttimes the coming
soul hears him roar), what man that is coming can do otherwise than
tremble? (Amos 3:8). But trembling he comes: "He sprang in, and
came trembling, and fell down before Paul and Silas" (Acts 16:29).
Should you ask him that we mentioned but now, How long is it since
you began to fear you should miss of this damsel you love so? The
answer will be, Ever since I began to love her. But did you not
fear it before? No, nor should I fear it now, but that I vehemently
love her. Come, sinner, let us apply it: How long is it since thou
began to fear that Jesus Christ will not receive thee? Thy answer
is, Ever since I began to desire that he would save my soul. I
began to fear, when I began to come; and the more my heart burns
in desires after him, the more I feel my heart fear I shall not
be saved by him. See now, did not I tell thee that thy fears were
but the consequence of strong desires? Well, fear not, coming sinner,
thousands of coming souls are in thy condition, and yet they will
get safe into Christ's bosom: "Say," says Christ, "to them that
are of a fearful heart, Be strong, fear not; your God will come
and save you" (Isa 35:4; 63:1).
Third, Thy fear that Christ will not receive thee may arise from
a sense of thine own unworthiness. Thou seest what a poor, sorry,
wretched, worthless creature thou art; and seeing this, thou fearest
Christ will not receive thee. Alas, sayest thou, I am the vilest
of all men; a town-sinner, a ringleading sinner! I am not only a
sinner myself, but have made others twofold worse the children of
hell also. Besides, now I am under some awakenings and stirrings of
mind after salvation, even now I find my heart rebellious, carnal,
hard, treacherous, desperate, prone to unbelief, to despair: it
forgetteth the Word; it wandereth; it runneth to the ends of the
earth. There is not, I am persuaded, one in all the world that hath
such a desperate wicked heart as mine is; my soul is careless to
do good, but none more earnest to do that which is evil.
Can such a one as I am, live in glory? Can a holy, a just, and a
righteous God, once think (with honour to his name) of saving such
a vile creature as I am? I fear it. Will he show wonders to such a
dead dog as I am? I doubt it. I am cast out to the loathing of my
person, yea, I loath myself; I stink in mine own nostrils. How can
I then be accepted by a holy and sin-abhorring God? (Psa 38:5-7;
Eze 11; 20:42,44). Saved I would be; and who is there that would
not, were they in my condition? Indeed, I wonder at the madness
and folly of others, when I see them leap and skip so carelessly
about the mouth of hell! Bold sinner, how darest thou tempt God,
by laughing at the breach of his holy law? But alas! they are not
so bad one way, but I am worse another: I wish myself were anybody
but myself; and yet here again, I know not what to wish. When I
see such as I believe are coming to Jesus Christ, O I bless them!
But I am confounded in myself, to see how unlike, as I think, I am
to every good man in the world. They can read, hear, pray, remember,
repent, be humble, do everything better than so vile a wretch as
I. I, vile wretch, am good for nothing but to burn in hell-fire,
and when I think of that, I am confounded too!
Fourth. Thy fear that Christ will not receive thee, may arise from
a sense of the exceeding mercy of being saved; sometimes salvation
is in the eyes of him that desires so great, so huge, so wonderful
a thing, that the very thoughts of the excellency of it, engenders
unbelief about obtaining it, in the heart of those that unfeignedly
desire it. "Seemeth it to you," saith David, "a light thing to be
a king's son-in-law?" (1 Sam 18:23). So the thoughts of the greatness
and glory of the thing propounded, as heaven, eternal life, eternal
glory, to be with God, and Christ, and angels; these are great
things, things too good, saith the soul that is little in his own
eyes; things too rich, saith the soul that is truly poor in spirit,
for me.
But suppose this great person should second his suit, and send to
this sorry creature again, what would she say now? Would she not
say, You mock me? But what if he affirms that he is in good earnest,
and that his lord must have her to wife; yea, suppose he should
prevail upon her to credit his message, and to address herself for
her journey; yet, behold every thought of her pedigree confounds
her; also her sense of want of beauty makes her ashamed; and if she
doth but think of being embraced, the unbelief that is mixed with
that thought whirls her into tremblings; and now she calls herself
fool, for believing the messenger, and thinks not to go; if she
thinks of being bold, she blushes; and the least thought that she
shall be rejected, when she comes at him, makes her look as if she
would give up the ghost.
Thus, I say, doth the greatness of the things desired, quite dash
and overthrow the mind of the desirer. O, it is too big! it is too
big! it is too great a mercy! But, coming sinner, let me reason
with thee. Thou sayest, it is too big, too great. Well, will things
that are less satisfy thy soul? Will a less thing than heaven, than
glory and eternal life, answer thy desires? No, nothing less; and
yet I fear they are too big, and too good for me, ever to obtain.
Well, as big and as good as they are, God giveth them to such as
thou; they are not too big for God to give; no, not too big to give
freely. Be content; let God give like himself; he is that eternal
God, and giveth like himself. When kings give, they do not use to
give as poor men do. Hence it is said, that Nabal made a feast in
his house like the feast of a king; and again, "All these things
did Araunah, as a king, give unto David" (1 Sam 25:36; 2 Sam 24:23).
Now, God is a great king, let him give like a king; nay, let him
give like himself, and do thou receive like thyself. He hath all,
and thou hast nothing. God told his people of old, that he would
save them in truth and in righteousness, and that they should return
to, and enjoy the land, which before, for their sins, had spewed
them out; and then adds, under a supposition of their counting the
mercy too good, or too big, "If it be marvellous in the eyes of the
remnant of this people in these days, should it also be marvellous
in mine eyes? saith the Lord of hosts" (Zech 8:6).
As who should say, they are now in captivity, and little in their
own eyes; therefore they think the mercy of returning to Canaan is
a mercy too marvellously big for them to enjoy; but if it be so in
their eyes, it is not so in mine; I will do for them like God, if
they will but receive my bounty like sinners. Coming sinner, God
can give his heavenly Canaan, and the glory of it, unto thee; yea,
none ever had them but as a gift, a free gift. He hath given us his
Son, "How shall he not with him also freely give us all things?"
(Rom 8:32).
Fifth. Thy fears that Christ will not receive thee may arise from
the hideous roaring of the devil, who pursues thee. He that hears
him roar, must be a mighty Christian, if he can at that time deliver
himself from fear. He is called a roaring lion; and then to allude
to that in Isaiah, "If one look" into them, they have "darkness
and sorrow, and the light is darkened in the heavens thereof" (1
Peter 5:8; Isa 5:3).
(2.) Jesus Christ hath promised, "That him that cometh to him he
will in no wise cast out." And if he hath said it, will he not make
it good, I mean even thy salvation? For, as I have said already, not
to cast out, is to receive and admit to the benefit of salvation.
If then the Father hath given thee, as is manifest by thy coming;
and if Christ will receive thee, thou coming soul, as it is plain
he will, because he hath said, "He will in no wise cast out;" then
be confident, and let those conclusions, that as naturally flow
from the text as light from the sun, or water from the fountain,
stay thee.
If Satan therefore objecteth, But thou art not elected; answer,
But I am coming, Satan, I am coming; and that I could not be, but
that the Father draws me; and I am coming to such a Lord Jesus,
as will in no wise cast me out. Further, Satan, were I not elect,
the Father would not draw me, nor would the Son so graciously
open his bosom to me. I am persuaded, that not one of the nonelect
shall ever be able to say, no, not in the day of judgment, I did
sincerely come to Jesus Christ. Come they may, feignedly, as Judas
and Simon Magus did; but that is not our question. Therefore, O
thou honest-hearted coming sinner, be not afraid, but come.
2. [Of the sin against the Holy Ghost.]--As to the second part of
the objection, about sinning the sin against the Holy Ghost, the
same argument overthrows that also. But I will argue thus:
(3.) Coming to Jesus Christ lays a man under the promise of forgiveness
and salvation. But it is impossible that he that hath sinned that
sin should ever be put under a promise of these. Therefore, he that
hath sinned that sin can never have heart to come to Jesus Christ.
(5.) He that hath sinned that sin, Christ is to him of no more worth
than is a man that is dead; "For he hath crucified to himself the
Son of God;" yea, and hath also counted his precious blood as the
blood of an unholy thing. (Heb 6, 10) Now, he that hath this low
esteem of Christ will never come to him for life; but the coming
man has an high esteem of his person, blood, and merits. Therefore,
he that is coming has not committed that sin.
(6.) If he that has sinned this sin might yet come to Jesus Christ,
then must the truth of God be overthrown; which saith in one place,
"He hath never forgiveness;" and in another, "I will in no wise
cast him out." Therefore, that he may never have forgiveness, he
shall never have heart to come to Jesus Christ. It is impossible
that such an one should be renewed, either to or by repentance (Heb
6). Wherefore, never trouble thy head nor heart about this matter;
he that cometh to Jesus Christ cannot have sinned against the Holy
Ghost.
Sixth, Thy fears that Christ will not receive thee may arise from
thine own folly, in inventing, yea, in thy chalking out to God, a
way to bring thee home to Jesus Christ. Some souls that are coming
to Jesus Christ are great tormentors of themselves upon this account;
they conclude, that if their coming to Jesus Christ is right, they
must needs be brought home thus and thus.
This is the way that some sinners appoint for God; but, perhaps,
he will not walk therein; yet will he bring them to Jesus Christ.
But now, because they come not the way of their own chalking out,
therefore they are at a loss. They look for heavy load and burden;
but, perhaps, God gives them a sight of their lost condition, and
addeth not that heavy weight and burden. They look for fearful
temptations of Satan; but God sees that yet they are not fit for
them, nor is the time come that he should be honoured by them in
such a condition. They look for great and glorious revelations of
Christ, grace, and mercy; but, perhaps, God only takes the yoke
from off their jaws, and lays meat before them. And now again they
are at a loss, yet a-coming to Jesus Christ; "I drew them," saith
God, "with cords of a man, with bands of love--I took the yoke from
off their jaws, and laid meat unto them" (Hosea 11:4).
Now, I say, If God brings thee to Christ, and not by the way that
thou hast appointed, then thou art at a loss; and for thy being
at a loss, thou mayest thank thyself. God hath more ways than thou
knowest of to bring a sinner to Jesus Christ; but he will not give
thee beforehand an account by which of them he will bring thee to
Christ (Isa 40:13; Job 33:13). Sometimes he hath his ways in the
whirlwind; but sometimes the Lord is not there (Nahum 1:3; 1 Kings
19:11). If God will deal more gently with thee than with others
of his children, grudge not at it; refuse not the waters that go
softly, lest he bring upon thee the waters of the rivers, strong
and many, even these two smoking firebrand, the devil and guilt of
sin (Isa 8:6,7). He saith to Peter, "Follow me." And what thunder
did Zaccheus hear or see? Zaccheus, "Come down," said Christ; "and
he came down," says Luke, "and received him joyfully."
But had Peter or Zaccheus made the objection that thou hast made,
and directed the Spirit of the Lord as thou hast done, they might
have looked long enough before they had found themselves coming
to Jesus Christ. Besides, I will tell thee, that the greatness of
sense of sin, the hideous roaring of the devil, yea, and abundance
of revelations, will not prove that God is bringing thy soul to
Jesus Christ; as Balaam, Cain, Judas, and others, can witness.
Further, consider that what thou hast not of these things here, thou
mayest have another time, and that to thy distraction. Wherefore,
instead of being discontent, because thou art not in the fire, because
thou hearest not the sound of the trumpet and alarm of war, "Pray
that thou enter not into temptation;" yea, come boldly to the
throne of grace, and obtain mercy, and find grace to help in that
time of need (Psa 88:15; Matt 26:41; Heb 4:16).
Trouble not thyself, coming sinner. If thou seest thy lost condition
by original and actual sin; if thou seest thy need of the spotless
righteousness of Jesus Christ; if thou art willing to be found in
him, and to take up thy cross and follow him; then pray for a fair
wind and good weather, and come away. Stick no longer in a muse and
doubt about things, but come away to Jesus Christ. Do it, I say,
lest thou tempt God to lay the sorrows of a travailing woman upon
thee. Thy folly in this thing may make him do it. Mind what follows:
"The sorrows of a travailing woman shall come upon him." Why? "He
is an unwise son; for he should not stay long in the place of the
breaking forth of children" (Hosea 13:13).
Seventh, Thy fears that Christ will not receive thee may arise
from those decays that thou findest in thy soul, even while thou
art coming to him. Some, even as they are coming to Jesus Christ,
do find themselves grow worse and worse; and this is indeed a sore
trial to the poor coming sinner.
Here is now room for fears of being cast away. Now I see I am
lost, says the sinner. This is not coming to Jesus Christ, says
the sinner; such a desperate, hard, and wretched heart as mine is,
cannot be a gracious one, saith the sinner. And bid such an one be
better, he says, I cannot; no, I cannot.
Alas! we are sinful out of measure, but see it not to be the full,
until an hour of temptation comes. But when it comes, it doth as
the painter doth, draweth out our heart to the life: yet the sight
of what we are should not keep us from coming to Jesus Christ.
There are two ways by which God lets a man into a sight of the
naughtiness of his heart; one is, by the light of the Word and
Spirit of God; and the other is, by the temptations of the devil.
But, by the first, we see our naughtiness one way; and, by the
second, another. By the light of the Word and Spirit of God, thou
hast a sight of thy naughtiness; and by the light of the sun, thou
hast a sight of the spots and defilements that are in thy house or
raiment. Which light gives thee to see a necessity of cleansing,
but maketh not the blemishes to spread more abominably. But when
Satan comes, when he tempts, he puts life and rage into our sins,
and turns them, as it were, into so many devils within us. Now,
like prisoners, they attempt to break through the prison of our
body; they will attempt to get out at our eyes, mouth, ears, any
ways, to the scandal of the gospel, and reproach of religion, to
the darkening of our evidences, and damning of our souls.
But I shall say, as I said before, this hath ofttimes been the lot
of God's people. And, "There hath no temptation overtaken you but
such as is common to man; but God is faithful, who will not suffer
you to be tempted above that ye are able" (1 Cor 10:13). See the
Book of Job, the Book of Psalms, and that of the Lamentations. And
remember further, that Christ himself was tempted to blaspheme,
to worship the devil, and to murder himself, (Matt 4; Luke 4);
temptations worse than which thou canst hardly be overtaken with.
But he was sinless, that is true. And he is thy Saviour, and that
is as true! Yea, it is as true also, that by his being tempted, he
became the conqueror of the tempter, and a succourer of those that
are tempted (Col 2:14,15; Heb 2:15; 4:15,16).
Quest. But what should be the reason that some that are coming to
Christ should be so lamentably cast down and buffeted with temptations?
2. Some that are coming to Jesus Christ are too much affected
with their own graces, and too little taken with Christ's person;
wherefore God, to take them off from doting upon their own jewels,
and that they might look more to the person, undertaking, and merits
of his Son, plunges them into the ditch by temptations. And this I
take to be the meaning of Job, "If I wash myself," said he, "with
snow-water, and make my hands never so clean, yet shalt thou plunge
me in the ditch, and mine own clothes shall abhor me" (Job 9:30).
Job had been a little too much tampering with his own graces, and
setting his excellencies a little too high; as these texts make
manifest: Job 33:8-13, 34:5-10, 35:2,3, 38:1,2, 40:105, 42:3-6.
But by that the temptations were ended, you find him better taught.
Yea, God doth ofttimes, even for this thing, as it were, take our
graces from us, and so leave us almost quite to ourselves and to
the tempter, that we may learn not to love the picture more than
the person of his Son. See how he dealt with them in the 16th of
Ezekiel, and the second of Hosea.
3. Perhaps thou hast been given too much to judge thy brother, to
condemn thy brother, because a poor tempted man. And God, to bring
down the pride of thy heart, letteth the tempter loose upon thee,
that thou also mayst feel thyself weak. For "pride goeth before
destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall" (Prov 16:18).
4. It may be thou hast dealt a little too roughly with those that
God hath this way wounded, not considering thyself, lest thou also
be tempted. And therefore God hath suffered it to come unto thee
(Gal 6:1).
6. It may be thou hast presumed too far, and stood too much
in thine own strength, and therefore is a time of temptation come
upon thee. This was also one cause why it came upon Peter--Though
all men forsake thee, yet will not I. Ah! that is the way to be
tempted indeed (John 13:36-38).
9. It may be thy graces must be tried in the fire, that that rust
that cleaveth to them may be taken away, and themselves proved,
both before angels and devils, to be far better than of gold that
perisheth; it may be also, that thy graces are to receive special
praises, and honour, and glory, at the coming of the Lord Jesus to
judgment, for all the exploits that thou hast acted by them against
hell, and its infernal crew, in the day of thy temptation (1 Peter
1:6,7).
10. It may be God would have others learn by thy sighs, groans,
and complaints, under temptation, to beware of those sins for the
sake of which thou art at present delivered to the tormentors.
But to conclude this, put the worst to the worst--and then things
will be bad enough--suppose that thou art to this day without the
grace of God, yet thou art but a miserable creature, a sinner, that
hath need of a blessed Saviour; and the text presents thee with one
as good and kind as heart can wish; who also for thy encouragement
saith, "And him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out."
1. That faith and doubting may at the same time have their residence
in the same soul. "O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou
doubt?" (Matt 14:31). He saith not, O thou of no faith! but, O thou
of little faith! because he had a little faith in the midst of his
many doubts. The same is true even of many that are coming to
Jesus Christ. They come, and fear they come not, and doubt they come
not. When they look upon the promise, or a word of encouragement
by faith, then they come; but when they look upon themselves, or
the difficulties that lie before them, then they doubt. "Bid me
come," said Peter; "Come," said Christ. So he went down out of the
ship to go to Jesus, but his hap was to go to him upon the water;
there was the trial. So it is with the poor desiring soul. Bid me
come, says the sinner; Come, says Christ, and I will in no wise
cast thee out. So he comes, but his hap is to come upon the water,
upon drowning difficulties; if, therefore, the wind of temptations
blow, the waves of doubts and fears will presently arise, and this
coming sinner will begin to sink, if he has but little faith. But
you shall find here in Peter's little faith, a twofold act; to wit,
coming and crying. Little faith cannot come all the way without
crying. So long as its holy boldness lasts, so long it can come
with peace; but when it is so, it can come no further, it will go
the rest of the way with crying. Peter went as far as his little
faith would carry him: he also cried as far as his little faith would
help, "Lord, save me, I perish!" And so with coming and crying he
was kept from sinking, though he had but a little faith. "Jesus
stretched forth his hand, and caught him, and said unto him, O thou
of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt?"
2. Is it so, that they that are coming to Jesus Christ are ofttimes
heartily afraid that Jesus Christ will not receive them? Then
this shows us a reason of that dejection, and those castings down,
that very often we perceive to be in them that are coming to Jesus
Christ. Why, it is because they are afraid that Jesus Christ will
not receive them. The poor world they mock us, because we are a
dejected people; I mean, because we are sometimes so: but they do
not know the cause of our dejection. Could we be persuaded, even
then, when we are dejected, that Jesus Christ would indeed receive
us, it would make us fly over their heads, and would put more
gladness into our hearts than in the time in which their corn,
wine, and oil increases (Psa 4:6,7). But,
3. It is so, That they that are coming to Jesus Christ are ofttimes
heartily afraid that he will not receive them. Then this shows that
they that are coming to Jesus Christ are an awakened, sensible,
considering people. For fear cometh from sense, and consideration
of things. They are sensible of sin, sensible of the curse due
thereto; they are also sensible of the glorious majesty of God,
and of what a blessed, blessed thing it is to be received of Jesus
Christ. The glory of heaven, and the evil of sin, these things
they consider, and are sensible of. "When I remember, I am afraid."
"When I consider, I am afraid" (Job 21:6; 23:15).
These things dash their spirits, being awake and sensible. Were
they dead, like other men, they would not be afflicted with fear
as they are. For dead men fear not, feel not, care not, but the
living and sensible man, he it is that is ofttimes heartily afraid
that Jesus Christ will not receive him. I say, the dead and senseless
are not distressed. They presume; they are groundlessly confident.
Who so bold as blind Bayard? These indeed should fear and be
afraid, because they are not coming to Jesus Christ. O! the hell,
the fire, the pit, the wrath of God, and torment of hell, that
are prepared for poor neglecting sinners! "How shall we escape if
we neglect so great salvation?" (Heb 3:3). But they want sense of
things, and so cannot fear.
4. Is it so, that they that are coming to Jesus Christ are ofttimes
heartily afraid that he will not receive them? Then this should
teach old Christians to pity and pray for young comers. You know
the heart of a stranger; for you yourselves were strangers in the
land of Egypt. You know the fears, and doubts, and terrors, that take
hold of them; for that they sometimes took hold of you. Wherefore
pity them, pray for them, encourage them; they need all this: guilt
hath overtaken them, fears of the wrath of God hath overtaken them.
Perhaps they are within the sight of hell-fire; and the fear of
going thither is burning hot within their hearts. You may know,
how strangely Satan is suggesting his devilish doubts unto them, if
possible he may sink and drown them with the multitude and weight
of them. Old Christians, mend up the path for them, take the
stumblingblocks out of the way; lest that which is feeble and weak
be turned aside, but let it rather be healed (Heb 12).
[CHRIST WOULD HAVE COMERS NOT ONCE THINK THAT HE WILL CAST THEM
OUT.]
First, Christ Jesus did forbid even them that as yet were not
coming to him, once to think him such an one. "Do not think," said
he, "that I will accuse you to the Father" (John 5:45).
These, as I said, were such, that as yet were not coming to him.
For he saith of them a little before, "And ye will not come to me;"
for the respect they had to the honour of men kept them back. Yet,
I say, Jesus Christ gives them to understand, that though he might
justly reject them, yet he would not, but bids them not once to
think that he would accuse them to the Father. Now, not to accuse,
with Christ, is to plead for: for Christ in these things stands
not neuter between the Father and sinners. So then, if Jesus Christ
would not have them think, that yet will not come to him, that he
will accuse them; then he would not that they should think so, that
in truth are coming to him. "And him that cometh to me I will in
no wise cast out."
Second, When the woman taken in adultery, even in the very act,
was brought before Jesus Christ, he so carried it both by words and
actions, that he evidently enough made it manifest, that condemning
and casting out were such things, for the doing of which he came
not into the world. Wherefore, when they had set her before him,
and had laid to her charge her heinous fact, he stooped down, and
with his finger wrote upon the ground, as though he heard them not.
Now what did he do by this his carriage, but testify plainly that
he was not for receiving accusations against poor sinners, whoever
accused by? And observe, though they continue asking, thinking at
last to force him to condemn her; yet then he so answered, so that
he drove all condemning persons from her. And then he adds, for
her encouragement to come to him; "Neither do I condemn thee; go,
and sin no more" (John 8:1-11).
Not but that he indeed abhorred the fact, but he would not condemn
the woman for the sin, because that was not his office. He was
not sent "into the world to condemn the world; but that the world
through him might be saved" (John 3:17). Now if Christ, though
urged to it, would not condemn the guilty woman, though she was far
at present from coming to him, he would not that they should once
think that he will cast them out, that in truth are coming to him.
"And him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out."
Third, Christ plainly bids the turning sinner come; and forbids him
to entertain any such thought as that he will cast him out. "Let
the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts;
and let him return unto the Lord, and he will have mercy upon him;
and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon" (Isa 4:7). The Lord,
by bidding the unrighteous forsake his thoughts, doth in special
forbid, as I have said, viz., those thoughts that hinder the coming
man in his progress to Jesus Christ, his unbelieving thoughts.
Therefore he bids him not only forsake his ways, but his thoughts.
"Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his
thoughts." It is not enough to forsake one if thou wilt come to
Jesus Christ; because the other will keep thee from him. Suppose
a man forsakes his wicked ways, his debauched and filthy life;
yet if these thoughts, that Jesus Christ will not receive him, be
entertained and nourished in his heart; these thoughts will keep
him from coming to Jesus Christ.
Sinner, coming sinner, art thou for coming to Jesus Christ? Yes,
says the sinner. Forsake thy wicked ways then. So I do, says the
sinner.
Look ye now, did not I tell you so? There are thoughts yet remaining
in the heart, even of those who have forsaken their wicked ways;
and with those thoughts they are more plagued than with anything
else; because they hinder their coming to Jesus Christ; for the sin
of unbelief, which is the original of all these thoughts, is that
which besets a coming sinner more easily, than doth his ways (Heb
12:1-4). But now, since Jesus Christ commands thee to forsake these
thoughts, forsake them, coming sinner; and if thou forsake them
not, thou transgressest the commands of Christ, and abidest thine
own tormentor, and keepest thyself from establishment in grace.
"If ye will not believe, surely ye shall not be established" (Isa
7:9). Thus you see how Jesus Christ setteth himself against such
thoughts, that any way discourage the coming sinner; and thereby
truly vindicates the doctrine we have in hand; to wit, that Jesus
Christ would not have them, that in truth are coming to him, once
think that he will cast them out. "And him that cometh to me I will
in no wise cast out."
6. If Jesus Christ should allow that they should once think that are
coming to him, that he will cast them out, then he must allow them
to think that he will be unfaithful to his office of priesthood; for,
as by the first part of it, he paid price for, and ransomed souls,
so by the second part thereof, he continually maketh intercession
to God for them that come (Heb 7:25). But he cannot allow us to
question his faithful execution of his priesthood. Therefore he
cannot allow us once to think that the coming sinner shall be cast
out.
I come now to make some GENERAL USE AND APPLICATION OF THE WHOLE,
and so to draw towards a conclusion.
First, It informeth us that men by nature are far off from Christ.
Let me a little improve this use, by speaking to these three
questions. 1. Where is he that is coming [but has not come], to
Jesus Christ? 2. What is he that is not coming to Jesus Christ? 3.
Whither is he to go that cometh not to Jesus Christ?
1. Where is he?
That none can save but Jesus Christ, is evident from Acts 4:12:
"Neither is there salvation in any other;" and "he hath given to us
eternal life, and this life is in his Son" (1 John 5:11). If life
could have been had anywhere else, it should have been in the law.
But it is not in the law; for by the deeds of the law, no man living
shall be justified; and if not justified, then no life. Therefore
life is nowhere to be had but in Jesus Christ (Gal 3).
[Quest.] But why would God so order it, that life should be had
nowhere else but in Jesus Christ?
[Answ.] There is reason for it, and that both with respect to God
and us.
(1.) That we might have it upon the easiest terms, to wit, freely:
as a gift, not as wages. Was it in Moses' hand, we should come
hardly at it. Was it in the pope's hand, we should pay soundly
for it. 20 But thanks be to God, it is in Christ, laid up in him,
and by him to be communicated to sinners upon easy terms, even
for receiving, accepting, and embracing with thanksgiving; as the
Scriptures plainly declare (John 1:11,12; 2 Cor 11:4; Heb 11:13;
Col 3:13-15). (2.) Life is in Christ FOR US, that it might not be
upon so brittle a foundation, as indeed it would had it been anywhere
else. The law itself is weak because of us, as to this. But Christ
is a tried stone, a sure foundation, one that will not fail to bear
thy burden, and to receive thy soul, coming sinner. (3.) Life is
in Christ, that it might be sure to all the seed. Alas! the best
of us, was life left in our hand, to be sure we should forfeit it,
over, and over, and over; or, was it in any other hand, we should,
by our often backslidings, so offend him, that at last he would
shut up his bowels in everlasting displeasure against us. But now
it is in Christ, it is with one that can pity, pray for, pardon,
yea, multiply pardons; it is with one that can have compassion
upon us, when we are out of the way; with one that hath an heart to
fetch us again, when we are gone astray; with one that can pardon
without upbraiding. Blessed be God, that life is in Christ! For
now it is sure to all the seed. But,
[Of the Sin of Unbelief.]--This sin may be called the white devil,
for it oftentimes, in its mischievous doings in the soul, shows as
if it was an angel of light: yea, it acteth like a counsellor of
heaven. Therefore a little to discourse of this evil disease.
1. It is that sin, above all others, that hath some show of reason
in its attempts. For it keeps the soul from Christ by pretending
its present unfitness and unpreparedness; as want of more sense
of sin, want of more repentance, want of more humility, want of a
more broken heart.
2. It is the sin that most suiteth with the conscience: the conscience
of the coming sinner tells him that he hath nothing good; that
he stands inditeable for ten thousand talents; that he is a very
ignorant, blind, and hard-hearted sinner, unworthy to be once taken
notice of by Jesus Christ. And will you, says Unbelief, in such a
case as you now are, presume to come to Jesus Christ?
3. It is the sin that most suiteth with our sense of feeling. The
coming sinner feels the workings of sin, of all manner of sin and
wretchedness in his flesh; he also feels the wrath and judgment
of God due to sin, and ofttimes staggers under it. Now, says
Unbelief, you may see you have no grace; for that which works in
you is corruption. You may also perceive that God doth not love
you, because the sense of his wrath abides upon you. Therefore,
how can you bear the face to come to Jesus Christ?
4. It is that sin, above all others, that most suiteth with the
wisdom of our flesh. The wisdom of our flesh thinks it prudent to
question awhile, to stand back awhile, to hearken to both sides
awhile; and not to be rash, sudden, or unadvised, in too bold
a presuming upon Jesus Christ. And this wisdom unbelief falls in
with.
4. Faith will make thee see love in the heart of Christ, when with
his mouth he giveth reproofs; but unbelief will imagine wrath in
his heart, when with his mouth and Word he saith he loves us (Matt
15:22,28; Num 13; 2 Chron 14:3).
5. Faith will help the soul to wait, though God defers to give; but
unbelief will take huff and throw up all, if God makes any tarrying
(Psa 25:5; Isa 8:17; 2 Kings 6:33; Psa 106:13,14).
7. Faith will suck sweetness out of God's rod; but unbelief can
find no comfort in his greatest mercies (Psa 23:4; Num 21).
8. Faith maketh great burdens light; but unbelief maketh light ones
intolerably heavy (2 Cor 4:1; 14-18; Mal 1:12,13).
10. Faith bringeth us near to God when we are far from him; but
unbelief puts us far from God when we are near to him (Heb 10:22;
3:12,13).
12. Faith putteth a man under grace; but unbelief holdeth him
under wrath (Rom 3:24-26; 14:6; Eph 2:8; John 3:36; 1 John 5:10;
Heb 3:17; Mark 16:16).
15. Faith maketh our work acceptable to God through Christ; but
whatsoever is of unbelief is sin. For without faith it is impossible
to please him (Heb 11:4; Rom 14:23; Heb 6:6).
16. Faith giveth us peace and comfort in our souls; but unbelief
worketh trouble and tossings, like the restless waves of the sea
(Rom 5:1; James 1:6).
19. Faith gives us the victory over the law, sin, death, the devil,
and all evils; but unbelief layeth us obnoxious to them all (1 John
5:4,5; Luke 12:46).
20. Faith will show us more excellency in things not seen, than
in them that are; but unbelief sees more in things that are seen,
than in things that will be hereafter;. (2 Cor 4:18; Heb 11:24-27;
1 Cor 15:32).
21. Faith makes the ways of God pleasant and admirable; but unbelief
makes them heavy and hard (Gal 5:6; 1 Cor 12:10,11; John 6:60; Psa
2:3).
22. By faith Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob possessed the land of promise;
but because of unbelief, neither Aaron, nor Moses, nor Miriam could
get thither (Heb 11:9; 3:19).
23. By faith the children of Israel passed through the Red Sea;
but by unbelief the generality of them perished in the wilderness
(Heb 11:29; Jude 5).
24. By faith Gideon did more with three hundred men, and a few
empty pitchers, than all the twelve tribes could do, because they
believed not God (Judg 7:16-22; Num 14:11,14).
Thus might many more be added, which, for brevity's sake, I omit;
beseeching every one that thinketh he hath a soul to save, or be
damned, to take heed of unbelief; lest, seeing there is a promise
left us of entering into his rest, any of us by unbelief should
indeed come short of it.
First, Art thou indeed come to Jesus Christ? What hast thou left
behind thee? What didst thou come away from, in thy coming to Jesus
Christ?
When Lot came out of Sodom, he left the Sodomites behind him (Gen
19). When Abraham came out of Chaldea, he left his country and
kindred behind him (Gen 12; Acts 7). When Ruth came to put her trust
under the wings of the Lord God of Israel, she left her father and
mother, her gods, and the land of her nativity, behind her (Ruth
1:15-17; 2:11,12). When Peter came to Christ, he left his nets
behind him (Matt 4:20). When Zaccheus came to Christ, he left the
receipt of custom behind him (Luke 19). When Paul came to Christ,
he left his own righteousness behind him (Phil 3:7,8). When those
that used curious arts came to Jesus Christ, they took their
curious books and burned them; though, in another man's eye, they
were counted worth fifty thousand pieces of silver (Acts 19:18-20).
What sayest thou, man? Hast thou left thy darling sins, thy Sodomitish
pleasures, thy acquaintance and vain companions, thy unlawful gain,
thy idol-gods, thy righteousness, and thy unlawful curious arts,
behind thee? If any of these be with thee, and thou with them, in
thy heart and life, thou art not yet come to Jesus Christ.
Second, Art thou come to Jesus Christ? Prithee tell me what moved
thee to come to Jesus Christ?
Take three or four instances for this. Adam and Eve came not to
Jesus Christ until they received the alarm, the conviction of their
undone state by sin. (Gen 3) The children of Israel cried not out
for a mediator before they saw themselves in danger of death by the
law (Exo 20:18,19). Before the publican came, he saw himself lost
and undone (Luke 18:13). The prodigal came not, until he saw death
at the door, ready to devour him (Luke 15:17,18). The three thousand
came not, until they knew not what to do to be saved (Acts 2:37-39).
Paul came not, until he saw himself lost and undone (Acts 9:3-8,11).
Lastly, Before the jailer came, he saw himself undone (Acts 16:29-31).
And I tell thee, it is an easier thing to persuade a well man to
go to the physician for cure, or a man without hurt to seek for
a plaster to cure him, than it is to persuade a man that sees not
his soul-disease, to come to Jesus Christ. The whole have no need
of the physician; then why should they go to him? The full pitcher
can hold no more; then why should it go to the fountain? And if
thou comest full, thou comest not aright; and be sure Christ will
send thee empty away. "But he healeth the broken in heart, and
bindeth up their wounds" (Mark 2:17; Psa 147:3; Luke 1:53).
Third, Art thou coming to Jesus Christ? Prithee tell me, What seest
thou in him to allure thee to forsake all the world, to come to
him?
I say, What hast thou seen in him? Men must see something in Jesus
Christ, else they will not come to him. 1. What comeliness hast
thou seen in his person? thou comest not, if thou seest no form
nor comeliness in him (Isa 53:1-3). 2. Until those mentioned in
the Song were convinced that there was more beauty, comeliness,
and desirableness in Christ, than in ten thousand, they did not
so much as ask where he was, nor incline to turn aside after him
(Song 5, 6).
There be many things on this side heaven that can and do carry away
the heart; and so will do, so long as thou livest, if thou shalt
be kept blind, and not be admitted to see the beauty of the Lord
Jesus.
Fourth, Art thou come to the Lord Jesus? What hast thou found in
him, since thou camest to him?
Peter found with him the word of eternal life (John 6:68). They
that Peter makes mention of, found him a living stone, even such
a living stone as communicated life to them (1 Peter 2:4,5). He
saith himself, they that come to him, &c., shall find rest unto
their souls; hast thou found rest in him for thy soul? (Matt 11:28).
1. Abraham found THAT in him, that made him leave his country for
him, and become for his sake a pilgrim and stranger in the earth
(Gen 12; Heb 11).
2. Moses found THAT in him, that made him forsake a crown, and a
kingdom for him too.
4. What did Daniel and the three children find in him, to make
them run the hazards of the fiery furnace, and the den of lions,
for his sake? (Dan 3, 6).
1. Stephen found that in him that made him joyful, and quietly
yield up his life for his name (Acts 7).
4. What saw Menas, the Egyptian, in Christ, when he said, under most
cruel torments, There is nothing in my mind that can be compared to
the kingdom of heaven; neither is all the world, if it was weighed
in a balance, to be preferred with the price of one soul? Who is
able to separate us from the love of Jesus Christ our Lord? And
I have learned of my Lord and King not to fear them that kill the
body, &c. P. 117.
5. What did Eulalia see in Christ, when she said, as they were
pulling her one joint from another, Behold, O Lord, I will not forget
thee. What a pleasure it is for them, O Christ! that remember thy
triumphant victory? P. 121.
6. What think you did Agnes see in Christ, when rejoicingly she
went to meet the soldier that was appointed to be her executioner.
I will willingly, said she, receive into my paps the length of this
sword, and into my breast will draw the force thereof, even to the
hilts; that thus I, being married to Christ my spouse, may surmount
and escape all the darkness of this world? P. 122.
8. What did Marcus Arethusius see in Christ, when after his enemies
had cut his flesh, anointed it with honey, and hanged him up in a
basket for flies and bees to feed on, he would not give, to uphold
idolatry, one halfpenny to save his life? P. 128.
10. But what need I give thus particular instances of words and
smaller actions, when by their lives, their blood, their enduring
hunger, sword, fire, pulling asunder, and all torments that the
devil and hell could devise, for the love they bare to Christ,
after they were come to him?
4. Art thou come to Jesus Christ? Thou hast found glory in him,
glory that surmounts and goes beyond. "Thou art more glorious--than
the mountains of prey" (Psa 76:4).
Coming sinner, I have now a word for thee; be of good comfort, "He
will in no wise cast out." Of all men, thou art the blessed of the
Lord; the Father hath prepared his Son to be a sacrifice for thee,
and Jesus Christ, thy Lord, is gone to prepare a place for thee
(John 1:29; Heb 10). What shall I say to thee?
[First,] Thou comest to a FULL Christ; thou canst not want anything
for soul or body, for this world or that to come, but it is to
be had in or by Jesus Christ. As it is said of the land that the
Danites went to possess, so, and with much more truth, it may be
said of Christ; he is such an one with whom there is no want of any
good thing that is in heaven or earth. A full Christ is thy Christ.
6. He is full of bowels and compassion: and they shall feel and find
it so that come to him for life. He can bear with thy weaknesses,
he can pity thy ignorance, he can be touched with the feeling of
thy infirmities, he can affectionately forgive they transgressions,
he can heal thy backslidings, and love thee freely. His compassions
fail not; "and he will not break a bruised reed, nor quench the
smoking flax; he can pity them that no eye pities, and be afflicted
in all thy afflictions" (Matt 26:41; Heb 5:2; 2:18; Matt 9:2;
Hosea 14:4; Eze 16:5,6; Isa 63:9; Psa 78:38; 86:15; 111:4; 112:4;
Lam 3:22; Isa 42:3).
7. Coming soul, the Jesus that thou art coming to, is full of might
and terribleness for thy advantage; he can suppress all thine
enemies; he is the Prince of the kings of the earth; he can bow all
men's designs for thy help; he can break all snares laid for thee
in the way; he can lift thee out of all difficulties wherewith thou
mayest be surrounded; he is wise in heart, and mighty in power.
Every life under heaven is in his hand; yea, the fallen angels
tremble before him. And he will save thy life, coming sinner (1
Cor 1:24; Rom 8:28; Matt 28:18; Rev 4; Psa 19:3; 27:5,6; Job 9:4;
John 17:2; Matt 8:29; Luke 8:28; James 2:19).
Second. Thou hast yet another advantage by Jesus Christ, thou art
coming to him, for he is not only full, BUT FREE. He is not sparing
of what he has; he is open-hearted and open-handed. Let me in a
few particulars show thee this:
2. He doth not only bid thee come, but tells thee, he will heartily
do thee good; yea, he will do it with rejoicing; "I will rejoice
over them, to do them good--with my whole heart, and with my whole
soul" (Jer 32:41).
2. God hath also prepared a golden altar for thee to offer thy prayers
and tears upon. A golden altar! It is called a "golden altar," to
show what worth it is of in God's account: for this golden altar
is Jesus Christ; this altar sanctifies thy gift, and makes thy
sacrifice acceptable. This altar, then, makes thy groans golden
groans; thy tears golden tears; and thy prayers golden prayers,
in the eye of that God thou comest to, coming sinner (Rev 8; Matt
23:19; Heb 10:10; 1 Peter 2:5).
3. God hath strewed all the way, from the gate of hell, where thou
wast, to the gate of heaven, whither thou art going, with flowers
out of his own garden. Behold how the promises, invitations, calls,
and encouragements, like lilies, lie round about thee! take heed
that thou dost not tread them under foot, sinner. With promises,
did I say? Yea, he hath mixed all those with his own name, his
Son's name; also, with the name of mercy, goodness, compassion,
love, pity, grace, forgiveness, pardon, and what not, that may
encourage the coming sinner.
4. He hath also for thy encouragement laid up the names, and set
forth the sins, of those that have been saved. In this book they
are fairly written, that thou, through patience and comfort of
the Scriptures, mightest have hope. (1.) In this book is recorded
Noah's maim and sin; and how God had mercy upon him. (2.) In this
record is fairly written the name of Lot, and the nature of his
sin; and how the Lord had mercy upon him. (3.) In this record thou
hast also fairly written the names of Moses, Aaron, Gideon, Samson,
David, Solomon, Peter, Paul, with the nature of their sins; and how
God had mercy upon them; and all to encourage thee, coming sinner.
Fourth. I will add yet another encouragement for the man that is
coming to Jesus Christ. Art thou coming? Art thou coming, indeed?
Why,
1. Then this thy coming is by virtue of God's call. Thou art called.
Calling goes before coming. Coming is not of works, but of him that
calleth. "He goeth up into a mountain, and calleth unto him whom
he would; and they came unto him" (Mark 3:13).
3. Art thou coming? This is because God hath inclined thine heart
to come. God hath called thee, illuminated thee, and inclined thy
heart to come; and, therefore, thou comest to Jesus Christ. It
is God that worketh in thee to will, and to come to Jesus Christ.
Coming sinner, bless God for that he hath given thee a will to come
to Jesus Christ. It is a sign that thou belongest to Jesus Christ,
because God has made thee willing to come to him (Psa 110:3). Bless
God for slaying the enmity of thy mind; had he not done it, thou
wouldst as yet have hated thine own salvation.
6. Coming sinner, hast thou not now and then a kiss of the sweet
lips of Jesus Christ, I mean some blessed word dropping like a
honey-comb upon thy soul to revive thee, when thou art in the midst
of thy dumps?
8. Hast thou not sometimes as it were the very warmth of his wings
overshadowing the face of thy soul, that gives thee as it were
a gload22 upon thy spirit, as the bright beams of the sun do upon
thy body, when it suddenly breaks out of a cloud, though presently
all is gone away? Well, all these things are the good hand of thy
God upon thee, and they are upon thee to constrain, to provoke,
and to make thee willing and able to come, coming sinner, that thou
mightest in the end be saved.
FOOTNOTES:
1 "My grace is sufficient for thee," and the language of the church,
conscious of its own weakness and the Lord's all-sufficiency, is,
"Draw me, we will run after thee" (Song 1:4).--Mason.
9 Many misspend their time in poring upon their own hearts, to find
out some evidence of their interest in Christ, when they should
rather be employed in receiving Christ, and walking in him, by a
confident faith grounded on the Divine testimony.--Mason.
20 This nation now pays some eight or ten millions sterling a year.
Had God sanctioned this diabolical trade in souls, all Christendom
would have been divided into two classes-priests and slaves.--Ed.
***
OR,
This is one of those ten excellent manuscripts which were found among
Bunyan's papers after his decease in 1688. It had been prepared by
him for publication, but still wanted a few touches of his masterly
hand, and a preface in his characteristic style. He had, while a
prisoner for nonconformity, in 1672, published a treatise upon this
subject, in reply to Mr. Fowler, who was soon after created Bishop
of Gloucester; but that was more peculiarly intended to prove that
those who are justified by faith in Christ are placed in a safer,
more honourable, and more glorious state than that possessed by
Adam before his fall. Mr. Fowler took the popular view, that the
sufferings of the Saviour were intended to replace man in a similar
position to that of Adam when in a state of innocence; and to
give him powers, which, if properly used, would enable him to save
himself.
The great delusion which like a deadly leprosy, has involved man
in uncertainty and darkness in all his conceptions of purity and
holiness, is the fallacious hope of producing some good works to
blot out transgressions; or that man is not so polluted, but that
he may justify himself by works performed through some kind of
ability communicated by the Saviour--an ability which he might or
might not use, but upon the proper use of which he considers that his
salvation depends; leaving him in the most distressing uncertainty
and doubt upon this all-important subject. All these Bunyan considered
to be specious and most dangerous devices of Satan, unscriptural,
and contrary to the simplicity and design of the gospel.
GEO. OFFOR.
As to justification with men; that is, when a man stands clear and
quit from just ground of reprehension with them.
I might hence also show you that a man may be justified even then
when his action is condemned; also that a man may be in a state
of condemnation when his action may be justified. But with these
distinctions I will not take up time, my intention being to treat
of justification as it sets a man free or quit from sin, the curse
and condemnation of the law in the sight of God, in order to eternal
salvation.
And that I may with the more clearness handle this point before
you, I will lay down and speak to this
PROPOSITION.
The terms of this proposition are easy; yet if it will help, I will
speak a word or two for explication. First. By a sinner, I mean
one that has transgressed the law; 'for sin is the transgression
of the law' (1 John 3:4). Second. By the curse of the law, I mean
that sentence, judgment, or condemnation which the law pronounceth
against the transgressor (Gal 3:10). Third. By justifying righteousness,
I mean that which stands in the doing and suffering of Christ when
he was in the world (Rom 5:19). Fourth. By the residing of this
righteousness in Christ's person, I mean it still abides with him
as to the action, though the benefit is bestowed upon those that
are his. Fifth. By the imputation of it to us, I mean God's making
of it ours by an act of his grace, that we by it might be secured
from the curse of the law. Sixth. When I say there is no other
way to be justified. I cast away TO THAT END the law, and all the
works of the law as done by us.[2]
First and Second. Now the two first--to wit, what sin and the
curse is--stand clear in all men's sight, unless they be atheists
or desperately heretical. I shall, therefore, in few words, clear
the other four.
Mark, the righteousness is still 'in him,' not 'in us,' even then
when we are made partakers of the benefit of it; even as the wing
and feathers still abide in the hen when the chickens are covered,
kept, and warmed thereby.
Sixth. Therefore the law and the works thereof, as to this, must by
us be cast away; not only because they here are useless, but also
they being retained are a hindrance. That they are useless is
evident, for that salvation comes by another name (Acts 4:12). And
that they are a hindrance, it is clear; for the very adhering to
the law, though it be but a little, or in a little part, prevents
justification by the righteousness of Christ (Rom 9:31,32).
[FIRST POSITION]
FIRST. Let us, then, now enter into the consideration of the first
of these--namely, THAT MEN ARE JUSTIFIED FROM THE CURSE OF THE
LAW BEFORE GOD WHILE SINNERS IN THEMSELVES. This I shall manifest,
FIRST, By touching upon the mysterious acts of our redemption;
SECOND, By giving of you plain texts which discover it; and, THIRD,
By reasons drawn from the texts.
FIRST. For the first of these; to wit, the mysterious act of our
redemption: and that I shall speak to under these two heads--First,
I shall show you what that is; and, Second, How we are concerned
therein.
First. [What that is.] That which I call, and that rightly,
the mysterious act of our redemption, is Christ's sufferings as a
common,[4] though a particular person and as a sinner, though always
completely righteous.
Second. And now I come to show you how the elect are concerned
therein; that is, in this mysterious act of this most blessed One;
and this will make this act yet more mysterious to you.
Now, then, we will speak of this first, as to how Christ prepared
himself thus mysteriously to act. He took hold of our nature. I
say, he took hold of us, by taking upon him flesh and blood. The
Son of God, therefore, took not upon him a particular person, though
he took to him a human body and soul; but that which he took was,
as I may call it, a lump of the common nature of man; and by that,
hold of the whole elect seed of Abraham; 'For verily he took not on
him the nature of angels, but he took on him the seed of Abraham'
(Heb 2:16) Hence he, in a mystery, became us, and was counted as
all the men that were or should be saved. And this is the reason why
we are said to do, when only Jesus Christ did do. As for instance--
(2.) By this means also we have now escaped death. 'Knowing that
Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more; death hath no more
dominion over him. For in that he died, he died unto,' or for, 'sin
once; but in that he liveth, he liveth unto God' (Rom 6:9,10). Now
in all this, considering what has been said before, we that are
of the elect are privileged, for that we also are raised up by the
rising of the body of Christ from the dead. And thus the apostle
bids us reckon: 'Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead
indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus Christ' (Rom 6:11).
Hence Christ says, 'I am the resurrection and the life,' for that
all his are safe in him, suffering, dying, and rising. He is the
life, 'our life'; yea, so our life, that by him the elect do live
before God, even then when as to themselves they yet are dead in
their sins. Wherefore, hence it is that in time they partake of
quickening grace from this their Head, to the making of them also
live by faith, in order to their living hereafter with him in glory;
for if Christ lives, they cannot die that were sharers with him in
his resurrection.[7] Hence they are said to 'live,' being 'quickened
together with him.' Also, as sure as at his resurrection they lived
by him, so sure at his coming shall they be gathered to him; nay,
from that day to this, all that, as aforesaid, were in him at
his death and resurrection, are already, in the 'dispensation of
the fulness of times,' daily 'gathering to him.' For this he hath
purposed, wherefore none can disannul it--'In the dispensation of
the fulness of times he might gather together in one all things in
Christ, both which are in heaven and which are in earth; even in
him' (Eph 1:10).
(3.) To secure this the more to our faith that believe, as we are
said to be 'raised up together' with him, so we are said to be 'made
to sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus' (Eph 2:6). We
died by him, we rose by him, and are together, even all the elect,
set down 'together' in 'heavenly places in Christ Jesus'; for still,
even now he is on the right hand of God, he is to be considered as
our public man, our Head, and so one in whom is concluded all the
elect of God. We then are by him already in heaven; in heaven,
I say, by him; yea, set down there in our places of glory by him.
Hence the apostle, speaking of us again, saith, That as we are
predestinate, we are called, justified, and glorified; called,
justified, glorified; all is done, already done, as thus considered
in Christ (Rom 8:30). For that in his public work there is nothing
yet to do as to this. Is not HE called? Is not HE justified? Is not
HE glorified? And are we not in him, in him, even as so considered?
First. 'Speak not thou in thine heart,' no, not in thine heart,
'after that the Lord thy God hath cast them out [thine enemies] before
thee, saying, For my righteousness--do I possess this land.--Not
for thy righteousness, or for the uprightness of thine heart, dost
thou go to possess their land.--Understand, therefore, that the
Lord thy God giveth thee not this good land to possess it for thy
righteousness; for thou art a stiff-necked people' (Deut 9:4-6).
In these words, very pat for our purpose, two things are worthy
our consideration. 1. The people here spoken to were the people
of God; and so by God himself are they here twice acknowledged to
be--'The Lord thy God, the Lord thy God.' So then, the righteousness
here intended is not the righteousness that is in the world, but
that which the people of God perform. 2. The righteousness here
intended is not some, but all, and every whit of that the church
performs to God: Say not in thine heart, after the Lord hath brought
thee in, It was for my righteousness. No, all thy righteousness,
from Egypt to Canaan, will not purchase Canaan for thee.
Second. 'Remember me, O my God, concerning this; and wipe not out
my good deeds that I have done' (Neh 13:14).
These words were spoken by holy Nehemiah, and that at the end of
all the good that we read he did in the world. Also, the deeds here
spoken of were deeds done for God, for his people, for his house,
and for the offices thereof. Yet godly Nehemiah durst not stand
before God in these, nor yet suffer them to stand to his judgment
by the law; but prays to God to be merciful both to him and them,
and to spare him 'according to the greatness of his mercy' (v 22).
God blots out no good but for the sake of sin;[10] and forasmuch
as this man prays God would not blot out his, it is evident that
he was conscious to himself that in his good works were sin. Now,
I say, if a good man's works are in danger of being overthrown
because there is in them a tang of sin, how can bad men think to
stand just before God in their works, which are in all parts full
of sin? Yea, if the works of a sanctified man are blameworthy, how
shall the works of a bad man set him clear in the eyes of Divine
justice?
Third. 'But we are all as an unclean thing, and all our
righteousnesses are as filthy rags; and we all do fade as a leaf;
and our iniquities, like the wind, have taken us away' (Isa 64:6).
Fourth. 'There is not a just man upon earth, that doeth good, and
sinneth not' (Eccl 7:20; 1 Kings 8:46).
Although the words before are large, yet these seem far larger;
there is not a man, not a just man, not a just man upon the earth,
that doeth good, and sinneth not. Now, if no good man, if no good
man upon earth doth good, and sinneth not; then no good man upon
earth can set himself by his own actions justified in the sight of
God, for he has sin mixed with his good. How then shall a bad man,
any bad man, the best bad man upon earth, think to set himself by
his best things just in the sight of God? And if the tree makes
the fruit either good or evil, then a bad tree--and a bad man is
a bad tree--can bring forth no good fruit, how then shall such an
one do that that shall 'cleanse him from his sin,' and set him as
'spotless before the face of God?' (Matt 7:16).
Seventh. 'There is none righteous, no, not one: there is none that
understandeth, there is none that seeketh after God. They are all
gone out of the way, they are together become unprofitable; there
is none that doeth good, no, not one' (Rom 3:10-12).
Now, as he concludes from these five reasons that not one indeed
is righteous, so he concludes by five more that none can do good to
make him so--1. For that internally they are as an open sepulchre,
as full of dead men's bones. Their minds and consciences are defiled;
how then can sweet and good proceed from thence? (v 13). 2. Their
throat is filled with this stink; all their vocal duties therefore
smell thereof. 3. Their mouth is full of cursing and bitterness;
how then can there be found one word that should please God? 4.
Their tongue, which should present their praise to God, has been
used to work deceit; how then, until it is made a new one, should
it speak in righteousness? 5. The poison of asps is under their lips;
therefore whatever comes from them must be polluted (Rom 3:11-14;
Matt 23:27; Titus 1:15; Jer 44:17, 17:9). Thus, you see, he sets
forth their internal part, which being a true report, as to be sure
it is, it is impossible that any good should so much as be framed
in such an inward part, or come clean out of such a throat, by such
a tongue, through such lips as these.
And yet this is not all. He also proves, and that by five reasons
more, that it is not possible they should do good--1. 'Their feet
are swift to shed blood' (Rom 3:15). This implies an inclination,
an inward inclination to evil courses; a quickness of motion to
do evil, but a backwardness to do good. 2. 'Destruction and misery
are in their ways' (v16). Take 'ways' for their 'doings,' and in
the best of them destruction lurks, and misery yet follows them at
the heels. 3. 'The way of peace have they not known'; that is far
above out of their sight (v 17). Wherefore the labour of these
foolish ones will weary every one of them, because they know not
the way that goes to the city (Eccl 10:15). 4. 'There is no fear
of God before their eyes' (v 18). How then can they do anything
with that godly reverence of his holy Majesty that is and must be
essential to every good work? for to do things, but not in God's
fear, to what will it amount? will it avail? 5. All this while they
are under a law that calls for works that are perfectly good; that
will accept of none but what are perfectly good; and that will
certainly condemn them because they neither are nor can be perfectly
good. 'For what things soever the law saith, it saith it to them
who are under the law; that every mouth may be stopped, and all
the world may become guilty before God' (v 19).
Thus you see that Paul here proves, by fifteen reasons, that none
are, nor can be, righteous before God by works that they can do;
therefore 'men must be justified from the curse, in the sight of
God, while sinners in themselves.'
This text utterly excludes the law--what law? The law of works,
the moral law, (v 27)--and makes mention of another righteousness,
even a righteousness of God; for the righteousness of the law is
the righteousness of men, men's 'own righteousness' (Phil 3:9).
Now, if the law, as to a justifying righteousness, is rejected;
then the very matter upon and by which man should work is rejected;
and if so, then he must be justified by the righteousness of
God, or not at all; for he must be justified by a righteousness
that is without the law; to wit, the righteousness of God. Now,
this righteousness of God, whatever it is, to be sure it is not a
righteousness that flows from men; for that, as I said, is rejected,
and the righteousness of God opposed unto it, being called
a righteousness that is without the law, without our personal
obedience to it. The righteousness of God, or a righteousness of
God's completing, a righteousness of God's bestowing, a righteousness
that God also gives unto, and puts upon all them that believe (Rom
3:22), a righteousness that stands in the works of Christ, and that
is imputed both by the grace and justice of God (v 24-26). Where,
now, is room for man's righteousness, either in the whole, or as
to any part thereof? I say, where, as to justification with God?
Ninth. 'What shall we then say that Abraham, our father as pertaining
to the flesh, hath found?' (Rom 4:1)
This, saith Paul, was not the righteousness by which Abraham found
justification with God--'For if Abraham was justified by works,
he hath whereof to glory; but not before God. For what saith the
Scripture? Abraham believed God, and it was counted to him for
righteousness' (Rom 4:2-3). This 'believing' is also set in flat
opposition to 'works,' and to the 'law of works'; wherefore, upon
pain of great contempt to God, it must not be reckoned as a work
to justify withal, but rather as that which receiveth and applieth
that righteousness. From all this, therefore, it is manifest 'that
men must be justified from the curse of the law, in the sight of
God, while sinners in themselves.' But,
Tenth. 'Now to him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of grace,
but of debt' (Rom 4:4).
These words do not only back what went before, as to the rejection
of the law for righteousness as to justification with God, but supposing
the law was of force to justify, life must not be admitted to come
that way, because of the evil consequences that will unavoidably
flow therefrom. 1. By this means, grace, and justification by grace,
would be rejected; and that would be a foul business; it would not
be reckoned of grace. 2. By this, God would become the debtor, and
so the underling; and so we in this the more honourable.
It would not be reckoned of grace, but of debt; and what would follow
from hence? Why, (1.) By this we should frustrate the design of
Heaven, which is, to justify us freely by grace, through a redemption
brought in by Christ (Rom 3:24-26; Eph 2:8-13). (2.) By this we
should make ourselves the saviours, and jostle Christ quite out of
doors (Gal 5:2-4). (3.) We should have heaven at our own dispose,
as a debt, not by promise, and so not be beholden to God for it (Gal
3:18). It must, then, be of grace, not of works, for the preventing
of these evils.
Eleventh. 'But to him that worketh not, but believeth on him that
justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness'
(Rom 4:5).
These words show how we must stand just in the sight of God from
the curse of the law, both as it respecteth justification itself,
as also the instrument or means that receiveth that righteousness
which justifieth.
But again; faith when it hath received the Lord Jesus, it hath
done that which pleaseth God; therefore, the very act of believing
is the most noble in the world; believing sets the crown upon the
head of grace; it seals to the truth of the sufficiency of the
righteousness of Christ, and giveth all the glory to God (John
3:33). And therefore it is a righteous act; but Christ himself,
he is the Righteousness that justifieth' (Rom 4:20,25). Besides,
faith is a relative, and hath its relation as such. Its relation
is the righteousness that justifieth, which is therefore called the
righteousness of faith, or that with which faith hath to do (Rom
10:6). Separate these two, and justification cannot be, because
faith now wants his righteousness. And hence it is you have so often
such sayings as these--'He that believeth in me; he that believeth
on him; believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved'
(John 6:35,40). Faith, then, as separate from Christ, doth nothing;
nothing, neither with God nor man; because it wants its relative;
but let it go to the Lord Jesus--let it behold him as dying, &c.,
and it fetches righteousness, and life, and peace out of the virtue
of his blood, &c. (Acts 10:29,31,33). Or rather, sees it there as
sufficient for me to stand just thereby in the sight of Eternal
Justice For him 'God hath set forth to be a propitiation through
faith [belief] in his blood,' with intent to justify him that
believeth in Jesus (Rom 3:25,26).
Did our adversaries understand this one text, they would not
so boldly affirm, as they do, that the words, 'impute, imputed,
imputeth, imputing,' &c., are not used in scripture but to express
men really and personally to be that which is imputed unto them;
for men are not really and personally faith, yet faith is imputed
to men; nay, they are not really and personally sin, nor really and
personally righteousness, yet these are imputed to men: so, then,
both good things and bad may sometimes be imputed to men, yet
themselves be really and personally neither. But to come to the
point: what righteousness hath that man that hath no works? Doubtless
none of his own; yet God imputeth righteousness to him. Yea, what
works of that man doth God impute to him that he yet justifies as
ungodly?
First. By the Old [Testament types]. First. 'Unto Adam also and to
his wife did the Lord God make coats of skins, and clothed them'
(Gen 3:21).
In the beginning of this chapter you find these two persons reasoning
with the serpent, the effect of which discourse was, they take of
the forbidden fruit, and so break the command of God (vv 7-15).
This done, they hide themselves, and cover their nakedness with
aprons. But God finds out their sin, from the highest branch even
to the roots thereof. What followeth? Not one precept by which
they should by works obtain the favour of God, but the promise of
a Saviour; of which promise this twenty-first verse is a mystical
interpretation: 'The Lord God made them coats of skins, and clothed
them.'
Hence observe--1. That these coats were made, not before, but after
they had made themselves aprons; a plain proof their aprons were
not sufficient to hide their shame from the sight of God. 2. These
coats were made, not of Adam's inherent righteousness, for that
was lost before by sin, but of the skins of the slain, types of the
death of Christ, and of the righteousness brought in thereby--'By
whose stripes we are healed' (Isa 53).[14] 3. This is further
manifest; for the coats, God made them; and for the persons, God
clothed them therewith; to show that as the righteousness by which
we must stand just before God from the curse is a righteousness of
Christ's performing, not of theirs; so he, not they, must put it on
them also, for of God we are in Christ, and of God his righteousness
is made ours (1 Cor 1:30).
Second. 'The Lord had respect unto Abel and to his offering' (Gen
4:4).
Third. 'And the Lord said unto her, The elder shall serve the
younger' (Gen 25:23).
Fourth. The same may be said concerning Solomon, whom the Lord
loved with special love, as soon as born into the world; which he
also confirmed with signal characters. 'He sent,' saith the Holy
Ghost, 'by the hand of Nathan the prophet, and he called his name
Jedidiah, because the Lord loved him (2 Sam 12:24,25).[15] Was
this love of God extended to him because of his personal virtues?
No, verily; for he was yet an infant.[16] He was justified then in
the sight of God from the curse by another than his own righteousness.
Fifth. 'And when I passed by thee, and saw thee polluted in thine
own blood, I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood, Live; yea,
I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood, Live' (Eze 16:6).
The state of this people you have in the former verses described,
both as to their rise and practice in the world (vv 1-5). 1. As
to their rise. Their original was the same with Canaan, the men of
God's curse (Gen 9:25). 'Thy birth and thy nativity is of the land
of Canaan'; the same with other carnal men (Rom 3:9). 'Thy father
was an Amorite, and thy mother an Hittite' (Eze 16:3). Their
condition, that is showed us by this emblem--(1.) They had not been
washed in water. (2.) They had not been swaddled. (3.) They had
not been salted. (4.) They brought filth with them into the world.
(5.) They lay stinking in their cradle. (6.) They were without
strength to help themselves. Thus they appear and come by generation.
2. Again, as to their practice--(1.) They polluted themselves in
their own blood. (2.) They so continued till God passed by--'And when
I passed by thee, and saw thee polluted in thine own blood';--'in
thy blood, in thy blood'; it is doubled. Thus we see they were
polluted born, they continued in their blood till the day that the
Lord looked upon them; polluted, I say, to the loathing of their
persons, &c. Now this was the time of love--'And when I passed by
thee, and saw thee polluted in thine own blood, I said unto thee
when thou wast in thy blood, Live; yea, I said unto thee when thou
wast in thy blood, Live' (Eze 16:6).
Quest. But how could a holy God say, 'Live,' to such a sinful
people?
Answ. Though they had nought but sin, yet he had love and righteousness.
He had love to pity them; righteousness to cover them--'Now when
I passed by thee, and looked upon thee, behold, thy time was the
time of love' (Eze 16:8). What follows? (1) 'I spread my skirt
over thee'; and (2) 'Covered thy nakedness'; yea, (3) 'I sware unto
thee'; and (4) 'Entered into covenant with thee'; and (5) 'Thou
becamest mine.' My love pitied thee; my skirt covered thee. Thus
God delivered them from the curse in his sight. 'Then I washed thee
with water, after thou wast justified; yea, I thoroughly washed
away thy blood from thee, and anointed thee with oil' (v 9).
Sixth. 'Now Joshua was clothed with filthy garments, and stood
before the angel' (Zech 3:3).
Second. But to pass [from] the Old Testament types, and to come to
the New.
First. 'And when he was come into the ship, he that had been possessed
with the devil prayed him that he might be with him. Howbeit Jesus
suffered him not, but saith unto him, Go home to thy friends, and
tell them how great things God hath done for thee, and hath had
compassion on thee' (Mark 5:18,19).
The occasion of these words was, for that the Pharisee murmured
against the woman that washed Jesus' feet, because 'she was a sinner';
for so said the Pharisee, and so saith the Holy Ghost (v 37). But,
saith Christ, Simon, I will ask thee a question, 'A certain man
had two debtors: the one owed him five hundred pence, and the other
fifty. And when they had nothing to pay, he frankly forgave them
both' (v 38).
Hence I gather these conclusions--1. That men that are wedded to their
own righteousness understand not the doctrine of the forgiveness of
sins. This is manifested by the poor Pharisee; he objected against
the woman because she was a sinner. 2. Let Pharisees murmur still,
yet Christ hath pity and mercy for sinners. 3. Yet Jesus doth not
usually manifest mercy until the sinner hath nothing to pay. 'And
when they had nothing to pay, he frankly,' or freely, or heartily,
'forgave them both.' If they had nothing to pay, then they were
sinners; but he forgiveth no man but with respect to a righteousness;
therefore that righteousness must be another's; for in the very
act of mercy they are found sinners. They had nothing but debt,
nothing but sin, nothing to pay [with]. Then they were 'justified
freely by his grace, through the redemption that is in Christ
Jesus.' So, then, 'men are justified from the curse, in the sight
of God, while sinners in themselves.'
Third. 'And when he saw their faith, he said unto the man, Thy sins
are forgiven thee' (Luke 5:20).
This man had not righteousness to stand just before God withal,
for his sins as yet remained unforgiven; wherefore, seeing guilt
remained until Christ remitted him, he was discharged while ungodly.
And observe it, the faith here mentioned is not to be reckoned so
much the man's, as the faith of them that brought him; neither did
it reach to the forgiveness of sins, but to the miracle of healing;
yet this man, in this condition, had his sins forgiven him.
But again; set the case, the faith was only his, as it was not,
and that it reached to the doctrine of forgiveness, yet it did it
without respect to righteousness in himself; for guilt lay still
upon him, he had now his sins forgiven him. But this act of grace
was a surprisal; it was unlooked for. 'I am found of them that
sought me not' (Isa 65:1). They came for one thing, he gave them
another; they came for a cure upon his body, but, to their amazement,
he cured first his soul. 'Thy sins are forgiven thee.' Besides,
to have his sins forgiven betokeneth an act of grace; but grace
and works as to this are opposite (Rom 11:6). Therefore 'men are
justified from the curse, in the sight of God, while sinners in
themselves.'
Fifth. 'For the Son of man is come to seek and to save that which
was lost' (Luke 19:10).
The occasion of these words was, for that the Pharisees murmured
because 'Jesus was gone to be guest to one that was a sinner,' yea,
a sinner of the publicans, and are most fitly applied to the case
in hand. For though Zaccheus climbed the tree, yet Jesus Christ
found him first, and called him down by his name; adding withal,
'For to-day I must abide at thy house' (v 5); which being opened
by verse 9, is as much as to say, I am come to be thy salvation.
Now this being believed by Zaccheus, 'he made haste and came down,
and received him joyfully.' And not only so, but to declare to all
the simplicity of his faith, and that he unfeignedly accepted of
this word of salvation, he said unto the Lord, and that before all
present, 'Behold, Lord, the half of my goods I give to the poor;
and if I have taken anything from any man by false accusation,' a
supposition intimating an affirmative, 'I restore him fourfold.'[18]
This being thus, Christ doubleth his comfort, saying to him also,
and that before the people, 'This day is salvation come to this
house.' Then, by adding the next words, he expounds the whole of
the matter, 'For I am come to seek and save that which was lost';
to seek it till I find it, to save it when I find it. He finds
them that sought him not (Rom 10:20); and saith, Zaccheus, Behold
me! to a people that asked not after him. So, then, seeing Jesus
findeth this publican first, preaching salvation to him before he
came down from the tree, it is evident he received this as he was
a sinner; from which faith flowed his following words and works as
a consequence.
Sixth. 'Jesus saith unto him, Verily I say unto thee, To-day shalt
thou be with me in paradise' (Luke 23:43).
This was spoken to the thief upon the cross, who had lived in
wickedness all his days; neither had he so much as truly repented--no,
not till he came to die; nay, when he first was hanged he then fell
to railing on Christ; for though Luke leaves it out, beginning but
at his conversion; yet by Matthew's relating the whole tragedy,
we find him at first as bad as the other (Matt 27:44). This man,
then, had no moral righteousness, for he had lived in the breach
of the law of God. Indeed, by faith he believed Christ to be King,
and that when dying with him. But what was this to a personal
performing the commandments? or of restoring what he had oft taken
away? Yea, he confesseth his death to be just for his sin; and so
leaning upon the mediation of Christ he goeth out of the world. Now
he that truly confesseth and acknowledgeth his sin, acknowledgeth
also the curse to be due thereto from the righteous hand of God. So
then, where the curse of God is due, that man wanteth righteousness.
Besides, he that makes to another for help, hath by that condemned
his own, had he any, of utter insufficiency. But all these did
this poor creature; wherefore he must stand 'just from the law in
the sight of God, while sinful in himself.'
What wilt thou have me to do? Ignorance is here set forth to the
full. Paul hitherto knew not Jesus, neither what he would have him
to do; yet a mighty man for the law of works, and for zeal towards
God according to that. Thus you see that he neither knew that Christ
was Lord, nor what was his mind and will--'I did it ignorantly, in
unbelief' (1 Tim 1:13-15). I did not know him; I did not believe
he was to save us; I thought I must be saved by living righteously,
by keeping the law of God. This thought kept me ignorant of Jesus,
and of justification from the curse by him. Poor Saul! how many
fellows hast thou yet alive!--every man zealous of the law of works,
yet none of them know the law of grace; each of them seeking for
life by doing the law, when life is to be had by nought but believing
in Jesus Christ.
Eighth. 'Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved'
(Acts 16:31).
A little before, we find Paul and Silas in the stocks for preaching
of Jesus Christ; in the stocks, in the inward prison, by the hands
of a sturdy jailer; but at midnight, while Paul and his companion
sang praises to God, the foundations of the prison shook, and every
man's bands were loosed. Now the jailer being awakened by the noise
of this shaking, and supposing he had lost his prisoners, drew his
sword, with intent to kill himself; 'But Paul cried out, Do thyself
no harm; for we are all here. Then he called for a light, and sprang
in, and came trembling, and fell down before Paul and Silas, and
brought them out, and said, Sirs, what must I do to be saved?'
In all this relation here is not aught that can justify the jailer.
For, 1. His whole life was idolatry, cruelty, and enmity to God.
Yea, 2. Even now, while the earthquake shook the prison, he had
murder in his heart--yea, and in his intentions too; murder, I
say, and that of a high nature, even to have killed his own body
and soul at once.[19] Well, 3. When he began to shake under the
fears of everlasting burnings, yet then his heart was wrapped up
in ignorance as to the way of salvation by Jesus Christ: 'What must
I do to be saved?' He knew not what; no, not he. His condition,
then, was this: he neither had righteousness to save him, nor knew
he how to get it. Now, what was Paul's answer? Why, 'Believe in the
Lord Jesus Christ,' look for righteousness in Christ, 'and then
thou shalt be saved.' This, then, still holdeth true, 'men are
justified from the curse, in the sight of God, whilst sinners in
themselves.'
2. God judgeth him for one that spurneth against Christ, even by
every such work he doth. And hence it is, when Paul was converted
to Jesus Christ, that he calls the righteousness he had before,
madness, blasphemy, injury; because what he did to save himself
by works was in direct opposition to grace by Jesus Christ (Phil
3:7,8; Acts 22:3,4, 26:4; 1 Tim 1:14,15). Behold, then, the evil
that is in a man's own righteousness! (1.) It curseth and condemneth
the righteousness of Christ. (2.) It blindeth the man from seeing
his misery. (3.) It hardeneth his heart against his own salvation.
3. But again, God judgeth such, for those that condemn him of
foolishness--'The preaching of the cross,' that is, Christ crucified,
'is to them that perish foolishness' (1 Cor 1:18,23). What, saith
the merit-monger, will you look for life by the obedience of
another man? Will you trust to the blood that was shed upon the
cross, that run down to the ground, and perished in the dust? Thus
deridingly they scoff at, stumble upon, and are taken in the gin
that attends the gospel; not to salvation, but to their condemnation,
because they have condemned the Just, that they might justify their
own filthy righteousness (Isa 8:14).
But, I say, if all have sinned, if all are defiled, if the best
of a man's righteousness be but madness, blasphemy, injury; if
for their righteousness they are judged hypocrites, condemned as
opposers of the gospel, and as such have counted God foolish for
sending his Son into the world; then must the best of 'men be justified
from the curse in the sight of God while sinners in themselves';
because they still stand guilty in the sight of God, their hearts
are also still filthy infected--'Though thou wash thee with nitre,
and take thee much soap, yet thine iniquity is marked before ME,
saith the Lord God' (Jer 2:22). It stands marked still before God.
So, then, what esteem soever men have of the righteousness of the
world, yet God accounts it horrible wickedness, and the greatest
enemy that Jesus hath. Wherefore, this vine is the vine of Sodom;
these clusters are the clusters of Gomorrah; these grapes are
grapes of gall; these clusters are bitter, they are the poison of
dragons, and the cruel venom of asps (Matt 3:7; 23). No marvel,
then, if John in his ministry gives the first rebuke and jostle to
such, still calling them serpents and vipers, and concluding it
is almost impossible they should escape the damnation of hell; for
of all sin, man's own righteousness, in special, bids defiance to
Jesus Christ.
The Second Reason.--A second reason why men must stand just in
the sight of God from the curse, while sinners in themselves, is,
because of the exactions of the law. For were it granted that men's
good works arose from a holy root, and were perfect in their kind,
yet the demand of the law--for that is still beyond them--would
leave them sinners before the justice of God. And hence it is that
holy men stand just in the sight of God from the curse; yet dare
not offer their gifts by the law, but through Jesus Christ; knowing
that not only their persons, but their spiritual service also,
would else be rejected of the heavenly Majesty (1 Peter 2:5; Rev
7:14-16; Heb 8:7,8).[20]
For the law is itself so perfectly holy and good as not to admit of
the least failure, either in the matter or manner of obedience--'Cursed
is every one that continueth not in all things that are written in
the book of the law to do them' (Gal 3:10). For they that shall keep
the whole law, and yet offend in one point, are guilty of all, and
convicted of the law as transgressors (James 2:9,10). 'Tribulation,'
therefore, 'and anguish, upon every soul of man that doth evil,
of the Jew first, and also of the Gentile' (Rom 2:9). And observe,
the law leaveth thee not to thy choice, when, or when not, to
begin to keep it; but requireth thy obedience so soon as concerned,
exactly, both as to the matter and manner, and that before thou
hast sinned against it; for the first sin breaks the law. Now, if
thou sinnest before thou beginnest to do, thou art found by the
law a transgressor, and so standest by that convicted of sin; so,
then, all thy after-acts of righteousness are but the righteousness
of a sinner, of one whom the law hath condemned already (John 3:18).
'The law is spiritual, but thou art carnal, sold under sin' (Rom
7:14).
Besides, the law being absolutely perfect, doth not only respect
the matter and manner as to outward acts, but also the rise and
root, the heart, from whence they flow; and an impediment there
spoils all, were the executive part never so good--'Thou shalt
love the Lord thy God with ALL thy heart, with ALL thy soul, with
ALL thy mind, and with ALL thy strength' (Mark 12:30). Mark the
repetition, with all, with all, with all, with all; with all thy
heart, with all thy soul, in all things, at all times, else thou
hadst as good do nothing. But 'every imagination of the thought of
the heart of man is only evil continually' (Gen 6:5). The margin
hath it, 'the whole imagination, the purposes, and desires'; so
that a good root is here wanting. 'The heart is deceitful above
all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?' (Jer 17:9).
What thoughts, words, or actions can be clean, sufficiently to answer
a perfect law that flows from this original? It is impossible. 'Men
must therefore be justified from the curse, in the sight of God,
while sinners in themselves.' But further yet to open the case.
There are several things that make it impossible that a man should
stand just in the sight of God but while sinful in himself.
These things, then, are not infused or operated by the law from its
own nature or doctrine, but are occasioned by the meeting of, and
having to do with, a thing directly opposite. 'The law is spiritual,
I am carnal'; therefore every imposition is rejected and rebelled
against. Strike a steel against a flint, and the fire flies about
you; strike the law against a carnal heart, and sin appears, sin
multiplies, sin rageth, sin is strengthened! And hence ariseth all
these doubts, murmurings, and sinful complainings that are found
in the hearts of the people of God; they have too much to do with
the law; the law of works is now in the conscience, imposing duty
upon the carnal part. This is the reason of the noise that you
hear, and of the sin that you see, and of the horror that you feel
in your own souls when tempted. But to pass this digression.
The law, then, having to do with carnal men, by this they become worse
sinners than before; for their heart now recoileth desperately,
opposeth blasphemously; it giveth way to despair; and then
to conclude there is no hope for hereafter; and so goeth on in a
sordid, ungodly course of life, till his time is come to die and be
damned, unless a miracle of grace prevent. From all this I conclude,
that 'a man cannot stand just from the curse, in the sight of God
but while sinful in himself.' But,
5. By the law, God will show no mercy; for, 'I will be merciful
to their unrighteousness,' is the tenor of another covenant (Heb
8:9,10,12). But by the law I regard them not, saith the Lord. For,
6. All the promises annexed to the law are, by the first sin, null
and void. Though, then, a man should live a thousand years twice
told, and all that while fulfil the law, yet having sinned first,
he is not at all the better. Our legalists, then, begin to talk too
soon of having life by the law; let them first begin without sin,
and so throughout continue to death, and then if God will save them,
not by Christ, but works, contrary to the covenant of grace, they
may hope to go to heaven.
7. But, lastly, to come close to the point. Thou hast sinned; the
law now calls for passive as well as active obedience; yea, great
contentedness in all thou sufferest for thy transgressing against
the law. So, then, wilt thou live by the law? Fulfil it, then,
perfectly till death, and afterwards go to hell and be damned, and
abide there till the law and curse for thy sin be satisfied for;
and then, but not till then, thou shalt have life by the law. Tell
me, now, you that desire to be under the law, can you fulfil all
the commands of the law, and after answer all its demands? Can you
grapple with the judgment of God? Can you wrestle with the Almighty?
Are you stronger than he that made the heavens, and that holdeth
angels in everlasting chains? 'Can thine heart endure, or can thy
hands be strong in the day that I shall deal with thee? I the Lord
have spoken it, and will do it' (Eze 22:14). O, it cannot be! 'These
must go away into everlasting punishment' (Matt 25:46). So, then,
men must stand just from the curse, in the sight of God, while
sinners in themselves, or not at all.
Objection [to the second reason]. But the apostle saith, 'That the
doers of the law shall be justified' (Rom 2). Plainly intimating
that, notwithstanding all you say, some by doing the law may stand
just before God thereby; and if so, then Christ fulfilled it for
us but as our example.
Answer. The consequences are not true; for by these words, 'The
doers of the law shall be justified,' there is no more proof of a
possibility of saving thyself by the law than there is by these:
'For by the works of the law shall no man living be justified in
his sight' (Gal 2:16). The intent, then, of the text objected, is
not to prove a possibility of man's salvation by the law, but to
insinuate rather an impossibility, by asserting what perfections
the law requireth. And were I to argue against the pretended
sufficiency of man's own righteousness, I would choose to frame
mine argument upon such a place as this--'The hearers of the law
are not just before God'; therefore the breakers of the law are not
just before God; not just, I say, by the law; but all have sinned
and broken the law; therefore none by the law are just before
God. For if all stand guilty of sin by the law, then that law that
judgeth them sinners cannot justify them before God. And what if the
apostle had said, 'Blessed are they that continue in all things,'
instead of pronouncing a curse for the contrary, the conclusion had
been the same; for where the blessing is pronounced, he is not the
better that breaks the condition; and where the curse is pronounced,
he is not the worse that keeps it. But neither doth the blessing
nor curse in the law intend a supposition that men may be just by
the law, but rather to show the perfection of the law, and that
though a blessing be annexed thereto, no man by it can obtain that
blessing; for not the hearers of the law are justified before God,
but the doers, when they do it, shall be justified. None but doers
can by it be just before God: but none do the law, no, not one,
therefore none by it can stand just before God (Rom 3:10,11).
And whereas it is said Christ kept the law as our example, that we
by keeping it might get to heaven, as he; it is false, as before
was showed--'He is the end of the law,' or, hath perfectly finished
it, 'for righteousness to every one that believeth' (Rom 10:4). But
a little to travel with this objection; no man can keep the moral
law as Christ, unless he be first without sin, as Christ; unless he
be God and man, as Christ. And again; Christ cannot be our pattern
in keeping the law for life, because of the disproportion that is
between him and us; for if we do it as he, when yet we are weaker
than he; what is this but to out-vie, outdo, and go beyond Christ?
Wherefore we, not he, have our lives exemplary: exemplary, I say,
to him; for who doth the greatest work, they that take it in hand
in full strength, as Christ; or he that takes it in hand in weakness,
as we? Doubtless the last, if he fulfils it as Christ. So, then,
by this doctrine, while we call ourselves his scholars, we make
ourselves indeed the masters. But I challenge all the angels in
heaven, let them but first sin as we have done, to fulfil the law,
as Christ, if they can!
But again; if Christ be our pattern in keeping the law for life from
the curse before God, then Christ fulfilled the law for himself;
if so, he was imperfect before he fulfilled it. And how far short
this is of blasphemy let sober Christians judge; for the righteousness
he fulfilled was to justify from sin; but if it was not to justify
us from ours, you know what remaineth (Dan 9:26; Isa 53:8-10).
But when must we conclude we have kept the law? Not when we begin,
because we have sinned first; nor when we are in the middle, for
we may afterwards miscarry. But what if a man in this his progress
hath one sinful thought? I query, is it possible to come up to the
pattern for justification with God? If yea, then Christ had such;
if no, then who can fulfil the law as he? But should I grant that
which is indeed impossible--namely, that thou art justified by the
law; what then? Art thou now in the favour of God? No, thou art
fallen by this thy perfection, from the love and mercy of God:
'Whosoever of you are justified by the law are fallen from grace'
(Gal 5:4). He speaks not this to them that are doing, but to such
as think they have done it, and shows that the blessing that these
have got thereby is to fall from the favour of God. Being fallen
from grace, Christ profits them nothing, and so they still stand
debtors to do the whole law. So, then, they must not be saved by
God's mercy, nor Christ's merits, but alone by the works of the
law! But what should such men do in that kingdom that comes by gift,
where grace and mercy reigns? Yea, what should they do among that
company that are saved alone by grace, through the redemption that
is in Jesus Christ? Let them go to that kingdom that God hath prepared
for them that are fallen from grace. 'Cast out the bond-woman and
her son; for he shall not be heir with the son of the free-woman'
and of promise (Gal 4:30).[23]
Behold how boldly Paul asserts it! And observe it, he saith not
here, so many as sin against the law--though that be true--but, 'As
many as are of the works of the law.' But what, then, are the works
of the law? Not whoredom, murder, theft, and the like; but works
that are holy and good, the works commanded in the ten commandments,
as to love God, abhor idols, reverence the name of God, keeping the
Sabbath, honouring thy parents, abstaining from adultery, murder,
theft, false-witness, and not to covet what is thy neighbour's--these
are the works of the law. Now he, saith Paul, that is of these is
under the curse of God. But what is it then to be of these? Why,
to be found in the practice of them, and there resting; this is the
man that is under the curse: not because the works of the law are
wicked in themselves, but because the man that is in the practice
of them comes short of answering the exactness of them, and therefore
dies for his imperfections (Rom 2:17).
These words, 'the just shall live by faith,' are taken out of the
Old Testament, and are thrice used by this apostle in the New.
(1.) To show that nothing of the gospel can be apprehended but by
faith: 'For therein is the righteousness of God revealed from faith
to faith.' 'As it is written, The just shall live by faith' (Rom
1:17). (2.) To show that the way to have relief and succour under
temptation is then to live by faith: 'Now the just shall live by
faith' (Heb 10:38) (3.) But in this of the Galatians it is urged
to show that how holy and just soever men be in themselves, yet as
such they are dead, and condemned to death by the law before God.
But that no man is justified by the law, in the sight of God, is
evident; for, 'the just shall live by faith.'
This is the true intent of this place. Because they carry with them
a supposition that the just here intended may be excluded life,
he falling within the rejection asserted within the first part of
the verse. No man is just by the law in the sight of God; for 'the
just shall live by faith': his justice cannot make him live, he
must live by the faith of Christ.[24] Again, the words are a reason
dissuasive, urged to put a stop to those that are seeking life by
the law; as if the apostle had said, Ye Galatians! what are you
doing? Would you be saved by keeping the law? Would you stand just
before God thereby? Do you not hear the prophets, how they press
faith in Jesus, and life by faith in him? Come, I will reason with
you, by way of supposition. Were it granted that you all loved
the law, yet that for life, will avail you nothing; for, 'the just
shall live by faith.'
Were it granted that you kept the law, and that no man on earth
could accuse you; were you therefore just before God? No; neither
can you live by works before him; for 'the just shall live by faith.'
Why not live before him? Because when we have done our best, and
are applauded of all the world for just, yet then God sees sin in
our hearts: 'He putteth no trust in his saints; yea, the heavens
are not clean in his sight' (Job 15:15, 4:18). There is then a just
man that perisheth in his righteousness, if he want the faith of
Christ, for that no man is justified by the law, in the sight of
God, is evident; for, 'the just shall live by faith'; and the law
is not of faith.
The Third Reason.--Another reason why not one under heaven can be
justified by the law, or by his own personal performances to it,
is, because since sin was in the world, God hath rejected the law
and the works thereof for life (Rom 7:10).
[Six things that incline the heart to seek to the law for life.]
First. Take heed thou be not made to seek to the law for life,
because of that name and majesty of God which thou findest upon the
doctrine of the law (Exo 20:1). God indeed spake all the words of
the law, and delivered them in that dread and majesty to men that
shook the hearts of all that heard it. Now this is of great authority
with some, even to seek for life and bliss by the law. 'We know,'
said some, 'that God spake to Moses' (John 9:29). And Saul rejected
Christ even of zeal towards God (Acts 22:3). What zeal? Zeal towards
God according to the law, which afterwards he left and rejected,
because he had found out a better way. The life that he once lived,
it was by the law; but afterwards, saith he, 'The life which I now
live,' it is by faith, 'by the faith of Jesus Christ' (Gal 2:20).
So that though the law was the appointment of God, and had also
his name and majesty upon it, yet now he will not live by the law.
Indeed, God is in the law, but yet only as just and holy, not as
gracious and merciful; so he is only in Jesus Christ. 'The law,'
the word of justice, 'was given by Moses, but grace and truth came
by Jesus Christ' (John 1:17). Wherefore, whatever of God thou findest
in the law, yet seeing grace and mercy is not there, let neither
the name of God, nor that majesty that thou findest of him in the
law, prevail with thee to seek life by all the holy commandments
of the law.
Second. Take heed that the law, by taking hold on thy conscience,
doth not make thee seek life by the law (Rom 2:13-15). The heart
of man is the seat of the law. This being so, the understanding
and conscience must needs be in danger of being bound by the law.
Man is a law unto himself, and showeth that the works of the law
are written in his heart. Now, the law being thus nearly related
to man, it easily takes hold of the understanding and conscience;
by which hold, if it be not quickly broken off by the promise and
grace of the gospel, it is captivated to the works of the law;
for conscience is such a thing, that if it once be possessed with
a doctrine, yea, though but with the doctrine of an idol, it will
cleave so fast thereto that nothing but a hand from heaven can
loosen it; and if it be not loosed, no gospel can be there embraced
(1 Cor 8:7). Conscience is Little-ease, if men resist it, whether
it be rightly or wrongly informed.[26] How fast, then, will it
hold when it knows it cleaves to the law of God! Upon this account,
the condition of the unbeliever is most miserable; for not having
faith in the gospel of grace, through which is tendered the forgiveness
of sins, they, like men a-drowning, hold fast that they have found;
which being the law of God, they follow it; but because righteousness
flies from them, they at last are found only accursed and condemned
to hell by the law. Take heed, therefore, that thy conscience be
not entangled by the law (Rom 9:31,32).
2. The law veils and blinds by that guilt and horror for sin that
seizeth the soul by the law; for guilt, when charged close upon
the conscience, is attended with such aggravations, and that with
such power and evidence, that the conscience cannot hear, nor see,
nor feel anything else but that. When David's guilt for murder and
blood did roar by the law in his conscience, notwithstanding he
knew much of the grace of the gospel, he could hear nothing else
but terror, the sound of blood; the murder of Uriah was the only
noise that he heard; wherefore he crieth to God that he would make
him hear the gospel. 'Make me to hear joy and gladness, that the
bones which thou hast broken may rejoice' (Psa 51:8). And as he
could not hear, so neither could he see; the law had struck him
deaf and blind. 'I am,' saith he, 'not able to look up'; not up to
Christ for mercy. As if David had said, O Lord, the guilt of sin,
which is by the law, makes such a noise and horror in my conscience,
that I can neither hear nor see the word of peace unless it is
spoken with a voice from heaven! The serpents that bit the people
in the days of old were types of guilt and sin (Num 21:6). Now,
these were fiery serpents, and such as, I think, could fly (Isa
14:29). Wherefore, in my judgment, they stung the people about
their faces, and so swelled up their eyes, which made it the more
difficult for them to look up to the brazen serpent, which was the
type of Christ (John 3:14). Just so doth sin by the law do now.
It stings the soul, the very face of the soul, which is the cause
that looking up to Jesus, or believing in him, is so difficult a
task in time of terror of conscience.[28]
4. Again; where the law comes with power, there it begetteth many
doubts against the grace of God; for it is only a revealer of sin,
and the ministration of death; that is, a doctrine that sheweth
sin, and condemneth for the same; hence, therefore, as was hinted
before, the law being the revealer of sin, where that is embraced,
there sin must needs be discovered and condemned, and the soul for
the sake of that. Further, it is not only a revealer of sin, but
that which makes it abound; so that the closer any man sticks to
the law for life, the faster sin doth cleave to him. 'That law,'
saith Paul, 'which was ordained to be unto life, I found to be unto
death,' for by the law I became a notorious sinner; I thought to
have obtained life by obeying the law, 'but sin taking occasion by
the commandment, deceived me, and by it slew me' (Rom 7:10-14). A
strange way of deceivableness, and it is hid from the most of men;
but, as I have already told you, you see how it comes to pass.
(1.) Man by nature is carnal, and the law itself is spiritual: now
betwixt these two ariseth great difference; the law is exceeding
good, the heart exceeding bad; these two opposites, therefore, the
heart so abiding, can by no means agree. (2.) Therefore, at every
approach of the law to the heart with intent to impose duty, or to
condemn for the neglect thereof; at every such approach the heart
starteth back, especially when the law comes home indeed, and is
heard in his own language. This being thus, the conscience perceiving
this is a fault, begins to tremble at the sense of judgment; the
law still continueth to command to duty, and to condemn for the
neglect thereof. From this struggling of these two opposites ariseth,
I say, those doubts and fears that drive the heart into unbelief,
and that make it blind to the word of the gospel, that it can neither
see nor understand anything but that it is a sinner, and that the
law must be fulfilled by it, if ever it be saved.
[Fifth.] But again; another thing that hath great influence upon
the heart to make it lean to the law for life is, the false names
that Satan and his instruments have put upon it; such as these--to
call the law the gospel; conscience, the Spirit of Christ; works,
faith; and the like: with these, weak consciences have been
mightily pestered; yea, thousands deluded and destroyed. This was
the way whereby the enemy attempted to overthrow the church of
Christ of old; as, namely, those in Galatia and at Corinth, &c. (2
Cor 11:3,4,13,14). I say, by the feigned notion that the law was
the gospel, the Galatians were removed from the gospel of Christ;
and Satan, by appropriating to himself and his ministers the names
and titles of the ministers of the Lord Jesus, prevailed with many
at Corinth to forsake Paul and his doctrine. Where the Lord Jesus
hath been preached in truth, and something of his doctrine known,
it is not there so easy to turn people aside from the sound of the
promise of grace, unless it be by the noise and sound of a gospel.
Therefore, I say, the false apostles came thus among the churches:
'another gospel, another gospel'; which, in truth, saith Paul,
'is not another; but some would pervert the gospel of Christ,' and
thrust that out of doors, by gilding the law with that glorious name
(Gal 1:6-8).[29] So again, for the ministers of Satan, they must
be called the apostles of Christ, and ministers of righteousness;
which thing, I say, is of great force, especially being accompanied
with so holy and just a doctrine as the word of the law is; for
what better to the eye of reason than to love God above all, and
our neighbour as ourselves, which doctrine, being the scope of the
ten words given on Sinai, no man can contradict; for, in truth,
they are holy and good.
But here is the poison; to set this law in the room of a mediator,
as those do that seek to stand just before God thereby; and then
nothing is so dishonourable to Christ, nor of so soul-destroying a
nature as the law; for that, thus placed, hath not only power when
souls are deluded, but power to delude, by its real holiness, the
understanding, conscience, and reason of a man; and by giving the
soul a semblance of heaven, to cause it to throw away Christ, grace,
and faith. Wherefore it behoveth all men to take heed of names,
and of appearances of holiness and goodness.
SECOND. THAT MEN CAN BE JUSTIFIED FROM THE CURSE BEFORE GOD, WHILE
SINNERS IN THEMSELVES, BY NO OTHER RIGHTEOUSNESS THAN THAT LONG
AGO PERFORMED BY, AND REMAINING WITH, THE PERSON OF CHRIST.
Second. The righteousness by which we stand just before God from the
curse is called, 'The righteousness of the Lord--the righteousness
of God--the righteousness of Jesus Christ,' &c. (Phil 3:6-9);
and that by way of opposition to the righteousness of God's
own holy law--'That I might be found in him, not having on my own
righteousness, which is of the law, but that which is through the
faith of Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith.' Now,
by this opposition, as by what was said before, the truth is made
exceeding clear; for by these words, 'not having my own righteousness,'
are not only excluded what qualifications we suppose to be in us,
but the righteousness through which we stand just in the sight of
God by them is limited and confined to a person absolutely distinct.
Distinct, I say, as to his person and performances, who here is
called God and Jesus Christ; as he saith also in the prophet Isaiah,
'In the Lord shall all the seed of Israel be justified, and shall
glory' (Isa 45:25). In the Lord, not in the law; in the Lord, not
in themselves. 'And their righteousness is of me, saith the Lord.' Of
me, not of themselves; of me, not of the law (54:17). And again;
'Surely, shall one say, in the Lord have I righteousness and strength'
(45:24). Now, as I have already said, all this is to be understood
of the righteousness that was fulfilled by acts and works of obedience,
which the person of the Son of God accomplished in the days of his
flesh in the world; by that man, I say, 'The Lord our righteousness' (Jer
23:5). Christ, indeed, is naturally and essentially righteousness;
but as he is simply such, so he justifieth no man; for then he
need not to bear our sins in his flesh, and become obedient in all
points of the law for us; but the righteousness by which we stand
just before God is righteousness consisting of works and deeds, of
the doings and sufferings, of such a person who also is essentially
righteousness. And hence, as before I have hinted, we are said to
be justified by the obedience and blood of the Lord Jesus Christ,
by the doings and sufferings of the Son of God. And hence, again,
it is that he first is called King of righteousness; that is, a
King of righteousness as God-man, which of necessity supposeth his
personal performances; and after that, 'King of peace' (Heb 7:1-3).
For what he is naturally and eternally in his Godhead, he is not
to us, but himself; but what he is actively and by works, he is not
to himself, but to us; so, then, he is neither King of righteousness
nor of peace to us, as he is only the eternal Son of the Father,
without his being considered as our priest and undertaker. He hath
'obtained,' by works of righteousness, 'eternal redemption for
us' (Heb 9:12). So then, the righteousness by which we stand just
before God is a righteousness inherent only in Christ, because a
righteousness performed by him alone.
Quest. But what law is that which hath not power to command our
obedience in the point of our justification with God?
Answ. The moral law, or that called the ten commandments. Therefore
we are neither commanded to love God, or our neighbour, as the
means or part of our justifying righteousness; nay, he that shall
attempt to do these things to be delivered from the curse thereby,
by the scripture is holden accursed of God. 'As many as are of
the works,' or duties, 'of the law, are under the curse,' &c. (Gal
3:10). Because we are justified not by that of the law, but by the
righteousness of God without the law; that is, without its commanding
of us, without our obedience to it--'Freely by his grace, through
the redemption that is in Christ Jesus; whom God hath set forth to
be a propitiation, through faith in his blood' (Rom 3:24,25). This
is the righteousness of God without the law; that is, without any
of our obedience to the law. Wherefore the righteousness by which
we stand just, in the sight of God, cannot be inherent in us, but
in Christ the King thereof.
Fourth. This is further made apparent, by the capacity that God will
consider that soul in, to whom he imputeth justifying righteousness;
and that is, 'as one that worketh not,' as one that stands ungodly
in the judgment of the law (Rom 4:4,5). But this I have handled
before, and therefore shall pass it here.
That works after faith do not justify us from the curse, in the
sight of God, is evident--
4. To put all out of doubt; the saint, when he hath done what he
can to bring forth good works by faith, yet he dares not show these
works before God but as they pass through the Mediator Christ, but
as they are washed in the blood of the Lamb. And therefore Peter
saith, those sacrifices of ours that are truly spiritual are only
then accepted of God, when offered up by Jesus Christ (1 Peter 2:5).
And therefore it is said again, that the prayers of the saints,
which are the fruits of faith, come up before the throne of God
through the angel's hand; that is, through the hand of Christ, through
his golden censer, perfumed with his incense, made acceptable by
his intercession (Rev 8:3,4). It is said in the Book of Revelation,
that it is granted to the bride, the Lamb's wife, that she should
be 'arrayed in fine linen, clean and white; which white linen is
the righteousness of saints.' This fine linen, in my judgment, is
the works of godly men, their works that sprang from faith. But
how came they clean? How came they white? Not simply because they
were the works of faith. But mark, they 'washed their robes, and
made them white in the blood of the Lamb.' And 'therefore they
stand before the throne of God' (Rev 7:14,15). Yea, therefore it
is that their good works stand there too.
THE USE.
First. Get good acquaintance with the covenant of grace, and of the
persons concerned in the conditions of that covenant. The conditions
of that covenant are, that a righteousness shall be brought into
the world that shall please the justice of God, and answer and so
remove the curse of the law. Now he that doth perform this condition
is Christ; therefore the covenant is not immediately with man, but
with him that will be the Mediator betwixt God and man: 'As for
thee also, by the blood of thy covenant, I have sent forth thy
prisoners,' speaking of Christ (Zech 9:11). So then, Christ, the
Man Christ, is he who was to bring in these conditions; to wit,
everlasting righteousness. And hence it is that God hath said,
Christ shall be the covenant of the people--that is, he shall be
our conditions to Godward (Dan 9:23,24). He, therefore, is all our
righteousness as to the point of our justification before God; he
is the covenant of the people, as well as the light of the Gentiles;
for as no man can see but in the light of his Spirit, so no man
can stand but in and by him; he is the covenant of the people, the
conditions and qualifications of the people (Isa 52:6). So that to
Godward Christ is all in all, and no man anything at all. He hath
made with me an everlasting covenant; with me, as I stand in my head,
Christ, who, because he hath brought in everlasting righteousness,
therefore hath removed the curse of the law; wherefore he adds, this
covenant 'is ordered in all things, and sure,' because all points
that concern me, as to redemption from the curse, are taken away
by Christ, as before is discoursed (2 Sam 23:5). Look, then, upon
Christ as the man, the mediator, undertaker, and accomplisher of
that righteousness in himself, wherein thou must stand just before
God; and that he is the covenant or conditions of the people to
Godward, always having in himself the righteousness that the law
is well pleased with, and always presenting himself before God as
our only righteousness.
Second. That this truth may be the more heartily inquired into by
thee, consider thine own perfections;[33] I say, study how polluted
thou art, even from the heart throughout. No man hath a high esteem
of the Lord Jesus that is a stranger to his own sore. Christ's
church is an hospital of sick, wounded, and afflicted people; even
as when he was in the world, the afflicted and distressed set the
highest price upon Jesus Christ. Why? They were sick, and he was
the Physician; but the whole had no need of him. And just thus
it is now: Christ is offered to the world to be the righteousness
and life of sinners, but no man will regard him save he that seeth
his own pollution; he that seeth he cannot answer the demands of
the law, he that sees himself from top to toe polluted, and that
therefore his service cannot be clean as to justify him from the
curse before God--he is the man that must needs die in despair and
be damned, or must trust in Jesus Christ for life.
Further, This rule I would have all receive that come to Jesus
Christ for life and salvation--
Answ. And well it may, for it is the most submitting act that a man
can do; it throweth out all our righteousness; it makes the soul
poor in itself; it liveth upon God and Christ, as the almsman doth
upon his lord; it consenteth to the gospel that it is true; it
giveth God and Christ the glory of their mercy and merit; it loveth
God for his mercy, and Jesus Christ for his service; whatever good
it doth, it still crieth, Hereby am I not justified, but he that
justifieth me is the Lord. Well, but is there in truth such a thing
as the obedience of faith? Then let Christians labour to understand
it, and distinguish it aright, and to separate it from the law
and all man's righteousness; and remember that it is a receiving of
mercy, an embracing of forgiveness, an accepting of the righteousness
of Christ, and a trusting to these for life. Remember, again,
that it putteth the soul upon coming to Christ as a sinner, and to
receive forgiveness as a sinner, as such. We now treat of justification.
1. Because faith, having laid hold upon Christ, hath found him 'in
whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge' (Col 2:3).
In him therefore it finds and sees those heights and depths of
gospel mysteries that are nowhere else to be found; nay, let a man
be destitute of faith, and it is not possible he should once think
of some of them.
Again; why not live upon Christ alway? and especially as he standeth
the mediator between God, and the soul, defending thee with the
merit of his blood, and covering thee with his infinite righteousness
from the wrath of God and curse of the law. Can there be any
greater comfort ministered to thee than to know thy person stands
just before God? Just and justified from all things that would
otherwise swallow thee up? Is peace with God and assurance of
heaven of so little respect with thee that thou slightest the very
foundation thereof, even faith in the blood and righteousness of
Christ? and are notions and whimsies of such credit with thee that
thou must leave the foundation to follow them? But again; what
mystery is desirable to be known that is not to be found in Jesus
Christ, as Priest, Prophet, or King of saints? In him are hid all
the treasures of them, and he alone hath the key of David to open
them (Col 2:1,2; Rev 3:7). Paul was so taken with Jesus Christ,
and the knowledge of this, that he was crucified for us, that
he desired, nay, determined not to know any thing else among the
Corinthians, that itched after other wisdom (1 Cor 2:2).
Object. But I see not that in Christ now, that I have seen in him
in former days. Besides, I find the Spirit lead me forth to study
other things.
By this, therefore, you see the miserable state of the people that
have not faith--'Whatever they do, they sin'; if they break the
law, they sin; if they endeavour to keep it, they sin. They sin, I
say, upon a double account: first, because they do it but imperfectly;
and, secondly, because they yet stay upon that, resisting that which
is perfect, even that which God hath appointed. It mattereth not,
as to justification from the curse, therefore; men wanting faith,
whether they be civil or profane, they are such as stand accursed
of the law, because they have not believed, and because they have
given the lie to the truth, and to the God of truth. Let all men,
therefore, that would please God make conscience of believing;
on pain, I say, of displeasing him; on pain of being, with Cain,
rejected, and on pain of being damned in hell. 'He that believeth
not shall be damned' (Mark 16:16). Faith is the very quintessence
of all gospel obedience, it being that which must go before other
duties, and that which also must accompany whatever I do in the
worship of God, if it be accepted of him.[35] Here you may see a
reason why the force and power of hell is so bent against believing.
Satan hateth all the parts of our Christian obedience, but the best
and chiefest most. And hence the apostle saith to the Thessalonians,
that he sent to know their faith, lest by some means the tempter
have tempted them, and so his labour had been in vain (1 Thess
3:5). Indeed, where faith is wanting, or hath been destroyed, all
the labour is in vain, nothing can profit any man, neither as to
peace with God, nor the acceptance of any religious duty; and this,
I say, Satan knows, which makes him so bend his force against us.
There are three things in the act of believing which make this
grace displeasing to the wicked one--
3. Faith keeps the soul from giving credit to any of his insinuations;
for whatever Satan saith, either about the acceptance of my person
or performances, so long as I believe that both are accepted of
God for Christ's sake, he suggesteth to the wind; wherefore faith
doth the same against the devil that unbelief doth to God. Doth
unbelief count God a liar? Faith counts the devil a liar. Doth
unbelief hold the soul from the mercy of God? Faith holds the soul
from the malice of the devil. Doth unbelief quench thy graces?
Faith kindleth them even into a flame. Doth unbelief fill the soul
full of sorrow? Faith fills it full of the joy of the Holy Ghost.
In a word, doth unbelief bind down thy sins upon thee? Why, faith
in Jesus Christ releaseth thee of them all.
First. The first sort, though they may seek life, yet, thus continuing,
are never like to find it. Wherefore? Because they seek it not by
faith, but, as it were, by the works of the law. Indeed, they will
not be merit-mongers; they will not wholly trust to the law; they
will partly venture on Christ, and partly trust to the law. Well,
but therefore they shall be damned, because they trust to Christ
but in part, and in part, as it were, to the works of the law; for
such sinners make Christ but a Saviour in part--why, then, should
he be their Saviour in whole? No; because they halt between Christ
and the law, therefore they shall fall between Christ and the law;
yea, because they will trust to their works in part, they shall be
but almost saved by Christ. Let not that man think that he shall
obtain any thing from the Lord. What man? Why, he that doubteth or
wavereth in his mind about the truth of the mercy of God in Christ.
Therefore the exhortation is, 'But let him ask in faith.--For he
that wavereth,' or, that halteth between the law and Christ for
life, 'is like a wave of the sea, driven of the wind and tossed'
(James 1:6). In conclusion, he resteth nowhere--'a double-minded
man is unstable in all his ways' (v 8). This man, therefore, must
miscarry; he must not see the good land that flows with milk and
honey; no, let him not have a thought of life in his heart; let
not that man think that he shall receive any thing of the Lord.[36]
This was the case of many in the primitive times, for whose sake
this caution was written; for the devout and religious Jew and
proselyte, when they fell away from the word of the gospel, they
did not fall to those gross and abominable pollutions in which the
open profane, like sows and swine, do wallow, but they fell from
the grace of God to the law; or, at least, did rest betwixt them
both, doubting of the sufficiency of either; and thus, being fearful,
they distrust; wherefore, being found at length unbelieving, they
are reputed of God abominable, as murderers, whoremongers, sorcerers,
idolators, and liars, and so must have their portion in the lake,
with them, that burns with fire and brimstone (Rev 21:8). The
reason is, because where Christ is rejected sin remaineth, and so
the wrath of God for sin. Neither will he be a Saviour in part; he
must be all thy salvation, or none. 'Let not that man think that
he shall receive any thing of the Lord' (James 1:7; John 3:36).
Not any thing. There is no promise for him, no pardon for him,
no heaven for him, no salvation for him, no escaping of his fire!
What condition is this man in? Yet he is a religious man, for he
prays; he is a seeking man, a desiring man, for he prays; but he
halts between two, he leaneth to his righteousness, and committeth
iniquity. He is afraid to venture all upon the Lord Jesus Christ.
Let not that man think of receiving any thing from the Lord!
There are six things that on man's part are the cause he receiveth
not the gospel of Christ, and so life by him--1. They see not their
state by nature, how polluted they are with original sin (Eph 2:2).
2. They see not the justice of God against sin; they know not him
that hath said, 'Vengeance belongeth unto me, I will recompense'
(Heb 10:30). 3. They cannot see the beauty of Jesus Christ (2 Cor
4:4). 4. Unbelief being mighty in them, they dare not venture their
souls with Jesus Christ. They dare not trust to his righteousness,
and to that only (Rev 21:8). For, 5. Their carnal reason also sets
itself against the word of faith, and cannot stoop to the grace
of Jesus Christ (1 Cor 2:14). 6. They love to have honour one
of another, they love to be commended for their own vain-glorious
righteousness; and the fools think that because they are commended
of men, they shall be commended of God also: 'How can ye believe,
which receive honour one of another, and seek not the honour that
cometh from God only?' (John 5:44). This last thing--to wit, desire
of vain-glory, is the bane of thousands; it is the legalist's bane,
it is the civilian's[37] bane, it is the formalist's bane, yea,
which yet is stranger, it is the bane of the vicious and debauched
also;[38] for though there be a generation that, to one's thinking,
have not regard to righteousness, yet watch them narrowly, and
they have their times of doing something that looks like good, and
though possibly it be but seldom, yet this wretch counteth that,
for the sake of that, God accepteth him, and counteth his, glorious
righteousness. I might add a seventh cause, which is, want of
serious meditation upon eternal judgment, and what shall follow.
This consideration, did it take a deep place in the heart, would
doubtless produce these workings of spirit after Jesus Christ for
justification that now are wanting in the most of men. This made
Felix, yea, it makes the devils, tremble; and would, I say, couldst
thou deeply meditate, make thee start and turn thy wanton thoughts
into heavy sighs after God's mercy in Jesus Christ, lest thou also
come into their place of torment.
1. Consider, God hath put man above all the creatures in this
visible world, into a state of abiding for ever; they cannot be
annihilated, they shall never again be turned into nothing, but
must live with God or the devil for ever and ever. And though the
scripture saith, 'Man hath not pre-eminence over a beast in his
death,' yet the beast hath pre-eminence above many men, for he
shall not rise again to come into judgment as man must, nor receive
that dismal sentence for sin and transgression as man shall; this,
therefore, is worthy to be considered with seriousness of all
that have souls to be saved or damned--'They must one day come to
judgment,' there to stand before that Judge of all the earth whose
eyes are like a flame of fire, from the sight of which thou canst
not hide one of thy words, or thoughts, or actions, because thou
wantest the righteousness of God. The fire of his justice shall
burn up all thy rags of righteousness wherewith by the law thou
hast clothed thyself, and will leave thee nothing but a soul full
of sin to bemoan, and eternal burnings to grapple with. O the
burnings that will then beset sinners on every side, and that will
eat their flesh and torment their spirit with far more terror than
if they were stricken with scorpions! And observe it, the torment
will there be higher than other where there is the guilt of neglecting
Jesus Christ, he being indeed the Saviour, and him that was sent
on purpose to deliver men from the wrath to come.
2. Consider, once past grace, and ever past grace. When the door
is shut against thee, it will open no more, and then repentings,
desires, wishings, and wouldings, come all too late (Luke 13).
Good may be done to others, but to thee, none; and this shall be
because, even because thou hast withstood the time of thy visitation,
and not received grace when offered: 'My God will cast them away,
because they did not hearken unto him' (Luke 19:41-43; Hosea 9:17).
Cain was driven out from the presence of God, for aught I know,
some hundreds of years before his death; Ishmael was cast away after
seventeen years of age; Esau lived thirty or forty years after he
had sold his birthright. O! many, very many are in this condition!
for though God be gracious, yet he will not be slighted nor abused
always; there are plenty of sinners in the world--if one will not,
another will. Christ was soon repulsed by and sent away from the
country of the Gadarenes; but on the other side of the sea there
were many ready with joy to receive him (Luke 8:37,40). So, when
the Jews contradicted and blasphemed, 'the Gentiles gladly received
the word' (Acts 13:46-48). Look to it, sinner, here is life and
death set before thee; life, if it be not too late to receive it;
but if it be, it is not too late for death to swallow thee up.
And tell me, will it not be dreadful to be carried from under the
gospel to the damned, there to lie in endless torment, because thou
wouldst not be delivered therefrom?[39] Will it be comfort to thee
to see the Saviour turn Judge? to see him that wept and died for
the sin of the world now ease his mind on Christ-abhorring sinners
by rendering to them the just judgment of God? For all their
abominable filthiness, had they closed with Christ, they had been
shrouded from the justice of the law, and should not have come into
condemnation. 'But had been passed from death to life'; but they
would not take shelter there; they would venture to meet the justice
of God in its fury, wherefore now it shall swallow them up for ever
and ever. And let me ask further, is not he a madman who, being
loaded with combustible matter, will run headlong into the fire
upon a bravado? or that, being guilty of felony or murder, will
desperately run himself into the hand of the officer, as if the law,
the judge, the sentence, execution, were but a jest, or a thing to
be played withal? And yet thus mad are poor, wretched, miserable
sinners, who, flying from Christ as if he were a viper, they are
overcome, and cast off for ever by the just judgment of the law.
But ah! how poorly will these be able to plead the virtues of the
law to which they have cleaved, when God shall answer them, 'Whom
dost thou pass in beauty? go down, and be thou laid with the
uncircumcised' (Eze 32:19). Go down to hell, and there be laid with
those that refused the grace of God.
FOOTNOTES:
2. Let not a scoffer say, 'See how Christians cast away the law of
God!' They are under the law to Christ; bound by the most sacred
obligations to obey all its requirements; not to merit pardon, but
to prove, to the comfort of their souls, that they have received
pardon, and are living under a sense of the unmerited grace of God
in Christ.--Ed.
6. Christ (amazing love!) 'was made a curse for us,' and thereby
redeemed us from the curse of the law. He subjected himself to the
law in active as well as passive obedience, and his obedience even
to death was for our justification.--Mason.
12. The way of salvation by works was blasted by the curse upon
Adam's sin, so that it cannot work life in us, or holiness, but
only death.--Ed.
22. The law condemns all sinners, and strikes them dead as with a
thunderbolt; adjudging them to shame and misery, instead of glory
and happiness. None can fulfil its strict terms, neither Jew nor
Gentile. There is no hope, if free grace restore them not. Romans
3:20, 2:6-29; 8:7.--Mason.
24. We will hold and extol this faith which doubteth not of God,
nor of the Divine promises, nor of the forgiveness of sins through
Christ; that we may dwell sure and safe in this our object Christ,
and may keep still before our eyes the passion and blood of the
Mediator and all his benefits.--Luther on Galatians 3:11.
27. Ye cannot serve God and mammon. We must either, as lost sinners,
fall into the arms of Divine mercy, and receive pardon as a free
gift through the merits of the Saviour, or we must perish. It is
a solemn, searching consideration.--Ed.
28. Difficult at any time, and impossible without Divine power; but
most difficult when all the faculties of the soul become harrowed
by a 'certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation'
(Heb 10:27).--Ed.
34. Faith looks at things which be not, as though they were. Sense
judges from what it sees and feels, faith from what God says;
sense looks inward to self, faith looks outward to Christ and his
fullness.--Mason.
35. How strangely does the world mistake the source of good works!
The common and fatal error is, that if salvation is all of faith,
then good works will fail; whereas faith is the prolific fountain,
yea, the only source of really good works and holy obedience.--Ed.
37. 'The civilian'; one who is versed in law and government. See
Imperial Dictionary.--Ed.
38. When the pilgrims Christian and Hopeful had wandered in By-path
Meadow, one that walked before them said that the way led to the
celestial gate. 'He therefore that went before, Vain-confidence by
name, not seeing the way before him, fell into a deep pit, which
was on purpose there made by Giant Despair to catch vain-glorious
fools withal, and was dashed in pieces with his fall.' Beware, O
legalist, civilian, or formalist!--Ed.
39. How deplorably and inexcusably they will perish, who perish by
their own willful unbelief under the gospel! It will be dreadful
indeed to be driven, as it were, from the very gate of heaven to
the lowermost and hottest hell. Lord, send forth thy light, truth,
and power, that sinners may be saved and comforted by coming unto
thee for life and peace!--Mason.
***
SAVED BY GRACE;
OR,
SHOWING--
But I must not detain the reader from entering upon this solemn
subject; only for a moment, while I quote another passage conceived
in all the ardour of Bunyan's feelings:--'O Son of God! grace was
in all thy tears--grace came out where the. whip smote thee, where
the thorns pricked thee, where the nails and spear pierced thee! O
blessed Son of God! Here is grace indeed!' Unsearchable riches of
grace! Grace to make angels wonder, grace to make sinners happy,
grace to astonish devils! And what will become of them that trample
under foot this Son of God?'
GEO. OFFOR.
TO THE READER.
COURTEOUS READER,
Thou shalt also find, in this small treatise, the way of God with
the sinner, as to his CONVERSATION, 1 and the way of the sinner with
God in the same; where[in] the grace of God, and the wickedness of
the sinner, do greatly show themselves.
J.B.
SAVED BY GRACE.
In the first chapter, from the fourth to the twelfth verse, the
apostle is treating of the doctrine of election, both with respect
to the act itself, the end, and means conducing thereto. The act,
he tells us, was God's free choice of some (verse 4,5,11). The end
was God's glory in their salvation (verse 6,14). The means conducing
to that end was Jesus Christ himself--"In whom we have redemption
through his blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches
of his grace" (verse 7). This done, he treateth of the subjection
of the Ephesians to the faith, as it was held forth to them in the
Word of the truth of the gospel, as also of their being sealed by
the Holy Spirit of God unto the day of redemption (verse 12-14).
Moreover, he telleth them how he gave thanks to God for them,
making mention of them in his prayers, even that he would make them
see "what is the hope of his calling, and what the riches of the
glory of his inheritance in the saints, and what is the exceeding
greatness of his power to usward who believe, according to the
working of his mighty power, which he wrought in Christ, when he
raised him from the dead," &c. (verse 15-20).
Again, if God hath chosen you, if God hath justified and saved you
by his Christ, and left others as good as you by nature to perish
in their sins, then the true cause of this your blessed condition
is, the free grace of God. But just thus it is, therefore by grace
ye are saved; therefore all the good which you enjoy more than
others, it is of mere goodwill.
The method that I shall choose to discourse upon these words shall
be this--I will propound certain questions upon the words, and
direct particular answers to them; in which answers I hope I shall
answer also, somewhat at least, the expectation of the godly and
conscientious reader, and so shall draw towards a conclusion.
The miseries from which they that shall be saved shall by their
salvation be delivered, are dreadful; they are no less than sin,
the curse of God, and flames of hell for ever. What more abominable
than sin? What more insupportable than the dreadful wrath of an
angry God? And what more fearful than the bottomless pit of hell?
I say, what more fearful than to be tormented there for ever with
the devil and his angels? Now, to "save," according to my text, is
to deliver the sinner from these, with all things else that attend
them. And although sinners may think that it is no hard matter to
answer this question, yet I must tell you there is no man, that can
feelingly know what it is to be saved, that knoweth not experimentally
something of the dread of these three things, as is evident, because
all others do even by their practice count it a thing of no great
concern, when yet it is of all other of the highest concern among
men; "For what is a man profited if he shall gain the whole world,
and lose his own soul?" (Matt 16:26).
And here lies the reason that long life is granted to the elect
before conversion, and that all the sins they commit and all the
judgments they deserve, cannot drive them out of the world before
conversion. Manasseh, you know, was a great sinner, and for the
trespass which he committed he was driven from his own land, and
carried to Babylon; but kill him they could not, though his sins
had deserved death ten thousand times. But what was the reason?
Why, he was not yet called; God had chosen him in Christ, and laid
up in him a stock of grace, which must be given to Manasseh before
he dies; therefore Manasseh must be convinced, converted, and saved.
That legion of devils that was in the possessed, with all the sins
which he had committed in the time of his unregeneracy, could not
take away his life before his conversion (Mark 5). How many times
was that poor creature, as we may easily conjecture, assaulted for
his life by the devils that were in him, yet could they not kill
him, yea, though his dwelling was near the sea-side, and the devils
had power to drive him too, yet could they not drive him further
than the mountains that were by the sea-side; yea, they could help
him often to break his chains and fetters, and could also make him
as mad as a bedlam, 3 they could also prevail with him to separate
from men, and cut himself with stones, but kill him they could
not, drown him they could not; he was saved to be called; he was,
notwithstanding all this, preserved in Christ, and called. As it
is said of the young lad in the gospel, he was by the devil cast
oft into the fire, and oft into the water, to destroy him, but it
could not be; even so hath he served others, but they must be "saved
to be called" (Mark 9:22). How many deaths have some been delivered
from and saved out of before conversion! Some have fallen into
rivers, some into wells, some into the sea, some into the hands
of men; yea, they have been justly arraigned and condemned, as
the thief upon the cross, but must not die before they have been
converted. They were preserved in Christ, and called.
Called Christian, how many times have thy sins laid thee upon
a sick-bed, and, to thine and others' thinking, at the very mouth
of the grave? yet God said concerning thee, Let him live, for he
is not yet converted. Behold, therefore, that the elect are saved
before they are called. 4 "God, who is rich in mercy, for his great
love wherewith he loved us, even when we were dead in sins," hath
preserved us in Christ, and called us (Eph 2:4,5).
Now this "saving" of us arises from six causes. 1. God hath chosen
us unto salvation, and therefore will not frustrate his own purposes
(1 Thess 5:9). 2. God hath given us to Christ; and his gift, as
well as his calling, is without repentance (Rom 11:29; John 6:37).
3. Christ hath purchased us with his blood (Rom 5:8,9). 4. They
are, by God, counted in Christ before they are converted (Eph
1:3,4). 5. They are ordained before conversion to eternal life;
yea, to be called, to be justified, to be glorified, and therefore
all this must come upon them (Rom 8:29,30). 6. For all this, he
hath also appointed them their portion and measure of grace, and
that before the world began; therefore, that they may partake of all
these privileges, they are saved and called, preserved in Christ,
and called.
Third. To be saved is to be brought to, and helped to lay hold on,
Jesus Christ by faith. And this is called saving by grace through
faith. "For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of
yourselves, it is the gift of God" (Eph 2:8).
1. They must be brought unto Christ, yea, drawn unto him; for "no
man," saith Christ, "can come to me, except the Father which hath
sent me draw him" (John 6:44). Men, even the elect, have too many
infirmities to come to Christ without help from heaven; inviting
will not do. "As they called them, so they went from them," therefore
he "drew them with cords" (Hosea 11:2,4).
1. That all the power and policy, malice and rage, of the devils
and hell itself are against us. Any man that understandeth this will
conclude that to be saved is no small thing. The devil is called
a god, a prince, a lion, a roaring lion; it is said that he hath
death and the power of it, &c. But what can a poor creature, whose
habitation is in flesh, do against a god, a prince, a roaring lion,
and the power of death itself? Our perseverance, therefore, lieth
in the power of God; "the gates of hell shall not prevail against
it."
2. All the world is against him that shall be saved. But what
is one poor creature to all the world, especially if you consider
that with the world is terror, fear, power, majesty, laws, jails,
gibbets, hangings, burnings, drownings, starvings, banishments,
and a thousand kinds of deaths? (1 John 5:4,5; John 16:33).
3. Add to this, that all the corruptions that dwell in our flesh
are against us, and that not only in their nature and being, but
they lust against us, and war against us, to "bring us into captivity
to the law of sin and death" (Gal 5:17; 1 Peter 2:11; Rom 7:23).
4. All the delusions in the world are against them that shall be
saved, many of which are so cunningly woven, so plausibly handled,
so rarely5 polished with Scripture and reason, that it is ten
thousand wonders that the elect are not swallowed up with them;
and swallowed up they would be, were they not elect, and was not
God himself engaged, either by power to keep them from falling, or
by grace to pardon if they fall, and to lift them up again (Matt
24:24; Eph 4:14; Rom 3:12).
Fifth. To be saved calls for more than all this; he that is saved,
must, when this world can hold him no longer, have a safe-conduct
to heaven, for that is the place where they that are saved must to
the full enjoy their salvation. This heaven is called "the end of
our faith," because it is that which faith looks at; as Peter says,
"Receiving the end of your faith, even the salvation of your souls."
And again, "But we are not of them who draw back unto perdition;
but of them that believe to the saving of the soul" (1 Peter 1:9;
Heb 10:39). For, as I said, heaven is the place for the saved to
enjoy their salvation in, with that perfect gladness that is not
attainable here. Here we are saved by faith and hope of glory;
but there, we that are saved shall enjoy the end of our faith and
hope, even the salvation of our souls. There is "Mount Zion, the
heavenly Jerusalem, the general assembly and church of the firstborn;"
there is the "innumerable company of angels, and the spirits of
just men made perfect;" there is "God the judge of all, and Jesus
the Mediator of the new covenant;" there shall our soul have
as much of heaven as it is capable of enjoying, and that without
intermission; wherefore, when we come there we shall be saved indeed!
But now for a poor creature to be brought hither, this is the life
of the point. But how shall I come hither? there are heights and
depths to hinder (Rom 8:38,39).
These angels, therefore, are not to fail them that are the saved;
but must, as commissioned of God, come down from heaven to do this
office for them; they must come, I say, and take the care and charge
of our soul, to conduct it safely into Abraham's bosom. It is not
our meanness in the world, nor our weakness of faith, that shall
hinder this; nor shall the loathsomeness of our diseases make these
delicate spirits shy of taking this charge upon them. Lazarus the
beggar found this a truth; a beggar so despised of the rich glutton
that he was not suffered to come within his gate; a beggar full
of sores and noisome putrefaction; yet, behold, when he dies, the
angels come from heaven to fetch him thither: "And it came to pass
that the beggar died, and was carried by the angels into Abraham's
bosom" (Luke 16:22). True, sick-bed temptations are ofttimes the
most violent, because then the devil plays his last game with us,
he is never to assault us more; besides, perhaps God suffereth it
thus to be, that the entering into heaven may be the sweeter, and
ring of this salvation the louder! O it is a blessed thing for
God to be our God and our guide even unto death, and then for his
angels to conduct us safely to glory; this is saving indeed. And
he shall save Israel "out of all his troubles;" out of sick-bed
troubles as well as others (Psa 25:22; 34:6; 48:14).
There are three things from which this body must be saved--1. There
is that sinful filth and vileness that yet dwells in it, under
which we groan earnestly all our days (2 Cor 5:1-3). 2. There
is mortality, that subjecteth us to age, sickness, aches, pains,
diseases, and death. 3. And there is the grave and death itself,
for death is the last enemy that is to be destroyed. "So when this
corruptible shall have put on incorruption, and this mortal shall
have put on immortality, then shall be brought to pass the saying
that is written, Death is swallowed up in victory" (1 Cor 15:54).
So then, when this comes to pass, then we shall be saved; then
will salvation, in all the parts of it, meet together in our glory;
then we shall be every way saved--saved in God's decree, saved
in Christ's undertakings, saved by faith, saved in perseverance,
saved in soul, and in body and soul together in the heavens, saved
perfectly, everlastingly, gloriously.
Third. Shall I now speak of the place that this saved body and soul
shall dwell in?
Why, 1. They shall stand and live in the presence of the glorious
God, the Judge of all (Heb 12:23). 2. They shall be with the Lamb,
the Lord Jesus. 3. They shall be with an innumerable company of
holy angels (Heb 12:22). 4. They shall be with Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob, and all the prophets, in the kingdom of heaven (Luke 13:28).
1. It is for ever and ever. "And they shall see his face, and his
name shall be in their foreheads; and they shall reign for ever and
ever" (Rev 22:4,5). 2. It is everlasting. "And this is the will of
him that sent me, that every one which seeth the Son, and believeth
on him, may have everlasting life" (John 6:40,47). 3. It is life
eternal. "My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow
me; and I give unto them eternal life" (John 10:27,28). 4. It is
world without end. "But Israel shall be saved in the Lord with an
everlasting salvation; ye shall not be ashamed nor confounded world
without end" (Isa 45:17; Eph 3:20,21).
O sinner! what sayest thou? How dost thou like being saved? Doth
not thy mouth water? Doth not thy heart twitter at being saved? Why,
come then: "The Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let him that
heareth say, Come. And let him that is athirst come. And whosoever
will, let him take the water of life freely" (Rev 22:17).
First. I must touch a little upon the word GRACE, and show you
how diversely it is taken. Sometimes it is taken for the goodwill
and favour of men (Esth 2:17: Ruth 2:2: 1 Sam 1:18: 2 Sam 16:4).
Sometimes it is taken for those sweet ornaments that a life
according to the Word of God putteth about the neck 9 (Prov 1:9;
3:22). Sometimes it is taken for the charity of the saints, as 2
Corinthians 9:6-8.
But "grace" in the text is taken for God's goodwill, "the goodwill of
him that dwelt in the bush;" and is expressed variously. Sometimes
it is called "his good pleasure." Sometimes, "the good pleasure
of his will," which is all one with "the riches of his grace" (Eph
1:7). Sometimes it is expressed by goodness, pity, love, mercy,
kindness, and the like (Rom 2:4; Isa 63:9; Titus 3:4,5). Yea, he
styles himself, "The Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious,
long-suffering, and abundant in goodness and truth, keeping mercy
for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, and
that will by no means clear the guilty" (Exo 34:6,7).
[Fourth.] But I must not here conclude this point. We are here
discoursing of the grace of God, and that by it we are saved; saved,
I say, by the grace of God.
Now, God is set forth in the Word unto us under a double consideration--1.
He is set forth in his own eternal power and Godhead; and as thus
set forth, we are to conceive of him by his attributes of power,
justice, goodness, holiness, everlastingness, &c. 2. But then, we
have him set forth in the Word of truth as consisting of Father,
Son, and Spirit; and although this second consideration containeth
in it the nature of the Godhead, yet the first doth not demonstrate
the persons in the Godhead. We are saved by the grace of God--that
is, by the grace of the Father, who is God; by the grace of the
Son, who is God; and by the grace of the Spirit, who is God.
Now, since we are said to be "saved by grace," and that the grace
of God; and since also we find in the Word that in the Godhead
there are Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, we must conclude that it is
by the grace of the Father, Son, and Spirit that we are saved; wherefore
grace is attributed to the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost distinctly.
1. Grace is attributed to the Father, as these scriptures testify;
Romans 7:25, 1 Corinthians 1:3, 2 Corinthians 1:2, Galatians 1:3,
Ephesians 1:2, Philippians 1:2, Colossians 1:2, 1 Thessalonians
1:1, 2 Thessalonians 1:2, 1 Timothy 1:2, 2 Timothy 1:2, Titus 1:4,
Philemon 3. 2. Grace is also attributed to the Son, and I first
manifest it by all those texts above-mentioned, as also by these
that follow: 2 Corinthians 8:9, 13:14, Galatians 6:18, Philippians
4:23, 1 Thessalonians 5:28, 2 Thessalonians 3:18, Philemon 25,
Revelation 22:21. 3. It is also attributed to the Holy Ghost. Now,
he is here called the Spirit of grace, because he is the author of
grace as the Father, and the Son (Zech 12:10; Heb 10:29).
FIRST. How we are saved by the grace of the Father. Now this will
I open unto you thus--
SECOND. I come now to speak of the grace of the Son; for as the
Father putteth forth his grace in the saving of the sinner, so doth
the Son put forth his--"For ye know the grace of our Lord Jesus
Christ, that, though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became
poor, that ye through his poverty might be rich" (2 Cor 8:9).
Here you see also that the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ is brought
in as a partner with the grace of his Father in the salvation of
our souls. Now this is the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ; he was
rich, but for our sakes he became poor, that we through his poverty
might be made rich.
(1.) He had the glory of dominion, he was Lord of all the creatures;
they were under him upon a double account--(a) as he was their
Creator (Col 1:16); (b) as he was made the heir of God (Heb 1:2).
(2.) Therefore the glory of worship, reverence, and fear from all
creatures, was due unto him; the worship, obedience, subjection,
and service of angels were due unto him; the fear, honour, and glory
of kings, and princes, and judges of the earth were due unto him;
the obedience of the sun, moon, stars, clouds, and all vapours,
were due unto him; all dragons, deeps, fire, hail, snow, mountains
and hills, beasts, cattle, creeping things, and flying fowls, the
service of them all, and their worship, were due unto him (Psa
148).
(3.) The glory of the heavens themselves was due unto him; in a
word, heaven and earth were his.
(4.) But above all, the glory of communion with his Father was his;
I say, the glory of that unspeakable communion that he had with the
Father before his incarnation, which alone was worth ten thousand
worlds, that was ever his.
(5.) But again; as Jesus Christ was possessed with this, so,
besides, he was Lord of life; this glory also was Jesus Christ's:
"In him was life," therefore he is called the Prince of it; because
it was in him originally as in the Father (Acts 3:15). He gave to
all life and breath, and all things; angels, men, beasts, they had
all their life from him.
[Second. How poor he made himself.] Now this heaven he forsook for
our sakes--"He came into the world to save sinners" (1 Tim 1:15).
[1.] He was made lower than the angels, for the suffering of death
(Heb 2:9). When he was born, he made himself, as he saith, a worm,
or one of no reputation; he became the reproach and byword of the
people; he was born in a stable, laid in a manger, earned his bread
with his labour, being by trade a carpenter (Psa 22:6; Phil 2:7;
Luke 2:7; Mark 6:3). When he betook himself to his ministry, he
lived upon the charity of the people; when other men went to their
own houses, Jesus went to the Mount of Olives. Hark what himself
saith for the clearing of this--"Foxes have holes, and birds of
the air have nests, but the Son of man hath not where to lay his
head." He denied himself of this world's good (Luke 8:2,3; 9:58;
John 7:35; 8:1).
[3.] Again; he was Prince of peace, but he forsook his peace also.
(1.) He laid aside peace with the world, and chose upon that account
to be a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief, and therefore
was persecuted from his cradle to his cross, by kings, rulers, &c.
(2.) He laid aside his peace with his Father, and made himself the
object of his Father's curse, insomuch that the Lord smote, struck,
and afflicted him; and, in conclusion, hid his face from him (as
he expressed, with great crying) at the hour of his death.
[Object.] But perhaps some may say, What need was there that Jesus
Christ should do all this? Could not the grace of the Father save
us without this condescension of the Son?
I might thus enlarge, and that by authority from this text--"He became
poor, that ye through his poverty might be rich." All the riches
he stripped himself of, it was for our sakes; all the sorrows he
underwent, it was for our sakes; to the least circumstance of the
sufferings of Christ there was necessity that so it should be, all
was for our sakes: "For our sakes he became poor, that ye through
his poverty might be rich."
And you see the argument that prevailed with Christ to do this
great service for man, the grace that was in his heart; as also
the prophet saith, "In his love and in his pity he redeemed them."
According to this in the Corinthians, "Ye know the grace of our
Lord Jesus Christ"; both which agree with the text, "By grace ye
are saved."
I say, this was the grace of the Son, and the exercise thereof. The
Father therefore shows his grace one way, and the Son his another.
It was not the Father, but the Son, that left his heaven for
sinners; it was not the Father, but the Son, that spilt his blood
for sinners. The Father indeed gave the Son, and blessed be the
Father for that; and the Son gave his life and blood for us, and
blessed be the Son for that.
But methinks we should not yet have done with this grace of
the Son. Thou Son of the Blessed, what grace was manifest in thy
condescension! Grace brought thee down from heaven, grace stripped
thee of thy glory, grace made thee poor and despicable, grace made
thee bear such burdens of sin, such burdens of sorrow, such burdens
of God's curse as are unspeakable. O Son of God! grace was in all
thy tears, grace came bubbling out of thy side with thy blood,
grace came forth with every word of thy sweet mouth (Psa 45:2; Luke
4:22). Grace came out where the whip smote thee, where the thorns
pricked thee, where the nails and spear pierced thee. O blessed
Son of God! Here is grace indeed! Unsearchable riches of grace!
Unthought-of riches of grace! Grace to make angels wonder, grace to
make sinners happy, grace to astonish devils. And what will become
of them that trample under foot this Son of God?
Of the grace of the Spirit. THIRD. I come now to speak of the grace
of the Spirit; for he also saveth us by his grace. The Spirit, I
told you, is God, as the Father and the Son, and is therefore also
the author of grace; yea, and it is absolutely necessary that he
put forth his grace also, or else no flesh can be saved. The Spirit
of God hath his hand in saving of us many ways; for they that go
to heaven, as they must be beholding to the Father and the Son,
so also to the Spirit of God. The Father chooseth us, giveth us to
Christ, and heaven to us, and the like. The Son fulfills the law
for us, takes the curse of the law from us, bears in his own body
our sorrows, and sets us justified in the sight of God. The Father's
grace is showed in heaven and earth; the Son's grace is showed on
the earth, and on the cross; and the Spirit's grace must be showed
in our souls and bodies, before we come to heaven.
Quest. But some may say, Wherein doth the saving grace of the Spirit
appear?
The Holy Spirit coming into us, and dwelling in us, worketh out
many salvations for us now, and each of them in order also to our
being saved for ever.
10. By this blessed Spirit we are led from the ways of the flesh
into the ways of life, and by it our mortal body, as well as our
immortal soul, is quickened in the service of God (Gal 5:18,25;
Rom 8:11).
11. By this good Spirit we keep that good thing, even the seed of
God, that at the first by the Word of God was infused into us, and
without which we are liable to the worst damnation (1 John 3:9; 1
Peter 1:23; 2 Tim 1:14).
12. By this good Spirit we have help and light against all the
wisdom and cunning of the world, which putteth forth itself in its
most cursed sophistications to overthrow the simplicity that is in
Christ (Matt 10:19,20; Mark 13:11; Luke 12:11,12).
13. By this good Spirit our graces are maintained in life and
vigour, as faith, hope, love, a spirit of prayer, and every grace
(2 Cor 4:13; Rom 15:13; 2 Tim 1:7; Eph 6:18; Titus 3:5).
14. By this good Spirit we are sealed to the day of redemption (Eph
1:14).
15. And by this good Spirit we are made to wait with patience until
the redemption of the purchased possession comes (Gal 5:5).
And thus have I in few words showed you the grace of the Spirit,
and how it putteth forth itself towards the saving of the soul.
And verily, Sirs, it is necessary that you know these things
distinctly--to wit, the grace of the Father, the grace of the Son,
and the grace of the Holy Ghost; for it is not the grace of one,
but of all these three, that saveth him that shall be saved indeed.
The Father's grace saveth no man without the grace of the Son;
neither doth the Father and the Son save any without the grace
of the Spirit; for as the Father loves, the Son must die, and the
Spirit must sanctify, or no soul must be saved.
Some think that the love of the Father, without the blood of the
Son, will save them, but they are deceived; for "without shedding
of blood is no remission" (Heb 9:22).
Some think that the love of the Father and blood of the Son will
do, without the holiness of the Spirit of God; but they are deceived
also; for "if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of
his"; and again, "without holiness no man shall see the Lord" (Rom
8:9; Heb 12:14).
But yet, as these three do put forth grace jointly and truly in the
salvation of a sinner, so they put it forth, as I also have showed
you before, after a diverse manner. The Father designs us for heaven,
the Son redeems from sin and death, and the Spirit makes us meet
for heaven; not by electing, that is the work of the Father; not
by dying, that is the work of the Son; but by his revealing Christ,
and applying Christ to our souls, by shedding the love of God abroad
in our hearts, by sanctifying of our souls, and taking possession
of us as an earnest of our possession of heaven.
First. Not the self-righteous, not they that have no need of the
physician. "The whole have no need of the physician," saith Christ.
"I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance" (Mark
2:17). And again, "He hath filled the hungry with good things, and
the rich he hath sent empty away" (Luke 1:53). Now when I say not
the self-righteous nor the rich, I mean not that they are utterly
excluded; for Paul was such an one; but he saveth not such without
he first awaken them to see they have need to be saved by grace.
Second. The grace of God saveth not him that hath sinned the unpardonable
sin. There is nothing left for him "but a certain fearful looking
for of judgment,--which shall devour the adversaries" (Heb 10:26,27).
Fourth. That sinner whose mind the god of this world hath blinded,
that the glorious light of the gospel of Christ, who is the image
of God, can never shine into him, is lost, and must be damned (2
Cor 4:3,4).
Fifth. The sinner that maketh religion his cloak for wickedness, he
is a hypocrite, and, continuing so, must certainly be damned (Psa
125:5; Isa 33:14; Matt 24:50,51).
[Who are saved.] Question. But what kind of sinners shall then be
saved?
Answ. Those of all these kinds that the Spirit of God shall bring
[to] the Father by Jesus Christ; these, I say, and none but these,
can be saved, because else the sinners might be saved without the
Father, or without the Son, or without the Spirit.
Now, in all that I have said, I have not in the least suggested
that any sinner is rejected because his sins, in the nature of them,
are great; Christ Jesus came into the world to save the chief of
sinners. It is not, therefore, the greatness of, but the continuance
in, sins that indeed damneth the sinner. But I always exclude him
that hath sinned against the Holy Ghost. That it is not the greatness
of sin that excludeth the sinner is evident--
1. From the words before the text, which doth give an account
of what kind of sinners were here saved by grace, as namely, they
that were dead in trespasses and sins, those that walked in these
sins, "according to the course of this world, according to the
prince of the power of the air, the spirit that now worketh in the
children of disobedience: among whom also we all had our conversation
in times past in the lusts of our flesh, fulfilling the desires
of the flesh and of the mind; and were by nature the children of
wrath, even as others" (Eph 2:2,3).
Answ. So was Noah, and yet he found grace in the eyes of the Lord
(Gen 9:21,22). So was Lot, and yet God saved him by grace (Gen
19:35; 2 Peter 2:7-9). So was David, yet by grace he was forgiven
his iniquities (2 Sam 12:7-13). So was Solomon, and a great one
too; yet by grace his soul was saved (Psa 89:28-34). So was Peter,
and that a dreadful one; yet by grace he was saved (Matt 26:69-74;
Mark 16:7; Acts 15:7-11). Besides, for further encouragement, read
Jeremiah 3, 33:25,26, 51:5, Ezekiel 36:25, Hosea 14:1-4; and stay
thyself, and wonder at the riches of the grace of God.
Quest. But how should we find out what sinners shall be saved? All,
it seems, shall not. Besides, for aught can be gathered by what
you have said, there is as bad saved as damned, set him that hath
sinned the unpardonable sin aside.
Answ. True, there are as bad saved as damned; but to this question:
They that are effectually called, are saved. They that believe on
the Son of God shall be saved. They that are sanctified and preserved
in Christ shall be saved. They that take up their cross daily, and
follow Christ, shall be saved.
See some other scriptures. "He shall save the humble person" (Job
22:29). "Thou wilt save the afflicted people" (Psa 18:27). "He
shall save the children of the needy" (Psa 72:4). "He shall save
the souls of the needy" (Psa 72:13). "O thou, my God, save thy
servant that trusteth in thee" (Psa 86:2). "He will fulfill the
desire of them that fear him, he also will hear their cry, and will
save them" (Psa 145:19).
4. Take heed that thy inside and outside be alike;, and both
conformable to the Word of his grace; labour to be like the living
creatures which thou mayest read of in the book of the prophet
Ezekiel, whose appearance and themselves were one 10 (Eze 10:22).
QUEST. IV.--HOW IT APPEARS THAT THEY THAT ARE SAVED, ARE SAVED BY
GRACE?
This fourth question requireth that some demonstration be given of
the truth of this doctrine--to wit, that they that are saved are
saved by grace.
What hath been said before hath given some demonstration of the
truth; wherefore, first repeating in few words the sum of what hath
been said already, I shall come to further proof. 1. That this is
true, the Scriptures testify, because God chose them to salvation
before they had done good (Rom 9:11). 2. Christ was ordained to be
their Saviour before the foundation of the world (Eph 1:4; 1 Peter
1:19-21). 3. All things that concur and go to our salvation were
also in the same laid up in Christ, to be communicated in the
dispensation of the fullness of times, to them that shall be saved
(Eph 1:3,4; 2 Tim 1:9; Eph 1:10; 3:8-11; Rom 8:30).
"Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath
blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ:
according as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the
world, that we should be holy and without blame before him in love:
having predestinated us unto the adoption of children by Jesus
Christ to himself, according to the good pleasure of his will,
to the praise of the glory of his grace, wherein he hath made us
accepted in the Beloved; in whom we have redemption through his
blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of his
grace" (Eph 1:3-7).
What man is, upon whom the Father, the Son, and the Spirit bestows
this grace.
2. [A slave to sin.] So that the state of man was this--he was not
only over persuaded on a sudden to sin against God, but he drank
this sin, like water, into his very nature, mingled it with every
faculty of his soul and member of his body; by the means of which he
became alienated from God, and an enemy to him in his very heart;
and wilt thou, O Lord, as the Scripture hath it, "And dost thou
open thine eyes upon such an one?" (Job 14:3). Yea, open thy heart,
and take this man, not into judgment, but into mercy with thee?
3. [In covenant with death and hell.] Further, man by his sin had
not only given himself to be a captive slave to the devil, but,
continuing in his sin, he made head against his God, struck up a
covenant with death, and made an agreement with hell; but for God
to open his eyes upon such an one, and to take hold of him by riches
of grace, this is amazing (Isa 28:16-18).
See where God found the Jew when he came to look upon him to save
him--"As for thy nativity," says God, "in the day thou wast born
thy navel was not cut, neither wast thou washed in water to supple
thee; thou wast not salted at all, nor swaddled at all. None eye
pitied thee, to do any of these unto thee, to have compassion upon
thee; but thou wast cast out in the open field, to the loathing of
thy person, in the day that thou wast born. And when I passed by
thee, and saw thee polluted in thine own blood, I said unto thee,
when thou wast in thy blood, Live; yea, I said unto thee, when thou
wast in thy blood, Live.--Now when I passed by thee, and looked
upon thee, behold, thy time was the time of love; and I spread my
skirt over thee, and covered thy nakedness; yea, I sware unto thee,
and entered into a covenant with thee, saith the Lord God, and thou
becamest mine." Sinner, see further into the chapter, Ezekiel 16.
All this is the grace of God; every word in this text smells of
grace.
But this is not all. God doth not only beseech thee to be reconciled
to him, but further, for thy encouragement, he hath pronounced,
in thy hearing, exceeding great and precious promises; "and hath
confirmed it by an oath, that by two immutable things, in which it
was impossible for God to lie, we might have a strong consolation,
who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us"
(Heb 6:18,19; Isa 1:18; 55:6,7; Jer 51:5).
SECOND. OF MAN'S CARRIAGE TO GOD. Let us come now to the carriage
of these sinners to God, and that from the first day he beginneth
to deal with their souls, even to the time that they are to be
taken up into heaven. And,
Christian, what had become of thee if God had taken thy denial
for an answer, and said, Then will I carry the word of salvation
to another, and he will hear it? Sinner, turn, says God. Lord, I
cannot tend15 it, says the sinner. Turn or burn, says God. I will
venture that, says the sinner. Turn, and be saved, says God. I cannot
leave my pleasures, says the sinner: sweet sins, sweet pleasures,
sweet delights, says the sinner. But what grace is it in God thus
to parley with the sinner! O the patience of God to a poor sinner!
What if God should now say, Then get thee to thy sins, get thee to
thy delights, get thee to thy pleasures, take them for thy portion,
they shall be all thy heaven, all thy happiness, and all thy portion?
Third. But God comes again, and shows the sinner the necessity of
turning now; now or not at all; yea, and giveth the sinner this
conviction so strongly, that he cannot put it off. But behold, the
sinner has one spark of enmity still. If he must needs turn now,
he will either turn from one sin to another, from great ones to
little ones, from many to few, or from all to one, and there stop.
But perhaps convictions will not thus leave him. Why, then, he will
turn from profaneness to the law of Moses, and will dwell as long
as God will let him upon his own seeming goodness. And now observe
him, he is a great stickler for legal performance; now he will be
a good neighbour, he will pay every man his own, will leave off his
swearing, the alehouse, his sports, and carnal delights; he will
read, pray, talk of Scripture, and be a very busy one in religion,
such as it is; now he will please God, and make him amends for all
the wrong he hath done him, and will feed him with chapters, and
prayers, and promises, and vows, and a great many more such dainty
dishes as these, persuading himself that now he must needs be fair
for heaven, and thinks besides that he serveth God as well as any
man in England can. 16
Might not God now cut off this sinner, and cast him out of his
sight; might he not leave him here to his own choice, to be deluded
by, and to fall in his own righteousness, because he "trusteth to
it, and commits iniquity"? (Eze 33:13). But grace, preventing grace,
preserves him. It is true, this turn of the sinner, as I said, is
a turning short of Christ; but,
Fourth. God in this way of the sinner will mercifully follow him,
and show him the shortness of his performances, the emptiness of
his duties, and the uncleanness of his righteousness (Isa 28:20;
64:6). Thus I speak of the sinner, the salvation of whose soul is
graciously intended and contrived of God; for he shall by gospel
light be wearied out of all; he shall be made to see the vanity of
all, and that the personal righteousness of Jesus Christ, and that
only, is it which of God is ordained to save the sinner from the
due reward of his sins. But behold, the sinner now, at the sight
and sense of his own nothingness, falleth into a kind of despair;
for although he hath it in him to presume of salvation, through
the delusiveness of his own good opinion of himself, yet he hath it
not in himself to have a good opinion of the grace of God in the
righteousness of Christ; wherefore he concludeth, that if salvation be
alone of the grace of God, through the righteousness of Christ, and
that all of a man's own is utterly rejected, as to the justification
of his person with God, then he is cast away. Now the reason of this
sinking of heart is the sight that God hath given him, a sight of
the uncleanness of his best performance; the former sight of his
immoralities did somewhat distress him, and make him betake himself
to his own good deeds to ease his conscience, wherefore this was
his prop, his stay; but behold, now God hath taken this from under
him, and now he falls; wherefore his best doth also now forsake
him, and flies away like the morning dew, or a bird, or as the chaff
that is driven with the whirlwind, and the smoke out of a chimney
(Hosea 9:11; 13:3). Besides, this revelation of the emptiness of
his own righteousness, brings also with it a further discovery of
the naughtiness of his heart, in its hypocrisies, pride, unbelief,
hardness of heart, deadness, and backwardness to all gospel and
new-covenant obedience, which sight of himself lies like millstones
upon his shoulders, and sinks him yet further into doubts and fears of
damnation. For, bid him now receive Christ, he answers he cannot,
he dares not. Ask him why he cannot, he will answer he has no faith,
nor hope in his heart. Tell him that grace is offered him freely,
he says, but I have no heart to receive it; besides, he finds not,
as he thinks, any gracious disposition in his soul, and therefore
concludes he doth not belong to God's mercy, nor hath an interest
in the blood of Christ, and therefore dares not presume to believe;
wherefore, as I said, he sinks in his heart, he dies in his thoughts,
he doubts, he despairs, and concludes he shall never be saved.
Fifth. But behold, the God of all grace leaveth him not in this
distress, but comes up now to him closer than ever; he sends the
Spirit of adoption, the blessed Comforter, to him, to tell him,
"God is love," and therefore not willing to reject the broken in
heart; bids him cry and pray for an evidence of mercy to his soul,
and says, "Peradventure you may be hid in the day of the Lord's
anger." At this the sinner takes some encouragement, yet he can get
no more than that which will hang upon a mere probability, which
by the next doubt that ariseth in the heart is blown quite away,
and the soul left again in his first plight, or worse, where he
lamentably bewails his miserable state, and is tormented with a
thousand fears of perishing, for he hears not a word from heaven,
perhaps for several weeks together. Wherefore unbelief begins to
get the mastery of him, and takes off the very edge and spirit of
prayer, and inclination to hear the Word any longer; yea, the devil
also claps in with these thoughts, saying that all your prayers,
and hearing, and reading, and godly company which you frequent,
will rise up in judgment against you at last; therefore better it
is, if you must be damned, to choose as easy a place in hell as
you can. The soul at this, being quite discouraged, thinks to do
as it hath been taught, and with dying thoughts it begins to faint
when it goeth to prayer or to hear the word; but behold, when
all hope seems to be quite gone, and the soul concludes, I DIE, I
PERISH, in comes, on a sudden, the Spirit of God again, with some
good word of God, which the soul never thought of before, which
word of God commands a calm in the soul, makes unbelief give place,
encourageth to hope and wait upon God again; perhaps it gives some
little sight of Christ to the soul, and of his blessed undertaking
for sinners. But behold, so soon as the power of things does again
begin to wear off the heart, the sinner gives place to unbelief,
questions God's mercy, and fears damning again; he also entertains
hard thoughts of God and Christ, and thinks former encouragements
were fancies, delusions, or mere think-so's. And why doth not God
now cast the sinner to hell for his thus abusing his mercy and
grace. O no! "He will have mercy on whom he will have mercy, and
he will have compassion on whom he will have compassion"; wherefore
"goodness and mercy shall follow him all the days of his life, that
he may dwell in the house of the Lord for ever" (Psa 23:6).
Seventh. But after this, perhaps the soul grows cold again, it
also forgets this grace received, and waxeth carnal, begins again
to itch after the world, loseth the life and savour of heavenly
things, grieves the Spirit of God, woefully backslides, casteth off
closet duties quite, or else retains only the formality of them, is
a reproach to religion, grieves the hearts of them that are awake,
and tender of God's name, &c. But what will God do now? Will
he take this advantage to destroy the sinner? No. Will he let him
alone in his apostasy? No. Will he leave him to recover himself by
the strength of his now languishing graces? No. What then? Why, he
will seek this man out till he finds him, and bring him home to
himself again: "For thus saith the Lord God, Behold, I, even I, will
both search my sheep, and seek them out. As a shepherd seeketh out
his flock in the day that he is among the sheep that are scattered;
so will I seek out my sheep, and will deliver them out of all places
where they have been scattered.--I will seek that which was lost,
and bring again that which was driven away, and will bind up that
which was broken, and will strengthen that which was sick" (Eze
34:11,16).
Thus he dealt with the man that went down from Jerusalem to Jericho,
and fell among thieves; and thus he dealt with the prodigal you
read of also (Luke 10:30-35; 15:20).
Eighth. But suppose God deals not either of these ways with the
backslider, but shines upon him again, and seals up to him the
remission of his sins a second time, saying, "I will heal their
backslidings, and love them freely," what will the soul do now?
Surely it will walk humbly now, and holily all its days. It will
never backslide again, will it? It may happen it will not, it may
happen it will; it is just as his God keeps him; for although his
sins are of himself, his standing is of God; I say, his standing,
while he stands, and his recovery, if he falls, are both of God;
wherefore, if God leaves him a little, the next gap he finds, away
he is gone again. "My people," says God, "are bent to backsliding
from me." How many times did David backslide; yea, Jehoshaphat and
Peter! (2 Sam 11,24; 2 Chron 19:1-3; 20:1-5; Matt 26:69-71; Gal
2:11-13). As also in the third of Jeremiah it is said, "But thou hast
played the harlot with many lovers, yet return unto me, saith the
Lord" (verse 1). Here is grace! So many time as the soul backslides,
so many times God brings him again--I mean, the soul that must be
saved by grace--he renews his pardons, and multiplies them. "Lo,
all these things worketh God oftentimes with man" (Job 33:29).
Ninth. But see yet more grace. I will speak here of heart-wanderings,
and of daily miscarriages--I mean, of these common infirmities that
are incident to the best of saints, and that attend them in their
best performances; not that I intend, for I cannot, mention them
particularly, that would be a task impossible; but such there are,
worldly thoughts, unclean thoughts, too low thoughts of God, of
Christ, of the Spirit, words, ways, and ordinances of God, by which
a Christian transgresses many times; may I not say, sometimes many
hundred times a day; yea, for aught I know, there are some saints,
and them not long-lived either, that must receive, before they
enter into life, millions of pardons from God for these; and every
pardon is an act of grace, through the redemption that is in Christ's
blood. 17
But to mention some of them. Sometimes they question the very being
of God, or foolishly ask how he came to be at first; sometimes they
question the truth of his Word, and suspect the harmony thereof,
because their blind hearts and dull heads cannot reconcile it; yea,
all fundamental truths lie open sometimes to the censure of their
unbelief and atheism; as, namely, whether there be such an one as
Christ, such a thing as the day of judgment, or whether there will
be a heaven or hell hereafter, and God pardons all these by his
grace. When they believe these things, even then they sin, by not
having such reverent, high, and holy thoughts of them as they ought;
they sin also by having too, too good thoughts of themselves, of
sin, and the world; sometimes, let me say, often, they wink too much
at known sin, they bewail not, as they should, the infirmities of
the flesh; the itching inclinations which they find in their hearts
after vanity go too often from them unrepented of. I do not say
but they repent them in the general. But all these things, O how
often doth God forgive, through the riches of his grace!
How often do they make promises to God, and afterwards break them!
Yea, or if they keep promise in show, how much doth their heart even
grudge the performing of them; how do they shuck18 at the cross;
and how unwilling are they to lose that little they have for God,
though all they have was given them to glorify him withal! 19
All these things, and a thousand times as many more, dwell in the
flesh of man; and they may as soon go away from themselves as from
these corruptions; yea, they may sooner cut the flesh from their
bones than these motions of sin from their flesh; these will be
with them in every duty--I mean, some or other of them; yea, as
often as they look, or think, or hear, or speak. These are with
them, especially when the man intends good in so doing: "When
I would do good," says Paul, "evil is present with me." And God
himself complains that "every imagination of the thoughts of the
heart of man is only evil," and that "continually" (Rom 7:21; Gen
6:5).
I come now to answer the fifth question; namely, to show why God
saveth those that he saveth by grace, rather than by any other
means.
Fourth. If man should be saved any other way than by grace, God
would be disappointed in his design to cut off boasting from his
creature; but God's design to cut off boasting from his creature
cannot be frustrated or disappointed; therefore he will save man
by no other means than by grace; he, I say, hath designed that
no flesh should glory in his presence, and therefore he refuseth
their works; "Not of works, lest any man should boast." "Where is
boasting then? It is excluded. By what law? of works? Nay; but by
the law of faith" (Eph 2:8,9; Rom 3:24-28).
Fifth. God hath ordained that we should be saved by grace, that he
might have the praise and glory of our salvation; that we should
be "to the praise of the glory of his grace, wherein he hath made
us accepted in the Beloved" (Eph 1:6). Now God will not lose his
praise, and his glory he will not give to another; therefore God
doth choose to save sinners but by his grace.
What shall I say? Grace can take us into favour with God, and that
when we are in our blood (Eze 16:7,8). Grace can make children of
us, though by nature we have been enemies to God (Rom 9:25,26).
Grace can make them God's people which were not God's people (1
Peter 2:9,10). Grace will not trust our own salvation in our own
hands--"He putteth no trust in his saints" (Job 15:15). Grace can
pardon our ungodliness, justify us with Christ's righteousness;
it can put the spirit of Jesus Christ within us, it can help us
up when we are down, it can heal us when we are wounded, it can
multiply pardons, as we, through frailty, multiply transgressions.
What shall I say? Grace and mercy are everlasting. They are built
up for ever. They are the delight of God. They rejoice against
judgment. And therefore it is the most safe and secure way of
salvation, and therefore hath God chosen to save us by his grace
and mercy rather than any other way (Isa 43:25; Rom 3:24,25; Isa
44:2,4; Psa 37:23; Luke 10:33,34; Isa 55:7,8; Psa 136; 89:2; Mal
3:18; James 2:13).
3. God is not willing that faith should be made void, and the
promise of none effect; therefore they of the righteousness of the
law are excluded: "for if the inheritance be of the law, it is no
more of promise, but God gave it to Abraham by promise" (Rom 4:14
Gal 3:18).
4. God is not willing that men should be saved by their own natural
abilities; but all the works of the law which men do to be saved
by, they are the works of men's natural abilities, and are therefore
called the work of the flesh, but God is not willing that men should
be saved by these, therefore no way but by his grace (Rom 4:1; Gal
3:1-3; Phil 3:3).
4. God's glory, that also must stand; to wit, the glory of his
grace; for that he will not give to another; therefore men must
so be saved from the wrath to come, that in their salvation praise
may redound to the glory of his grace.
Ninth. There can be but one will the master in our salvation; but
that shall never be the will of man, but of God; therefore man must
be saved by grace (John 1:13; Rom 9:16).
POSTSCRIPT.
1. None are received for their good deeds; for then they would not
be saved by grace, but by works. Works and grace, as I have showed,
are in this matter opposite each to other; if he be saved by works,
then not by grace; if by grace, then not by works (Rom 11). That
none are received of God for their good deeds is evident, not
only because he declares his abhorrence of the supposition of such
a thing, but hath also rejected the persons that have at any time
attempted to present themselves to God in their own good deeds for
justification. This I have showed you before.
2. Men are not rejected for their bad deeds. This is evident by
Manasseh, by the murderers of our Lord Jesus Christ, by the men
that you read of in the nineteenth of the Acts, with many others,
whose sins were of as deep a dye as the sins of the worst of men
(2 Chron 33:2,13; Acts 2:23,41; 19:19).
This blessed man ascribes all to the grace of God. 1. His call he
ascribes to the grace of God. 2. His apostleship he ascribes to the
grace of God. 3. And all his labour in that charge he also ascribes
to the grace of God.
This grace of God it was that which saved from the beginning.
1. Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord, and was therefore
converted and preserved from the flood (Gen 6:8). 2. Abraham found
grace in the sight of the Lord, and therefore he was called out of
his country (Gen 12:1,2). 3. Moses found grace in the eyes of the
Lord, and therefore he must not be blotted out of God's book (Exo
33:12,17).
Neither may it be imagined that these men were, before grace laid
hold on them, better than other men; for then they would not have
been saved by grace; grace should not have had the dominion and
glory of their salvation. But, as Paul says of himself, and of
those that were saved by grace in his day, "What then? are we better
than they? No, in no wise; for we have before proved both Jews and
Gentiles that they are all under sin" (Rom 3:9). So it may be said
of these blessed ones; for indeed this conclusion is general, and
reacheth all the children of men, Christ Jesus alone only excepted.
But,
There was grace for Lot, but none for his wife; therefore she was
left in her transgression, but Lot was saved notwithstanding. There
was grace for Jacob, but none for Esau; therefore Esau was left in
his backsliding, but Jacob found mercy notwithstanding. There was
grace for David, but none for Saul; therefore David obtained mercy,
and Saul perished in his backsliding. There was grace for Peter,
but none for Judas; therefore Judas is left to perish in his
backsliding, and Peter is saved from his sin. That text stands
good to none but those that are elect by grace--"Sin shall not have
dominion over you; for ye are not under the law, but under grace"
(Rom 6:14).
It will be said, repentance was found in one, but not in the other.
Well, but who granted and gave the one repentance; The Lord turned,
and looked upon Peter; he did not turn and look upon Judas; yea,
the Lord told Peter before he fell that he should follow him to
the kingdom of heaven, but told him that he should deny him first;
but withal told him also he should not let his heart be troubled,
that is, utterly dejected, for he would go and prepare a place
for him, and come again and receive him to himself (John 13:36-38;
14:1-3). That is a blessed word of God, "The steps of a good man
are ordered by the Lord, and he delighteth in his way. Though he
fall, he shall not be utterly cast down; for the Lord upholdeth
him with his hand" (Psa 37:23,24).
First. Are they that are saved, saved by grace? Then they that
would have their guilty consciences quieted, they must study the
doctrine of grace.
Wherefore thou must study the grace of God. "It is a good thing,"
saith the apostle, "that the heart be established with grace";
thereby insinuating that there is no establishment in the soul that
is right but by the knowledge of the grace of God (Heb 13:9).
There are many things which men call the grace of God, that are
not.
1. The light and knowledge that are in every man. 2. That natural
willingness that is in man to be saved. 3. That power that is in man
by nature to do something, as he thinketh, towards his own salvation.
I name these three; there are also many other which some will have
entitled the grace of God. But do thou remember that the grace
of God is his goodwill and great love to sinners in his Son Jesus
Christ; "by the which" good "will we are sanctified, through the
offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all" (Heb 10:10).
Again; when thou hast smelt out this grace of God, and canst
distinguish it from that which is not, then labour to strengthen
thy soul with the blessed knowledge of it. "Thou therefore, my
son," said Paul, "be strong in the grace that is in Christ Jesus"
(2 Tim 2:1). Fortify thy judgment and understanding; but especially
labour to get down all into thy conscience, that that may be "purged
from dead works, to serve the living God."
[Second.] And to enforce this use upon thee yet further, consider,
a man gets yet more advantage by the knowledge of, and by growing
strong in, this grace of God.
3. The knowledge of, and strength that comes by, the grace of God
is a sovereign antidote against all, and all manner of delusions
that are or may come into the world. Wherefore Peter, exhorting
the believers to take heed that they were not carried away with
the errors of the wicked, and so fall from their own steadfastness,
adds, as their only help, this exhortation--"But grow in grace,
and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ" (2 Peter
3:18).
(4.) Suppose men should attempt to burden the church of God with
unnecessary ceremonies, and impose them, even as the false apostles21
urged circumcision of old, saying, Unless you do these things, ye
cannot be saved; why, the answer is ready--"Why tempt ye God, to put
a yoke upon the necks of the disciples, which neither our fathers
nor we were able to bear? But we believe that through the grace
of the Lord Jesus Christ we shall be saved, even as they" (Acts
15:1,10,11). But not to enlarge, 22
1. Thou criest out, O cursed man that I am! my sins will sink me
into hell.
Answ. Hold, man; there is a God in heaven that is "the God of all
grace" (1 Peter 5:10). Yet thou art not the man of all sin. If God
be the God of all grace, then if all the sins in the world were
thine, yet the God of all grace can pardon, or else it should seem
that sin is stronger in a man penitent, to damn, than the grace of
God can be to save.
Answ. "All manner of sins and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men,
wherewithsoever they shall blaspheme.--Let the wicked forsake his
way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts; and let him return unto
the Lord, and he will have mercy upon him; and to our God, for he
will abundantly pardon" (Matt 12:31; Mark 3:28; Isa 55:7,8).
Answ. "Hearken unto me," saith God, "ye stout-hearted, that are
far from righteousness: I bring near my righteousness"; that is,
the righteousness of Christ, by which stout-hearted sinners are
justified, though ungodly (Isa 46:12,13; Phil 3:7,8; Rev 4:5).
Answ. "A new heart also will I give you," says God, "and a new
spirit will I put within you: and I will take away the stony heart
out of your flesh, and I will give you a heart of flesh" (Eze
36:26).
Answ. "I will bring the blind by a way that they know not; I will
lead them in paths that they have not known: I will make darkness
light before them, and crooked things straight. These things will
I do unto them, and not forsake them" (Isa 42:16).
6. But my heart will not be affected with the sufferings and blood
of Christ.
Answ. "I will pour upon the house of David, and upon the inhabitants
of Jerusalem, the Spirit of grace and of supplications: and they
shall look upon me whom they have pierced, and they shall mourn for
him, as one mourneth for his only son, and shall be in bitterness
for him, as one that is in bitterness for his first-born" (Zech
12:10).
Answ. "Then will I sprinkle clean water upon you, and ye shall be
clean: from all your filthiness, and from all your idols will I
cleanse you" (Eze 36:25).
10. But I cannot repent. Answ. "The God of our fathers raised up
Jesus, whom ye slew and hanged on a tree. Him hath God exalted with
his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour, for to give repentance
to Israel, and forgiveness of sins" (Acts 5:30,31).
Thus might I enlarge, for the holy Bible is full of this exceeding
grace of God. O these words, "I will" and "you shall"! they are
the language of a gracious God; they are promises by which our God
has engaged himself to do that for poor sinners which would else
be left undone for ever.
Are they that are saved, saved by grace? Then let Christians labour
to advance God's grace. FIRST. In heart. SECOND. In life.
Third. Come boldly to the throne of grace by hearty prayer; for this
is the way also to magnify the grace of God. This is the apostle's
exhortation, "Let us therefore come boldly unto the throne of grace,
that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of need"
(Heb 4:16). See here a little, and wonder.
We have been all this while discoursing of the grace of God; and
now we are come to his throne, as Job says, "even to his seat";
and behold, "that is a throne of grace." O, when a God of grace is
upon a throne of grace, and a poor sinner stands by and begs for
grace, and that in the name of a gracious Christ, in and by the
help of the Spirit of grace, can it be otherwise but such a sinner
must obtain mercy and grace to help in time of need? But not to
forget the exhortation, "Come boldly." Indeed, we are apt to forget
this exhortation; we think, seeing we are such abominable sinners,
we should not presume to come boldly to the throne of grace; but
yet so we are bidden to do; and to break a commandment here is as
bad as to break it in another place.
The gospel shows us that God did wonderfully stoop and condescend
for our good; and to do accordingly, it is to stoop and condescend
to others.
The gospel shows us that there was abundance of pity, love, bowels,
and compassion in God towards us; and accordingly we should be full
of bowels, pity, love, and compassion to others.
And now, before I conclude this use, let me give you a few
heart-endearing considerations to this so good and so happy a work.
[Heart-endearing Considerations.]
Second. Consider, God left millions in their sins that day he saved
thee by his grace; he left millions out, and pitched upon thee;
it may be hundreds also, yea, thousands, were in the day of thy
conversion lying before him under the preaching of the word as thou
wert, yet he took thee. 25 Considerations of this nature affected
David much; and God would have them affect thee, to the advancing
of his grace in thy life and conversation (Psa 78:67-72; Deu 7:7).
Third. Consider, perhaps the most part of those that God refused
that day that he called thee by his grace were, as to conversation,
far better than ever thou wert--I was a blasphemer, I was a
persecutor, I was an injurious person, but I obtained mercy! O this
should affect thy heart, this should engage thy heart to study to
advance this grace of God (1 Tim 1:14,15).
Fourth. Perhaps in the day of thy conversion thou wast more unruly
than many. Like a bullock unaccustomed to the yoke, hardly tamed,
thou wast brought home by strong hands; thou wouldst not drive,
the Lord Jesus must take thee up, lay thee upon his shoulder, and
carry thee home to his Father's house. This should engage thy heart
to study to advance the grace of God (Luke 15:1-6).
Fifth. It may be many did take even offence at God in his converting
and saving of thee by his grace, even as the elder son was offended
with his father for killing the fatted calf for his brother, and
yet that did not hinder the grace of God, nor make God abate his
love to thy soul. This should make thee study to advance the grace
of God in thy heart and life (Luke 15:21-32).
Sixth. Consider again, that God hath allowed thee but a little
time for this good work, even the few days that thou hast now to
live--I mean, for this good work among sinful men, and then thou
shalt go to receive that wages that grace also will give thee for
thy work to thy eternal joy.
Seventh. Let this also have some place upon thy heart--every man
shows subjection to the god that he serveth; yea, though that god be
none other but the devil and his lusts; and wilt not thou, O man!
saved of the Lord, be much more subject "to the Father of spirits,
and live"?26
Alas! they are pursuing their own damnation, yet they sport it,
and dance all the way they go. They serve that "god" (Satan) with
cheerfulness and delight, who at last will plunge them into the
everlasting gulf of death, and torment them in the fiery flames
of hell; but thy God is the God of salvation, and to God thy Lord
belong the issues from death. Wilt not thou serve him with joyfulness
in the enjoyment of all good things, even him by whom thou art to
be made blessed for ever?
Answ. What dost thou mean by cannot? 1. If thou meanest thou hast
no strength to do it, thou hast said an untruth, for "greater is he
that is in you, than he that is in the world" (1 John 4:4). 2. If
thou meanest thou hast no will, then thou art out also; for every
Christian, in his right mind, is a willing man, and the day of
God's power hath made him so (Psa 110:3). 3. If thou meanest that
thou wantest wisdom, that is thine own fault--"If any man lack
wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, and
upbraideth not" (James 1:5).
And here indeed lies a great discovery of this truth, "ye are saved
by grace"; for the children of God whilst here, notwithstanding
their conversion to God, and salvation by Christ through grace, are
so infirm and weak by reason of a body of death that yet remaineth
in them, that should even the sin that is in the best of their
performances be laid to their charge, according to the tenor of a
covenant of works, they would find it impossible ever to get into
glory. But why do I talk thus? It is impossible that those that
are saved by grace should have their infirmities laid to their
charge as afore, "for they are not under the law"; they are included
by the grace of God in the death and blood of the Son of God, who
ever liveth to make intercession for them at the right hand of God;
whose intercession is so prevalent with the Father as to take away
the iniquity of our holy things from his sight, and to present
us holy, and unreprovable, and unblamable in his sight. To him,
by Christ Jesus, through the help of the blessed Spirit of grace,
be given praise, and thanks, and glory, and dominion, by all his
saints, now and for ever. Amen.
FOOTNOTES:
2 Their conduct proved to the living that they were dead, they
themselves having no feeling or sense of spiritual life; but,
when quickened, their penitence and good works were brought into
existence by Divine power; they feel the joys of salvation, but
feel also their total unworthiness of this new creating power, and
sing, "O to grace how great a debtor!"--Ed.
4 The person who writes this, was a singular instance of the truth
of our author's remark; having been twice providentially preserved
from drowning, and once from the fatal effects of a violent fever,
before effectual saving grace had reached his soul. The same rich
and abundant mercy follows all the elect, quickens them when dead,
saves them when lost, and restores them when ruined. God hath
chosen us unto salvation, and enables us to live holily on earth,
in order to a life of happiness in heaven. The Father's good will
and pleasure is the only fountain from whence the salvation of
believers flows; and such as are given to Christ by the Father he
considers as his charge, and stands engaged for their preservation;
and the death of Christ for sinners, is an evident demonstration
of the love of God the Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ, towards
them; this love manifested in time was in and upon the heart of God
before the world began.--Mason. What a multitude of unseen dangers,
both spiritual and temporal, the Christian escapes before he is
called!--Ed.
7 What amazing love! Christ visited this poor beggar, yea, was formed
in him the hope of glory; his body, so miserable in the sight of
man, was a temple of the Holy Ghost, and the angels carry his soul
to heaven. O the riches of grace!--Ed.
8 What heart can conceive the glorious worship of heaven? The new
song shall be as the voice of many waters, and a great thunder,
when the "ten thousand times ten thousand and thousand of thousands"
shall sing, "Worthy is the Lamb that was slain, to receive power,
and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honour, and blessing."
O that my poor voice may join that celestial choir!--Ed.
9 The fear of the Lord--an ornament of grace unto thy head, and
chains about thy neck, and life unto thy soul.--Solomon.
14 This treatise having been written some years after the Pilgrim's
Progress, Bunyan very naturally refers to the well-known scene in
the Interpreter's House, where the fire is kept burning by oil from
behind the wall, in spite of all the water thrown upon its flames.--Ed.
***
OR,
PLAINLY PROVING, BY THE SCRIPTURES, THAT NOT ONLY THE RUDE AND
PROFANE, BUT MANY GREAT PROFESSORS, WILL COME SHORT OF THAT KINGDOM.
"Enter ye in at the strait gate; for wide is the gate, and broad
is the way that leadeth to destruction, and many there be which
go in thereat: because strait is the gate, and narrow is the way
which leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it."--Matthew
7:13, 14
GEO. OFFOR.
TO THE READER.
COURTEOUS READER,
God, I hope, hath put it into my heart to write unto thee another
time, and that about matters of greatest moment--for now we discourse
not about things controverted among the godly, but directly about
the saving or damning of the soul; yea, moreover, this discourse is
about the fewness of them that shall be saved, and it proves that
many a high professor will come short of eternal life; wherefore
the matter must needs be sharp, and so disliked by some, but let
it not be rejected by thee. The text calls for sharpness, so do
the times, yea, the faithful discharge of my duty towards thee hath
put me upon it.
I do not now pipe, but mourn; and it will be well for thee if thou
canst graciously lament. (Matt 11:17) Some, say they, make the
gate of heaven too wide, and some make it too narrow; for my part,
I have here presented thee with as true a measure of it as by the
Word of God I can. Read me, therefore, yea, read me, and compare
me with the Bible; and if thou findest my doctrine and that book
of God concur, embrace it, as thou wilt answer the contrary in the
day of judgment. This awakening work--if God will make it so--was
prepared for thee: if there be need, and it wounds, get healing by
blood: if it disquiets, get peace by blood: if it takes away all
thou hast, because it was naught (for this book is not prepared to
take away true grace from any), then buy of Christ "gold tried in
the fire, that thou mayest be rich, and white raiment, that thou
mayest be clothed, and that the shame of thy nakedness do not appear,
and anoint thine eyes with eye-salve, that thou mayest see." (Rev
3:18) Self-flatteries, self-deceivings, are easy and pleasant,
but damnable. The Lord give thee a heart to judge right of thyself,
right of this book, and so to prepare for eternity, that thou
mayest not only expect entrance, but be received into the kingdom
of Christ and of God. Amen.
JOHN BUNYAN.
"STRIVE TO ENTER IN AT THE STRAIT GATE; FOR MANY, I SAY UNTO YOU,
WILL SEEK TO ENTER IN, AND SHALL NOT BE ABLE."--LUKE 13:24
These are the words of our Lord Jesus Christ, and are, therefore,
in especial manner to be heeded; besides, the subject matter of the
words is the most weighty, to wit, how we should attain salvation,
and therefore also to be heeded.
The occasion of the words was a question which one that was at
this time in the company of the disciples put to Jesus Christ; the
question was this, "Lord, are there few that be saved?" (verse 23)
A serious question, not such as tended to the subversion of the
hearers, as too many now-a-days do; but such as in its own nature
tended to the awakening of the company to good, and that called
for such an answer that might profit the people also. This question
also well pleased Jesus Christ, and he prepareth and giveth such an
answer as was without the least retort, or show of distaste; such
an answer, I say, as carried in it the most full resolve to the
question itself, and help to the persons questioning. "And he said
unto them, Strive to enter in," &c. The words are an answer, and
an instruction also. First. An answer, and that in the affirmative;
the gate is strait--many that seek will not be able, therefore
but few shall be saved. Second. The answer is an instruction also;
"strive to enter in," &c., good counsel and instruction; pray God
help me, and my reader, and all that love their own salvation, to
take it.
The words, I say, are to direct us not only to talk of, or to wish
for, but to understand how we shall, and to seek that we may be,
effectually saved, and therefore of the greatest importance. To be
saved! what is like being saved? To be saved from sin, from hell,
from the wrath of God, from eternal damnation, what is like it? To
be made an heir of God, of his grace, of his kingdom, and eternal
glory, what is like it? and yet all this is included in this word
saved, and in the answer to that question, "Are there few that be
saved?" Indeed this word SAVED is but of little use in the world,
save to them that are heartily afraid of damning. This word lies
in the Bible as excellent salves lie in some men's houses, thrust
into a hole, and not thought on for many months, because the household
people have no wounds nor sores. In time of sickness, what so set
by as the doctor's glasses and gally-pots full of his excellent
things? but when the person is grown well, the rest is
thrown to the dunghill. 1
O when men are sick of sin, and afraid of damning, what a text is
that where this word saved is found! Yea, what a word of worth,
and goodness, and blessedness, is it to him that lies continually
upon the wrath of a guilty conscience? "But the whole need not a
physician"; he therefore, and he only, knows what saved means, that
knows what hell, and death, and damnation means. "What shall I do
to be saved?" is the language of the trembling sinner. "Lord save
me," is the language of the sinking sinner; and none admire the
glory that is in that word saved, but such as see, without being
saved, all things in heaven and earth are emptiness to them. They
also that believe themselves privileged in all the blessedness
that is wrapt up in that word, bless and admire God that hath saved
them. Wherefore, since the thing intended, both in the question
and the answer, is no less than the salvation of the soul, I beseech
you to give the more earnest heed. (Heb 12) But,
Behold, therefore, what a great thing the Lord Jesus hath included
by this little word, "IN." In this word is wrapt up a whole heaven
and eternal life; even as there is also by other little words in
the holy Scriptures of truth: as where he saith, "Knock, and it
shall be opened unto you," and "the election hath obtained it."
This should teach us, not only to read, but to attend in reading;
not only to read, but to lift up our hearts to God in reading; for
if we be not heedful, if he gives us not light and understanding,
we may easily pass over, without any great regard, such a word as
may have a glorious kingdom and eternal salvation in the bowels
of it; yea, sometimes, as here, a whole heaven is intimated, where
it is not at all expressed. The apostles of old did use to fetch
great things out of the Scriptures, even out of the very order and
timing of the several things contained therein. See Romans 4:9-11,
Galatians 3:16,17, Hebrews 8:13. But,
1. There is the door of faith, the door which the grace of God hath
opened to the Gentiles. This door is Jesus Christ, as also himself
doth testify, saying, "I am the door," &c. (John 10:9, Acts 14:27)
By this door men enter into God's favour and mercy, and find
forgiveness through faith in his blood, and live in hope of eternal
life; and therefore himself also hath said, "I am the door; by me
if any man enter in, he shall be saved"; that is, received to mercy,
and inherit eternal life. But,
(1.) It is that gate that letteth men into, or shutteth men out
of that place or kingdom where Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob is,
which place is that paradise where Christ promised the thief that
he should be that day, that he asked to be with him in his kingdom;
it is that place into which Paul said he was caught, when he heard
words unlawful or impossible for a man to utter. (Luke 13:28, 23:42,
2 Cor 12:1-6)
Quest. But is not Christ the gate or entrance into this heavenly
place?
(2.) That this gate is the very passage into heaven, consider the
text hath special reference to the day of judgment, when Christ
will have laid aside his mediatory office, which before he exercised
for the bringing to the faith his own elect; and will then act,
not as one that justifieth the ungodly, but as one that judgeth
sinners. He will now be risen up from the throne of grace, and
shut up the door against all the impenitent, and will be set upon
the throne of judgment, from thence to proceed with ungodly sinners.
Object. But Christ bids strive: "Strive" now "to enter in at the
strait gate"; but if that gate be as you say, the gate or entrance
into heaven, then it should seem that we should not strive till
the day of judgment, for we shall not come at that gate till then.
1. The place by which God turned Adam and his wife out of paradise.
Possibly our Lord might have his eye upon that; for though that
was wide enough for them to come out at, yet it was too strait for
them to go in at. But what should be the reason of that? Why, they
had sinned; and therefore God "placed at the east of that garden
cherubims, and a flaming sword, which turned every way, to keep
the way of the tree of life." (Gen 3:24) The cherubims, and the
flaming sword, they made the entrance too strait for them to enter
in. Souls, there are cherubims and a flaming sword at the gates
of heaven to keep the way of the tree of life; therefore none but
them that are duly fitted for heaven can enter in at this strait
gate; the flaming sword will keep all others out. "Know ye not
that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God? Be not
deceived, neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor
effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with mankind, nor thieves,
nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners, shall
inherit the kingdom of God." (1 Cor 6:9,10)
(2.) Perhaps our Lord might have his eye upon the gates of the temple
when he spoke this word unto the people; for though the gates of
the temple were six cubits wide, yet they were so strait, that none
that were unclean in anything might enter in thereat (Eze 40:48),
because there were placed at these gates, porters, whose office
was to look that none but those that had right to enter might go in
thither. And so it is written, Jehoiada set "porters at the gates
of the house of the Lord, that none which was unclean in anything
should enter in." (2 Chron 23:19) Souls, God hath porters at the
gates of the temple, at the gate of heaven; porters, I say, placed
there by God, to look that none that are unclean in anything may
come in thither. In at the gate of the church, none may enter now
that are openly profane, and scandalous to religion; no, though
they plead they are beloved of God: "What hath my beloved to do
in mine house," saith the Lord, "seeing she hath wrought lewdness
with many?" (Jer 11:15)
I say, I am very apt to believe that our Lord Jesus Christ had his
thoughts upon these two texts, when he said the gate is strait:
and that which confirms me the more in the things is this, a little
below the text he saith, "There shall be weeping and gnashing of
teeth, when ye shall see Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, and all
the prophets, in the kingdom of heaven, and you yourselves thrust
out." (Luke 13:28) Thrust out, which signifieth a violent act,
resisting with striving those that would--though unqualified--enter.
The porters of the temple were, for this very thing, to wear arms,
if need were, and to be men of courage and strength, lest the
unsanctified or unprepared should by some means enter in. We read,
in the book of Revelations, of the holy city, and that it had twelve
gates, and at the gates twelve angels; but what did they do there?
Why, amongst the rest of their service, this was one thing, that
there might "in no wise enter in to it any thing that defileth, or
worketh abomination, or that maketh a lie." (Rev 21:27)
1. There is sin; the sin of the profane, and the sin of the professor.
(1.) The sin of the profane. But this needs not be enlarged upon,
because it is concluded upon at all hands, where there is the
common belief of the being of God, and the judgment to come, that
"the wicked shall be turned into hell, and all the nations that
forget God." (Psa 9:17)
2. There is the word of the law, and that will make the gate strait
also. None must go in thereat but those that can go in by the leave
of the law; for though no man be, or can be, justified by the works
of the law, yet unless the righteousness and holiness by which they
attempt to enter into this kingdom be justified by the law, it is
in vain once to think of entering in at this strait gate. Now the
law justifieth not, but upon the account of Christ's righteousness;
if therefore thou be not indeed found in that righteousness, thou
wilt find the law lie just in the passage into heaven to keep thee
out. Every man's work must be tried by fire, that it may be manifest
of what sort it is. There are two errors in the world about the
law; one is, when men think to enter in at the strait gate by the
righteousness of the law; the other is, when men think they may enter
into heaven without the leave of the law. Both these, I say, are
errors; for as by the works of the law no flesh shall be justified;
so without the consent of the law, no flesh shall be saved. "Heaven
and earth shall pass away, before one jot or tittle of the law
shall fail, till all be fulfilled." He therefore must be damned
that cannot be saved by the consent of the law. And, indeed, this
law is the flaming sword that turneth every way; yea, that lieth
to this day in the way to heaven, for a bar to all unbelievers and
unsanctified professors; for it is taken out of the way for the
truly gracious only. It will be found as a roaring lion to devour
all others. Because of the law, therefore, the gate will be found
too strait for the unsanctified to enter in. When the apostle had
told the Corinthians that "the unrighteous should not inherit the
kingdom of God," and that such were some of them, he adds, "But ye
are washed, but ye are sanctified, but ye are justified, in the name
of the Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God." (1 Cor 6:9-11)
Closely concluding, that had they not been washed, and sanctified,
and justified, in the name of the Lord Jesus, the law, for their
transgressions, would have kept them out; it would have made the
gate too strait for them to enter in.
3. There are also the angels of God, and by reason of them the gate
is strait. The Lord Jesus calleth the end of the world his harvest;
and saith, moreover, that the angels are his reapers. These angels
are therefore to gather his wheat into his barn, but to gather
the ungodly into bundles to burn them. (Matt 13:39,41,49) Unless,
therefore, the man that is unsanctified can master the law, and
conquer angels; unless he can, as I may say, pull them out of the
gateway of heaven, himself is not to come thither for ever. No man
goeth to heaven but by the help of the angels--I mean at the day
of judgment. For the Son of man "shall send his angels with a great
sound of a trumpet, and they shall gather together his elect from
the four winds, from one end of heaven to the other." (Matt 24:31)
If those that shall enter in at the strait gate shall enter in
thither by the conduct of the holy angels, pray when do you think
those men will enter in thither, concerning whom the angels are
commanded to gather them, to "bind them in bundles to burn them?"
This, therefore, is a third difficulty. The angels will make this
entrance strait; yea, too strait for the unjustified and unsanctified
to enter in thither.
Answ. The answer in general is, Thou must strive lawfully. "and if
a man also strive for masteries, yet is he not crowned, except he
strive lawfully." (2 Tim 2:5) But you will say, What is it to strive
lawfully? [I] answer--
4. He that striveth lawfully, must take God and Christ along with
him to the work, otherwise he will certainly be undone. "Whereunto,"
said Paul, "I also labour, striving according to his working, which
worketh in me mightily." (Col 1:29) And for the right performing
of this, he must observe these following particulars:--
(1.) He must take heed that he doth not strive about things, or
words, to no profit; for God will not then be with him. "Of these
things," saith the apostle, "put them in remembrance; charging them
before the Lord, that they strive not about words to no profit, but
to the subverting of the hearers." (2 Tim 2:14) But, alas! how many
professors in our days are guilty of this transgression, whose
religion stands chiefly, if not only, in a few unprofitable questions
and vain wranglings about words and things to no profit, but to
the destruction of the hearers!
(2.) He must take heed that whilst he strives against one sin, he
does not harbour and shelter another; or that whilst he cries out
against other men's sin, he does not countenance his own.
(5.) We should also strive by mortifying our members that are upon
the earth. "I therefore so run," said Paul, "not as uncertainly;
so fight I, not as one that beateth the air; but I keep under my
body, and bring it into subjection, lest that by any means, when I
have preached the gospel to others, I myself should be a cast-away."
(1 Cor 9:26,27) But all this is spoken principally to professors;
so I would be understood.
III. I come now to the third question, namely, But why should we
strive? Answer--
1. Because the thing for which you are here exhorted to strive,
it is worth the striving for; it is for not less than for a whole
heaven, and an eternity of felicity there. How will men that have
before them a little honour, a little profit, a little pleasure,
strive? I say again, how will they strive for this? Now they do
it for a corruptible crown, but we an incorruptible. Methinks this
word heaven, and this eternal life, ought verily to make us strive,
for what is there again either in heaven or earth like them to
provoke a man to strive?
3. Strive, because every lust strives and wars against thy soul.
"The flesh lusteth against the Spirit." (Gal 5:17) "Dearly beloved,
I beseech you," said Peter, "as strangers and pilgrims, abstain
from fleshly lusts, which war against the soul." (1 Peter 2:11)
It is a rare thing to see or find out a Christian that indeed can
bridle his lusts; but no strange thing to see such professors that
are "not only bridled, but saddled too," yea, and ridden from lust
to sin, from one vanity to another, by the very devil himself, and
the corruptions of their hearts.
4. Strive, because thou hast a whole world against thee. The world
hateth thee if thou be a Christian; the men of the world hate
thee; the things of the world are snares for thee, even thy bed and
table, thy wife and husband, yea, thy most lawful enjoyments have
that in them that will certainly sink thy soul to hell, if thou
dost not strive against the snares that are in them. (Rom 11:9)
The world will seek to keep thee out of heaven with mocks, flouts,
taunts, threatenings, jails, gibbets, halters, burnings, and
a thousand deaths; therefore strive! Again, if it cannot overcome
thee with these, it will flatter, promise, allure, entice, entreat,
and use a thousand tricks on this hand to destroy thee; and observe,
many that have been stout against the threats of the world, have
yet been overcome with the bewitching flatteries of the same. 5
There ever was enmity betwixt the devil and the church, and betwixt
his seed and her seed too; Michael and his angels, and the dragon
and his angels, these make war continually. (Gen 3, Rev 12) There
hath been great desires and endeavours among men to reconcile
these two in one, to wit, the seed of the serpent and the seed of
the woman, but it could never yet be accomplished. The world says,
they will never come over to us; and we again say, by God's grace,
we will never come over to them. But the business hath not ended
in words; both they and we have also added our endeavours to make
each other submit, but endeavours have proved ineffectual too. They,
for their part, have devised all manner of cruel torments to make
us submit, as slaying with the sword, stoning, sawing asunder,
flames, wild beasts, banishments, hunger, and a thousand miseries.
We again, on the other side, have laboured by prayers and tears,
by patience and long-suffering, by gentleness and love, by sound
doctrine and faithful witness-bearing against their enormities,
to bring them over to us; but yet the enmity remains; so that they
must conquer us, or we must conquer them. One side must be overcome;
but the weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty through
God.
"Strive to enter in." By these words also the Lord Jesus giveth
sharp rebuke to those professors that have not eternal glory, but
other temporal things in their eye, by all the bustle that they
make in the world about religion. Some there be, what a stir they
make, what a noise and clamour, with their notions and forms, and
yet perhaps all is for the loaves; because they have eaten of the
loaves, and are filled. (John 6:26) These strive indeed to enter,
but it is not into heaven; they find religion hath a good trade at
the end of it, or they find that it is the way to credit, repute,
preferment, and the like, and therefore they strive to enter into
these. But these have not the strait gate in their eye, nor yet
in themselves have they love to their poor and perishing souls;
wherefore this exhortation nippeth such, by predicting of their
damnation.
"Strive to enter in." These words also sharply rebuke them who
content themselves as the angel of the church of Sardis, did, to
wit, "to have a name to live, and be dead" (Rev 3:1), or as they
of the Laodiceans, who took their religion upon trust, and were
content with a poor, wretched, lukewarm profession; for such as
these do altogether unlike to the exhortation in the text, that
says, Strive, and they sit and sleep; that says, Strive to enter
in, and they content themselves with a profession that is never
like to bring them thither.
"Strive to enter in." Further, these words put us upon proving the
truth of our graces now; I say, they put us upon the proof of the
truth of them now; for if the strait gate be the gate of heaven,
and yet we are to strive to enter into it now, even while we live,
and before we come thither, then doubtless Christ means by this
exhortation, that we should use all lawful means to prove our
graces in this world, whether they will stand in the judgment or
no. Strive to enter in; get those graces now that will prove true
graces then, and therefore try those you have; and if, upon trial,
they prove not right, cast them away, and cry for better, lest they
cast thee away, when better are not to be had. "Buy of me gold tried
in the fire"; mark that. (Rev 3:18) Buy of me faith and grace that
will stand in the judgment; strive for that faith; buy of me that
grace, and also white raiment, that thou mayest be clothed, that
the shame of thy wickedness doth not appear, and anoint thine eyes
with eye-salve, that thou mayest see. Mind you this advice; this
is right striving to enter in.
But you will say, How should we try our graces? Would you have us
run into temptation, to try if they be sound or rotten? Answ. You
need not run into trials; God hath ordained that enough of them
shall overtake thee to prove thy graces either rotten or sound before
the day of thy death; sufficient to the day is the evil thereof,
if thou hast but a sufficiency of grace to withstand. I say, thou
shalt have trials enough overtake thee, to prove thy grace sound
or rotten. Thou mayest, therefore, if God shall help thee, see how
it is like to go with thee before thou goest out of this world, to
wit, whether thy graces be such as will carry thee in at the gates
of heaven or no.
But how should we try our graces now? Answ. (a.) How dost thou find
them in outward trials? See Hebrews 11:15,16. (b.) How dost thou
find thyself in the inward workings of sin? (Rom 7:24) (c.) How
dost thou find thyself under the most high enjoyment of grace in
this world? (Phil 3:14)
But what do you mean by these three questions? I mean graces show
themselves at these their seasons, whether they be rotten or sound.
(b.) How do they show themselves to be true under the second? Answ.
By mourning, and confessing, and striving, and praying, against
them; by not being content, shouldst thou have heaven, if they live,
and defile thee; and by counting of holiness the greatest beauty
in the world; and by flying to Jesus Christ for life. (Zech 12:10,
John 19, Heb 12:14, Psa 19:12)
(c.) How do they show themselves to be true under the third? Answ.
By prizing the true graces above all the world, by praying heartily
that God will give thee more; by not being content with all the
grace thou canst be capable of enjoying on this side heaven and
glory. (Psa 84:10, Luke 17:5, Phil 3)
"Strive to enter in." The reason why Christ addeth these words,
"to enter in," is obvious, to wit, because there is no true and
lasting happiness on this side heaven; I say, none that is both
true and lasting, I mean, as to our sense and feeling as there
shall [be]; "For here have we no continuing city, but we seek one
to come." (Heb 13:14) The heaven is within, strive therefore to
enter in; the glory is within, strive therefore to enter in; the
Mount Zion is within, strive therefore to enter in; the heavenly
Jerusalem is within, strive therefore to enter in; angels and saints
are within, strive therefore to enter in; and, to make up all, the
God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, and that glorious Redeemer,
is within, strive therefore to enter in.
"Strive to enter in." "For without are dogs, and sorcerers, and
whoremongers, and murderers, and idolaters, and whosoever loveth and
maketh a lie." Without are also the devils, and hell, and death,
and all damned souls; without is howling, weeping, wailing, and
gnashing of teeth; yea, without are all the miseries, sorrows, and
plagues that an infinite God can in justice and power inflict upon
an evil and wicked generation; "Strive therefore to enter in at the
strait gate." (Rev 22:15, Matt 25:41, Rev 12:9, Is 65:13,14, Matt
22:13, Deu 29:18-20)
"Strive to enter in at the strait gate; for many, I say unto you,
will seek to enter in, and shall not be able."
Fourth. We are come now to the motive which our Lord urges to
enforce his exhortation.
2. That not a few, but many, will meet with this disappointment;
"For many will seek to enter in, and shall not be able."
4. Professors shall make a great heap among the many that shall
fall short of heaven; "For many, I say unto you, will seek to enter
in, and shall not be able."
5. Where grace and striving are wanting now, seeking and contending
to enter in will be unprofitable then; "For many, I say unto you,
will seek to enter in, and shall not be able."
"For many," &c. If he had said, For some will fall short, it had
been a sentence to be minded; if he had said, For some that seek
will fall short, it had been very awakening; but when he saith,
Many, many will fall short, yea, many among professors will fall
short, this is not only awakening, but dreadful!
[Various applications of the word MANY.]--"For many," &c. I find
this word many variously applied in Scripture.
4. Sometimes this word many intendeth them that make a great noise,
and do many great things in the church, and yet want saving grace:
"Many," saith Christ, "will say unto me in that day, Lord, Lord,
have we not prophesied in thy name? and in thy name have cast out
devils? and in thy name done many wonderful works?" (Matt 7:22)
Mark, there will be many of these.
6. Sometimes this word many includeth all the world, good and bad:
"And many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake,
some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt."
(Dan 12:2) Compare with John 5:28,29.
7. Lastly. Sometimes this word many intendeth the good only, even
them that shall be saved. (Luke 1:16, 2:34)
[How MANY is applied in the text.] Since then that the word is so
variously applied, let us inquire how it must be taken in the text.
And,
1. It must not be applied to the sincerely godly, for they shall never
perish. (John 10:27,28) 2. It cannot be applied to all the world,
for then no flesh should be saved. 3. Neither is it to be applied
to the open profane only, for then the hypocrite is by it excluded.
4. But by the many in the text our Lord intendeth in special the
professor; the professor, I say, how high soever he seems to be
now, that shall be found without saving grace in the day of judgment.
Now that the professor is in special intended in this text,
consider, so soon as the Lord had said, "Many will seek to enter
in, and shall not be able," he pointeth, as with his finger, at
the many that then he in special intendeth; to wit, them among whom
he had taught; them that had eat and drunken in his presence; them
that had prophesied, and cast out devils in his name, and in his
name had done many wonderful works. (Luke 13:26, Matt 7:22) These
are the many intended by the Lord in this text, though others also
are included under the sentence of damnation by his word in other
places. "For many," &c. Matthew saith, concerning this strait gate,
that there are but few that find it. But it seems the cast-always
in my text did find it; for you read, that they knocked at it, and
cried, "Lord, open unto us." So then, the meaning may seem to be
this--many of the few that find it will seek to enter in, and shall
not be able. I find, at the day of judgment, some will be crying
to the rocks to cover them, and some at the gates of heaven for
entrance. Suppose that those that cry to the rocks to cover them,
are they whose conscience will not suffer them once to look God
in the face, because they are fallen under present guilt, and the
dreadful fears of the wrath of the Lamb. (Rev 6:16) And that those
that stand crying at the gate of heaven, are those whose confidence
holds out to the last,--even those whose boldness will enable them
to contend even with Jesus Christ for entrance; them, I say, that
will have profession, casting out of devils, and many wonderful
works, to plead; of this sort are the many in my text: "For many,
I say unto you, will seek to enter in, and shall not be able."
Could we compare the professors of the times with the everlasting
word of God, this doctrine would more easily appear to the children
of men. How few among the many, yea, among the swarms of professors,
have heart to make conscience of walking before God in this world,
and to study his glory among the children of men! How few, I say,
have his name lie nearer their hearts than their own carnal concerns!
Nay, do not many make his Word, and his name, and his ways,
a stalking-horse to their own worldly advantages? 7
"For many, I say unto you." These latter words carry in them a
double argument to prove the truth asserted before: First, in that
he directly pointeth at his followers: "I say unto you": Many, I say
unto you, even to you that are my disciples, to you that have eat
and drunk in my presence. I know that sometimes Christ hath directed
his speech to his disciples, not so much upon their accounts, as
upon the accounts of others; but here it is not so; the "I say unto
you," in this place, it immediately concerned some of themselves:
I say unto you, ye shall begin to stand without, and to knock,
"saying, Lord, Lord, open unto us, and he shall answer and say unto
you, I know you not whence ye are; then shall ye begin to say, We
have eaten and drunk in thy presence, and thou hast taught in our
streets. But he shall say, I tell you, I know you not whence ye
are; depart from me, all ye workers of iniquity"; it is you, you,
YOU, that I mean! "I say unto you." It is common with a professing
people, when they hear a smart and a thundering sermon, to say, Now
has the preacher paid off the drunkard, the swearer, the liar, the
covetous, and adulterer; forgetting that these sins may be committed
in a spiritual and mystical way. There is spiritual drunkenness,
spiritual adultery, and a man may be a liar that calls God his Father
when he is not, or that calls himself a Christian, and is not. 8
"I say unto you!" Had not the Lord Jesus designed by these words
to show what an overthrow will one day be made among professors,
he needed not to have you'd it at this rate, as in the text, and
afterwards, he has done; the sentence had run intelligible enough
without it; I say, without his saying, "I say unto you." But the
truth is, the professor is in danger; the preacher and the hearer,
the workers of miracles, and workers of wonders, may all be in
danger of damning, notwithstanding all their attainments. And to
awaken us all about this truth, therefore, the text must run thus:
"For many, I say unto YOU, shall seek to enter in, and shall not
be able."
See you not yet that the professor is in danger, and that those
words, "I say unto you," are a prophecy of the everlasting perdition
of some that are famous in the congregation of saints? I say, if
you do not see it, pray God your eyes may be opened, and beware
that thy portion be not as the portion of one of those that are
wrapped up in the 28th verse of the chapter: "There shall be weeping
and gnashing of teeth, when ye shall see Abraham, and Isaac, and
Jacob, and all the prophets, in the kingdom of heaven, and you
yourselves thrust out."
"For many, I say unto you." These words, I told you, carry in them
a double argument for confirmation of the truth asserted before:
first, that professors are here particularly pointed at; and,
secondly, it is the saying of the Truth himself: for these words,
"I say," are words full of authority; I say it, I say unto you, says
Christ, as he saith in another place, "It is I that speak; behold
it is I!" The person whose words we have now under consideration
was no blundering raw-headed preacher, 9 but the very wisdom of
God, his Son, and him that hath lain in his bosom from everlasting,
and consequently had the most perfect knowledge of his Father's
will, and how it would fare with professors at the end of this
world. And now hearken what himself doth say of the words which he
hath spoken; "Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall
not pass away." (Matt 24:35)
"I say unto you." The prophets used not to speak after this manner,
nor yet the holy apostles; for thus to speak, is to press things
to be received upon their own authority. They used to say, Thus
saith the Lord, or Paul, or Peter, an apostle, or a servant of God.
But now we are dealing with the words of the Son of God; it is HE
that hath said it; wherefore we find the truth of the perishing
of many professors asserted, and confirmed by Christ's own mouth.
This consideration carrieth great awakening in it; but into such
a fast sleep are many now-a-days fallen, that nothing will awaken
them but that shrill and terrible cry, "Behold, the Bridegroom
cometh; go ye out to meet him."
"I SAY UNTO YOU." There are two things upon which this assertion
may be grounded--1. There is in the world a thing like grace, that
is not. 2. There is a sin called the sin against the Holy Ghost,
from which there is no redemption. And both these things befall
professors.
There is a sin, called the sin against the Holy Ghost, from which
there is no redemption. This is evident both from Matthew and Mark:
"But whosoever speaketh against the Holy Ghost, it shall not be
forgiven him, neither in this world, neither in the world to come."
"But he that shall blaspheme against the Holy Ghost hath never
forgiveness, but is in danger of eternal damnation." (Matt 12:32,
Mark 3:29) Wherefore, when we know that a man hath sinned this sin,
we are not to pray for him, or to have compassion on him. (1 John
5:16, Jude 22)
This sin doth most ordinarily befall professors; for there are
few, if any, that are not professors, that are at present capable
of sinning this sin. They which "were once enlightened, and have
tasted of the heavenly gift, and were made partakers of the Holy
Ghost, and have tasted the good word of God, and the powers of the
world to come," of this sort are they that commit this sin. (Heb
6:4,5) Peter also describes them to be such, that sin the unpardonable
sin. "For if, after they have escaped the pollutions of the world
through the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, they
are again entangled therein, and overcome, the latter end is worse
with them than the beginning." (2 Peter 2:20) The other passage in
the tenth of Hebrews holdeth forth the same thing. "For if we sin
willfully after that we have received the knowledge of the truth,
there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins, but a certain fearful
looking for of judgment and fiery indignation, which shall devour
the adversaries." (Heb 10:26,27) THESE, therefore, are the persons
that are the prey for this sin; this sin feedeth upon PROFESSORS,
and they that are such do very often fall into the mouth of
this eater. Some fall into the mouth of the sin by delusions and
doctrines of devils; and some fall into the mouth of it by returning
with the dog to his own vomit again, and with the sow that was
washed to her wallowing in the mire. (2 Peter 2:22) I shall not
here give you a particular description of this sin--that I have
done elsewhere; 10 but such a sin there is, and they that commit it
shall never have forgiveness. And I say again, there be professors
that commit this unpardonable sin, yea, more than most are aware
of. Let all, therefore, look about them. The Lord awaken them
that they may so do; for what with a profession without grace, and
by the venom of the sin against the Holy Ghost, many will seek to
enter in, and shall not be able.
"Will seek to enter in." This kingdom, at the gate of which the
reprobate will be stopped, will be, at the last judgment, the desire
of all the world; and they, especially THEY in my text, will seek
to enter in; for then they will see that the blessedness is to
those that shall get into this kingdom, according to that which
is written, "Blessed are they that do his commandments, that they
may have right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the
gates into the city." (Rev 21:14) To prove that they will seek,
although I have done it already, yet read these texts at your
leisure--Matthew 25:11, 7:22, Luke 13:28. And, in a word, to give
you the reason why they will seek to enter in.
1. Now they will see what a kingdom it is, what glory there is in
it, and now they shall also see the blessedness which they shall
have that shall then be counted worthy to enter in. The reason why
this kingdom is so little regarded, it is because it is not seen;
the glory of it is hid from the eyes of the world. "Their eye hath
not seen, nor their ear heard," &c. Aye, but then they shall hear
and see too; and when this comes to pass, then, even then, he that
now most seldom thinks thereof will seek to enter in.
2. They will now see what hell is, and what damnation in hell is,
more clear than ever. They will also see how the breath of the
Lord, like a stream of brimstone, doth kindle it. O the sight of
the burning fiery furnace, which is prepared for the devil and his
angels! This, this will make work in the souls of cast-always at
that day of God Almighty, and then they will seek to enter in.
3. Now they will see what the meaning of such words as these are,
hell-fire, everlasting fire, devouring fire, fire that never shall
be quenched. Now they will see what "for ever" means, what eternity
means; now they will see what this word means, "the bottomless
pit"; now they will hear roaring of sinners in this place, howling
in that, some crying to the mountains to fall upon them, and others
to the rocks to cover them; now they will see blessedness is nowhere
but within!
4. Now they will see what glory the godly are possessed with; how
they rest in Abraham's bosom, how they enjoy eternal glory, how
they walk in their white robes, and are equal to the angels. O the
favour, and blessedness, and unspeakable happiness that now God's
people shall have! and this shall be seen by them that are shut
out, by them that God hath rejected for ever; and this will make
them seek to enter in. (Luke 16:22,23, 13:28)
"Will seek to enter in." Quest. But some may say, How will they
seek to enter in? [I] answer,
1. They will put on all the confidence they can, they will trick
and trim up their profession, and adorn it with what bravery they
can. Thus the foolish virgins sought to enter in; they did trim
up their lamps, made themselves as fine as they could. They made
shift to make their lamps to shine awhile; but the Son of God
discovering himself, their confidence failed, their lamps went out,
the door was shut upon them, and they were kept out. (Matt 25:1-12)
I might add other things by which it will appear how they will seek
to enter in. As,
1. They will make a stop at this gate, this beautiful gate of heaven.
They will begin to stand without at the gate, as being loath to
go any further. Never did malefactor so unwillingly turn off the
ladder when the rope was about his neck, as these will turn away
in that day from the gates of heaven to hell.
2. They will not only make a stop at the gate; but there they will
knock and call. This also argueth them willing to enter. They will
begin to stand without, and to knock at the gate, saying, Lord, Lord,
open to us. This word, Lord, being doubled, shows the vehemency of
their desires, "Lord, Lord, open unto us." The devils are coming;
Lord, Lord, the pit opens her mouth upon us; Lord, Lord, there is
nothing but hell and damnation left us, if, Lord, Lord, thou hast
not mercy upon us; "Lord, Lord, open unto us!"
I come now to the latter part of the words, which closely show
us the reason of the rejection of these many that must be damned;
"They will seek to enter in, and shall not be able."
"And shall not be able." The time, as I have already hinted, which
my text respecteth, it is the day of judgment, a day when all masks
and vizards shall be taken off from all faces. It is a day wherein
God "will bring to light the hidden things of darkness, and will
make manifest the counsel of the hearts." (1 Cor 4:5) It is also
the day of his wrath, the day in which he will pay vengeance, even
a recompence to his adversaries.
At this day, those things that now these "many" count sound and good,
will then shake like a quagmire, even all their naked knowledge,
their feigned faith, pretended love, glorious shows of gravity in
the face, their holiday words and specious carriages, will stand
them in little stead. I call them holiday ones, for I perceive that
some professors do with religion just as people do with their best
apparel--hang it against the wall all the week, and put it on on
Sundays. For as some scarce ever put on a suit but when they go
to a fair or a market, so little house religion will do with some;
they save religion till they go to a meeting, or till they meet
with a godly chapman. O poor religion! O poor professor! What wilt
thou do at this day, and the day of thy trial and judgment? Cover
thyself thou canst not; go for a Christian thou canst not; stand
against the Judge thou canst not! What wilt thou do? "The ungodly
shall not stand in the judgment, nor sinners in the congregation
of the righteous." 12 "And shall not be able." The ability here
intended is not that which standeth in carnal power or fleshly
subtlety, but in the truth and simplicity of those things for the
sake of which God giveth the kingdom of heaven to his people.
There are five things, for the want of which this people will not
be able to enter.
2. They will not be able to enter, because they will want the
birthright. The kingdom of heaven is for the heirs--and if children, then
heirs; if born again, then heirs. Wherefore it is said expressly,
"Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God."
By this one word, down goes all carnal privilege of being born of
flesh and blood, and of the will of man. Canst thou produce the
birthright? But art thou sure thou canst? For it will little profit
thee to think of the blessed kingdom of heaven, if thou wantest
a birthright to give thee inheritance there. Esau did despise his
birthright, saying, What good will this birthright do me? And there
are many in the world of his mind to this day. "Tush," say they,
"they talk of being born again; what good shall a man get by that?
They say, no going to heaven without being born again. But God is
merciful; Christ died for sinners; and we will turn when we can
tend it, 13 and doubt not but all will be well at last." But I will
answer thee, thou child of Esau, that the birthright and blessing
go together; miss of one, and thou shalt never have the other! Esau
found this true; for, having first despised the birthright, when
he would afterwards "have inherited the blessing, he was rejected;
for he found no place of repentance, though he sought it carefully
with tears." (Gen 25, Heb 12:16,17)
3. They shall not be able to enter in who have not believed with
the faith of God's operation; the faith that is most holy, even
the faith of God's elect. "He that believeth on the Son of God hath
everlasting life; and he that believeth not the Son shall not see
life; but the wrath of God abideth on him." (John 3:36) But now
this faith is the effect of electing love, and of a new birth.
(John 1:11-13) Therefore, all the professors that have not faith
which floweth from being born of God, will seek to enter in, and
shall not be able.
"The foolish shall not stand in thy sight; thou hatest all workers
of iniquity." (Psa 5:5) The foolish are the unholy ones, that
neither have faith, nor holiness, nor perseverance in godliness,
and yet lay claim to the kingdom of heaven; but "better is a little
with righteousness, than great revenues without right." (Prov 16:8)
What is it for me to claim a house, or a farm, without right? or
to say, all this is mine, but have nothing to show for it? This
is but like the revenues of the foolish; his estate lieth in his
conceit. He hath nothing by birthright and law, and therefore shall
not be able to inherit the possession. "For many, I say unto you,
will seek to enter in, and shall not be able."
Thus you see, that the non-elect shall not be able to enter, that
he that is not born again shall not be able to enter, that he
that hath not saving faith, with holiness and perseverance flowing
therefrom, shall not be able to enter; wherefore consider of what
I have said.
I come now to give you some observations from the words, and they
may be three.
FIRST. When men have put in all the claim they can for heaven,
but few will have it for their inheritance. "For many, I say unto
you, will seek to enter in, and shall not be able." SECOND. Great,
therefore, will be the disappointment that many will meet with at
the day of judgment: "For many will seek to enter in, and shall
not be able." THIRD. Going to heaven, therefore, will be no trivial
business; salvation is not got by a dream; they that would then
have that kingdom must now strive lawfully to enter: "For many, I
say unto you, will seek to enter in, and shall not be able."
FIRST. I shall speak chiefly, and yet but briefly, to the first
of these observations; to wit, That when men have put in all the
claim they can to the kingdom of heaven, but few will have it for
their inheritance. The observation standeth of two parts. First.
That the time is coming, when every man will put in whatever claim
they can to the kingdom of heaven. Second. There will be but few
of them that put in claim thereto, that shall enjoy it for their
inheritance.
[First. ALL WILL PUT IN WHAT CLAIM THEY CAN TO THE KINGDOM OF
HEAVEN.]
I shall speak but a word or two to the first part of the observation,
because I have prevented my enlargement thereon by my explication
upon the words; but you find in the 25th of Matthew, that all they
on the left hand of the Judge did put in all the claim they could
for this blessed kingdom of heaven. If you should take them on the
left hand as most do, for all the sinners that shall be damned,
then that completely proveth the first part of the observation;
for it is expressly said, "Then shall they," all of them jointly,
and every one apart, "also answer him, saying, Lord, when saw
we thus and thus, and did not minister unto thee?" (Matt 25:44) I
could here bring you in the plea of the slothful servant, the cry
of the foolish virgins; I could also here enlarge upon that passage,
"Lord, Lord, have we not eaten and drunk in thy presence, and thou
hast taught in our streets?" But these things are handled already
in the handling of which this first part of the observation is
proved; wherefore, without more words, I will, God assisting by
his grace, descend to the second part thereof, to wit,
[Second. THERE WILL BE BUT FEW OF THEM THAT PUT IN CLAIM THERETO
THAT WILL ENJOY IT FOR THEIR INHERITANCE.]
1. In the old world, when it was most populous, even in the days
of Noah, we read but of eight persons that were saved out of it;
well, therefore, might Peter call them but few; but how few? why,
but eight souls; "wherein few, that is, eight souls, were saved by
water." (1 Peter 3:20) He touches a second time upon this truth,
saying, He "spared not the old world, but saved Noah the eighth
person, a preacher of righteousness, bringing in the flood upon the
world of the ungodly." (2 Peter 2:5) Mark, all the rest are called
the ungodly, and there were also a world of them. These are also
taken notice of in Job, and go there also by the name of wicked
men: "Hast thou marked the old way which wicked men have trodden?
which were cut down out of time, whose foundation was overflown
with a flood, which said unto God, Depart from us, and what can
the Almighty do for them?" (Job 22:15-17)
There were therefore but eight persons that escaped the wrath of
God, in the day that the flood came upon the earth; the rest were
ungodly; there was also a world of them, and they are to this day
in the prison of hell. (Heb 11:7, 1 Peter 3:19,20) Nay, I must
correct my pen, there were but seven of the eight that were good;
for Ham, though he escaped the judgment of the water, yet the curse
of God overtook him to his damnation. 2. When the world began again
to be replenished, and people began to multiply therein: how few,
even in all ages, do we read of that were saved from the damnation
of the world!
(1.) One Abraham and his wife, God called out of the land of the
Chaldeans; "I called," said God, "Abraham alone." (Isa 51:2)
(2.) One Lot out of Sodom and Gomorrah, out of Admah and Zeboim;
one Lot out of four cities! Indeed his wife and two daughters went
out of Sodom with him; but they all three proved naught, as you
may see in the 19th of Genesis. Wherefore Peter observes, that Lot
only was saved: "He turned the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah into
ashes, condemning them with an overthrow, making them an example
unto those that after should live ungodly, and delivered just Lot,
that righteous man." (Read 2 Peter 2:6-8) Jude says, that in this
condemnation God overthrew not only Sodom and Gomorrah, but the
cities about them also; and yet you find none but Lot could be
found that was righteous, either in Sodom or Gomorrah, or the cities
about them; wherefore they, all of them, suffer the vengeance of
eternal fire. (verse 7)
(3.) Come we now to the time of the Judges, how few then were godly,
even then when the inhabitants of the villages ceased, they ceased
in Israel! "the highways" of God "were" then "unoccupied." (Judg
5:6,7)
(4.) There were but few in the days of David: "Help, Lord," says
he, "for the godly man ceaseth, for the faithful fail from among
the children of men." (Psa 12:1)
(5.) In Isaiah's time the saved were come to such a few, that he
positively says that there were a very small number left: "God had
made them like Sodom, and they had been like unto Gomorrah." (Isa
1:8,9)
(6.) It was cried unto them in the time of Jeremiah, that they
should "run to and fro through the streets of Jerusalem, and see
now, and know, and seek in the broad places thereof, if ye can
find a man, if there be any that executeth judgment, that seeketh
the truth, and I will pardon it." (Jer 5:1)
(7.) God showed his servant Ezekiel how few there would be saved
in his day, by the vision of a few hairs saved out of the midst of
a few hairs; for the saved were a few saved out of a few. (Eze 5:5)
(8.) You find in the time of the prophet Micah, how the godly
complain, that as to number they then were so few, that he compares
them to those that are left behind when they had gathered the
summer-fruit. (Micah 7:1)
(9.) When Christ was come, how did he confirm this truth, that but
few of them that put in claim for heaven will have it for their
inheritance! But the common people could not hear it, and therefore,
upon a time when he did but a little hint at this truth, the people,
even all in the synagogue where he preached it, "were filled with
wrath, rose up, thrust him out of the city, and led him unto the
brow of the hill," whereon their city was built, "that they might
cast him down headlong." (Luke 4:24-29)
(10.) John, who was after Christ, saith, "The whole world lieth in
wickedness; that all the world wondered after the beast; and that
power was given to the beast over all kindreds, tongues, and nations."
Power to do what? Why, to cause all, both great and small, rich
and poor, bond and free, to receive his mark, and to be branded
for him. (1 John 5:10, Rev 13:3,7,16)
Before I pass this head, I will show you to what the saved are
compared in the Scriptures.
3. They that are saved are called but one of many; for though
there be "threescore queens, and fourscore concubines, and virgins
without number," yet my love, saith Christ, is but one, my undefiled
is but one. (Cant 6:8,9) According to that of Jeremiah, "I will
take you one of a city." (Jer 3:14) That saying of Paul is much
like this, "Know ye not that they which run in a race run all, but
one receiveth the prize?" (1 Cor 9:24) But one, that is, few of
many, few of them that run; for he is not here comparing them that
run with them that sit still, but with them that run, some run and
lose, some run and win; they that run and win are few in comparison
with them that run and lose: "They that run in a race run all, but
one receives the prize"; let there then be "threescore queens, and
fourscore concubines, and virgins without number," yet the saved
are but few.
4. They that are saved are compared to the gleaning after the vintage
is in: "Woe is me," said the church, "for I am as when they have
gathered the summer-fruits, as the grape-gleanings" after the
vintage is in. (Micah 7:1) The gleanings! What are the gleanings
to the whole crop? and yet you here see, to the gleanings are
the saved compared. It is the devil and sin that carry away the
cartloads, while Christ and his ministers come after a gleaning. But
the gleaning of the grapes of Ephraim are better than the vintage
of Abiezer. (Judg 8:2) Them that Christ and his ministers glean up
and bind up in the bundle of life, are better than the loads that
go the other way. You know it is often the cry of the poor in
harvest, Poor gleaning, poor gleaning. And the ministers of the
gospel they also cry, Lord, "who hath believed our report? and to
whom is the arm of the Lord revealed?" (Isa 53:1) When the prophet
speaks of the saved under this metaphor of gleaning, how doth he
amplify the matter? "Gleaning-grapes shall be left," says he, "two
or three berries in the top of the uppermost bough, four or five
in the outmost fruitful branches thereof, saith the Lord." (Isa
17:6) Thus you see what gleaning is left in the vineyard, after the
vintage is in; two or three here, four or five there. Alas! they
that shall be saved when the devil and hell have had their due,
they will be but as the gleaning, they will be but few; they that
go to hell, go thither in clusters, but the saved go not so to
heaven. (Matt 13:30, Micah 7) Wherefore when the prophet speaketh
of the saved, he saith there is no cluster; but when he speaketh of
the damned, he saith they are gathered by clusters. (Rev 14:18,19)
O sinners! but few will be saved! O professors! but few will be
saved!
5. They that shall be saved are compared to jewels: "and they shall
be mine, saith the Lord of hosts, in that day when I make up my
jewels." (Mal 3:17) Jewels, you know, are rare things, things that
are not found in every house. Jewels will lie in little room, being
few and small, though lumber takes up much. In almost every house,
you may find brass, and iron, and lead; and in every place you may
find hypocritical professors, but the saved are not these common
things; they are God's peculiar treasure. (Psa 135:4) Wherefore Paul
distinguisheth betwixt the lumber and the treasure in the house.
There is, saith he, in a great house, not only vessels of gold and
silver, but also of wood and of earth, and some to honour, and some
to dishonour. (2 Tim 2:20) Here is a word for wooden and earthy
professors; the jewels and treasures are vessels to honour, they
of wood and earth are vessels of dishonour, that is, vessels for
destruction. (Rom 9:21) 6. They that shall be saved are compared
to a remnant: "Except the Lord of hosts had left unto us a very
small remnant, we should have been as Sodom, and we should have
been like unto Gomorrah." (Isa 1:9) A remnant, a small remnant, a
very small remnant! O how doth the Holy Ghost word it! and all to
show you how few shall be saved. Every one knows what a remnant
is, but this is a small remnant, a very small remnant. So again,
"Sing with gladness for Jacob, and shout among the chief of the
nations: publish ye, praise ye, and say, O Lord, save thy people,
the remnant of Israel." (Jer 31:7) What shall I say? the saved
are often in Scripture called a remnant. (Eze 9:4,8, Isa 10:20-22,
11:11,16, Jer 23:3, Joel 2:32) But what is a remnant to the whole
piece? What is a remnant of people to the whole kingdom? or what
is a remnant of wheat to the whole harvest?
I shall not add more generals at this time. I pray God that the
world be not offended at these. But without doubt, but few of them
that shall put in their claim for heaven will have it for their
inheritance; which will yet further appear in the reading of that
which follows.
Therefore I come more particularly to show you that but few shall
be saved. I say, but few of professors themselves will be saved;
for that is the truth that the text doth more directly look at
and defend. Give me, therefore, thy hand, good reader, and let us
soberly walk through the rest of what shall be said; and let us
compare as we go each particular with the holy Scripture.
3. "Reprobate silver shall men call them, because the Lord hath
rejected them." (Jer 6:30) The people here under consideration
are called, in verse 27, God's people, his people by profession:
"I have set thee for a tower and a fortress among my people, that
thou mayest know, and try their way." What follows? They are all
grievous revolters, walking with slanders, reprobate silver; the
Lord hath rejected them. In chapter 7, verse 29, they are called
also the generation of his wrath: "For the Lord hath rejected and
forsaken the generation of his wrath." This, therefore, I gather
out of these holy Scriptures,--that with reference to profession
and church-constitution, a people may be called the people of God;
but, with reference to the event and final conclusion that God
will make with some of them, they may be truly the generation of
his wrath.
God saith of his saved ones, "He hath chosen them in the furnace
of affliction." The refiner, when he putteth his silver into his
furnace, he puts lead in also among it; now this lead being ordered
as he knows how, works up the dross from the silver, which dross,
still as it riseth, he putteth by, or taketh away with an instrument.
And thus deals God with his church; there is silver in his church,
aye, and there is also dross: now the dross are the hypocrites and
graceless ones that are got into the church, and these will God
discover, and afterwards put away as dross. So that it will without
doubt prove a truth of God, that many of their professors that
shall put in claim for heaven, will not have it for their inheritance.
6. It is said of Christ, his "fan is in his hand, and he will
thoroughly purge his floor, and will gather his wheat into the
garner, but he will burn up the chaff with unquenchable fire."
(Matt 3:12) The floor is the church of God: "O my threshing, and
the corn of my floor!" said God by the prophet, to his people. (Isa
21:10) The wheat are these good ones in his church that shall be
undoubtedly saved; therefore he saith, "Gather my wheat into my
garner." The chaff groweth upon the same stalk and ear, and so is
in the same visible body with the wheat, but there is not substance
in it: wherefore in time they must be severed one from the other;
the wheat must be gathered into the garner, which is heaven; and
the chaff, or professors that want true grace, must be gathered into
hell, that they may be burned up with unquenchable fire. Therefore
let professors look to it! 15
7. Christ Jesus casts away two of the three grounds that are said
to receive the word. (Luke 8)
The stony ground received it with joy, and the thorny ground brought
forth fruit almost to perfection. Indeed the highway ground was to
show us that the carnal, whilst such, receive not the word at all;
but here is the pinch, two of the three that received it, fell
short of the kingdom of heaven; for but one of the three received
it so as to bring forth fruit to perfection. Look to it, professors!
10. The parable of the ten virgins also suiteth our purpose; these
ten are called the kingdom of heaven, that is, the church of Christ,
the visible rightly-constituted church of Christ; for they went
all out of the world, had all lamps, and all went forth to meet
the bridegroom; yet behold what an overthrow the one-half of them
met with at the gate of heaven; they were shut out, bid to depart,
and Christ told them he did not know them. (Matt 25:1-13) Tremble,
professors! Pray, professors!
11. The parable of the net that was cast into the sea, that also
countenanceth this truth. The substance of that parable is to
show that souls may be gathered by the gospel--there compared to a
net--may be kept in that net, drawn to shore, to the world's end,
by that net, and yet may then prove bad fishes, and be cast away.
The parable runs thus:--"The kingdom of heaven," the gospel, "is like
unto a net which was cast into the sea," the world, "and gathered
of every kind," good and bad, "which when it was full, they drew
to shore," to the end of the world, "and sat down," in judgment,
"and gathered the good into vessels, but cast the bad away." Some
bad fishes, nay, I doubt a great many, will be found in the net of
the gospel, at the day of judgment. (Matt 13:47,49) Watch and be
sober, professors!
12. "And--many shall come from the east and from the west, and
shall sit down with Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, in the kingdom
of heaven. But the children of the kingdom shall be cast out."
(Matt 8:11,12) The children of the kingdom, whose privileges were
said to be these, "to whom pertaineth the adoption, and the glory,
and the covenants, and the giving of the law, and the service of
God, and the promises." (Rom 9:4) I take liberty to harp the more
upon the first church, because that that happened to them, happened
as types and examples, intimating, there is ground to think, that
things of as dreadful a nature are to happen among the church of
the Gentiles. (1 Cor 10:11,12) Neither, indeed, have the Gentile
churches security from God that there shall not as dreadful things
happen to them. And concerning this very thing, sufficient caution
is given to us also. (1 Cor 6:9,10, Gal 5:19-21, Eph 5:3-6, Phil
3:17,19, 2 Thess 2:11,12, 2 Tim 2:20,21, Heb 6:4-8, 10:26-28, 2
Peter 2, 3, 1 John 5:10, Rev 2:20-22)
13. The parable of the true vine and its branches confirm what I
have said. By the vine there I understand Christ, Christ as head;
by the branches, I understand this church. Some of these branches
proved fruitless cast-always, were in time cast out of the church,
were gathered by men, and burned. (John 15:1-6)
(1.) The twelve had a devil among them. (John 6:70) (2.) Ananias
and Sapphira were in the church of Jerusalem. (Acts 5) (3.) Simon
Magus was among them at Samaria. (Acts 8) (4.) Among the church of
Corinth were them that had not the knowledge of God. (1 Cor 15:34)
(5.) Paul tells the Galatians that false brethren crept in unawares;
and so does the apostle Jude, and yet they were as quick-sighted to
see as any now-a-days. (Gal 2:4, Jude 4) (6.) The church in Sardis
had but a few names in her, to whom the kingdom of heaven belonged.
"Thou hast a few names, even in Sardis, which have not defiled
their garments, and they shall walk with me in white, for they are
worthy." (Rev 3:4) (7.) As for the church of the Laodiceans, it is
called "wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked."
(Rev 3:17) So that put all things together, and I may boldly say,
as I also have said already, that among the multitude of them that
shall be damned, professors will make a considerable party; or,
to speak in the words of the observation, "when men have put in
all the claim they can for heaven, but few will have it for their
inheritance."
I will show you some reasons of the point, besides those five that
I showed you before. And, First, I will show you why the poor,
carnal, ignorant world miss of heaven; and then, Second, why the
knowing professors miss of it also.
2. The poor ignorant world miss of heaven, because the god of this
world hath blinded their eyes, that they can neither see the evil
and damnable state they are in at present, nor the way to get out
of it; neither do they see the beauty of Jesus Christ, nor how
willing he is to save poor sinners. (2 Cor 4:2,3)
3. The poor ignorant world miss of heaven, because they put off
and defer coming to Christ, until the time of God's patience and
grace is over. Some, indeed, are resolved never to come; but some,
again, say, We will come hereafter; and so it comes to pass, that
because God called, and they did not hear; so they shall cry, and
I will not hear, saith the Lord. (Zech 7:11-13)
4. The poor ignorant world miss of heaven, because they have false
apprehensions of God's mercy. They say in their hearts, We shall
have peace, though we walk in the imagination of our heart, to add
drunkenness to thirst. But what saith the Word? "The Lord will not
spare him; but then the anger of the Lord, and his jealousy, shall
smoke against that man, and all the curses that are written in this
book shall lie upon him, and the Lord shall blot out his name from
under heaven." (Deu 29:19-21)
5. The poor ignorant world miss of heaven, because they make light
of the gospel that offereth mercy to them freely, and because they
lean upon their own good meanings, and thinkings, and doings. (Matt
22:1-5, Rom 9:30,31)
[Second.] I come, in the next place, to show you some reasons why
the professor falls short of heaven.
Behold, then, how far a man may go in repentance, and yet be short
of that which is called, "Repentance unto salvation, not to be
repented of." (a.) He may be awakened; (b.) He may acknowledge his
sin; (c.) He may cry out under the burden of sin; (d.) He may have
humility for it; (e.) He may loath it; (f.) May have prayers and
tears against it; (g.) may delight to do many things of God; (h.)
May be afraid of sinning against him--and, after all this, may
perish, for want of saving repentance.
Second. Have they that shall be saved, faith? Why, they that shall
not be saved may have faith also; yea, a faith in many things so
like the faith that saveth, that they can hardly be distinguished,
though they differ both in root and branch. To come to particulars.
1. Saving faith hath Christ for its object, and so may the faith
have that is not saving. Those very Jews of whom it is said they
believed on Christ, Christ tells them, and that after their believing,
"Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father ye
will do." (John 8:30-44) 2. Saving faith is wrought by the Word
of God, and so may the faith be that is not saving. (Luke 8:13)
3. Saving faith looks for justification without works, and so may
a faith do that is not saving. (James 2:18) 4. Saving faith will
sanctify and purify the heart, and the faith that is not saving may
work a man off from the pollutions of the world, as it did Judas,
Demas, and others. (2 Peter 2) 5. Saving faith will give a man
tastes of the world to come, and also joy by those tastes, and so
will the faith do that is not saving. (Heb 6:4,5, Luke 8:13) 6.
Saving faith will help a man, if called thereto, to give his body
to be burned for his religion, and so will the faith do that is
not saving. (1 Cor 13:1-5) 7. Saving faith will help a man to look
for an inheritance in the world to come, and that may the faith do
that is not saving. All those virgins "took their lamps, and went
forth to meet the bridegroom." (Matt 25:1) 8. Saving faith will
not only make a man look for, but prepare to meet the bridegroom,
and so may the faith do that is not saving. "Then all those virgins
arose, and trimmed their lamps." (Matt 25:7) 9. Saving faith will
make a man look for an interest in the kingdom of heaven with
confidence, and the faith that is not saving will even demand
entrance of the Lord. "Lord, Lord, open to us." (Matt 25:11) 10.
Saving faith will have good works follow it into heaven, and the
faith that is not saving may have great works follow it, as far as
to heaven gates. "Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? and in
thy name have cast out devils? and in thy name done many wonderful
works?" (Matt 7:22)
Now, then, if the faith that is not saving may have Christ for
its object, be wrought by the Word, look for justification without
works, work men off from the pollutions of the world, and give men
tastes of, and joy in the things of another world--I say again,
if it will help a man to burn for his judgment, and to look for an
inheritance in another world; yea, if it will help a man to prepare
for it, claim interest in it; and if it can carry great works, many
great and glorious works, as far as heaven gates, then no marvel
if abundance of people take this faith for the saving faith, and
so fall short of heaven thereby. Alas, friends! There are but few
that can produce such [works] for repentance; and such faith, as
yet you see I have proved even reprobates have had in several ages
of the church. 17
But,
Third. They that go to heaven are a praying people; but a man may
pray that shall not be saved. Pray! He may pray, pray daily; yea,
he may ask of God the ordinances of justice, and may take delight
in approaching to God; nay, further, such souls may, as it were,
cover the altar of the Lord with tears, with weeping and crying
out. (Isa 28:2, Mal 2:13)
Fourth. Do God's people keep holy fasts? They that are not his
people may keep fasts also--may keep fasts often--even twice a
week. "The Pharisee stood, and prayed thus with himself: God, I
thank thee that I am not as other men are, extortioners, unjust,
adulterers, or even as this publican. I fast twice in the week, I
give tithes of all that I possess." (Luke 18:11,12) I might enlarge
upon things, but I intend but a little book. I do not question but
many Balaamites will appear before the judgment-seat to condemnation;
men that have had visions of God, and that knew the knowledge of
the Most High; men that have had the Spirit of God come upon them,
and that have by that been made other men; yet these shall go to
the generations of their fathers, they shall never see light. (Num
24:2,4,16, 1 Sam 10:6,10, Psa 49:19)
I come now to make some brief use and application of the whole:
and
2. Poor swearing and thievish sinner, God hath prepared the curse,
that "every one that stealeth shall be cut off as on this side
according to it; and every one that sweareth shall be cut off as
on that side, according to it." (Zech 5:3)
4. Poor covetous worldly man, God's Word says, that "the covetous
the Lord abhorreth"; that the "covetous man is an idolater"; and
that the covetous "shall not inherit the kingdom of God." (Psa
10:3, Eph 5:5, John 2:15, 1 Cor 6:9,10)
5. And thou liar, what wilt thou do? "All liars shall have their part
in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone." (Rev 21:8,27)
I shall not enlarge, poor sinner, let no man deceive thee; "for
because of these things cometh the wrath of God upon the children
of disobedience." (Eph 5:6) I will therefore give thee a short
call, and so leave thee.
Sinner, awake: yea, I say unto thee, awake! Sin lieth at thy door,
and God's axe lieth at thy root, and hell-fire is right underneath
thee. (Gen 4:7) I say again, Awake! "Therefore every tree which
bringeth not forth good fruit is hewn down, and cast into the fire."
(Matt 3:10)
Poor sinner, awake; eternity is coming, and HIS SON, they are both
coming to judge the world; awake, art yet asleep, poor sinner? let
me set the trumpet to thine ear once again! The heavens will be
shortly on a burning flame; the earth, and the works thereof, shall
be burned up, and then wicked men shall go into perdition; dost
thou hear this, sinner? (2 Peter 3) Hark again, the sweet morsels
of sin will then be fled and gone, and the bitter burning fruits
of them only left. What sayest thou now, sinner? Canst thou drink
hell-fire? Will the wrath of God be a pleasant dish to thy taste?
This must be thine every day's meat and drink in hell, sinner!
I will yet propound to thee God's ponderous question, and then for
this time leave thee: "Can thine heart endure, or can thine hands
be strong, in the days that I shall deal with thee?" saith the Lord.
(Eze 22:14) What sayest thou? Wilt thou answer this question now,
or wilt thou take time to do it? or wilt thou be desperate, and
venture all? And let me put this text in thine ear to keep it open;
and so the Lord have mercy upon thee: "Upon the wicked shall the
Lord rain snares, fire and brimstone, and an horrible tempest; this
shall be the portion of their cup." (Psa 11:6) Repent, sinners!
[USE SECOND.]--My second word is to them that are upon the potter's
wheel; concerning whom we know not as yet whether their convictions
and awakenings will end in conversion or not. Several things I
shall say to you, both to further your convictions, and to caution
you from staying anywhere below or short of saving grace.
1. Remember that but few shall be saved; and if God should count
thee worthy to be one of that few, what a mercy would that be!
Thou mayest also doubt18 thy thoughts of the damned thus: If these
poor creatures were in the world again, would they sin as they did
before? would they neglect salvation as they did before? If they
had sermons, as I have; if they had the Bible, as I have; if they
had good company, as I have; yea, if they had a day of grace, as
I have, would they neglect it as they did before?
Object. But you have said few shall be saved; and some that go a great
way, yet are not saved. At this, therefore, I am even discouraged
and weakened; I think I had as good go no further. I am, indeed,
under conviction, but I may perish; and if I go on in my sins, I
can but perish; and it is ten, twenty, and an hundred to one if I
be saved, should I be ever so earnest for heaven.
Answ. That few will be saved must needs be a truth, for Christ hath
said it; that many go far, and come short of heaven, is as true,
being testified by the same hand. But what then? "Why, then had
I as good never seek." Who told thee so? Must nobody seek because
few are saved? This is just contrary to the text, that bids us
therefore strive; strive to enter in, because the gate is strait,
and because many will seek to enter in, and shall not be able. But
why go back again, seeing that is the next way to hell? Never go
over hedge and ditch to hell. If I must needs go thither, I will
go the furthest way about. But who can tell, though there should
not be saved so many as there shall, but thou mayest be one of that
few? They that miss of life perish, because they will not let go
their sins, or because they take up a profession short of the saving
faith of the gospel. They perish, I say, because they are content
with such things as will not prove graces of a saving nature when
they come to be tried in the fire. Otherwise, the promise is free,
and full, and everlasting--"Him that cometh to me," saith Christ,
"I will in no wise cast out"; "for God so loved the world, that he
gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should
not perish, but have everlasting life." (John 6:37, 3:16) Wherefore
let not this thought, Few shall be saved, weaken thy heart; but let
it cause thee to mend thy pace, to mend thy cries, to look well to
thy grounds for heaven; let it make thee fly faster from sin to
Christ; let it keep thee awake, and out of carnal security, and
thou mayest be saved.
6. The legalist comes next, even him that hath no life but what he
makes out of his duties. This man hath chosen to stand or fall by
Moses, who is the condemner of the world. "There is one that accuseth
you, even Moses, in whom ye trust." (John 5:45)
10. We will add to all these, the professor that would prove
himself a Christian, by comparing himself with others, instead of
comparing himself with the Word of God. This man comforts himself,
because he is as holy as such and such; he also knows as such as
that old professor, and then concludes he shall go to heaven: as
if he certainly knew, that those with whom he compareth himself
would be undoubtedly saved; but how if he should be mistaken? nay,
may they not both fall short? But to be sure he is in the wrong that
hath made the comparison; and a wrong foundation will not stand in
the day of judgment. (2 Cor 10:12) This man, therefore, is one of
the many that "will seek to enter in, and shall not be able."
11. There is yet another professor; and he is for God and for Baal
too; he can be anything for any company; he can throw stones with
both hands; his religion alters as fast as his company; he is a
frog of Egypt, and can live in the water and out of the water; he
can live in religious company, and again as well out. Nothing that
is disorderly comes amiss to him; he will hold with the hare, and
run with the hound; he carries fire in the one hand, and water in
the other; he is a very anything but what he should be. This is
also one of the many that "will seek to enter in, and shall not be
able." 20
12. There is also that free-willer, who denies to the Holy Ghost the
sole work in conversion; and that Socinian, who denieth to Christ
that he hath made to God satisfaction for sin; and that Quaker,
who takes from Christ the two natures in his person: and I might
add as many more, touching whose damnation, they dying as they are,
the Scripture is plain: these "will seek to enter in, and shall
not be able." But,
(1.) They will look to escape hell, and yet fall just into the
mouth of hell: what a disappointment will be here! (2.) They will
look for heaven, but the gate of heaven will be shut against them:
what a disappointment is here! (3.) They will expect that Christ
should have compassion for them, but will find that he hath shut
up all bowels of compassion form them: what a disappointment is
here! Again,
1. They will not have a profession, to bite them when they come
thither. 2. They will not have a taste of a lost heaven, to bite
them when they come thither. 3. They will not have the thoughts
of, "I was almost at heaven," to bite them when they come thither.
4. They will not have the thoughts of, how they cheated saints,
ministers, churches, to bite them when they come thither. 5. They
will not have the dying thoughts of false faith, false hope, false
repentance, and false holiness, to bite them when they come thither.
I was at the gates of heaven, I looked into heaven, I thought
I should have entered into heaven; O how will these things sting!
They will, if I may call them so, be the sting of the sting of
death in hell-fire.
1. Dost thou love thine own soul? then pray to Jesus Christ for
an awakened heart, for a heart so awakened with all the things of
another world, that thou mayest be allured to Jesus Christ. 2. When
thou comest there, beg again for more awakenings about sin, hell,
grace, and about the righteousness of Christ. 3. Cry also for a
spirit of discerning, that thou mayest know that which is saving
grace indeed. 4. Above all studies apply thyself to the study of
those things that show thee the evil of sin, the shortness of man's
life, and which is the way to be saved. 5. Keep company with the
most godly among professors. 6. When thou hearest what the nature
of true grace is, defer not to ask thine own heart if this grace
be there. And here take heed--
(1.) That the preacher himself be sound, and of good life. (2.) That
thou takest not seeming graces for real ones, nor seeming fruits
for real fruits. (3.) Take heed that a sin in thy life goes
not unrepented of; for that will make a flaw in thine evidence, a
wound in thy conscience, and a breach in thy peace; and a hundred
to one, if at last it doth not drive all the grace in thee into
so dark a corner of thy heart, that thou shalt not be able, for a
time, by all the torches that are burning in the gospel, to find
it out to thine own comfort and consolation. 21
FOOTNOTES:
4 How well does our unlettered author give the meaning of strive,
agonize.--Ed.
11 The wedding garments being provided by the host, this man must
have refused it, and insults his King by sitting among the guests
in his ordinary apparel. O reader, before you take a seat at the
Lord's table, take prayerful care to be clothed with the robe of
righteousness, otherwise you will eat to your utter condemnation
and may, after all, be cast into outer darkness.--Ed.
13 "Tend it," or attend to it. What madness does sin engender and
foster! The trifles of time entirely occupy the attention, while
the momentous affairs of eternity are put off to a more convenient
opportunity.--Ed.
16 The word "faith" was changed in 1737 for "repentance," which has
been continued in subsequent editions; "faith" is right. Awakenings
and repentance are classed together under the first head, and faith
under the second.--Ed.
17 Many readers will cry out, Who then can be saved? Without
charity, or the love of Christ in the heart, all faith and works
are but dross. Love is the touchstone of faith and works--not
to glorify ourselves, but him who has bought us with his own most
precious blood. Carry the solemn inquiry to the throne of grace,
Have I passed from death unto life? for whosoever thus liveth
believeth in Christ, and amidst the fatal wreck of professors, he
shall never die.--Ed.
***
LIGHT FOR THEM THAT SIT IN DARKNESS;
OR,
ALSO, HOW THE LORD JESUS ADDRESSED HIMSELF TO THIS WORK; WITH
UNDENIABLE DEMONSTRATIONS THAT HE PERFORMED THE SAME.
'Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a
curse for us.'--Galatians 3:13.
by John Bunyan--1674
Every age has had its peculiar delusions for the trial of the
spirit--mysticism in Bunyan's time, Puseyism in our days. Prior to
the Reformation, the clergy, called the church, claimed implicit
obedience from the laity as essential to salvation, and taught
that inquiry was the high road to eternal ruin. After the Bible had
been extensively circulated, many regarded it as the letter which
killeth--that it was of no importance, compared with the light
within, which alone was essential. These were not the notions of any
one or two sects, but had spread their influence to a considerable
extent over the Christian church. To check the growth of these
errors, and to recover those who had been misled by them, Bunyan
published this 'Light for them that sit in darkness.' His object
is to prove that all our knowledge of the Saviour must be received
directly from the written Word--that to understand these holy oracles,
we must seek and obtain Divine light. By this light we shall find
that Christ took upon himself our nature, and, by his holy and perfect
obedience to the law, and sacrifice of himself as a sin-atoning
offering, he redeemed all his saints, paid the FULL price of their
redemption, and will present them unblameable, unreprovable, and
acceptable to him that is of purer eyes than to behold iniquity.
Their robes are washed and made white in the blood of the Lamb;
they are perfect as Christ is perfect; there is no condemnation to
them; their salvation is sure. To those whose spirits are dismayed
under a fear that they have sinned the unpardonable sin, the
arguments on the following pages are most consoling. Those who are
under that awful curse are sunk in a deathly state of insensibility,
while they sit in the seat of the scorner. To be alarmed with the
fear of having so offended the Saviour, is the best evidence that
no such sin can have been committed. The closing chapter is full
of striking solemnity. May its beneficial effects be felt, to the
glory of God and the reader's solid peace.
GEO. OFFOR.
Gentle Reader,
It was the great care of the apostle Paul to deliver his gospel to
the churches in its own simplicity, because so it is the power of
God unto salvation to every one that believeth. And if it was his
care so to deliver it to us, it should be ours to seek so to continue
it; and the rather, because of the unaptness of the minds, even
of the saints themselves, to retain it without commixture. For, to
say nothing of the projects of hell, and of the cunning craftiness
of some that lie in wait to deceive even the godly themselves, as
they are dull of hearing, so much more dull in receiving and holding
fast the simplicity of the gospel of Jesus Christ. From their sense,
and reason, and unbelief, and darkness, arise many imaginations
and high thoughts, which exalt themselves against the knowledge of
God and the obedience of Jesus Christ, wherefore they themselves
have much ado to stand complete in all the will of God. And were
they not concerned in electing love, by which they are bound up
in the bundle of life, and blessed with the enjoyment of saving
grace, which enlighteneth their souls and maintaineth their fath
and hope, they would not only be assaulted and afflicted with their
own corruptions, but, as others, overcome thereby.
Now, this their swerving from the gospel ariseth, 1. Either from
their not having, or, having, not retaining, the true knowledge of
the person of the Lord Jesus Christ; or, 2. From their not believing
the true causes of his coming into the world, with his doing and
suffering there. Upon one or both these accounts, I say, it is that
they everlastingly perish; for if they have not, and do not also
retain the knowledge of his person, they want the HE, on whom, if
they believe not, they must die in their sins; and if they know
not the reason of his coming, doing, and suffering, they are in
the same condition also.
Now, those professors that have had some knowledge of these things,
and yet have lost them, it hath come thus to pass with them because
they first lost the knowledge of themselves and of their sins.
They know not themselves to be such nothing ones as the Scriptures
reporteth them to be, nor their sins to be so heinous as the
law hath concluded; therefore they either turn again with the dog
to his vomit, or adhere to a few of the rags of their own fleshly
righteousness, and so become pure in their own eyes, yet are not
purged by blood from their filthiness.
For the person and doings of Jesus Christ are only precious to them
that get and retain the true knowledge of themselves, and the due
reward of their sins by the law. These are desolate, being driven
out of all; these embrace the rock instead of a shelter. The sensible
sinner receiveth him joyfully.
Now, for their sakes that have not sinned this sin, for their sakes
that are in danger thereof, but yet not overcome, for their sakes
have I written this little book, wherein is largely, and yet with
few words, discovered the doctrine of the person, and doings, and
sufferings of Christ, with the true cause thereof, also a removal
of those objections that the crafty children of darkness have framed
against the same.
And I have been the more plain and simple in my writing, because
the sin against the Holy Ghost is in these days more common than
formerly, and the way unto it more beautified with colour and
pretence of truth. I may say of the way to this sin, it is, as was
once the way to Jerusalem, strewed with boughs and branches; and
by some there is cried a kind of hosanna to them that are treading
these steps to hell. O the plausible pretences, the golden names,
the feigned holiness, the demure behaviours, mixed with damnable
hypocrisy, that attend the persons that have forsaken the Lord Jesus,
that have despised his person, trampled upon him, and counted the
blood of the covenant wherewith he was sanctified an unholy thing!
They have crucified him to themselves, and think that they can go
to heaven without him; yea, pretend they love him, when they hate
him; pretend they have him, when they have cast him off; pretend
they trust in him, when they bid defiance to his undertakings for
the world.
JOHN BUNYAN.
'OF THIS MAN'S SEED HATH GOD, ACCORDING TO HIS PROMISE, RAISED UNTO
ISRAEL A SAVIOUR, JESUS.'--ACTS 13:23.
These words are part of a sermon which Paul preached to the people
that lived at Antioch in Pisidia, where also inhabited many of the
Jews. The preparation to his discourse he thus begins--'Men of
Israel, and ye that fear God, give audience' (v 16); by which having
prepared their minds to attend, he proceeds and gives a particular
relation of God's peculiar dealings with his people Israel, from Egypt
to the time of David their king, of whom he treateth particularly--
That he was the son of Jesse, that he was a king, that God raised
him up in mercy, that God gave testimony of him, that he was a man
after God's own heart, that he should fulfil all his will (v 22).
And this he did of purpose both to engage them the more to attend,
and because they well knew that of the fruit of his loins God hath
promised the Messiah should come.
From these things we may inquire, for the explication of the words,
First. What this Jesus is? Second. What it was for this Jesus to
be of the seed of David? Third. What it was for Jesus to be of this
man's seed according to the promise? And, Fourth, what it was for
him to be raised unto Israel? These things may give us light into
what shall be spoken after.
He is God, and had personal being from before all worlds; therefore
not such an one as took being when he was formed in the world; he is
God's natural Son, the Eternal Son of his begetting and love--'God
sent forth his Son.' He was, and was his Son, before he was
revealed--'What is his name, and what is his Son's name, if thou
canst tell?' (Prov 30:4; Eze 21:10). He hath an eternal generation,
such as none can declare, not man, not angel (Isa 53:8). He was the
delight of his Father before he had made either mountain or hill.
While as yet he had not made the earth or the fields, or the highest
part of the dust of the world, all things were made by him, and
without him was not anything made that was made, and he is before
all things, and by him all things consist. It is he with whom the
Father consulted when he was about to make man, when he intended
to overthrow Babel, and when he sent Isaiah to harden the hearts of
Israel (Prov 8:26; John 1:3; Heb 1:2,3; Col 1:17; Gen 1:26, 11:7;
Isa 6:8). This is the person intended in the text. Hence also he
testifies of himself that he came down from the Father; that he
had glory with him before the world was. And 'what and if ye shall
see the Son of man ascend up where he was before?' (John 6:62,
16:28, 17:5).
Here we have two things to consider of--1. Who Israel is. 2. What
it was for Jesus to be raised up unto them.
[OBSERVATION FIRST.]
To begin with the first, THAT IN ALL AGES GOD GAVE HIS PEOPLE A
PROMISE, AND SO GROUND FOR A BELIEVING REMEMBRANCE, THAT HE WOULD
ONE DAY SEND THEM A SAVIOUR.
This Zacharias testifies when he was filled with the Holy Ghost;
for, speaking of the Messiah or the Saviour, he saith that God spake
of him by the mouth of all the prophets which have been since the
world began; to which I will add that of Peter, 'Yea, and all the
prophets from Samuel, and those that follow after, as many as have
spoken, have likewise foretold of these days' (Luke 1:69,70; Acts
3:24).
SECOND. How it appears that God in all ages gave his people a
promise that he would one day send them a Saviour.
[First.] He promised him under the name of 'the seed of the women,'
after our first father had sinned--'I will also put enmity between
thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed. He shall
bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel' (Gen 3:15).[1] This
the apostle hath his eye upon when he saith, 'When the fulness of
the time was come, God sent forth his Son, made of a woman, made
under the law, to redeem them that were under the law' (Gal 4:4,5).
Second. God renewed this promise to Abraham, and there tells him
Christ should be his seed, saying, 'In thy seed shall all families
of the earth be blessed' (Gen 12:3). 'Now,' saith Paul, 'to Abraham
and his seed were the promises made. He saith not, And to seeds,
as of many; but as of one, And to thy seed, which is Christ' (Gal
3:16).
9. He was promised by the prophet Micah under the name of the 'ruler
in Israel'--'But thou, Bethlehem-Ephratah, though thou be little
among the thousands of Judah, yet out of thee shall he come--that
is to be ruler in Israel' (Micah 5:2; Matt 2:6).
10. He was promised to Haggai as 'the desire of all nations'--'I
will shake all nations, and the desire of all nations shall come,
and I will fill this house with glory, saith the Lord of hosts'
(Hagg 2:7).
12. He was promised by Malachi under the name of 'the Lord, and
the messenger of the covenant'--'Behold, I will send my messenger,
and he shall prepare the way before me: and the Lord, whom ye
seek, shall suddenly come to his temple, even the messenger of the
covenant, whom ye delight in: behold, he shall come, saith the Lord
of hosts' (Mal 3:1).
Indeed, the Scriptures of the Old Testament are filled with promises
of the Messias to come, prophetical promises, typical promises;
for all the types and shadows of the Saviour are virtually so many
promises.
1. He was typed forth sometimes by men. Adam was his type in many
things, especially as he was the head and father of the first world.
He was 'the figure of him that was to come' (Rom 5:14). Moses was
his type as Mediator, and as builder of the tabernacle (Heb 3:2,3).
Aaron was his type as he was high-priest, and so was Melchisedec
before him (Heb 5:4,5, 7:1,21). Samson was his type in the effects
of his death; for as Samson gave his life for the deliverance of
Israel from the Philistines, Christ gave his life to deliver us from
sin and devils. Joshua was his type in giving the land of Canaan
to Israel, as Jesus will give the kingdom of heaven to the elect
(Heb 4:8). David was his type in many things, especially in his
subduing of Israel's enemies, and feeding them [Israel]: hence he
is sometimes called David their king, and David their shepherd (Eze
34:23,24). Solomon was his type in his building the temple, and in
his peaceable kingdom. Hence it is said, 'He shall build the temple
of the Lord'; and again, 'Of his government and peace there shall
be no end.'
(1.) The paschal lamb was his type (Exo 12). In its spotlessness;
Christ was 'a lamb without blemish and without spot' (1 Peter
1:18,19). In its being roasted it was a figure of the cursed death
of Christ; for to be roasted bespake one accursed (Jer 29:22;
Gal 3:13). In that it was to be eaten--'Whoso eateth my flesh and
drinketh my blood,' saith Christ, 'hath eternal life' (John 6:54).
In that its blood was to be sprinkled upon the doors of their
houses, for the destroying angel to look on; the blood of Christ
is sprinkled upon the elect for the justice of God to look on (Heb
9; 1 Peter 1:2). By eating the paschal lamb, the people went out
of Egypt; by feeding upon Christ by faith we come from under the
Egyptian darkness, tyranny of Satan, &c.
(2.) The red cow was his type (Num 19:2, &c.).[2] In that she was
to be without blemish. In that she was to be slain without the
camp--'Jesus also, that he might sanctify the people with his own
blood, suffered without the gate' (Heb 13:12). In that her flesh
was to be burnt; a type of the grievous death of Christ. Her ashes
were to be carried into a clean place without the camp; a type of
the clean sepulchre where the body of Jesus was laid (John 19:38-41).
There were also divers other sacrifices, as bulls, goats, and birds,
which were types of him, which I here omit.
(1.) The man in the wilderness (Exo 16). And that as it came down
from heaven, for so did Christ--'I came down from heaven,' saith
he; and again, 'I am the living bread which came down from heaven'
(John 6:51). The manna was to be eaten; so is Christ by faith--'If
any man eat of this bread, he shall live for ever; and the bread
that I will give is my flesh, which I will give for the life of
the world' (John 6:51). The manna was to be gathered daily; so is
Christ to be daily eaten. The manna was all the bread that Israel
had in the wilderness; Christ is all the bread that believers have
in this life for their souls. The manna came not by Moses' law,
neither comes Christ by our merits--'Moses gave you not that bread
from heaven, but my Father giveth you the true bread from heaven'
(John 6:32).
(2.) Again; the rock that gave them out water for their thirst
was a type of him (Num 20). They 'did all drink the same spiritual
drink, for they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them;
and that Rock was Christ' (1 Cor 10:4). This rock was his type in
four things--
(a.) It gave drink to the people in the wilderness when they were
come out of Egypt; Christ gives drink to them that forsake the
world for him. (b.) The rock yielded water by being smitten by
Moses' rod; Christ giveth drink, even his blood, by being stricken
by Moses' law (Num 20:11; Isa 53). (c.) The water out of this rock
was given to the thirsty--'I will give unto him that is athirst,'
saith Christ, 'of the fountain of the water of life freely' (Rev
21:6). (d.) The water of the rock in the wilderness ran after the
people; they drank of that rock that followed them--'He opened the
rock, and the waters gushed out, they ran in the dry places like
a river' (Psa 110:41). Christ also is said by that type to follow
us--'They drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them; and that
Rock was Christ' (1 Cor 10:4).
(3.) Again, the mount Moriah was his type. That mount stood in
Jerusalem; Christ also stands in his church. Upon that rock was
built the temple (2 Chron 3:1)--'And upon this rock,' said Christ,
'I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail
against it' (Matt 16:18).
THIRD. I come now to the third thing--to wit, That these promises
were ground for a believing remembrance that a Saviour should one
day come.
Here we may see how much the heart of God was set upon the salvation
of sinners--he studied it, contrived it, set his heart on it, and
promised, and promised, and promised to complete it, by sending
one day his Son for a Saviour (2 Same 14:14; Eph 1:3; Titus 1:2).
No marvel, therefore, if when he treateth of the new covenant, in
which the Lord Jesus is wrapped, and presented in a word of promise
to the world, that he saith, I will do it 'assuredly with my whole
heart, and with my whole soul' (Jer 32:41).
[OBSERVATION SECOND.]
QUEST. FIRST. For the first, the Jesus in the text is distinguished
from all others of that name.
QUEST. SECOND. What it was for Jesus to come into the world.
Answ. Not his coming in, or by his Spirit in his people; for so
he was never out of the world. Neither is it his appearance in his
ordinances. Nor that coming of his by which he destroyeth Antichrist.
Nor his appearing in his dreadful providences or judgments. But by
the coming of Jesus, according to the text, we are to understand
that, or such a coming, whereby he was manifest to be God-man in
one person; God in our flesh without us, or distinct in his own
person by himself; such a coming by which he was manifested to be
in all points like as men are, sin only excepted; such a coming
wherein, or by which, the Son of God became also the Son of man.
Now, that this was fulfilled according to the very word of the text,
without any juggle, evasion, or cunningly-devised fable, consider--
2. He was not born till nourished in her womb the full time,
according to the time of life: 'And so it was, that while they were
there [at Bethlehem], the days were accomplished that she should
be delivered. And she brought forth her first-born son, and wrapped
him in swaddling-clothes, and laid him in a manger' (Luke 2:6,7).
5. Thus Jesus also, as other Hebrew children, when the set day was
come, was circumcised--'And when eight days were accomplished for
the circumcising of the child, his name was called JESUS, which was
so named of the angel before he was conceived in the womb' (Luke
2:21).
6. After this he is often called the young child, the child Jesus;
and further, it is said of him, that he grew, that he increased in
wisdom and stature (Matt 2:20,21; Luke 2:40,52).
Second. The reality of the manhood of this Lord Jesus is yet further
manifest, and that, 1. By those natural infirmities that attend
human flesh; 2. By the names the prophets gave him in the days of
the Old Testament and the New.
1. By those natural infirmities that attend human flesh. As, at
his birth he could not go but as carried by his parents. He was
sensible of hunger (Luke 4:2). He was sensible of thirst (John
19:28). He was sensible of weariness (John 4:6). He was nourished
by sleep (Mark 4:38). He was subject to grief (Mark 3:5). He was
subject to anger (Mark 3:5). He was subject to weep (John 11:35;
Luke 19:41). He had joy as a man, and rejoiced (Matt 11:25; Luke
10:21). These things, I say, Jesus was subject to as a man, as the
son of the Virgin.
2. The reality of his manhood is yet made manifest by the names the
prophets gave him, both in the Old Testament and in the New. As,
Thus have I showed you what it was for Jesus to come into the
world--namely, to be born of a woman, to take flesh, and to become
God-man in one person. I come now to the third question; but before
I speak particularly to that, I will produce further testimony that
we find upon record concerning the truth of all this.
The Testimony of the Star and Wise Men.--The star that appeared at
his birth in the east, and that coasted through the heavens till
it came over the place where the young child Jesus was, that star
gave testimony that he was the Saviour. This star alarmed many,
especially the wise men of the east, who were brought by it from
afar to worship him: 'And lo, the star which they saw in the east,
went before them till it came and stood over where the young child
was. When they saw the star, they rejoiced with exceeding great
joy. And when they were come into the house, they saw the young
child, with Mary his mother, and fell down and worshipped him;
and when they had opened their treasures, they presented unto him
gifts, gold, and frankincense, and myrrh' (Matt 2:9-11).
Concerning Jesus, how he put himself upon the test among his
adversaries.
The Lord Jesus also putteth himself upon the test among his
adversaries divers ways.
Besides, the kingly race of Judah was at this time become so low
by reason of the Roman oppression, that the chief of them were put
to get their living by their own hands; even Joseph, the supposed
father of Jesus, was then become a carpenter. Poor man! when Jesus
was born, he was fain to thrust into a stable, for there was in
the inn no room for such guests as they. The offering also which
was brought unto God at the time when Jesus was presented unto
the Lord, was two turtle-doves, or two young pigeons--a sacrifice
allowed only for them that were poor, and could provide no bigger--'And if
she be not able to bring a lamb, then she shall bring two turtles,
or two young pigeons, the one for the burnt-offering, and the
other for a sin-offering' (Lev 12:8). Besides, Jesus himself saith,
'Foxes have holes, and birds of the air have nests; but the Son of
man hath not where to lay his head.'
Now, I say, all these things were so apparent to the Jews, that
they could not object; they felt the Romans were come, they knew
the sceptre was gone, they smarted under the Roman tyranny, and
knew the kingly race of Judea was overthrown. How, then, could they
object that the time was not come for Christ to be born?
Further, the people were generally convinced that the time was come,
and therefore, saith the text, they were in expectation. 'And as
the people were in expectation, and all men mused in their hearts
of John, whether he were the Christ or not' (Luke 3:15). The unbiased
people, observing the face of things, could do no other but look
for the Messias. And hence it is that the Lord Jesus gives the
Pharisees, those mortal enemies of his, such sore rebukes, saying,
'O ye hypocrites, ye can discern the face of the sky, but can ye not
discern the signs of the times?' The kingdom is lost, the heathens
are come, and the sceptre is departed from Judah. 'Ye hypocrites,
ye can discern the face of the sky, and of the earth, but how is
it that ye do not discern this time?' (Matt 16:3; Luke 12:56).
Second. He yet again puts himself upon the test by the miracles
which he wrought before them--'Believe me, that I am in the Father,
and the Father in me, or else believe me for the very works'
sake' (John 14:11). 'For the works which the Father hath given me
to finish, the same works that I do, bear witness of me, that the
Father hath sent me' (John 5:36.)
This proof they could not withstand, but granted that he did many
miracles, while they did nothing. 'Then gathered the chief priests
and the Pharisees a council, and said, What do we? for this man
doeth many miracles. If we let him thus alone, all men will believe
on him, and the Romans shall come, and take away both our place
and nation' (John 11:47,48).
Yea, so did Jesus confound them, that by their own records and
laws, by which they were to prove persons clean or unclean, they,
in reading their lectures, did justify him, and overthrow themselves.
Again, in their law it was written that whoso toucheth the altar
of incense should be holy (Exo 29:37). A woman with a bloody issue
touched him, and is whole of her plague (Mark 5:28). Yea, they
brought to him many diseased persons, 'and besought him that they
might only touch the hem of his garment; and as many as touched
were made perfectly whole' (Matt 14:36).
Thus was he justified before them out of their own law, and had his
glory manifest before their faces, to their everlasting confusion
and contempt.
Indeed, the Jews did make one objection against Jesus Christ that
seemed to them to have weight in it, and that was, because he first
began to appear and manifest his glory in Cana of Galilee. At this,
I say, they stumbled. It was their sore temptation; for still, as
some affirmed him to be the Christ, others as fast objected, 'Shall
Christ come out of Galilee?' 'Art thou also of Galilee? Search and
look; for out of Galilee ariseth no prophet' (John 2:1,11, 7:40-42,52).
But this their stumble might arise either from the cruelty of
Herod, or from their own not observing and keeping mind the alarm
that God gave them at his birth.
2. This stumble of theirs might arise from their not observing and
keeping in mind the alarm that God gave them of his birth. (1.)
God began to give them the alarm at the birth of John the Baptist,
where was asserted that he was to go before the face of the Lord
Jesus, and to prepare his ways. 'And fear came on all that dwelt
round about them, and all these sayings were noised abroad throughout
all the hill country of Judea' (Luke 1:65). (2.) Again, what a
continuation of this alarm was there also at the birth of Jesus,
which was about three months after John Baptist was born? Now come
the angels from heaven. Now comes a strange star over the country
to lead the men of the east to the stable where Jesus was born; now
was Herod, the priests, the scribes, and also the city of Jerusalem,
awakened and sore troubled; for it was noised by the wise men that
Christ the King and Saviour was born. Besides the shepherds, Simeon
and Anna gave notice of him to the people. They should, therefore,
have retained the memory of these things, and have followed God
in all his dark providences, until his Sun of Righteousness should
arise among them with healing under his wings.
Hence note, that though the prophecies and promises be full and plain
as these were, that he should be born in Bethlehem, yet men's sins
may cause them to be fulfilled in such obscurity, that instead
of having benefit thereby, they may stumble and split their souls
thereat. Take heed then; hunt not Christ from plain promises with
Herod, hunt him not from Bethlehem, lest he appear to your amazement
and destruction from Egypt, or in the land of Zabulon! But this
much to the second question; to wit, What it was for Jesus to come
into the world.
I come, then, in the next place, to show you how Jesus Christ
addressed himself to the work of man's redemption.
FIRST. He took upon him our flesh. I showed you before that he came
in our flesh, and now I must show you the reason of it--namely,
because that was the way to address himself to the work of our
redemption.
[First.] For the first. That he took our flesh for this reason--that
he might be a Saviour: 'For what the law could not do, in that it
was weak through the flesh, God, sending his own Son in the likeness
of sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned sin in the flesh' (Rom
8:3).
The sum of the words is, Forasmuch as the law could do us no good,
by reason of the inability that is in our flesh to do it--for the
law can do us no good until it be fulfilled--and because God had a
desire that good should come to us, therefore did he send his Son
in our likeness, clothed with flesh, to destroy, by his doing the
law, the tendency of the sin that dwells in our flesh. He therefore
took our flesh, that our sin, with its effects, might by him be
condemned and overcome.
3. 'That he might destroy him that had the power of death, that is,
the devil, and deliver them.' This was the thing in chief intended,
that he might deliver the children, that he might deliver them
from death, the fruit of their sin, and from sin, the sting of that
death--'That he might deliver them who through fear of death were
all their lifetime subject to bondage.'
Again, in a Saviour there must be not only merit, but compassion and
sympathy, because the children are yet to live by faith, are not
yet come to the inheritance--'Wherefore it behoved him in all things
to be made like unto his brethren, that he might be a merciful
and faithful High-priest in things pertaining to God, to make
reconciliation for the sins of the people' (Heb 2:17,18).
Two reasons are rendered in this text why he must take flesh--namely,
that he might be their priest to offer sacrifice, to wit, his body
and blood for them; and that he might be merciful and faithful, to
pity and preserve them unto the kingdom appointed for them.
Second. I come now to the second question--to wit, How he took our
flesh. This must be inquired into; for his taking flesh was not
after the common way; never any took man's flesh upon him as he,
since the foundation of the world.
1. He took not our flesh like Adam, who was formed out of the
ground; 'who was made of the dust of the ground' (Gen 2:7, 3:19).
2. He took not our flesh as we do, by carnal generation. Joseph
knew not his wife, neither did Mary know any man, till she had
brought forth her first-born son (Matt 1:25; Luke 1:34). 3. He took
flesh, then, by the immediate working and overshadowing of the Holy
Ghost. And hence it is said expressly, 'She was found with child
of the Holy Ghost.' 'Now the birth of Jesus Christ was on this
wise: When as his mother Mary was espoused to Joseph, before they
came together, she was found with child of the Holy Ghost' (Matt
1:18). And hence again, when Joseph doubted of her honesty, for
he perceived she was with child, and knew he had not touched her,
the angel of God himself comes down to resolve his doubt, and
said, 'Joseph, thou son of David, fear not to take unto thee Mary
thy wife, for that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Ghost'
(Matt 1:20).
But again, though the Holy Ghost was that by which the child Jesus
was formed in the womb, so as to be without carnal generation, yet
was he not formed in her without, but by, her conception--'Behold,
thou shalt conceive in they womb, and bring forth a son, and shalt
call his name JESUS' (Luke 1:31). Wherefore he took flesh not only
in, but of, the Virgin. Hence he is called her son, the seed of the
woman; and hence it is also that he is called the seed of Abraham,
the seed of David; their seed, according to the flesh (Gen 12,
13:15, 22; Luke 1:31, 2:7; Rom 1:3, 9:5; Gal 3:16, 4:4).
This mystery of the incarnation of the Son of God was thus completed,
I say, that he might be in all points like as we are, yet without
sin; for sin in the flesh disableth and maketh incapable to do
the commandment. Therefore was he thus made, thus made of a woman;
and this the angel assigneth as the reason of this his marvellous
incarnation. 'The Holy Ghost,' saith he, 'shall come upon thee,
and the power of the Highest shall overshadow thee; therefore also
that holy thing that shall be born of thee shall be called the Son
of God' (Luke 1:35).
The overshadowing of the Holy Ghost and the power of the Highest--the
Father and the Holy Ghost--brought this wonderful thing to pass,
for Jesus is a wonderful one in his conception and birth. This
mystery is that next to the mystery of three persons in one God;
it is a great mystery. 'Great is the mystery of godliness: God was
manifest in the flesh.'
The conclusion is, that Jesus Christ took our flesh that he might
be our Saviour; and that he might be our Saviour indeed, he thus
took our flesh.
1. And that, first, from the nature of the work; his work was to
save, to save man, sinking man, man that was 'going down to the
pit' (Job 33:24). Now, he that will save him that is sinking must
take hold on him. And since he was not to save a man, but men,
therefore it was necessary that he should take hold, not of one
person, but of the common nature, clothing himself with part of the
same. He took not hold of angels, 'but he took on him the seed of
Abraham' (Heb 2:16). For that flesh was the same with the whole
lump of the children to whom the promise was made, and comprehended
in it the body of them that shall be saved, even as in Adam was
comprehended the whole world at first (Rom 5).
2. The manner of his doing the work of a Saviour did call for his
taking of our flesh.
The end of our salvation is, that we might enjoy God, and that he
by us might be glorified for ever and ever.
(1.) That we might enjoy God. 'I will dwell in them, and they shall
be my people, and I will be their God.' This indwelling of God, and
consequently our enjoyment of him, begins first in its eminency by
his possessing our flesh in the person of Jesus Christ. Hence his
name is called 'Immanuel, God with us'; and 'the Word was made
flesh, and dwelt among us.' The flesh of Christ is the tabernacle
which the Lord pitched, according to that saying, 'The tabernacle
of God is with men, and he will dwell with them, and they shall be
his people, and God himself shall be with them, and be their God'
(Rev 21:3). Here God beginneth to discover his glory, and to be
desirable to the sons of men.
God could not communicate himself to us, nor take us into the
enjoyment of himself, but with respect to that flesh which his Son
took of the Virgin, because sin stood betwixt. Now this flesh only
was the holy lump, in this flesh God could dwell; and forasmuch
as this flesh is the same with ours, and was taken up with intent
that what was done in and by that, should be communicated to all
the children; therefore through that doth God communicate of himself
unto his people--'God was in Christ, reconciling the world unto
himself' (2 Cor 5:19). And 'I am the way,' saith Christ, 'no man
cometh unto the Father but by me' (John 14:6).
That passage to the Hebrews is greatly to our purpose. We have
boldness, brethren, 'to enter into the holiest,' the place where
God is, 'by the blood of Jesus, by a new and living way, which
he hath consecrated for us, through the veil, that is to say, his
flesh' (Heb 10:19,20).
Wherefore by the flesh and blood of Christ we enter into the holiest;
through the veil, saith he, that is to say, his flesh.
Here indeed will the mystery of his grace, wisdom, justice, power,
holiness, and glory, inhabit eternal praise, while we that are
counted worthy of the kingdom of God shall admire at the mystery,
and see ourselves, without ourselves, even by the flesh and blood
of Christ through faith therein, effectually and eternally saved.
Oh, this will be the burden of our eternal joy--God loved us, and
gave his Son for us; Christ loved us, and gave his flesh for our
life, and his blood for our eternal redemption and salvation!
SECOND. But, secondly CHRIST WAS MADE UNDER THE LAW--'When the
fulness of the time was come, God sent forth his Son, made of a
woman, made under the law' (Gal 4:4).
Made under the law--that is, put himself into the room of sinners,
into the condition of sinners; made himself subject to the same
pains and penalties we were obnoxious to. We were under the law,
and it had dominion over us, bound us upon pain of eternal damnation
to do completely all things written in the law. This condition
Christ put himself into that 'he might redeem'; for assuredly we
had else perished.
The law had dominion over us, and since we had sinned, of right
it pronounced the curse, and made all men subject to the wrath of
God. Christ, therefore, did not only come into our flesh, but also
into our condition, into the valley and shadow of death where we
were, and where we are, as we are sinners. He that is under the
law is under the edge of the axe. When David was to go to visit
his brethren, and to save them from the hand of Goliath, he was
to look how his brethren fared, and to 'take their pledge' (1 Sam
17:18). This is true of Jesus Christ when he came to save us from
the hand of death and the law; he looked how his brethren fared,
took to heart their deplorable condition, and put himself into the
same plight--to wit, under the law, that he might redeem them that
were under the law.
I told you before that he came sinless into the world, that he had
a miraculous conception, and wonderful birth; and here you see a
reason for it, he was to be put, or made, under the law, 'to redeem.'
He that will be made under the law to redeem, had need be sinless
and spotless himself; for the law findeth fault with the least,
and condemneth man for the first beginning of, sin.
Without this, then, there could not have been redemption, nor any
the sons of God by adoption: no redemption, because the sentence
of death had already passed upon all; no sons by adoption, because
that is the effect of redemption. 'God sent forth his Son, made
of a woman, made under the law, to redeem them that were under the
law, that we might receive the adoption of sons.' Christ, then, by
being made under the law, hath recovered his from under the law,
and obtained for them the privilege of the adoption of sons.
Thus Jesus Christ came into the world under the law to redeem, not
simply as God, but God-man, both natures making one Christ. The
Godhead, therefore, did influence and give value to the human flesh
of Christ in all its obedience to the law, else there would have
been wanting that perfection of righteousness which only could
answer the demands and expectation of the justice of God; to wit,
perfect righteousness by flesh.
But the second Person in the Godhead, the Son, the Word, coming
under the law for men in their flesh, and subjecting himself by
that flesh to every tittle and demand of the law; all and every
whit of what was acted and done by Jesus Christ, God-man, for us,
it was and is the righteousness of God; and since it was not done
for himself, but for us, as he saith in the text, 'to redeem,' the
righteousness by which we are set free from the law is none other
but the righteousness that alone resideth in the person of the Son
of God.
Quest. But some may say, what need of the righteousness of one
that is naturally God? Had Adam, who was but a mere man, stood in
his innocency, and done his duty, he had saved himself and all his
posterity.
Answ. Had Adam stood, he had so long secured himself from the wages
of sin, and posterity so long as they were in him. But had Adam
sinned, yea, although he had not defiled his nature with filth,
he could never after that have redeemed himself from the curse of
the law, because he was not equal with God; for the curse of the
law is the curse of God; but no man can deliver himself from the
curse of God, having first transgressed. This is evident, because
angels, for sin, lie bound in chains, and can never deliver
themselves. He, therefore, that redeemeth man from under the law
must not only do all the good that the law requireth, but bear all
the penalty that is due by the law for sin.
Should an angel assume human flesh, and in that flesh do the law,
this righteousness would not redeem a sinner; it would be but the
righteousness of an angel, and so, far short of such a righteousness
as can secure a sinner from the wrath of God. But 'thou shalt love
the Lord thy God with all thy soul, with all thy heart, with all
thy mind, with all thy strength.' If there were no more required
of us now to redeem ourselves, it would be utterly impossible for
us to do it, because in the best there is sin, which will intermix
itself with every duty of man. This being so, all the heart, all the
soul, all the strength, and all the mind, to the exact requirement
of the justice of the law, can never be found in a natural man.
I say, should the penalty of the law be taken off, should God
forgive the penalty and punishment due to sins that are past, and
only demand good works now, according to the tenor of the law, no
man could be saved; there would not be found that heart, that soul,
that mind, and that strength, anywhere in the world.
This, therefore, must cease for ever, unless the Son of God will
put his shoulder to the work; but, blessed be God, he hath done
it--'When the fulness of the time was come, God sent forth his
Son, made of a woman, made under the law, to redeem them that were
under the law.'
THIRD. But thirdly, CHRIST OUR SAVIOUR TAKES UPON HIM OUR SINS.
This is another step to the work of our redemption. 'He hath made
him to be sin for us.' Strange doctrine! A fool would think it
blasphemy; but Truth hath said it. Truth, I say, hath said, not
that he was made to sin, but that God made him to be sin--'He hath
made him to be sin for us' (2 Cor 5:21).
Sin, then, and man for sin, is the object of the wrath of God. If
the object of the wrath of God, then is his case most dreadful; for
who can bear, who can grapple with the wrath of God? Men cannot,
angels cannot, the whole world cannot. All, therefore, must sink
under sin, but he who is made to be sin for us; he only can bear
sins, he only can bear them away, and therefore were they laid
upon him--'The Lord hath laid upon him the iniquity of us all' (Isa
53:6).
Mark, therefore, and you shall find that the reason why God made
him to be sin for us was, 'that we might be made the righteousness
of God in him.' He took our flesh, he was made under the law, and
was made to be sin for us, that the devil might be destroyed, that
the captives might be redeemed, and made the righteousness of God
in him.
Now, what remains but that we who are reconciled to God by faith
in his blood are quit, discharged, and set free from the law of sin
and death? Yea, what encouragement to trust in him, when we read
that God 'made him to be sin for us.'
Quest. But how was Jesus Christ made of God to be sin for us?
Answ. Even so as if himself had committed all our sins; that is,
they were as really charged upon him as if himself had been the actor
and committer of them all. 'He hath made him to be sin,' not only
as a sinner, but as sin itself. He was as the sin of the world that
day he stood before God in our stead. Some, indeed, will not have
Jesus Christ our Lord to be made sin for us; their wicked reasons
think this to be wrong judgment in the Lord; it seems, supposing
that because they cannot imagine how it should be, therefore God,
if he does it, must do it at his peril, and must be charged with
doing wrong judgment, and so things that become not his heavenly
Majesty; but against this duncish sophistry[4] we set Paul and
Isaiah, the one telling us still, 'the Lord hath laid on him the
iniquity of us all'; and the other, that 'God made him to be sin
for us.'
God charged our sins upon Christ, and that in their guilt and burden,
what remaineth but that the charge was real or feigned? If real,
then he hath either perished under them, or carried them away from
before God; if they were charged but feignedly, then did he but
feignedly die for them, then shall we have but feigned benefit by
his death, and but a feigned salvation at last--not to say how this
cursed doctrine chargeth God and Christ with hypocrisy, the one in
saying, He made Christ to be sin; the other in saying that he bare
our sin; when, in deed and in truth, our guilt and burden never
was really upon him.
Quest. But might not Christ die for our sins but he needs must bear
their guilt or burden?
Answ. He that can sever sin and guilt, sin and the burden, each from
other, laying sin and no guilt, sin and no burden on the person
that dieth for sin, must do it only in his own imaginative head.
No scripture, nor reason, nor sense, understandeth or feeleth sin
when charged without its guilt and burden.
And here we must distinguish between sin charged and sin forgiven.
Sin forgiven may be seen without guilt or burden, though I think
not without shame in this world; but sin charged, and that by the
justice of God--for so it was upon Christ--this cannot be but guilt
and the burden, as inseparable companions, must unavoidably lie on
that person. Poor sinner, be advised to take heed of such deluded
preachers who, with their tongues smoother than oil, would rob
thee of that excellent doctrine, 'God hath made him to be sin for
us'; for such, as I said, do not only present thee with a feigned
deliverance and forgiveness, with a feigned heaven and happiness,
but charge God and the Lord Jesus as mere impostors, who, while
they tell us that Christ was made of God to be sin for us, affirm
that it was not so really, suggesting this sophistical reason,
'No wrong judgment comes from the Lord.' I say again, this wicked
doctrine is the next way to turn the gospel in thy thoughts to no
more than a cunningly-devised fable (2 Peter 1:16), and to make
Jesus Christ, in his dying for our sins, as brutish as the paschal
lamb in Moses' law.
FOURTH. As he was made flesh under the law, and also sin, SO HE
WAS MADE A CURSE FOR US--'Christ hath redeemed us from the curse
of the law, being made a curse for us; as it is written, Cursed
is every one that hangeth on a tree.' This sentence is taken out
of Moses, being passed there upon them that for sin are worthy
of death--'And if a man have committed a sin worthy of death, and
thou hang him on a tree, his body shall not remain all night upon
the tree, but thou shalt in anywise bury him that day, for he that
is hanged is accursed of God' (Deut 21:22,23). By this sentence
Paul concludeth that Jesus Christ was justly hanged, because sin
worthy of death was upon him; sin, not of his own, but ours. Since,
then, he took our sins, he must be cursed of God; for sin is sin
wherever it lies, and justice is justice wherever it finds it;
wherefore since Jesus Christ will bear our sin, he must be 'numbered
with the transgressors,' and counted worthy to die the death.
Sin and the curse cannot be severed. Sin must be followed with the
curse of God. Sin therefore being removed from us to the back of
Christ, thither goes also the curse; for if sin be found upon him,
he is the person worthy to die--worthy by our sins.
Wherefore Paul here setteth forth Christ clothed with our sins,
and so taking from us the guilt and punishment. What punishment,
but the wrath and displeasure of God?--'Christ hath redeemed us
from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us.'
For where sin is charged and borne, there must of necessity follow
the wrath and curse of God. Now where the wrath and curse of God is,
there must of necessity follow the effects, the natural effects--I
say, the natural effects--to wit, the sense, the sorrowful sense
of the displeasure of an infinite Majesty, and his chastisements
for the sin that hath provoked him. There are effects natural,
and effects accidental; those accidental are such as flow from
our weakness, whilst we wrestle with the judgment of God--to wit,
hellish fear, despair, rage, blasphemy, and the like; these were
not incident to Jesus Christ, he being in his own person every
way perfect. Neither did he always endure the natural effects; his
merits relieved and delivered him. God loosed the pains of death,
'because it was not possible that he should be holden of it.'
Christ then was made a curse for us, for he did bear our sin; the
punishment therefore from the revenging hand of God must needs fall
upon him.
First. That Christ did bear our sins and curse is clear, because
he died, and that without a mediator.
He, then, that will conclude that Christ did not bear our sin,
chargeth God foolishly, for delivering him up to death; for laying
on him the wages, when in no sense he deserved the same. Yea, he
overthroweth the whole gospel, for that hangeth on this hinge--'Christ
died for our sins.'
Object. But all that die do not bear the curse of God for sin.
Answ. But all that die without a mediator do. Angels died the
cursed death because Christ took not hold of them; and they for whom
Christ never prayeth, they die the cursed death, for they perish
everlastingly in the unutterable torments of hell. Christ, too,
died that death which is the proper wages of sin, for he had none
to stand for him. 'I looked,' saith he, 'and there was none to
help; and I wondered that there was none to uphold: therefore mine
own arm brought salvation unto me.--And he saw that there was no
man, and wondered that there was no intercessor; therefore his arm
brought salvation unto him, and his righteousness it sustained him'
(Isa 63:5, 54:16).
Christ then died, or endured the wages of sin, and that without an
intercessor, without one between God and him; he grappled immediately
with the eternal justice of God, who inflicted on him death, the
wages of sin; there was no man to hold off the hand of God; justice
had his full blow at him, and made him a curse for sin. He died
for sin without a mediator, he died the cursed death.
Add to this, that Jesus Christ was better able to grapple with
death, even better able to do it alone, than the whole world joined
all together. 1. He was anointed with the Spirit without measure
(John 3:34). 2. He had all grace perfect in him (John 1:16). 3.
Never none so soaked in the bosom of his Father's love as himself
(Prov 8:23-30). 4. Never none so harmless and without sin as he
was, and, consequently, never man had so good a conscience as he
had (Heb 7:26). 5. Never none prepared such a stock of good works
to bear him company at the hour of death as he. 6. Never none had
greater assurance of being with the Father eternally in the heavens
than he. And yet, behold, when he comes to die, how weak is he,
how amazed at death, how heavy, how exceeding sorrowful! and, I
say, no cause assigned but the approach of death.
What, I say, should be the reason, but that death assaulted him
with his sting? If Jesus Christ had been to die for his virtues
only, doubtless he would have borne it lightly, and so he did
as he died, bearing witness to the truth, 'He endured the cross,
despising the shame' (Heb 12:2). How have the martyrs despised
death, and, as it were, not been careful of that, having peace with
God by Jesus Christ, scorning the most cruel torments that hell and
men could devise and invent! but Jesus Christ could not do so, as
he was a sacrifice for sin; he died for sin, he was made a curse
for us. O my brethren, Christ died many deaths at once, he made
his grave with the wicked, and with the rich in his death. Look
how many thousands shall be saved--so many deaths did Jesus die;
yet it was but once he died. He died thy death, and my death, and
so many deaths as all our sins deserved who shall be saved from
the wrath to come.
Now, to feign that these sorrows and this bloody agony, was not
real, but in show only, what greater condemnation can be passed
upon Jesus Christ, who loved to do all things in the most unfeigned
simplicity? It was, therefore, because of sin, the sin that was put
into the death he died, and the curse of God that was due to sin,
that made death so bitter to Jesus Christ--'It is Christ that died.'
The apostle speaks as if never any died but Christ, nor indeed did
there, so wonderful a death as he (Rom 8:34). Death, considered
simply as it is a deprivation of natural life, could not have these
effects in a person, personally more righteous than an angel. Yea,
even carnal, wicked men, not awakened in their conscience, how
securely can they die! It must therefore also be concluded that the
sorrows and agony of Jesus Christ came from a higher cause, even
from the guilt of sin, and from the curse of God that was now
approaching for that sin.
Third. It is evident that Christ did bear and die the cursed death
for sin, from the carriage and dispensations of God towards him.
These things could not be, had he only considered him in his own
personal standing. Where was the righteous forsaken? Without the
consideration of sin, he doth not willingly afflict nor grieve the
children of men--that is, not out of pleasure, or without sufficient
cause.
Now many men do what they will with him, he was delivered to their
will--Judas may sell him; Peter may deny him; all his disciples
forsake him; the enemy apprehends him, binds him, they have him
away like a thief to Caiaphas the high-priest, in whose house he
is mocked, spit upon, his beard is twitched from his cheeks; now
they buffet him and scornfully bow the knee before him; yea, 'his
visage was so marred more than any man, and his form more than the
sons of men' (Isa 52:14).
Now the earth quakes, the rocks are rent, the sun becomes black,
and Jesus still cries out that he was forsaken of God; and presently
boweth his head and dies (Matt 26, 27; Mark 14, 15; Luke 22, 23;
John 18, 19).
And for all this there is no cause assigned from God but sin--'He
was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities;
the chastisement of our peace was upon him, and with his stripes
we are healed' (Isa 53:5).
The sum then is, that Jesus Christ the Lord, by taking part of
our flesh, became a public person, not doing or dying in a private
capacity, but in the room and stead of sinners, whose sin deserved
death and the curse of God; all which Jesus Christ bare in his
own body upon the tree. I conclude, then, that my sin is already
crucified and accursed in the death and curse Christ underwent.
Objection First. Christ never was a sinner, God never supposed him
to be a sinner, neither did our sins become really his; God never
reputed him so to have been; therefore hate or punish him as a
sinner he could not; for no false judgment can belong to the Lord.
Objection Second. But if Christ indeed hath suffered for our sins,
and endured for them that curse that of justice is due thereto,
then hath he also endured for us the proper torments of hell, for
they are the wages of our sins.
First. The charge is sin--God charge him with our sins. The person
then stands guilty before the judgment of God. The consequences
are--1. The person charged sustains or suffereth the wrath of God.
2. This wrath of God is expressed and inflicted on body and soul.
If the person utterly fall under this charge, as not being able to
wrestle with and overcome this wrath of God, then despair, horror
of hell, rage, blasphemy, darkness, and damnable anguish, immediately
swallow him up, and he lieth for ever and ever in the pains of
hell, a monument of eternal vengeance.
[Second.] But now, because Christ Jesus the Lord was a person
infinitely differing from all others that fall under the wrath of
God, therefore those things that flow from damned sinners could
not flow from him.
1. Despair would not rise in his heart, for his flesh did rest in
hope; and said, even when he suffered, 'Thou wilt not leave my soul
in hell' (Acts 2:27).
Christ under the sentence was, as to his own personal acts only,
altogether innocent; the damned only altogether sinners. Christ had
in him even then the utmost perfection of all graces and virtues; but
the damned, the perfection of sin and vileness. Christ's humanity
had still union with his Godhead; the damned, union only with sin.
Now, an innocent person, perfect in all graces, as really God as
man, can better wrestle with the curse for sin than either sinful
men or angels.
So that it follows not, that because Christ did undergo the curse
due to our sins, he therefore must have those accidental consequences
which are found to accompany damned souls.
Objection Third. But the Scripture saith, that the wages of sin is
everlasting punishment: 'Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting
fire, prepared for the devil and his angels' (Matt 25:41).
Third. The reason, then, why fallen angels and damned souls have
an everlastingness of punishment allotted them is, because, by what
they suffer, they cannot satisfy the justice of God.
Fourth. The conclusion then is, though the rebukes of God for sin
by death, and punishment after, be the rebukes of eternal vengeance,
yet the eternity of that punishment is for want of merit. Could
the damned merit their own deliverance, justice would let them go.
Sixth. His rising, therefore, from the dead the third day doth
nothing invalidate his sufferings, but rather showeth the power of
his merit. And here I would ask a question, Had Christ Jesus been
more the object of faith, if weakness and endless infirmity had
kept him under the curse, than by rising again from the dead; want
of merit causing the one, sufficiency thereof causing the other?
Seventh. If men will not believe that Christ hath removed the
curse because he is risen again, they would much more strongly have
doubted it had he been still in the grave. But, O amazing darkness!
to make that an argument that his sufferings wanted merit, which
to God himself is sufficient proof that he hath purged our sins for
ever--'For this man, after he had offered one sacrifice for sins
for ever, sat down on the right hand of God' (Heb 10:12).
And for this last work, he had power given him of God--that is,
power to die when he would. 'I have power,' said he, 'to lay down
my life, and I have power to take it again.' This power never man
had before. This made the centurion wonder, and made Pontius Pilate
marvel; and indeed well they might, for it was as great a miracle
as any he wrought in his life; it demonstrated him to be the Son
of God (Mark 15:38,39). The centurion, knowing that according to
nature he might have lived longer, concluded therefore that his
dying at that instant was not but miraculously. And when he 'saw
that he so cried out, and gave up the ghost, he said, Truly this
man was the Son of God.'
And the reason why he had power to die was, that he might offer
his offering willingly, and at the season. 1. Willingly--'If his
offering be a burnt sacrifice of the herd, let him offer a male
without blemish: he shall offer it of his own voluntary will, at
the door of the tabernacle of the congregation before the Lord'
(Lev 1:3). 2. He must offer it at the season--'Thou shalt keep this
ordinance,' the passover, 'in his season' (Exo 13:10).
Objection Fifth. But if indeed Christ hath paid the full price for
us by his death, in suffering the punishment that we should have
done, wherefore is the Scripture so silent as not to declare that
by his death he hath made satisfaction?
But the word 'satisfaction' may not be used by the Holy Ghost,
perhaps for that it is too short and scanty a word to express the
blessedness that comes to sinners by the blood of Christ.
But take a few more scriptures for the proof of the doctrine before
asserted.
First. 'We have redemption through his blood' (Col 1:14). 1. Redemption
from sin (Eph 1:7). 2. Redemption from death (Heb 2:14,15; Hosea
13:14). 3. Redemption from Satan (Heb 2:14). 4. Redemption from
the world (Gal 1:4). 5. Redemption to God (Rev 5:9). 6. Eternal
redemption--'Neither by the blood of goats and calves, but by his
own blood, he entered in once into the holy place, having obtained
eternal redemption for us' (Heb 9:12).
Yea, lastly, this blood which was once spilt upon the cross, will
be the burden of our song in heaven itself for ever and ever (Rev
5:9).
But before I conclude this answer, I will give you nine or ten more
undeniable demonstrations to satisfy you, if God will bless them
to you, in the truth of this great doctrine--to wit, that Jesus
Christ, by what he hath done, hath paid the full price to God for
the souls of sinners, and obtained eternal redemption for them.
FIRST. And, first, I begin with his resurrection. That God that
delivered him up unto death, and that made him a curse for sin,
that God raised him up from the dead--'But God raised him from the
dead' (Acts 3:15, 13:30). Now, considering that at his death he was
charged with our sins, and accursed to death for our sins, that
justice that delivered him up for them must have amends made to
him before he acquits him from them; for there can be no change
in justice. Had he found him in our sins in the grave, as he found
him in them upon the tree (for he had them in his body on the tree),
he had left him there as he had left him upon the tree; yea, he
had as surely rotted in the grave, as ever he died on the tree (1
Peter 2:24). But when he visited Christ in the grave, he found him
a holy, harmless, undefiled, and spotless Christ, and therefore
he raised him up from the dead--'He raised him up from the dead,
having loosed the pains of death; because it was not possible that
he should be holden of it' (Acts 2:24).
Answ. Because the cause was removed. Sin was the cause--'He died
for our sins.--He gave himself for our sins' (1 Cor 15:1-3; Gal
1:4). These sins brought him to death; but when God, that had
made him a curse for us, looked upon him in the grave, he found
him there without sin, and therefore loosed the pains of death;
for justice saith, this is not possible, because not lawful, that
he who lieth sinless before God should be swallowed up of death;
therefore he raised him up.
Quest. But what did he do with our sins, for he had them upon his
back?
And observe it, as his death was for our sin, so his rising again
was for our discharge; for both in his death and resurrection he
immediately respected our benefits; he died for us, he rose from
the dead for us--'He was delivered for our offences, and was raised
again for our justification' (Rom 4:25). By his death he carried
away our sins, by his rising he brought to us justifying righteousness.
There are five circumstances also attending his resurrection that
show us how well pleased God was with his death.
Second. At, or just upon, his resurrection, the graves where many
of the saints for whom he died lay asleep, did open, and they
followed their Lord in full triumph over death--'The graves were
opened, and many bodies of the saints which slept arose, and came
out of the graves after his resurrection, and went into the holy
city, and appeared unto many' (Matt 27:52,53). These saints coming
out of their graves after him, what a testimony is it that he for
them had taken away sin, and destroyed him that had the power of
death; yea, what a testimony was it that he had made amends to God
the Father, who granted him at his resurrection to have presently
out of the grave, of the price of his blood, even the bodies of
many of the saints which slept! He was declared to be the Son of
God with power by the Spirit of holiness, and the resurrection from
the dead (Rom 1:4). It saith not, by his resurrection, though that
be true; but by the resurrection, meaning the resurrection of the
bodies of the saints which slept, because they rose by virtue of
his blood; and by that he was with power declared to be the Son of
God. They, I say, were part of his purchase, some of them for whom
Christ died. Now for God to raise them, and that upon and by virtue
of his resurrection, what is it but an open declaration from heaven
that Christ by his death hath made amends for us, and obtained
eternal redemption for us?
Third. When he was risen from the dead, God, to confirm his
disciples in the faith of the redemption that Christ had obtained
by his blood, brings him to the church, presents him to them alive,
shows him openly, sometimes to two or three, sometimes to eleven
or twelve, and once to above five hundred brethren at once (Acts
1:3, 10:40; Luke 24:13-16; John 20:19, 21:1-23; 1 Cor 15:3-8).
Fourth. At his resurrection, God gives him the keys of hell and
of death (Rev 1:18). Hell and death are the effects and fruits of
sin. 'The wicked shall be turned into hell,' and the wages of sin
is death. But what then are sinners the better for the death and
blood of Christ? O! they that dare venture upon him are much the
better, for they shall not perish, unless the Saviour will damn
them, for he hath the keys of hell and of death. 'Fear not,' saith
he, 'I am the first and the last, I am he that liveth, and was
dead, and, behold, I am alive for evermore, and have the keys of
hell and death.' These were given him at his resurrection, as if
God had said, My Son, thou hast spilt thy blood for sinners, I am
pleased with it, I am delighted in thy merits, and in the redemption
which thou hast wrought; in token hereof I give thee the keys of
hell and of death; I give thee all power in heaven and earth; save
who thou wilt, deliver who thou wilt, bring to heaven who thou
wilt.
4. The apostles must be the beholders of his going up, and must
see the cloud receive him out of their sight (Acts 1:9-12).
First. The everlasting gates are set, yea, bid stand open--Be ye
open, 'ye everlasting doors, and the King of glory shall come in.'
This King of glory is Jesus Christ, and the words are a prophecy
of his glorious ascending into the heavens, when he went up as the
high-priest of the church, to carry the price of his blood into
the holiest of all. 'Lift up your heads, O ye gates; even lift them
up, ye everlasting doors; and the King of glory shall come in' (Psa
24:7,9).
Third. At his reception he received glory, and that also for our
encouragement--'God raised him up, and gave him glory, that your
faith and hope might be in God' (1 Peter 1:19-21). He gave him glory,
as a testimony that his undertaking the work of our redemption was
accepted of him.
2. He gave glory to his name, to his name Jesus, that name being
exalted above every name--'He hath given him a name above every
name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in
heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth; and that
every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory
of God the Father' (Phil 2:9-11).
But should JESUS have been such a name, since he undertook for
sinners, had this undertaker failed in his work, if his work had
not been accepted with God, even the work of our redemption by
his blood? No, verily; it would have stunk in the nostrils both of
God and man; it would have been the most abhorred name. But Jesus
is the name; Jesus he was called, in order to his work--'His name
shall be called JESUS, for he shall save'; he was so named of the
angel before he was conceived in the womb; and he goeth by that
name now he is in heaven; by the name Jesus--'Jesus of Nazareth,'
because he once dwelt there. This name, I say, is the highest name,
the everlasting name, the name that he is to go by, to be known
by, to be worshipped by, and to be glorified by; yea, the name by
which also most glory shall redound to God the Father. Now, what
is the signification of this name but SAVIOUR? This name he hath,
therefore, for his work's sake; and because God delighted in his
undertaking, and was pleased with the price he had paid for us,
therefore the Divine Majesty hath given him it, hath made it high,
and hath commanded all angels to bow unto it; yea, it is the name in
which he resteth, and by which he hath magnified all his attributes.
(1.) This is the name by which sinners should go to God the Father.
(3.) This is the name through which our spiritual services and
sacrifices are accepted, and by which an answer of peace is returned
into our bosoms (1 Peter 2). But more of this anon.
(4.) At this name devils tremble, at this name angels bow the head,
at this name God's heart openeth, at this name the godly man's
heart is comforted; this name, none but devils hate it, and none
but those that must be damned despise it. 'No man speaking by the
Spirit of God calleth Jesus accursed,' or accounteth him still
dead, and his blood ineffectual to save the world.
Now, put all these together--to wit, his resurrection from the
dead, his ascension, and exaltation to office; and remember also
that the person thus exalted is the same Jesus of Nazareth that
sometime was made accursed of God for sin, and also that he obtained
this glory by virtue of the blood that was shed for us, and it must
unavoidably follow that Jesus Christ, by what he hath done, hath
paid a full price to God for sinners, and obtained eternal redemption
for them.
'This Jesus hath God raised up, whereof,' said Peter, 'we all are
witnesses. Therefore, being by the right hand of God exalted, and
having received of the Father the promise of the Holy Ghost, he
hath shed forth this, which ye now see and hear' (Acts 2:32,33).
The receiving of the Holy Ghost at the hand of the Father, who
had bruised him before for the transgressions of his people; the
receiving of it, I say, upon his resurrection, and that to give them
for whom, just before, he had spilt his blood to make an atonement
for their souls, argueth that the Divine Majesty found rest and
content in that precious blood, and found it full price for the
sinners for whom he shed it.
And if you consider the necessity of the giving of this good Spirit
to men, and the benefit that they receive by his coming upon them,
you will see yet more into the truth now contended for. First, then,
Of the necessity of giving this good Spirit; and then, Second, Of
the benefit which we receive at his coming.
2. Without the giving of the Holy Ghost, there had wanted a testimony
that his gospel was the gospel of Messias. Moses' ministration was
confirmed by signs and wonders and mighty deeds, both in Egypt,
in the wilderness, and at the Red Sea; wherefore it was necessary
that the doctrine of redemption by blood, which is the doctrine
of the gospel of this Jesus, should be also 'confirmed with signs
following.' Hence both himself and apostles did as frequently work
miracles and do mighty deeds as his ministers now do preach; which
signs and miracles and wonders confirmed their doctrine, though
themselves, both master and scholar, were in appearance the
most considerable mean [in outward show the meanest of men]; yea,
they by the means of the Holy Ghost have so ratified, confirmed,
and settled the gospel in the world, that no philosopher, tyrant,
or devil, hath been able hitherto to move it out of its place. He
confirmed 'the word with signs following' (Mark 16:20; Heb 2:4).
Now I say, that God should give the Holy Ghost to Jesus to confirm
this gospel, redemption from sin by his blood, what is it but
that by his blood he hath paid full price to God for sinners, and
obtained eternal redemption for them?
4. By this Holy Spirit we are helped to pray and call God Father.
6. By this Holy Spirit the joy of heaven and the love of God is
shed abroad in the heart of the saved.
7. By this Holy Spirit we are made to wait for the hope of righteousness
by faith; that is, to stand fast through our Lord Jesus in the day
when he shall judge the world.
This is yet further evident, (1.) Because the work of the Spirit is
to lead us into the sayings of Christ, which, as to our redemption
from death, are such as these--'I lay down my life, that you may
have life'; 'I give my life a ransom for many'; and, 'The bread
that I will give is my flesh, which I will give for the life
of the world' (John 6:51). (2.) Because the Spirit, in the wisdom
of heaven, is not counted a sufficient testimony on earth, but as
joined with the blood of Christ--'There are three that bear witness
on earth, the Spirit, the water, and the blood'; these are the
witnesses of God. The Spirit, because it quickeneth; the blood,
because it hath merited; and the water--to wit, the word--because
by that we are clean as to life and conversation (1 John 5:8; Eph
5:26; Rom 8:16; Psa 119:9). (3.) Because, as by the Spirit, so we
are sanctified by faith in the blood of Jesus (Heb 13:12). (4.)
Because, when most full of the Spirit, and when that doth work
most mightily in us, we are then most in the belief and admiring
apprehensions of our deliverance from death by the blood of Jesus
(Rev 5:9, 15). (5.) The Holy Ghost breatheth nowhere so as in the
ministry of this doctrine, this doctrine is sent with the Holy Ghost
from heaven; yea, as I have hinted, one of the great works of the
Holy Ghost, under the Old Testament, was to testify 'of the sufferings
of Christ, and the glory that should follow' (1 Peter 1:11,12).
Put all these things together, and see if Jesus Christ, by what
he hath done, hath not paid full price to God for sinners, if he
'hath not obtained eternal redemption for them?'
FOURTH. That Jesus Christ, by what he hath done, hath paid full
price to God for sinners, and obtained eternal redemption for them,
is evident, if you consider how the preaching thereof hath been,
from that time to this, a mighty conqueror over all kinds of
sinners. What nation, what people, what kind of sinners have not
been subdued by the preaching of a crucified Christ? He upon the
white horse with his bow and his crown hath conquered, doth conquer,
and goeth forth yet 'conquering and to conquer' (Rev 6:2). 'And
I,' saith he, 'if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men
unto me' (John 12:32). But what was it to be lifted up from the
earth? Why, it may be expounded by that saying, 'As Moses lifted
up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be
lifted up, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but
have eternal life' (John 3:14,15).
He was then lifted up when he was hanged upon a tree between the
heavens and the earth, as the accursed of God for us. The revelation
of this, it conquers all nations, tongues, and people. 'And they
sung a new song, saying, Thou art worthy to take the book, and to
open the seals thereof: for thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us
to God by thy blood, out of every kindred, and tongue, and people,
and nation' (Rev 5:9). Hence the apostle Paul chose above all
doctrines to preach up a crucified Christ, and resolved so to do;
'for I determined,' saith he, 'not to know anything among you, save
Jesus Christ and him crucified' (1 Cor 2:2).
Second. Though Paul was mad, exceeding mad against Jesus Christ of
Nazareth; yea, though he was his avowed enemy, seeking to put out
his name from under heaven, yet the voice from heaven, 'I am Jesus,'
&c., 'I am the Saviour,' how did it conquer him, make him throw down
his arms, fall down at his feet, and accept of the forgiveness of
sins freely by grace, through redemption by faith in his blood!
Fifth. How were those that used curious arts, that were next to,
if not witches indeed; I say, how were they prevailed upon and
overcome by the word of God, which is the gospel of good tidings,
through faith in the blood of Christ! (Acts 19:17,18).
Sixth. How were the Ephesians, who were sometimes far from God;
how, I say, were they made nigh by the blood of Christ! (Eph 2:13).
What shall I say? No man could as yet stand before and not fall
under the revelation of the forgiveness of sins through a crucified
Christ, as hanged, as dying, as accursed for sinners; he draws all
men unto him, men of all sorts, of all degrees.
Shall I add, how have men broken through the pricks to Jesus when
he hath been discovered to them! Neither lions, nor fires, nor sword,
nor famine, nor nakedness, nor peril, 'neither death, nor life,
nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present,
nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature,
shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in
Christ Jesus our Lord' (Rom 8:35-39).
FIFTH. That Jesus Christ, by what he hath done, hath paid full price
to God for sinners, and obtained eternal redemption for them, is
evident, by the peace and holiness that by that doctrine possesseth
men's souls; the souls of men awakened, and that continue so. By
awakened men I mean such as, through the revelation of their sin
and misery, groan under the want of Jesus to save them, and that
continue sensible that they needs must perish if his benefits be
not bestowed upon them; for otherwise the gospel ministereth neither
peace nor holiness to any of the souls of the sons of men; that
is to say, not saving peace and holiness. The gospel of grace and
salvation is above all doctrines the most dangerous, if in word
only it be received by graceless men; if it be not attended with
a revelation of men's need of a Saviour; if it be not accompanied
in the soul by the power of the Holy Ghost. For such men as have
only the notions of it are of all men liable to the greatest sins,
because there wanteth in their notions the power of love, which
alone can constrain them to love Jesus Christ. And this is the reason
of these scriptures--They turn the grace of God into wantonness.
'They turn the grace of our God into lasciviousness' (Jude 4).
For some, when they hear of the riches of grace through Christ,
that hearing not being attended with the faith and love which is in
Christ Jesus, those men receive the notions of this good doctrine
only to cloak their wickedness, and to harden themselves in their
villainies.
Others, when they hear, being leavened before with the leaven
of some other doctrine, some doctrine of the righteousness of the
world, or doctrine of devils, forthwith make head against and speak
evil of the blessed doctrine; and because some that profess it are
not cleansed from their filthiness of flesh and spirit, and do not
perfect holiness in the fear of God, therefore others conclude that
all that profess it are such, and that the doctrine itself tendeth
to encourage, or at least to tolerate, licentiousness, as they
imagined and affirmed of Paul that he should say, 'Let us do evil,
that good may come' (Rom 3:8).
Now all these, and five times as many more, having their foundation
in the love, blood, and righteousness of Christ, and operating in
the soul by faith, are the great arguments unto that holiness to
which is annexed eternal life. It is worth our observing, that in
Acts 26:18, the inheritance belongs 'to them which are sanctified
by faith in Jesus Christ'; for all other pretences to holiness, they
are but a stolen semblance of that which is true and acceptable,
though it is common for even that which is counterfeit to be called
by the deluded the true, and to be reckoned to be in them that are
utter strangers to faith, and the holiness that comes by faith. 'But
whosoever compoundeth any like it, or whosoever putteth any of it
upon a stranger, shall even be cut off from his people' (Exo 30:23).
God knoweth which is holiness that comes by faith in forgiveness of
sins, and acceptance with God through Christ; and God knows which
is only such feignedly; and accordingly will he deal with sinners
in that great day of God Almighty.
SIXTH. That Jesus Christ, by what he hath done, hath paid full price
to God for sinners, and obtained eternal redemption for them, is
evident, because prayers are accepted of God only upon the account
and for the sake of the name of Jesus Christ--'Verily, verily,
I say unto you, whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my name, he
will give it you' (John 16:23). In my name, in the name of Jesus
Christ of Nazareth, in the name of him that came into the world
to save sinners, by dying for them a grievous, bloody death; in
his name that hath by himself put away sin, and brought unto God
acceptable righteousness for sinners; in his name. Why in his name,
if he be not accepted of God? why in his name if his undertakings
for us are not well-pleasing to God? But by these words, 'in
my name,' are insinuated that his person and performances, as our
undertaker, are accepted by the Father of spirits. We may not go
in our own names, because we are sinners; not in the name of one
another, because all are sinners. But why not in the name of an
angel? Because they are not those that did undertake for us; or
had they, they could not have done our work for us. 'He putteth no
trust in his saints, yea, the heavens are not clean in his sight'
(Job 4:18, 15:15). It may further be objected--
Since Jesus Christ is God, equal with the Father, and so hath
naturally the same power to give us the Father, why should the
Father rather than the Son be the great giver to the sinners of the
world? and why may we not go to Christ in the name of the Father,
as well as to the Father in the name of Christ? I say, how can
these things be solved, but by considering that sin and justice
put a necessity upon it that thus must our salvation be obtained.
Sin and justice could not reconcile, nor could a means be found out
to bring the sinner and a holy God together, but by the intercepting
of the Son, who must take upon him to answer justice, and that by
taking our sins from before the face of God by bloody sacrifice, not
by blood of others, as the high-priests under the law--'For every
high-priest is ordained to offer gifts and sacrifices; wherefore
it is of necessity that this man have somewhat also to offer' (Heb
8:3). Which offering and sacrifice of his being able to perfect
for ever them that are sanctified and set apart for eternal life,
therefore the name of the person that offered--even Jesus, made of
God a high-priest--is acceptable with God; yea, therefore is he
made for ever, by his doing for us, the appeaser of the justice
of God, and the reconciler of sinners to him. Hence it is that HIS
name is that which it behoveth us to mention when we come before
God, for what God hath determined in his counsels of grace to bestow
upon sinners, because for his name's sake he forgiveth them. 'I
write unto you, little children, because your sins are forgiven you
for his name's sake' (1 John 2:12). 'To him give all the prophets
witness, that through his name, whosoever believeth in him shall
receive remission of sins' (Acts 10:43).
They therefore that would obtain the forgiveness of sins must ask
it of God, through the name of Jesus; and he that shall sensibly
and unfeignedly do it, he shall receive the forgiveness of
them--'Whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my name, he will give
it you.' Hence it is evident that he hath not only paid full price
to God for them, but also obtained eternal redemption for them.
But, I say, what cause would there be to ask in his name more than
in the name of some other, since justice was provoked by our sin,
if he had not undertook to make up the difference that by sin was
made betwixt justice and us? For though there be in this Jesus
infinite worth, infinite righteousness, infinite merit, yet if he
make not with these interest for us, we get no more benefit thereby
than if there were no mediator. But this worth and merit is in him
for us, for he undertook to reconcile us to God; it is therefore
that his name is with God so prevailing for us poor sinners, and
therefore that we ought to go to God in his name. Hence, therefore,
it is evident that Jesus Christ hath paid full price to God for
sinners, and obtained eternal redemption for them.
SEVENTH. That Jesus Christ, by what he hath done, hath paid full
price to God for sinners, &c., is evident, because we are commanded
also to give God thanks in his name--'By him, therefore, let us offer
the sacrifice of praise to God continually, that is, the fruit of
our lips, giving thanks to his name' (Heb 3:15).
He sanctified us with his blood; but why should the Father have
thanks for this? Even because the Father gave him for us, that he
might die to sanctify us with his blood--'Giving thanks unto the
Father, which hath made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance
of the saints in light; who hath delivered us from the power of
darkness, and hath translated us into the kingdom of his dear Son;
in whom we have redemption through his blood, even the forgiveness
of sins' (Col 1:12-14). The Father is to be thanked, for the
contrivance was also his; but the blood, the righteousness, or
that worthiness, for the sake of which we are accepted of God, is
the worthiness of his own dear Son. As it is meet, therefore, that
God should have thanks, so it is necessary that he have it in his
name for whose sake we indeed are accepted of him.
Let us therefore by him offer praise first for the gift of his Son,
and for that we stand quit through him in his sight, and that in
despite of all inward weakness, and that in despite of all outward
enemies.
When the apostle had taken such a view of himself as to put himself
into a maze, with an outcry also, 'Who shall deliver me?' he quiets
himself with this sweet conclusion, 'I thank God through Jesus
Christ' (Rom 7:24,25). He found more in the blood of Christ to
save him than he found in his own corruptions to damn him; but that
could not be, had he not paid full price for him, had he not obtained
eternal redemption for him. And can a holy and just God require
that we give thanks to him in his name, if it was not effectually
done for us by him?
Further, when the apostle looks upon death and the grave, and
strengtheneth them by adding to them sin and the law, saying, 'The
sting of death is sin, and the strength of sin is the law,' he
presently addeth, 'But thanks be to God, which giveth us the victory,
through Jesus Christ' (1 Cor 15)--the victory over sin, death, and
the law, the victory over these through our Lord Jesus Christ: but
God hath given us the victory; but it is through our Lord Jesus
Christ, through his fulfilling the law, through his destroying death,
and through his bringing in everlasting righteousness. Elisha said
to the king of Israel, that had it not been that he regarded the
presence of Jehoshaphat, he would not look to him nor regard him
(2 Kings 3:14); nor would God at all have looked to or regarded
thee, but that he respected the person of Jesus Christ.
'Let the peace of God [therefore] rule in our hearts, to the which
also ye are called in one body; and be ye thankful' (Col 3:15). The
peace of God, of that we have spoken before. But how should this
rule in our hearts? He by the next words directs you--'Let the
word of Christ dwell in you richly'--that is, the word that makes
revelation of the death and blood of Christ, and of the peace that
is made with God for you thereby.
'Giving thanks always for all things unto God and the Father,
in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ' (Eph 5:20). For all things;
for all things come to us through this name Jesus--redemption,
translation, the kingdom, salvation, with all the good things
wherewith we are blessed.
These are the works of God; he gave his Son, and he brings us to
him, and puts us into his kingdom--that is, his true body, which
Jeremiah calleth a putting among the children, and a 'giving us a
goodly heritage of the hosts of nations' (Jer 3:19; John 6).
See here our cause of triumph is through Christ Jesus; and God causeth
us through him to triumph, first and chiefly, because Christ Jesus
hath done our work for us, hath pleased God for our sins, hath
spoiled the powers of darkness. God gave Jesus Christ to undertake
our redemption; Christ did undertake it, did engage our enemies,
and spoiled them--He 'spoiled principalities and powers, and made
a show of them openly, triumphing over them' upon the cross (Col
2:14,15). Therefore it is evident that he paid full price to God
for sinners with his blood, because God commands us to give thanks
to him in his name, through his name--'And whatsoever ye do in
word or deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks
to God and the Father by him' (Col 3:17).
Take this conclusion from the whole: no thanks are accepted of God
that come not to him in the name of his Son; his Son must have the
glory of conveying our thanks to God, because he was he that by
his blood conveyeth his grace to us.
Second. 'We wait for his Son from heaven, whom he raised from the
dead, even Jesus [Christ], which delivered us from the wrath to
come' (1 Thess 1:10). He delivered us by his blood, and obtained
the kingdom of heaven for us, and hath promised that he would go
and prepare our places, and come again and fetch us thither--'And
if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again, and receive
you unto myself, that where I am, there ye may be also' (John
14:3). This, then, is the cause that we wait for him, we look for
the reward of the inheritance at his coming who have served the
Lord Christ in this world.
Fifth. 'For Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many; and
unto them that look for him shall he appear the second time without
sin unto salvation' (Heb 9:28). Here we have it promised that he
shall come, that he shall appear the second time, but not with sin,
as he did before--to wit, with and in the sin of his people, when
he bare them in his own body; but now without sin, for he before
did put them away by the sacrifice of himself. Now, then, let the
saints look for him, not to die for the purchasing of their persons
by blood, but to bring to them, and to bring them also to that
salvation that before when he died he obtained of God for them by
his death.
NINTH. That Jesus Christ, by what he hath done, hath paid full price
to God for sinners, and obtained eternal redemption for sinners, is
evident, because of the threatenings wherewith God hath threatened,
and the punishments wherewith he punisheth those that shall refuse
to be saved by Christ, or seek to make insignificant the doctrine
of righteousness by faith in him.
This demonstration consisteth of three parts--First. It suggesteth
that some refuse to be justified or saved by Christ, and also seek
to make insignificant the doctrine of righteousness by faith in
him. Second. That God doth threaten these. Third. That God will
punish these.
The causes of men's refusing Christ are many--1. Their love to sin.
2. Their ignorance of his excellency. 3. Their unbelief. 4. Their
deferring to come to him in the acceptable time. 5. Their leaning
to their own righteousness. 6. Their entertaining damnable doctrines.
7. Their loving the praise of men. 8. The meanness of his ways, his
people, &c. 9. The just judgment of God upon them. 10. The kingdom
is given to others.
Now these, as they all refuse him, so they seek, more or less, some
practically, others in practice and judgment also, to make insignificant
the doctrine of righteousness by faith in him. One does it by
preferring his sins before him. Another does it by preferring his
righteousness before him. Another dies it by preferring his delusions
before him. Another does it by preferring the world before him.
The Lord that is here said to come with ten thousands of his saints
is Jesus Christ himself; and they that come with him are called
his saints, because given to him by the Father, for the sake of the
shedding of his blood. Now in that he is said to come to execute
judgment upon all, and especially those that speak hard speeches
against him, it is evident that the Father tendereth his name,
which is Jesus, a Saviour, and his undertaking for our redemption;
and as evident that the hard speeches intended by the text are
such as vilify him as Saviour, counting the blood of the covenant
unholy, and trampling him that is Prince of the covenant under the
feet of their reproachful language; this is counted a putting of
him to open shame, and a despising the riches of his goodness (Heb
6:10; Rom 2). Time would fail to give you a view of the revilings,
despiteful sayings, and of the ungodly speeches which these
abominable children of hell let fall in their pamphlets, doctrines,
and discourses against the Lord the King. But the threatening is,
he shall 'execute judgment upon them for all their ungodly deeds,
and for all the hard speeches which ungodly sinners have spoken
against him.'
This work is the same we have been all this while treating of--to
wit, redemption by the blood of Christ for sinners, or that Christ
hath paid full price to God for sinners, and obtained eternal
redemption for them. This is manifest from verses 23 to 29 of this
chapter.
Now, observe, there are and will be despisers of this doctrine, and
they are threatened with the wrath of God--'Behold, ye despisers,
and wonder, and perish.' But would God so carefully have cautioned
sinners to take heed of despising this blessed doctrine, and have
backed his caution with a threatening that they shall perish, if
they persist, had not he himself received by the blood of Christ
full price for the souls of sinners?
The wrath of God for men; for sin stands already condemned by
the law; and the judgment is, that they who refuse the Lord Jesus
Christ shall have this wrath of God for ever lie and abide upon
them; for they want a sacrifice to pacify wrath for the sin they
have committed, having resisted and refused the sacrifice of the
body of Christ. Therefore it cannot be that they should get from
under their present condition who have refused to accept of the
undertaking of Christ for them.
(1.) That Jesus is the Saviour. 'If,' saith he, 'ye believe not
that I am he, ye shall die in your sins.'
See here, if fury comes not up now into the face of God; now is
mention made of his fearful judgment and fiery indignation. Now, I
say, is mention made thereof, when it is suggested that some have
light thoughts of him, count his blood unholy, and trample his
sacrificed body under the feet of their reproaches; now is he a
consuming fire, and will burn to the lowest hell. 'For we know him
that hath said, Vengeance belongeth unto me, I will recompense,
saith the Lord. And again, The Lord shall judge his people' (Heb
10:30). These words are urged by the Holy Ghost on purpose to beget in
the hearts of the rebellious reverend thoughts, and a high esteem
of the sacrifice which our Lord Jesus offered once for all upon
Mount Calvary unto God the Father for our sins; for that is the
very argument of the whole epistle.
I come now to make some use of and to apply this blessed doctrine
of the undertaking of Jesus Christ, and of his paying full price to
God for sinners, and of his obtaining eternal redemption for them.
First. Here is more of his WISDOM seen than in his making and
upholding all the creatures. His wisdom, I say, in devising means
to reconcile sinners to a holy and infinite Majesty; to be a just God,
and YET a Saviour; to be just to his law, just to his threatening,
just to himself, and yet save sinners, can no way be understood
till thou understandest why Jesus Christ did hang on the tree; for
here only is the riddle unfolded, 'Christ died for our sins,' and
therefore can God in justice save us (Isa 45:21). And hence is Christ
called the Wisdom of God, not only because he is so essentially,
but because by him is the greatest revelation of his wisdom towards
man. In redemption, therefore, by the blood of Christ, God is said
to abound towards us in all wisdom (Eph 1:7,8). Here we see the
highest contradictions reconciled, here justice kisseth the sinner,
here a man stands just in the sight of God while confounded at
his own pollutions, and here he that hath done no good hath yet a
sufficient righteousness, even the righteousness of God, which is
by faith of Jesus Christ.
Second. The JUSTICE of God is here more seen than in punishing all
the damned. 'He spared not his own Son,' is a sentence which more
revealeth the nature of the justice of God than if it had said,
He spared not all the world. True, he cast angels from heaven, and
drowned the old world; he turned Sodom and Gomorrah into ashes, with
many more of like nature; but what were all these to the cursing
of his Son? Yea, what were ten thousand such manifestations of his
ireful indignation against sin, to that of striking, afflicting,
chastising, and making the darling of his bosom the object of his
wrath and judgment? Here it is seen he respecteth not persons, but
judgeth sin, and condemneth him on whom it is found; yea, although
on Jesus Christ his well-beloved (Rom 8:32; Gal 3:13).
Third. The mystery of God's WILL is here more seen than in hanging
the earth upon nothing, while he condemneth Christ, though righteous,
and justifieth us, though sinners, while he maketh him to be sin
for us, and us the righteousness of God in him (1 Peter 3:18; 2
Cor 5:20).
Fifth. The LOVE and MERCY of God are more seen in and by this
doctrine than any other way. Mercy and love are seen, in that God
gives us rain and fruitful seasons, and in that he filleth our
hearts with food and gladness; from that bounty which he bestoweth
upon us as men, as his creatures. O! but herein is love made manifest,
in that 'Christ laid down his life for us.' 'And God commendeth
his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died
for us' (1 John 3:16; Rom 5:8).
Never love like this, nor did God ever give such discovery of his
love from the beginning to this day. 'Herein is love, not that
we loved God, but that he loved us, and sent his Son to be the
propitiation for our sins' (1 John 4:10).
Here is love, that God sent his Son, his darling, his Son that never
offended, his Son that was always his delight! Herein is love, that
he sent him to save sinners, to save them by bearing their sins,
by bearing their curse, by dying their death, and by carrying their
sorrows! Here is love, in that while we were yet enemies, Christ
died for us; yea, here is love, in that while 'we were yet without
strength, Christ died for the ungodly' (Rom 5:6).
Second. For your good deeds cannot help you; the blood of Christ
tells you so. For by this doctrine, 'Christ died for our sins,'
God damneth to death and hell the righteousness of the world.
Christ must die, or man be damned. Where is now any room for the
righteousness of men? room, I say, for man's righteousness, as to
his acceptance and justification? Bring, then, thy righteousness
to the cross of Jesus Christ, and in his blood behold the demands
of justice; behold them, I say, in the cries and tears, in the
blood and death of Jesus Christ. Look again, and behold the person
dying; such an one as never sinned nor offended at any time, yet
he dies. Could a holy life, an innocent, harmless conversation,
have saved one from death, Jesus had not died. But he must die;
sin was charged, therefore Christ must die.
Quest. But how should I prove [or try] the goodness of mine own
righteousness by the death and blood of Christ?
Answ. Thus: if Christ must die for sin, then all thy righteousness
cannot save thee. 'If righteousness come by the law, then Christ
is dead in vain' (Gal 2:21). By this text it is manifest that
either Christ died in vain, or thy righteousness is vain. If thy
righteousness can save thee, then Christ died in vain; if nothing
below or besides the death of Christ could save thee, then thy
righteousness is in vain; one of the two must be cast away, either
Christ's or thine. Christ crucified to save the world, discovereth
two great evils in man's own righteousness; I mean, when brought
for justification and life. 1. It opposeth the righteousness of
Christ. 2. It condemneth God of foolishness.
Yea, wherefore hath God also given it out that there is none other
name given to men under heaven whereby we must be saved? I say again,
why is it affirmed 'without shedding of blood is no remission,' if
man's good deeds can save him?
Justice calls for blood, sins call for blood, the righteous law
calls for blood, yea, the devil himself must be overcome by blood.
Sinner, where is now thy righteousness? Bring it before a consuming
fire, for our God is a consuming fire; bring it before the justice
of the law; yea, try if aught but the blood of Christ can save thee
from thy sins, and devils; try it, I say, by this doctrine; go not
one step further before thou hast tried it.
There are two things in special when men begin to be awakened, that
kill their thoughts of being saved. 1. A sense of sin. 2. The wages
due thereto. These kill the heart; for who can bear up under the
guilt of sin? 'If our sins be upon us, and we pine away in them,
how should we then live?' (Eze 33:10). How indeed! it is impossible.
So neither can man grapple with the justice of God. 'Can thine heart
endure, or can thine hands be strong?' They cannot (Eze 22:14).
'A wounded spirit who can bear?' (Prov 18:14). Men cannot, angels
cannot. Wherefore, if now Christ be hid, and the blessing of faith
in his blood denied, woe be to them; such go after Saul and Judas,
one to the sword, and the other to the halter, and so miserably
end their days; for come to God they dare not; the thoughts of that
eternal Majesty strike them through.
But now, present such poor dejected sinners with a crucified Christ,
and persuade them that the sins under which they shake and tremble
were long ago laid upon the back of Christ, and the noise and sense
and fear of damning begins to cease, depart, and fly away; dolors
and terrors fade and vanish, and that soul conceiveth hopes of
life; for thus the soul argueth, Is this indeed the truth of God,
that Christ was made to be sin for me? was made the curse of God for
me? Hath he indeed borne all my sins, and spilt his blood for my
redemption! O Blessed tidings! O welcome grace! 'Bless the Lord,
O my soul, and all that is within me, bless his holy name.' Now is
peace come; now the face of heaven is altered; 'Behold, all things
are become new.' Now the sinner can abide God's presence, yea,
sees unutterable glory and beauty in him; for here he sees justice
smite. While Jacob was afraid of Esau, how heavily did he drive
even towards the promised land? but when killing thoughts were
turned into kissing, and the fears of the sword's point turned into
brother embraces, what says he?--'I have seen thy face as though
it had been the face of God, and thou wast pleased with me' (Gen
33:10).
Now, the soul sees qualifications able to set him quit in the sight
of God; qualifications prepared already. Prepared, I say, already;
and that by God through Christ; even such as can perfectly answer
the law. What doth the law require? If obedience, here it is; if
bloody sacrifice, here it is; if infinite righteousness, here it
is! Now, then, the law condemns him that believes before God no
more; for all its demands are answered, all its curses are swallowed
up in the death and curse Christ underwent.
Object. But reason saith, since personal sin brought the death,
surely personal obedience must bring us life and glory.
Answ. True reason saith so, and so doth the law itself (Rom 10:5);
but God, we know, is above them both, and he in the covenant of
grace saith otherwise; to wit, that 'if thou shalt confess with
thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that
God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved' (Rom 10:9).
Let reason, then, hold its tongue, yea, let the law with all its
wisdom subject itself to him that made it; let it look for sin
where God hath laid it; let it approve the righteousness which
God approveth; yea, though it be not that of the law, but that by
faith of Jesus Christ.
God hath made him our righteousness, God hath made him our sin, God
hath made him our curse, God hath made him our blessing; methinks
this word, 'God hath made it so,' should silence all the world.
When souls begin to seek after the Lord Jesus, then Satan begins
to afflict and distress, as the Canaanites did the Gibeonites, for
making peace with Joshua (Josh 10:1,6).
There are three things that do usually afflict the soul that is
earnestly looking after Jesus Christ. First. Dreadful accusations
from Satan. Second. Grievous defiling and infectious thoughts.
Third. A strange readiness in our nature to fall in with both.
Second. Besides this, there doth now arise, even in the heart,
such defiling and foul infectious thoughts that putteth the tempted
to their wits' end; for now it seems to the soul that the very
flood-gates of the flesh are opened, and that to sin there is no
stop at all; now the air seems to be covered with darkness, and
the man is as if he was changed into the nature of a devil; now if
ignorance and unbelief prevail, he concludeth that he is a reprobate,
made to be taken and destroyed.
1. How he did deliver me; it was with his life, his blood; it cost
him tears, groans, agony, separation from God; to do it he endured
his Father's wrath, bore his Father's curse, and died thousands of
deaths at once.
Thus also is the song, that new song that is said to be sung by
the hundred forty and four thousand which stand with the Lamb upon
Mount Sion, with his Father's name written in their foreheads. These
are also called harpers, harping with their harps: 'And they sung
as it were a new song before the throne, and before the four beasts,
and the elders: and no man could learn that song but the hundred
and forty and four thousand, which were redeemed from the earth'
(Rev 14:1-3).
But why could they not learn that song? Because they were not
redeemed: none can sing of this song but the redeemed; they can
give glory to the Lamb, the Lamb that was slain, and that redeemed
them to God by his blood. It is faith in his blood on earth that
will make us sing this song in heaven. These shoutings and heavenly
songs must needs come from love put into a flame by the sufferings
of Christ.
FOOTNOTES:
5. The apostle evidently means by 'Christ made sin for us,' that
he was made an offering or sacrifice for our sins. He was made sin
who knew no sin. Our sins were laid upon him; he bore them away
in his own body on the tree. The clean animals sacrificed by the
patriarchs, and under the law, were types of this great sacrifice
of Christ.--Ed.
6. 'I hid myself when I for flies do wait, So doth the devil when
he lays his bait; If I do fear the losing of my prey, I stir me,
and more snares upon her lay, This way and that her wings and legs
I tie, That sure as she is caught, so she must die.'--Bunyan's
Divine Emblems, No. XVIII. 'Dialogue between a spider and a sinner.'
***
SHOWING
WHAT IT IS, AND HOW DISTINGUISHED FROM THAT WHICH IS NOT SO.
ALSO, WHENCE IT COMES; WHO HAS IT; WHAT ARE THE EFFECTS; AND WHAT
THE PRIVILEGES OF THOSE THAT HAVE IT IN THEIR HEARTS.
"The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom," and "a fountain
of life"--the foundation on which all wisdom rests, as well as the
source from whence it emanates. Upon a principle so vastly important,
all the subtle malignity of Satan has been directed, if possible
to mislead the very elect; while the ungodly and impenitent fall
under his devices. To the mind enlightened by Divine truth, the
difference between a filial fear of offending God and the dread of
punishment is very plain. Still, by the devil's sophistry, some of
the most pious Christians have been puzzled and bewildered. Bunyan
was not ignorant of Satan's devices, and he has roused the energies
of his powerful mind, guided by Divine truth, to render this important
doctrine so clear and easy to be understood, that the believer may
not err.
Geo. Offor.
First they present us with God, the true and living God, maker of
the worlds, and upholder of all things by the word of his power:
that incomprehensible majesty, in comparison of whom all nations
are less than the drop of a bucket, and than the small dust of the
balance. This is he that fills heaven and earth, and is everywhere
present with the children of men, beholding the evil and the good;
for he hath set his eyes upon all their ways.
By the fear, that is, by the God of his father Isaac. And, indeed,
God may well be called the fear of his people, not only because they
have by his grace made him the object of their fear, but because
of the dread and terrible majesty that is in him. "He is a mighty
God, a great and terrible, and with God is terrible majesty" (Dan
7:28, 10:17; Neh 1:5, 4:14, 9:32; Job 37:22). Who knows the power
of his anger? "The mountains quake at him, the hills melt, and
the earth is burned at his presence, yea, the world, and all that
dwell therein. Who can stand before his indignation? who can abide
in the fierceness of his anger? his fury is poured out like fire,
and the rocks are thrown down by him" (Nahum 1:5,6). His people
know him, and have his dread upon them, by virtue whereof there is
begot and maintained in them that godly awe and reverence of his
majesty which is agreeable to their profession of him. "Let him be
your fear, and let him be your dread." Set his majesty before the
eyes of your souls, and let his excellency make you afraid with
godly fear (Isa 8:13).
There are these things that make God to be the fear of his people.
First. His presence is dreadful, and that not only his presence
in common, but his special, yea, his most comfortable and joyous
presence. When God comes to bring a soul news of mercy and salvation,
even that visit, that presence of God, is fearful. When Jacob went
from Beersheba towards Haran, he met with God in the way by a dream,
in the which he apprehended a ladder set upon the earth, whose top
reached to heaven; now in this dream, from the top of this ladder,
he saw the Lord, and heard him speak unto him, not threateningly;
not as having his fury come up into his face; but in the most sweet
and gracious manner, saluting him with promise of goodness after
promise of goodness, to the number of eight or nine; as will appear
if you read the place. Yet I say, when he awoke, all the grace that
discovered itself in this heavenly vision to him could not keep him
from dread and fear of God's majesty. "And Jacob awaked out of his
sleep, and he said, Surely the Lord is in this place, and I knew it
not; and he was afraid and said, How dreadful is this place! this
is none other but the house of God, and this is the gate of heaven"
(Gen 28:10-17).
At another time, to wit, when Jacob had that memorable visit from
God, in which he gave him power as a prince to prevail with him;
yea, and gave him a name, that by his remembering it he might
call God's favour the better to his mind; yet even then and there
such dread of the majesty of God was upon him, that he went away
wondering that his life was preserved (Gen 32:30). Man crumbles to
dust at the presence of God; yea, though he shows himself to us in
his robes of salvation. We have read how dreadful and how terrible
even the presence of angels have been unto men, and that when they
have brought them good tidings from heaven (Judg 13:22; Matt 28:4;
Mark 16:5,6). Now, if angels, which are but creatures, are, through
the glory that God has put upon them, so fearful and terrible in
their appearance to men, how much more dreadful and terrible must
God himself be to us, who are but dust and ashes! When Daniel had
the vision of his salvation sent him from heaven, for so it was,
"O Daniel," said the messenger, "a man greatly beloved"; yet behold
the dread and terror of the person speaking fell with that weight
upon this good man's soul, that he could not stand, nor bear up under
it. He stood trembling, and cries out, "O my lord, by the vision
my sorrows are turned upon me, and I have retained no strength. For
how can the servant of this my lord talk with this my lord? for as
for me, straightway there remained no strength in me" (Dan 10:16-17).
See you here if the presence of God is not a dreadful and a fearful
thing; yea, his most gracious and merciful appearances; how much
more then when he showeth himself to us as one that disliketh our
ways, as one that is offended with us for our sins?
And there are three things that in an eminent manner make his
presence dreadful to us.
2. When God giveth his presence to his people, that his presence
causeth them to appear to themselves more what they are, than at
other times, by all other light, they can see. "O my lord," said
Daniel, "by the vision my sorrows are turned upon me"; and why
was that, but because by the glory of that vision, he saw his own
vileness more than at other times. So again: "I was left alone,"
says he, "and saw this great vision"; and what follows? Why, "and
there remained no strength in me; for my comeliness was turned
into corruption, and I retained no strength" (Dan 10:8,16). By the
presence of God, when we have it indeed, even our best things, our
comeliness, our sanctity and righteousness, all do immediately turn
to corruption and polluted rags. The brightness of his glory dims
them as the clear light of the shining sun puts out the glory of
the fire or candle, and covers them with the shadow of death. See
also the truth of this in that vision of the prophet Isaiah. "Wo
is me," said he, "for I am undone, because I am a man of unclean
lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips." Why,
what is the matter? how came the prophet by this sight? Why, says
he, "mine eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts" (Isa 6:5).
But do you think that this outcry was caused by unbelief? No; nor
yet begotten by slavish fear. This was to him the vision of his
Saviour, with whom also he had communion before (vv 2-5). It was
the glory of that God with whom he had now to do, that turned, as
was noted before of Daniel, his comeliness in him into corruption,
and that gave him yet greater sense of the disproportion that was
betwixt his God and him, and so a greater sight of his defiled and
polluted nature.
And what mean the tremblings, the tears, those breakings and shakings
of heart that attend the people of God, when in an eminent manner
they receive the pronunciation of the forgiveness of sins at his
mouth, but that the dread of the majesty of God is in their sight
mixed therewith? God must appear like himself, speak to the soul like
himself; nor can the sinner, when under these glorious discoveries
of his Lord and Saviour, keep out the beams of his majesty from the
eyes of his understanding. "I will cleanse them," saith he, "from
all their iniquity, whereby they have sinned against me, and I will
pardon all their iniquities whereby they have sinned, and whereby
they have transgressed against me." And what then? "And they shall
fear and tremble for all the goodness, and for all the prosperity
that I procure unto it" (Jer 33:8,9). Alas! there is a company of
poor, light, frothy professors in the world, that carry it under
that which they call the presence of God, more like to antics,
than sober sensible Christians; yea, more like to a fool of a play,
than those that have the presence of God. They would not carry it
so in the presence of a king, nor yet of the lord of their land,
were they but receivers of mercy at his hand. They carry it even
in their most eminent seasons, as if the sense and sight of God,
and his blessed grace to their souls in Christ, had a tendency in
them to make men wanton: but indeed it is the most humbling and
heart-breaking sight in the world; it is fearful.[2]
Object. But would you not have us rejoice at the sight and sense
of the forgiveness of our sins?
Answ. Yes; but yet I would have you, and indeed you shall, when God
shall tell you that your sins are pardoned indeed, "rejoice with
trembling" (Psa 2:11). For then you have solid and godly joy; a
joyful heart, and wet eyes, in this will stand very well together;
and it will be so more or less. For if God shall come to you indeed,
and visit you with the forgiveness of sins, that visit removeth
the guilt, but increaseth the sense of thy filth, and the sense of
this that God hath forgiven a filthy sinner, will make thee both
rejoice and tremble. O, the blessed confusion that will then cover
thy face whilst thou, even thou, so vile a wretch, shalt stand
before God to receive at his hand thy pardon, and so the firstfruits
of thy eternal salvation--"That thou mayest remember, and be
confounded, and never open thy mouth any more because of thy shame
(thy filth), when I am pacified toward thee for all that thou hast
done, saith the Lord God" (Eze 16:63). But,
Also his name, I am, Jah, Jehovah, with several others, what is
by them intended but his nature, as his power, wisdom, eternity,
goodness, and omnipotency, &c., might be expressed and declared.
The name of God is therefore the object of a Christian's fear. David
prayed to God that he would unite his heart to fear his name (Psa
86:11). Indeed, the name of God is a fearful name, and should
always be reverenced by his people: yea his "name is to be feared
for ever and ever," and that not only in his church, and among
his saints, but even in the world and among the heathen--"So the
heathen shall fear the name of the Lord, and all kings thy glory"
(Psa 102:15). God tells us that his name is dreadful, and that he
is pleased to see men be afraid before his name. Yea, one reason
why he executeth so many judgments upon men as he doth, is that
others might see and fear his name. "So shall they fear the name of
the Lord from the west, and his glory from the rising of the sun"
(Isa 59:19; Mal 2:5).
Make mention then of the name of the Lord at all times with great
dread of his majesty upon our hearts, and in great soberness and
truth. To do otherwise is to profane the name of the Lord, and to
take his name in vain; and "the Lord will not hold him guiltless
that taketh his name in vain." Yea, God saith that he will cut off
the man that doth it; so jealous is he of the honour due unto his
name (Exo 20:7; Lev 20:3). This therefore showeth you the dreadful
state of those that lightly, vainly, lyingly, and profanely make use
of the name, this fearful name of God, either by their blasphemous
cursing and oaths, or by their fraudulent dealing with their
neighbour; for some men have no way to prevail with their neighbour
to bow under a cheat, but by calling falsely upon the name of the
Lord to be witness that the wickedness is good and honest; but how
these men will escape, when they shall be judged, devouring fire and
everlasting burnings, for their profaning and blaspheming of the
name of the Lord, becomes them betimes to consider of (Jer 14:14,15;
Eze 20:39; Exo 20:7).[3]
But,
Third. As the presence and name of God are dreadful and fearful in
the church, so is his worship and service. I say his worship, or
the works of service to which we are by him enjoined while we are
in this world, are dreadful and fearful things. This David conceiveth,
when he saith, "But as for me, I will come into thy house in the
multitude of thy mercy, and in thy fear will I worship toward thy
holy temple" (Psa 5:7). And again, saith he, "Serve the Lord with
fear." To praise God is a part of his worship. But, says Moses, "Who
is a God like unto thee, glorious in holiness, fearful in praises,
doing wonders?" (Exo 15:11). To rejoice before him is a part of
his worship; but David bids us "rejoice with trembling" (Psa 2:11).
Yea, the whole of our service to God, and every part thereof, ought
to be done by us with reverence and godly fear. And therefore let
us, as Paul saith again, "Cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of
the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God" (2
Cor 7:1; Heb 12).
1. That which makes the worship of God so fearful a thing, is, for
that it is the worship of GOD: all manner of service carries more
or less dread and fear along with it, according as the quality
or condition of the person is to whom the worship and service is
done. This is seen in the service of subjects to their princes,
the service of servants to their lords, and the service of children
to their parents. Divine worship, then, being due to God, for it is
now of Divine worship we speak, and this God so great and dreadful
in himself and name, his worship must therefore be a fearful thing.
4. The judgments that sometimes God hath executed upon men for
their want of godly fear, while they have been in his worship and
service, put fear and dread upon his holy appointments. (1.) Nadab
and Abihu were burned to death with fire from heaven, because they
attempted to offer false fire upon God's altar, and the reason
rendered why they were so served, was, because God will be sanctified
in them that come nigh him (Lev 10:1-3). To sanctify his name
is to let him be thy dread and thy fear, and to do nothing in his
worship but what is well-pleasing to him. But because these men had
not grace to do this, therefore they died before the Lord. (2.)
Eli's sons, for want of this fear, when they ministered in the
holy worship of God, were both slain in one day by the sword of the
uncircumcised Philistines (see 1 Sam 2). (3.) Uzzah was smitten,
and died before the Lord, for but an unadvised touching of the
ark, when the men forsook it (1 Chron 13:9,10). (4.) Ananias and
Sapphira his wife, for telling a lie in the church, when they were
before God, were both stricken dead upon the place before them all,
because they wanted the fear and dread of God's majesty, name, and
service, when they came before him (Acts 5).
3. This also rebukes those that care not, so they worship, how they
worship; how, where, or after what manner they worship God. Those,
I mean, whose fear towards God "is taught by the precept of men."
They are hypocrites; their worship also is vain, and a stink in
the nostrils of God. "Wherefore the Lord said, Forasmuch as this
people draw near me with their mouth, and with their lips do honour
me, but have removed their heart far from me, and their fear toward
me is taught by the precept of men: therefore, behold I will proceed
to do a marvellous work among this people, even a marvellous work
and a wonder: for the wisdom of their wise men shall perish, and
the understanding of their prudent men shall be hid" (Isa 29:13,14;
Matt 15:7-9; Mark 7:6,7).[6] Thus I conclude this first thing,
namely, that God is called our dread and fear.
I shall now come to the second thing, to wit, to the rule and
director of our fear.
SECOND. But again, this word FEAR is sometimes to be taken for THE
WORD, the written Word of God; for that also is, and ought to be,
the rule and director of our fear. So David calls it in the nineteenth
Psalm: "the fear of the Lord," saith he, "is clean, enduring for
ever." The fear of the Lord, that is, the Word of the Lord, the
written word; for that which he calleth in this place the fear
of the Lord, even in the same place he calleth the law, statutes,
commandments, and judgments of God. "The law of the Lord is perfect,
converting the soul: the testimony of the Lord is sure, making
wise the simple: the statutes of the Lord are right, rejoicing the
heart: the commandment of the Lord is pure, enlightening the eyes:
the fear of the Lord is clean, enduring for ever: the judgments of
the Lord are true and righteous altogether." All these words have
respect to the same thing, to wit, to the Word of God, jointly
designing the glory of it. Among which phrases, as you see, this
is one, "The fear of the Lord is clean, enduring for ever." This
written Word is therefore the object of a Christian's fear. This
is that also which David intended when he said, "Come, ye children,
hearken unto me, I will teach you the fear of the Lord" (Psa
34:11). I will teach you the fear, that is, I will teach you the
commandments, statutes, and judgments of the Lord, even as Moses
commanded the children of Israel--"Thou shalt teach them diligently
unto thy children, and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in
thine house, and when thou walkest by the way, and when thou liest
down, and when thou risest up" (Deut 6:4-7).
That also in the eleventh of Isaiah intends the same, where the
Father saith of the Son, that he shall be of quick understanding
in the fear of the Lord; that he may judge and smite the earth with
the rod of his mouth. This rod in the text is none other but the
fear, the Word of the Lord; for he was to be of a quick understanding,
that he might smite, that is, execute it according to the will of
his Father, upon and among the children of men. Now this, as I said,
is called the fear of the Lord, because it is called the rule and
director of our fear. For we know not how to fear the Lord in a
saving way without its guidance and direction. As it is said of the
priest that was sent back from the captivity to Samaria to teach
the people to fear the Lord, so it is said concerning the written
Word; it is given to us, and left among us, that we may read
therein all the days of our life, and learn to fear the Lord (Deut
6:1-3,24, 10:12, 17:19). And here it is that, trembling at the
Word of God, is even by God himself not only taken notice of, but
counted as laudable and praiseworthy, as is evident in the case of
Josiah (2 Chron 34:26,27). Such also are the approved of God, let
them be condemned by whomsoever: "Hear the word of the Lord, ye
that tremble at his word; Your brethren that hated you, that cast
you out for my name's sake, said, Let the Lord be glorified; but
he shall appear to your joy, and they shall be ashamed" (Isa 66:5).
First. As I have already hinted, from the author of them, they are
the words of God. Therefore you have Moses and the prophets, when
they came to deliver their errand, their message to the people,
still saying, "Hear the word of the Lord," "Thus saith the Lord,"
and the like. So when Ezekiel was sent to the house of Israel, in
their state of religion, thus was he bid to say unto them, "Thus
saith the Lord God"; "Thus saith the Lord God" (Eze 2:4, 3:11).
This is the honour and majesty, then, that God hath put upon his
written Word, and thus he hath done even of purpose, that we might
make them the rule and directory of our fear, and that we might
stand in awe of, and tremble at them. When Habakkuk heard the word
of the Lord, his belly trembled, and rottenness entered into his
bones. "I trembled in myself," said he, "that I might rest in the
day of trouble" (Hab 3:16). The word of a king is as the roaring
of a lion; where the word of a king is, there is power. What is it,
then, when God, the great God, shall roar out of Zion, and utter
his voice from Jerusalem, whose voice shakes not only the earth,
but also heaven? How doth holy David set it forth; "The voice of
the Lord is powerful, the voice of the Lord is full of majesty,"
&c. (Psa 29).
1. Know that those that have no due regard to the Word of the Lord,
and that make it not their dread and their fear, but the rule of
their life is the lust of their flesh, the desire of their eyes,
and the pride of life, are sorely rebuked by this doctrine, and
are counted the fools of the world; for "lo, they have rejected
the word of the Lord, and what wisdom is in them?" (Jer 8:9). That
there are such a people is evident, not only by their irregular
lives, but by the manifest testimony of the Word. "As for the word
of the Lord," said they to Jeremiah, "that thou hast spoken to us
in the name of the Lord, we will not hearken unto thee, but we will
certainly do whatsoever thing goeth forth out of our own mouth"
(Jer 44:16). Was this only the temper of wicked men then? Is not
the same spirit of rebellion amongst us in our days? Doubtless
there is; for there is no new thing--"The thing that hath been, it
is that which shall be, and that which is done is that which shall
be done; and there is no new thing under the sun" (Eccl 1:9).
Therefore, as it was then, so it is with many in this day.
2. Are the words of God called by the name of the fear of the
Lord? Are they so dreadful in their receipt and sentence? Then
this rebukes them that esteem the words and things of men more than
the words of God, as those do who are drawn from their respect of,
and obedience to, the Word of God, by the pleasures or threats of
men. Some there be who verily will acknowledge the authority of
the Word, yet will not stoop their souls thereto. Such, whatever
they think of themselves, are judged by Christ to be ashamed of the
Word; wherefore their state is damnable as the other. "Whosoever,"
saith he, "shall be ashamed of me and of my words, in this adulterous
and sinful generation, of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed,
when he cometh in the glory of the Father, with the holy angels"
(Mark 8:38).
3. And if these things be so, what will become of those that mock
at, and professedly contemn, the words of God, making them as a
thing ridiculous, and not to be regarded? Shall they prosper that do
such things? From the promises it is concluded that their judgment
now of a long time slumbereth not, and when it comes, it will devour
them without remedy (2 Chron 36:15). If God, I say, hath put that
reverence upon his Word as to call it the fear of the Lord, what will
become of them that do what they can to overthrow its authority,
by denying it to be his Word, and by raising cavils against
its authority? Such stumble, indeed, at the Word, being appointed
thereunto, but it shall judge them in the last day (1 Peter 2:8;
John 12:48). But thus much for this.
Having thus spoken of the object and rule of our fear, I should come
now to speak of fear as it is a grace of the Spirit of God in the
hearts of his people; but before I do that, I shall show you that
there are divers sorts of fear besides. For man being a reasonable
creature, and having even by nature a certain knowledge of God,
hath also naturally something of some kind of fear of God at times,
which, although it be not that which is intended in the text,
yet ought to be spoken to, that that which is not right may be
distinguished from that that is.
FIRST. To the first, to wit, that there is a fear of God that flows
even from the light of nature. A people may be said to do things
in a fear of God, when they act one towards another in things
reasonable, and honest betwixt man and man, not doing that to others
they would not have done to themselves. This is that fear of God
which Abraham thought the Philistines had destroyed in themselves,
when he said of his wife to Abimelech, "She is my sister." For when
Abimelech asked Abraham why he said of his wife, She is my sister;
he replied, saying, "I thought surely the fear of God is not in
this place, and they will slay me for my wife's sake" (Gen 20:11).
I thought verily that in this place men had stifled and choked that
light of nature that is in them, at least so far forth as not to
suffer it to put them in fear, when their lusts were powerful in
them to accomplish their ends on the object that was present before
them. But this I will pass by, and come to the second thing, namely--
SECOND. To show that there is a fear of God that flows from some
of his dispensations to men, which yet is neither universal nor
saving. This fear, when opposed to that which is saving, may be
called an ungodly fear of God. I shall describe it by these several
particulars that follow--
Now this fear is also, as you here see, called anguish, and in
another place, an hornet; for it, and the soul that it falls upon,
do greet each other, as boys and bees do. The hornet puts men in
fear, not so as to bring the heart into a sweet compliance with
his terror, but so as to stir up the spirit into acts of opposition
and resistance, yet withal they flee before it. "I will send hornets
before thee, which shall drive out the Hivite," &c. (Exo 23:28).
Now this fear, whether it be wrought by misapprehending of the
judgments of God, as in the Israelites, or otherwise as in the
Canaanites, yet ungodliness is the effect thereof, and therefore
I call it an ungodly fear of God, for it stirreth up murmurings,
discontents, and heart-risings against God, while he with his
dispensations is dealing with them.
Second. There is a fear of God that driveth a man away from God--I
speak not now of the atheist, nor of the pleasurable sinner, nor
yet of these, and that fear that I spoke of just now--I speak now
of such who through a sense of sin and of God's justice fly from
him of a slavish ungodly fear. This ungodly fear was that which
possessed Adam's heart in the day that he did eat of the tree
concerning which the Lord has said unto him, "In the day that thou
eatest thereof, thou shalt surely die." For then was he possessed
with such a fear of God as made him seek to hide himself from his
presence. "I heard," said he, "thy voice in the garden, and I was
afraid, because I was naked; and I hid myself" (Gen 3:10). Mind it,
he had a fear of God, but it was not godly. It was not that that
made him afterwards submit himself unto him; for that would have
kept him from not departing from him, or else have brought him to
him again, with bowed, broken, and contrite spirit. But this fear,
as the rest of his sin, managed his departing from his God, and
pursued him to provoke him still so to do; by it he kept himself
from God, by it his whole man was carried away from him. I call
it ungodly fear, because it begat in him ungodly apprehensions of
his Maker; because it confined Adam's conscience to the sense of
justice only, and consequently to despair.
The same fear also possessed the children of Israel when they heard
the law delivered to them on Mount Sinai; as is evident, for it
made them that they could neither abide his presence nor hear his
word. It drove them back from the mountain. It made them, saith
the apostle to the Hebrews, that "they could not endure that which
was commanded" (Heb 12:20). Wherefore this fear Moses rebukes,
and forbids their giving way thereto. "Fear not," said he; but had
that fear been godly, he would have encouraged it, and not forbid
and rebuke it as he did. "Fear not," said he, "for God is come to
prove you"; they thought otherwise. "God," saith he, "is come to
prove you, and that his fear may be before your faces." Therefore
that fear that already had taken possession of them, was not the
fear of God, but a fear that was of Satan, of their own misjudging
hearts, and so a fear that was ungodly (Exo 20:18-20). Mark you,
here is a fear and a fear, a fear forbidden, and a fear commended;
a fear forbidden, because it engendered their hearts to bondage,
and to ungodly thoughts of God and of his word; it made them that
they could not desire to hear God speak to them any more (vv 19-21).
Many also at this day are possessed with this ungodly fear; and
you may know them by this,--they cannot abide conviction for sin,
and if at any time the word of the law, by the preaching of the
word, comes near them, they will not abide that preacher, nor such
kind of sermons any more. They are, as they deem, best at ease,
when furthest off of God, and of the power of his word. The word
preached brings God nearer to them than they desire he should come,
because whenever God comes near, their sins by him are manifest, and
so is the judgment too that to them is due. Now these not having
faith in the mercy of God through Christ, nor that grace that
tendeth to bring them to him, they cannot but think of God amiss,
and their so thinking of him makes them say unto him, "Depart
from us, for we desire not the knowledge of thy ways" (Job 21:14).
Wherefore their wrong thoughts of God beget in them this ungodly fear;
and again, this ungodly fear doth maintain in them the continuance
of these wrong and unworthy thoughts of God, and therefore, through
that devilish service wherewith they strengthen one another, the
sinner, without a miracle of grace prevents him, is drowned in
destruction and perdition.
It was this ungodly fear of God that carried Cain from the presence
of God into the land of Nod, and that put him there upon any carnal
worldly business, if perhaps he might by so doing stifle convictions
of the majesty and justice of God against his sin, and so live
the rest of his vain life in the more sinful security and fleshly
ease. This ungodly fear is that also which Samuel perceived at the
people's apprehension of their sin, to begin to get hold of their
hearts; wherefore he, as Moses before him, quickly forbids their
entertaining of it. "Fear not," said he, "ye have done all this
wickedness, yet turn not aside from following the Lord." For to
turn them aside from following of him, was the natural tendency of
this fear. "But fear not," said he, that is, with that fear that
tendeth to turn you aside. Now, I say, the matter that this fear
worketh upon, as in Adam, and the Israelites mentioned before, was
their sin. You have sinned, says he, that is true, yet turn not
aside, yet fear not with that fear that would make you so do (1 Sam
12:20). Note by the way, sinner, that when the greatness of thy
sins, being apprehended by thee, shall work in thee that fear of
God, as shall incline thy heart to fly from him, thou art possessed
with a fear of God that is ungodly, yea, so ungodly, that not any
of thy sins for heinousness may be compared therewith, as might be
made manifest in many particulars, but Samuel having rebuked this
fear, presently sets before the people another, to wit, the true
fear of God; "fear the Lord," says he, "serve him--with all your
heart" (v 24). And he giveth them this encouragement so to do, "for
the Lord will not forsake his people." This ungodly fear is that
which you read of in Isaiah 2, and in many other places, and God's
people should shun it, as they would shun the devil, because its
natural tendency is to forward the destruction of the soul in which
it has taken possession.[8]
Fifth. This ungodly fear of God is that which will put men upon
adding to the revealed will of God their own inventions, and their
own performances of them, as a means to pacify the anger of God.
For the truth is, where this ungodly fear reigneth, there is no end
of law and duty. When those that you read of in the book of Kings
were destroyed by the lions, because they had set up idolatry in
the land of Israel, they sent for a priest from Babylon that might
teach them the manner of the God of the land; but behold when they
knew it, being taught it by the priest, yet their fear would not
suffer them to be content with that worship only. "They feared
the Lord," saith the text, "and served their own gods." And again,
"So these nations feared the Lord, and served their graven images"
(2 Kings 17). It was this fear also that put the Pharisees upon
inventing so many traditions, as the washing of cups, and beds,
and tables, and basins, with abundance of such other like gear,[10]
none knows the many dangers that an ungodly fear of God will drive
a man into (Mark 7). How has it racked and tortured the Papists
for hundreds of years together! for what else is the cause but this
ungodly fear, at least in the most simple and harmless of them,
of their penances, as creeping to the cross, going barefoot on
pilgrimage, whipping themselves, wearing of sackcloth, saying so
many Pater-nosters, so many Ave-marias, making so many confessions
to the priest, giving so much money for pardons, and abundance of
other the like, but this ungodly fear of God? For could they be
brought to believe this doctrine, that Christ was delivered for our
offences, and raised again for our justification, and to apply it
by faith with godly boldness to their own souls, this fear would
vanish, and so consequently all those things with which they so
needlessly and unprofitably afflicted themselves, offend God, and
grieve his people. Therefore, gentle reader, although my text doth
bid that indeed thou shouldest fear God, yet it includeth not, nor
accepteth of any fear; no, not of any [or every] fear of God. For
there is, as you see, a fear of God that is ungodly, and that is to
be shunned as their sin. Wherefore thy wisdom and thy care should
be, to see and prove thy fear to be godly, which shall be the next
thing that I shall take in hand.
Third. I now come to show you what this fear doth in the soul.
Now, although this godly fear is not to last always with us, as I
shall further show you anon, yet it greatly differs from that which
is wholly ungodly of itself, both because of the author, and also
of the effects of it. Of the author I have told you before; I now
shall tell you what it doth.
1. This fear makes a man judge himself for sin, and to fall down
before God with a broken mind under this judgment; the which is
pleasing to God, because the sinner by so doing justifies God in
his saying, and clears him in his judgment (Psa 51:1-4).
2. As this fear makes a man judge himself, and cast himself down
at God's foot, so it makes him condole and bewail his misery before
him, which is also well-pleasing in his sight: "I have surely heard
Ephraim bemoaning himself," saying, "Thou hast chastised me, and
I was chastised, as a bullock unaccustomed to the yoke," &c. (Jer
31:18,19).
3. This fear makes a man lie at God's foot, and puts his mouth in
the dust, if so be there may be hope. This also is well-pleasing
to God, because now is the sinner as nothing, and in his own eyes
less than nothing, as to any good or desert: "He sitteth alone
and keepeth silence," because he hath now this yoke upon him; "he
putteth his mouth in the dust, if so be there may be hope" (Lam
3:28,29).
4. This fear puts a man upon crying to God for mercy, and that
in most humble manner; now he sensibly cries, now he dejectedly
cries, now he feels and cries, now he smarts and criest out, "God
be merciful to me a sinner" (Luke 18:13).
5. This fear makes a man that he cannot accept of that for support
and succour which others that are destitute thereof will take up,
and be contented with. This man must be washed by God himself, and
cleansed from his sin by God himself (Psa 51).
6. Therefore this fear goes not away until the Spirit of God doth
change his ministration as to this particular, in leaving off
to work now by the law, as afore, and coming to the soul with the
sweet word of promise of life and salvation by Jesus Christ. Thus
far this fear is godly, that is, until Christ by the Spirit in the
gospel is revealed and made over unto us, and no longer.
Thus far this fear is godly, and the reason why it is godly is
because the groundwork of it is good. I told you before what this
fear is; namely, it is the fear of damnation. Now the ground for
this fear is good, as is manifest by these particulars. 1. The soul
feareth damnation, and that rightly, because it is in its sins.
2. The soul feareth damnation rightly, because it hath not faith
in Christ, but is at present under the law. 3. The soul feareth
damnation rightly now, because by sin, the law, and for want of
faith, the wrath of God abideth on it. But now, although thus far
this fear of God is good and godly, yet after Christ by the Spirit
in the word of the gospel is revealed to us, and we made to accept
of him as so revealed and offered to us by a true and living faith;
this fear, to wit, of damnation, is no longer good, but ungodly.
Nor doth the Spirit of God ever work it in us again. Now we do not
receive the spirit of bondage again to fear, that is to say, to
fear damnation, but we have received the spirit of adoption, whereby
we cry, Father, Father. But I would not be mistaken, when I say,
that this fear is no longer godly. I do not mean with reference to
the essence and habit of it, for I believe it is the same in the
seed which shall afterwards grow up to a higher degree, and into
a more sweet and gospel current and manner of working, but I mean
reference to this act of fearing damnation, I say it shall never
by the Spirit be managed to that work; it shall never bring forth
that fruit more. And my reasons are,
[Reasons why the Spirit of God cannot work this ungodly fear.]
3. The state therefore of the sinner being changed, and that, too,
by the Spirit's changing his dispensation, leaving off to be now
as a spirit of bondage to put us in fear, and coming to our heart
as the spirit of adoption to make us cry, Father, Father, he cannot
go back to his first work again; for if so, then he must gratify,
yea, and also ratify, that profane and popish doctrine, forgiven
to-day, unforgiven to-morrow--a child of God to-day, a child of
hell to-morrow; but what saith the Scriptures? "Now therefore ye
are no more strangers and foreigners, but fellow-citizens with the
saints, and of the household of God; and are built upon the foundation
of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the chief
corner stone; in whom all the building fitly framed together groweth
unto an holy temple in the Lord; in whom ye also are builded together
for an habitation of God through the Spirit" (Eph 2:19-22).
Answ. All this may be granted, and yet nevertheless what I have
said will abide a truth; for I have not said that after the spirit
of adoption is come, a Christian shall not again be in as great fears,
for he may have worse than he had at first; but I say, that after
the spirit of adoption is come, the spirit of bondage, as such, is
sent of God no more, to put us into those fears. For, mark, for we
"have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear." Let the
word be true, whatever thy experience is. Dost thou not understand
me?
After the Spirit of God has told me, and also helped me to believe
it, that the Lord for Christ's sake hath forgiven mine iniquities:
he tells me no more that they are not forgiven. After the Spirit
of God has helped me, by Christ, to call God my Father, he tells
me no more that the devil is my father. After he hath told me that
I am not under the law, but under grace, he tells me no more that
I am not under grace, but under the law, and bound over by it, for
my sins, to the wrath and judgment of God; but this is the fear that
the Spirit, as a spirit of bondage, worketh in the soul at first.
Answ. Yes.
And he must do the second, if--after he hath gone through the first
work on us as a spirit of bondage, to the second as a spirit of
adoption--he should overthrow as a spirit of bondage again what
before he had built as a spirit of adoption.
And the third must therefore needs follow, that is, he overthroweth
the testimony of his servants; for they have said, that now we
receive the spirit of bondage again to fear no more; that is, after
that we by the Holy Ghost are enabled to call God Father, Father.
2. This is evident also, because the covenant in which now the soul
is interested abideth, and is everlasting, not upon the supposition
of my obedience, but upon the unchangeable purpose of God, and the
efficacy of the obedience of Christ, whose blood also hath confirmed
it. It is "ordered in all things, and sure," said David; and this,
said he, "is all my salvation" (2 Sam 23:5). The covenant then is
everlasting in itself, being established upon so good a foundation,
and therefore standeth in itself everlastingly bent for the good
of them that are involved in it. Hear the tenor of the covenant,
and God's attesting of the truth thereof--"This is the covenant
that I will make with the house of Israel, after those days, saith
the Lord; I will put my laws into their mind, and write them in
their hearts; and I will be to them a God, and they shall be to
me a people; and they shall not teach every man his neighbour, and
every man his brother, saying, Know the Lord; for all shall know
me, from the least to the greatest; for I will be merciful to
their unrighteousness, and their sins and their iniquities I will
remember no more" (Heb 8:10-12). Now if God will do thus unto those
that he hath comprised in his everlasting covenant of grace, then
he will remember their sins no more, that is, unto condemnation--for
so it is that he doth forget them; then cannot the Holy Ghost, who
also is one with the Father and the Son, come to us again, even
after we are possessed with these glorious fruits of this covenant,
as a spirit of bondage, to put us in fear of damnation.
Answ. The text saith the contrary; for we "have not received the
spirit of bondage again to fear." Nor is God put to it for want of
wisdom, to say and unsay, do and undo, or else he cannot do good.
When we are sons, and have received the adoption of children, he
doth not use to send the spirit after that to tell us we are slaves
and heirs of damnation, also that we are without Christ, without
the promise, without grace, and without God in the world; and yet
this he must do if it comes to us after we have received him as a
spirit of adoption, and put us, as a spirit of bondage, in fear as
before.
[This ungodly fear wrought by the spirit of the devil.]
Besides, the direct tendency of the fear that the Spirit of God,
as a spirit of bondage, worketh in the soul, is to cause us to come
repenting home to God by Jesus Christ, but these latter fears tend
directly to make a man, he having first denied the work of God, as
he will, if he falleth in with them, to run quite away from God, and
from his grace to him in Christ, as will evidently appear if thou
givest but a plain and honest answer to these questions following.
[This fear driveth a man from God.]
Quest. 1. Do not these fears make thee question whether there was
ever a work of grace wrought in thy soul? Answ. Yes, verily, that
they do. Quest. 2. Do not these fears make thee question whether
ever thy first fears were wrought by the Holy Spirit of God? Answ.
Yes, verily, that they do. Quest. 3. Do not these fears make thee
question whether ever thou hast had, indeed, any true comfort from
the Word and Spirit of God? Answ. Yes, verily, that they do. Quest.
4. Dost thou not find intermixed with these fears plain assertions
that thy first comforts were either from thy fancy, or from the
devil, and a fruit of his delusions? Answ. Yes, verily, that I do.
Quest. 5. Do not these fears weaken thy heart in prayer? Answ.
Yes, that they do. Quest. 6. Do not these fears keep thee back
from laying hold of the promise of salvation by Jesus Christ? Answ.
Yes; for I think if I were deceived before, if I were comforted by
a spirit of delusion before, why may it not be so again? so I am
afraid to take hold of the promise. Quest. 7. Do not these fears
tend to the hardening of thy heart, and to the making of thee
desperate? Answ. Yes, verily, that they do. Quest. 8. Do not these
fears hinder thee from profiting in hearing or reading of the Word?
Answ. Yes, verily, for still whatever I hear or read, I think
nothing that is good belongs to me. Quest. 9. Do not these fears
tend to the stirring up of blasphemies in thy heart against God?
Answ. Yes, to the almost distracting of me. Quest. 10. Do not these
fears make thee sometimes think, that it is in vain for thee to
wait upon the Lord any longer? Answ. Yes, verily; and I have many
times almost come to this conclusion, that I will read, pray, hear,
company with God's people, or the like, no longer.
Answ. So far forth as such wickedness was in thy heart, so far did
the devil and thine own heart seek to drive thee to despair, and
drown thee there; but thou hast forgot the question; the question
is not whether then thou wast troubled with such iniquities, but
whether thy fears of damnation at that time were not just and good,
because grounded upon thy present condition, which was, for that
thou wast out of Christ, in thy sins, and under the curse of the
law; and whether now, since the spirit of adoption is come unto thee,
and hath thee, and hath done that for thee as hath been mentioned;
I say, whether thou oughtest for anything whatsoever to give way
to the same fear, from the same ground of damnation; it is evident
thou oughtest not, because the ground, the cause, is removed.
That sin dissolveth not the relation of Father and son is further
evident--"When the fulness of the time was come, God sent forth
his Son, made of a woman, made under the law, to redeem them that
were under the law, that we might receive the adoption of sons.
And because ye are sons, God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son
into your hearts, crying, [Abba, or] Father, Father." Now mark,
"wherefore thou art no more a servant"; that is, no more under the
law of death and damnation, "but a son; and if a son, then an heir
of God through Christ" (Gal 4:4-7).
Know then that thy sin, after thou hast received the spirit of adoption
to cry unto God, Father, Father, is counted the transgression of a
child, not of a slave, and that all that happeneth to thee for that
transgression is but the chastisement of a father--and "what son is
he whom the father chasteneth not?" It is worth your observation,
that the Holy Ghost checks those who, under their chastisements
for sin, forget to call God their Father--"Ye have," said Paul,
"forgotten the exhortation which speaketh unto you as unto children,
My son, despise not thou the chastening of the Lord, nor faint
when thou art rebuked of him." Yea, observe yet further, that God's
chastising of his children for their sin, is a a sign of grace and
love, and not of his wrath, and thy damnation; therefore now there
is no ground for the aforesaid fear--"For whom the Lord loveth he
chasteneth, and scourgeth every son whom he receiveth" (Heb 12).
Now, if God would not have those that have received the Spirit of
the Son, however he chastises them, to forget the relation that by
the adoption of sons they stand in to God, if he checks them that
do forget it, when his rod is upon their backs for sin, then it
is evident that those fears that thou hast under a colour of the
coming again of the Spirit, as a spirit of bondage, to put thee
in fear of eternal damnation, is nothing else but Satan disguised,
the better to play his pranks upon thee.
I will yet give you two or three instances more, wherein it will be
manifest that whatever happeneth to thee, I mean as a chastisement
for sin, after the spirit of adoption is come, thou oughtest to hold
fast by faith the relation of Father and son. The people spoken
of by Moses are said to have lightly esteemed the rock of their
salvation, which rock is Jesus Christ, and that is a grievous sin
indeed, yet, saith he, "Is not God thy Father that hath bought
thee?" and then puts them upon considering the days of old (Deut
32:6). They in the prophet Jeremiah had played the harlot with
many lovers, and done evil things as they could; and, as another
scripture hath it, gone a-whoring from under their God, yet God calls
to them by the prophet, saying, "Wilt thou not from this time cry
unto me, My Father, thou art the guide of my youth?" (Jer 3:4).
Remember also that eminent text made mention of in 1 Samuel 12:20,
"Fear not; ye have done all this wickedness"; and labour to maintain
faith in thy soul, of thy being a child, it being true that thou hast
received the spirit of adoption before, and so that thou oughtest
not to fall under thy first fears, because the ground is taken
away, of thy eternal damnation.
Now, let not any, from what hath been said, take courage to live
loose lives, under a supposition that once in Christ, and ever
in Christ, and the covenant cannot be broken, nor the relation of
Father and child dissolved; for they that do so, it is evident,
have not known what it is to receive the spirit of adoption. It is
the spirit of the devil in his own hue that suggesteth this unto
them, and that prevaileth with them to do so. Shall we do evil that
good may come? shall we sin that grace may abound? or shall we be
base in life because God by grace hath secured us from wrath to
come? God forbid; these conclusions betoken one void of the fear
of God indeed, and of the spirit of adoption too. For what son is
he, that because the father cannot break the relation, nor suffer
sin to do it--that is, betwixt the Father and him--that will
therefore say, I will live altogether after my own lusts, I will
labour to be a continual grief to my Father?
Yet lest the devil (for some are "not ignorant of his devices" ),
should get an advantage against some of the sons, to draw them away
from the filial fear of their Father, let me here, to prevent such
temptations, present such with these following considerations.
First. Though God cannot, will not, dissolve the relation which
the spirit of adoption hath made betwixt the Father and the Son,
for any sins that such do commit, yet he can, and often doth, take
away from them the comfort of their adoption, not suffering children
while sinning to have the sweet and comfortable sense thereof on
their hearts. He can tell how to let snares be round about them,
and sudden fear trouble them. He can tell how to send darkness that
they may not see, and to let abundance of waters cover them (Job
22:10,11).
Second. God can tell how to hide his face from them, and so to
afflict them with that dispensation, that it shall not be in the
power of all the world to comfort them. "When he hideth his face,
who then can behold him?" (Job 23:8,9, 34:29).
Third. God can tell how to make thee again to possess the sins
that he long since hath pardoned, and that in such wise that things
shall be bitter to thy soul. "Thou writest bitter things against
me," says Job, "and makest me to possess the iniquities of my
youth." By this also he once made David groan and pray against it
as an insupportable affliction (Job 13:26; Psa 25:7).
Fourth. God can lay thee in the dungeon in chains, and roll a stone
upon thee, he can make thy feet fast in the stocks, and make thee
a gazing-stock to men and angels (Lam 3:7,53,55; Job 13:27; Nahum
3:6).
Fifth. God can tell how to cause to cease the sweet operations
and blessed influences of his grace in thy soul, and to make those
gospel showers that formerly thou hast enjoyed to become now to
thee nothing but powder and dust (Psa 51; Deut 28:24).
Sixth. God can tell how to fight against thee "with the sword of
his mouth," and to make thee a butt for his arrows; and this is a
dispensation most dreadful (Rev 2:16; Job 6:4; Psa 38:2-5).
Seventh. God can tell how so to bow thee down with guilt and distress
that thou shalt in no wise be able to lift up thy head (Psa 40:12).
Eighth. God can tell how to break thy bones, and to make thee by
reason of that to live in continual anguish of spirit: yea, he can
send a fire into thy bones that shall burn, and none shall quench
it (Psa 51:8; Lam 3:4, 1:13; Psa 102:3; Job 30:30).
Ninth. God can tell how to lay thee aside, and make no use of thee
as to any work for him in thy generation. He can throw thee aside
"as a broken vessel" (Psa 31:12; Eze 44:10-13).
Tenth. God can tell how to kill thee, and to take thee away from
the earth for thy sins (1 Cor 11:29-32).
Eleventh. God can tell how to plague thee in thy death, with great
plagues, and of long continuance (Psa 78:45; Deut 28).
Twelfth. What shall I say? God can tell how to let Satan loose upon
thee; when thou liest a dying he can license him then to assault
thee with great temptations, he can tell how to make thee possess
the guilt of all thy unkindness towards him, and that when thou,
as I said, art going out of the world, he can cause that thy life
shall be in continual doubt before thee, and not suffer thee to
take any comfort day nor night; yea, he can drive thee even to a
madness with his chastisements for thy folly, and yet all shall be
done by him to thee, as a father chastiseth his son (Deut 28:65-67).
Thirteenth. Further, God can tell how to tumble thee from off thy
deathbed in a cloud, he can let thee die in the dark; when thou art
dying thou shalt not know whither thou art going, to wit, whether
to heaven or to hell. Yea, he can tell how to let thee seem to come
short of life, both in thine own eyes, and also in the eyes of them
that behold thee. "Let us therefore fear," says the apostle,--though
not with slavish, yet with filial fear--"lest a promise being left
us of entering into his rest, any of you should seem to come short
of it" (Heb 4:1).
Now all this, and much more, can God do to his as a Father by his
rod and fatherly rebukes; ah, who know but those that are under
them, what terrors, fears, distresses, and amazements God can bring
his people into; he can put them into a furnace, a fire, and no
tongue can tell what, so unsearchable and fearful are his fatherly
chastisements, and yet never give them the spirit of bondage again
to fear. Therefore, if thou art a son, take heed of sin, lest all
these things overtake thee, and come upon thee.
Object. But I have sinned, and am under this high and mighty hand
of God.
Answ. Then thou knowest what I say is true, but yet take heed of
hearkening unto such temptations as would make thee believe thou
art out of Christ, under the law, and in a state of damnation; and
take heed also, that thou dost not conclude that the author of
these fears is the Spirit of God come to thee again as a spirit
of bondage, to put thee into such fears, lest unawares to thyself
thou dost defy the devil, dishonour thy Father, overthrow good
doctrine, and bring thyself into a double temptation.
Object. But if God deals thus with a man, how can he otherwise think
but that he is a reprobate, a graceless, Christless, and faithless
one?
Answ. Nay, but why dost thou tempt the Lord thy God? Why dost
thou sin and provoke the eyes of his glory? Why "doth a living man
complain, a man for the punishment of his sins?" (Lam 3:39). He
doth not willingly afflict nor grieve the children of men; but if
thou sinnest, though God should save thy soul, as he will if thou
art an adopted son of God, yet he will make thee know that sin is
sin, and his rod that he will chastise thee with, if need be, shall
be made of scorpions; read the whole book of the Lamentations; read
Job's and David's complaints; yea, read what happened to his Son,
his well-beloved, and that when he did but stand in the room of
sinners, being in himself altogether innocent, and then consider,
O thou sinning child of God, if it is any injustice in God, yea, if
it be not necessary, that thou shouldest be chastised for thy sin.
But then, I say, when the hand of God is upon thee, how grievous soever
it be, take heed, and beware that thou give not way to thy first
fears, lest, as I said before, thou addest to thine affliction; and
to help thee here, let me give you a few instances of the carriages
of some of the saints under some of the most heavy afflictions that
they have met with for sin.
Second. David complained that God had broken his bones, that he
had set his face against his sins, and had taken from him the joy
of his salvation: yet even at this time he saith, "O God, thou God
of my salvation" (Psa 51:8,9,12,14).
Third. Heman complained that his soul was full of troubles, that
God had laid him in the lowest pit, that he had put his acquaintance
far from him, and was casting off his soul, and had hid his face
from him. That he was afflicted from his youth up, and ready to die
with trouble: he saith, moreover, that the fierce wrath of God went
over him, that his terrors had cut him off; yea, that by reason
of them he was distracted; and yet, even before he maketh any of
these complaints, he takes fast hold of God as his, saying, "O Lord
God of my salvation" (Psa 88).
Fourth. The church in the Lamentations complains that the Lord had
afflicted her for her transgressions, and that in the day of his
fierce anger; also that he had trodden under foot her mighty men,
and that he had called the heathen against her; she says, that he
had covered her with a cloud in his anger, that he was an enemy,
and that he had hung a chain upon her; she adds, moreover, that he
had shut out her prayer, broken her teeth with gravel stones, and
covered her with ashes, and in conclusion, that he had utterly
rejected her. But what doth she do under all this trial? doth she
give up her faith and hope, and return to that fear that begot the
first bondage? No: "The Lord is my portion, saith my soul, therefore
will I hope in him"; yea, she adds, "O Lord, thou hast pleaded the
causes of my soul, thou hast redeemed my life" (Lam 1:5, 2:1,2,5,
3:7,8,16, 5:22, 3:24,31,58).
These things show, that God's people even after they have received
the spirit of adoption, have fell foully into sin, and have been
bitterly chastised for it; and also, that when the rod was most
smart upon them, they made great conscience of giving way to their
first fears wherewith they were made afraid by the Spirit as it
wrought as a spirit of bondage; for indeed there is no such thing
as the coming of the spirit of bondage to put us in fear the second
time, as such, that is, after he is come as the spirit of adoption
to the soul.
1. Quest. But since it is as you say, how doth the devil, after
the spirit of adoption is come, work the child of God into those
fears of being out of Christ, not forgiven, and so an heir of
damnation again?
Quest. But would you not have the people of God stand in fear of
his rod, and be afraid of his judgments?
Answ. Yes, and the more they are rightly afraid of them, the less
and the seldomer will they come under them; for it is want of fear
that brings us into sin, and it is sin that brings us into these
afflictions. But I would not have them fear with the fear of slaves;
for that will add no strength against sin; but I would have them
fear with the reverential fear of sons, and that is the way to
depart from evil.
Now God would have us thus fear his rod, because he is resolved
to chastise us therewith, if so be we sin against him, as I have
already showed; for although God's bowels turn within him, even
while he is threatening his people, yet if we sin, he will lay on
the rod so hard as to make us cry, "Woe unto us that we have sinned"
(Lam 5:16); and therefore, as I said, we should be afraid of his
judgments, yet only as afore is provided as of the rod, wrath, and
judgment of a Father.
Quest. But have you yet any other considerations to move us to fear
God with child-like fear?
Answ. I will in this place give you five. 1. Consider that God thinks
meet to have it so, and he is wiser in heart than thou; he knows
best how to secure his people from sin, and to that end hath given
them law and commandments to read, that they may learn to fear him
as a Father (Job 37:24; Eccl 3:14; Deut 17:18,19). 2. Consider he
is mighty in power; if he touch but with a fatherly touch, man nor
angel cannot bear it; yea, Christ makes use of that argument, he
"hath power to cast into hell; Fear him" (Luke 12:4,5). 3. Consider
that he is everywhere; thou canst not be out of his sight or
presence; nor out of the reach of his hand. "Fear ye not me? saith
the Lord." "Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not
see him? saith the Lord. Do not I fill heaven and earth? saith the
Lord" (Jer 5:22, 23:24). 4. Consider that he is holy, and cannot
look with liking upon the sins of his own people. Therefore, says
Peter, be "as obedient children, not fashioning yourselves according
to the former lusts in your ignorance, but as he which hath called
you is holy, so be ye holy in all manner of conversation, because
it is written, Be ye holy, for I am holy. And if ye call on the
Father, who without respect of persons judgeth according to every
man's work, pass the time of your sojourning here in fear." 5.
Consider that he is good, and has been good to thee, good in that
he hath singled thee out from others, and saved thee from their
death and hell, though thou perhaps wast worse in thy life than
those that he left when he laid hold on thee. O this should engage
thy heart to fear the Lord all the days of thy life. They "shall
fear the Lord, and his goodness in the latter days" (Hosea 3:5).
And now for the present, I have done with that fear, I mean as to
its first workings, to wit, to put me in fear of damnation, and
shall come, in the next place, to treat
I shall now speak to this fear, which I call a lasting godly fear;
first, by way of explication; by which I shall show, FIRST. How by
the Scripture it is described. SECOND. I shall show you what this
fear flows from. And then, THIRD. I shall also show you what doth
flow from it.
FIRST. For the first of these, to wit, how by the Scripture this
fear is described; and that, First. More generally. Second. More
particularly.
2. This fear is called also the fear of God, not as that which is
ungodly is, nor yet as that may be which is wrought by the Spirit
as a spirit of bondage, but by way of eminency; to wit, as a
dispensation of the grace of the gospel, and as a fruit of eternal
love. "I will put my fear in their hearts, that they shall not
depart from me" (Jer 32:38-41).
4. This grace of fear is that which maketh men excel and go beyond
all men, in the account of God; it is that which beautifies a man,
and prefers him above all other; "Hast thou," says God to Satan,
"considered my servant Job, that there is none like him in the earth,
a perfect and an upright man, one that feareth God, and escheweth
evil?" (Job 1:8, 2:3). Mind it, "There is none like him, none alike
him in the earth." I suppose he means either [that Job was the
only most perfect and upright man] in those parts, or else he was
the man that abounded in the fear of the Lord; none like him to fear
the Lord, he only excelled others with respect to his reverencing
of God, bowing before him, and sincerely complying with his will;
and therefore is counted the excellent man. It is not the knowledge
of the will of God, but our sincere complying therewith, that proveth
we fear the Lord; and it is our so doing that putteth upon us the
note of excelling; hereby appears our perfection, herein is manifest
our uprightness. A perfect and an upright man is one that feareth
God, and that because he escheweth evil. Therefore this grace of
fear is that without which no part or piece of service which we do
to God, can be accepted of him. It is, as I may call it, the salt
of the covenant, which seasoneth the heart, and therefore must not
be lacking there; it is also that which salteth, or seasoneth all
our doings, and therefore must not be lacking in any of them (Lev
2:13).
3. This fear of the Lord is to hate evil. To hate sin and vanity.
Sin and vanity, they are the sweet morsels of the fool, and such
which the carnal appetite of the flesh runs after; and it is only
the virtue that is in the fear of the Lord that maketh the sinner
have an antipathy against it (Job 20:12). "By the fear of the Lord
men depart from evil" (Prov 16:6). That is, men shun, separate
themselves from, and eschew it in its appearances. Wherefore it is
plain that those that love evil, are not possessed with the fear
of God.
There is a generation that will pursue evil, that will take it in,
nourish it, lay it up in their hearts, hide it, and plead for it,
and rejoice to do it. These cannot have in them the fear of the
Lord, for that is to hate it, and to make men depart from it: where
the fear of God and sin is, it will be with the soul, as it was
with Israel when Omri and Tibni strove to reign among them both at
once, one of them must be put to death, they cannot live together
(see 1 Kings 16): sin must down, for the fear of the Lord begetteth
in the soul a hatred against it, an abhorrence of it, therefore
sin must die, that is, as to the affections and lusts of it; for
as Solomon says in another case, "where no wood is, the fire goeth
out." So we may say, where there is a hatred of sin, and where men
depart from it, there it loseth much of its power, waxeth feeble,
and decayeth. Therefore Solomon saith again, "Fear the Lord, and
depart from evil" (Prov 3:7). As who should say, Fear the Lord,
and it will follow that you shall depart from evil: departing from
evil is a natural consequence, a proper effect of the fear of the
Lord where it is. By the fear of the Lord men depart from evil,
that is, in their judgment, will, mind, and affections. Not that
by the fear of the Lord sin is annihilated, or has lost its being
in the soul; there still will those Canaanites be, but they are
hated, loathed, abominated, fought against, prayed against, watched
against, striven against, and mortified by the soul (Rom 7).
4. This fear is called a fountain of life--"The fear of the Lord
is a fountain of life, to depart from the snares of death" (Prov
14:27). It is a fountain, or spring, which so continually supplieth
the soul with variety of considerations of sin, of God, of death,
and life eternal, as to keep the soul in continual exercise of
virtue and in holy contemplation. It is a fountain of life; every
operation thereof, every act and exercise thereof, hath a true and
natural tendency to spiritual and eternal felicity. Wherefore the
wise man saith in another place, "The fear of the Lord tendeth to
life, and he that hath it shall abide satisfied; he shall not be
visited with evil" (Prov 19:23). It tendeth to life; even as of
nature, everything hath a tendency to that which is most natural
to itself; the fire to burn, the water to wet, the stone to fall,
the sun to shine, sin to defile, &c. Thus I say, the fear of the Lord
tendeth to life; the nature of it is to put the soul upon fearing
of God, of closing with Christ, and of walking humbly before him.
"It is a fountain of life, to depart from the snares of death." What
are the snares of death, but sin, the wiles of the devil, &c. From
which the fear of God hath a natural tendency to deliver thee, and
to keep thee in the way that tendeth to life.
SECOND. I come now to the second thing, to wit, to show you what
this fear of God flows from.
First. This fear, this grace of fear, this son-like fear of God,
it flows from the distinguishing love of God to his elect. "I will
be their God," saith he, "and I will put my fear in their hearts."
None other obtain it but those that are enclosed and bound up
in that bundle. Therefore they, in the same place, are said to be
those that are wrapt up in the eternal or everlasting covenant of
God, and so designed to be the people that should be blessed with
this fear. "I will make an everlasting covenant with them" saith
God, "that I will not turn away from them to do them good, but I
will put my fear in their hearts, that they shall not depart from
me" (Jer 32:38-40). This covenant declares unto men that God hath,
in his heart, distinguishing love for some of the children of men;
for he saith he will be their God, that he will not leave them, nor
yet suffer them to depart, to wit, finally, from him. Into these
men's hearts he doth put his fear, this blessed grace, and this
rare and effectual sign of his love, and of their eternal salvation.
Second. This fear flows from a new heart. This fear is not in men
by nature; the fear of devils they may have, as also an ungodly
fear of God; but this fear is not in any but where there dwelleth
a new heart, another fruit and effect of this everlasting covenant,
and of this distinguishing love of God. "A new heart also will I
give them"; a new heart, what a one is that? why, the same prophet
saith in another place, "A heart to fear me," a circumcised one, a
sanctified one (Jer 32:39; Eze 11:19, 36:26). So then, until a man
receive a heart from God, a heart from heaven, a new heart, he
has not this fear of God in him. New wine must not be put into old
bottles, lest the one, to wit, the bottles, mar the wine, or the
wine the bottles; but new wine must have new bottles, and then
both shall be preserved (Matt 9:17). This fear of God must not be,
cannot be found in old hearts; old hearts are not bottles out of
which this fear of God proceeds, but it is from an honest and good
heart, from a new one, from such an one that is also an effect of
the everlasting covenant, and love of God to men.
" I will give them one heart" to fear me; there must in all actions
be heart, and without heart no action is good, nor can there be
faith, love, or fear, from every kind of heart. These must flow
from such an one, whose nature is to produce, and bring forth such
fruit. Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles? so
from a corrupt heart there cannot proceed such fruit as the fear of
God, as to believe in God, and love God (Luke 6:43-45). The heart
naturally is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked;
how then should there flow from such an one the fear of God? It
cannot be. He, therefore, that hath not received at the hands of
God a new heart, cannot fear the Lord.
But, on the contrary, those that do not love good doctrine, that
give not place to the wholesome truths of the God of heaven, revealed
in his Testament, to take place in their souls, but rather despise
it, and the true possessors of it, they fear not God. For, as
I said before, this fear of God, it flows from a sound impression
that the Word of God maketh upon the soul; and therefore,
Fourth. This godly fear floweth from faith; for where the Word
maketh a sound impression on the soul, by that impression is faith
begotten, whence also this fear doth flow. Therefore right hearing
of the Word is called "the hearing of faith" (Gal 3:2). Hence it
is said again, "By faith Noah, being warned of God of things not
seen as yet, moved with fear, prepared an ark to the saving of his
house, by the which he condemned the world, and became heir of the
righteousness which is by faith" (Heb 11:7). The Word, the warning
that he had from God of things not seen as yet, wrought, through
faith therein, that fear of God in his heart that made him prepare
against unseen dangers, and that he might be an inheritor of unseen
happiness. Where, therefore, there is not faith in the Word of God,
there can be none of this fear; and where the Word doth not make
sound impression on the soul, there can be none of this faith. So that
as vices hang together, and have the links of a chain, dependence
one upon another, even so the graces of the Spirit also are the
fruits of one another, and have such dependence on each other,
that the one cannot be without the other. No faith, no fear of God;
devil's faith, devil's fear; saint's faith, saint's fear.
Fifth. This godly fear also floweth from sound repentance for and
from sin; godly sorrow worketh repentance, and godly repentance
produceth this fear--"For behold," says Paul, "this self-same thing,
that ye sorrowed after a godly sort, what carefulness it wrought
in you! yea, what clearing of yourselves! yea, what indignation!
yea, what fear!" (2 Cor 7:10,11). Repentance is the effect of sorrow,
and sorrow is the effect of smart, and smart the effect of faith.
Now, therefore, fear must needs be an effect of, and flow from
repentance. Sinner, do not deceive thyself; if thou art a stranger
to sound repentance, which standeth in sorrow and shame before God
for sin, as also in turning from it, thou hast no fear of God; I
mean none of this godly fear; for that is the fruit of, and floweth
from, sound repentance.
Sixth. This godly fear also flows from a sense of the love and
kindness of God to the soul. Where there is no sense of hope of
the kindness and mercy of God by Jesus Christ, there can be none
of this fear, but rather wrath and despair, which produceth that
fear that is either devilish, or else that which is only wrought
in us by the Spirit, as a spirit of bondage; but these we do
not discourse of now; wherefore the godly fear that now I treat
of, it floweth from some sense or hope of mercy from God by Jesus
Christ--"If thou, Lord," says David, "shouldest mark iniquities,
O Lord, who shall stand? But there is forgiveness with thee that
thou mayest be feared" (Psa 130:3,4). "There is mercy with thee";
this the soul hath sense of, and hope in, and therefore feareth
God. Indeed nothing can lay a stronger obligation upon the heart
to fear God, than sense of, or hope in mercy (Jer 33:8,9). This
begetteth true tenderness of heart, true godly softness of spirit;
this truly endeareth the affections to God; and in this true
tenderness, softness, and endearedness of affection to God, lieth
the very essence of this fear of the Lord, as is manifest by the
fruit of this fear when we shall come to speak of it.
Eighth. This godly fear also flows from a godly remembrance of our
former distresses, when we were distressed with our first fears; for
though our first fears were begotten in us by the Spirit's working
as a spirit of bondage, and so are not always to be entertained
as such, yet even that fear leaveth in us, and upon our spirits,
that sense and relish of our first awakenings and dread, as also
occasioneth and produceth this godly fear. "Take heed," says God,
"and keep thy soul diligently, lest thou forget the things which
thine eyes have seen, and lest they depart from thy heart all the
days of thy life, but teach them thy sons, and thy son's sons."
But what were the things that their eyes had seen, that would so
damnify them should they be forgotten? The answer is, the things
which they saw at Horeb; to wit, the fire, the smoke, the darkness,
the earthquake, their first awakenings by the law, by which they
were brought into a bondage fear; yea, they were to remember this
especially--"Specially," saith he, "the day that thou stoodest before
the Lord thy God in Horeb, when the Lord said unto me, Gather me
the people together, and I will make them hear my words, that they
may learn to fear me all the days that they shall live upon the
earth" (Deut 4:9-11). The remembrance of what we saw, felt, feared,
and trembled under the sense of, when our first fears were upon us,
is that which will produce in our hearts this godly filial fear.
THIRD. Having showed you what godly fear flows from, I come now, I
say, to show you what proceedeth or flows from this godly fear of
God, where it is seated in the heart of man. And,
First. There flows from this godly fear a godly reverence of God.
"He is great," said David, "and greatly to be feared in the assembly
of his saints." God, as I have already showed you, is the proper
object of godly fear; it is his person and majesty that this fear
always causeth the eye of the soul to be upon. "Behold," saith David,
"as the eyes of servants look unto the hand of their masters, and
as the eyes of a maiden unto the hand of her mistress; so our eyes
wait upon the Lord our God, until that he have mercy upon us" (Psa
123:2). Nothing aweth the soul that feareth God so much as doth the
glorious majesty of God. His person is above all things feared by
them; "I fear God," said Joseph (Gen 42:18). That is, more than any
other; I stand in awe of him, he is my dread, he is my fear, I do
all mine actions as in his presence, as in his sight; I reverence
his holy and glorious majesty, doing all things as with fear and
trembling before him. This fear makes them have also a very great
reverence of his Word; for that also, I told you, was the rule of
their fear. "Princes," said David, "persecuted me without a cause,
but my heart standeth in awe," in fear, "of thy word." This grace
of fear, therefore, from it flows reverence of the words of God; of
all laws, that man feareth the word; and no law that is not agreeing
therewith (Psa 119:116). There flows from this godly fear tenderness
of God's glory. This fear, I say, will cause a man to afflict his
soul, when he seeth that by professors dishonour is brought to the
name of God and to his Word. Who would not fear thee, said Jeremiah,
O king of nations, for to thee doth it appertain? He speaks it as
being affected with that dishonour, that by the body of the Jews
was continually brought to his name, his Word, and ways; he also
speaks it of a hearty wish that they once would be otherwise minded.
The same saying in effect hath also John in the Revelation--"Who
shall not fear thee, O Lord," said he, "and glorify thy name?"
(Rev 15:4); clearly concluding that godly fear produceth a godly
tenderness of God's glory in the world, for that appertaineth unto
him; that is, it is due unto him, it is a debt which we owe unto
him. "Give unto the Lord," said David, "the glory due unto his name."
Now if there be begotten in the heart of the godly, by this grace
of fear, a godly tenderness of the glory of God, then it follows
of consequence, that where they that have this fear of God do see
his glory diminished by the wickedness of the children of men,
there they are grieved and deeply distressed. "Rivers of waters,"
said David, "run down mine eyes, because they keep not thy law"
(Psa 119:136). Let met give you for this these following instances--
How was David provoked when Goliath defied the God of Israel (1
Sam 17:23-29,45,46). Also, when others reproached God, he tells us
that that reproach was even as "a sword in his bones" (Psa 42:10).
How was Hezekiah afflicted when Rabshakeh railed upon his God (Isa
37). David also, for the love that he had to the glory of God's
word, ran the hazard and reproach "of all the mighty people" (Psa
119:151, 89:50). How tender of the glory of God was Eli, Daniel, and
the three children in their day. Eli died with fear and trembling
of heart when he heard that "the ark of God was taken" (1 Sam
4:14-18). Daniel ran the danger of the lions' mouths, for the tender
love that he had to the word and worship of God (Dan 6:10-16). The
three children ran the hazard of a burning fiery furnace, rather than
they would dare to dishonour the way of their God (Dan 3:13,16,20).
This therefore is one of the fruits of this godly fear, to wit, a
reverence of his name and tenderness of his glory.
Fourth. There flows from this fear of God great reverence of his
majesty, in and under the use and enjoyment of God's holy ordinances.
His ordinances are his courts and palaces, his walks and places,
where he giveth his presence to those that wait upon him in them,
in the fear of his name. And this is the meaning of that of the
apostle: "Then had the churches rest throughout all Judea, and
Galilee, and Samaria, and were edified; and, walking in the fear
of the Lord, and in the comfort of the Holy Ghost, were multiplied"
(Acts 9:31). "And walking"--that word intendeth their use of the
ordinances of God. They walked in all the commandments and ordinances
of the Lord blameless. This, in Old Testament language, is called,
treading God's courts, and walking in his paths. This, saith
the text, they did here, in the fear of God. That is, in a great
reverence of that God whose ordinances they were. "Ye shall keep
my Sabbaths, and reverence my sanctuary; I am the Lord" (Lev 19:30,
26:2).
It is one thing to be conversant in God's ordinances, and another
to be conversant in them with a due reverence of the majesty and
name of that God whose ordinances they are: it is common for men
to do the first, but none can do the last without this fear. "In
thy fear," said David, "will I worship" (Psa 5:7). It is this fear
of God, therefore, from whence doth flow that great reverence that
his saints have in them, of his majesty, in and under the use and
enjoyment of God's holy ordinances; and, consequently, that makes
our service in the performance of them acceptable to God through
Christ (Heb 12). For God expects that we serve him with fear and
trembling, and it is odious among men, for a man in the presence,
or about the service of his prince, to behave himself lightly, and
without due reverence of that majesty in whose presence and about
whose business he is. And if so, how can their service to God have
anything like acceptation from the hand of God, that is done, not
in, but without the fear of God? This service must needs be an
abomination to him, and these servers must come off with rebuke.
Fifth. There flows from this godly fear of God, self-denial. That
is, a holy abstaining from those things that are either unlawful or
inexpedient; according to that of Nehemiah, "The former governors
that had been before me, were chargeable unto the people, that had
taken of them bread and wine, beside forty shekels of silver, yea,
even their servants bare rule over the people: but so did not I,
because of the fear of God" (Neh 5:15).[17]
Here not was self-denial; he would not do as they did that went
before him, neither himself, nor should his servants; but what was
it that put him upon these acts of self-denial? The answer is, the
fear of God: "but so did not I, because of the fear of God."
Now, whether by the fear of God in this place be meant his Word, or
the grace of fear in his heart, may perhaps be a scruple to some,
but in my judgment the text must have respect to the latter, to wit,
to the grace of fear, for without that being indeed in the heart,
the word will not produce that good self-denial in us, that here
you find this good man to live in the daily exercise of. The fear
of God, therefore, that was the cause of his self-denial, was
this grace of fear in his heart. This made him to be, as was said
before, tender of the honour of God, and of the salvation of his
brother: yea, so tender, that rather than he would give an occasion
to the weak to stumble, or be offended, he would even deny himself
of that which others never sticked to do. Paul also, through the
sanctifying operations of this fear of God in his heart, did deny
himself even of lawful things, for the profit and commodity of his
brother--"I will eat no flesh while the world standeth, lest I make
my brother to offend"; that is, if his eating of it would make his
brother to offend (1 Cor 8:13).
Men that have not this fear of God in them, will not, cannot deny
themselves--of love to God, and the good of the weak, who are
subject to stumble at indifferent things--but where this grace of
fear is, there follows self-denial; there men are tender of offending;
and count that it far better becomes their profession to be of a
self-denying, condescending conversation and temper, than to stand
sturdily to their own liberty in things inexpedient, whoever is
offended thereat. This grace of fear, therefore, is a very excellent
thing, because it yieldeth such excellent fruit as this. For this
self-denial, of how little esteem soever it be with some, yet the
want of it, if the words of Christ be true, as they are, takes
quite away from even a professor the very name of a disciple (Matt
10:37,38; Luke 14:26,27,33). They, says Nehemiah, lorded it over
the brethren, but so did not I. They took bread and wine, and
forty shekels of silver of them, but so did not I; yea, even their
servants bare rule over the people, "but so did not I, because of
the fear of God."
Sixth. There flows from this godly fear of God "singleness of heart"
(Col 3:22). Singleness of heart both to God and man; singleness of
heart, that is it which in another place is called sincerity and
godly simplicity, and it is this, when a man doth a thing simply
for the sake of him or of the law that commands it, without respect
to this by-end,[18]
Had not Obadiah served the Lord, yea, had he not greatly feared him,
he would not have been able to do this thing, especially as the
case then stood with him, and also with the church at that time,
for then Jezebel sought to slay all that indeed feared the Lord;
yea, and the persecution prevailed so much at that time, that even
Elijah himself thought that she had killed all but him. But now,
even now, the fear of God in this good man's heart put forth itself
into acts of mercy though attended with so imminent danger. See
here, therefore, that the fear of God will put forth itself in the
heart where God hath put it, even to show kindness, and to have
compassion upon the distressed servants of God, even under Jezebel's
nose; for Obadiah dwelt in Ahab's house, and Jezebel was Ahab's
wife, and a horrible persecutor, as was said before: yet Obadiah
will show mercy to the poor because he feared God, yea, he will
venture her displeasure, his place, and neck, and all, but he will
be merciful to his brethren in distress. Cornelius, also, being
a man possessed with this fear of God, became a very free-hearted
and open-handed man to the poor--"He feared God, and gave much
alms to the people." Indeed this fear, this godly fear of God, it
is a universal grace; it will stir up the soul unto all good duties.
It is a fruitful grace; from it, where it is, floweth abundance of
excellent virtues; nor without it can there be anything good, or
done well, that is done. But,
Eighth. There flows from this fear of God hearty, fervent, and
constant prayer. This also is seen in Cornelius, that devout man.
He feared God; and what then? why, he gave much alms to the people,
"and prayed to God alway" (Acts 10:1,2).
Did I say that hearty, fervent, and constant prayer flowed from
this fear of God? I will add, that if the whole duty, and the
continuation of it, be not managed with this fear of God, it profiteth
nothing at all. It is said of our Lord Jesus Christ himself, "He
was heard in that he feared." He prayed, then, because he feared,
because he feared God, and therefore was his prayer accepted of
him, even because he feared--"He was heard in that he feared" (Heb
5:7). This godly fear is so essential to right prayer, and right
prayer is such an inseparable effect and fruit of this fear, that
you must have both or none; he that prayeth not feareth not God,
yea, he that prayeth not fervently and frequently feareth him not;
and so he that feareth him not cannot pray; for if prayer be the
effect of this fear of God, then without this fear, prayer, fervent
prayer, ceaseth. How can they pray or make conscience of the duty
that fear not God? O prayerless man, thou fearest not God! Thou
wouldest not live so like a swine or a dog in the world as thou
dost, if thou fearest the Lord.
Tenth. There floweth from this godly fear humility of mind. This
is evident, because, when the apostle cautions the Romans against
the venom of spiritual pride, he directs them to the exercise of
this blessed grace of fear as its antidote. "Be not high-minded,"
saith he, "but fear" (Rom 11:20). Pride, spiritual pride, which is
here set forth by the word "high-minded," is a sin of a very high
and damnable nature; it was the sin of the fallen angels, and is
that which causeth men to fall into the same condemnation--"Lest
being lifted up with pride, he fall into the condemnation of the
devil." Pride, I say, it damns a professor with the damnation of
devils, with the damnation of hell, and therefore it is a deadly,
deadly sin. Now against this deadly sin is set the grace of
humility; that comely garment, for so the apostle calls it, saying,
"be clothed with humility." But the question is now, how we should
attain to, and live in, the exercise of this blessed and comely
grace? to which the apostle answers, Fear; be afraid with godly fear,
and thence will flow humility--"Be not high-minded, but fear." That
is, Fear, or be continually afraid and jealous of yourselves, and
of your own naughty hearts, also fear lest at some time or other
the devil, your adversary, should have advantage of you. Fear,
lest by forgetting what you are by nature, you also forget the need
that you have of continual pardon, support, and supplies from the
Spirit of grace, and so grow proud of your own abilities, or of
what you have received of God, and fall into the condemnation of
the devil. Fear, and that will make you little in your own eyes,
keep you humble, put you upon crying to God for protection, and
upon lying at his foot for mercy; that will also make you have low
thoughts of your own parts, your own doings, and cause you to prefer
your brother before yourself, and so you will walk in humiliation,
and be continually under the teachings of God, and under his conduct
in your way. The humble, God will teach--"The meek will he guide
in judgment, the meek will he teach his way." From this grace of
fear then flows this excellent and comely thing, humility; yea, it
also is maintained by this fear. Fear takes off a man from trusting
to himself, it puts a man upon trying of all things, it puts a man
upon desiring counsel and help from heaven, it makes a man ready
and willing to hear instruction, and makes a man walk lowly, softly,
and so securely in the way.
Eleventh. There flows from this grace of fear, hope in the mercy
of God--"The Lord taketh pleasure in them that fear him, in them
that hope in his mercy" (Psa 147:11). The latter part of the text
is an explanation of the former: as if the psalmist had said, They
be the men that fear the Lord, even they that hope in his mercy;
for true fear produceth hope in God's mercy. And it is further
manifest thus. Fear, true fear of God inclineth the heart to a
serious inquiry after that way of salvation which God himself hath
prescribed; now the way that God hath appointed, by the which the
sinner is to obtain the salvation of his soul, is his mercy as so
and so set forth in the Word, and godly fear hath special regard
to the Word. To this way, therefore, the sinner with this godly
fear submits his soul, rolls himself upon it, and so is delivered
from that death into which others, for want of this fear of God,
do headlong fall.
Twelfth. There floweth from this godly fear of God an honest and
conscientious use of all those means which God hath ordained, that
we should be conversant in for our attaining salvation. Faith and
hope in God's mercy is that which secureth our justification and
hope, and as you have heard, they do flow from this fear. But now,
besides faith and hope, there is a course of life in those things
in which God hath ordained us to have our conversation, without
which there is no eternal life. "Ye have your fruit unto holiness,
and the end everlasting life"; and again, "without holiness no man
shall see the Lord." Not that faith and hope are deficient, if they
be right, but they are both of them counterfeit when not attended
with a reverent use of all the means: upon the reverent use of which
the soul is put by this grace of fear. "Wherefore, beloved," said
Paul, "as ye have always obeyed, not as in my presence only, but
now much more in mine absence, work out your own salvation with
fear and trembling" (Rom 6:22; Heb 12:14; Phil 2:11).
There is a faith and hope of mercy that may deceive a man (though
the faith of God's elect, and the hope that purifies the heart
never will), because they are alone, and not attended with those
companions that accompany salvation (Heb 6:3-8). But now this godly
fear carries in its bowels, not only a moving of the soul to faith
and hope in God's mercy, but an earnest provocation to the holy
and reverent use of all the means that God has ordained for a man
to have his conversation in, in order to his eternal salvation.
"Work out your salvation with fear." Not that work is meritorious,
or such that can purchase eternal life, for eternal life is obtained
by hope in God's mercy; but this hope, if it be right, is attended
with this godly fear, which fear putteth the soul upon a diligent
use of all those means that may tend to the strengthening of hope,
and so to the making of us holy in all manner of conversation, that
we may be meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in
light. For hope purifieth the heart, if fear of God shall be its
companion, and so maketh a man a vessel of mercy prepared unto
glory. Paul bids Timothy to fly pride, covetousness, doting about
questions, and the like, and to "follow after righteousness,
godliness, faith, love, patience; to fight the good fight of faith,
and to lay hold on eternal life" (1 Tim 6).
Thirteenth. There flows from this fear, this godly fear, a great delight
in the holy commands of God, that is, a delight to be conformable
unto them. "Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord, that delighteth
greatly in his commandments" (Psa 112:1). This confirmeth that
which was said before, to wit, that this fear provoketh to a holy
and reverent use of the means; for that cannot be, when there is
not an holy, yea, a great delight in the commandments. Wherefore
this fear maketh the sinner to abhor that which is sin, because that
is contrary to the object of his delight. A man cannot delight
himself at the same time in things directly opposite one to another,
as sin and the holy commandment is; therefore Christ saith of the
servant, he cannot love God and mammon--"Ye cannot serve God and
mammon." If he cleaves to the one, he must hate and despise the
other; there cannot at the same time be service to both, because
that themselves are at enmity one with the other. So is sin
and the commandment. Therefore if a man delighteth himself in the
commandment, he hateth that which is opposite, which is sin: how
much more when he greatly delighteth in the commandment? Now, this
holy fear of God it taketh the heart and affections from sin, and
setteth them upon the holy commandment. Therefore such a man is
rightly esteemed blessed. For no profession makes a man blessed
but that which is accompanied with an alienation of the heart from
sin, nor doth anything do that when this holy fear is wanting.
It is from this fear then, that love to, and delight in, the holy
commandment floweth, and so by that the sinner is kept from those
falls and dangers of miscarrying that other professors are so
subject to: he greatly delights in the commandment.
Thus have I showed you both what this fear of God is, what it flows
from, and also what doth flow from it. I come now to show you some
First Privilege, then. That man that feareth the Lord, has a grant
and a license "to trust in the Lord," with an affirmation that
he is their help, and their shield--"Ye that fear the Lord, trust
in the Lord; he is their help and their shield" (Psa 115:11). Now
what a privilege is this! an exhortation in general to sinners, as
sinners, to trust in him, is a privilege great and glorious; but
for a man to be singled out from his neighbours, for a man to be
spoken to from heaven, as it were by name, and to be told that God
hath given him a license, a special and peculiar grant to trust in
him, this is abundantly more; and yet this is the grant that God
hath given that man! He hath, I say, a license to do it--a license
indicted by the Holy Ghost, and left upon record for those to be
born that shall fear the Lord, to trust in him. And not only so, but
as the text affirmeth, "he is their help and their shield." Their
help under all their weaknesses and infirmities, and a shield to
defend them against all the assaults of the devil and this world.
So then, the man that feareth the Lord is licensed to make the
Lord his stay and God of his salvation, the succour and deliverer
of his soul. He will defend him because his fear is in his heart.
O ye servants of the Lord, ye that fear him, live in the comfort of
this; boldly make use of it when you are in straits, and put your
trust under the shadow of his wings, for indeed he would have you
do so, because you do fear the Lord.
Second Privilege. God hath also proclaimed concerning the man that
feareth the Lord, that he will also be his teacher and guide in
the way that he shall choose, and hath moreover promised concerning
such, that their soul shall dwell at ease--"What man is he that
feareth the Lord?" says David, "him shall he teach in the way that
he shall choose" (Psa 25:12). Now, to be taught of God, what like
it? yea, what like to be taught in the way that thou shalt choose?
Thou hast chosen the way to life, God's way; but perhaps thy
ignorance about it is so great, and those that tempt thee to turn
aside so many and so subtle, that they seem to outwit thee and
confound thee with their guile. Well, but the Lord whom thou fearest
will not leave thee to thy ignorance, nor yet to thine enemies'
power or subtlety, but will take it upon himself to be thy teacher
and thy guide, and that in the way that thou hast chosen. Hear,
then, and behold thy privilege, O thou that fearest the Lord; and
whoever wanders, turns aside, and swerveth from the way of salvation,
whoever is benighted, and lost in the midst of darkness, thou shalt
find the way to the heaven and the glory that thou hast chosen.
Further, He doth not only say, that he will teach them the way, for
that must of necessity be supplied, but he says also that he will
teach such in it--"Him shall he teach in the way that he shall
choose." This argueth that, as thou shalt know, so the way shall
be made, by the communion that thou shalt have with God therein,
sweet and pleasant to thee. For this text promiseth unto the man
that feareth the Lord, the presence, company, and discovery of the
mind of God, while he is going in the way that he hath chosen. It
is said of the good scribe, that he is instructed unto, as well as
into, the way of the kingdom of God (Matt 13:52). Instructed unto;
that is, he hath the heart and mind of God still discovered to him
in the way that he hath chosen, even all the way from this world
to that which is to come, even until he shall come to the very gate
and door of heaven. What the disciples said was the effect of the
presence of Christ, to wit, "that their hearts did burn within
them while he talked to them by the way," shall be also fulfilled
in thee, he will meet with thee in the way, talk with thee in the
way; he will teach thee in the way that thou shalt choose (Luke
24:32).
Third Privilege. Dost thou fear the Lord? he will open his secret
unto thee, even that which he hath hid and keeps close from all
the world, to wit, the secret of his covenant and of thy concern
therein--"The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him, and
he will shew them his covenant" (Psa 25:14). This, then, further
confirmeth what was said but just above; his secret shall be with
them, and his covenant shall be showed unto them. His secret, to
wit, that which hath been kept hid from ages and generations; that
which he manifesteth only to the saints, or holy ones; that is, his
Christ, for he it is that is hid in God, and that no man can know
but he to whom the Father shall reveal him (Matt 11:27).
Fourth Privilege. Dost thou fear the Lord? his eye is always over
thee for good, to keep thee from all evil--"Behold the eye of the
Lord is upon them that fear him, upon them that hope in his mercy;
to deliver their soul from death, and to keep them alive in famine"
(Psa 33:18,19). His eye is upon them; that is, to watch over them
for good. He that keepeth Israel neither slumbers nor sleeps. His
eyes are upon them, and he will keep them as a shepherd doth his
sheep; that is, from those wolves that seek to devour them, and
to swallow them up in death. His eyes are upon them; for they are
the object of his delight, the rarities of the world, in whom, saith
he, is all my delight. His eye is upon them, as I said before, to
teach and instruct them--"I will instruct thee and teach thee in
the way which thou shalt go; I will guide thee with mine eye" (Psa
32:8; 2 Chron 7:15,16). The eye of the Lord, therefore, is upon
them, not to take advantage of them, to destroy them for their sins,
but to guide, to help, and deliver them from death; from that death
that would feed upon their souls--"To deliver their soul from
death and to keep them alive in famine." Take death here for death
spiritual, and death eternal; and the famine here, not for that
that is for want of bread and water, but for that which comes on
many for want of the Word of the Lord (Rev 20:14; Amos 8:11,12);
and then the sense is this, the man that feareth the Lord shall
neither die spiritually nor eternally; for God will keep him with
his eye from all those things that would in such a manner kill
him. Again, should there be a famine of the Word; should there want
both the Word and them that preach it in the place that thou dost
dwell, yet bread shall be given thee, and thy water shall be sure;
thou shalt not die of the famine, because thou fearest God. I say,
that man shall not, behold he shall not, because he feareth God,
and this the next head doth yet more fully manifest.
Fifth Privilege. Dost thou fear God? fear him for this advantage
more and more--"O fear the Lord, ye his saints, for there is no want
to them that fear him. The young lions do lack and suffer hunger,
but they that seek the Lord," that fear him, "shall not want any
good thing" (Psa 34:9,10). Not anything that God sees good for them
shall those men want that fear the Lord. If health will do them
good, if sickness will do them good, if riches will do them good,
if poverty will do them good, if life will do them good, if death
will do them good, then they shall not want them, neither shall any
of these come nigh them, if they will not do them good. The lions,
the wicked people [19] of the world that fear not God, are not
made sharers in this great privilege; all things fall out to them
contrary, because they fear not God. In the midst of their sufficiency,
they are in want of that good that God puts into the worst things
that the man that feareth God doth meet with in the world.
Sixth Privilege. Dost thou fear God? he hath given charge to the
armies of heaven to look after, take charge of, to camp about,
and to deliver thee--"The angel of the Lord encampeth round about
them that fear him, and delivereth them" (Psa 34:7). This also is
a privilege entailed to them that in all generations fear the Lord.
The angels, the heavenly creatures, have it in commission to take
the charge of them that fear the Lord; one of them is able to slay of
men in one night 185,000. These are they that camped about Elisha
like horses of fire, and chariots of fire, when the enemy came
to destroy him. They also helped Hezekiah against the band of the
enemy, because he feared God (2 Kings 6:17; Isa 37:36; Jer 26:19).
"The angel of the Lord encampeth round about them"; that is, lest
the enemy should set upon them on any side; but let him come where
he will, behind or before, on this side or that, the angel of the
Lord is there to defend them. "The angel." It may be spoken in the
singular number, perhaps, to show that every one that feareth God
hath his angel to attend on him, and serve him. When the church,
in the Acts, was told that Peter stood at the door and knocked; at
first they counted the messenger mad, but when she did constantly
affirm it, they said, It is his angel (Acts 12:13-15). So Christ
saith of the children that came unto him, "their angels behold
the face of my Father which is in heaven." Their angels; that is,
those of them that feared God, had each of them his angel, who had
a charge from God to keep them in their way. We little think of
this, yet this is the privilege of them that fear the Lord; yea,
if need be, they shall all come down to help them and to deliver
them, rather than, contrary to the mind of their God, they should
by any be abused--"Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth
to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation?" (Heb 1:14).
[Quest.] But how do they deliver them? for so says the text--"The
angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that fear him, and
delivereth them." Answ. The way that they take to deliver them
that fear the Lord, is sometimes by smiting of their enemies with
blindness, that they may not find them; and so they served the
enemies of Lot (Gen 19:10,11). Sometimes by smiting of them with
deadly fear; and so they served those that laid siege against
Samaria (2 Kings 7:6). And sometimes by smiting of them even with
death itself; and thus they served Herod, after he had attempted
to kill the apostle James, and also sought to vex certain others of
the church (Acts 12). These angels that are servants to them that
fear the Lord, are them that will, if God doth bid them, revenge
the quarrel of his servants upon the stoutest monarch on earth.
This, therefore, is a glorious privilege of the men that fear the
Lord. Alas! they are, some of them, so mean that they are counted
not worth taking notice of by the high ones of the world; but their
betters do respect them. The angels of God count not themselves
too good to attend on them, and camp about them to deliver them.
This, then, is the man that hath his angel to wait upon him, even
he that feareth God.
Seventh Privilege. Dost thou fear the Lord? salvation is nigh unto
thee--"Surely his salvation is nigh them that fear him, that glory
may dwell in our land" (Psa 85:9). This is another privilege for
them that fear the Lord. I told you before, that the angel of the
Lord did encamp about them, but now he saith, "his salvation is
also nigh them"; the which although it doth not altogether exclude
the conduct of angels,[20] but include them; yet it looketh further.
"Surely his salvation," his saving, pardoning grace, "is nigh them
that fear him"; that is, to save them out of the hand of their
spiritual enemies. The devil, and sin, and death, do always wait
even to devour them that fear the Lord, but to deliver them from
these his salvation doth attend them. So then, if Satan tempts,
here is their salvation nigh; if sin, by breaking forth, beguiles
them, here is God's salvation nigh them; yea, if death itself shall
suddenly seize upon them, why, here is their God's salvation nigh
them.
Eighth Privilege. Dost thou fear the Lord? hearken yet again--"The
mercy of the Lord is from everlasting to everlasting upon them
that fear him, and his righteousness unto children's children" (Psa
103:17). This still confirms what was last asserted, that is, that
his salvation is nigh unto them. His salvation, that is, pardoning
mercy, that is nigh them. But mind it, there he says it is nigh
them; but here it is upon them. His mercy is upon them, it covereth
them all over, it encompasseth them about as with a shield. Therefore
they are said in another place to be clothed with salvation,
and covered with the robe of righteousness. The mercy of the Lord
is upon them, that is, as I said, to shelter and defend them. The
mercy, the pardoning preserving mercy, the mercy of the Lord is
upon them, who is he then that can condemn them? (Rom 8).
But there yet is more behind, "The mercy of the Lord is from
everlasting to everlasting upon them." It was designed for them
before the world was, and shall be upon them when the world itself
is ended; from everlasting to everlasting it is on them that fear
him. This from everlasting to everlasting is that by which, in another
place, the eternity of God himself is declared--"From everlasting
to everlasting, thou art God" (Psa 90:2). The meaning, then, may
be this; that so long as God hath his being, so long shall the
man that feareth him find mercy at his hand. According to that
of Moses--"The eternal God is thy refuge, and underneath are the
everlasting arms; and he shall thrust out the enemy from before
thee, and shall say, Destroy them" (Deut 33:27).
Child of God, thou that fearest God, here is mercy nigh thee, mercy
enough, everlasting mercy upon thee. This is long-lived mercy. It
will live longer than thy sin, it will live longer than temptation,
it will live longer than thy sorrows, it will live longer than thy
persecutors. It is mercy from everlasting to contrive thy salvation,
and mercy to everlasting to weather it out with all thy adversaries.
Now what can hell and death do to him that hath this mercy of God
upon him? And this hath the man that feareth the Lord. Take that
other blessed word, and O thou man that fearest the Lord, hang it
like a chain of gold about thy neck--"As the heaven is high above
the earth, so great is his mercy toward them that fear him" (Psa
103:11). If mercy as big, as high, and as good as heaven itself
will be a privilege, the man that feareth God shall have a privilege.
" The Lord pitieth them that fear him"; that is, condoleth and is
affected, feeleth and sympathizeth with them in all their afflictions.
It is a great matter for a poor man to be in this manner in the
affections of the great and mighty, but for a poor sinner to be
thus in the heart and affections of God, and they that fear him are
so, this is astonishing to consider. "In his love and in his pity
he redeemed them." In his love and in his pity! "In all their
affliction he was afflicted, and the angel of his presence saved
them; in his love and in his pity he redeemed them, and he bare
them, and carried them all the days of old" (Isa 63:9). I say, in
that he is said to pity them, it is as much as to say, he condoleth,
feeleth, and sympathizeth with them in all their afflictions and
temptations. So that this is the happiness of him that feareth God,
he has a God to pity him and to be touched with all his miseries.
It is said in Judges, "His soul was grieved for the misery of
Israel" (Judg 10:16). And in the Hebrews, he is "touched with the
feeling of our infirmities," and can "succour them that are tempted"
(4:15, 2:17,18).
Tenth Privilege. Dost thou fear God?--"He will fulfil the desire
of them that fear him; he also will hear their cry, and will save
them" (Psa 145:19). Almost all those places that make mention of
the men that fear God, do insinuate as if they still were under
affliction, or in danger by reason of an enemy. But I say, here
is still their privilege, their God is their father and pities
them--"He will fulfil the desire of them that fear him." Where now
is the man that feareth the Lord? let him hearken to this. What
sayest thou, poor soul? will this content thee, the Lord will fulfil
thy desires? It is intimated of Adonijah, that David his father
did let him have his head and his will in all things. "His father,"
says the text, "had not displeased him at any time in (so much as)
saying, Why hast thou done so?" (1 Kings 1:6). But here is more,
here is a promise to grant thee the whole desire of thy heart,
according to the prayer of holy David, "The Lord grant thee, according
to thine own heart, and fulfil all thy counsel." And again, "The
Lord fulfil all thy petitions" (Psa 20).
O thou that fearest the Lord, what is thy desire? All my desire,
says David, is all my salvation (2 Sam 23:5), so sayest thou, "All
my salvation" is "all my desire." Well, the desire of thy soul is
granted thee, yea, God himself hath engaged himself even to fulfil
this thy desire--"He will fulfil the desire of them that fear him,
he also will hear their cry, and will save them." O this desire when
it cometh, what a tree of life will it be to thee! Thou desirest
to be rid of thy present trouble; the Lord shall rid thee out of
trouble. Thou desirest to be delivered from temptation; the Lord
shall deliver thee out of temptation. Thou desirest to be delivered
from thy body of death; and the Lord shall change this thy vile
body, that it may be like to his glorious body. Thou desirest to
be in the presence of God, and among the angels in heaven. This
thy desire also shall be fulfilled, and thou shalt be made equal
to the angels (Exo 6:6; 2 Peter 2:9; Phil 3:20,21; Luke 16:22,
20:35,36). O but it is long first! Well, learn first to live upon
thy portion in the promise of it, and that will make thy expectation
of it sweet. God will fulfil thy desires, God will do it, though
it tarry long. Wait for it, because it will surely come, it will
not tarry.
You know how pleasing in our eyes the actions of our children are,
when we know that they do what they do even of a reverent fear and
awe of us; yea, though that which they do amounts but to little, we
take it well at their hands, and are pleased therewith. The woman
that cast in her two mites into the treasury, cast in not much, for
they both did but make one farthing; yet how doth the Lord Jesus
trumpet her up,[22] he had pleasure in her, and in her action (Mark
12:41-44). This, therefore, that the Lord taketh pleasure in them
that fear him, is another of their great privileges.
Twelfth Privilege. Dost thou fear God? the least dram of that fear
giveth the privilege to be blessed with the biggest saint--"He will
bless them that fear the Lord, small and great" (Psa 115:13). This
word small may be taken three ways--1. For those that are small
in esteem, for those that are but little accounted of (Judg 6:15;
1 Sam 18:23). Art thou small or little in this sense, yet if thou
fearest God, thou art sure to be blessed. "He will bless them that
fear him, small and great," be thou never so small in the world's
eyes, in thine own eyes, in the saints' eyes, as sometimes one saint
is little in another saint's eye; yet thou, because thou fearest
God, art put among the blessed. 2. By small, sometimes is meant
those that are but small of stature, or young in years, little
children, that are easily passed by and looked over: as those that
sang Hosanna in the temple were, when the Pharisees deridingly said
of them to Christ, "Hearest thou what these say?" (Matt 21:16).
Well, but Christ would not despise them, of them that feared God,
but preferred them by the Scripture testimony far before those that
did contemn them. Little children, how small soever, and although
of never so small esteem with men, shall also, if they fear the
Lord, be blessed with the greatest saints--"He will bless them
that fear him, small and great." 3. By small may sometimes be meant
those that are small in grace or gifts; these are said to be the
least in the church, that is, under this consideration, and so are
by it least esteemed (Matt 25:45). Thus also is that of Christ to
be understood, "Inasmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of
these, ye did it not to me" (1 Cor 6:4).
Are great saints only to have the kingdom, and the glory everlasting?
Are great works only to be rewarded? works that are done by virtue
of great grace, and the abundance of the gifts of the Holy Ghost?
No: "Whosoever shall give to drink unto one of these little ones
a cup of cold water only, in the name of a disciple, verily I say
unto you, he shall in no wise lose his (a disciple's) reward." Mark,
here is but a little gift, a cup of cold water, and that given to
a little saint, but both taken special notice of by our Lord Jesus
Christ (Matt 10:42). "He will give reward to his servants the
prophets, and to his saints, and to them that fear his name, small
and great" (Rev 11:18). The small, therefore, among them that
fear God, are blessed with the great, as the great, with the same
salvation, the same glory, and the same eternal life; and they
shall have, even as the great ones also shall, as much as they can
carry; as much as their hearts, souls, bodies, and capacities can
hold.
Thirteenth Privilege. Dost thou fear God? why, the Holy Ghost
hath on purpose indited for thee a whole psalm to sing concerning
thyself. So that thou mayest even as thou art in thy calling, bed,
journey, or whenever, sing out thine own blessed and happy condition
to thine own comfort and the comfort of thy fellows. The psalm is
called the 128th Psalm; I will set it before thee, both as it is
in the reading[23] and in the singing Psalms--
" Blessed is every one that feareth the Lord, that walketh in his
ways. For thou shalt eat the labour of thine hands: happy shalt
thou be, and it shall be well with thee. Thy wife shall be as a
fruitful vine by the sides of thine house; thy children, like olive
plants round about thy table. Behold, that thus shall the man be
blessed that feareth the Lord. The Lord shall bless thee out of
Zion; and thou shalt see the good of Jerusalem all the days of thy
life. Yea, thou shalt see thy children's children, and peace upon
Israel."
AS IT IS SUNG.
Blessed art thou that fearest God, And walkest in his way: For of
thy labour thou shalt eat; Happy art thou, I say! Like fruitful
vines on thy house side, So doth thy wife spring out; Thy children
stand like olive plants Thy table round about.
Thus art thou blest that fearest God, And he shall let thee see
The promised Jerusalem, And her felicity. Thou shalt thy children's
children see, To thy great joy's increase; And likewise grace on
Israel, Prosperity and peace.[24]
And now I have done with the privileges when I have removed one
objection.
Object. But the Scripture says, "perfect love casteth our fear";
and therefore it seems that saints, after that a spirit of adoption
is come, should not fear, but do their duty, as another Scripture
saith, without it (1 John 4:18; Luke 1:74,75).
Now the fear that perfect love casts out cannot be that son-like,
gracious fear of God, that I have in this last place been treating
of; because that fear that love casts out hath torment, but so has
not the son-like fear. Therefore the fear that love casts out is
either that fear that is like the fear of devils and reprobates,
or that fear that is begot in the heart by the Spirit of God as a
spirit of bondage, or both; for, indeed, all these kinds of fear
have torment, and therefore may be cast out; and are so by the
spirit of adoption, which is called the spirit of faith and love,
when he comes with power into the soul; so that without this fear
we should serve him. But to argue from these texts that we ought
not to fear God, or to mix fear with our worship of him, is as much
as to say that by the spirit of adoption we are made very rogues;
for not to fear God is by the Scripture applied to such (Luke
23:40). But for what I have affirmed the Scripture doth plentifully
confirm, saying, "Happy is the man that feareth alway." And again,
"It shall be well with them that fear God, which fear before him."
Fear, therefore; the spirit of the fear of the Lord is a grace
that greatly beautifies a Christian, his words, and all his ways:
"Wherefore now let the fear of the Lord be upon you; take heed, and
do it, for there is no iniquity with the Lord our God, nor respect
of persons, nor taking of gifts" (2 Chron 19:7).
Having proceeded thus far about this doctrine of the fear of God,
I now come to make some use and application of the whole; and my
1. That man that is proud, and of a high and lofty mind, fears not
God. This is plain from the exhortation, "Be not high-minded, but
fear" (Rom 11:20). Here you see that a high mind and the fear of
God are set in direct opposition the one to the other; and there
is in them, closely concluded by the apostle, that where indeed
the one is, there cannot be the other; where there is a high mind,
there is not the fear of God; and where there is the fear of God,
the mind is not high but lowly. Can a man at the same time be a
proud man, and fear God too? Why, then, is it said God beholdeth
every one that is proud, and abases him? and again, He beholds the
proud afar off? He therefore that is proud of his person, of his
riches, of his office, of his parts, and the like, feareth not God.
It is also manifest further, for God resisteth the proud, which he
would not do, if he feared him, but in that he sets him at such a
distance from him, in that he testifies that he will abase him and
resist him, it is evident that he is not the man that hath this
grace of fear; for that man, as I have showed you, is the man of
God's delight, the object of his pleasure (Psa 138:6; James 4:6;
1 Peter 5:5; Mal 4:1).
2. The covetous man feareth not God. This also is plain from
the Word, because it setteth covetousness and the fear of God in
direct opposition. Men that fear God are said to hate covetousness
(Exo 18:21). Besides, the covetous man is called an idolater, and
is said to have no part in the kingdom of Christ and of God. And
again, "The wicked boasteth of his heart's desire, and blesseth the
covetous, whom the Lord abhorreth" (Eze 33:31; Eph 5:5; Psa 10:3).
Hearken to this, you that hunt the world to take it, you that care
not how you get, so you get the world. Also you that make even
religion your stalking-horse to get the world, you fear not God.
And what will you do whose hearts go after your covetousness? you
who are led by covetousness up and down, as it were by the nose;
sometimes to swear, to lie, to cozen, and cheat and defraud, when
you can get the advantage to do it. You are far, very far, from the
fear of God. "Ye adulterers and adulteresses," for so the covetous
are called, "know ye not that the friendship of the world is enmity
with God? whosoever, therefore, will be a friend of the world, is
the enemy of God" (James 4:4).
3. The riotous eaters of flesh have not the fear of God. For this
is done "without fear" (Jude 12). Gluttony is a sin little taken
notice of, and as little repented of by those that use it, but
yet it is odious in the sight of God, and the practice of it a
demonstration of the want of his fear in the heart: yea, so odious
is it, that God forbids that his people should so much as company
with such. "Be not," saith he, "among wine-bibbers, among riotous
eaters of flesh" (Prov 23:20). And he further tells us, that they
that are such, are spots and blemishes to those that keep them
company, for indeed they fear not God (2 Peter 2:13; Rom 13:13;
1 Peter 4:4). Alas! some men are as if they were for nought else
born but to eat and to drink, and pamper their carcasses with the
dainties of this world, quite forgetting why God sent them hither;
but such, as is said, fear not God, and so consequently are of the
number of them upon whom the day of judgment will come at unawares
(Luke 21:34).
4. The liar is one that fears not God. This also is evident from
the plain text, "Thou hast lied," saith the Lord, "and hast not
remembered me, nor laid it to thy heart: have not I held my peace
even of old," saith the Lord, "and thou fearest me not?" (Isa
57:11). What lie this was is not material; it was a lie, or a course
of lying that is here rebuked, and the person or persons in this
practice, as is said, were such as feared not God; a course of lying
and the fear of God cannot stand together. This sin of lying is a
common sin, and it walketh in the world in several guises. There
is the profane scoffing liar, there is the cunning artificial liar,
there is the hypocritical religious liar, with liars of other ranks
and degrees. But none of them all have the fear of God, nor shall
any of them, they not repenting, escape the damnation of hell--"All
liars shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire
and brimstone" (Rev 21:8). Heaven and the New Jerusalem are not a
place for such--"And there shall in no wise enter into it anything
that defileth, neither whatsoever worketh abomination, or maketh
a lie" (v 27). Therefore another scripture says that all liars are
without--"For without are dogs, and sorcerers, and whoremongers,
and murderers, and idolaters, and whosoever loveth and maketh a
lie" (Rev 22:15). But this should not be their sentence, judgment,
and condemnation, if they that are liars were such as had in them
this blessed fear of God.
5. They fear not God who cry unto him for help in the time of their
calamity, and when they are delivered, they return to their former
rebellion. This, Moses, in a spirit of prophecy, asserteth at the
time of the mighty judgment of the hail. Pharaoh then desired him
to pray to God that he would take away that judgment from him. Well,
so I will, said Moses, "But as for thee and thy servants, I know
that ye will not yet fear the Lord God" (Exo 9:30). As who should
say, I know that so soon as this judgment is removed, you will to
your old rebellion again. And what greater demonstration can be
given that such a man feareth not God, than to cry to God to be
delivered from affliction to prosperity, and to spend that prosperity
in rebellion against him? This is crying for mercies that they may
be spent, or that we may have something to spend upon our lusts,
and in the service of Satan (John 4:1-3). Of these God complains in
the sixteenth of Ezekiel, and in the second of Hosea--"Thou hast,"
saith God, "taken thy fair jewels of my gold and of my silver, which
I had given thee, and madest to thyself images" &c. (Eze 16:17).
This was for want of the fear of God. Many of this kind there be
now in the world, both of men, and women, and children; art not
thou that readest this book of this number? Hast thou not cried
for health when sick, for wealth when poor, when lame for strength,
when in prison for liberty, and then spent all that thou gottest
by thy prayer in the service of Satan, and to gratify thy lusts?
Look to it, sinner, these things are signs that with thy heart thou
fearest not God.
6. They fear not God that way-lay his people and seek to overthrow
them, or to turn them besides the right path, as they are journeying
from hence to their eternal rest. This is evident from the plain
text, "Remember," saith God, "what Amalek did unto thee by the way
when ye were come forth out of Egypt; how he met thee by the way,
and smote the hindmost of thee, even all that were feeble behind
thee, when thou wast faint and weary, and he feared not God" (Deut
25:17,18). Many such Amalekites there be now in the world that set
themselves against the feeble of the flock, against the feeble of
the flock especially, still smiting them, some by power, some with
the tongue, some in their lives and estates, some in their names and
reputations, by scandals, slanders, and reproach, but the reason
of this their ungodly practice is this, they fear not God. For did
they fear him, they would be afraid to so much as think, much more
of attempting to afflict and destroy, and calumniate the children
of God; but such there have been, such there are, and such there
will be in the world, for all men fear not God.
7. They fear not God who see his hand upon backsliders for their
sins, and yet themselves will be backsliders also. "I saw," saith
God, "when for all the causes whereby backsliding Israel committed
adultery, I had put her away, and given her a bill of divorce,
yet her treacherous sister Judah feared not, but went and played
the harlot also" (Jer 3:8, 2:19). Judah saw that her sister was
put away, and delivered by God into the hands of Shalmaneser, who
carried her away beyond Babylon, and yet, though she saw it, she
went and played the harlot also--a sign of great hardness of heart,
and of the want of the fear of God indeed. For this fear, had it
been in her heart, it would have taught her to have trembled at
the judgment that was executed upon her sister, and not to have
gone and played the harlot also: and not to have done it while
her sister's judgment was in sight and memory. But what is it that
a heart that is destitute of the fear of God will not do? No sin
comes amiss to such: yea, they will sin, they will do that themselves,
for the doing of which they believe some are in hell-fire, and all
because they fear not God.
But pray observe, if those that take not warning when they see the
hand of God upon backsliders, are said to have none of the fear
of God, have they it, think you, that lay stumbling-blocks in the
way of God's people, and use devices to cause them to backslide,
yea, rejoice when they can do this mischief to any? and yet many
of this sort there are in the world, that even rejoice when they
see a professor fall into sin, and go back from his profession, as
if they had found some excellent thing.
8. They fear not God who can look upon a land as wallowing in
sin, and yet are not humbled at the sight thereof. "Have ye," said
God by the prophet to the Jews, "forgotten the wickedness of your
fathers, and the wickedness of the kings of Judah, and the wickedness
of their wives, which they have committed in the land of Judah
and in the streets of Jerusalem? They are not humbled to this day,
neither have they feared, nor walked in my law" (Jer 44:9,10).
Here is a land full of wickedness, and none to bewail it, for they
wanted the fear of God, and love to walk in his law. But how say
you, if they that are not humbled at their own and others' wickedness
are said not to fear, or have the fear of God, what shall we think
or say of such that receive, that nourish and rejoice in such
wickedness? Do they fear God? Yea, what shall we say of such that
are the inventors and promoters of wickedness, as of oaths, beastly
talk, or the like? Do they, do you think, fear God? Once again,
what shall we say of such that cannot be content to be wicked
themselves, and to invent and rejoice in other men's wickedness,
but must hate, reproach, vilify and abuse those that they cannot
persuade to be wicked? Do they fear God?
9. They that take more heed to their own dreams than to the Word
of God, fear not God. This also is plain from the Word--"For in
the multitude of dreams, there are also divers vanities, but fear
thou God"; that is, take heed unto his Word (Eccl 5:7; Isa 8:20).
Here the fearing of God is opposed to our overmuch heeding dreams:
and there is implied, that it is for want of the fear of God that
men so much heed those things. What will they say to this that give
more heed to a suggestion that ariseth from their foolish hearts,
or that is cast in thither by the devil, than they do to the holy
Word of God? These are "filthy dreamers." Also, what shall we
say to those that are more confident of the mercy of God to their
soul, because he hath blessed them with outward things, than they
are afraid of his wrath and condemnation, though the whole of the
Word of God doth fully verify the same? These are "filthy dreamers"
indeed.
10. They fear not God, who are sorcerers, adulterers, false swearers,
and that oppress the hireling of his wages. It is a custom with some
men to keep back by fraud from the hireling that which by covenant
they agreed to pay for their labour; pinching, I say, and paring
from them their due that of right belongs to them, to the making of
them cry in "the ears of the Lord of sabaoth" (James 5:4). These
fear not God; they are reckoned among the worst of men, and in
their day of account God himself will bear witness against them.
"And I," saith God, "will come near to you to judgment; and I will
be a swift witness against the adulterers, and against the false
swearers, and against those that oppress the hireling in his wages,
the widow and the fatherless, and that turn aside the stranger from
his right, and fear not me, saith the Lord" (Mal 3:5).
11. They fear not God, who instead of pitying of, rail at God's
people in their affliction, temptations, and persecutions, and
rather rejoice and skip for joy, than sympathize with them in their
sorrow. Thus did David's enemies, thus did Israel's enemies, and
thus did the thief, he railed at Christ when he hanged upon the
cross, and was for that, even by his fellow, accounted for one
that feared not God (Luke 23:40; Psa 35:1,22-26. Read Oba 10-15;
Jer 48:2-6). This is a common thing among the children of men, even
to rejoice at the hurt of them that fear God, and it ariseth even
of an inward hatred to godliness. They hate you, saith Christ,
because they hated me. Therefore Christ takes what is done to his,
in this, as done unto himself, and so to holiness of life. But
this falls hard upon such as despise at, and rejoice to see, God's
people in their griefs, and that take the advantage, as dogged
Shimei did, to augment the griefs and afflictions of God's people
(2 Sam 16:5-8). These fear not God, they do this of enmity, and
their sin is such as will hardly be blotted out (1 Kings 2:8,9).
12. They fear not God, who are strangers to the effects of fear.
"If I be a master, where is my fear?" That is, show that I am so
by your fear of me in the effects of your fear of me. "You offer
polluted bread upon mine altar." This is not a sign that you fear
me, ye offer the blind for sacrifices, where is my fear? ye offer
the lame and the sick, these are not the effects of the fear of
God (Mal 1:6-8). Sinner, it is one thing to say, I fear God, and
another to fear him indeed. Therefore, as James says, show me thy
faith by thy works, so here God calls for a testimony of thy fear
by the effects of fear. I have already showed you several effects
of fear; if thou art a stranger to them, thou art a stranger to this
grace of fear. Therefore, to conclude this, it is not a feigned
profession that will do; nothing is good here, but what is salted
with this fear of God, and they that fear him are men of truth,
men of singleness of heart, perfect, upright, humble, holy men;
wherefore, reader, examine, and again, I say examine, and lay the
Word and thy heart together, before that thou concludest that thou
fearest God.
What! fear God, and in a state of nature? fear God without a change
of heart and life? What! fear God and be proud, and covetous,
a wine-bibber, and a riotous eater of flesh? How! fear God and a
liar, and one that cries for mercies to spend them upon thy lusts?
This would be strange. True, thou mayest fear as devils do, but
what will that profit? Thou mayest by thy fear be driven away from
God, from his worship, people, and ways, but what will that avail?
It may be thou mayest so fear at present, as to be a little stopped
in thy sinful course; perhaps thou hast got a knock from the Word
of God, and are at present a little dazzled and hindered from being
in thy former and full career after sin; but what of that? if by
the fear that thou hast, thy heart is not united to God, and to the
love of his Son, Word, and people, thy fear is nothing worth.[26]
Many men also are forced to fear God, as underlings are forced to
fear those that are by force above them. If thou only thus fearest
God, it is but a false fear; it flows not from love to God: this
fear brings not willing subjection, which indeed brings the effect
of right fear; but being over-mastered like an hypocrite, thou
subjected thyself by feigned obedience, being forced, I say, by
mere dread to do it (Psa 66:3).
It is said of David, "that the fame of him went out into all lands,
and the Lord brought the fear of him upon all nations" (1 Chron
14:17). But what, did they now love David? did they now choose him
to be their king? no verily; they, many of them, rather hated him,
and, when they could, made resistance against him. They did even
as thou dost--feared, but did not love; feared, but did not choose
his government that ruled over them. It is also said of Jehoshaphat,
when God had subdued before him Ammon, Moab, and mount Seir, that
"the fear of God was on all the kingdoms of these countries, when
they had heard that the Lord fought against the enemies of Israel"
(2 Chron 20:29). But, I say, was this fear, that is called now the
fear of God, anything else, but a dread of the greatness of power
of the king? No verily, nor did that dread bring them into a willing
subjection to, and liking of his laws and government; it only made
them like slaves and underlings, stand in fear of his executing
the vengeance of God upon them.
Before I leave this use, let me give thee a few things, that, if
God will, may provoke thee to fear the Lord.
1. The man that feareth not God, carrieth it worse towards him than
the beast, the brute beast, doth carry it towards that man. "The
fear of you, and the dread of you, shall be upon every beast of the
earth," yea, "and upon every fowl of the air," and "upon all that
moveth upon the earth, and upon all the fishes of the sea" (Gen
9:2).
Mark, all my creatures shall fear you, and dread you, says God.
None of them shall be so hardy as to cast of all reverence of you.
But what a shame is this to man, that God should subject all his
creatures to him, and he should refuse to stoop his heart to God?
The beast, the bird, the fish, and all, have a fear and dread of
man, yea, God has put it in their hearts to fear man, and yet man
is void of fear and dread, I mean of godly fear of him, that thus
lovingly hath put all things under him. Sinner, art thou not ashamed,
that a silly cow, a sheep, yea, a swine, should better observe the
law of his creation, than thou dost the law of thy God?
2. Consider, he that will not fear God, God will make him fear him
whether he will or no. That is, he that doth not, will not now so
fear him, as willingly to bow before him, and put his neck into his
yoke. God will make him fear him when he comes to take vengeance
on him. Then he will surround him with terror, and with fear on
every side, fear within, and fear without; fear shall be in the
way, even in the way that thou goest when thou art going out of
this world; and that will be dreadful fear (Eccl 12:5). "I will
bring their fears upon them," saith the Lord (Isa 66:4).
3. He that fears not God now, the Lord shall laugh at his fears
then. Sinner, God will be even with all them that choose not to
have his fear in their hearts: for as he calls and they hear not
now, so they shall cry, yea, howl then, and he will laugh at their
fears. "I will laugh," saith he, "at their destruction; I will mock
when their fear cometh, when your fear cometh as desolation and
your destruction cometh as a whirlwind, when distress and anguish
cometh upon you; then shall they call upon me, but I will not
answer: they shall seek me early, but they shall not find me, for
that they hated knowledge, and did not choose the fear of the Lord"
(Prov 1:27-29).
Sinner! thou thinkest to escape the fear; but what wilt thou do
with the pit? Thou thinkest to escape the pit; but what wilt thou
do with the snare? The snare, say you, what is that? I answer, it
is even the work of thine own hands. "The wicked is snared in the
work of his own hands," he is "snared by the transgression of his
lips" (Psa 9:16; Prov 12:13).
Sinner! what wilt thou do when thou comest into this snare; that
is, into the guilt and terror that thy sins will snaffle[27] thee
with, when they, like a cord, are fastened about thy soul? This
snare will bring thee back again to the pit, which is hell, and
then how wilt thou do to be rid of thy fear? The fear, pit, and
the snare shall come upon thee, because thou fearest not God.
Sinner! art thou one of them that hast cast off fear? poor man,
what wilt thou do when these three things beset thee? whither wilt
thou fly for help? And where wilt thou leave thy glory? If thou
fliest from the fear, there is the pit; if thou fliest from the
pit, there is the snare.
Third. Another motive may be this: The man that groweth in this
grace of the fear of the Lord will escape those evils that others
will fall into. Where this grace is, it keepeth the soul from final
apostasy, "I will put my fear in their hearts, that they shall not
depart from me" (Jer 32:40). But yet, if there be not an increase
in this grace, much evil may attend, and be committed notwithstanding.
There is a child that is healthy, and hath its limbs, and can go,
but it is careless; now the evil of carelessness doth disadvantage
it very much; carelessness is the cause of stumblings, of falls,
of knocks, and that it falls into the dirt, yea, that sometimes
it is burned, or almost drowned. And thus it is, even with God's
people that fear him, because they add not to their fear a care
of growing more in the fear of God, therefore they reap damage;
whereas, were they more in his fear, it would keep them better,
deliver them more, and preserve them from these snares of death.
Fourth. Another motive may be this: To grow in this grace of
the fear of God, is the way to be kept always in a conscientious
performance of Christian duties. An increase in this grace, I say,
keeps every grace in exercise, and the keeping of our graces in
their due exercise, produceth a conscientious performance of duties.
Thou hast a watch perhaps in thy pocket, but the hand will not
as yet be kept in any good order, but does always give the lie as
to the hour of the day; well, but what is the way to remedy this,
but to look well to the spring, and the wheels within? for if they
indeed go right, so will the hand do also. This is thy case in
spiritual things; thou art a gracious man, and the fear of God is
in thee, but yet for all that, one cannot well tell, by thy life,
what time of day it is.[28] Thou givest no true and constant sign
that thou art indeed a Christian; why, the reason is, thou dost
not look well to this grace of the fear of God. Thou dost not grow
and increase in that, but sufferest thy heart to grow careless,
and hard, and so thy life remiss and worldly: Job's growing great
in the fear of God made him eschew evil (Job 1, 2:3).
Yea, see if God doth not count that the growth of his people in
this grace of fear is that which makes them honourable, when he
positively excludeth those from a dwelling-place in his house, that
do not honour them that fear him (Psa 15:4). And he saith moreover,
"A woman that feareth the Lord, she shall be praised." If the world
and godless men will not honour these, they shall be honoured some
way else. Such, saith he, "that honour me I will honour," and they
shall be honoured in heaven, in the churches, and among the angels.
Eighth. Another motive to grow in this fear of God may be: This
fear, and the increase of it, qualifies a man to be put in trust
with heavenly and spiritual things, yea, and with earthly things
too.
Ninth. Another motive to grow in this grace of fear is, Where the
fear of God in the heart of any is not growing, there no grace
thrives, nor duty done as it should.
There no grace thrives, neither faith, hope, love, nor any grace.
This is evident from that general exhortation, "Perfecting holiness
in the fear of God" (2 Cor 7:1). Perfecting holiness, what is that?
but as James says of patience, let every grace have its perfect
work, that ye may be perfect and entire, lacking nothing (James
1:4).
But this cannot be done but in the fear of God, yea, in the exercise
of that grace, and so consequently in the growth of it, for there
is no grace but grows by being exercised. If then you would be
perfect in holiness, if you would have every grace that God has
put into your souls, grow and flourish into perfection; lay them,
as I may say, a-soak in this grace of fear,[30] and do all in the
exercise of it; for a little done in the fear of the Lord is better
than the revenues of the wicked. And again, the Lord will not suffer
the soul of the righteous, the soul that liveth in the fear of the
Lord, to famish, but he casteth away the abundance of the wicked.
Bring abundance to God, and if it be not seasoned with godly fear,
it shall not be acceptable to him, but loathsome and abominable
in his sight; for it doth not flow from the spirit of the fear of
the Lord.
This fear of God is it that keeps the conscience clean and tender,
and so free from much of that defilement that even a good man may
be afflicted with, for want of his growth in this fear of God.
Yea, let me add, if a man can with a good conscience say that he
desires to fear the name of God, it will add boldness to his soul
in his approaches into the presence of God. "O Lord," said Nehemiah,
"I beseech thee, let now thine ear be attentive to the prayer of
thy servant, and servants, who desire to fear thy name" (Neh 1:11).
He pleaded his desire of fearing the name of God, as an argument
with God to grant him his request; and the reason was, because God
had promised before "to bless them that fear him, both small and
great" (Psa 115:13).
Wouldest thou save thy husband, thy wife, thy children, &c., then
be greatly in the fear of God.
The want of this fear of God is that that has been a stumbling-block
to the blind oftentimes. Alas, the world will not be convinced by
your talk, by your notions, and by the great profession that you
make, if they see not, therewith mixed, the lively impressions of
the fear of God; but will, as I said, rather stumble and fall, even
at your conversation and at your profession itself. Wherefore, to
prevent this mischief, that is, of stumbling of souls while you
make your profession of God, by a conversation not becoming your
profession, God bids you fear him; implying that a good conversation,
coupled with fear, delivers the blind world from those falls that
otherwise they cannot be delivered from. "Thou shalt not curse the
deaf, nor put a stumbling-block before the blind, but shalt fear
thy God: I am the Lord" (Lev 19:14). But shalt fear thy God, that
is the remedy that will prevent their stumbling at you, at what
else soever they stumble. Wherefore Paul says to Timothy, "Take
heed unto thyself, and unto the doctrine; continue in them; for in
doing this thou shalt both save thyself and them that hear thee"
(1 Tim 4:16).
Having given you these motives to the duty of growing in this fear
of God, before I leave this use, I will, in a few words, show you
how you may grow in this fear of God.
First. Then, if thou wouldest grow in this fear of God, learn aright
to distinguish of fear in general. I mean, learn to distinguish
between that fear that is godly, and that which in itself is indeed
ungodly fear of God; and know them well the one from the other,
lest the one, the fear that in itself indeed is ungodly, get the
place, even the upper hand of that which truly is godly fear. And
remember the ungodly fear of God is by God himself counted an enemy
to him, and hurtful to his people, and is therefore most plentifully
forbidden in the Word (Gen 3:15, 26:24, 46:3; Exo 14:13, 20:20;
Num 14:9, 21:34; Isa 41:10,14, 43:1, 44:2,8; 54:4; Jer 30:10; Dan
10:12,19; Joel 2:21; Hagg 2:5; Zech 8:13).
Again, before I leave this, let me tell thee that if thou dost not
well bestir thee in this matter, this bondage fear, to wit, that
which is like it, though not wrought in thee by the Holy Ghost,
will, by the management and subtlety of the devil, the author
of it, haunt, disturb, and make thee live uncomfortably, and that
while thou art an heir of God and his kingdom. This is that fear
that the apostle speaks of, that makes men "all their lifetime
subject to bondage" (Heb 2:14,15). For though Christ will deliver
thee indeed at last, thou having embraced him by faith, yet thy
life will be full of trouble; and death, though Jesus hath abolished
it, will be always a living bugbear to thee in all thy ways and
thoughts, to break thy peace, and to make thee to draw thy loins
heavily after him.
Third. Wouldest thou grow in this godly fear? then, as thou shouldest
learn to distinguish of fears, so thou shouldest make conscience
of which to entertain and cherish. If God would have his fear--and
it is called HIS fear by way of eminency--"that his fear may be
before you, that ye sin not" (Exo 20:20; Jer 32:40)--I say, if God
would have his fear be with thee, then thou shouldest make conscience
of this, and not so lightly give way to slavish fear, as is common
for Christians to do.
But Christians are ready to do with this fear as the horse does
when the tines[34] of the fork are set against his side; even lean
to it until it entereth into his belly. We lean naturally to this
fear, I mean, after God has done good to our souls; it is hard
striving against it, because it has even our sense and feeling of
its side. But I say, if thou wouldest be a growing Christian--growing, I
say, in the fear that is godly, in the fear that is always so--then
make conscience of striving against the other, and against all
these things that would bring thee back to it. "Wherefore should
I fear," said David, "in the day of evil, when the iniquity of my
heels shall compass me about?" (Psa 49:5).
What! not fear in the day of evil? What! not when the iniquity of
thy heels compasseth thee about? No, not then, saith he, that is,
not with that fear that would bring him again into bondage to the
law; for he had received the spirit of adoption before. Indeed, if
ever a Christian has ground to give way to slavish fear, it is at
these two times, to wit, in the day of evil, and when the iniquity
of his heels compasseth him about; but you see, David would not
then, no, not then, give way thereto, nor did he see reason why
he should. "Wherefore should I," said he? Aye, wherefore indeed?
since now thou art become a son of God through Christ, and hast
received the Spirit of his Son into thy heart, crying, Father,
Father.
Fourth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of godly fear? then grow
in the knowledge of the new covenant, for that is indeed the girdle
of our reins, and the strength of our souls. Hear what Zacharias
saith: God, says he, "hath raised up an horn of salvation for
us in the house of his servant David, as he spake by the mouth of
his holy prophets which have been since the world began." But what
was it? what was it that he spake? Why, "That he would grant unto
us, that we, being delivered out of the hand of our enemies, might
serve him without fear," without this slavish bondage fear, "in
holiness and righteousness before him all the days of our life."
But upon what is this princely fearless service of God grounded?
Why, upon the holy covenant of God, upon the oath that he swore
unto Abraham (Luke 1:69-74). Now in this covenant is wrapped up all
thy salvation; in it is contained all thy desire, and I am sure,
that then it containeth the complete salvation of thy soul; and I
say, since this covenant is confirmed by promise, by oath, and by
the blood of the Son of God, and that on purpose that thou mightest
serve thy God without slavish fear, then the knowledge and faith
of this covenant is of absolute necessity to bring us into this
liberty, and out of our slavish terrors, and so, consequently, to
cause us to grow in that son-like, godly fear, which became even
the Son of God himself, and becomes all his disciples to live in
the growth and exercise of.
Fifth. Wouldest thou grow in this godly fear? then labour even always
to keep thine evidences for heaven and of thy salvation alive upon
thy heart; for he that loseth his evidences for heaven, will hardly
keep slavish fear out of heart; but he that hath the wisdom and
grace to keep them alive, and apparent to himself, he will grow in
this godly fear. See how David words it, "From the end of the earth,"
saith he, "will I cry unto thee; when my heart is overwhelmed, lead
me to the rock that is higher than I. For thou hast been a shelter
for me, and a strong tower from the enemy: I will abide in thy
tabernacle for ever. For thou, O God, hast heard my vows; thou hast
given me the heritage of those that fear thy name" (Psa 61:2-5).
Mark a little, David doth by these words, in the first place,
suggest that sometimes, to his thinking, he was as far off of his
God as the ends of the earth are asunder, and that at such times he
was subject to be overwhelmed, afraid: [And] second, the way that
he took at such times, to help himself, was to cry to God to lead
him again to Jesus Christ--"lead me to the rock that is higher
than I"; for indeed without faith in him, and the renewing of that
faith, there can be no evidence for heaven made to appear unto the
soul. This therefore he prays for first. Then he puts that faith
into exercise, and that with respect to the time that was past,
and also of the time that was to come. For the time past, says
he, "Thou hast been a shelter to me, and a strong tower from the
enemy"; and for the time to come, he said, "I will abide in thy
tabernacle," that is, in thy Christ by faith, and in thy way of
worship by love, "forever." And observe it, he makes the believing
remembrance of his first evidences for heaven the ground of this
his cry and faith, "For thou," says he, "O God, hast given me the
heritage of those that fear thy name." Thou hast made me meet to
be a partaker of the mercy of thy chosen, and hast put me under
the blessing of goodness wherewith thou hast blessed those that
fear thee. Thus you see how David, in his distresses, musters up
his prayers, faith, and evidences for eternal life, that he might
deliver himself from being overwhelmed, that is, with slavish
fear, and that he might also abound in that son-like fear of
his fellow-brethren, that is not only comely, with respect to our
profession, but profitable to our souls.
Sixth. Wouldest thou grow in this fear of God? then set before
thine eyes the being and majesty of God; for that both begetteth,
maintaineth, and increaseth this fear. And hence it is called the
fear of God, that is, an holy and awful dread and reverence of his
majesty. For the fear of God is to stand in awe of him, but how
can that be done if we do not set him before us? And again, if we
would fear him more, we must abide more in the sense and faith of
his glorious majesty. Hence this fear and God's name is so often
put together: as fear God, fear the Lord, fear thy God, do this in
the fear of the Lord, and thou shalt fear thy God, I am the Lord.
For these words, "I am the Lord thy God," and the like, are on
purpose put in, not only to show us whom we should fear, but also
to beget, maintain, and increase in us that fear that is due from
us to that "glorious and fearful name, the Lord our God" (Deut
28:58).
Judgments! you may say, what judgments? Answ. Time will fail me
here to tell thee of the judgments that sometimes overtake God's
people, and that always certainly overtake the hypocrite for his
transgressions. For those that attend God's people, I would have
thee look back to the place in this book where they are particularly
touched upon. And for those that attend the hypocrite, in general
they are these. 1. Blindness of heart in this world. 2. The death
of their hope at the day of their death. 3. And the damnation
of their souls at the day of judgment (Matt 23:15-19; Job 8:13,
11:20, 18:14, 20:4-7, Matt 23:33, 24:51; Luke 20:47). The godly
consideration of these things tend to make men grow in the fear of
God.
Tenth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then study the
excellencies of the grace of fear, and what profit it yieldeth
to them that have it, and labour to get thy heart into the love,
both of the exercise of the grace itself, and also of the fruit
it yieldeth; for a man hardly grows in the increase of any grace,
until his heart is united to it, and until it is made lovely in
his eyes (Psa 119:119,120). Now the excellencies of this grace of
fear have also been discoursed of in this book before, where by
reading thou shalt find the fruit it bears, and the promises that
are annexed to it, which, because they are many, I refer thee also
thither for thy instruction.
What things they are that have a tendency in them to hinder the
growth of the fear of God in our hearts.
And that I may yet be helpful to thee, reader, I shall now give
thee caution of those things that will, if way be given to them,
hinder thy growth in this fear of God, the which, because they are
very hurtful to the people of God, I would have thee be warned by
them. And they are these which follow:
Now if thou wouldest be kept from a hard heart, 1. Take heed of the
beginnings of sin. Take heed, I say, of that, though it should be
never so small; "A little leaven leaveneth the whole lump." There
is more in a little sin to harden, than in a great deal of grace
to soften. David's look upon Bathsheba was, one would think, but
a small matter; yet that beginning of sin contracted such hardness
of heart in him, that it carried him almost beyond all fear of
God. It did carry him to commit lewdness with her, murder upon the
body of Uriah, and to abundance of wicked dissimulation; which are
things, I say, that have direct tendency to quench and destroy all
fear of God in the soul.
2. If thou hast sinned, lie not down without repentance; for the
want of repentance, after one has sinned, makes the heart yet harder
and harder. Indeed a hard heart is impenitent, and impenitence
also makes the heart harder and harder. So that if impenitence be
added to hardness of heart, or to the beginning of sin which makes
it so, it will quickly be with that soul, as is said of the house
of Israel, it will have a whore's forehead, it will hardly be
brought to shame (Jer 3:3).
Second. If thou wouldest have the grace of fear to grow in thy soul,
take heed also of A PRAYERLESS HEART, for that is not a place for
this grace of fear to grow in. Hence he that restraineth prayer
is said to cast off fear. "Thou castest off fear," said one of his
friends to Job. But how must he do that? Why the next words show,
"Thou restrainest prayer before God" (Job 15:4). Seest thou a
professor that prayeth not? that man thrusteth the fear of God away
from him. Seest thou a man that prays but little, that man feareth
God but little; for it is the praying soul, the man that is mighty
in praying, that has a heart for the fear of God to grow in. Take
heed, therefore, of a prayerless heart, if you would grow in this
grace of the fear of God. Prayer is as the pitcher that fetcheth
water from the brook, therewith to water the herbs; break the pitcher,
and it will fetch no water, and for want of water the garden withers.
Third. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed of
A LIGHT AND WANTON HEART, for neither is such a heart good ground
for the fear of God to grow in. Wherefore it is said of Israel,
"She feared not, but went and played the harlot also." She was
given to wantonness, and to be light and vain, and so her fear of
God decayed (Jer 3:8). Had Joseph been as wanton as his mistress,
he had been as void of the fear of God as she; but he was of a
sober, tender, godly, considerate spirit, therefore he grew in the
fear of God.
Fourth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed
of A COVETOUS HEART, for neither is that which is such an one good
ground for this grace of fear to grow in. Therefore this covetousness
and the fear of God are as enemies, set the one in opposition to the
other: one that feareth God and hateth covetousness (Exo 18:21).
And the reason why covetousness is such an obstruction to the growth
of this grace of fear, is because covetousness casteth those things
out of the heart which alone can nourish this fear. It casteth out
the Word and love of God, without which no grace can grow in the
soul; how then should the fear of God grow in a covetous heart?
(Eze 33:30-32; 1 John 2:15).
Fifth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed of
AN UNBELIEVING HEART, for an unbelieving heart is not good ground
for this grace of fear to grow in. An unbelieving heart is called
"an evil heart," because from it flows all the wickedness that is
committed in the world (Heb 3:12). Now it is faith, or a believing
heart, that nourisheth this fear of God, and not the other; and
the reason is, for that faith brings God, heaven, and hell, to the
soul, and maketh it duly consider of them all (Heb 11:7). This is
therefore the means of fear, and that which will make it grow in
the soul; but unbelief is a bane thereto.
Sixth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed of
A FORGETFUL HEART. Such a heart is not a heart where the grace of
fear will flourish, "when I remember, I am afraid," &c. Therefore
take heed of forgetfulness; do not forget but remember God, and
his kindness, patience, and mercy, to those that yet neither have
grace, nor special favour from him, and that will beget and nourish
his fear in thy heart, but forgetfulness of this, or of any other
of his judgments, is a great wound and weakening to this fear (Job
21:6). When a man well remembers that God's judgments are so great
a deep and mystery, as indeed they are, that remembrance puts a man
upon such considerations of God and of his judgments as to make him
fear--"Therefore," said Job, "I am afraid of him." See the place,
Job 23:15. "Therefore am I troubled at his presence; when I consider,
I am afraid of him"--when I remember and consider of the wonderful
depths of his judgments towards man.
Seventh. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed
of A MURMURING AND REPINING HEART, for that is not a heart for
this grace of fear to grow in. As for instance, when men murmur and
repine at God's hand, at his dispensations, and at the judgments that
overtake them, in their persons, estates, families, or relations,
that their murmuring tendeth to destroy fear; for a murmuring
spirit is such an one as seems to correct God, and to find fault
with his dispensations, and where there is that, the heart is far
from fear. A murmuring spirit either comes from that wisdom that
pretends to understand that there is a failure in the nature and
execution of things, or from an envy and spite at the execution of
them. Now if murmurings arise from this pretended wisdom of the
flesh, then instead of fearing of God, his actions are judged to be
either rigid or ridiculous, which yet are done in judgment, truth,
and righteousness. So that a murmuring heart cannot be a good one
for the fear of God to grow in. Alas! the heart where that grows
must be a soft one; as you have it in Job 23:15, 16; and a heart
that will stoop and be silent at the most abstruse of all his
judgments--"I was dumb, because THOU didst it." The heart in which
this fear of God doth flourish is such, that it bows and is mute,
if it can but espy the hand, wisdom, justice, or holiness of God in
this or the other of his dispensations, and so stirs up the soul
to fear before him. But if this murmuring ariseth from envy and
spite, that looketh so like to the spirit of the devil, that nothing
need be said to give conviction of the horrible wickedness of it.
Eighth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed
of A HIGH AND CAPTIOUS SPIRIT, for that is not good ground for the
fear of God to grow in. A meek and quiet spirit is the best, and
there the fear of God will flourish most; therefore Peter puts
meekness and fear together, as being most suited in their nature
and natural tendency one to another (1 Peter 3:15). Meekness of
spirit is like that heart that hath depth of earth in it in which
things may take root and grow; but a high and captious spirit is
like to the stony ground, where there is not depth of earth, and
consequently, where this grace of fear cannot grow; therefore take
heed of this kind of spirit, if thou wouldest that the fear of God
should grow in thy soul.
Ninth. Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take heed
of AN ENVIOUS HEART, for that is not a good heart for the fear of
God to grow in. "Let not thine heart envy sinners; but be thou in
the fear of the Lord all the day long" (Prov 23:17). To envy any
is a sign of a bad spirit, and that man takes upon him, as I have
already hinted, to be a controller and a judge, yea, and a malicious
executioner too, and that of that fury that ariseth from his own
lusts and revengeful spirit, upon (perhaps) the man that is more
righteous than himself. But suppose he is a sinner that is the object
of thine envy, why, the text sets that envy in direct opposition
to the fear of God; "Envy not sinners, but be thou in the fear of
God." These two, therefore, to wit, envy to sinners and fearing of
God, are opposites. Thou canst not fear God, and envy sinners too.
And the reason is, because he that envieth a sinner, hath forgotten
himself, that he is as bad; and how can he then fear God? He that
envies sinners rejects his duty of blessing of them that curse,
and praying for them that despitefully use us; and how can he that
hath rejected this, fear God? He that envieth sinners, therefore,
cannot be of a good spirit, nor can the fear of God grow in his
heart.
Tenth. Lastly, Wouldest thou grow in this grace of fear? then take
heed of HARDENING THY HEART at any time against convictions to
particular duties, as to prayer, alms, self-denial, or the like.
Take heed also of hardening thy heart, when thou art under any
judgment of God, as sickness, losses, crosses, or the like. I bid
you before to beware of a hard heart, but now I bid you beware of
hardening your soft ones. For to harden the heart is to make it
worse than it is; harder, more desperate, and bold against God,
than at the present it is. Now, I say, if thou wouldest grow in this
grace of fear, take heed of hardening thy heart, and especially of
hardening of it against convictions to good; for those convictions
are sent of God like seasonable showers of rain, to keep the tillage of
thy heart in good order, that the grace of fear may grow therein;
but this stifling of convictions makes the heart as hard as a
piece of the nether millstone. Therefore happy is he that receiveth
conviction, for so he doth keep in the fear of God, and that fear
thereby nourished in his soul; but cursed is he that doth
otherwise--"Happy is the man that feareth alway; but he that
hardeneth his heart shall fall into mischief" (Prov 28:14).
First. Had God given thee all the world, yet cursed hadst thou been,
if he had not given thee the fear of the Lord; for the fashion of
this world is a fading thing, but he that feareth the Lord shall
abide for ever and ever. This therefore is the first thing that I
would propound for thy encouragement, thou man that fears the Lord.
This grace will dwell in thy heart, for it is a new covenant grace,
and will abide with thee for ever. It is sent to thee from God,
not only to join thy heart unto him, but to keep thee from final
apostasy--"I will put my fear in their hearts, that they shall not
depart from me" (Jer 32:40). That thou mayest never forsake God,
is his design, and therefore, to keep thee from that wicked thing,
he hath put his fear in thy heart. Many are the temptations,
difficulties, snares, traps, trials, and troubles that the people
of God pass through in the world, but how shall they be kept, how
shall they be delivered, and escape? Why, the answer is, The fear
of God will keep them--"He that feareth God shall come forth of
them all."
1. It is seated in the heart, and the heart is, as I may call it,
the main fort in the mystical world, man. It is not placed in the
head, as knowledge is; nor in the mouth, as utterance is, but in
the heart, the seat of all, "I will put my fear in their hearts."
If a king will keep a town secure to himself, let him be sure to
man sufficiently the main fort thereof. If he have twenty thousand
men well armed, yet if they lie scattered here and there, the town
may be taken for all that, but if the main fort be well manned, then
the town is more secure. What if a man had all the parts, yea, all
the arts of men and angels? That will not keep the heart to God.
But when the heart, this principal fort, is possessed with the fear
of God, then he is safe, but not else.
4. This grace of fear is the softest and most tender of God's honour
of any other grace. It is that tender, sensible, and trembling
grace, that keepeth the soul upon its continual watch. To keep a
good watch is, you know, a wonderful safety to a place that is in
continual danger because of the enemy. Why, this is the grace that
setteth the watch, and that keepeth the watchmen awake (Can 3:7,8).
A man cannot watch as he should, if he be destitute of fear: let him
be confident, and he sleeps; he unadvisedly lets into the garrison
those that should not come there. Israel's fault when they came to
Canaan was, that they made a covenant with the inhabitants of the
land, to wit, the Gibeonites, without asking counsel of God. But
would they have done so, think you, if at the same time the fear
of God had had its full play in the soul, in the army? no, they at
that time forgot to fear. The grace of fear had not at that time
its full stroke and sway among them.
Quest. But you may say, How shall I know that I fear God?
True desires are lower than higher acts of grace, but God will not
overlook desires--"But now they desire a better country, that is,
an heavenly; wherefore God is not ashamed to be called their God;
for he hath prepared for them a city." Mark, they desire a country,
and they shall have a city. At this low place, to wit, sincere
desires, God will meet the soul and will tell him that he hath
accepted of his desires, that his desires are his kindness, and
flow from grace itself: "He will fulfil the desire of them that fear
him." Therefore desires are not rejected of God; but they would,
if they did not flow from a principle of grace already in the soul;
therefore desires, sincere desires to fear God, flow from grace
already in the soul. Therefore, since thou fearest God, and it is
evident by thy desires that thou dost so do, thou art happy now
in this thy fear, and shalt be happy for ever hereafter in the
enjoyment of that which God in another world hath laid up for them
that fear him.
Third. Another encouragement for those that have this grace of fear
is this; this grace can make that man, that in many other things
is not capable of serving of God, serve him better than those that
have all without it. Poor Christian man, thou hast scarce been able
to do anything for God all thy days, but only to fear the Lord.
Thou art no preacher, and so canst not do him service that way;
thou art no rich man, and so canst not do him service with outward
substance; thou art no wise man, and so canst not do anything that
way; but here is thy mercy, thou fearest God. Though thou canst
not preach, thou canst fear God. Though thou hast no bread to feed
the belly, nor fleece to clothe the back of the poor, thou canst
fear God. O how "blessed is the man that feareth the Lord"; because
this duty of fearing of God is an act of the mind, and may be
done by the man that is destitute of all things but that holy and
blessed mind.
Blessed therefore is that man, for God hath not laid the comfort
of his people in the doing of external duties, nor the salvation
of their souls, but in believing, loving, and fearing God. Neither
hath he laid these things in actions done in their health nor in the
due management of their most excellent parts, but in the receiving
of Christ, and fear of God. The which, good Christian, thou mayest
do, and do acceptably, even though thou shouldest lie bed-rid all
thy days; thou mayest also be sick and believe; be sick and love,
be sick and fear God, and so be a blessed man. And here the poor
Christian hath something to answer them that reproach him for his
ignoble pedigree, and shortness of the glory of the wisdom of the
world. True, may that man say, I was taken out of the dunghill, I
was born in a base and low estate, but I fear God. I have no worldly
greatness, nor excellency of natural parts, but I fear God.
When Obadiah met with Elijah, he gave him no worldly and fantastical
compliment, nor did he glory in his promotion by Ahab the king of
Israel, but gravely, and after a gracious manner, said, "I thy servant
fear the Lord from my youth." Also when the mariners inquired of
Jonah, saying, "What is thine occupation, and whence comest thou?
what is thy country, and of what people art thou?" This was the
answer he gave them, "I am a Hebrew, and I fear the Lord, the God
of heaven, which hath made the sea and the dry land" (Jonah 1:8,9).
Indeed this answer is the highest, and most noble in the world,
nor are there any, save a few, that in truth can thus express
themselves, though other answers they had enough; most can say,
I have wisdom, or might, or riches, or friends, or health, or the
like; these are common, and are greatly boasted in by the most;
but he is the man that feareth God, and he that can say, when they
say to him, What art thou? "I thy servant fear the Lord," he is
the man of many, he is to be honoured of men: though this, to wit,
that he feareth the Lord, is all that he hath in the world. He
hath the thing, the honour, the life, and glory that is lasting;
his blessedness will abide when all men's but his is buried in the
dust, in shame and contempt.[35]
A word to hypocrites.
Hypocrite, thou mayest by thy cunning shifts be veiled and hid from
men, but thou art naked before the eyes of God, and he knoweth that
his fear is not in thy heart (Luke 16:15).
Hypocrite, thou must fear God first, even before thou dost offer to
meddle with the commandments, that is, as to the keeping of them.
Indeed, thou shouldest read therein, that thou mayest learn to fear
the Lord, but yet, "fear God" goes before the command to keep his
commandments. And if thou dost not fear God first, thou transgressest,
instead of keeping of the commandments.
Hypocrite, this word, FEAR GOD, is that which the hypocrite quite
forgets, although it is that which sanctifies the whole duty of
man. For this is that, and nothing without it, that can make a man
sincere in his obedience; the hypocrite looks for applause abroad,
and forgets that he is condemned at home, and both these he does
because he wanteth the fear of God.
Perhaps thou wilt not let go now, what, as a hypocrite, thou hast
got; but "what is the hope of the hypocrite, when God taketh away
his soul?" (Job 27:8). Hypocrite, thou shouldest have chosen the
fear of God, as thou hast chosen a profession without it, but thou
hast cast off fear, because thou art a hypocrite; and because thou
art such, thou shalt have the same measure that thou metest; God
will cast thee off, because thou art a hypocrite. God hath prepared
a fear for thee because thou didst not choose the fear of God, and
that fear shall come upon thee like desolation, and like an armed
man, and shall swallow thee up, thou and all that thou art (Prov
1:27).
Hypocrite, thou art like to have no other reward of God for thy
labour than that which the goats shall have;[36] the hypocrite,
because he is a hypocrite, shall not stand in God's sight. The
gain of thy religion thou spendest as thou gettest it. Thou wilt
not have one farthing overplus at death and judgment.
Hypocrite, God hath not intrusted thee with the least dram of his
saving grace, nor will he, because thou art a hypocrite: and as for
what thou hast, thou hast stolen it, even every man of you from his
neighbour; still pilfering out of their profession, even as Judas
did out of the bag. Thou comest like a thief into thy profession,
and like a thief thou shalt go out of the same. Jesus Christ hath
not counted thee faithful to commit to thee any of his jewels to
keep, because thou fearest him not. He hath given his "banner to
them that fear him, that it may be displayed because of the truth"
(Psa 60:4).
Hypocrite, thou art not true to God nor man, nor thine own soul,
because thou art a hypocrite! How should the Lord put any trust
in thee? Why should the saints look for any good from thee? Should
God give thee his Word, thou wilt sell it. Should men commit their
souls to thee, thou wilt destroy them, by making merchandise of
them, for thy own hypocritical designs. Yea, if the sun waxes hot,
thou wilt throw all away, and not endure the heat, because thou
art a hypocrite!
FOOTNOTES:
[1]This is a very remarkable illustration of godly fear. Jacob does
not swear by the omnipresence or omniscience of God--nor by his
omnipotence--nor by his love or mercy in his covenant--nor by the
God of Abraham, but by the "fear of his father Isaac"--the sole
object of his adoration. A most striking and solemn appeal to
Jehovah, fixing upon our hearts that Divine proverb, "The fear of
the Lord is the beginning of wisdom"--the source of all happiness,
both in time and in eternity.--Ed.
[5] The genuine disciple "who thinketh no evil" will say, Can this
be so now? Yes, reader, it is. Some go to God's house to worship
their ease and forgetfulness in sleep; some for worldly purposes;
some to admire the beauty of the frail body; but many to worship God
in spirit and in truth. Reader, inquire to which of these classes
you belong.--Ed.
[7] The Word is the decree upon which we must depend or perish. In
vain, poor sinner, is any reliance upon churches or men; neither
Papist nor Protestant have any power "committed unto them" to
forgive sins. If they claim it, believe them not, but pity their
pride and delusion. Christ is the Rock, and not poor erring Peter,
as some have vainly imagined. Peter is dead, awaiting the resurrection
of his body, and the great day of judgment; but Christ ever liveth
at all times, and in all places, able to save unto the uttermost.
Put no trust in man, but in thy broken spirit seek the blessing of
Christ, that he may pardon thy sins.--Ed.
[11] God does not limit himself as to his mode of calling poor
sinners. The three thousand he convinced at one hour, and they
immediately made a profession, but Bunyan was for years in a state
of alarming uncertainty; some are driven by fiery terrors, others
by a still small voice. Reader, our anxious inquiry should be,
Have we entered in by Christ the gate? Are our fruits meet for
repentance? Let no one vaunt of his experience, because he go
well bedaubed with the dirt of the slough. Every soul that enters
the gate is equally a miracle of grace.--Ed.
[13] Those who are adopted into the family of heaven are "justified
from all things"; being delivered from sin, the curse, and wrath,
"there is now no condemnation for them"; and trusting to Jesus'
precious blood of pardon, to his righteousness for acceptance, and
to his grace for sanctification, they are, by the indwelling of
the Spirit which adopted them, possessed of that love which casteth
out fear, and rejoiceth in hope of the glory of God. And to those
who, through their manifold infirmities and departures, are often
beset with unbelieving fears, the Lord says, for their encouragement,
"Fear thou not, for I am with thee; I will help thee; yea, I will uphold
thee with the right hand of my righteousness" (Isa 41:10).--Mason.
[15] Alas! how few attain to this most blessed state. To delight
so in the Word--to make it so much our daily study, and the object
of our meditations at night, as to have "its very form engraven
upon the face of our souls." Happy is the man that is in such a
case. O my soul, why is it not thy case?--Ed.
[16] The filial fear of God is most prevalent when the heart
is impressed with a lively sense of the love of God manifested in
Christ. As a dutiful and obedient child fears to offend an affectionate
parent, or as a person of grateful heart would be extremely careful
not to grieve a kind and bountiful friend, who is continually loading
him with favours and promoting his true happiness; so, and much
more, will the gracious soul be afraid of displeasing the Lord,
his bountiful and unwearied benefactor, who is crowning him with
loving kindness and tender mercies.--Mason.
[20] "The conduct of angels" means not merely their guiding pilgrims
in the way, but also, in a military sense, a guard, or what is now
called a convoy.--Ed.
[23] This if from the Bible, and not from the inferior version in
the Book of Common Prayer, commonly called the reading Psalms.--Ed.
How blessed are we in our day with the poetry of Watts, Wesley,
and a host of others, who have supplied the church with beautiful
soul-inspiring compositions, without fear to restrain us in using
them.--Ed.
[26] Whoever thou art, beseech the Lord to weigh thee in the
balances of the sanctuary. No fear of God--no grace in the soul.
Of this class is the proud, the covetous, the glutton, the liar,
the apostate, the perverter of God's people from the right way;
obstinate and incorrigible backsliders; those who neither mourn
nor sigh for the wickedness of the land; they that prefer their
own fancies, dreams, frames, and feelings, to the Word of God;
swearers, adulterers, perjured persons, and oppressors of the poor;
they that insult the godly, and rejoice at their sufferings; they
that have no love, gratitude, nor sense of duty to God, as the
fountain of their unmerited mercies. O reader, give God no rest
until, by his Word and Spirit, he imparts to thee this holy fear as
the earnest of glory hereafter; without it you are perishing.--Mason.--Ed.
[31] The words, "he made them houses," we humbly suggest, may not
only mean that these God-fearing women had safe dwelling-places,
but, in a more extensive sense, God made them the heads of honourable
families, see 1 Samuel 2:35; 2 Samuel 7:11, 13, 27, 29; 1 Kings
2:24, 11:28. So David's prayer was, "Let my house be established
before thee; thou, O my God, wilt build me an house" (1 Chron
17:24,25).--Ed.
[32] Royal patents, in Bunyan's time, were lucrative but most oppressive,
conferring upon favourites, or their nominees, an exclusive right
to deal in any article of manufacture. But the patent to God's
fearers, to trust in him when involved in darkness and distress,
is a blessed privilege, injurious to none.--Ed.
[34] "Tines"; from the Saxon; the teeth or spikes in the rowel of
a spur.--Ed.
***
THE DOCTRINE
OF
OR,
A DISCOURSE TOUCHING THE LAW AND GRACE; THE NATURE OF THE ONE, AND
THE NATURE OF THE OTHER; SHOWING WHAT THEY ARE, AS THEY ARE THE
TWO COVENANTS; AND LIKEWISE, WHO THEY BE, AND WHAT THEIR CONDITIONS
ARE, THAT BE UNDER EITHER OF THESE TWO COVENANTS:
"For the law made nothing perfect, but the bringing in of a better
hope did; by the which we draw nigh unto God" (Heb 7:19).
"To him [therefore] that worketh not, but believeth on Him that
justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness"
(Rom 4:5).
Again; that man that doth not know the nature of the law, that man
doth not know the nature of sin; and that man that knoweth not the
nature of sin, will not regard to know the nature of a Saviour;
this is proved (John 8:31-36). These people were professors, and
yet did not know the truth--the Gospel; and the reason was, because
they did not know themselves, and so not the law. I would not have
thee mistake me, Christian reader; I do not say that the law of
itself will lead any soul to Jesus Christ; but the soul being killed
by the law, through the operation of its severity seizing on the
soul, then the man, if he be enlightened by the Spirit of Christ
to see where remedy is to be had, will not, through grace, be
contented without the real and saving knowledge through faith of
Him.
If thou wouldst, then, wash thy face clean, first take a glass and
see where it is dirty; that is, if thou wouldst indeed have thy
sins washed away by the blood of Christ, labour first to see them
in the glass of the law, and do not be afraid to see thy besmeared
condition, but look on every spot thou hast; for he that looks on
the foulness of his face by the halves, will wash by the halves;
even so, he that looks on his sins by the halves, he will seek for
Christ by the halves. Reckon thyself, therefore, I say, the biggest
sinner in the world, and be persuaded that there is none worse than
thyself; then let the guilt of it seize on thy heart, then also
go in that case and condition to Jesus Christ, and plunge thyself
into His merits and the virtue of His blood; and after that, thou
shalt speak of the things of the law and of the Gospel experimentally,
and the very language of the children of God shall feelingly drop
from thy lips, and not till then (James 1).
Let this therefore learn thee thus much: he that hath not seen his
lost condition hath not seen a safe condition; he that did never
see himself in the devil's snare, did never see himself in Christ's
bosom. "This my Son was dead, and is alive again: he was lost, and
is found." "Among whom we also had our conversation in time past."
2 "But now are (so many of us as believe) returned unto" Jesus
Christ, "the" chief "Shepherd and Bishop of your souls."
There be some that through ignorance do say how that such men as
preach terror and amazement to sinners are beside the book, and
are ministers of the letter--the law, and not of the Spirit--the
Gospel; but I would answer them, citing them to the Sixteenth of
Luke, from the nineteenth verse to the end; and (1 Cor 6:9,10; Gal
3:10; Rom 3:9-19) only this caution I would give by the way, how
that they which preach terror to drive souls to the obtaining of
salvation by the works of the law, that preaching is not the right
Gospel preaching; yet when saints speak of the sad state that man
are in by nature, to discover to souls their need of the Gospel,
this is honest preaching, and he that doth do so, he doth the work
of a Gospel minister (Rom 3:9-25).
Again, there are others that say, because we do preach the free,
full, and exceeding grace discovered in the Gospel, therefore we
make void the law; when indeed, unless the Gospel be held forth in
the glory thereof without confusion, by mingling the Covenant of
Works therewith, the law cannot be established. "Do we then make
void the law through faith," or preaching of the Gospel; nay, stay,
saith Paul, "God forbid: yea, we establish the law" (Rom 3:31).
First. And the first is, Friend, if thou do not desire the salvation
of thy soul, yet I pray thee to read this book over with serious
consideration; it may be it will stir up in thee some desires to
look out after it, which at present thou mayest be without.
Secondly, If thou dost find any stirrings in thy heart by thy reading
such an unworthy man's works as mine are, be sure that in the first
place thou give glory to God, and give way to thy convictions,
and be not too hasty in getting them off from thy conscience; but
let them so work till thou dost see thyself by nature void of all
graces, as faith, hope, knowledge of God, Christ, and the Covenant
of Grace.
Thirdly, Then, in the next place, fly in all haste to Jesus Christ,
thou being sensible of thy lost condition without Him, secretly
persuading of thy soul that Jesus Christ standeth open-armed
to receive thee, to wash away thy sins, to clothe thee with His
righteousness, and is willing, yea, heartily willing, to present thee
before the presence of the glory of God and among the innumerable
company of angels with exceeding joy. This being thus, in the next
place, do not satisfy thyself with these secret and first persuasions,
which do or may encourage thee to come to Jesus Christ; but be
restless till thou dost find by blessed experience the glorious
glory of this the second covenant extended unto thee, and sealed
upon thy soul with the very Spirit of the Lord Jesus Christ. And
that thou mayest not slight this my counsel, I beseech thee, in
the second place, consider these following things--
First, If thou dost get off thy convictions, and not the right
way (which is by seeing thy sins washed away by the blood of Jesus
Christ), it is a question whether ever God will knock at thy heart
again or no; but rather say, such an one "is joined to idols, let
him alone" (Hosea 4:17). Though he be in a natural state, "let him
alone." Though he be in or under the curse of the law, "let him
alone." Though he be in the very hand of the devil, "let him alone."
Though he be a-going post-haste to Hell, "let him alone." Though
his damnation will not only be damnation for sins against the law,
but also for slighting the Gospel, yet "let him alone." My Spirit,
My ministers, My Word, My grace, My mercy, My love, My pity, My
common providences, shall no more strive with him; "let him alone."
O sad! O miserable! who would slight convictions that are on their
souls, which (if not slighted) tend so much for their good?
Secondly, If thou shalt not regard how thou do put off convictions,
but put them off without the precious blood of Christ being savingly
applied to thy soul, thou art sure to have the mis-spending of that
conviction to prove the hardening of thy heart against the next
time thou art to hear the Word preached or read. This is commonly
seen, that those souls that have not regarded those convictions
that are at first set upon their spirits, do commonly, and that by
the just judgments of God upon them, grow more hard, more senseless,
more seared and sottish in their spirits; for some, who formerly
would quake and weep, and relent under the hearing of the Word, do
now for the present sit so senseless, so seared, and hardened in
their consciences, that certainly if they should have hell-fire
thrown in their faces, as it sometimes cried up in their ears, they
would scarce be moved; and this comes upon them as a just judgment
of God (2 Thess 2:11,12).
First, Consider thou hast a precious soul, more worth than the whole
world; and this is commonly worked upon, if ever it be saved, by
convictions.
Thirdly, If that go to Hell, thy body must go thither too, and then
never to come out again. "Now consider this, ye that" are apt to
"forget God," and His convictions, "lest He tear you in pieces,
and there be none to deliver" (Psa 50:22).
These are several titles which are set over the several TRUTHS
contained in this book, for thy sooner finding of them--
1. The words of the text opened, and the doctrines laid down. [This
doctrine, that there are some that are under the law, or under the
Covenant of Works.] 2. What the Covenant of Works is, and when it
is given. 3. What it is to be under the Covenant of Works. 4. Who
they are that are under the Covenant of Works. 5. What men may
attain to that are under this Covenant of Works.
THE DOCTRINE OF THE LAW AND GRACE UNFOLDED; OR, A DISCOVERY OF THE
LAW AND GRACE; THE NATURE OF THE ONE, AND THE NATURE OF THE OTHER,
AS THEY ARE THE TWO COVENANTS, ETC.
"FOR YE ARE NOT UNDER THE LAW, BUT UNDER GRACE" (Rom 6:14).
[THE WORDS OF THE TEXT OPENED, AND THE DOCTRINES LAID DOWN.]
In the three former chapters, the Apostle is pleading for the
salvation of sinners by grace without the works of the law, to the
end he might confirm the saints, and also that he might win over
all those that did oppose the truth of this doctrine, or else leave
them the more without excuse; and that he might so do, he taketh
in hand, first, to show the state of all men naturally, or as they
come into the world by generation, saying, in the Third Chapter, "There
is none righteous, no, not one; there is none that understandeth;
there is none that doeth good," etc. As if he had said, It seems there
is a generation of men that think to be saved by the righteousness
of the law; but let me tell them that they are much deceived, in that
they have already sinned against the law; for by the disobedience
of one, many, yea all, were brought into a state of condemnation
(Rom 5:12-20). Now, in the Sixth Chapter he doth, as if he had
turned him round to the brethren, and said, My brethren, you see
now that it is clear and evident that it is freely by the grace of
Christ that we do inherit eternal life. And again, for your comfort,
my brethren, let me tell you that your condition is wondrous safe,
in that you are under grace; for, saith he, "Sin shall not have
dominion over you"; that is, neither the damning power, neither the
filthy power, so as to destroy your souls: "For ye are not under
the law"; that is, you are not under that that will damn you for
sin; "but" you are "under grace," or stand thus in relation to
God, that though you have sinned, yet you shall be pardoned. "For
ye are not under the law, but under grace." If any should ask what
is the meaning of the word "under," I answer, it signifieth, you
are not held, kept, or shut up by it so as to appear before God
under that administration, and none but that; or thus, you are
not now bound by the authority of the law to fulfill it and obey
it, so as to have no salvation without you so do; or thus, if you
transgress against any one tittle of it, you by the power of it
must be condemned. No, no, for you are not so under it; that is,
not thus under the law. Again, "For ye are not under the law." What
is meant by this word "law"? The word "law," in Scripture, may be
taken more ways than one, as might be largely cleared. There is the
law of faith, the law of sin, the law of men, the law of works,
otherwise called the Covenant of Works, or the first or old
covenant. "In that He saith a new covenant," which is the grace of
God, or commonly called the Covenant of Grace, "He hath made the
first old," that is, the Covenant of Works, or the law (Heb 8:13).
I say, therefore, the word "law" and the word "grace," in this
Sixth of the Romans, do hold forth the two covenants which all men
are under; that is, either the one or the other. "For ye are not
under the law"--that is, you to whom I do now write these words,
who are and have been effectually brought into the faith of Jesus,
you are not under the law, or under the Covenant of Works. He
doth not, therefore, apply these words to all, but to some, when
he saith, "But ye"; mark, ye, ye believers, ye converted persons,
ye saints, ye that have been born. (YE) "for ye are not under the
law," implying others are that are in their natural state, that
have not been brought in to the Covenant of Grace by faith in Jesus
Christ.
DOCTRINE FIRST.
For the first, THAT THERE ARE SOME THAT ARE UNDER THE LAW, OR UNDER
THE COVENANT OF WORKS, see, I pray you, that Scripture in the Third
of the Romans, where the Apostle, speaking before of sins against
the law, and of the denunciations thereof against those that are
in that condition, he saith, "What things soever the law saith, it
saith to them who are under the law"; mark, "it saith to them who
are under the law, that every mouth may be stopped, and all the
world become guilty before God" (Rom 3:19). That is, all those that
are under the law as a Covenant of Works, that are yet in their
sins, and unconverted, as I told you before. Again he saith, "But
if ye be led by the Spirit, ye are not under the law" (Gal 5:18).
Implying again, that those which are for sinning against the law,
or the works of the law, either as it is the old covenant, these
are under the law, and not under the Covenant of Grace. Again he
saith, "For as many as are of the works of the law are under the
curse" (Gal 3:10). That is, they that are under the law are under
the curse; for mark, they that are under the Covenant of Grace are
not under the curse. Now, there are but two covenants, therefore,
it must needs be that they that are under the curse are under the
law, seeing those that are under the other covenant are not under
the curse, but under the blessing. "So, then, they which be of
faith are blessed with faithful Abraham," but the rest are under
the law (Gal 3:9).
FIRST. What this Covenant of Works is, and when it was given. [What
this covenant is.] The Covenant of Works or the law, here spoken
of, is the law delivered upon Mount Sinai to Moses, in two tables
of stone, in ten particular branches or heads; for this see Galatians
4. The Apostle, speaking there of the law, and of some also that
through delusions of false doctrine were brought again, as it were,
under it, or at least were leaning that way (verse 21) he saith,
As for you that desire to be under the law, I will show you the
mystery of Abraham's two sons, which he had by Hagar and Sarah;
these two do signify the two covenants; the one named Hagar signifies
Mount Sinai, where the law was delivered to Moses on two tables of
stone (Exo 24:12; 34:1; Deu 10:1). Which is that, that whosoever
is under, he is destitute of, and altogether without the grace of
Christ in his heart at the present. "For I testify again to every
man," saith he, speaking to the same people, that "Christ has become
of no effect unto you, whosoever of you are justified by the law,"
namely, that given on Mount Sinai--"ye are fallen from grace" (Gal
5:3,4). That is, not that any can be justified by the law; but this
meaning is, that all those that seek justification by the works of
the law, they are not such as seek to be under the second covenant,
the Covenant of Grace. Also the Apostle, speaking again of these
two covenants, saith, "But if the ministration of death," or the
law, for it is all one, "written and engraven in stones," mark that,
"was glorious, how shall not the ministration of the Spirit," or
the Covenant of Grace, "be rather glorious?" (2 Cor 3:7,8). As if
he had said, It is true, there was a glory in the Covenant of Works,
and a very great excellency did appear in it--namely, in that given
in the stones on Sinai--yet there is another covenant, the Covenant
of Grace, that doth exceed it for comfort and glory.
[When it was given.] But, though this law was delivered to Moses
from the hands of angels in two tables of stones, on Mount Sinai,
yet this was not the first appearing of this law to man; but even
this in substance, though possibly not so openly, was given to the
first man, Adam, in the Garden of Eden, in these words: "And the
LORD God commanded the man, saying, Of every tree of the garden
thou mayest freely eat: but of the tree of the knowledge of good
and evil, thou shalt not eat of it; for in the day that thou eatest
thereof thou shalt surely die" (Gen 2:16,17). Which commandment
then given to Adam did contain in it a forbidding to do any of
those things that was and is accounted evil, although at that time
it did not appear so plainly, in so many particular heads, as it
did when it was again delivered on Mount Sinai; but yet the very
same. And that I shall prove thus--
The First, Second, and Third Commandments were broken by Pharaoh and
his men; for they had false gods which the Lord executed judgment
against (Exo 12:12); and blasphemed their true God (Exo 5:2) which
escaped not punishment (Exo 7:17-25). For their gods could neither
deliver themselves nor their people from the hand of God; but
"in the thing wherein they dealt proudly, He was above them" (Exo
18:11).
Again; some judge that the Lord punished the sin against the
Second Commandment, which Jacob was in some measure guilty of in
not purging his house from false gods, with the defiling of his
daughter Dinah (Gen 34:2).
Again; we find that Abimelech thought the sin against the Third
Commandment so great, that he required no other security of Abraham
against the fear of mischief that might be done to him by Abraham,
his son, and his son's son, but only Abraham's oath (Gen 21:23).
The like we see between Abimelech and Isaac (Gen 31:53). The like
we find in Moses and the Israelites, who durst not leave the bones
of Joseph in Egypt, because of the oath of the Lord, whose name,
by so doing, would have been abused (Exo 13:19).
And we find the Lord rebuking His people for the breach of the
Fourth Commandment (Exo 16:27-29).
And for the breach of the Fifth, the curse came upon Ham (Gen
9:25-27). And Ishmael dishonouring his father in mocking Isaac
was cast out, as we read (Gen 21:9,10). The sons-in-law of Lot for
slighting their father perish in the overthrow of Sodom (Gen 19:14).
Again; when Esau threatened to slay his brother, Rebecca sent him
away, saying, "Why should I be deprived also of you both in one
day?" hinting unto us, that she knew murder was to be punished
with death (Gen 27:45) which the Lord Himself declared likewise to
Noah (Gen 9:6).3 Again; a notable example of the Lord's justice in
punishing murder we see in the Egyptians and Pharaoh, who drowned
the Israelites' children in the river (Exo 1:22); and they themselves
were drowned in the sea (Exo 14:27).
The sin against the Seventh Commandment was punished in the Sodomites,
etc., with the utter destruction of their city and themselves (Gen
19:24,25). Yea, they suffer "the vengeance of eternal fire" (Jude
7). Also the male Shechemites, for the sin committed by Hamor's
son, were all put to the sword (Gen 34:25,26).
Again; there are no other sins than those against that law given
on Sinai, for the which those sins before mentioned were punished;
therefore the law given before by the Lord to Adam and his posterity
is the same with that afterwards given on Mount Sinai. Again; the
conditions of that on Sinai and of that in the garden are all one;
the one saying, "Do this and live," the other saying the same. Also
judgment denounced against men in both kinds alike; therefore this
law it appeareth to be the very same that was given on Mount Sinai.
Now the law given on Sinai was for the more clear discovery of
those sins that were before committed against it; for though the
very substance of the Ten Commandments were given in the garden
before they were received from Sinai, yet they lay so darkly in
the heart of man, that his sins were not so clearly discovered as
afterwards they were; therefore, saith the Apostle, the law was
added (Gal 3:19). Or, more plainly, given on Sinai, on tables of
stone, "that the offence might abound,"--that is, that it might
the more clearly be made manifest and appear (Rom 5:20).
[Object.] But if any object and say, though the sins against the
one be the sins against the other, and so in that they do agree,
yet it doth not appear that the same is therefore the same Covenant
of Works with the other.
Answ. That which was given to Adam in Paradise you will grant was
the Covenant of Works; for it runs thus: Do this and live; do it
not and die; nay, "Thou shalt surely die." Now there is but one
Covenant of Works. If therefore I prove that that which was delivered
on Mount Sinai is the Covenant of Works, then all will be put out
of doubt. Now that this is so it is evident--
First. That the Law of God, or Covenant of Works, doth not contain
itself in one particular branch of the law, but doth extend itself
into many, even into all the Ten Commandments, and those ten into
very many more, as might be showed; so that the danger doth not
lie in the breaking of one or two of these ten only, but it doth
lie even in the transgression of any one of them. As you know, if
a king should give forth ten particular commands to be obeyed by
his subjects upon pain of death; now if any man doth transgress
against any one of these ten, he doth commit treason, as if he had
broke them all, and lieth liable to have the sentence of the law
as certainly passed on him as if he had broken every particular of
them.
Second. Again; you know that the laws being given forth by the
king, which if a man keep and obey for a long time, yet if at the
last he slips and breaks those laws, he is presently apprehended,
and condemned by that law. These things are clear as touching the
Law of God, as it is a Covenant of Works. If a man doth fulfill nine
of the Commandments, and yet breaketh but one, that being broken
will as surely destroy him and shut him out from the joys of Heaven
as if he had actually transgressed against them all; for indeed,
in effect, so he hath. There is a notable Scripture for this in
the Epistle of James, Second Chapter, at the tenth verse, that runs
thus:--"For whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in
one point, he is guilty of all,"--that is, he hath in effect broken
them all, and shall have the voice of them all cry out against him.
And it must needs be so, saith James, because "He that said," or
that law which said, "Do not commit adultery, said also, Do not kill.
Now, if thou commit no adultery, yet if thou kill, thou art become
a transgressor of the law" (Verse 11). As thus; it may be thou didst
never make to thyself a god of stone or wood, or at least not to
worship them so greatly and so openly as the heathen do, yet if
thou hast stolen, born false witness, or lusted after a woman in
thy heart (Matt 5:28) thou hast transgressed the law, and must for
certain, living and dying under that covenant, perish for ever by
the law; for the law hath resolved on that before-hand, saying,
"Cursed is every one that continueth not in ALL things"; mark,
I pray you, "in all things"; that is the Word, and that seals the
doctrine.
Third. Again; though a man doth not covet, steal, murder, worship
gods of wood and stone, etc., yet if he do take the Lord's name in
vain, he is for ever gone, living and dying under that covenant.
"Thou shalt not take the name of the LORD thy God in vain"; there
is the command. But how if we do? Then he saith, "the LORD will not
hold him guiltless that taketh His name in vain." No; though thou
live as holy as ever thou canst, and walk as circumspectly as ever
any did, yet if thou dost take the Lord's name in vain, thou art
gone by that covenant: "For I will not," mark "I will not," let
him be in never so much danger, "I will not hold him guiltless that
taketh My name in vain" (Exo 20:7). And so likewise for any other
of the ten, do but break them, and thy state is irrecoverable, if
thou live and die under that covenant.
Fifth. Again; you must consider that this law doth not only condemn
words and actions, as I said before, but it hath authority to
condemn the most secret thoughts of the heart, being evil; so that
if thou do not speak any word that is evil, as swearing, lying,
jesting, dissembling, or any other word that tendeth to, or
savoureth of sin, yet if there should chance to pass but one vain
thought through thy heart but once in all thy lifetime, the law
taketh hold of it, accuseth, and also will condemn thee for it. You
may see one instance for all in (Matt 5:27,28) where Christ saith,
that though a man doth not lie with a woman carnally, yet if he doth
but look on her, and in his heart lust after her, he is counted by
the law, being rightly expounded, such an one that hath committed
the sin, and thereby hath laid himself under the condemnation of
the law. And so likewise of all the rest of the commands; if there
be any thought that is evil do but pass through thy heart, whether
it be against God or against man in the least measure, though
possibly not discerned of thee, or by thee, yet the law takes hold
of thee therefore, and doth by its authority, both cast, condemn,
and execute thee for thy so doing. "The thought of foolishness is
sin" (Prov 24:9).
Sixth. Again; the law is of that nature and severity, that it
doth not only inquire into the generality of thy life as touching
several things, whether thou art upright there or no; but the law
doth also follow thee into all thy holy duties, and watcheth over
thee there, to see whether thou dost do all things aright there--that
is to say, whether when thou dost pray thy heart hath no wandering
thoughts in it; whether thou do every holy duty thou doest perfectly
without the least mixture of sin; and if it do find thee to slip,
or in the least measure to fail in any holy duty that thou dost
perform, the law taketh hold on that, and findeth fault with that,
so as to render all the holy duties that ever thou didst unavailable
because of that. I say, if, when thou art a hearing, there is but
one vain thought, or in praying, but one vain thought, or in any
other thing whatsoever, let it be civil or spiritual, one vain
thought once in all thy lifetime will cause the law to take such
hold on it, that for that one thing it doth even set open all the
floodgates of God's wrath against thee, and irrecoverably by that
covenant it doth bring eternal vengeance upon thee; so that, I say,
look which ways thou wilt, and fail wherein thou wilt, and do it as
seldom as ever thou canst, either in civil or spiritual things, as
aforesaid--that is, either in the service of God, or in thy employments
in the world, as thy trade or calling, either in buying or selling
any way, in anything whatsoever; I say, if in any particular it
find thee tardy, or in the least measure guilty, it calleth thee
an offender, it accuseth thee to God, it puts a stop to all the
promises thereof that are joined to the law, and leaves thee there
as a cursed transgressor against God, and a destroyer of thy own soul. 5
Here I would have thee, by the way, for to take notice, that it is
not my intent at this time to enlarge on the several commands in
particular--for that would be very tedious both for me to write
and thee to read; only thus much I would have thee to do at the
reading hereof--make a pause, and sit still one quarter of an hour,
and muse a little in thy mind thus with thyself, and say, Did I
ever break the law; yea or no? Had I ever, in all my lifetime, one
sinful thought passed through my heart since I was born; yea or
no? And if thou findest thyself guilty, as I am sure thou canst
not otherwise choose but do, unless thou shut thy eyes against thy
every day's practice, then, I say, conclude thyself guilty of the
breach of the first covenant. And when that this is done, be sure,
in the next place, thou do not straightway forget it and put it
out of thy mind, that thou art condemned by the same covenant; and
then do not content thyself until thou do find that God hath sent
thee a pardon from Heaven through the merits of our Lord Jesus
Christ, the mediator of the second covenant. And if God shall but
give thee a heart to take this my counsel, I do make no question
but these words spoken by me, will prove an instrument for the
directing of thy heart to the right remedy for the salvation of
thy soul.
Thus much now touching the law, and the severity of it upon the person
that is found under it, having offended or broken any particular
of it, either in thought, word, or action; and now, before I do
proceed to the next thing, I shall answer four objections that do
lie in my way, and also, such as do stumble most part of the world.
[Four Objections.]
Object. First. But you will say, Methinks you speak very harsh;
it is enough to daunt a body. Set the case, therefore, that a man,
after he hath sinned and broken the law, repenteth of his wickedness
and promiseth to do so no more, will not God have mercy then, and
save a poor sinner then?
Answ. I told you before, that the covenant, once broken, will
execute upon the offender that which it doth threaten to lay upon
him; and as for your supposing that your repenting and promising to
do so no more may help well, and put you in a condition to attain
the mercy of God by the law, these thoughts do flow from gross
ignorance both of the nature of sin, and also of the nature of the
justice of God. And if I were to give you a description of one in
a lost condition for the present, I would brand him out with such
a mark of ignorance as this is.
Object. Second. But hath not the law promises as well as threatenings?
saying, "The man which doeth these things shall live," mark, he
shall live, "by them," or in them (Rom 10:5; Gal 3:12).
Object. Third. Ay, but sometimes, for all your haste, the judge doth
also give some pardons, and forgives some offenders, notwithstanding
their offences, though he be a judge.
Object. Fourth. But, you will say, "I do not only repent me of
my former life, and also promise to do so no more, but now I do
labour to be righteous, and to live a holy life; and now, instead
of being a breaker of the law, I do labour to fulfill the same.
What say you to that?"
Answ. Set the case, thou couldst walk like an angel of God; set
the case, thou couldst fulfill the whole law, and live from this
day to thy life's end without sinning in thought, word, or deed,
which is impossible; but, I say, set the case it should be so, why,
thy state is as bad, if thou be under the first covenant, as ever
it was. For, first, I know thou darest not say but thou hast at
one time or other sinned; and if so, then the law hath condemned
thee; and if so, then I am sure that thou, with all thy actions
and works of righteousness, canst not remove the dreadful and
irresistible curse that is already laid upon thee by that law which
thou art under, and which thou hast sinned against; though thou
livest the holiest life that any man can live in this world, being
under the law of works, and so not under the Covenant of Grace,
thou must be cut off without remedy; for thou hast sinned, though
afterwards thou live never so well.
The reasons for this that hath been spoken are these--
First, The nature of God's justice calls for it--that is, it calls
for irrecoverable ruin on them that transgress against this law;
for justice gave it, and justice looks to have it completely and
continually obeyed, or else justice is resolved to take place, and
execute its office, which is to punish the transgressor against it.
You must understand that the justice of God is as unchangeable as
His love; His justice cannot change its nature; justice it is, if
it be pleased; and justice it is, if it be displeased. The justice
of God in this case may be compared to fire; there is a great fire
made in some place; if thou do keep out of it, it is fire; if thou
do fall into it, thou wilt find it fire; and therefore the Apostle
useth this as an argument to stir up the Hebrews to stick close
to Jesus Christ, lest they fall under the justice of God by these
words, "For our God is a consuming fire" (Heb 12:29); into which,
if thou fall, it is not for thee to get out again, as it is with
some that fall into a material fire; no, but he that falls into
this, he must lie there for ever; as it is clear where he saith,
"Who among us shall dwell with everlasting burnings, and with
devouring fire?" (Isa 33:14). For justice once offended knoweth
not how to show any pity or compassion to the offender, but runs on
him like a lion, takes him by the throat, throws him into prison,
and there he is sure to lie, and that to all eternity, unless
infinite satisfaction be given to it, which is impossible to be
given by any of us the sons of Adam.
Secondly, The faithfulness of God calls for irrecoverable ruin to
be poured out on those that shall live and die under this covenant.
If thou, having sinned but one sin against this covenant, and shouldst
afterwards escape damning, God must be unfaithful to Himself and
to His Word, which both agree as one. First, he would be unfaithful
to Himself; to Himself, that is, to His justice, holiness,
righteousness, wisdom, and power, if He should offer to stop the
running out of His justice for the damning of them that have offended
it. And secondly, He would be unfaithful to His Word, His written
Word, and disown, deny, and break that, of which He hath said, "It
is easier for Heaven and earth to pass, than one tittle of the law
to fail," or be made of none effect (Luke 16:17). Now, if He should
not, according to His certain declarations therein, take vengeance
on those that fall and die within the threat and sad curses denounced,
in that His Word could not be fulfilled.
And the reasons for it are these:--First, Because God is God; and
secondly, Because man is man.
First, Because God is perfectly just and eternally just, perfectly holy
and eternally holy, perfectly faithful and eternally faithful; that
is, without any variableness or shadow of turning, but perfectly
continueth the same, and cannot as well cease to be God as to alter
or change the nature of His Godhead. As He is thus the perfection
of all perfections, He gave out His Law to be obeyed; but if
any offend it, then they fall into the hands of this His eternal
justice, and so must drink of His irrevocable wrath, which is the
execution of the same justice. I say, this being thus, the law being
broken, justice takes place, and so faithfulness followeth to see
that execution be done, and also to testify that He is true, and
doth denounce His unspeakable, insupportable, and unchangeable
vengeance on the party offending.
Secondly, Because thou art not as infinite as God, but a poor created
weed, that is here today and gone tomorrow, and not able to answer
God in His essence, being, and attributes; thou art bound to fall
under Him, for thy soul or body can do nothing that is infinite
in such a way as to satisfy this God, which is an infinite God in
all His attributes.
[First, The danger of them by reason of the law, as they come from
Adam.]
2. He did not only leave them a broken covenant, but also made
them himself sinners against it. He [Adam] made them sinners--"By
one man's disobedience many were made sinners" (Rom 5:19). And this
is worse than the first.
3. Not only so, but he did deprive them of their strength, by which
at first they were enabled to stand, and left them no more than
dead men. O helpless state! O how beggarly and miserable are the
sons of Adam!
4. Not only so, but also before he left them he was the conduit
pipe through which the devil did convey off his poisoned spawn
and venom nature into the hearts of Adam's sons and daughters, by
which they are at this day so strongly and so violently carried
away, that they fly as fast to Hell, and the devil, by reason of
sin, as chaff before a mighty wind.
[Second.] But I pass this, and come to the second thing, which is,
the cause of their being in a sad condition, which is by reason of
their being in their particular persons under it.
1. Therefore, they that are under the law, they are in a sad
condition, because they are under that which is more ready, through
our infirmity, to curse than to bless; they are under that called
the ministration of condemnation, that is, they are under that
dispensation, or administration, whose proper work is to curse and
condemn, and nothing else (2 Cor 3).
2. Their condition is sad who are under the law, because they are
not only under that ministration that doth condemn, but also that
which doth wait an opportunity to condemn; the law doth not wait
that it might be gracious, but it doth wait to curse and condemn;
it came on purpose to discover sin, "The law entered," saith
the Apostle, "that the offence might abound" (Rom 5:20) or appear
indeed to be that which God doth hate, and also to curse for that
which hath been committed; as he saith, "Cursed is every one that
continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the
law to do them" (Gal 3:10).
4. They that are under the law are in a sad condition, because they
are under that administration that will never be contented with
what is done by the sinner. If thou be under this covenant, work
as hard as thou canst, the law will never say, "Well done"; never
say, "My good servant"; no; but always it will be driving thee
faster, hastening of thee harder, giving thee fresh commands, which
thou must do, and upon pain of damnation not to be left undone.
Nay, it is such a master that will curse thee, not only for thy
sins, but also because thy good works were not so well done as they
ought to be.
5. They that are under this covenant or law, their state is very
sad, because this law doth command impossible things of him that
is under it; and yet doth but right in it, seeing man at the first
had in Adam strength to stand, if he would have used it, and the
law was given them, as I said before, when man was in his full
strength; and therefore no inequality if it commands the same still,
seeing God that gave thee strength did not take it away. I will
give you a similitude for the clearing of it. Set the case that I
give to my servant ten pounds, with this charge, Lay it out for my
best advantage, that I may have my own again with profit; now if
my servant, contrary to my command, goeth and spends my money in a
disobedient way, is it any inequality in me to demand of my servant
what I gave him at first? Nay, and though he have nothing to pay, I
may lawfully cast him into prison, and keep him there until I have
satisfaction. So here; the law was delivered to man at the first
when he was in a possibility to have fulfilled it; now, then, though
man have lost his strength, yet God is just in commanding the same
work to be done. Ay, and if they do not do the same things, I say,
that are impossible for them to do, it is just with God to damn
them, seeing it was they themselves that brought themselves into
this condition; therefore, saith the Apostle, "What things soever
the law (or commands) saith, it saith to them who are under the
law; that every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may become
guilty before God" (Rom 3:19). And this is thy sad condition that
art under the law (Gal 3:10).
But if any should object, and say, But the law doth not command
impossible things of natural man,--
I should answer in this case as the Apostle did in another very
much like unto it, saying, "Understanding neither what they say,
nor whereof they affirm." For doth not the law command thee to love
the Lord thy God with all thy soul, with all they strength, with
all thy might, etc., and can the natural man do this? How can those
that are accustomed to do evil, do that which is commanded in this
particular? "Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his
spots?" (Jer 12:23).
Doth the law command thee to do good, and nothing but good, and that
with all thy soul, heart, and delight? which the law as a Covenant
of Works calleth for; and canst thou, being carnal, do that? But
there is no man that hath understanding, if he should hear thee
say so, but would say that thou wast either bewitched or stark mad.
6. They that are under the law are in a sad condition, because that
though they follow the law, or Covenant of Works; I say, though they
follow it, it will not lead them to Heaven; no, but contrariwise,
it will lead them under the curse. It is not possible, saith Paul,
that any should be justified by the law, or by our following of it;
for by that "is the knowledge of sin," and by it we are condemned
for the same, which is far from leading us to life, being the
ministration of death (2 Cor 3). And again; "Israel, which followeth
after the law of righteousness, hath not attained to the law of
righteousness. Wherefore? Because they sought it not by faith, but
by the law, and by the works thereof" (Rom 9:30-32).
7. They that are under the law are in a sad condition, because they
do not know whether ever they shall have any wages for their work
or no; they have no assurance of the pardon of their sins, neither
any hopes of eternal life; but poor hearts as they are, they work
for they do not know what, even like a poor horse that works hard
all day, and at night hath a dirty stable for his pains; so thou
mayest work hard all the days of thy life, and at the day of death,
instead of having a glorious rest in the Kingdom of Heaven, thou
mayest, nay, thou shalt, have for thy sins the damnation of thy
soul and body in Hell to all eternity; forasmuch, as I said before,
that the law, if thou sinnest, it doth not take notice of any good
work done by thee, but takes its advantage to destroy and cut off
thy soul for the sin thou hast committed.
8. They that are under the law are in a sad condition, because
they are under that administration; upon whose souls God doth not
smile, they dying there; for the administration that God doth smile
upon His children through, is the Covenant of Grace, they being in
Jesus Christ, the Lord of life and consolation; but contrariwise
to those that are under the law; for they have His frowns, His
rebukes, His threatenings, and with much severity they must be dealt
withal--"For they continued not in My covenant, and I regarded them
not, saith the Lord" (Heb 8:9).
9. They are in a sad condition, because they are out of the faith of
Christ; they that are under the law have not the faith of Christ
in them; for that dispensation which they are under is not the
administration of faith. The law is not of faith, saith the Apostle
(Gal 3:12).
10. Because they have not received the Spirit; for that is received
by the hearing of faith, and not by the law, nor the works thereof
(Gal 3:2).
11. In a word, if thou live and die under that covenant, Jesus
Christ will neither pray for thee, neither let thee have one drop
of His blood to wash away thy sins, neither shalt thou be so much
as one of the least in the Kingdom of Heaven; for all these privileges
come to souls under another covenant, as the Apostle saith--"For
such are not under the law, but under grace"--that is, such as have
a share in the benefits of Jesus Christ, or such as are brought from
under the first covenant into the second; or from under the law
into the grace of Christ's Gospel, without which Covenant of Grace,
and being found in that, there is no soul can have the least hope
of eternal life, no joy in the Holy Ghost, no share in the privileges
of saints, because they are tied up from them by the limits and
bonds of the Covenant of Works. For you must understand that these
two covenants have their several bounds and limitations, for the
ruling and keeping in subjection, or giving of freedom, to the
parties under the said covenants. Now they that are under the law
are within the compass and the jurisdiction of that, and are bound
to be in subjection to that; and living and dying under that, they
must stand and fall to that, as Paul saith, "To his own master he
standeth or falleth." The Covenant of Grace doth admit to those that
are under it also liberty and freedom, together with commanding of
subjection to the things contained in it, which I shall speak to
further hereafter. [For what purpose the Law was added and given.]
But now, that the former things may be further made to appear--that
is, what the sad condition of all them that are under the law is,
as I have shown you something of the nature of the law, so also shall
I show that the law was added and given for this purpose, that it
might be so with those that are out of the Covenant of Grace.
First, God did give the law that sin might abound, not that
it should take away sin in any, but to discover the sin which is
already begotten, or that may be hereafter begotten, by lust and
Satan (Rom 5:20). I say, this is one proper work of the law, to
make manifest sin; it is sent to find fault with the sinner, and it
doth also watch that it may do so, and it doth take all advantages
for the accomplishing of its work in them that give ear thereto, or
do not give ear, if it have the rule over them. I say, it is like
a man that is sent by his lord to see and pry into the labours
and works of other men, taking every advantage to discover their
infirmities and failings, and to chide them? yea, to throw them
out of the Lord's favour for the same.
Second. Another great end why the Lord did add or give the law, it
was that no man might have anything to lay to the charge of the
Lord for His condemning of them that do transgress against the same.
You know that if a man should be had before an officer or judge,
and there be condemned, and yet by no law, he that condemns him
might be very well reprehended or reproved for passing the judgment;
yea, the party himself might have better ground to plead for his
liberty than the other to plead for the condemning of him; but this
shall not be so in the judgment-day, but contrariwise; for then
every man shall be forced to lay his hand on his mouth, and hold
his tongue at the judgment of God when it is passed upon them;
therefore saith the Apostle, "What things soever the law saith, it
saith to them who are under the law"; that is, all the commands,
all the cursings and threatenings that are spoken by it, are spoken,
saith he, "that every mouth may be stopped"; mark, I beseech you,
"it saith," saith he, "that every mouth may be stopped, and all
the world may become guilty before God" (Rom 3:19). So that now,
in case any in the judgment-day should object against the judgment
of God, as those in the 25th of Matthew do, saying, Lord, when saw
we Thee thus and thus? and why dost Thou pass such a sad sentence
of condemnation upon us? surely this is injustice, and not equity:
now for the preventing of this the law was given; ay, and that it
might prevent thee to purpose, God gave it betimes, before either
thy first father had sinned, or thou wast born. So that again, if
there should be these objections offered against the proceedings
of the Lord in justice and judgment, saying, Lord, why am I thus
condemned, I did not know it was sin? Now against these two was
the law given and that betimes, so that both these are answered. If
the first come in and say, Why am I judged? why am I damned? then
will the law come in, even all the Ten Commandments, with every one
of their cries against thy soul; the First saying, He hath sinned
against Me, damn him; the Second saying also, He hath transgressed
against Me, damn him; the Third also saying the same, together with
the Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth; even all
of them will discharge themselves against thy soul if thou die under
the first covenant, saying, He or they have transgressed against
us, damn them, damn them: and I tell thee also, that these ten great
guns, the Ten Commandments, will, with discharging themselves in
justice against thy soul, so rattle in thy conscience, that thou
wilt in spite of thy teeth be immediately put to silence, and have
thy mouth stopped. And let me tell thee further, that if thou shalt
appear before God to have the Ten Commandments discharge themselves
against thee, thou hadst better be tied to a tree, and have ten,
yea, ten thousand of the biggest pieces of ordnance in the world
to be shot off against thee; for these could go no further but only
to kill the body; but they, both body and soul, to be tormented in
Hell with the devil to all eternity.
Fourth, A fourth end why the Lord did give the law it was, because
they that die out of Jesus Christ might not only have their mouths
stopped, but also that their persons "might become guilty before
God" (Rom 3:19). And indeed this will be the ground of silencing,
as I said before, they finding themselves guilty, their consciences
backing the truth of the judgment of God passed upon them, "they
shall become guilty"--that is, they shall be fit vessels for the
wrath of God to be poured out into, being filled with guilt by
reason of transgressions against the commandments; thus, therefore,
shall the parties under the first covenant be "fitted to destruction"
(Rom 9:22) even as wood or straw, being well dried, is fitted
for the fire; and the law was added and given, and speaks to this
very end, that sins might be shown, mouths might be stopped from
quarreling, and that "all the world," mark, "the world may become
guilty before God," and so be in justice for ever and ever overthrown
because of their sins.
THIRD. But you will say--"But who are those that are thus under
the law?"
Answ. Those that are under the law may be branched out into three
ranks of men; either, first, such as are grossly profane, or such
as are more refined; which may be two ways, some in a lower sort,
and some in a more eminent way.
First, Then they are under the law as a Covenant of Works who are
open profane, and ungodly wretches, such as delight not only in
sin, but also make their boast of the same, and brag at the thoughts
of committing of it. Now, as for such as these are, there is a
Scripture in the First Epistle of Paul to Timothy Chapter 1, verses
9, 10, which is a notable one to this purpose, "The law," saith
he, "is not made for a righteous man," not as it is a Covenant of
Works, "but for the" unrighteous or "lawless and disobedient, for
the ungodly and for sinners, for unholy and profane, for murderers
of fathers and murderers of mothers, for manslayers, for whoremongers,
for them that defile themselves with mankind, for menstealers,
for liars," look to it, liars, "for perjured persons, and," in a
word, "if there be any other thing that is not according to sound
doctrine." These are one sort of people that are under the law,
and so under the curse of the same, whose due is to drink up the
brimful cup of God's eternal vengeance, and therefore I beseech you
not to deceive yourselves; for "know ye not that the unrighteous
shall not inherit the kingdom of God? Neither fornicators, nor
idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves
with mankind, nor thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers,
nor extortioners, shall inherit the kingdom of God" (1 Cor 6:9,10).
Poor souls, you think that you may have your sins, your lusts, and
pleasures, and yet you shall do pretty well, and be let to go free
in the judgment-day; but see what God saith of such in Deuteronomy
29:19, 20--which shall "bless himself in his heart, saying, I shall
have peace," I shall be saved, I shall do as well as others, in
the day when God shall judge the world by Jesus Christ; but, saith
God, I will not spare them, no, but My anger and My jealousy shall
smoke against them. How far? Even to the executing all the curses
that are written in the Law of God upon them. Nay, saith God, I
will be even with them, "for I will blot out their names from under
Heaven." And indeed it must of necessity be so, because such souls
are unbelievers, in their sins, and under the law, which cannot,
will not, show any mercy on them; for it is not the administration
of mercy and life, but the administration of death and destruction,
as you have it (2 Cor 3:7,9); and all those, every one of them,
that are open profane, and scandalous wretches are under it, and
have been so ever since they came into the world to this day; and
they will for certain live and die under the same dispensation,
and then be damned to all eternity, if they be not converted from
under that covenant into and under the Covenant of Grace, of which
I shall speak in its place; and yet for all this, how brag and crank
6 are our poor wantons and wicked ones in this day of forbearance!
as if God would never have a reckoning with them, as if there was
no law to condemn them, as if there was no hellfire to put them
into. But O how will they be deceived when they shall see Christ
sitting upon the judgment-seat, having laid aside his priestly and
prophetical office, and appearing only as a judge to the wicked?
when they shall see all the records of Heaven unfolded and laid
open; when they shall see each man his name in the Book of Life,
and in the book of the law; when they shall see God in His majesty,
Christ in His majesty, the saints in their dignity, but themselves
in their impurity. What will they say then? whither will they fly
then? where will they leave their glory? O sad state! (Isa 10:3).
Second. They are under the law also who do not only so break and
disobey the law, but follow after the law as hard as ever they
can, seeking justification thereby--that is, though a man should
abstain from the sins against the law, and labour to fulfill the
law, and give up himself to the law, yet if he look no further
than the law he is still under the law, and for all his obedience
to the law, the righteous Law of God, he shall be destroyed by that
law. Friend, you must not understand that none but profane persons
are under the law; no, but you must understand that a man may be
turned from a vain, loose, open, profane conversation and sinning
against the law, to a holy, righteous, religious life, and yet be
in the same state, under the same law, and as sure to be damned as
the other that are more profane and loose. And though you may say
this is very strange, yet I shall both say it and prove it to be
true. Read with understanding that Scripture in Romans 9:30-31,
where the Apostle, speaking of the very thing, saith, "But Israel,
which followed after the law of righteousness"; mark, that followed
after the law of righteousness; they notwithstanding their earnest
pursuit, or hunting after the law of righteousness, "hath not
attained to the law of righteousness." It signifies thus much to
us, that let a man be never so earnest, so fervent, so restless,
so serious, so ready, so apt and willing to follow the law and the
righteousness thereof, if he be under that covenant, he is gone,
he is lost, he is deprived of eternal life, because he is not under
the ministration of life if he die there. Read also that Scripture,
Galatians 3:10, which saith, "For as many as are of the works of
the law are under the curse"; mark, they that are of the works of
the law. Now, for to be of the works of the law, it is to be of the
works of the righteousness thereof--that is, to abstain from sins
against the law, and to do the commands thereof as near as ever
they can for their lives, or with all the might they have: and
therefore I beseech you to consider it, for men's being ignorant of
this is the cause why so many go on supposing they have a share in
Christ, because they are reformed, and abstain from the sins against
the law, who, when all comes to all, will be damned notwithstanding,
because they are not brought out from under the Covenant of Works,
and put under the Covenant of Grace.
Object. "But can you in very deed make these things manifestly
evident from the Word of God? Methinks to reason thus is very
strange, that a man should labour to walk up according to the Law
of God as much as ever he can, and yet that man notwithstanding
this, should be still under the curse. Pray clear it."
Answ. Truly this doth seem very strange, I do know full well, to
the natural man, to him that is yet in his unbelief, because he
goeth by beguiled reason; but for my part, I do know it is so, and
shall labour also to convince thee of the truth of the same.
1. Then, the law is thus strict and severe, that if a man do sin but
once against it, he, I say, is gone for ever by the law, living and
dying under that covenant. If you would be satisfied as touching the
truth of this, do but read Galatians 3:10, where it saith "Cursed
is every one," that is, not a man shall miss by that covenant, "that
continueth not in all," mark, in all "things which are written in
the book of the law to do them." (1.) Pray mark, here is a curse,
in the first place, if all things written in the book of the law be
not done, and that, continually too--that is, without any failing
or one slip, as I said before. Now there is never a one in the world
but before they did begin to yield obedience to the least command,
they in their own persons did sin against it by breaking of it.
The Apostle, methinks, is very notable for the clearing of this
in Romans 3:5. In the one he endeavours for to prove that all
had transgressed in the first Adam as he stood a common person,
representing both himself and us in his standing and falling.
"Wherefore," saith he, "as by one man sin entered into the world,
and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men," mark that; but
why? "for that all have sinned" (Rom 5:12). That is, forasmuch as
all naturally are guilty of original sin, the sin that was committed
by us in Adam; so this is one cause why none can be justified by
their obedience to the law, because they have in the first place
broken it in their first parents. But, (2.) in case this should be
opposed and rejected by quarrelsome persons, though there be no
ground for it, Paul hath another argument to back his doctrine,
saying, For we have proved (already) that both Jews and Gentiles
are all under sin. "As it is written, There is none righteous, no,
not one." "They are all gone out of the way, they are together,"
mark, together, "become unprofitable, there is none that doeth
good, no, not one." "Their throat is an open sepulchre; with their
tongues they have used deceit, the poison of asps is under their
lips." Their "mouths are full of cursing and bitterness." "Their
feet are swift to shed blood." In a word, "Destruction and misery
are in their ways; and the way of peace have they not known." Now
then, saith he, having proved these things so clearly, the conclusion
of the whole is this, "That what things soever the law saith," in
both showing of sin, and cursing for the same, "it saith" all "to
them who are under the law that every mouth may be stopped, and
all the world may become guilty before God" (Rom 3:10,19). So that
here, I say, lieth the ground of our not being justified by the
law, even because, in the first place, we have sinned against it;
for know this for certain, that if the law doth take the least
advantage of thee by thy sinning against it, all that ever thou
shalt afterwards hear from it is nothing but Curse, curse, curse
him, "for not continuing in all things which are written in the
book of the law to do them."
2. Thou canst not be saved by the righteous Law of God, the first
covenant, because that, together with this thy miserable state, by
original and actual sins, before thou didst follow the law, since
thy turning to the law thou hast committed several sins against the
law--"In many things we offend all." So that now thy righteousness
to the law being mixed with sometimes the lust of concupiscence,
fornication, covetousness, pride, heart-risings against God, coldness
of affection towards Him, backwardness to good duties, speaking
idle words, having of strife in your hearts, and such like; I say,
these things being thus, the righteousness of the law is become
too weak through this our flesh (Rom 8:3), and so, notwithstanding
all our obedience to the law, we are yet through our weakness under
the curse of the law; for, as I said before, the law is so holy,
so just, and so good, that it cannot allow that any failing or slip
should be done by them that look for life by the same. "Cursed is
every one that continuteth not in everything" (Gal 3:10). And this
Paul knew full well, which made him throw away all his righteousness.
But you will say, that was his own. Answ. But it was even that which
while he calls it his own, he also calls it the righteousness of
the law (Phil 3:7-10) and to account it but dung, but as dirt on
his shoes, and that, that he might be found in Christ, and so be
saved by Him "without the deeds of the law" (Rom 3:28). But,
3. Set the case, the righteousness of the law which thou hast was
pure and perfect, without the least flaw or fault, without the
least mixture of the least sinful thought, yet this would fall far
short of presenting of thee blameless in the sight of God. And that
I prove by these arguments--(1.) The first argument is, that that
which is not Christ cannot redeem souls from the curse, it cannot
completely present them before the Lord; now the law is not Christ;
therefore the moral law cannot, by all our obedience to it, deliver
us from the curse that is due to us (Acts 4:12). (2.) The second
argument is, that that righteousness that is not the righteousness
of faith, that is, by believing in Jesus Christ, cannot please
God; now the righteousness of the law as a Covenant of Works is
not the righteousness of faith; therefore the righteousness of the
law as acted by us, being under that covenant, cannot please God.
The first is proved in Hebrews 11:6, "But without faith it is
impossible to please Him"; mark, it is impossible. The second thus,
"The law is not of faith" (Gal 3:12; Rom 10:5,6), compared with
Galatians 3:11. "But that no man is justified by the law in the
sight of God, it is evident; for, The just shall live by faith.
And the law is not of faith."
Answ. The motive that moveth God to have mercy upon sinners is not
because they are willing to follow the law, but because He is willing
to save them. "Not for thy righteousness, or for the uprighteous
of thine heart dost thou go to possess their land" (Deu 9:4-6).
Now understand this: if thy will to do righteousness was the first
moving cause why God had mercy on thee through Christ, then it must
not be freely by grace--I say, freely. But the Lord loves thee and
saves thee upon free terms, having nothing beforehand to make Him
accept of thy soul, but only the blood of Christ; therefore to allow
of such a principle it is to allow that grace is to be obtained
by the works of the law, which is as gross darkness as lies in
the darkest dungeon in Popery, and is also directly opposite to
Scripture--For we are "justified freely by His grace, through the
redemption that is in Christ"; not through the good that is in our
selves, or done by us, no, "but by faith, without"--mark that--"without
the deeds of the law" (Rom 3:24-28). Again, "Not of works, least
any man should boast" (Eph 2:9). No, no, saith he, "Not according
to our works," or righteousness, "but according to His own purpose";
mark "according to His own purpose and grace, which was" a free
gift, "given us in Christ Jesus," not lately, but "before the world
began" (2 Tim 1:9).
Object. But you will say, "Then why did God give the law, if we
cannot have salvation by following of it?"
Answ. I told you before that the law was given for these following
reasons--1. That thou mightest be convinced by it of thy sins, and
that thy sins might indeed appear very sinful unto thee, which is
done by the law these ways--(1.) By showing of thee what a holy God
He is that did give the law; and, (2.) By showing thee thy vileness
and wickedness, in that thou, contrary to this holy God, hast
transgressed against and broken this His holy Law; therefore, saith
Paul, "the law entered, that the offence might abound," that is, by
showing the creature the holiness of God, and also its own vileness
(Rom 5:20). 2. That thou mayest know that God will not damn thee for
nothing in the judgment-day. 3. Because He would have no quarreling
at His just condemning of them at that day. 4. Because He will make
thee to know that He is a holy God and pure.
WHAT MEN MAY ATTAIN TO THAT ARE UNDER THIS COVENANT OF WORKS.
[FOURTH] Quest. "But seeing you have spoken thus far, I wish you
would do so much as to show in some particulars, both what men
have done, and how far they have gone, and what they have received,
being yet under this covenant, which you call the ministration of
condemnation."
Answ. This is somewhat a difficult question, and had need be not only
warily, but also home and soundly answered. The question consists
of three particulars--First, What men have done; Second, How far
men have gone; Third, What they have received, and yet to be under
the law, or Covenant of Works, and so in a state of condemnation.
1. A man hath and may be convinced and troubled for his sins, and
yet be under this covenant, and that in a very heavy and dreadful
manner, insomuch that he find the weight of them to be intolerable
and too heavy for him to bear, as it was with Cain, "My punishment,"
saith he, "is greater than I can bear" (Gen 4:13).
2. A man living thus under a sense of his sins may repent and be
sorry for them, and yet be under this covenant, and yet be in a
damned state. And when he, Judas, saw what was done, he "repented"
(Matt 27:3).
3. Men may not only be convinced, and also repent for their sins,
but they may also desire the prayers of the children of God for
them too, and yet be under this covenant and curse, "Then Pharaoh
called for Moses and Aaron, in haste, and he said, I have sinned;
entreat the LORD your God that He may take away from me this death"
(Exo 10:16, 17).
4. A man may also humble himself for his offences and disobedience
against his God, and yet be under this covenant (1 Kings 21:24-19).
5. A man may make restitution unto men for the offence he hath done
unto them, and yet be under this covenant.
6. A man may do much work for God in his generation, and yet be
under this first covenant; as Jehu, who did do that which God bid
him (2 Kings 9:25, 26). And yet God threateneth even Jehu, because
though he did do the thing that the Lord commanded him, yet he did
it not from a right principle; for had he, the Lord would not have
said, "Yet a little while, and I will avenge the blood of Jezreel
upon the house of Jehu" (Hosea 1:4).
7. Men may hear and fear the servants of the Lord, and reverence
them very highly; yea, and when they hear, they may not only hear,
but hear and do, and that gladly too, not one or two things, but
many; mark, many things gladly, and yet be lost, and yet be damned,
"For Herod feared John," why? not because he had any civil power
over him, but because "he was a just man and an holy, and observed
him; and when he heard him, he did many things, and heard him gladly"
(Mark 6:20). It may be that thou thinkest that because thou hearest
such and such, therefore thou art better than thy neighbours; but
know for certain that thou mayest not only hear, but thou mayest
hear and do, and that not with a backward will, but gladly--mark,
"gladly"--and yet be Herod still, an enemy to the Lord Jesus still.
Consider this, I pray you.
Second. But to the second thing, which is this, How far may such
an one go? To what may such an one attain? Whither may he arrive,
and yet be an undone man, under this covenant? [1] answer--
4. They may go yet further; they may have the gifts of the Spirit
of God, which may enable them to cast out devils, to remove the
biggest hills or mountains in the world; nay, thou mayest be so
gifted as to prophesy of things to come, the most glorious things,
even the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ to reign over all His
enemies, and yet be but a Balaam, a wicked and a mad prophet (2
Peter 2:16; Num 24:16-25).
5. There may not only stand thus for awhile, for a little season,
but they may stand thus till the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ
with His holy angels; ay, and not be discovered of the saints till
that very day. "Then all those virgins arose,"--the wise and the
foolish; then! when? why, when this voice was heard, "Behold the
Bridegroom cometh, go ye out to meet him" (Matt 25:1-6). And yet
were out of the Lord Jesus Christ, and yet were under the law.
But some may say, Methinks this is yet more strange that God should
hear the prayers, the cries of those that are under the law, and
answer them. Answ. I told you before, He doth not hear them as to
their eternal state, but as to their temporal state; for God as
their Creator hath a care for them, and causeth the sun to shine
upon them, and the rain to distill upon their substance (Matt
5:45). Nay, He doth give the beasts in the field their appointed
food, and doth hear the young ravens when they cry, which are far
inferior to man (Psa 147:9). I say, therefore, that God doth hear
the cries of His creatures, and doth answer them too, though not
as to their eternal state; but may damn them nevertheless when they
die for all that.
2. They may receive promises from the mouth of the Lord. There are
many that have promises made to them by the Lord in a most eminent
way, and yet, as I said before, are such as are cast out and called
the children of the bond-woman, which is the law--"And the angel
of God called to Hagar out of Heaven," that was the bond-woman,
saying, "Fear not; for God hath heard the voice of the lad where
he is. Arise, lift up the lad, and hold him in thine hand; FOR
I WILL MAKE HIM,"--mark, there is the promise,--"for I will make
him," of the son of the bond-woman, "a great nation" (Gen 21:17,18).
3. Nay, they may go further; for they may receive another heart
than they had before, and yet be under the law. There is no man,
I think, but those that do not know what they say, that will think
or say that Saul was under the Covenant of Grace; yet after he had
talked with Samuel, and had turned his back to go from him, saith
the Scripture, "God gave him another heart" (1 Sam 10:9). Another
heart, mark that, and yet an out-cast, a rejected person (1 Sam
15:26,29). Friends, I beseech you, let not these things offend
you, but let them rather beget in your hearts an inquiring into
the truth of your condition, and be willing to be searched to
the bottom; and also, that everything which hath not been planted
by the Lord's right hand may be rejected, and that there may be a
reaching after better things, even the things that will not only
make thy soul think thy state is good now, but that thou mayest be
able to look sin, death, Hell, the curse of the law, together with
the Judge, in the face with comfort, having such a real, sound,
effectual work of God's grace in thy soul, that when thou hearest
the trumpet sound, seest the graves fly open, and the dead
come creeping forth out of their holes; when thou shalt see the
judgment set, the books opened, and all the world standing before
the judgment-seat; I say, that then thou mayest stand, and have
that blessed sentence spoken to thy soul, "Come, ye blessed of My
Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation
of the world" (Matt 25:34).
[Objection to this head.] But, you will say, for all this, We cannot
believe that we are under the law, for these reasons--As, First.
Because we have found a change in our hearts. Second. Because we
do deny that the Covenant of Works will save any. Third. Because,
for our parts, we judge ourselves far from legal principles; for we
are got up into as perfect a Gospel order, as to matter of practice
and discipline in church affairs, as any this day in England, as
we judge.
[Answer to reason second.] This is sooner said than done. Alas, alas!
poor souls think because they say, "Grace, grace, it is freely by
grace," therefore they are under the Covenant of Grace. A very wide
mistake. You must understand thus much, that though you be such as
can speak of the grace of the Gospel, yet if you yourselves be not
brought under the very Covenant of Grace, you are yet, notwithstanding
your talk and profession, very far wide of a sense and of a share
in the Covenant of the Grace of God held forth in the Gospel.
Again, therefore, those that this day profess the Gospel, for
the generality of them they are such, that, notwithstanding their
profession, they are very ignorant of that glorious influence and
lustre of the same; I say, they are ignorant of the virtue and
efficacy of the glorious things of Christ held forth by and in
the Gospel, which doth argue their not being under the Covenant of
Grace, but rather under the law or old covenant (2 Cor 4:3). As,
for instance, if you do come among some professors of the Gospel,
in general you shall have them pretty busy and ripe; also able to
hold you in a very large discourse in several points of the same
glorious Gospel; but if you come to the same people and ask them
concerning heart-work, or what work the Gospel hath wrought on
them, and what appearance they have had of the sweet influences and
virtues on their souls and consciences, it may be they will give
you such an answer as this--I do find by the preaching thereof that
I am changed, and turned from my sins in a good measure, and also
have learned (but only in tongue), to distinguish between the law
and the Gospel, so that for the one--that is, for the Gospel--I
can plead, and also can show the weakness and unprofitableness of
the other. And thus far, it is like they may go, which is not far
enough to prove them under the Covenant of Grace, though they may
have their tongues so largely tipped with the profession of the
same (2 Peter 2:20) where he saith "For if after they have escaped
the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and
Saviour Jesus Christ," which was not a saving knowledge, "they are
again entangled therein, and overcome, the latter end" of that man
"is worse than the beginning" (Matt 25:1-4, etc.; Matt 7:22).
Object. But, you will say, is not this a fair declaring of the work
of grace, or doth it not discover that, without all gainsaying,
we are under the Covenant of Grace, when we are able, not only to
speak of the glorious Gospel of Jesus Christ, but also to tell,
and that by experience, that we have been changed from worse to
better, from sin to a holy life, by leaving of the same, and that
by hearing of the Word preached?
[Third part of objection.] The last part of the objection. But, say
you, our practices in the worship of God shall testify for us that
we are not under the law; for we have by God's goodness attained to
as exact a way of waking in the ordinances of God, and as near the
examples of the Apostles, as ever any churches since the primitive
times, as we judge.
[Answer to reason third.] What then? Do you think that the walking
in the order of the churches of old, as to matter of outward worship,
is sufficient to clear you of your sins at the judgment-day? or, do
you think that God will be contented with a little bodily subjection
to that which shall vanish and fade like a flower, when the Lord
shall come from Heaven in flaming fire, with His mighty angels (2
Thess 1:7,8). Alas, alas, how will such professors as these are fall
before the judgment-seat of Christ! Then such a question as this,
"Friend, how camest thou in hither, not having a wedding garment?"
will make them be speechless, and fall down into everlasting
burnings, thousands on a heap; for you must know that it is not
then your crying, Lord, Lord, that will stand you in stead; not
your saying, We have ate and drank in Thy presence, that will keep
you from standing on the left hand of Christ. It is the principle
as well as the practice that shall be inquired into at that day.
Quest. The principle, you will say, what do you mean by that?
Answ. My meaning is, the Lord Jesus Christ will then inquire
and examine whether the spirit from which you acted was legal or
evangelical--that is, whether it was the Spirit of adoption that
did draw you out to the thing you took in hand, or a mere moral
principle, together with some shallow and common illuminations into
the outward way of the worship of God, according to Gospel rule.
Quest. But, you will say, it is like, How should this be made
manifest and appear?
Object. But, you will say, can a man use Gospel ordinances with a
legal spirit?
Answ. Yes, as easily as the Jews could use and practise circumcision,
though not the moral or Ten Commandments. For this I shall be
bold to affirm, that it is not the commands of the New Testament
administration that can keep a man from using of its self [that
administration] in a legal spirit; for know this for certain, that
it is the principle, not the command, that makes the subjector to
the same either legal or evangelical, and so his obedience from
that command to be from legal convictions or evangelical principles.
Quest. But have you no other way to discover the things of the
Gospel, how they are done with a legal principle, but those you
have already made mention of?
Object. But, you will say, by these words of yours you do seem
to deny that there are conditional promises in the Gospel, as is
clear, in that you strike at such practices as are conditional,
and commanded to be done upon the same.
The Law and the Gospel being two distinct covenants, they are made
in divers ways, and the nature of the conditions also being not
the same, as saith the Apostle, the righteousness of the law saith
one thing, and the righteousness of faith saith another (Rom 10:4-6).
That is, the great condition in the law is, If you do these things,
you shall live by them; but the condition, even the greatest condition
laid down for a poor soul to do, as to salvation--for it is that
we speak of--is to believe that my sins be forgiven me for Jesus
Christ's sake, without the works or righteousness of the law, on my
part, to help forward. "To him that worketh not," saith the Apostle
[that is] for salvation, "but believeth on Him that justifieth the
ungodly, his faith"--mark, "his faith is counted for righteousness"
(Rom 4:5). So that we, saith, he, "conclude that a man is justified
by faith without"--mark again, "without the deeds of the law" (Rom
3:28).
Now, if Christ doth give it, and that freely, then He doth not
sell if for anything that is in the creature; but Christ doth give
Himself, as also doth His Father, and that freely, not because
there is anything in us, or done by us, that moves Him thereunto.
If it were by doing, then, saith Paul, "Grace is not grace," seeing
it is obtained by works; but grace is grace, and that is the reason
it is given to men without their works. And if it be by grace,
that is, if it be a free gift from God, without anything foreseen
as done, or to be done, by the creature, then it is not of works,
which is clear; therefore it is grace, without the works of the
law. But if you say, Nay, it is of something in the man done by
him that moves God thereunto; then you must conclude that either
grace is no grace, or else that works are grace and not works. Do
but read with understanding (Rom 11:6).
Object. But you did but even now put souls upon fulfilling the
first condition of the Gospel, even to believe in Christ, and so
be saved; but now you say it is alone by grace, without condition;
and therefore by these words, there is first a contradiction to your
former sayings, and also that men may be saved without the condition
of faith, which to me seems a very strange thing. I desire, therefore,
that you would clear out what you have said, to my satisfaction.
And thus, you see, I have briefly spoken to you something touching
the law. First, what it is, and when given; secondly, how sad those
men's conditions are that are under it; thirdly, who they are that
be under it; fourthly, how far they may go, and what they may do
and receive, and yet be under it; which hath been done by way of
answers to several questions, for the better satisfaction of those
that may stand in doubt of the truth of what hath been delivered.
[DOCTRINE SECOND.]
The second doctrine now to be spoken to is, TO SHOW THAT THE PEOPLE
OF GOD ARE NOT UNDER THE LAW BUT UNDER GRACE--"For ye are not under
the law, but under grace" (Rom 6:14).
You may well remember that from these words I did observe these
two great truths of the Lord--FIRST, That there are some in Gospel
times that are under the law, or Covenant of Works. SECOND, That
there is never a believer under the law, or Covenant of Works,
but under grace. I have spoken something to the former of these
truths--to wit, that there are some under the law, together with
who they are, and what their condition is, that are under it. Now
I am to speak to the second, and to show you who they are, and what
their condition is, that are under that [Covenant of Grace].
But before I come to that, I shall speak a few words to show you
what the word "grace" in this place signifies; [I touched upon
this in the first doctrine] for the word "grace" in the Scripture
referreth sometimes to favour with men (Gen 33:10; 39:4; 50:4).
Sometimes to holy qualifications of saints (2 Cor 8:7). And sometimes
to hold forth the condescension of Christ in coming down from the
glory which He had with His Father before the world was, to be
made of no reputation, and a servant to men (2 Cor 8:9; Phil 2:7).
Again: sometimes it is taken for the free, rich, and unchangeable
love of God to man, through Jesus Christ, that for our cause and
sakes did make Himself poor; and so it is to be understood in these
words, "For ye are not under the law," to be cursed, and damned, and
sent headlong to Hell, "but" you are "under grace," to be saved,
to be pardoned, to be preserved, "and kept by the mighty power
of God, through faith," which alone is the gift of grace, "unto
eternal glory." This one Scripture alone proves the same--"For by
grace are ye saved" (Eph 2:8), by free grace, by rich grace, by
unchangeable grace. And you are saved from the curse of the law;
from the power, guilt, and filth of sin; from the power, malice,
madness, and rage of the devil; from the wishes, curses, and desires
of wicked men; from the hot, scalding, flaming, fiery furnace
of Hell; from being arraigned as malefactors, convinced, judged,
condemned, and fettered with the chains of our sins to the devils
to all eternity; and all this freely, freely by His grace (Rom
3:24) by rich grace unchangeable grace; for, saith He, "I am the
LORD, I change not: therefore ye sons of Jacob are not consumed"
(Mal 3:6). This is grace indeed.
The words being thus opened, and the truth thus laid down, HOW THERE
IS NEVER A BELIEVER UNDER THE COVENANT OF WORKS, BUT UNDER GRACE,
the free, rich, unchangeable love of God, it remaineth that, in
the first place, we prove the doctrine, and after that proceed.
First. They are not under the law, because their sins are pardoned,
which could not be if they were dealt withal according to the law,
and their being under it; for the law alloweth of no repentance,
but accuseth, curseth and condemneth every one that is under
it--"Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which
are written in the Book of the Law to do them" (Gal 3:10). But, I
say, believers having their sins forgiven them, it is because they
are under another, even a new covenant--"Behold, the days come,
saith the LORD, when I will make a new covenant with them."--"For
I will be merciful to their unrighteousness, and their sins and
their iniquities will I remember no more" (Heb 8:12).
Second. They are not under the law, because their sins and iniquities
are not only forgiven, but they are forgiven them freely. They
that stand in the first covenant, and continue there, are to have
never a sin forgiven them unless they can give God a complete
satisfaction; for the law calls for it at their hands, saying, "Pay
me that thou owest." O! but when God deals with His saints by the
Covenant of Grace it is not so; for it is said, "And when" He saw
"they had nothing to pay, He frankly" and freely "forgave them"
all--"I will heal their backsliding; I will love them freely."--I
will blot "out thy transgressions for Mine own sake," etc. (Luke
7:42; Hosea 14:4; Isa 43:25).
Third. The saints are not under the law, because the righteousness
that they stand justified before God in is not their own actual
righteousness by the law, but by imputation, and is really the
righteousness of Another--namely, of God in Christ (2 Cor 5:21;
Phil 3:9). "Even the righteousness of God, which is by faith of
Jesus Christ unto all and upon all," that is, imputed to "them that
believe" (Rom 3:22). But if they were under the old covenant, the
Covenant of Works, then their righteousness must be their own, [But
it is impossible that the righteousness of man by the law should
save him.] or no forgiveness of sins--"If thou doest well, shalt
thou not be accepted?" but if thou transgress, "sin lieth at the
door," saith the law (Gen 4:7).
And so, I say, whether it be victory over sin, death, Hell, or the
devil, it is given us by the victory of Christ--"But thanks be to
God which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ" (1
Cor 15:57; Rom 7:24,25). Heaven and glory it is also the gift of
Him who giveth us richly all things to enjoy (Matt 25:34).
[THE NEW COVENANT FREE AND UNCHANGEABLE, WHO ARE UNDER IT, AND
THEIR PRIVILEGES.]
Now we are to proceed, and the things that we are to treat upon
in the second place are these--First. [Besides the reasons already
given.] Why is it a free and unchangeable grace? SECOND. Who they are
that are actually brought into His free and unchangeable Covenant
of Grace, and how they are brought in? THIRD. What are the privileges
of those that are actually brought into this free and glorious
grace of the glorious God of Heaven and glory?
[THE NEW COVENANT FREE AND UNCHANGEABLE BECAUSE MADE WITH CHRIST.]
And for the opening of this we must consider, first, How and through
Whom this grace doth come to be, first, free to us, and, secondly,
unchangeable? This grace is free to us through conditions in
Another--that is, by way of covenant or bargain; for this grace
comes by way of covenant or bargain to us, yet made with Another
for us.
Second. This covenant, I say, was made with One, not with many, and
also confirmed in the conditions of it with One, not with several.
First, that the covenant was made with One (Gal 3:16). "Now to
Abraham and his Seed were the promises made. He saith not, And to
seeds, as of many; but as of one, And to thy Seed, which is Christ"
(Verse 17). "And this, I say, that the covenant that was confirmed
before of God, in Christ," etc. The covenant was made with the Seed
of Abraham; not the seeds, but the Seed, which is the Lord Jesus
Christ, our Head and Undertaker in the things concerning the
covenant.
Third. The condition was made with One, and also accomplished
by Him alone, and not by several; yet in the nature, and for the
everlasting deliverance of many; even by one man Jesus Christ, as
it is clear from Romans 5:15-17, etc., and in Zechariah 9:11, the
Lord saith to Christ, "And as for Thee"--mark, "As for Thee also,
by the blood of Thy covenant," or as for Thee whose covenant was
by blood; that is, the condition of the covenant was, that Thou
shouldst spill Thy blood; which having been done in the account of
God, saith He, I according to My condition have let go the prisoners,
or sent them "out of the pit wherein is no water." Those Scriptures
in Galatians 3:16,17 that are above cited, are notably to our purpose;
Verse 16 saith it was made with Christ, Verse 17 saith it was also
confirmed in or with God in Him. Pray read with understanding. "Now,"
saith Paul, "the promises were not made unto seeds, as of many;
but as of one, And to thy Seed, which is Christ." . . . . "The law,
which was four hundred and thirty years after, cannot disannul, that
it should make the promise of none effect." Not that the covenant
was made with Abraham and Christ together, as two persons that
were the undertakers of the same; the promise was made with, or
to, Abraham afterwards; but the covenant with Christ before.
Further, that the covenant was not personally made with Abraham,
no, nor with any of the fathers, neither so as that they were the
persons that should stand engaged to be the accomplishers thereof,
either in whole or in part; which is very clear.
First. Because this covenant was not made with God and the creature;
not with another poor Adam, that only stood upon the strength
of natural abilities; but this covenant was made with the second
Person, with the Eternal Word of God; with Him that was everyways
as holy, as pure, as infinite, as powerful, and as everlasting as
God (Prov 8:22-31; Isa 9:6; Zech 13:7; Phil 2:6; Heb 1; Rev 1:11-17;
22:13,17).
1. For the first, That the price was agreed upon before the world
began. Consider the word which speaketh of the price that was paid
for sinners, even the precious blood of Christ; it saith of Him,
"Who verily was foreordained before the foundation of the world, but
was manifest in these last times for you, who by Him do believe,"
etc. (1 Peter 1:20,21). Mark, it was foreordained or concluded on
between the Father and the Son before the world began.
2. The promise from God to the Son was also made in the same manner,
as it is clear where the Apostle saith with comfort to his soul,
that he had "hope of eternal life, which God, that cannot lie,
promised before the world began," (Titus 1:2) which could be to
none but the Mediator of the new covenant, because there was none
else to whom it should be made but He.
3. The choice was also made then, even before man had a being in
this world, as it is evident where he saith, "Blessed be the God
and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with all
spiritual blessings in heavenly places IN Christ: according as He
hath chosen us in Him before the foundation of the world, that we
should be holy and without blame before Him in love" (Eph 1:3,4).
[Did I think this would meet with any opposition, I should be in
this more large.] Nay, did I look upon it here to be necessary, I
should show you very largely and clearly that God did not only make
the covenant with Christ before the world began, and the conditions
thereof, but I could also show you that the very saints' qualifications,
as part of the covenant, was then concluded on by the Father and
the Son according to these Scriptures, which, it may be, I may
touch upon further anon (Eph 1:3,4; 2:10; Rom 8:28). But,
Third. This covenant was not made with any of the fathers, neither
in whole nor in part, as the undertakers thereof; for then it must
be also concluded that they are co-partners with Christ in our
salvation, and so that Christ is not Mediator alone; but this would
be blasphemy for any once to surmise. And therefore, by the way,
when thou readest of the new covenant in Scripture as though it
was made with Adam, Noah, Abraham, or David, thou art to consider
thus with thyself--1. That God spake to them in such a way for to
show or signify unto us how He did make the covenant that He did
make with Christ before the world began, they being types of Him.
2. That He thereby might let them understand that He was the same
then as He is now, and now as He was then; and that then it was
resolved on between His Son and HIM, that in after ages His Son
should in their natures, from their loins, and for their sins, be
born of a woman, hanged on the Cross, etc., for them: for all along
you may see that when He speaketh to them of the new covenant, He
mentions their seed--their seed--still aiming at Christ; Christ,
the Seed of the woman, was to break the serpent's head (Gen 3:15;
17; Psa 89:36). Now to Abraham and his Seed was the promise made;
his Seed shall endure for ever, and His throne as the days of
Heaven, etc.; still pointing at Christ. And, 3. To stir up their
faith and expectations to be constant unto the end in waiting for
that which He and His Son had concluded on before time, and what He
had since the conclusion declared unto the world by the Prophets.
4. It appeareth that the heart of God was much delighted therein
also, as is evident, in that He was always in every age declaring
of that unto them which before He had prepared for them. O this
good God of Heaven!
Objection: But you will say, perhaps, the Scriptures say plainly
that the new covenant was and is made with believers, saying, "The
days come, saith the Lord, that I will make a new covenant with
the house of Israel, and with the house of Judah; not according to
the covenant that I made with their fathers in the day when I led
them out of the land of Egypt," etc. (Heb 8:8-10). So that it doth
not run with Christ alone, but with believers also--I will make a
new covenant with the house of Israel and Judah, etc. (Jer 31:33).
Answer first: It cannot be meant that the new covenant was made
with Christ, and the house of Israel and Judah as the undertakers
thereof; for so it was made with Christ alone, which is clear, in
that it was made long before the house of Israel and Judah had a
being, as I showed before. But,
Answer second: These words here are spoken, first, to show rather
the end of the ceremonies than the beginning or rise of the new
covenant. Mind a little; the Apostle is labouring to beat the Jews,
to whom he wrote this Epistle, off of the ceremonies of the law,
of the priests, altar, offerings, temple, etc., and to bring them
to the right understanding of the thing and things that they held
forth, which were to come, and to put an end to those. If you do
but understand the Epistle to the Hebrews, it is a discourse that
showeth that the Son of God being come, there is an end put to the
ceremonies; for they were to continue so long and no longer--"It,"
saith the Apostle, "stood in meats and drinks, and divers washings,
and carnal ordinances imposed on them until the time of reformation";
that is, until Christ did come. "But Christ being come an high
priest of good things to come," etc., puts an end to the things
and ordinances of the Levitical priesthood. Read the 7th, 8th, 9th,
and 10th Chapters of Hebrews, and you will find this true. So,
then, when He saith, "The days come in which I make a new covenant,"
it is rather to be meant a changing of the administration, taking
away the type, the shadow, the ceremonies from the house of Israel
and Judah, and relieving by the birth of Christ, and the death of
Christ, and the offering of the body of Him whom the shadows and
types did point out to be indeed He whom God the Father had given
for a ransom by covenant for the souls of the saints; and also to
manifest the truth of that covenant which was made between the Father
and the Son before the world began; for though the new covenant
was made before the world began, and also every one in all ages was
saved by the virtue of that covenant, yet that covenant was never
so clearly made manifest as at the coming, death, and resurrection
of Christ; and therefore, saith the Scripture, "He hath brought
life and immortality to light through the Gospel." "Who hath saved
us, and called us with an holy calling" not according to the
"works" of righteousness which we have done, "but according to His
own purpose and grace, which was given us in Christ Jesus before
the world began," there is the covenant, but it was "made MANIFEST
by the APPEARING of our Saviour Jesus Christ, who hath abolished
death, and brought life and immortality to LIGHT through the Gospel"
(2 Tim 1:9,10). Therefore, I say, these words are therefore to
discover that the time was come to change the dispensation, to take
away the type, and bring in the substance, and so manifesting that
more clearly which before lay hid in dark sayings and figures. And
this is usual with God to speak in this manner.
Third. [How the conditions are fulfilled]. In the next place, this
was not all--that is, the Covenant of Grace, with the conditions
thereof, was not only concluded on by both parties to be done, but
Jesus Christ [Christ is put into office by the Father, to do all
things contained in the new covenant]. must be authorized to do
what was concluded on touching this covenant by way of office. I
shall therefore speak a word or two also touching the offices, at
least, some of them, that Christ Jesus did and doth still execute
as the Mediator of the new covenant, which also were typed out in
the Levitical law; for this is the way to prove that we are not
under the law, but under grace. And,
FIRST. His first office, after the covenant was made and concluded
upon, was that Jesus should become bound as a Surety, [His Suretyship].
and stand engaged upon oath to see that all the conditions of the
covenant that were concluded on between Him and His Father should,
according to the agreement, be accomplished by Him; and that after
that, He should be the Messenger from God to the world to declare
the mind of God touching the tenor and nature of both the covenants,
especially of the new one. The Scripture saith, that Jesus Christ
was not only made a priest by an oath, but also a Surety, or
bondsman, as in Hebrews 7:21, 22. In the 21st Verse he speaketh of
the priesthood of Christ, that it was with an oath; and saith, in
the 22nd Verse, "By so much" also "was Jesus made a Surety of a
better testament," or covenant.
Now the covenant was not only made on Jesus Christ's side with an
oath, but also on God the Father's side, that it might be for the
better ground of establishment to all those that are, or are to be,
the children of the promise. Methinks it is wonderful to consider
that the God and Father of our souls, by Jesus Christ, should be
so bent upon the salvation of sinners, that He would covenant with
His Son Jesus for the security of them, and also that there should
pass an oath on both sides for the confirmation of Their resolution
to do good. As if the Lord had said, My Son, Thou and I have here
made a covenant, that I on My part should do thus and thus, and
that Thou on Thy part shouldst do so and so. Now that We may give
these souls the best ground of comfort that may be, there shall
pass an oath on both sides, that Our children may see that We do
indeed love them. "Wherein God, willing more abundantly to show
unto the heirs of promise the immutability of His counsel," in
making of the covenant, "confirmed it by an oath: that we might
have a strong consolation, who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon
the hope set before us" (Heb 6:17,18; 7:21). Mark, the 6th Chapter
saith, God confirmed His part by an oath; and the 7th saith, Christ
was made or set on His office also by an oath. Again, "Once,"
saith God, "have I sworn by My holiness, that I will not lie unto
David," "nor alter the thing that is gone out of My mouth," (Psa
89:34,35) as was before cited.
Herein you may see that God and Christ were in good earnest about
the salvation of sinners; for as soon as ever the covenant was made,
the next thing was, who should be bound to see all those things
fulfilled which were conditioned on between the Father and the
Son: the angels, they could have no hands in it; the world could
not do it; the devils had rather see them damned than they would
wish them the least good; thus Christ looked, and there was none
to help; though the burden lay never so heavy upon His shoulder,
He must bear it Himself; for there was none besides Himself to
uphold, or so much as to step in to be bound, to see the conditions,
before mentioned, fulfilled neither in whole nor in part (Isa
63:1-7). So that He must not be only He with whom the covenant was
made, but He must also become the bondsman or surety thereof, and
so stand bound to see that all and every particular thing conditioned
for should be, both in manner, and matter, at the time and place,
according to the agreement, duly and orderly fulfilled. Is not this
grace?
Now as touching the nature of a surety and his work, in some things
it is well known to most men; therefore I shall be very brief upon
it.
SECOND. [His second office]. After that Jesus Christ had stood bound,
and was become our Surety in things pertaining to this covenant,
His next office was to be the Messenger of God touching His mind
and the tenor of the covenant unto the poor world; and this did the
Prophet foresee long before, when he saith, "Behold, I will send
My messenger, and he shall prepare the way before Me"; speaking
of John the Baptist. "And he shall prepare the way before Me." And
then He speaketh of Christ to the people, saying, "And the Lord
whom ye seek shall suddenly come to His temple." Who is He? Even
the Messenger of the covenant, whom ye delight in, that is Christ.
"Behold, He shall come, saith the LORD of Hosts" (Mal 3:1).
Now the covenant being made before between the Father and the Son,
and Jesus Christ becoming bound to see all the conditions fulfilled,
this being done, He could come down from Heaven to earth, to declare
to the world what God the Father and HE had concluded on before,
and what was the mind of the Father towards the world concerning
the salvation of their souls; and indeed, who could better come on
such an errand than He that stood by when the covenant was made?
than He that shook hands with the Father in making of the covenant?
than He that was become a Surety in the behalf of poor sinners,
according to the terms of the covenant.
First. Jesus Christ was sent from Heaven to declare unto the world
from God the Father that He was wonderfully filled with love to poor
sinners. First, in that He would forgive their sins. Secondly, in
that He would save their souls. Thirdly in that He would make them
heirs of His glory. "For God so loved the world, that He gave His
only begotten Son.--For God sent not His Son into the world to
condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be saved"
(John 3:16,17).
Second. God sent Jesus Christ to tell the poor world how that He
would do this for poor sinners, and yet be just, and yet do His
justice no wrong; and that was to be done by Jesus Christ's dying
of a cursed death in the room of poor sinners, to satisfy justice,
and make way for mercy; to take away the stumbling-blocks, and set
open Heaven's gates; to overcome Satan, and break off from sinners
his chains (Luke 4:18) to set open the prison doors, and to let
the prisoners go free (Isa 61:1-3). And this was the message that
Christ was to deliver to the world by commandment from His Father;
and this did He tell us when He came of His errand, where he saith,
"I lay down My life for the sheep--no man taketh it from Me, but
I lay it down of Myself. I have power to lay it down, and to take
it again. This commandment have I received of My Father" (John
10:15-18). Even this commandment hath My Father given Me, that I
should both do this thing and also tell it unto you.
Fourth. His message was further; He came to tell them how and
which way they should come to enjoy these glorious benefits; also
by laying down motives to stir them up to accept of the benefits.
The way is laid down in John 3:14,15, where Christ saith, "As Moses
lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of
Man be lifted up," or caused to be hanged on the Cross, and die
the death--"that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish but
have everlasting life." The way, therefore, that thou shalt have the
benefit and comfort of that which My Father and I have covenanted
for, for thee, I am come down from Heaven to earth on purpose to
give thee intelligence, and to certify thee of it. Know, therefore,
that as I have been born of a woman, and I have taken this Body
upon Me, it is on purpose that I might offer it up upon the Cross
a sacrifice to God, to give Him satisfaction for thy sins, that
His mercy may be extended to thy soul, without any wrong done to
justice; and this thou art to believe, and not in the notion but
from thy very whole soul. Now the motives are many. 1. If they do
not leave their sins, and come to Jesus Christ, that their sins may
be washed away by His blood, they are sure to be damned in Hell;
for the law hath condemned them already (John 3:18,19). 2. But if
they do come, they shall have the bosom of Christ to lie in, the
Kingdom of Heaven to dwell in, the angels and saints for their
companions, shall shine there like the sun, shall be there for
ever, shall sit upon the thrones of judgment, etc. Here is grace.
Now though these sacrifices were offered, yet they were not offered
to the end they should make the comers to, or offerers thereof,
perfect; but the things were to represent to the world what God
had in after ages for to do, which was even the salvation of His
creatures by that offering of the body of Jesus Christ, of which
these were a shadow and a type for the accomplishing of the second
covenant. For Christ was by covenant to offer a sacrifice, and that
an effectual one too, if He intended the salvation of sinners--"A
body hast Thou prepared for Me; I am come to do Thy will" (Heb
10:5). I shall therefore show you, First. What was expected by God
in the sacrifice in the type, and then show you how it was answered
in the antitype. Second. I shall show you the manner of the offering
of the type, and so answerable thereto to show you the fitness
of the sacrifice of the body of Christ, by way of answering some
questions.
First. For the first of these, [What was expected by God in the
sacrifice in the type, and how answered in the antitype]--1. God
did expect that sacrifice which He Himself had appointed, and not
another, to signify, that none would serve His turn but the body
and soul of His appointed Christ, the Mediator of the new covenant
(John 1:29). 2. This sacrifice must not be lame nor deformed; it
must have no scar, spot, or blemish; to signify, that Jesus Christ
was to be a complete sacrifice by covenant (1 Peter 1:19). 3. This
sacrifice was to be taken out of the flock or herd; to signify, that
Jesus Christ was to come out of the race of mankind, according to
covenant (Heb 10:5). But,
Now of what hath been spoken this is the sum, that there is a
sacrifice under the new covenant, as there were sacrifices under the
old; and that this sacrifice did every way answer that, or those;
indeed, they did but suffer for sin in show, but He in reality;
they are the shadow, but He as the substance. O! when Jesus Christ
did come to make Himself a sacrifice, or to offer Himself for sin,
you may understand that our sins were indeed charged to purpose
upon Him. O! how they scarred his soul, how they brake His body,
insomuch that they made the blood run down His blessed face and from
His precious side; therefore thou must understand these following
things--First, that Jesus Christ by covenant did die for sin.
Secondly, that His death was not a mere natural death, but a "cursed
death," even such an one as men do undergo from God for their sins,
though He Himself had none, even such a death as to endure the very
pains and torments of Hell. O sad pains and inexpressible torments
that this our Sacrifice for sin went under! The pains of His body
were not all; no, but the pains of His soul; for His soul was made
an offering as well as His body, yet all but one sacrifice (Isa
53). [As Christ did not suffer in His body without suffering in
soul, nor yet in soul without His suffering in body; it was because
not the body without the soul, but both the body and soul of the
saints should be for ever saved]. To signify, that the suffering
of Christ was not only a bodily suffering, but a soul suffering;
not only to suffer what man could inflict upon Him, but also to
suffer soul torments that none but God can inflict, or suffer to
be inflicted upon Him. O, the torments of His soul! they were the
torments indeed; His soul was that that felt the wrath of God. "My
soul," saith He, "is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death" (Matt
26:38). "Now is My soul troubled, and what shall I say?" (John
12:27). The rock was not so rent as was His precious soul; there
was not such a terrible darkness on the face of the earth then as
there was on His precious soul. O! the torments of Hell and the
eclipsings of the Divine smiles of God were both upon Him at once;
the devils assailing of Him, and God forsaking of Him, and all
at once! "My God, My God," saith He, "why hast Thou forsaken Me?"
(Matt 27:46). Now in my greatest extremity; now sin is laid upon
Me, the curse takes hold of Me, the pains of Hell are clasped
about Me, and Thou hast forsaken Me. O sad! Sinners, this was not
done in pretence, but in reality; not in show, but in very deed;
otherwise Christ had dissembled, and had not spoken the truth; but
the truth of it His bloody sweat declares, His mighty cries declare,
the things which and for what He suffered declare. Nay, I must
say thus much, that all the damned souls in Hell, with all their
damnations, did never yet feel that torment and pain that did this
blessed Jesus in a little time. Sinner, canst thou read that Jesus
Christ was made an offering for sin, and yet go in sin? Canst thou
hear that the load of thy sins did break the very heart of Christ,
and spill His precious blood? and canst thou find in thy heart
to labour to lay more sins upon His back? Canst thou hear that He
suffered the pains, the fiery flames of Hell, and canst thou find
in thy heart to add to His groans by slighting of His sufferings?
O hard-hearted wretch! how canst thou deal so unkindly with such
a sweet Lord Jesus?
Answ. That thou mightest not fry with the devil and damned souls.
Quest. But could not we have been saved if Christ had not died?
Answ. Yea, and that in such a horrible way too, that it is unspeakable.
Answ. No, in nowise. [1]. The sins for which He suffered called for
the torments of Hell; the conditions upon which He died did call
for the torments of Hell; for Christ did not die the death of a
saint, but the death of a sinner, of a cursed and damned sinner;
because He stood in their room, the law to which He was subjected
called for the torments of Hell; the nature of God's justice could
not bate Him anything; the death which He was to suffer had not
lost its sting; all these being put together do irresistibly declare
unto us that He, as a sacrifice, did suffer the torments of Hell
(Gal 3:13). But, 2. Had He not died and suffered the cursed death,
the covenant had been made void, and His Suretyship would have
been forfeited, and, besides this, the world damned in the flames
of Hell-fire; therefore, His being a sacrifice was one part of the
covenant; for the terms of the covenant were that He should spill
His blood. O blessed Jesus! O blessed grace! (Zech 9:10,11).
Now the things that I shall treat upon are these--First, I shall
show you the qualifications required of a priest under the Law;
Second, his office; and, Third, how Jesus Christ did according to
what was signified by those under the law; I say, how He did answer
the types, and where He went beyond them.
2. The priests under the law they must be men, complete, not
deformed--"Speak unto Aaron," saith God to Moses, "saying, Whosoever
he be of thy seed in their generations that hath any blemish, let
him not approach to offer the bread of his God. For whatsoever man
he be that hath a blemish, he shall not approach; a blind man, or
a lame, or he that hath a flat nose, or any thing superfluous, or
a man that is broken-footed, or broken-handed, or crook-backt, or
a dwarf, or that hath a blemish in his eye, or be scurvy, or scabbed,
or hath his stones broken; no man that hath a blemish of the seed
of Aaron the priest shall come nigh to offer the offerings of the
Lord made by fire; he that hath a blemish; he shall not come nigh
to offer the bread of his God" (Lev 21:17-21). What doth all this
signify but that, (1.) He must not be lame, to signify he must not
go haltingly about the work of our salvation. (2.) He must not be
blind, to signify that he must not go ignorantly to work, but he
must be quick of understanding in the things of God. (3.) He must
not be scabbed, to signify that the priest must not be corrupt of
filthy in his office. (4.) In a word, he must be every way complete,
to signify to us that Jesus Christ was to be, and is, most complete
and most perfect in things pertaining to God in reference to His
second covenant.
4. The high priests under the law were not to be shy or squeamish
in case there were any that had the plague or leprosy, scab or
blotches; but must look on them, go to them, and offer for them (Lev
13), all which is to signify, that Jesus Christ should not refuse
to take notice of the several infirmities of the poorest people,
but to teach them, and to see that none of them be lost by reason
of their infirmity, for want of looking to or tending of. 10
5. The high priests under the law they were to be anointed with
very excellent oil, compounded by art (Exo 29:7; 30:30). To signify,
that Jesus, the Great High Priest of this new covenant, would be
in a most eminent way anointed to His priestly office by the Holy
Spirit of the Lord.
7. The priests under the law were to be washed with water (Exo
29:4). To signify, that Jesus Christ should not go about the work
of His priestly office with the filth of sin upon Him, but was
without sin to appear as our High Priest in the presence of His
Father, to execute His priestly office there for our advantage--"For
such a high priest became us, who is holy, harmless, undefiled,
separate from sinners, and made higher than the heavens" (Heb 7:26).
8. The high priest under the law, before they went into the holy place,
there were to be clothed--with a curious garment, a breastplate, and
an ephod, and a robe, and a broidered coat, a mitre, and a girdle,
and they were to be made of gold, and blue, and purple, and scarlet,
and fine linen; and in his garment and glorious ornaments there
must be precious stones, and on those stones there must be written
the names of the children of Israel (read Exodus 28), and all this
was to signify what a glorious High Priest Jesus Christ should be,
and how in the righteousness of God He should appear before God as
our High Priest, to offer up the sacrifice that was to be offered
for our salvation to God His Father. But I pass that.
Second, Now I shall speak to His office. The office of the high
priest in general was twofold. 1. To offer the sacrifice without
the camp. 2. To bring it within the veil--that is, into the holiest
of all, which did type out Heaven.
1. [First part of the high priest's office]. (1.) It was the office
of the priest to offer the sacrifice; and so did Jesus Christ; He
did offer His own Body and Soul in sacrifice. I say, HE did OFFER
it, and not another, as it is written, "No man taketh away My life,
but I lay it down of Myself; I have power to lay it down, and I
have power to take it again" (John 10:17,18). And again it is said,
"When He," Jesus, "had offered up one sacrifice for sin, for ever
sat down on the right hand of God" (Heb 10:12). (2.) The priests
under the law must offer up the sacrifice that God had appointed,
and none else, a complete one without any blemish; and so did our
High Priest, where He saith, "Sacrifice and offering Thou wouldest
not, but a body has Thou prepared Me," and that I will offer (Heb
10:5). (3.) The priest was to take of the ashes of the sacrifice,
and lay them in a clean place; and this signifies, that the Body
of Jesus, after it had been offered, should be laid into Joseph's
sepulchre, as in a clean place, where never any man before was laid
(Lev 6:11, compared with John 19:41,42).
2. [Second part of the high priest's office]. This being one part
of his office, and when this was done, then in the next place he
was, (1.) To put on the glorious garment, when he was to go into
the holiest, and take of the blood, and carry it thither, etc., he
was to put on the holy garment which signifieth the righteousness
of Jesus Christ. (2.) He was in this holy garment, which hath in
it the stones, and in the stones the names of the twelve tribes
of the children of Israel, to appear in the holy place. "And thou
shalt take two onyx stones, and grave on them the names of the
children of Israel: six of their names on one stone, and the other
six names of the rest on the other stone, according to their birth"
(Exo 28:9,10). And this was to signify, that Jesus Christ was to
enter into the holiest, then He was there to bear the names of His
elect in the tables of His heart before the Throne of God and the
Mercy-seat (Heb 12:23). (3.) With this he was to take of the blood
of the sacrifices, and carry it into the holiest of all, which was
a type of Heaven, and there was he to sprinkle the mercy-seat; and
this was to be done by the high priest only; to signify, that none
but Jesus Christ must have this office and privilege, to be the
people's High Priest to offer for them. "But into the second went
the high priest alone once every year, not without blood, which he
offered for himself, and for the errors of the people" (Heb 9:7).
(4.) He was there to make an atonement for the people with the blood,
sprinkling of it upon the mercy-seat; but this must be done with
much incense. "And Aaron shall bring the bullock of the sin-offering
which is for himself, and for his house, and shall kill the bullock
of the sin-offering which is for himself: and he shall take a censor
full of burning coals of fire from off the altar before the Lord,
and his hands full of sweet incense beaten small, and bring it
within the veil: and he shall put the incense upon the fire before
the Lord, that he cloud of the incense may cover the mercy-seat
that is upon the testimony, that he die not: and he shall take of
the blood of the bullock, and sprinkle it with his finger upon the
mercy-seat eastward, and before the mercy-seat shall he sprinkle
of the blood with his finger seven times. Then shall he kill the
goat of the sin-offering, that is for the people, and bring his
blood within the veil, and do with that blood as he did with the
blood of the bullock, and sprinkle it upon the mercy-seat and before
the mercy-seat." (Lev 16:11-15). Now this was for the priest and
the people; all which doth signify that Jesus Christ was after
His death to go into Heaven itself, of which this holy place was a
figure, and there to carry the sacrifice that He offered upon the
Cross into the presence of God, to obtain mercy for the people
in a way of justice (Heb 9). And in that he is said to take his
hands full of sweet incense, it signifies that Jesus Christ was to
offer up His sacrifice in the presence of His Father in a way of
intercession and prayers.
1. There is a pleading of the virtue of His Blood for them that are
already come in, that they may be kept from the evils of heresies,
delusions, temptations, pleasures, profits, or anything of this
world which may be too hard for them. "Father, I pray not that Thou
shouldest take them out of the world," saith Christ, "but that Thou
shouldest keep them from the evil" (John 17:15).
Third. The third thing now to be spoken to is, to show where and
how Jesus Christ outwent and goes beyond these priests, in all
their qualifications and offices, for the comfort of poor saints.
1. They that were called to the priesthood under the law were but
men; but He is both God and man (Heb 7:3,28).
3. They were consecrated but for a time, but He for evermore (Heb
7:23,24).
6. Their garments were but such as could be made with hands, but
His the very righteousness of God (Exo 28; Rom 3:22; Phil 3:8,9).
7. Their offerings were but the body and blood of beasts, and such
like, but His offering was His own body and soul (Heb 9:12,13;
10:4,5; Isa 53:10).
8. Those were at best but a shadow or type, but He the very substance
and end of all those ceremonies (Heb 9:1,10,11).
9. Their holy place was but made by men, but His, or that which
Jesus is entered, is into Heaven itself (Heb 9:2,3,24).
10. When they went to offer their sacrifice, they were forced to
offer for themselves, as men compassed about with infirmity, but He
holy, harmless, who did never commit the least transgression (Heb
7:26; 10:11).
11. They when they went to offer they were fain to do it standing,
to signify that God had no satisfaction therein; but He, when "He
had offered one sacrifice for sins for ever, sat down on the right
hand of God," to signify that God was very well pleased with His
offering (Heb 10:12).
12. They were fain to offer "oftentimes the same sacrifices, which
can never take away sins"; but He, "by one offering hath perfected
for ever them that are sanctified" (Heb 10:11,14).
13. Their sacrifices at the best could but serve for the cleansing
of the flesh, but His for cleansing both body and soul--the blood
of Jesus Christ doth purge the conscience from dead works, to live
a holy life (Heb 9:13,14).
14. Those high priests could not offer but once a year in the holiest
of all, but our High Priest He ever liveth to make intercession
for us (Heb 9:7; 12:24,25).
16. Those high priests, death would be too hard for them, but our
High Priest hath vanquished and overcome that cruel enemy of ours,
and brought life and immortality to light through the glorious
Gospel (Heb 7:21,23; 2:15; 2 Tim 1:10).
17. Those high priests were not able to save themselves; but this
is able to save Himself, and all that come to God, by Him (Heb
7:25).
18. Those high priests' blood could not do away sin; but the blood
of Jesus Christ, who is our High Priest, "cleanseth us from all
sin" (1 John 1:7).
19. Those high priests sometimes by sin caused God to reject their
sacrifices; but this High Priest doth always the things that please
Him.
20. Those high priests could never convey the Spirit by virtue of
their sacrifices or office; but this High Priest, our Lord Jesus,
He can and doth give all the gifts and graces that are given to
the sons of men.
21. Those high priests could never by their sacrifices bring the
soul of any sinner to glory by virtue of itself; but Jesus hath by
one offering, as I said before, perfected for ever those that He
did die for. Thus in brief I have showed in some particulars how
and wherein Jesus our High Priest doth go beyond those high priests;
and many more without question might be mentioned, but I forbear.
Here now I might begin to speak of His prophetical and kingly office,
and the privileges that do and shall come thereby, but that I fear
I shall be too tedious, therefore at this time I shall pass them
by. Thus you may see how the Covenant of Grace doth run, and with
Whom it was made, and also what were the conditions thereof.
Object. But some may say, How was it possible that one man Jesus,
by one offering, should so completely obtain and bring in unchangeable
grace for such an innumerable company of sinners as are to be saved?
Answ. First. In that He was every way fitted for such a work. And,
Second. In that, as I said before, He did every way completely
satisfy that which was offended by our disobedience to the former
covenant.
[First. He was every way fitted for such a work]. And, for the
clearing of this,
1. Consider, was it man that had offended? He was Man that gave
the satisfaction--"For since by man came death, by man came also
the resurrection of the dead" (1 Cor 15:21).
2. Was it God that was offended? He was God that did give a
satisfaction--"Unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given.--and
His name shall be called The mighty God" (Isa 9:6). "He thought
it not robbery to be equal with God: but," for our sakes, He "made
Himself of no reputation," etc. (Phil 2:6-7).
1. Doth justice call for the blood of that nature that sinned? here
is the heart-blood of Jesus Christ--"We have redemption through
His blood," (Eph 1:7,14; 1 Peter 1:18,19; Zech 9:10,11).
2. Doth justice say that this blood, if it be not the blood of One
that is really and naturally God, it will not give satisfaction
to infinite justice? then here is God, purchasing His Church "with
His own blood" (Acts 20:28).
3. Doth justice say, that it must not only have satisfaction for
sinners, but they that are saved must be also washed and sanctified
with this blood? then here is He that so loved us, that He "washed
us from our sins in His own blood" (Rev 1:5).
5. Are there any sins now that will fly upon this Saviour like so
many lions, or raging devils, if He take in hand to redeem man?
He will be content to bear them all Himself alone, even in His own
body upon the tree (1 Peter 2:24).
6. Is there any law now that will curse and condemn this Saviour
for standing in our persons to give satisfaction to God for the
transgression of man? He will be willing to be cursed, yea, to
be made a curse for sinners, rather than they shall be cursed and
damned themselves (Gal 3:13).
7. Must the great and glorious God, whose eyes are so pure that
He cannot behold iniquity; I say, must He not only have the blood,
but the very life of Him that will take in hand to be the Deliverer
and Saviour of us poor miserable sinners? He is willing to lay down
His life for His sheep (John 10:11).
8. Must He not only die a natural death, but must His soul descend
into hell, though it should not be left there, He will suffer that
also Psalms 16:10; and Acts 2:31. 11
9. Must He not only be buried, but rise again from the dead, and
overcome death, that He might be the first-fruits to God of them
that sleep, which shall be saved? He will be buried, and also
through the strength of His Godhead, He will raise Himself out of
the grave, though death hold Him never so fast, and the Jews lay
never such a great stone upon the mouth of the selpulchre, and seal
it never so fast (1 Cor 15:4; Luke 24:34).
10. Must He carry that body into the presence of His Father, to
take possession of Heaven, and must He appear there as a priest,
as a forerunner, as an advocate, as prophet, as a treasure-house,
as an interceder and pleader of the causes of His people? He will
be all these, and much more, to the end the grace of God by faith
in Jesus Christ might be made sure to all the seed. "Who then
can condemn? It is God that justifieth; because Christ hath died,
yea rather, that is risen again." Who, now seeing all this is so
effectually done, shall lay anything, the least thing? who can find
the least flaw, the least wrinkle, the least defect or imperfection,
in this glorious satisfaction (Rom 8:33-34; Heb 6:20; 9:24; John
14:2,3; 1 John 2:1)?
First. In that God did admit Him into His presence; yea, receive
Him with joy and music, even with the sound of the trumpet, at His
ascension into Heaven (Psa 47:5). And Christ makes it an argument
to His children that His righteousness was sufficient, in that He
went to His Father, and they saw Him no more, "of righteousness,"
saith He, "because I go to My Father, and ye see Me no more" (John
16:10). As if He had said, My Spirit shall show to the world that
I have brought in a sufficient righteousness to justify sinners
withal, in that when I go to appear in the presence of My Father
on their behalf, He shall give Me entertainment, and not throw Me
down from Heaven, because I did not do it sufficiently.
Again; if you consider the high esteem that God the Father doth set
on the death of His Son, you will find that He hath received good
content thereby. When the Lord Jesus, by way of complaint, told
His Father that He and His merits were not valued to the worth,
His Father answered, It is a light thing that I should give Thee,
O My Servant, to bring Jacob again; "I will also give Thee for a
light to the Gentiles, that Thou mayest be My salvation unto the
end of the earth" (Isa 49:6). As if the Lord had said, "My Son, I
do value Thy death at a higher rate than that Thou shouldst save
the tribes of Israel only; behold the Gentiles, the barbarous
heathens, they also shall be brought in as the price of Thy blood.
It is a light thing that Thou shouldest be My Servant only to bring,
or redeem, the tribes of Jacob, and to restore the preserved of
Israel: I will also give Thee for a light to the Gentiles, that
Thou mayest be My salvation unto the end of the earth." 12
Again; you may see it also by the carriage of God the Father to
all the great sinners to whom mercy was proffered. We do not find
that God maketh any objection against them to come to Him for the
pardon of their sins; because He did want a satisfaction suitable
to the greatness of their sins. There was Manasseh, who was one that
burned his children in the fire to the devil, that used witchcraft,
that used to worship the host of heaven, that turned his back on
the Word that God sent unto him; nay, that did worse than the very
heathen that God cast out before the children of Israel (2 Chron
33:1-13). Also those that are spoken of in the Nineteenth of Acts,
that did spend so much time in conjuration, and the like, for such
I judge they were, that when they came to burn their books, they
counted the price thereof to be fifty thousand pieces of silver
(Acts 19:19). Simon Magus also, that was a sorcerer, and bewitched
the whole city, yet he had mercy proffered to him once and again
(Acts 8). I say, it was not the greatness of the sins of these
sinners; no, nor of an innumerable company of others, that made
God at all to object against the salvation of their souls, which
justice would have constrained Him to had He not had satisfaction
sufficient by the blood of the Lord Jesus. Nay, further, I do find
that because God the Father would not have the merits of His Son
to be undervalued, I say, He doth therefore freely by His consent
let mercy be proffered to the greatest sinners--in the first place,
for the Jews, that were the worst of men in that day for blasphemy
against the Gospel; yet the Apostle proffered mercy to them in the
first place--"It was necessary," saith he, "that the Word of God
should first have been spoken to you" (Acts 3:26; 13:46). And Christ
gave them commission so to do; for, saith He, Let repentance and
remission of sins be preached in My name among all nations, and
begin--mark that, "beginning at Jerusalem" (Luke 24:47), Let them
that but the other day had their hands up to the elbows in My
heart's blood have the first proffer of My mercy. And, saith Paul,
"For this cause I obtained mercy, that in me first Jesus Christ
might show forth all longsuffering, for a pattern to them which
should hereafter believe on Him to life everlasting" (1 Tim 1:16).
As the Apostle saith, those sinners that were dead, possessed with
the devil, and the children of wrath, He hath quickened, delivered,
and saved. That He might, even in the very "ages to come He might
show the exceeding riches of His grace in His kindness toward us,"
and that "through Christ Jesus" (Eph 2:7).
Fourth. It doth still appear yet far more evident; for will you hear
what the Father Himself saith for the showing of His well-pleasedness
in these two particulars--First, in that He bids poor souls to
hear and to do as Christ would have them (Matt 3:17; Luke 9:35).
Secondly, in that He resolves to make them that turn their backs
upon Him, that dishonour Him, which is done in a very great measure
by those that lay aside His merits done by Himself for justification; I
say, He that resolved to make this His footstool, where He saith,
"Sit Thou at My right hand, until I make Thine enemies Thy footstool"
(Psa 110:1). Are they enemies to Thee? saith God. I will be even
with them. Do they slight Thy merits? Do they slight Thy groans,
Thy tears, Thy blood, Thy death, Thy resurrection and intercession,
Thy second coming again in heavenly glory? I will tear them and
rend them; I will make them as mire in the streets; I will make
Thy enemies Thy footstool (Matt 22:44; Heb 1:13; 10:13). Ay, saith
He, and "Thou shalt dash them in pieces like a potter's vessel"
(Psa 2:9). Look to it you that slight the merits of the blood of
Christ.
Fifth. Again further; yet God will make all the world to know that He
hath been and is well pleased in His Son, in that God hath given,
and will make it appear He hath given, the world to come into
His hand; and that He shall raise the dead, bring them before
His judgment-seat, execute judgment upon them, which He pleaseth
to execute judgment on to their damnation; and to receive them to
eternal life whom He doth favour, even so many as shall be found
to believe in His name and merits (Heb 2). "For as the Father
hath life in Himself; so hath He given to the Son to have life in
Himself; and hath given Him authority to execute judgment also,
because He is the Son of man. For the hour is coming, in the which
all that are in the graves shall hear His voice, and shall come
forth; they that have done good, unto the resurrection of life;
and they that have done evil, unto the resurrection of damnation"
(John 5:26-29). Ay, and the worst enemy that Christ hath now shall
come at that day with a pale face, with a quaking heart, and bended
knees, trembling before Him, confessing the glory of His merits,
and the virtue there was in them to save, "to the glory of God the
Father" (Rom 14:11; Phil 2:11).
The second thing for the discovering of this freeness and constancy
of the Covenant of Grace of God is manifested thus--
Was it not grace, absolute grace, that God made promise to Adam
after transgression? (Gen 3:15). Was it not free grace in God to save
such a wretch as Manasseh was, who used enchantments, witchcraft,
burnt his children in the fire, and wrought much evil? (2 Chron
33). Was it not free grace to save such as those were that are
spoken of in the 16th of Ezekiel, which no eye pitied? Was it not
free grace for Christ to give Peter a loving look after he had
cursed, and swore, and denied Him? Was it not free grace that met
Paul when he was agoing to Damascus to persecute, which converted
him, and made him a vessel of mercy?
Nay, further, He hath made them brethren with Jesus Christ, members
of His flesh and of His bones, the spouse of this Lord Jesus; and
all to show you how dearly, how really, how constantly He loveth
us, who, by faith of His operation, have laid hold upon Him. [These
things I might have treated upon more largely].
I shall now lay down a few arguments for the superabundant clearing
of it, and afterwards answer two or three objections that may be
made against it, and so I shall fall upon the next thing.
First. God loves the saints as He loves Jesus Christ; and God loves
Jesus Christ with an eternal love; therefore the saints also with
the same. "Thou hast loved them as Thou has loved Me" (John 17:23).
Answ. As God's love at the first was bestowed upon the saints
without anything foreseen by the Lord in them, as done by them,
Deuteronomy 9:4-6, so He goeth on with the same, Saying, "I will
never leave thee nor forsake thee" (Heb 13:5).
Objection Second. But how cometh it to pass then, that many fall
off again from the grace of the Gospel, after a profession of it
for some time; some to delusions, and some to their own sins again?
[The second objection].
Answ. They are all fallen away, not from the everlasting love of
God to them, but from the profession of the love of God to them.
Men may profess that God loves them when there is no such matter,
and that they are the children of God, when the devil is their
father; as it is in John 8:40-44. Therefore they that do finally
fall away from a profession of the grace of the Gospel, it is,
first, because they are bastards and not sons. Secondly, because
as they are not sons, so God suffereth them to fall, to make it
appear that they are not sons, not of the household of God--"They
went out from us, but they were not of us; for if they had been of
us, they would no doubt," mark that, "no doubt," saith he, "they
would have continued with us: but they went out," from us, "that
they might be made manifest that they were not all of us" (1 John
2:19). And though Hymeneus and Philetus do throw themselves headlong
to Hell, "nevertheless the foundation of God standeth sure, having
this seal, The Lord knoweth them that are His" (2 Tim 2:17-19).
Objection Third. But the Scripture saith that there are some that
had faith, yet lost it, and have made shipwreck of it. [The third
objection]. Now God loves no longer than they believe, as is evident;
for "he that believeth not shall be damned." So then, if some may
have faith, and yet lose it, and so lose the love of God because
they have lost their faith, it is evident that God's love is not
so immutable as you say it is to every one that believeth.
Answ. There are more sorts of faith than one that are spoken of in
Scripture--
1. There is a faith that man may have, and yet be nothing, none
of the saints of God, and yet may do great things therewith (1 Cor
13:1-4).
The great thing that wrought their faith in them, was only by seeing
the miracles that He did, John 2:23, which is not that saving faith
which is called the faith of God's elect, as is evident; for there
must not be only miracles wrought upon outward objects to beget
that--that being too weak a thing--but it must be by the same power
that was stretched out in raising Christ from the dead; yea, the
exceeding greatness of that power (Eph 1:18,19). So there is a
believing, being taken with some marvelous work, visibly appearing
to the outward sense of seeing; and there is a believing that
is wrought in the heart by an invisible operation of the Spirit,
revealing the certainty of the satisfaction of the merits of
Christ to the soul in a more glorious way, both for certainty and
for durableness, both as to the promise and the constancy of it
(Matt 16:17, 18).
But all these are short of the saving faith of God's elect, as
is manifest; I say, first, Because these may be wrought, and not
by that power so exceedingly stretched forth. Secondly, Because
these are wrought, partly, (1.) By the sense of seeing--namely,
the miracles--not by hearing; and, (2.) The rest is wrought by a
traditional or historical influence of the words in their heads,
not by a heavenly, invisible, almighty, and saving operation of
the Spirit of God in their hearts.
Now, also, I suppose that thou wilt say in thy heart, I would you
would show us then what is saving faith; which thing it may be I
may touch upon a while hence, in the next thing that I am to speak
unto. O they that have that are safe indeed!
SECOND. WHO AND HOW MEN ARE ACTUALLY BROUGHT INTO THE NEW COVENANT.
Answ. Indeed, now we come to the pinch of the whole discourse; and
if God do but help me to run rightly through this, as I do verily
believe He will, I may do thee, reader, good, and bring glory to
my God.
[SECOND.] The second thing is, How are these brought into this
Everlasting Covenant of Grace?
Answ. When God doth in deed and in truth bring in a sinner into
this most blessed covenant, [Come to the Touchstone, sinner]. for
so it is, He usually goeth this way--
1. [What God kills]. When God brings sinners into the Covenant of
Grace, He doth first kill them with the Covenant of Works, which
is the moral law, or Ten Commandments. This is Paul's doctrine, and
also Paul's experience. It is his doctrine where he saith, "The
ministration of death, written and engraven in stones--the ministration
of condemnation," which is the law, in that place called the letter,
"killeth" (2 Cor 3:6-9). The letter, saith he, killeth; or the law,
or the ministration of death, which in another place is called "the
voice of words" (Heb 12:19), because they have no life in them,
but rather death and damnation, through our inability to fulfill
them, doth kill (Rom 8:3; 2 Cor 6). It is his experience where he
saith, "I was alive" that is, to my own things, "without the law
once," that is, before God did strike him dead by it, "but when
the commandment came," that is, to do and exercise its right office
on me, which was to kill me, then "sin revived, and I died," and I
was killed. "And the commandment," or the law, "which was ordained
to" be unto "life, I found to be unto death. For sin, taking occasion
by the commandment, deceived me, and by it slew me" (Rom 7:9-11).
(3.) God, with a discovery of this, doth also discover His own
Divine and infinite justice, of which the law is a description,
which backs what is discovered by the law, and that by discovering
of its purity and holiness to be so Divine, so pure, so upright,
and so far of from winking at the least sin, that He doth by that
law, without any favour, condemn the sinner for that sin (Gal
3:10). Now, when He hath brought the soul into this praemunire,13
into this puzzle, then,
3. In the next place, when God hath done this, then He further
shows the soul that that covenant which it is under by nature is
distinct from the Covenant of Grace; and also they that are under
it are by nature without any of the graces which they have that are
under the Covenant of Grace; as, (1.) That it hath no faith (John
16:9). (2.) No hope (Eph 2:12). Nor none of the Spirit to work
these things in it by nature. (4.) Neither will that covenant give
to them any peace with God. (5.) No promise of safeguard from His
revenging law by that covenant. (6.) But lieth by nature liable
to all the curses, and condemnings, and thunderclaps of this most
fiery covenant. (7.) That it will accept of no sorrow, no repentance,
no satisfaction, as from thee. (8.) That it calls for no less than
the shedding of thy blood. (9.) The damnation of thy soul and body.
(10.) And if there be anything proffered to it by thee, as to the
making of it amends, it throws it back again as dirt in thy face,
slighting all that thou canst bring.
Now, when the soul is brought into this condition, then it is indeed
dead, killed to that to which it was once alive. And therefore,
3. The soul also now is killed to his own righteousness, and counts
that but dung, but dross, not worth the dirt hanging on his shoes.
O! then, says he, thou filthy righteousness! how hast thou deceived
me! How hast thou beguiled my poor soul! (Isa 64:6). How did I
deceive myself with giving of a little alms; with abstaining from
some gross pollutions; with walking in some ordinances, as to
the outside of them! How hath my good words, good thinkings, good
meanings, as the world calls them, deceived my ignorant soul! I
want the righteousness of faith, the righteousness of God; for I
see now there is no less will do me any good.
2. Because then, and not till then, will sinners accept of Jesus
Christ on God's terms. So long as sinners can make a life out
of anything below Christ, so long they will not close with Christ
without indenting; 15
But when the God of Heaven hath killed them to everything below
Himself and His Son, then Christ will down on any terms in the
world. And, indeed, this is the very reason why sinners, when they
hear of Christ, yet will not close in with Him; there is something
that they can take content in besides Him. The prodigal, so long
as he could content himself with the husks that the swine did eat,
so long he did keep him away from his father's house; but when
he could get no nourishment anywhere on this side of his father's
house, then saith he, and not till then, "I will arise, and go to
my father," etc.
But now, when a man is soundly killed to all his sins, to all his
righteousness, to all his comforts whatsoever, and sees that there
is no way but the devil must leave him, but he must be damned in
Hell if he be not clothed with Jesus Christ; O, then, saith he,
give me Christ on any terms, whatsoever He cost; though He cost
me friends, though He cost me comforts, though He cost me all that
ever I have; yet, like the wise merchant in the Gospel, they will
sell all to get that pearl. I tell you, when a soul is brought to
see its want of Christ aright, it will not be kept back; father,
mother, husband, wife, lands, livings, nay, life and all, shall go
rather than the soul will miss of Christ. Ay, and the soul counteth
Christ a cheap Saviour if he can get him upon any terms; now the
soul indents17 no longer. Now, Lord, give me Christ upon any terms,
whatsoever He cost; for I am a dead man, a damned man, a castaway,
if I have not Christ. What say you, O you wounded sinners? Is not
this true as I have said? Would you not give ten thousand worlds,
if you had so many, so be you might be well assured that your sins
shall be pardoned, and your souls and bodies justified and glorified
at the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ?
3. The Lord goeth this way for this reason also, that it might make
the soul sensible what it cost Christ to redeem it from death and
Hell. When a man cometh to feel the sting and guilt of sin, death
and Hell upon his conscience, then, and not till then, can he
tell what it cost Christ to redeem sinners. O! saith the soul, if
a few sins are so terrible, and lay the soul under such wrath and
torment, what did Christ undergo, who bare the sins of thousands
and thousands, and all at once?
This also is one means to make souls tender of sin (it is the burned
child that feareth the fire), to make them humble in a sense of
their own vileness, to make them count everything that God giveth
them a mercy, to make much of the least glimpse of the love of God,
and to prize it above the whole world. O sinners, were you killed
indeed [to sin], then Heaven would be Heaven, and Hell would be
Hell indeed; but because you are not wrought upon in this manner,
therefore you count the ways of God as bad as a good man counteth
the ways of the devil, and the ways of the devil and Hell as good
as a saint doth count the ways of God.
4. Again, God is fain to go this way, and all to make sinners make
sure of Heaven. So long as souls are senseless of sin, and what a
damnable state they are in by nature, so long they will even dally
with the Kingdom of Heaven and the salvation of their own poor
souls; but when God cometh and showeth them where they are, and
what it is like to become of them if they miss of the crucified
Saviour, O, then, saith the soul, would I were sure of Jesus; what
shall I do to get assurance of Jesus? And thus is God forced, as
I may say, to whip souls to Jesus Christ, they being so secure, so
senseless, and so much their own enemies, as not to look out after
their own eternal advantage.
5. A fifth reason why God doth deal thus with sinners it is, because
He would bring Christ and the soul together in a right way. Christ
and sinners would never come together in a beloved posture, they
would not so suitably suit each other, if they were not brought
together this way, the sinner being killed. O, when the sinner is
killed, and indeed struck dead to everything below a naked Jesus,
how suitably then doth the soul and Christ suit one with another.
Then here is a naked sinner for a righteousness Jesus, a poor
sinner to a rich Jesus, a weak sinner to a strong Jesus, a blind
sinner to a seeing Jesus, an ignorant, careless sinner to a wise
and careful Jesus. O, how wise is God in dealing thus with the
sinner! He strips him of his own knowledge, that He may fill him
with Christ's; He killeth him for taking pleasure in sin, that he
may take pleasure in Jesus Christ, etc.
6. God goeth this way with sinners, because He would have the glory
of their salvation. Should not men and women be killed to their own
things, they would do sacrifice unto them, and instead of saying to
the Lamb, "THOU ART WORTHY," they would say their own arm, their
own right hand hath saved them; but God will cut off boasting
from ever entering within the borders of eternal glory; for He is
resolved to have the glory of the beginning, the middle, and the
end; of the contriving, and saving, and giving salvation to them
that enter in to the joys of everlasting glory (Rom 3:27; Eph
2:8,9; Titus 3:5; Rev 5:9). "That they might be called trees of
righteousness, the planting of the LORD, that He might be glorified"
(Isa 61:3). I might have run through many things as to this; but
I shall pass them, and proceed.
Second. Now, the soul being this killed to itself, [The soul that
hath the right work of God upon its heart, is not only killed to
itself, but also made alive to Christ]. its sins, its righteousness,
faith, hope, wisdom, promises, resolutions, and the rest of its
things which it trusted in by nature; in the next place, it hath
also given unto it a most glorious, perfect, and never-fading life,
which is--
Sometimes I bless the Lord my soul hath had the life that now I
am speaking of, not only imputed to me, but the very glory of it
upon my soul; for, upon a time, when I was under many condemnings
of heart, and feared, because of my sins, my soul would miss of
eternal glory, methought I felt in my soul such a secret motion of
this--Thy righteousness is in Heaven, together with the splendour
and shining of the Spirit of Grace in my soul, which gave me to see
clearly that my righteousness by which I should be justified from
all that could condemn, was the Son of God Himself in His own Person,
now at the right hand of His Father representing me complete before
the Mercy-seat in His Ownself; so that I saw clearly that night
and day, wherever I was, or whatever I was a doing, still there
was my righteousness just before the eyes of Divine glory; so that
the Father could never find fault with me for any insufficiency that
was in my righteousness, seeing it was complete; neither could He
say, Where is it? because it was continually at His right hand. 18
But now, when the souls is thus wrought upon, it must be sure to
look for the very gates of Hell to be set open against it with all
their force and might to destroy it. Now Hell rageth, the devil
roareth, and all the world resolveth to do the best they can to
bring the soul again into bondage and ruin. Also, the soul shall
not want enemies, even in its own heart's lust, [But this is but for
the exercise of his faith.] as covetousness, adultery, blasphemy,
unbelief, hardness of heart, coldness, half-heartedness, ignorance,
with an innumerable company of attendants, hanging, like so many
blocks, at its heels, ready to sink it into the fire of Hell every
moment, together with strange apprehensions of God and Christ, as
if now they were absolutely turned to be its enemies, which maketh
it doubt of the certainty of its salvation; for you must understand,
that though a soul may in reality have the righteousness of the Son
of God imputed to it, and also some faith in a very strong manner
to lay hold upon it, yet at another time, through temptation, they
may fear and doubt again, insomuch that the soul may be put into
a very great fear lest it should return again into the condition
it once was in (Jer 32:40). O, saith the soul, when I think of my
former state, how miserable it was, it makes me tremble; and when
I think that I may fall into that condition again, how sad are the
thoughts of it to me! I would not be in that condition again for
all the world. And this fear riseth still higher and higher, as
the soul is sensible of Satan's temptations, or of the working of
its own corruptions. Ah! these filthy lusts, these filthy corruptions.
O that I were rid of them, that they were consumed in a moment,
that I could be quite rid of them, they do so disturb my soul,
dishonour my God, so defile my conscience, and sometimes so weaken
my hands in the way of God, and my comforts in the Lord; O how glad
should I be if I might be stripped of them (Rom 7:24). Which fear
puts the soul upon flying to the Lord by prayer for the covering
of His imputed righteousness, and for strength against the devil's
temptations and its own corruptions; that God would give down His
Holy Spirit to strengthen it against the things that do so annoy its
soul, and so discourage it in its way, with a resolution, through
grace, never to be contented while [until] it doth find in itself
a triumphing over it, by faith in the blood of a crucified Jesus.
Second. The soul that hath been thus killed by the Law to the things
it formerly delighted in, now, O now, it cannot be contented with
that slender, groundless faith and hope that once it contented
itself withal. No, no; but now it must be brought into the right
saving knowledge of Jesus Christ, now it must have Him discovered
to the soul by the Spirit, now it cannot be satisfied because such
and such do tell it is so. No; but now it will cry out, Lord, show
me continually, in the light of Thy Spirit, through Thy Word, that
Jesus that was born in the days of Caesar Augustus, when Mary, a
daughter of Judah, went with Joseph to be taxed at Bethlehem, that
He is the very Christ. Lord, let me see it in the light of Thy
Spirit, and in the operation thereof; and let me not be contented
without such a faith that is so wrought even by the discovery
of His birth, crucifying, death, blood, resurrection, ascension,
intercession, and second--which is His personal--coming again, that
the very faith of it may fill my soul with comfort and holiness.
And O, how afraid the soul is lest it should fall short of this
faith, and of the hope that is begotten by such discoveries as
these are! For the soul knoweth that if it hath not this, it will
not be able to stand either in death or judgment; and therefore,
saith the soul, Lord, whatever other poor souls content themselves
withal, let me have that which will stand me in stead, and carry
me through a dangerous world; that may help me to resist a cunning
devil; that may help me to suck true soul-satisfying consolation
from Jesus Christ through Thy promises, by the might and power
of Thy Spirit. And now, when the poor soul at any time hath any
discovery of the love of God through a bleeding, dying, risen,
interceding Jesus, because it is not willing to be deceived, O,
how wary [But this may be its temptation, taking place through the
timorousness of the soul]. is it of closing with it, for fear it
should not be right, for fear it should not come from God! Saith
the soul, Cannot the devil give one such comfort I trow? Cannot he
transform himself thus into an angel of light? So that the soul,
because that it would be upon a sure ground, cries out, Lord, show
me Thy salvation, and that not once or twice, but, Lord, let me
have Thy presence continually upon my heart, today, and tomorrow,
and every day. For the soul, when it is rightly brought from under
the Covenant of Works, and planted into the Covenant of Grace,
then it cannot be, unless it be under some desperate temptation,
contented without the presence of God, teaching, comforting,
establishing, and helping of the soul to grow in the things of the
Lord Jesus Christ; because it knoweth that if God hath but withdrawn
His presence in any way from it, as He doth do sometimes for a while,
that then the devil will be sure to be near at hand, working with
his temptations, trying all ways to get the soul into slavery and
sin again; also the corrupt principle, that will be joining and
combining with the Wicked One, and will be willing to be a co-partner
with him to bring the soul into mischief; which puts a soul upon
an earnest, continual panting after more of the strengthening,
preserving, comforting, and teaching presence of God, and for strong
supplies of faith, that it may effectually lay hold on him.
Fifth. And all this is from a Gospel spirit, and not from a legal,
natural principle, for the soul hath these things as the fruits and
effects of its being separated unto the Covenant of Grace, and so
now possessed with that Spirit that doth attend, yea, and dwell
in them that are brought into the Covenant of Grace from under the
old covenant; I say, these things do spring forth in the soul from
another root and stock than any of the actings of other men do;
for the soul that is thus wrought upon is as well dead to the law
and the righteousness thereof--as the first covenant--as well as
to its sins.
Sixth. Now the soul begins to have some blessed experience of the
things of God, even of the glorious mysteries of the Gospel.
3. Now the soul hath received a faith indeed, and a lively hope
indeed, such an one as now it can fetch strength from the fullness
of Christ, and from the merits of Christ.
4. Yea, now the soul can look on itself with one eye, and look upon
Christ with another, and say, Indeed, it is true; I am an empty
soul, but Christ is a full Christ; I am a poor sinner, but Christ
is a rich Christ; I am a foolish sinner, but Christ is a wise
Christ; I am an unholy, ungodly, unsanctified creature in myself,
but Christ is made of God "unto me, wisdom, and righteousness, and
sanctification, and redemption" (1 Cor 1:30).
5. Now also that fiery law, that it could not once endure, nor
could not once delight in, I say, now it can delight in it after
the inward man; now this law is its delight, it would always be
walking in it, and always be delighting in it, being offended with
any sin or any corruption that would be anyways an hinderance to it
(Rom 7:24,25). And yet it will not abide, it will not endure that
that, even that that law should offer to take the work of its
salvation out of Christ's hand; no, if it once comes to do that,
then out of doors it shall go, if it were as good again. For that
soul that hath the right work of God indeed upon it, cries, Not my
prayers, not my tears, not my works, not my things, do they come
from the work of the Spirit of Christ itself within me, yet these
shall not have the glory of my salvation; no, it is none but the
blood of Christ, the death of Christ, of the Man Christ Jesus of
Nazareth, the carpenter's son, as they called Him, that must have
the crown and glory of my salvation. None but Christ, none but
Christ. And thus the soul labours to give Christ the preeminence
(Col 1:18).
A word of experience.
Again; when I have been loaden with sin, and [I cannot stand here
to tell thee of particular temptations]. pestered with several
temptations, and in a very sad manner, then have I had the trial
of the virtue of Christ's blood with the trial of the virtue of
other things; and I have found that when tears would not do, prayers
would not do, repentings and all other things could not reach my
heart; O then, one touch, one drop, one shining of the virtue of
the blood, of that blood that was let out with the spear, it hath
in a very blessed manner delivered me, that it hath made me to
marvel. O! methinks it hath come with such life, such power, with
such irresistible and marvelous glory, that it wipes off all the
slurs, silences all the outcries, and quenches all the fiery darts,
and all the flames of Hell-fire, that are begotten by the charges
of the Law, Satan, and doubtful remembrances of my sinful life.
In the next place, I shall show you the several privileges and
advantages that the man or woman hath that is under this Covenant
of Grace, over what they have that are under the Covenant of the
Law and Works. As,
(1.) They are better, if you compare the excellency of the one
with the excellency of the other. The first hath promised nothing
but an early paradise--Do this, and thou shalt live; namely, here
in an earthly paradise. But the other doth bring the promise of a
heavenly paradise.
(4.) They are surer, in that they are founded upon God's love also,
and they come to us without calling for those things at our hands
that may be a means of putting of a stop to our certain enjoying
of them. The promises under, or for the law, they might easily
be stopped by our disobedience; but the promises under the Gospel
say, "If Heaven above can be measured, and the foundations of the
earth searched," then, and not till then, "I will also cast off
all the seed of Israel for all that they have done" (Jer 31:37).
Again, "I, even I, am He that blotteth out thy transgressions for
Mine own" name's "sake, and will not remember thy sins" (Isa 43:25).
I will make thee a partaker of My promise; and that I may so do,
I will take away that which would hinder; "I will cast all their
sins into the depths of the sea," that My promise may be sure to
all the seed; and therefore, saith the Apostle, when he would show
us that the new-covenant promises were more sure than the old, he
tells us plainly that the law and works are set aside and they are
merely made ours through the righteousness of faith, which is the
righteousness of Christ--"For the promise, that he [Abraham] should
be the heir of the world," saith he, "was not to Abraham, or to his
seed, through the law," or works, "but through the righteousness of
faith. For if they which are of the law," or of works, "be heirs,"
then "faith is made void, and the promise made of none effect.
Therefore it is of faith--to the end the promise might be sure to
all the seed" (Rom 4:13-14,16).
(5.) Surer, because that as that is taken away that should hinder,
so they are committed to a faithful Friend of ours in keeping. For
all the promises of God are in Christ, not yea and nay, but yea
and amen; certain and sure; sure, because they are in the hand of
our Head, our Friend, our Brother, our Husband, our flesh and bones,
even in the heart and hand of our precious Jesus.
(6.) Because all the conditions of them are already fulfilled for
us by Jesus Christ, as aforesaid; every promise that is a new-covenant
promise, if there be any condition in it, our Undertaker hath
accomplished that for us, and also giveth us such grace as to receive
the sweetness as doth spring from them through His obedience to
every thing required in them.
(7.) Surer, because that as they are grounded upon the love of God,
everything is taken out of the way, in the hand of a sure Friend.
And has Christ has fulfilled every condition as to justification
that is contained therein, so the Lord hath solemnly sworn with an
oath for our better confidence in this particular--"For when God
made promise to Abraham," and so to all the saints, "because He
could swear by no greater, He sware by Himself, saying, Surely,
blessing I will bless thee, and multiplying I will multiply thee.
And so, after he had patiently endured, he obtained the promise.
For men verily swear by the greater: and an oath for confirmation
is to them an end of all strife," that there might be no more
doubt or scruple concerning the certain fulfilling of the promise.
"Wherein God, willing more abundantly to show unto the heirs of
promise the immutability of His counsel," or certain, constant,
unchangeable decree of God in making of the promise, for the comfort
of his children, "confirmed it by an oath: that by two immutable
things," His promise backed with an oath, "in which it was impossible
for God to lie, we might have a strong consolation, who have fled
for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us" (Heb 6:13-18).
(8.) That they are better it appears also in that they are freer
and fuller. That they are freer, it is evident, in that one saith,
No works, no life--Do this, and then thou shalt live; if not, thou
shalt be damned. But the other saith, We are saved by believing in
what Another hath done, without the works of the Law--"Now to him
that worketh not, but believeth on Him that justifieth the ungodly,
his faith is counted for righteousness" (Rom 4:4,5). The one saith,
Pay me that thou owest; the other say, I do frankly and freely
forgive thee all. The one saith, Because thou hast sinned, thou
shalt die; the other saith, Because Christ lives, thou shalt live
also (John 15).
(9.) And as they are freer, so they are fuller; fuller of encouragement,
fuller of comfort; the one, to wit, the law, looks like Pharaoh's
seven ill-favoured kine, more ready to eat one up than to afford
us any food; the other is like the full grape in the cluster, which
for certain hath a glorious blessing in it. The one saith, If thou
hast sinned, turn again; the other saith, If thou hast sinned, thou
shalt be damned, for all I have a promise in me.
3. They that are of the second are better than they that are
of the first; and it also appeareth in this--The promises of the
Law, through them we have neither faith, nor hope, nor the Spirit
conveyed; but through the promises of the Gospel there are all
these--"Whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious
promises, that by these we might be partakers of the Divine nature"
(2 Peter 1:4). O therefore "let us hold fast the profession of
our faith without wavering; for He is faithful that promised" (Heb
10:23). "In hope of eternal life," how so? because "God, that cannot
lie, promised it before the world began" (Titus 1:2).
4. They that are in this covenant are in a very happy state; for
though there be several conditions in the Gospel to be done, yet
Christ Jesus doth not look that they should be done by man, as
man, but by His own Spirit in them, as it is written, "Thou hast
wrought all our works in us." Is there that condition, they must
believe? Why, then, He will be both the "author and finisher of
their faith" (Heb 12:2,3). Is there also hope to be in His children?
He also doth and hath given them "good hope through His grace" (2
Thess 2:16). Again, are the people of God to behave themselves
to the glory of God the Father? then He will work in them "both to
will and to do of His own good pleasure" (Phil 2:13).
6. In the next place, all those that are under this second covenant
are in a wonderful safe condition; for in case they should slip
or fall after their conversion into some sin or sins for who lives
and sins not? (Prov 24:16), yet through the merits and intercession
of Christ Jesus, who is their Undertaker in this covenant, they
shall have their sins pardoned, their wounds healed, and they raised
up again; which privilege the children of the first covenant have
not; for if they sin, they are never afterwards regarded by that
covenant--They brake My covenant and I regarded them not, saith
the Lord (Heb 8:9). But when He comes to speak of the Covenant of
Grace, speaking first of the public person under the name of David,
He saith thus, "He shall cry unto Me, Thou art My Father, My God,
and the rock of My salvation. Also I will make Him My firstborn,
higher than the kings of the earth. My mercy will I keep for Him
for evermore, and My covenant shall stand fast with Him. His seed
also will I make to endure for ever, and His throne as the days of
heaven. If His children forsake My law, and walk not in My judgments;
If they break my statutes, and keep not My commandments; Then will
I visit their transgression with the rod, and their iniquity with
stripes. Nevertheless My lovingkindness will I not utterly take
from Him, nor suffer My faithfulness to fail. My covenant will I
not break, nor alter the thing that is gone out of My lips. Once
have I sworn by My holiness that I will not lie unto David. His
seed shall endure for ever, and His throne as the sun before Me.
It shall be established for ever as the moon, and as a faithful
witness in heaven" (Psa 89:26-37). "My covenant shall stand fast with
him"--mark that. As if God had said, I did not make this covenant
with man, but with My Son, and with Him I will perform it; and
seeing He hath given Me complete satisfaction, though His children
do, through infirmity, transgress, yet My covenant is not therefore
broken, seeing He with whom it was made standeth firm, according
to the desire of my heart; so that My justice that is satisfied,
and My Law, hath nothing to say, for there is no want of perfection
in the sacrifice of Christ. If you love your souls, and would have
them live in the peace of God, to the which you are called in one
body, even all believers, then I beseech you seriously to ponder,
and labour to settle in your souls this one thing, that the new
covenant is not broken by our transgressions, and that because it
was not made with us. The reason why the very saints of God have
so many ups and downs in this their travel towards Heaven, it is
because they are so weak in the faith of this one thing; for they
think that if they fail of this or that particular performance, if
their hearts be dead and cold, and their lusts mighty and strong,
therefore now God is angry, and now He will shut them out of His
favour, now the new covenant is broken, and now Christ Jesus will
stand their Friend no longer; now also the devil hath power again,
and now they must have their part in the resurrection of damnation;
when, alas! the covenant is not for all this never the more broken,
and so the grace of God no more straitened than it was before.
Therefore, I say, when thou findest that thou art weak here, and
failing there, backward to this good, and thy heart forward to
that evil; then be sure thou keep a steadfast eye on the Mediator
of this new covenant, and be persuaded that it is not only made
with Him, and His part also fulfilled, but that He doth look upon
His fulfilling of it, so as not to lay thy sins to thy charge, though
He may as a Father chastise thee for the same--"If His children
forsake My law, and walk not in My judgments; if they break My
statutes, and keep not My commandments; then will I visit their
transgression with the rod, and their iniquity with stripes. Nevertheless,"
mark "nevertheless My lovingkindness will I not utterly take from
HIM, nor suffer My faithfulness to fail. My covenant will I not
break, nor alter the thing that is gone out of My lips." And what
was that? Why, that "His seed shall endure for ever, and His throne
as the sun before Me" (Psa 89:30-34,36).
8. Again, not only thus, but all the power of God, together with
the rest of His glorious attributes, are on our side, in that they
dwell in our nature, which is the Man Jesus, and doth engage for us
poor, simple, empty, nothing creatures as to our eternal happiness
(1 Peter 1:5). "For in Him," that is, in the Man Christ, who is
our nature, our Head, our root, our flesh, our bone, "dwelleth all
the fullness of the Godhead bodily" (Col 2:9,10). Mark how they
are joined together, "In whom dwelleth the fullness of the Godhead.
And ye are complete in Him." God dwelleth completely in Him, and you
also are completely implanted in Him, which is the Head of all
principality and power; and all this by the consent of the Father--"For
it pleased the Father that in Him should all fullness dwell" (Col
1:19). Now mark, the Godhead doth not dwell in Christ Jesus for
Himself only, but that it may be in a way of righteousness conveyed
to us, for our comfort and help in all our wants--"All power is
given unto Me in heaven and in earth," saith He (Matt 28:18). And
then followeth, "And lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end
of the world" (Verse 20). "He hath received gifts for men, yea for
the rebellious" (Psa 68:18). "Of His fullness have all we received,
and grace for grace" (John 1:16). And this the saints cannot be
deprived of, because the covenant made with Christ, in every tittle
of it, was so completely fulfilled as to righteousness, both active
and passive, that justice cannot object anything; holiness now can
find fault with nothing; nay, all the power of God cannot shake
anything that hath been done for us by the Mediator of the new
covenant; so that now there is no Covenant of Works to a believer;
none of the commands, accusations, condemnations, or the least
tittle of the old covenant to be charged on any of those that are
the children of the second covenant; no sin to be charged, because
there is no law to be pleaded, but all is made up by our middle
man, Jesus Christ. O blessed covenant! O blessed privilege! Be
wise, therefore, O ye poor drooping souls that are the sons of this
second covenant, and "stand fast in the liberty wherewith Christ
hath made you free, and be not entangled AGAIN," nor terrified in
your consciences, "with the yoke of bondage"; neither the commands,
accusations, or condemnations of the Law of the old covenant (Gal
5:1).
Object. If it be so, then one need not care what they do; they
may sin and sin again, seeing Christ hath made satisfaction. [The
first objection].
Answ. If I were to point out one that was under the power of the
devil, and going post-haste to Hell, for my life I would look no
farther for such a man than to him that would make such a use as
this of the grace of God. What, because Christ is a Saviour, thou
wilt be a sinner! because His grace abounds, therefore thou wilt
abound in sin! O wicked wretch! rake Hell all over, and surely I think
thy fellow will scarce be found! And let me tell thee this before
I leave thee--as God's covenant with Christ for His children, which
are of faith, stands sure, immutable, unrevocable, and unchangeable,
so also hath God taken such a course with thee, that unless thou
canst make God forswear Himself, it is impossible that thou shouldst
go to Heaven, dying in that condition--"They tempted Me, proved
Me," and turned the grace of God into lasciviousness, "so I sware,"
mark that, "so I sware," and that in My wrath, too, that they
should never enter into My rest. Compare Hebrews 3:9-11, with 1
Corinthians 10:5-10. No, saith God; if Christ will not serve their
turns, but they must have their sins too, take them, Devil; if
Heaven will not satisfy them, take them, Hell; devour them, Hell;
scald them, fry them, burn them, Hell! God hath more places than
one to put sinners into. If they do not like Heaven, He will fit
them with Hell; if they do not like Christ, they shall be forced
to have the devil. Therefore we must and will tell of the truth of
the nature of the Covenant of Grace of God to His poor saints for
their encouragement and for their comfort, who would be glad to leap
at Christ upon any terms; yet therewith, we can tell how, through
grace, to tell the hogs and sons of this world what a hog-sty there
is prepared for them, even such an one that God hath prepared to
put the devil and his angels into, is fitly prepared for them (Matt
25:41).
Object. But if Christ hath given God a full and complete satisfaction,
then though I do go on in sin, I need not fear, seeing God hath
already been satisfied. [The second objection]. It will be injustice
in God to punish for those sins for which He is already satisfied
for by Christ.
Answ. Rebel, rebel, there are some in Christ and some out of Him.
[1]. They that are in Him have their sins forgiven, and they
themselves made new creatures, and have the Spirit of the Son, which
is a holy, living, self-denying Spirit. And they that are thus in
Jesus Christ are so far off from delighting in sin, that sin is the
greatest thing that troubleth them; and O how willing would they
be rid of the very thoughts of it (Psa 119:113). It is the grief
of their souls, when they are in a right frame of spirit, that they
can live no more to the honour and glory of God than they do; and
in all their prayers to God, the breathings of their souls are as
much sanctifying grace as pardoning grace, that they might live a
holy life. They would as willing live holy here as they would be
happy in the world to come; they would as willingly be cleansed
from the filth of sin as to have the guilt of it taken away; they
would as willingly glorify God here as they would be glorified by
Him hereafter (Phil 3:6-22). [2]. But there are some that are out
of Christ, being under the Law; and as for all those, let them be
civil or profane, they are such as God accounts wicked; and I say,
as for those, if all the angels in Heaven can drag them before the
judgment-seat of Christ, they shall be brought before it to answer
for all their ungodly deeds; and being condemned for them, if all
the fire in Hell will burn them, they shall be burned there, if
they die in that condition (Jude 15). And, therefore, if you love
your souls, do not give way to such a wicked spirit. "Let no man
deceive you with" such "vain words," as to think, because Christ
hath made satisfaction to God for sin, therefore you may live in
your sins. O no, God forbid that any should think so, "for because
of these things cometh the wrath of God upon the children of
disobedience" (Eph 5:6).
[Quest.] Now here lieth the question. Which of these two covenants
art thou under, soul?
Quest. But what ground hast thou to think that thou art under that
blessed covenant, and not rather under the Covenant of Works, that
strict, that soul-damning covenant?
Quest. But what ground hast thou for this thy hope? for a hope
without a ground is like a castle built in the air, that will never
be able to do thee any good, but will prove like unto that spoken
of in Job 8, "Whose hope shall be cut off, and whose trust shall
be" like "a spider's web. He shall lean upon his house, but it
shall not stand; he shall hold it fast," as thou wouldst thy hope,
it is like, "but it shall not endure" (Job 8:13-15).
Quest. But what promises in the Scripture do you find your hope built
upon? and how do you know whether you do build your hope upon the
promises in the Gospel, the promises of the new covenant, and not
rather on the promises of the old covenant, for there are promises
in that as well as in the other?
Reply. Why, truly, if a man's doing well, and living well, and
his striving to serve God as well as he can, will not help him to
Christ, I do not know what will; I am sure sinning against God will
not.
Quest. Did you never read that Scripture which saith, "Israel, which
followed after the law of righteousness, hath not attained to the
law of righteousness"? (Rom 9:30-32).
Object. But doth not the Scripture say, "Blessed are they that do
His commandments, that they may have right to the tree of life"?
(Rev 22:14).
Answ. My meaning is, that the Law is not to be looked upon for
life, so as it was handed out from Mount Sinai, if ever thou wouldst
indeed be saved; though after thou hast faith in Christ, thou
mayest and must solace thyself in it, and take pleasure therein,
to express thy love to Him who hath already saved thee by His
own blood, without thy obedience to the law, either from Sinai or
elsewhere.
Answ. Ah, poor soul, this is the wrong way too; for this is to make
Christ but a piece of a Saviour; thou wilt do something, and Christ
shall do the rest; thou wilt set thy own things in the first place,
and if thou wantest at last, then thou wilt borrow of Christ; thou
art such an one that dost Christ the greatest injury of all. First,
in that thou dost undervalue His merits by preferring of thy own
works before His; and, secondly, by mingling of thy works thy dirty,
ragged righteousness with His.
Quest. Why, would you have us do nothing? Would you have us make
Christ such a drudge as to do all, while we sit idling still?
Answ. Poor soul, thou mistakest Jesus Christ in saying thou makest
Him a drudge in letting Him do all; I tell thee, He counts it a
great glory to do all for thee, and it is a great dishonour unto
Him for thee so much as to think otherwise. And this the saints
of God that have experienced the work of grace upon their souls do
count it also the same--"Saying, Thou art worthy to take the book,
and to open the seals thereof" (Rev 5:9). "Worthy is the Lamb, that
was slain, to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength,
and honour, and glory, and blessing" (Verse 12). And why so? read
again in the 9th verse, "For Thou wast slain, and hast redeemed
us to God by Thy" own "blood" (See also Eph 1:6,7). "To the praise
of the glory of His grace--in whom we have redemption through His
blood."
Reply. All this we confess, that Jesus Christ died for us; but he
that thinks to be saved by Christ, and liveth in his sins, shall
never be saved.
Answ. I grant that. But this I say again, a man must not make his
good doings the lowest round of the ladder by which he goeth to
Heaven--that is, he that will and shall go to Heaven, must, wholly
and alone, without any of his own things, venture his precious soul
upon Jesus Christ and His merits.
Answ. Yea, with all thy sins upon thee, even as filthy as ever thou
canst.
Quest. But is not this the way to make Christ to loath us? You know
when children fall down in the dirt, they do usually before they
go home make their clothes as clean as they can, for fear their
parents should chide them; and so I think should we.
Reply. Well, I hope that Christ will save me, for His promises and
mercy are very large; and as long as He hath promised to give us
life, I fear my state the less.
But out of Christ thou shalt find God a just God, a sin-avenging
God, a God that will by no means spare the guilty; and be sure that
every one that is found out of Jesus Christ will be found guilty in
the judgment-day, upon whom the wrath of God shall smoke to their
eternal ruin. Now, therefore, consider of it, and take the counsel
of the Apostle, in 2 Corinthians 13:5, which is, to examine thyself
whether thou art "in the faith," and to prove thy ownself whether
thou hast received the Spirit of Christ into thy soul, whether thou
hast been converted, whether thou hast been born again, and made
a new creature, whether thou hast had thy sins washed away in the
blood of Christ, whether thou hast been brought from under the old
covenant into the new; and do not make a slight examination, for
thou hast a precious soul either to be saved or damned.
Second. In the next place, you know I told you that a man might go
a great way in a profession, and have many excellent gifts, [Second
use]. so as to do many wondrous works, and yet be but under the
Law; from hence you may learn not to judge yourselves to be the
children of God, because you may have some gifts of knowledge or
understanding more than others: no, for thou mayest be the knowingest
man in all the country as to head-knowledge, and yet be but under
the law, and so consequently under the curse, notwithstanding that,
1 Corinthians 13. Now, seeing it is so, that men may have all this
and yet perish, then what will become of those that do no good at
all, and have no understanding, neither of their own sadness, nor
of Christ's mercy? O, sad! Read with understanding, Isaiah 27:11,
"Therefore He that made them will not have mercy on them, and He
that formed them will show them no favour" (See also 2 Thess 1:8,
9).
Now there is one thing which, for want of, most people do miscarry
in a very sad manner, and that is, because they are not able to
distinguish between the nature of the Law and the Gospel. O, people,
people, your being blinded here as to the knowledge of this is one
great cause of the ruining of many. As Paul saith, "While Moses
is read," or while the law is discovered, "the veil is upon their
heart" (2 Cor 3:15) that is, the veil of ignorance is still upon
their hearts, so that they cannot discern either the nature of
the law or the nature of the Gospel, they being so dark and blind
in their minds, as you may see, if you compare it with Chronicles
4:3, 4. And truly I am confident, that were you but well examined,
I doubt many of you would be found so ignorant that you would not
be able to give a word of right answer concerning either the Law or
the Gospel. Nay, my friends, set the case, one should ask you what
time you spend, what pains you take, to the end you may understand
the nature and difference of these two covenants, would you not say,
if you should speak the truth, that you did not so much as regard
whether there were two or more? Would you not say, I did not think
of covenants, or study the nature of them? I thought that if I had
lived honestly, and did as well as I could, that God would accept
of me, and have mercy upon me, as He had on others. Ah, friends,
this is the cause of the ruin of thousands; for if they are blinded
to this, both the right use of the law, and also of the Gospel, is
hid from their eyes, and so for certain they will be in danger of
perishing most miserably, poor souls that they are, unless God, of
His mere mercy and love, doth rend the veil from off their hearts,
the veil of ignorance, for that is it which doth keep these poor
souls in this besotted and blindfolded condition, in which if they
die they may be lamented for, but not helped; they may be pitied,
but not preserved from the stoke of God's everlasting vengeance.
A legal spirit.
In the next place, if you would indeed be delivered from the first
into the second covenant, I do admonish you to the observing of
these following particulars. First. Have a care that you do not
content yourselves, though you do good works--that is, which in
themselves are good. Secondly. In and with a legal spirit, which
are done these ways as followeth.
Again; some men think that they shall be heard because they have
prayer in their families, because they can pray long, and speak
excellent expressions, or express themselves excellently in prayer,
that because they have great enlargements in prayer, I say, that
therefore to think that God doth delight in their doings, and accept
their works, this is from a legal spirit.
Again; some men think that because their parents have been religious
before them, and have been indeed the people of God, they think if
they also do as to the outward observing of that which they learned
from their forerunners, that therefore God doth accept them; but this
also is from a wrong spirit; and yet how many are there in England
at this day that think the better of themselves merely upon that
account; ay, and think the people of God ought to think so too,
not understanding that it is ordinary for an Eli to have a Hophni
and a Phinehas, both sons of Belial; also a good Samuel to have a
perverse offspring; likewise David an Absalom. I say, their being
ignorant of, or else negligent in regarding this, they do think
that because they do spring from such and such, as the Jews in their
generation did, that therefore they have a privilege with God more
than others, when there is no such thing; but for certain, if the
same faith be not in them which was in their forerunners, to lay
hold of the Christ of God in the same spirit as they did, they
must utterly perish, for all their high conceits that they have of
themselves (John 8:33-35; Matt 3:7-9).
Second. When people come into the presence of God without having
their eye upon the Divine Majesty, through the flesh and blood
of the Son of Mary, the Son of God, then also do they come before
God, and do whatsoever they do from a legal spirit, an old-covenant
spirit. As, for instance, you have some people, it is true, they
will go to prayer, in appearance very fervently, and will plead
very hard with God that He would grant them their desires, pleading
their want, and the abundance thereof; they will also plead with
God His great mercy, and also His free promises; but yet they
neglecting the aforesaid body or Person of Christ, the righteous
Lamb of God, to appear before Him in, I say, in thus doing they
do not appear before the Lord no otherwise than in an old-covenant
spirit; for they go to God as a merciful Creator, and they themselves
as His creatures; not as He is, their Father in the Son, and they
His children by regeneration through the Lord Jesus. Ay, and though
they may call God their Father, in the notion--not knowing what
they say, only having learned such things by tradition--as the
Pharisees did, yet Christ will have His time to say to them, even
to their faces, as He did once to the Jews, Your father, for all this
your profession, is the devil, to their own grief and everlasting
misery (John 8:44).
1. That man doth bring himself under the Covenant of Works, by Gospel
ordinances, when he cannot be persuaded that God will have mercy
upon him except he do yield obedience to such or such a particular
thing commanded in the Word. This is the very same spirit that
was in the false brethren (spoken of Acts 15; Galatians, the whole
Epistle), whose judgment was, that unless such and such things were
done, "they could not be saved." As now-a-days we have also some
that say, Unless your infants be baptized they cannot be saved;23
and others say, unless you be rightly baptized, you have no ground
to be assured that you are believers, or members of churches; which
is so far off from being so good as a legal spirit, that it is the
spirit of blasphemy, as is evident, because they do reckon that
the Spirit, righteousness, and faith of Jesus, and the confession
thereof, is not sufficient to declare men to be members of the Lord
Jesus; when, on the other side, though they be rank hypocrites,
yet if they do yield an outward subjection to this or that, they
are counted presently communicable members, which doth clearly
discover that there is not so much honour given to the putting on
the righteousness of the Son of God as there is given to that which
a man may do, and yet go to Hell within an hour after; nay, in the
very doing of it doth shut himself for ever from Jesus Christ.
3. That man doth act from a legal spirit who maketh the strictness
of his walking the ground of his assurance for eternal life. Some
men, all the ground they have to believe that they shall be saved,
it is because they walk not so loose as their neighbours, they
are not so bad as others are, and therefore they question not but
that they shall do well. Now this is a false ground, and a thing
that is verily legal, and savours only of some slight and shallow
apprehensions of the old covenant. I call them shallow apprehensions,
because they are not right and sound, and are such as will do the
soul no good, but beguile it, in that the knowledge of the nature
of this covenant doth not appear to the soul, only some commanding
power it hath on the soul, which the soul endeavouring to give up
itself unto, it doth find some peace and content, and especially
if it find itself to be pretty willing to yield itself to its
commands. And is not this the very ground of thy hoping that God
will save thee from the wrath to come? If one should ask thee what
ground thou hast to think thou shalt be saved, wouldst thou not
say, Truly, because I have left my sins, and because I am more
inclinable to do good, [Do not think that I am against the order
of the Gospel]. and to learn, and get more knowledge; I endeavour
to walk in church order, as they call it, and therefore I hope God
hath done a good work for me, and I hope will save my soul. Alas,
alas! this is a very trick of the devil to make souls build the
ground of their salvation upon this their strictness, and abstaining
from the wickedness of their former lives, and because they desire
to be stricter and stricter. Now, if you would know such a man or
woman, you shall find them in this frame--namely, when they think
their hearts are good, then they think also that Christ will have
mercy upon them; but when their corruptions work, then they doubt
and scruple until again they have their hearts more ready to do the
things contained in the law and ordinances of the Gospel. Again,
such men do commonly cheer up their hearts, and encourage themselves
still to hope all shall be well, and that because they are not so
bad as the rest, but more inclinable than they, saying, I am glad
I am not as this publican, but better than he, more righteous than
he (Luke 18:11).
First, There is, first, pardon of sin, which is not in the old
covenant; for in that there is nothing but commands; and if not
obeyed, condemned. O, but there is pardon of sin, even of all thy
sins, against the first and second covenant, under which thou art,
and that freely upon the account of Jesus Christ the righteousness,
He having in thy name, nature, and in the room of thy person,
fulfilled all the whole law in Himself for thee, and freely giveth
it unto thee. O, though the law be a ministration of death and
condemnation, yet the Gospel, under which thou art, is the ministration
of life and salvation (2 Cor 3:6-9). Though they that live and die
under the first covenant, God regardeth them not (Heb 8:9). Yet they
that are under the second are as the apple of His eye (Deu 32:10;
Psa 17:8; Zech 2:8). Though they that are under the first, the Law,
are "called to blackness, and darkness, and tempest, the sound of
a trumpet," and a burning mountain, which sight was so terrible,
that Moses said, "I exceedingly fear and quake" (Heb 12:18-22).
"But ye are come unto Mount Sion, and unto the city of the living
God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to an innumerable company of angels,
to the general assembly and church of the firstborn," whose names
"are written in Heaven, and to God the Judge of all, and to the
spirits of just men made perfect, and to Jesus," to blessed Jesus,
"the Mediator of the new covenant, and to the blood of sprinkling,
that speaketh better things than that of Abel" (Heb 12:22-24). Even
forgiveness of sins (Eph 1:7).
Second, The covenant that thou art under doth allow of repentance
in case thou chance to slip or fall by sudden temptation; but the
law allows of none (Rev 2:5; Gal 3:10). The covenant that thou art
under allows thee strength also; but the law is only a sound of
words, commanding words, but no power is given by them to fulfill
the things commanded (Heb 12:19). Thou that art under this second,
art made a son; but they that art under that first, are slaves and
vagabonds (Gen 4:12). Thou that art under this, hast a Mediator,
that is to stand between justice and thee; but they under the other,
their mediator is turned an accuser, and speaketh most bitter things
against their souls (1 Tim 2:5; John 5:45). Again; the way that
thou hast into Paradise is a new and living way--mark, a living way;
but they that are under the old covenant, their way into Paradise
is a killing and destroying way (Heb 10:20; Gen 3:24). Again; thou
has the righteousness of God to appear before God withal; but they
under the old covenant have nothing but the righteousness of the
Law, which Paul counts dirt and dung (Phil 3:7-9). Thou hast that
which will make thee perfect, but the other will not do so--"The
law made nothing perfect, but the bringing in of a better hope did,"
which is the Son of God, "by the which we draw nigh unto God" (Heb
7:19).
Third, The new covenant promiseth thee a new heart, as I said before;
but the old covenant promiseth none; and a new spirit, but the old
covenant promiseth none (Eze 36:26). The new covenant conveyeth
faith, but the old one conveyeth none (Gal 3). Through the new
covenant the love of God is conveyed into the heart; but through
the old covenant there is conveyed none of it savingly through Jesus
Christ. Romans 5. The new covenant doth not only give a promise
of life, but also with that the assurance of life, but the old one
giveth none; the old covenant wrought wrath in us and to us, but
the new one worketh love (Rom 4:15; Gal 5:6). Thus much for the
first use.
SECOND USE. As all these, and many more privileges, do come to thee
through or by the new covenant, and that thou mightst not doubt of
the certainty of these glorious privileges, God hath so ordered it
that they do all come to thee by way of purchase, being obtained
for thee, ready to thy hand, by that one Man Jesus, who is the
Mediator, or the Person that hath principally to do both with God
and thy soul in the things pertaining to this covenant; so that
now thou mayst look on all the glorious things that are spoken of
in the new covenant, and say, All these must be mine; I must have
a share in them; Christ hath purchased them for me, and given them
to me. Now I need not to say, O! but how shall I come by them? God
is holy, I am a sinner; God is just, and I have offended. No; but
thou mayst say, Though I am vile, and deserve nothing, yet Christ
is holy, and He deserveth all things; though I have so provoked
God by breaking His law that He could not in justice look upon me,
yet Christ hath so gloriously paid the debt that now God can say,
Welcome, soul, I will give thee grace, I will give thee glory,
thou shalt lie in My bosom, and go no more out; My Son hath pleased
Me, He hath satisfied the loud cries of the Law and justice, that
called for speedy vengeance on thee; He hath fulfilled the whole
Law, He hath brought in everlasting righteousness (Dan 9:24,25).
He hath overcome the devil, He hath washed away thy sins with His
most precious blood, He hath destroyed the power of death, and
triumphs over all the enemies. This He did in His own Person,
as a common Jesus, for all persons in their stead, even as for so
many as shall come in to Him; for His victory I give to them, His
righteousness I give to them, His merits I bestow on them, and
look upon them holy, harmless, undefiled, and for ever comely in
my eye, through the victory of the Captain of their salvation (1
Cor 15:55-57).
And that thou mayest, in deed and in truth, not only hear and read
this glorious doctrine, but be found one that hath the life of it
in thy heart, thou must be much in studying of the two covenants,
the nature of the one, and the nature of the other, and the conditions
of them that are under them both. Also, thou must be well-grounded
in the manner of the victory, and merits of Christ, how they are
made thine.
First, And here thou must, in the first place, believe that the
babe that was born of Mary, lay in a manger at Bethlehem, in the
time of Caesar Augustus; that He, that babe, that child, was the
very Christ.
[A word of advice]. But because thou in thy pursuit after the faith
of the Gospel wilt be sure to meet with devils, heretics, particular
corruptions, as unbelief, ignorance, the spirit of works animated
on by suggestions, false conclusions, with damnable doctrines, I
shall therefore briefly, besides what hath been already said, speak
a word or two before I leave thee of further advice, especially
concerning these two things. First, How thou art to conceive of
the Saviour. Second, How thou art to make application of Him.
First. For the Saviour. 1. Thou must look upon Him to be very God
and very Man; not man only, nor God only, but God and Man in one
Person, both natures joined together, for the putting of Him in a
capacity to be a suitable Saviour; suitable, I say, to answer both
sides and parties, with whom He hath to do in the office of His
Mediatorship and being of a Saviour. 2. Thou must not only do this,
but thou must also consider and believe that even what was done
by Jesus Christ, it was not done by one nature without the other;
but thou must consider that both natures, both the Godhead and the
manhood, did gloriously concur and join together in the undertaking
of the salvation of our bodies and souls; not that the Godhead
undertook anything without the manhood, neither did the manhood
do anything without the virtue and union of the Godhead; and thou
must of necessity do this, otherwise thou canst not find any sound
ground and footing for thy soul to rest upon.
What ground can a man have to believe that Christ is his Saviour,
if he do not believe that He suffered for sin in his nature? And
what ground also can a man have to think that God the Father is
satisfied, being infinite, if he believe not also that He who gave
the satisfaction was equal to Him who was offended?
And when thou readest of the glorious works and splendour of the
Godhead in Christ, then consider that all that was done by the
Godhead, it was done as it had union and communion with the manhood.
And then thou shalt see that the devil is overcome by God-man;
sin, death, Hell, the grave, and all overcome by Jesus, God-man,
and then thou shalt find them overcome indeed. They must needs be
overcome when God doth overcome them; and we have good ground to
hope the victory is ours, when in our nature they are overcome.
1. That when Jesus Christ did thus appear, being born of Mary, He
was looked upon by the Father as if the sin of the whole world was
upon Him; nay, further, God did look upon Him and account Him the
sin of man--"He hath made Him to be sin for us," (2 Cor 5:21) that
is, God made His Son Jesus Christ our sin, or reckoned Him to be,
not only a sinner, but the very bulk of sin of the whole world, and
condemned Him so severely as if He had been nothing but sin. "For
what the law could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh,
God sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for
sin, condemned sin in the flesh"--that is, for our sins condemned
His Son Jesus Christ; as if He had in deed and truth been our
very sin, although altogether "without sin" (Rom 8:3; 2 Cor 5:21).
Therefore, as to the taking away of thy curse, thou must reckon
Him to be made sin for thee. And as to His being thy justification,
thou must reckon Him to be thy righteousness; for, saith the
Scripture, "He," that is, God, "hath made HIM to be SIN for us,
though He knew no sin, that we might be made the RIGHTEOUSNESS of
God in HIM."
2. Consider for whose sakes all this glorious design of the Father
and the Son was brought to pass; and that you shall find to be for
man, for sinful man (2 Cor 8:9).
3. The terms on which it is made ours; and that you will find to be
a free gift, merely arising from the tender-heartedness of God--you
are "justified freely by His grace, through the redemption that
is in Christ, whom God hath set forth to be a Propitiation through
faith in His blood," etc. (Rom 3:25).
4. How men are to reckon it theirs; and that is, upon the same terms
which God doth offer it, which is freely, as they are worthless
and undeserving creatures, as they are without all good, and also
unable to do any good. This, I say, is the right way of applying
the merits of Christ to thy soul, for they are freely given to
thee, a poor sinner, not for anything that is in thee, or done by
thee, but freely as thou art a sinner, and so standest in absolute
need thereof.
And, Christian, thou art not in this thing to follow thy sense
and feeling, but the very Word of God. The thing that doth do the
people of God the greatest injury, it is their too little hearkening
to what the Gospel saith, and their too much giving credit to what
the Law, sin, the devil, and conscience saith; and upon this very
ground to conclude that because there is a certainty of guilt upon
the soul, therefore there is also for certain, by sin, damnation
to be brought upon the soul. This is now to set the Word of God
aside, and to give credit to what is formed by the contrary; but
thou must give more credit to one syllable of the written Word
of the Gospel than thou must give to all the saints and angels in
Heaven and earth; much more than to the devil and thy own guilty
conscience.
Object. But, saith the soul, how, if after I have received a pardon,
I should commit treason again? What should I do then?
"Lord, here is one of the greatest sinners that ever the ground
bare; a sinner against the Law, and a sinner against the Gospel. I
have sinned against light, and I have sinned against mercy. And now,
Lord, the guilt of them breaks my heart. The devil also he would
have me despair, telling of me that Thou art so far from hearing
my prayers in this my distress, that I cannot anger Thee worse
than to call upon Thee; for saith he, Thou art resolved for ever
to damn, and not to grant me the least of Thy favour; yet, Lord,
I would fain have forgiveness. And Thy Word, though much may be
inferred from it against me, yet it saith, If I come unto Thee,
Thou will in nowise cast me out. Lord, shall I honour Thee most
by believing Thou canst pardon my sins, or by believing Thou canst
not? Shall I honour Thee most by believing Thou wilt pardon my
sins, or by believing Thou wilt not? Shall I honour the blood of Thy
Son also by despairing that the virtue thereof is not sufficient,
or by believing that it is sufficient to purge me from all my
blood-red and crimson sins? Surely, Thou that couldst find so much
mercy as to pardon Manasseh, Mary Magdalene, the three thousand
murderers, persecuting Paul, murderous and adulterous David, and
blaspheming Peter--Thou that offeredst mercy to Simon Magus, a
witch, and didst receive the astrologers and conjurors in the 19th
of Acts--Thou hast mercy enough for one poor sinner. Lord, set
the case: my sins were bigger than all these, and I less deserved
mercy than any of these, yet Thou hast said in Thy Word that he
that cometh to thee Thou wilt in "nowise cast out." And God hath
given comfort to my soul, even to such a sinner as I am. And I tell
you, there is no way so to honour God, and to beat out the devil,
as to stick to the truth of God's Word and the merits of Christ's
blood by believing. When Abraham believed--even against hope and
reason--he gave glory to God (Rom 4). And this is our victory,
even our faith (1 John 5:4). Believe, and all things are possible
to you. He that believeth shall be saved. He that believeth on the
Son hath everlasting life, and shall never perish, neither shall
any man pluck them out of Christ's Father's hands."
And if thou dost indeed believe this, thou wilt not only confess
Him as the Quakers do--that is, that He was born at Bethlehem of
Mary, suffered on Mount Calvary under Pontius Pilate, was dead and
buried, rose again, and ascended, etc.; for all this they confess,
and in the midst of their confession they do verily deny that His
death on that Mount Calvary did give satisfaction to God for the sins
of the world, and that His resurrection out of Joseph's sepulchre
is the cause of our justification in the sight of God, angels, and
devils; but, I say, if thou dost believe these things indeed, thou
dost believe that then, so long ago, even before thou wast born,
He did bear thy sins in His own body, which then was hanged on
the tree, and never before nor since; that thy old man was then
crucified with Him, namely, in the same body then crucified (See
1 Peter 2:24; and Rom 6:6). This is nonsense to them that believe
not; but if thou do indeed believe, thou seest it so plain, and
yet such a mystery, that it makes thee wonder. But,
[THIRD USE]. In the third place, this glorious doctrine of the new
covenant, and the Mediator thereof, will serve for the comforting,
and the maintaining of the comfort, of the children of the new
covenant this way also--that is, that He did not only die and rise
again, but that He did ascend in His own Person into Heaven to
take possession thereof for me, to prepare a place there for me,
standeth there in the second part of His suretyship to bring me
safe in my coming thither, and to present me in a glorious manner,
without spot or wrinkle, or any such thing; that He is there
exercising of His priestly office for me, pleading the perfection
of His own righteousness for me, and the virtue of His blood for
me; that He is there ready to answer the accusations of the Law,
devil, and sin for me. Here thou mayst through faith look the very
devil in the face, and rejoice, saying, O Satan! I have a precious
Jesus, a soul-comforting Jesus, a sin-pardoning Jesus. Here thou
mayst hear the biggest thunder-crack that the Law can give, and
yet not be daunted. Here thou mayst say, O Law! thou mayst roar
against sin, but thou canst not reach me; thou mayst curse and
condemn, but not my soul; for I have righteous Jesus, a holy Jesus,
a soul-saving Jesus, and He hath delivered me from thy threats,
from thy curses, from thy condemnations; I am out of thy reach,
and out of thy bounds; I am brought into another covenant, under
better promises, promises of life and salvation, free promises to
comfort me without my merit, even through the blood of Jesus, the
satisfaction given to God for me by Him; therefore, though thou
layest my sins to my charge, and sayest thou wilt prove me guilty,
yet so long as Christ is above ground, and hath brought in everlasting
righteousness, and given that to me, I shall not fear thy threats,
thy charges, thy soul-scarring denunciations; my Christ is all, hath
done all, and will deliver me from all that thou, and whatsoever
else can bring an accusation against me. Thus also thou may say when
death assaulteth thee--O death, where is thy sting? Thou mayst bite
indeed, but thou canst not devour; I have comfort by and through
the one Man Jesus; Jesus Christ, He hath taken thee captive, and
taken away thy strength; He hath pierced thy heart, and let out
all thy soul-destroying poison; therefore, though I see thee, I am
not afraid of thee; though I feel thee, I am not daunted; for thou
hast lost thy sting in the side of the Lord Jesus; through Him I
overcome thee, and set foot upon thee. Also, O Satan! though I hear
thee grumble, and make a hellish noise, and though thou threaten me
very highly, yet my soul shall triumph over thee, so long as Christ
is alive and can be heard in Heaven; so long as He hath broken thy
head, and won the field of thee; so long as thou are in prison, and
canst not have thy desire. I, therefore, when I hear thy voice, do
pitch my thoughts on Christ my Saviour, and do hearken when He will
say, for He will speak comfort; He saith, He hath got the victory,
and doth give to me the crown, and causeth me to triumph through
His most glorious conquest.
Nay, my brethren, the saints under the Levitical Law, who had not
the new covenant sealed or confirmed any further than by promise
that it should be; I say, they, when they thought of the glorious
privileges that God had promised should come, though at that time
they were not come, but seen afar off, how confidently were they
persuaded of them, and embraced them, and were so fully satisfied
as touching the certainty of them, that they did not stick at the
parting with all for the enjoying of them. [Shall not we then that
see all things already done before us make it a strong argument
to increase our faith (Heb 11).] How many times doth David in the
Psalms admire, triumph, and persuade others to do so also, through
the faith that he had in the thing that was to be done? Also Job,
in what faith doth he say he should see his Redeemer, though He
had not then shed one drop of blood for him, yet because He had
promised so to do; and this was signified by the blood of bulls
and goats. Also Samuel, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Zechariah, etc., how
gloriously in confidence did they speak of Christ, and His death,
blood, conquest, and everlasting priesthood, even before He did
manifest Himself in the flesh which He took of the Virgin. [For
they were so many sure promises, with a remembrance in them, also
for the better satisfaction of them that believed them]. We that
have lived since Christ, have more ground to hope than they under
the old covenant had, though they had the word of the just God for
the ground of their faith. Mark, they had only the promise that He
should and would come; but we have the assured fulfilling of those
promises, because He is come; they were told that He should spill
His blood, but we do see He hath spilt His blood; they ventured all
upon His standing Surety for them, but we see He hath fulfilled,
and that faithfully too, the office of His Suretyship, in that,
according to the engagement, He hath redeemed us poor sinners;
they ventured on the new covenant, though not actually sealed, only
"because He judged Him faithful who had promised" (Heb 11:11). But
we have the covenant sealed, all things are completely done, even
as sure as the heart-blood of a crucified Jesus can make it.
My brethren, I would not leave you ignorant of this one thing, that
though the Jews had the promise of a sacrifice, of an everlasting
High Priest that should deliver them, yet they had but the promise;
for Christ was not sacrificed, and was not then come a high priest
of good things to come; only the type, the shadow, the figure, the
ceremonies they had, together with Christ's engaging as Surety to
bring all things to pass that were promised should come, and upon
that account received and saved.
The end of my speaking of this is, to show you that it is not wisdom
now to doubt whether God will save you or no, but to believe, because
all things are finished as to our justification: the covenant not
only made, but also sealed; the debt paid, the prison doors flung
off of the hooks, with a proclamation from Heaven of deliverance
to the prisoners of hope, saying, "Turn you to the stronghold, ye
prisoners of hope, even today do I declare," saith God, "that I
will render double unto thee" (Zech 9:12). And, saith Christ, when
He was come, "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because He hath
anointed Me to preach the Gospel," that is, good tidings "to the
poor," that their sins should be pardoned, that their souls shall
be saved. "He hath sent Me to heal the broken-hearted, to preach
deliverance to the captives, and recovering of sight to the blind,
to set at liberty them that are bruised," and to comfort them that
mourn, "to preach the acceptable year of the Lord" (Luke 4:18,19).
Therefore here, soul, thou mayst come to Jesus Christ for anything
thou wantest, as to a common treasure-house, being the principal
Man for the distributing of the things made mention of in the new
covenant, He having them all in His own custody by right of purchase;
for He hath bought them all, paid for them all. Dost thou want
faith? then come for it to the Man Christ Jesus (Heb 12:2). Dost
thou want the Spirit? then ask it of Jesus. Dost thou want wisdom?
Dost thou want grace of any sort? Dost thou want a new heart? Dost
thou want strength against thy lusts, against the devil's temptations?
Dost thou want strength to carry thee through afflictions of body,
and afflictions of spirit, through persecutions? Wouldst thou
willingly hold out, stand to the last, and be more than a conqueror?
then be sure thou meditate enough on the merits of the blood of
Jesus, how He hath undertaken for thee, that He hath done the work
of thy salvation in thy room, that He is filled of God on purpose
to fill thee, and is willing to communicate whatsoever is in Him
or about Him to thee. Consider this, I say, and triumph in it.
Again; this may inform us of the safe state of the saints as touching
their perseverance, that they shall stand though Hell rages, though
the devil roareth, and all the world endeavoureth the ruin of the
saints of God, though some, through ignorance of the virtue of the
offering of the body of Jesus Christ, do say a man may be a child
of God today, and a child of the devil tomorrow, which is gross
ignorance; for what? Is the blood of Christ, the death of Christ,
the resurrection of Christ, of no more virtue than to bring in for
us an uncertain salvation? or must the effectualness of Christ's
merits, as touching our perseverance, be helped on by the doings
of man? Surely they that are predestinated are also justified;
and they that are justified, they shall be glorified (Rom 8:30).
Saints, do not doubt of the salvation of your souls, unless you do
intend to undervalue Christ's blood; and do not think but that He
that hath begun the good work of His grace in you will perfect it
to the second coming of our Lord Jesus (Phil 1:6). Should not we,
as well as Paul, say, I am persuaded that nothing shall separate
us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus (Rom 8). O let
the saints know, that unless the devil can pluck Christ out of
Heaven, he cannot pull a true believer out of Christ. When I say
a true believer, I do mean such an one as hath the faith of the
operation of God in his soul.
Reply. Why, soul? Didst thou ever kill anybody? Didst thou ever burn
any of thy children in the fire to idols? Hast thou been a witch?
Didst thou ever use enchantments and conjuration? [You that are
resolved to go on in your sins, meddle not with this]. Didst thou
ever curse, and swear, and deny Christ? And yet if thou hast,
there is yet hopes of pardon; yea, such sinners as these have been
pardoned, as appears by these and the like Scriptures, 2 Chronicles
33:1-10, compared with verses 12, 13. Again, Acts 19:19, 20; 8:22,
compared with verse 9; Matthew 26:74, 75.
Object. But though I have not sinned in such kind of sins, yet it
may be I have sinned as bad.
Answ. That cannot likely be; yet though thou hast, still there is
ground of mercy for thee, forasmuch as thou art under the promise
(John 6:37).
Answ. Dost thou know what the unpardonable sin, the sin against
the Holy Ghost, is? and when it is committed?
Answ. That is true; yet every sin against light is not the sin
against the Holy Ghost.
Answ. Yea, and I prove it thus--If every sin against light had been
the sin that is unpardonable, then had David and Peter and others
sinned that sin; but though they did sin against light, yet they
did not sin that sin; therefore every sin against light is not the
sin against the Holy Ghost, the unpardonable sin.
Object. But the Scripture saith, "If we sin willfully after that we
have received the knowledge of the Truth, there remaineth no more
sacrifice for sins; but a certain fearful looking for of judgment
and fiery indignation, which shall devour the adversaries."
Reply. Why, what is it? Is it not for a man to sin willingly after
enlightening?
Answ. 1. Yes; yet doubtless every willing sin is not that; for then
David had sinned it when he lay with Bathsheba; and Jonah, when he
fled from the presence of the Lord; and Solomon also, when he had
so many concubines. 2. But that sin is a sin that is of another
nature, which is this--For a man after he hath made some profession
of salvation to come alone by the blood of Jesus, together with
some light and power of the same upon his spirit; I say, for him
after this knowingly, willfully, and despitefully to trample upon
the blood of Christ shed on the Cross, and to count it an unholy
thing, or no better than the blood of another man, and rather to
venture his soul any other way than to be saved by this precious
blood. And this must be done, I say, after some light (Heb 6:4,5)
despitefully (Heb 10:29) knowingly (2 Peter 2:21) and willfully (Heb
10:26 compared with verse 29) and that not in a hurry and sudden
fit, as Peter's was, but with some time beforehand to pause upon
it first, with Judas; and also with a continued resolution never
to turn or be converted again; "for it is impossible to renew such
again to repentance," they are so resolved and so desperate (Heb
6).
Quest. And how sayest thou now? Didst thou ever, after thou hadst
received some blessed light from Christ, willfully, despitefully,
and knowingly stamp or trample the blood of the Man Christ Jesus
under thy feet? and art thou for ever resolved so to do?
Inquiry. But yet I must tell you, now you put me in mind of it,
surely sometimes I have most horrible blasphemous thoughts in me
against God, Christ, and the Spirit. May not these be that sin I
trow?
Answ. Dost thou delight in them? Are they such things as thou takest
pleasure in?
Answ. Beg of God for strength against them, and if at any time thou
findest thy wicked heart to give way in the least thereto, for that
is likely enough, and though thou find it may on a sudden give way
to that Hell-bred wickedness that is in it, yet do not despair,
forasmuch as Christ hath said, "All manner of sins and blasphemies
shall be forgiven to the sons of men. And whosoever speaketh a word
against the Son of man," that is Christ, as he may do with Peter,
through temptation, yet upon repentance, "it shall be forgiven him"
(Matt 12:31, 32).
Answ. For certain, this sin and the commission of it doth lie in a
knowing, willful, malicious, or despiteful, together with a final
trampling the blood of sweet Jesus under foot (Heb 10).
2. They that reject this sacrifice, and the merits of this Christ,
which He by Himself hath brought in for sinners, have rejected Him
through whom alone all the promises of the New Testament, together
with all the mercy discovered thereby, doth come unto poor creatures--"For
all the promises of God in Him are yea, and in Him amen, unto the
glory of God" (2 Cor 1:20). And all spiritual blessings are made
over to us through Him; that is, through and in this Man, which is
Christ, we have all our spiritual, heavenly, and eternal mercies
(Eph 1:3,4).
And now to show you why it is called the sin against the Holy Ghost,
as in these Scriptures, (Matt 12; Heb 10; Mark 3).
3. In that they do reject the beseeching of the Spirit, and all its
gentle entreatings of the soul to tarry still in the same doctrine.
Object. But, some may say, the slighting or rejecting of the Son
of Man, Jesus of Nazareth, the Son of Mary, cannot be the sin that
is unpardonable, as is clear from that Scripture in Matthew 12:32,
where He Himself saith, "Whosoever speaketh a word against the Son
of Man, it shall be forgiven him; but whosoever speaketh against the
Holy Ghost, it shall not be forgiven him, neither in this world,
neither in the world to come." Now by this it is clear that the sin
that is unpardonable is one thing, and the sin against the Son of
Man another; that sin that is against the Son of Man is pardonable;
but if that was the sin against the Holy Ghost, it would not be
pardonable; therefore the sin against the Son of Man is not the
sin against the Holy Ghost, the unpardonable sin.
Answ. 1. I do know full well that there are several persons that
have been pardoned, yet have sinned against the Son of Man, and
that have for a time rejected Him, as Paul (1 Tim 1:13, 14) also
the Jews (Acts 2:36,37). But there was an ignorant rejecting of
Him, without the enlightening, and taste, and feeling of the power
of the things of God, made mention in Hebrews 6:3-6. 2. There is
and hath been a higher manner of sinning against the Son of Man,
which also hath been, and is still, pardonable; as in the case
of Peter, who in a violent temptation, in a mighty hurry, upon a
sudden denied Him, and that after the revelation of the Spirit of
God from Heaven to him, that He, Jesus, was the Son of God (Matt
16:16-18). This also is pardonable, if there be a coming up again
to repentance. O, rich grace! O, wonderful grace! that God should
be so full of love to His poor creatures, that though they do sin
against the Son of God, either through ignorance, or some sudden
violent charge breaking loose from Hell upon them, but yet take if
for certain that if a man do slight and reject the Son of God and
the Spirit in that manner as I have before hinted--that is, for a
man after some great measure of the enlightening by the Spirit of
God, and some profession of Jesus Christ to be the Saviour, and
His blood that was shed on the mount without the gates of Jerusalem
to be the Atonement; I say, he that shall after this knowingly,
willfully, and out of malice and despite reject, speak against, and
trample that doctrine under foot, resolving for ever so to do, and
if he there continue, I will pawn my soul upon it, he hath sinned
the unpardonable sin, and shall never be forgiven, neither in this
world, nor in the world to come; or else these Scriptures that
testify the truth of this must be scrabbled out, and must be looked
upon for mere fables, which are these following--"For if after they
have escaped the pollutions of the world, through the knowledge of
our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ," which is the Son of Man (Matt
16:13) "and are again entangled therein, and overcome," which must
be by denying this Lord that brought them (2 Peter 2:1) "the latter
end is worse with them than the beginning," (2 Peter 2:20). For it
is impossible for those who were once enlightened, and have tasted
of the heavenly gift--and have tasted the good Word of God, and
the powers of the world to come; if they shall fall away, not only
fall, but fall away, that is, finally (Heb 10:29) "it is impossible
to renew them again unto repentance"; and the reason is rendered,
"seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God," which is the
Son of Man, "afresh, and put Him to an open shame" (Heb 6:4-6).
Now if you would further know what it is to crucify the Son of God
afresh, it is this--for to undervalue and trample under foot the
merits and virtue of His blood for remission of sins, as is clearly
manifested in Hebrews 10:26-28, where it is said, "For if we sin
willfully after that we have received the knowledge of the Truth,
there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins, but a certain fearful
looking for of judgment and fiery indignation, which shall devour
the adversaries. He that despised Moses' law died without mercy,--of
how much sorer punishment, suppose ye, shall he be thought worthy,
who hath trodden under foot the Son of God," there is the second
crucifying of Christ, which the Quakers think to be saved by, "and
hath counted the blood of the covenant, wherewith he was sanctified,
an unholy thing,"--and then followeth--"and hath done despite unto
the Spirit of Grace?" (verse 29). All that Paul had to keep him
from this sin was, his ignorance in persecuting the Man and merits
of Jesus Christ (Acts 9). But I obtained mercy, saith he, because
I did it ignorantly (1 Tim 1:13). And Peter, though he did deny Him
knowingly, yet he did it unwillingly, and in a sudden and fearful
temptation, and so by the intercession of Jesus escaped that
danger. So, I say, they that commit this sin, they do it after
light, knowingly, willfully, and despitefully, and in the open view
of the whole world reject the Son of Man for being their Lord and
Saviour, and in that it is called the sin against the Holy Ghost.
It is a name most fit for this sin to be called the sin against
the Holy Ghost, for these reasons but now laid down; for this sin
is immediately committed against the motions, and convictions, and
light of the Holy Spirit of God that makes it its business to hand
forth and manifest the truth and reality of the merits and virtues
of the Lord Jesus, the Son of Man. And therefore beware, Ranters and
Quakers, for I am sure you are the nearest that sin by profession,
which is, indeed, the right committing of it, of any persons that
I do know at this day under the whole heavens, forasmuch as you
will not venture the salvation of your souls on the blood shed on
Mount Calvary, out of the side of that Man that was offered up in
sacrifice for all that did believe (Luke 23:33). In that His offering
up of His body at that time, either before He offered it, or that
have, do, or shall believe on it for the time since, together with
that time that He offered it, though formerly you did profess that
salvation was wrought out that way, by that sacrifice then offered,
and also seemed to have some comfort thereby; yea, insomuch that
some of you declared the same in the hearing of many, professing
yourselves to be believers of the same. O, therefore, it is sad for
you that were once enlightened, and have tasted these good things,
and yet, notwithstanding all your profession, you are now turned
from the simplicity that is in Christ to another doctrine, which
will be your destruction, if you continue in it; for without blood
there is no remission (Heb 9:22).
Many other reasons might be given, but that I would not be too
tedious; yet I would put in this caution, that if there be any
souls that be but now willing to venture their salvation upon the
merits of a naked Jesus, I do verily for the present believe they
have not sinned that sin, because there is still a promise holds
forth itself to such a soul where Christ saith, "Him that cometh
to me, I will in nowise," for nothing that he hath done, "cast him
out" (John 6:37). That promise is worth to be written in letters
of gold.
Objections answered for their comfort who would have their part in
the New Covenant.
Object. But, alas, though I should never sin that sin, yet I have
other sins enough to damn me.
Answ. What though thou hadst the sins of a thousand sinners, yet
if thou come to Christ, He will save thee (John 6:37; See also
Hebrews 7:25).
Answ. Why, bethink thyself of all the sins that ever thou didst
commit, and lay the weight of them all upon thy heart, till thou
art down loaden with the same, and come to Him in such a case as
this, and He will give thee rest for thy soul (Matt 11:28-30). And
again; if thou wouldst know how thou shouldst come, come as much
undervaluing thyself as ever thou canst, saying, Lord, here is a
sinner, the basest in all the country; if I had my deserts, I had
been damned in Hell-fire long ago; Lord, I am not worthy to have
the least corner in the Kingdom of Heaven; and yet, O that Thou
wouldst have mercy! Come like Benhadad's servants to the king of
Israel, with a rope about thy neck (1 Kings 20:31,32) and fling
thyself at Christ's feet, and lie there a while, striving with Him
by thy prayers, and I will warrant thee speed (Matt 11:28-30; John
6:37).
Answ. To pray is not for thee to down on thy knees, and say over
a many Scripture words only; for that thou mayest do, and yet do
nothing but babble. But if thou from a sense of thy baseness canst
groan out thy heart's desire before the Lord, He will hear thee,
and grant thy desire; for He can tell what is the meaning of the
groanings of the Spirit (Rom 8:26,27).
Answ. That is a good sign that thy prayers are more than bare words,
and have some prevalence at the Throne of Grace through Christ
Jesus, or else the devil would never seek to labour to beat thee
off from prayer by undervaluing thy prayers, telling thee they are
sin; for the best prayers he will call the worst, and the worst he
will call the best, or else how should he be a liar?
Answ. Truly, with some men indeed it doth fare thus, that the day
of grace is at an end before their lives are at end. Or thus, the
day of grace is past before the day of death is come, as Christ
saith, "If thou hadst known, even thou, at least in this thy day,
the things which belong unto thy peace," that is, the word of grace
or reconciliation, "but now they are hid from thine eyes" (Luke
19:41,42). But for the better satisfying of thee as touching this
thing, consider these following things--
First, Doth the Lord knock still at the door of thy heart by His
Word and Spirit? If so, then the day of grace is not past with thy
soul; for where He doth so knock, there He doth also proffer and
promise to come in and sup, that is, to communicate of His things
unto them, which he would not do was the day of grace past with
his soul (Rev 3:20).
Answ. Consider these things--1. Doth the Lord make thee sensible of
thy miserable state without an interest in Jesus Christ, and that
naturally thou hast no share in Him, no faith in Him, no communion
with Him, no delight in Him, or love in the least to Him? If He
hath, and is doing this, He hath, and is knocking at thy heart. 2.
Doth He, together with this, put into thy heart an earnest desire
after communion with Him, together with holy resolutions not to
be satisfied without real communion with Him. 3. Doth He sometimes
give thee some secret persuasions, though scarcely discernible,
that thou mayest attain, and get an interest in Him? 4. Doth He
now and then glance in some of the promises into thy heart, causing
them to leave some heavenly savour, though but for a very short
time, on thy spirit? 5. Dost thou at some time see some little
excellency in Christ? And doth all this stir up in thy heart some
breathing after Him? If so, then fear not, the day of grace is not
past with thy poor soul; for if the day of grace should be past
with such a soul as this, then that Scripture must be broken where
Christ saith, "Him that cometh to Me, I will in nowise," for nothing,
by no means, upon no terms whatsoever, "cast out." (John 6:37).
Object. But surely, if the day of grace was not past with me, I
should not be so long without an answer of God's love to my soul;
that therefore doth make me mistrust my state the more is, that I
wait and wait, and yet am not delivered.
Answ. 1. Hast thou waited on the Lord so long as the Lord hath waited
on thee? It may be the Lord hath waited on thee these twenty, or
thirty, yes, forty years or more, and thou hath not waited on Him
seven years. Cast this into thy mind, therefore, when Satan tells
thee that God doth not love thee, because thou hast waited so long
without an assurance, for it is his temptation, for God did wait
longer upon thee, and was fain to send to thee by His ambassadors
time after time; and, therefore, say thou, I will wait to see what
the Lord will say unto me; and the rather, because He will speak
peace, for He is the Lord thereof. But, 2. Know that it is not thy
being under trouble a long time that will be an argument sufficiently
to prove that thou art past hopes; nay, contrariwise, for Jesus Christ
did take our nature upon Him, and also did undertake deliverance
for those, and bring it in for them who "were all their LIFETIME
subject to bondage" (Heb 2:14,15).
Answ. 1. Why in the first place, to be sure thy backsliding from God
will not prove thy election, neither thy growing weary of waiting
upon God. But, 2. Thou art, it may be, troubled to know whether
thou art elected; and, sayest thou, If I did but know that, that
would encourage me in my waiting on God. Answ. I believe thee;
but mark, thou shalt not know thy election in the first place, but
in the second--that is to say, thou must first get acquaintance
with God in Christ, which doth come by thy giving credit to His
promises, and records which He hath given of Jesus Christ's blood
and righteousness, together with the rest of His merits--that is,
before thou canst know whether thou are elected, thou must believe
in Jesus Christ so really, that thy faith laying hold of, and
drinking and eating the flesh and blood of Christ, even so that
there shall be life begotten in thy soul by the same; life from
the condemnings of the Law; life from the guilt of sin; life over
the filth of the same; life also to walk with God in His Son and
ways; the life of love to God the Father, and Jesus Christ His Son,
saints and ways and that because they are holy, harmless, and such
that are altogether contrary to iniquity.
Answ. If thou wast not such an one, thou hadst no need of mercy.
If thou wast whole, thou hadst no need of the physician. Dost thou
therefore see thyself in such a sad condition as this? Thou hast the
more need to come to Christ, that thou mayst be not only cleansed
from these evils, but also that thou mayst be delivered from that
wrath they will bring upon thee, if thou dost not get rid of them,
to all eternity.
Quest. But how should I do? and what course should I take to be
delivered from this sad and troublesome condition?
Answ. Dost thou see in thee all manner of wickedness? The best way
that I can direct a soul in such a case is, to pitch a steadfast
eye on Him that is full, and to look so steadfastly upon Him by
faith, that thereby thou mayst even draw down of His fullness into
thy heart; for that is the right way, and the way that was typed
out, before Christ came in the flesh, in the time of Moses, when
the Lord said unto him, "Make thee a fiery serpent" of brass, which
was a type of Christ "and set it upon a pole; and it shall come
to pass" that when a serpent hath bitten any man, "when he looketh
upon it, shall live" (Num 21:8). Even so now in Gospel times, when
any soul is bitten with the fiery serpents--their sins--that then
the next way to be healed is, for the soul to look upon the Son of
Man, who, as the serpent was, was hanged on a pole, or tree, that
whosoever shall indeed look on Him by faith may be healed of all
their distempers whatever (John 3:14,15).
Object. But, alas, I am blind, and cannot see; what shall I do now?
Answ. Why, truly, thou must go to Him that can make the eyes that
are blind to see, even to our Lord Jesus, by prayer, saying, as the
poor blind man did, "Lord, that I might receive my sight"; and so
continue begging Him, till thou do receive sight, even a sight of
Jesus Christ, His death, blood, resurrection, ascension, intercession,
and that for thee, even for thee. And the rather, because, 1. He
hath invited thee to come and buy such eye-salve of Him that may
make thee see (Rev 3:18). 2. Because thou shalt never have any true
comfort till thou dost thus come to see and behold the Lamb of God
that hath taken away thy sins (John 1:29). 3. Because that thereby
thou wilt be able through grace, to step over and turn aside from the
several stumbling-blocks that Satan, together with his instruments,
hath laid in our way, which otherwise thou wilt not be able to shun,
but will certainly fall when others stand, and grope and stumble
when others go upright, to the great prejudice of thy poor soul.
Object. But, alas, I have nothing to carry with me; how then should
I go?
Answ. Hast thou no sins? If thou hast, carry them, and exchange
them for His righteousness; because He hath said, "Cast thy burden
upon the Lord, and He shall sustain thee" (Psa 54:22); and again,
because He hath said, though thou be heavy laden, yet if thou do
but come to Him, He will give thee rest (Matt 11:28).
Answ. Why, truly thus--Doth Satan tell thee thou prayest but
faintly, and with very cold devotion? Answer him thus, and say, I
am glad you told me, for this will make me trust the more to Christ's
prayers, and the less to my own; also I will endeavour henceforth
to groan, to sigh, and to be so fervent in my crying at the Throne
of Grace, that I will, if I can, make the heavens rattle again
with the mighty groans thereof. And whereas thou sayest that I am
so weak in believing, I am glad you mind me of it; I hope it will
henceforward stir me up to cry the more heartily to God for strong
faith, and make me the more restless till I have it. And seeing
thou tellest me that I run so softly, and that I shall go near to
miss of glory, this also shall be, through grace, to my advantage,
and cause me to press the more earnestly towards the mark for the
prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus. And seeing thou
dost tell me that my sins are wondrous great, hereby thou bringest
the remembrance of the unsupportable vengeance of God into my mind,
if I die out of Jesus Christ, and also the necessity of the blood,
death, and merits of Christ to help me; I hope it will make me fly
the faster, and press the harder after an interest in Him; and the
rather, because, as thou tellest me, my state will be unspeakably
miserable without Him. And so all along, if he tell thee of thy
deadness, dullness, coldness, or unbelief, or the greatness of thy
sins, answer him, and say, I am glad you told me, I hope it will
be a means to make me run faster, seek earnestlier, and to be the
more restless after Jesus Christ. If thou didst but get this art
as to outrun him in his own shoes, as I may say, and to make his
own darts to pierce himself, then thou mightst also say, how doth
Satan's temptations, as well as all other things, work together
for my good, for my advantage (Rom 8:28).
Answ. Verily, thy sins appearing in thy best duties, do work for
thy advantage these ways--1. In that thou findest ground enough
thereby to make thee humble; and when thou hast done all, yet to
count thyself but an unprofitable servant. And, 2. Thou by this
means art taken off from leaning on anything below a naked Jesus
for eternal life. It is like, if thou wast not sensible of many
by-thoughts and wickednesses in thy best performances, thou wouldst
go near to be some proud, abominable hypocrite, or a silly, proud
dissembling wretch at the best, such an one as would send thy soul
to the devil in a bundle of thy own righteousness. But now, thou,
through grace, seest that in all and everything thou doest there is
sin enough in it to condemn thee. This, in the first place, makes
thee have a care of trusting in thy own doings; and, secondly,
showeth thee that there is nothing in thyself which will do thee
any good by working in thee, as to the meritorious cause of thy
salvation. No; but thou must have a share in the birth of Jesus,
in the death of Jesus, in the blood, resurrection, ascension, and
intercession of a crucified Jesus. And how sayest thou? Doth not
thy finding of this in thee cause thee to fly from a depending on
thy own doings? And doth it not also make thee more earnestly to
groan after the Lord Jesus? Yea, and let me tell thee also, it will
be a cause to make thee admire the freeness and tender heartedness
of Christ to thee, when He shall lift up the light of His countenance
upon thee, because He hath regarded such an one as thou, sinful
thou; and therefore, in this sense, it will be mercy to the saints
that they do find the relics of sin still struggling in their
hearts. But this is not simply the nature of sin, but the mercy and
wisdom of God, who causeth all things to work together for the good
of those that love and fear God (Rom 8). And, therefore, whatever
thou findest in thy soul, though it be sin of never so black
a soul-scarring nature, let it move thee to run the faster to the
Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt not be ashamed--that is, of thy
running to Him.
But when thou dost apprehend that thou art defiled, and also thy
best duties annoyed with many weaknesses, let that Scripture come
into thy thoughts which saith, "Of Him are ye in Christ Jesus, who
of God is made unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification,
and redemption"; and if thou shalt understand that, what thou canst
not find in thyself thou shalt find in Christ. Art thou a fool in
thyself? then Christ is made of God thy wisdom. Art thou unrighteous
in thyself? Christ is made of God thy righteousness. Dost thou
find that there is but very little sanctifying grace in thy soul?
still here is Christ made thy sanctification; and all this in His
own Person without thee, without thy wisdom, without thy righteousness,
without thy sanctification, without in His own Person in thy
Father's presence, appearing there perfect wisdom, righteousness,
and sanctification in His own Person; I say, as a public Person for
thee; so that thou mayest believe, and say to thy soul, My soul,
though dost find innumerable infirmities in thyself, and in thy
actions, yet look upon thy Jesus, the Man Jesus; He is wisdom, and
that for thee, to govern thee, to take care for thee, and to order
all things for the best for thee. He is also thy righteousness now
at God's right hand, always shining before the eyes of His glory;
so that there it is unmoveable, though thou art in never such a sad
condition, yet thy righteousness, which is the Son of God, God-man,
shines as bright as ever, and is as much accepted of God as ever.
O this sometimes hath been life to me; and so, whatever thou, O my
soul, findest wanting in thyself, through faith thou shalt see all
laid up for thee in Jesus Christ, whether it be wisdom, righteousness,
sanctification, or redemption. Nay, not only so, but, as I said
before, He is all these in His own Person without thee in the
presence of His Father for thee.
Object. But now, if any should say in their hearts, O, but I am one
of the old-covenant men, I doubt--that is, I doubt I am not within
this glorious Covenant of Grace. And how if I should not?
Answ. Well, thou fearest that thou are one of the old covenant, a
son of the bond-woman. [1.] In the first place, know that thou wast
one of them by nature, for all by nature are under that covenant;
but set the case that thou art to this day under that, yet let me
tell thee, in the first place, there are hopes for thee; for there
is a gap open, a way made for souls to come from under the Covenant
of Works, by Christ, "for He hath broken down the middle wall of
partition between us" and you (Eph 2:14). And therefore, if thou
wouldst be saved, thou mayest come to Christ; if thou wantest a
righteousness, as I said before, there is one in Christ; if thou
wouldst be washed, thou mayest come to Christ; and if thou wouldst
be justified, there is justification enough in the Lord Jesus Christ.
That is the first. [2.] And thou canst not be so willing to come
to Christ as He is willing thou shouldst come to Him. Witness His
coming down from Heaven, His humiliation, His spilling of His blood
from both His cheeks, by sweat under the burden of sin (Luke 22:44)
and His shedding of it by the spear when He hanged on the Cross.
It appears also by His promises, by His invitations, by His sending
forth His messengers to preach the same to poor sinners, and
threateneth damnation upon this very account, namely, the neglect
of Him; and declares that all the thousands and ten thousands of
sins in the world should not be able to damn those that believed
in Him; that He would pardon all, forgive and pass by all, if they
would but come unto Him; moreover, promiseth to cast out none,
no, not the poorest, vilest, contemptiblest creature in the whole
world. "Come unto Me all," every one, though you be never so many,
so vile, though your load be never so heavy and intolerable, though
you deserve no help, not the least help, no mercy, not the least
compassion, yet "cast your burden upon Me, and you shall find rest
for your souls." Come unto Me and I will heal you, love you, teach
you, and tell you the way to the Kingdom of Heaven. Come unto Me,
and I will succour you, help you, and keep you from all devils and
their temptations, from the Law and its curses, and from being for
ever overcome with any evil whatever. Come unto Me for what you
need, and tell Me what you would have, or what you would have Me
do for you, and all My strength, love, wisdom, and interest that I
have with My Father shall be laid out for you. Come unto Me, your
sweet Jesus, your loving and tender-hearted Jesus, your everlasting
and sin-pardoning Jesus. Come unto Me, and I will wash you, and put
My righteousness upon you, pray to the Father for you, and send My
Spirit into you, that you might be saved. Therefore,
Secondly, Not only thus, but thou shalt also be lovingly received
and tenderly embraced of Him at that day, when Christ hath thousands
of gallant saints, as old Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, David, Isaiah,
Jeremiah, together with all the Prophets, and Apostles, and martyrs,
attending on Him; together with many thousands of glittering angels
ministering before Him; besides, when the ungodly shall appear
there with their pale faces, with their guilty consciences, and
trembling souls, that would then give thousands and ten thousands
of worlds, if they had so many, if they could enjoy but one loving
look from Christ. I say, then, then shalt thou have the hand of
Christ, reached to thee kindly to receive thee, saying, Come, thou
blessed, step up hither; thou was willing to leave all for Me, and
now will I give all to thee; here is a throne, a crown, a kingdom,
take them; thou wast not ashamed of Me when thou wast in the world
among my enemies, and now will not I be ashamed of thee before
thine enemies, but will, in the view of all these devils and damned
reprobates promote thee to honour and dignity. "Come, ye blessed of
My Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation
of the world." Thou shalt see that those who have served Me in truth
shall lose nothing by the means. No; but ye shall be as pillars
in My temple, and inheritors of My glory, and shall have place to
walk in among My saints and angels (Zech 3:7). O! who would not be
in this condition? who would not be in this glory? It will be such
a soul-ravishing glory, that I am ready to think the whole reprobate
world will be ready to run mad, to think that they should miss of
it (Deu 28:34). Then will the vilest drunkard, swearer, liar, and
unclean person willingly cry, "Lord, Lord, open to us," yet be denied
of entrance; and thou in the meantime embraced, entertained, made
welcome, have a fair mitre set upon thy head, and clothed with immortal
glory (Zech 3:5). O, therefore, let all this move thee, and be of
weight upon thy soul to close in with Jesus, this tender-hearted
Jesus. And if yet, for all what I have said, thy sins do still
stick with thee, and thou findest thy hellish heart loath to let
them go, think with thyself in this manner--Shall I have my sins
and lose my soul? Will they do me any good when Christ comes? Would
not Heaven be better to me than my sins? and the company of God,
Christ, saints, and angels, be better than the company of Cain,
Judas, Balaam, with the devils in the furnace of fire? Canst thou
now that readest or hearest these lines turn thy back, and go on
in your sins? Canst thou set so light of Heaven, of God, of Christ,
and the salvation of thy poor, yet precious soul? Canst thou hear of
Christ, His bloody sweat and death, and not be taken with it, and
not be grieved for it, and also converted by it? If so, I might lay
thee down several considerations to stir thee up to mend thy pace
towards Heaven; but I shall not; there is enough written already
to leave thy soul without excuse and to bring thee down with a
vengeance into Hell-fire, devouring fire, the Lake of Fire, eternal
everlasting fire; O to make thee swim and roll up and down in the
flames of the furnace of fire!
FOOTNOTES:
1 These words are quoted from the Genevan or Breeches Bible (Mark
2:17).--Ed.
10 The duty of the priests, under the law, led them to be familiar
with the most loathsome and catching diseases; and doubtless they
took every precaution to avoid contagion. Poor sin-sick soul, do you
consider your state more loathsome and dangerous than the leprosy?
Fly to Christ, our High Priest and Physician; He will visit you
in the lowest abyss of misery, without fear of contagion, and with
full powers to heal and save.--ED.
11 The word "hell" in the two verses means the unseen place of the
dead, the invisible world, or the grave.--ED.
12 How awful and vast must have been the sufferings of the Saviour,
when He paid the redemption price for the countless myriads of His
saints; redeemed "out of every kindred, and tongue, and people,
and nation." How magnificent His glory when "ten thousand times
ten thousands, and thousands of thousands, shall sing with a loud
voice, Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive power, and riches,
and wisdom, and strength, and honour, and glory, and blessing, for
ever and ever." Such were the ecstatic vision which Bunyan enjoyed,
drawn from the unerring pages of eternal truth.--ED.
13 This singular use of the law term "premunire," meaning that the
soul has trusted in a foreign jurisdiction, incurred God's anger,
and forfeited its liberty and all its goods.--ED.
16 Same as 15--Ed.
17 Same as 15--Ed.
20 As Bunyan was a Baptist, this is full proof that his friends did
not ascribe regeneration to water baptism. It is an awful delusion
to suppose that immersion in or sprinkling with water can effect
or promote the new birth or spiritual regeneration of the soul.--ED.
23 Same As 20--Ed.
24 Same as 22--Ed.
***
Reader, my deep anxiety is that you should receive from this treatise
the benefits which its glorified author intended it to produce. It
is accurately printed from the first edition. My notes are intended
to explain obsolete words or customs or to commend the author's
sentiments. May the Divine blessing abundantly replenish our earthen
vessels with this heavenly hope.
GEO. OFFOR.
FOOTNOTES:
1. Cruden.
2. Pilgrim's Progress.
'Let Israel hope in the LORD: for with the LORD there is mercy,
and with him is plenteous redemption.'--Psalms 130:7
Verse 1. 'Out of the depths have I cried unto thee, O Lord'; that
is, out of deep or great afflictions, and said, 'Lord, hear my voice,
let thine ears be attentive to the voice of my supplications.' The
latter words explain the former; as who should say, By voice I mean
the meaning and spirit of my prayer. There are words in prayer, and
spirit in prayer, and by the spirit that is in prayer, is discerned
whether the words be dead, lifeless, feigned, or warm, fervent,
earnest; and God who searcheth the heart, knoweth the meaning of
the Spirit, because he maketh intercession for the saints according
to the will of God (Rom 8:27). Verse 3. 'If thou, Lord, shouldest
mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand?' Here he confesseth,
that all men by the law must fall before God for ever; for that
they have broken it, but cannot make amends for the transgression
thereof. But, he quickly bethinking himself of the mercy of God
in Christ, he saith, verse 4, 'But there is forgiveness with thee
that thou mayest be feared.' Then he returns, saying, verse 5,
'I wait for the Lord,' that is, in all his appointments; yea, he
doubleth it, saying, 'My soul doth wait, and in his word do I hope.'
By which repetition he insinuates, that many are content to give
their bodily presence to God in his appointments, while their hearts
were roving to the ends of the earth; but for his part he did not
so. Verse 6. 'My soul waiteth for the Lord, more than they that
watch for the morning, I say, more than they that watch for the
morning.' As who should say, even as it is with those that are tired
with the night, either by reason of dark or wearisome journies,
or because of tedious sickness, to whom the night is most doleful
and uncomfortable, waiting for spring of day; so wait I for the
Lord, that his presence might be with my soul. So and more too
I say, 'More than they that wait for the morning.' Then he comes
to the words which I have chosen for my text, saying, 'Let Israel
hope in the Lord; for with the Lord there is mercy, and with him
is plenteous redemption.'
[FIRST. AN EXHORTATION.]
We will speak first to the matter contained in the text, and that
presenteth itself unto us under three heads. First, A duty. Second,
A direction for the well management of that duty. Third, The persons
that are so to manage it.
First, Then, to speak to the duty, and that is HOPE; 'Let Israel
HOPE.' By which word there is something pre-admitted, and something
of great concern insinuated.
Thus faith saves, and thus hope saves. Faith saves by laying hold
of God by Christ (1 Peter 1:5). Hope saves by prevailing with the
soul to suffer all troubles, afflictions, and adversities that it
meets with betwixt this and the world to come, for the sake thereof
(Rom 8:24). Take the matter in this plain similitude. There was a
king that adopted such a one to be his child, and clothed him with
the attire of the children of the king, and promised him, that if
he would fight his father's battles, and walk in his father's ways,
he should at last share in his father's kingdoms. He has received
the adoption, and the king's robe, but not yet his part in the
kingdom; but now, hope of a share in that will make him fight the
king's battles, and also tread the king's paths. Yea, and though he
should meet with many things that have a tendency to deter him from
so doing, yet thoughts of the interest promised in the kingdom,
and hopes to enjoy it, will make him out his way through those
difficulties, and so save him from the ruin that those destructions
would bring upon him, and will, in conclusion, usher him into a
personal possession and enjoyment of that inheritance. Hope has a
thick skin, and will endure many a blow; it will put on patience
as a vestment, it will wade through a sea of blood, it will endure
all things, if it be of the right kind, for the joy that is set
before it. Hence patience is called, 'Patience of hope,' because
it is hope that makes the soul exercise patience and long-suffering
under the cross, until the time comes to enjoy the crown (1 Thess
1:3). The Psalmist, therefore, by this exhortation, persuadeth
them that have believed the truth, to wait for the accomplishment
of it, as by his own example he did himself--'I wait for the Lord,'
'my soul waiteth,' 'and in his word do I hope.' It is for want of
hope that so many brisk professors that have so boasted and made
brags of their faith, have not been able to endure the drum[3] in
the day of alarm and affliction. Their hope in Christ has been such
as has extended itself no further than to this life, and therefore
they are of all men the most miserable.
I. For the first of these, that the best things are yet behind,
and in reversion for believers; this is manifest by the natural
exercise of this grace. For 'hope that is seen, is not hope; for
what a man seeth, why doth he yet hope for? But if we hope for that
we see not, then do we with patience wait for it' (Rom 8:24,25).
Hope lives not by sight, as faith doth; but hope trusteth faith,
as faith trusts the Word, and so bears up the soul in a patient
expectation at last to enjoy what God has promised. But I say, the
very natural work of this grace proveth, that the believer's best
things are behind in reversion.
You may ask me, what those things are? and I may tell you, first,
in general, they are heavenly things, they are eternal things, they
are the things that are where Christ sitteth on the right hand of
God (John 3:12; 2 Cor 4:18; Col 3:1). Do you know them now? They
are things that 'eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor that have
entered into the heart of man to conceive of' (Isa 64:4; 1 Cor
2:9). Do you know them now? They are things that are referred to
the next world, for the saints when they come into the next world;
talked of they may be now, the real being of them may be believed
now, and by hope we may, and it will be our wisdom to wait for
them now; but to know what they are in the nature of them, or in
the enjoyment of them, otherwise than by faith, he is deceived that
saith it. They are things too big as yet to enter into our hearts,
and things too big, if they were there to come out, or to be
expressed by our mouths.
There is heaven itself, the imperial heaven; does any body know what
that is? There is the mount Zion, the heavenly Jerusalem, and the
innumerable company of angels; doth any body know what all they
are? There is immortality and eternal life: and who knows what they
are? There are rewards for services, and labour of love showed
to God's name here; and who knows what they will be? There are
mansion-houses, beds of glory, and places to walk in among the
angels; and who knows what they are? There will be badges of honour,
harps to make merry with, and heavenly songs of triumph; doth any
here know what they are? There will be then a knowing, an enjoying
and a solacing of ourselves with prophets, apostles, and martyrs,
and all saints; but in what glorious manner we all are ignorant
of. There we shall see and know, and be with for ever, all our
relations, as wife, husband, child, father, mother, brother, or
sister that have died in the faith; but how gloriously they will
look when we shall see them, and how gloriously we shall love when
we are with them, it is not for us in this world to know (1 Thess
4:16,17). There are thoughts, and words, and ways for us, which
we never dreamed on in this world. The law was but the shadow, the
gospel the image; but what will be the substance that comes to us
next, or that rather we shall go unto, who can understand? (Heb
10:1). If we never saw God nor Christ as glorified, nor the Spirit
of the Lord, nor the bottom of the Bible, nor yet so much as one
of the days of eternity,, and yet all these things we shall see
and have them, how can it be that the things laid up for us, that
should be the object of our hope, should by us be understood in
this world? Yet there are intimations given us of the goodness
and greatness of them.[4]
1. Of their goodness, and that, (1.) In that the Holy Ghost scorns
that things that are here should once be compared with them; hence
all things here are called vanities, nothings, less than nothings
(Isa 40:15-17). Now, if the things, all the things that are here,
are so contemptuously considered, when compared with the things that
are to be hereafter, and yet these things so great in the carnal
man's esteem, as that he is willing to venture life and soul, and
all to have them, what are the things that God has prepared for
them that wait, that is, that hope for him? (2.) Their goodness
also appears in this, that whoever has had that understanding of
them, as is revealed in the Word, whether king or beggar, wise mean
or fool, he has willingly cast this world behind him in contempt
and scorn, for the hope of that (Psa 73:25; Heb 11:24-26, 37-40).
(3.) The goodness of them has even testimony in the very consciences
of them that hate them. Take the vilest man in the country, the man
who is so wedded to his lusts, that he will rather run the hazard
of a thousand hells than leave them; and ask this man his judgment
of the things of the next world, and he will shake his head, and
say, They are good, they are best of all. (4.) But the saints have
the best apprehension of their goodness, for that the Lord doth
sometimes drop some of the juice of them out of the Word, into
their hungry souls.
2. But as they are good, so they are great: 'O how great is thy
goodness which thou hast laid up for them that fear thee, which
thou hast wrought for them that trust,' that hope, 'in thee before
the sons of men!' (Psa 31:19). (1.) Their greatness appears, in that
they go beyond the Word; yea, beyond the word of the Holy Ghost;
it doth not yet appear to us by the Word of God to the full, the
greatness of what is prepared for God's people. 'Beloved, now are
we the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what we shall be'
(1 John 3:2). It doth not appear in the Word; there is a greatness
in the things that we are to hope for, that could never be expressed:
they are beyond word, beyond thought, beyond conceiving of! Paul,
when he was come down again from out of paradise, into which he
was caught up, could not speak a word about the words he heard, and
the things that there he saw. They were things and words which he
saw and heard, 'which it is not possible[5] for a man to utter.'
(2.) Their greatness is intimated by the word Eternal; he that
knows the bottom of that word, shall know what things they are.
'The things which are not seen are eternal' (2 Cor 4:18). They are
'incorruptible, and undefiled, and that fadeth not away,' reserved
in heaven for us (1 Peter 1:4). (3.) Their greatness is showed in
that one right thought of them will fill the heart so full, that
both it and the eyes will run over together; yea, so full, that the
creature shall not be able to stand up under the weight of glory
that by it is laid upon the soul. Alas! all the things in this
world will not fill one heart; and yet one thought that is right,
of the things that God has prepared, and laid up in heaven for us,
will, yea, and over fill it too. (4.) The greatness of the things
of the next world appears, in that when one of the least of them
are showed to us, we are not able, without support from thence,
to abide the sight thereof. I count that the angels are of those
things that are least in that world; and yet the sight of one of
them, when the sight of them was in use, what work would it make
in the hearts and minds of mortal men, the scripture plainly enough
declares (John 13:22).[6] (5.) Their greatness is intimated, in that
we must be as it were new made again, before we can be capable of
enjoying them, as we must enjoy them with comfort (Luke 20:36).
And herein will be a great part of our happiness, that we shall not
only see them, but be made like unto them, like unto their King.
For 'when he shall appear, we shall be like him, for we shall see
him as he is' (1 John 3:2). We shall see him, and therefore must be
like him, for else the sight of him would overcome us and destroy
us; but because we are to see him with comfort and everlasting
joy, therefore we must be like him in body and mind (Rev 1:17; Phil
3:20,21).
II. But to come to the second thing, namely, That those that have
believed, there are such things as these, will meet with difficulties
before they come at them. This is so grand a truth, that nothing
can be said against it. Many are the afflictions of the righteous;
and we must through many tribulations enter into the kingdom of
heaven (Acts 14:22). The cause from whence these afflictions arise
is known to be,
1. From ourselves; for sin having got such hold in our flesh, makes
that opposition against our soul and the welfare of that, that puts
us continually to trouble. Fleshly lusts work against the soul,
and so do worldly lusts too (1 Peter 2:11); yea, they quench our
graces, and make them that would live, 'ready to die' (Rev 3:2).
Yea, by reason of these, such darkness, such guilt, such fear, such
mistrust, ariseth in us, that it is common for us, if we live any
while, to make a thousand conclusions, twice told, that we shall
never arrive with comfort at the gates of the kingdom of heaven.
The natural tendency of every struggle of the least lust against
grace is, if we judge according to carnal reason, to make us question
the truth of a work of grace in us, and our right to the world to
come. This it was that made Paul cry out, 'O wretched man that
I am! who shall deliver me!' (Rom 7:24). Only he had more wisdom
than to follow the natural conclusions that carnal reason was apt
to make thereupon, and so hoisted up his soul to hope.
2. Sin, by its working in us, doth not only bring darkness, guilt,
fear, mistrust, and the like; but it doth oft-times as it were
hamstring us, and disable us from going to God by faith and prayer
for pardon. It makes the heart hard, senseless, careless, lifeless,
spiritless as to feeling, in all Christian duty; and this is a
grievous thing to a gracious soul. The other things will create a
doubt, and drive it up to the head into the soul; but these will
go on the other side and clench it.[7] Now all these things make
hoping difficult.
3. For by these things the judgment is not only clouded, and the
understanding greatly darkened, but all the powers of the soul made
to fight against itself, conceiving, imagining, apprehending, and
concluding things that have a direct tendency to extirpate and
extinguish, if possible, the graces of God that are planted in the
soul; yea, to the making of it cry out, 'I am cut off from before
thine eyes!' (Psa 31:22).
4. Add to these, the hidings of the face of God from the soul; a
thing to it more bitter than death; yet nothing more common among
them that hope in the Lord. He 'hideth his face from the house of
Jacob!' (Isa 8:17). Nor is this done only in fatherly displeasure,
but by this means some graces are kept alive; faith is kept alive
by the word, patience by hope, and hope by faith; but oft-times a
spirit of prayer, by the rod, chastisement, and the hiding of God's
face (Hosea 5:14,15; Isa 26:16; Cant 5:6). But I say, this hiding
of this sweet face is bitter to the soul, and oft-times puts both
faith and hope to a sad and most fearful plunge. For at such a day,
it is with the soul as with the ship at sea, that is benighted and
without light; to wit, like a man bewildered upon the land; only
the text saith, for the help and succour of such, 'Who is among
you that feareth the Lord, that obeyeth the voice of his servant,
that walketh in darkness and hath no light? Let him trust in the
name of the Lord, and stay upon his God' (Isa 50:10). Yet as it
is with children, so it is with saints; we are a great deal more
subject to fears in the night than in the day. That, therefore,
that tendeth to the help of some graces, if there be not great care
taken, will prove an hindrance to others.
9. Add to all these, that the things that we suffer for were never
seen by us, but are quite beyond our sight: things that indeed are
said to be great and good; but we have only the word and the Bible
for it. And be sure if he that laboureth night and day to devour
us, can help it, our faith shall be molested and perplexed at such
a time, that it may, if possible, be hard to do the commandment
that here the text enjoins us to the practice of; that is, to hope
in the Lord. And this brings me to the third particular.
III. That the grace of hope well exercised, is the only way to
overcome those difficulties.--Abraham had never laughed for joy,
had he not hoped when the angel brought him tidings of a son; yea,
had he not hoped against all things that could have been said to
discourage (Gen 17:17). Hence it is said, that 'against hope' he
'believed in hope, that he might become the father of many nations,
according to that which was spoken, so shall thy seed be' (Rom
4:18). There is hope against hope; hope grounded on faith, against
hope grounded on reason. Hope grounded on reason, would have made
Abraham expect that the promise should surely have been ineffectual,
because of the deadness of Abraham's body, and of the barrenness
of Sarah's womb. But he hoped against the difficulty, by hope that
sprang from faith, which confided in the promise and power of God,
and so overcame the difficulty, and indeed obtained the promise.
Hope, therefore, well exercised, is the only way to overcome. Hence
Peter bids those that are in a suffering condition, 'Be sober, and
hope to the end, for the grace that is to be brought unto you at
the revelation of Jesus Christ' (1 Peter 1:13). And therefore it
is, as you heard before, that we are said to be 'saved by hope'
(Rom 8:24).
Quest. But you may say, What is it to exercise this grace aright?
Answ. 1. You must look well to your faith, that that may prosper,
for as your faith is, such your hope will be. Hope is never ill
when faith is well; nor strong if faith be weak. Wherefore Paul
prays that the Romans might be filled 'with all joy and peace
in believing,' that they might 'abound in hope' (Rom 15:13). When
a man by faith believes to joy and peace, then hope grows strong,
and with an assurance looketh for a share in the world to come.
Wherefore look to your faith, and pray heartily that the God of
hope will fill you with all joy and peace in believing. 2. Learn
of Abraham not to faint, stumble, or doubt, at the sight of your
own weakness; for if you do, hope will stay below, and creak in the
wheels as it goes, because it will want the oil of faith. But say
to thy soul, when thou beginnest to faint and sink at the sight of
these, as David did to his, in the places made mention of before.
3. Be much in calling to mind what God has done for thee in former
times. Keep thy experience as a choice thing (Rom 5:4). 'Remember
all the way the Lord led thee these forty years in the wilderness'
(Deut 8:2). 'O my God,' saith David, 'my soul is cast down within
me, therefore will I remember thee from the land of Jordan, and
of the Hermonites from the hill Mizar' (Psa 42:6). 4. Be much in
looking at the end of things, or rather to the end of this, and
to the beginning of the next world. What we enjoy of God in this
world, may be an earnest of hope, or a token that the thing hoped
for is to be ours at last; but the object of hope is in general the
next world (Heb 11:1). We must therefore put a difference betwixt
the mother of hope, Faith; the means of hope, the Word; the earnest
of hope, Christ in us; and the proper object of hope, to wit, the
world to come, and the goodness thereof (Psa 119:49; Col 1:27).
If Christians have not much here, their hope, as I may so say, lies
idle, and as a grace out of its exercise. For as faith cannot feed
upon patience, but upon Christ, and as the grace of hungering and
thirsting cannot live upon self-fulness, but upon the riches of the
promise; so hope cannot make what is enjoyed its object: 'for what
a man seeth why doth he yet hope for?' (Rom 8:24). But the proper
object of hope is, that we see not. Let faith then be exercised
upon Christ crucified for my justification, and hope upon the next
world for my glorification; and let love show the truth of faith in
Christ, by acts of kindness to Christ and his people; and patience,
the truth of hope, by a quiet bearing and enduring that which may
now be laid upon me for my sincere profession's sake, until the
hope that is laid up for us in heaven shall come to us, or we be
gathered to that, and then hope is in some measure in good order,
and exercised well. But,
IV. We now come to the last thing propounded to be spoken to, which
is, they that have hope and exercise it well, shall assuredly at
last enjoy that hope that is laid up for them in heaven; that is,
they that do regularly exercise the grace of hope shall at last enjoy
the object of it, or the thing hoped for. This must of necessity
be concluded, else we overthrow the whole truth of God at once, and
the expectation of the best of men; yea, if this be not concluded,
what follows, but that Atheism, unbelief, and irreligion, are the
most right, and profane and debauched persons are in the rights
way?
1. But to proceed, this must be, as is evident; for that the things
hoped for are put under the very name of the grace that lives in
the expectation of them. They are called HOPE; 'looking for that
blessed hope'; 'for the hope that is laid up for them in heaven'
(Titus 2:13; Col 1:5). God has set that character upon them, to
signify that they belong to hope, and shall be the reward of hope.
God doth in this, as your great traders do with the goods that their
chapmen have either bought or spoke for; to wit, he sets their name
or mark upon them, and then saith, This belongs to this grace, and
this belongs to that; but the kingdom of heaven belongs to HOPE,
for his name is set upon it. This therefore is one thing, to prove
that the thing hoped for shall be thine; God has marked it for
thee: nor can it be given to those that do not hope. That is, to
the same purpose that you read of, 'That ye may be counted worthy
of the kingdom of God, for which ye also suffer' (2 Thess 1:5).
Suffering flows from hope; he that hopes not for an house in
heaven, will not for it choose to suffer the loss of the pleasures
and friendships of this world. But they that suffer for it, and
that all do, one way or other, in whom is placed this grace of
hope, they God counteth worthy of it, and therefore, hath marked
it with their mark, HOPE; for that it belongs to hope, and shall
be given to those that hope. That is the first.
3. That we that have hope and rightly exercise it, might assuredly
enjoy that hope that is laid up for us in heaven: God has promised
it, and that to our Saviour for us. Had he promised it to us, we
might yet have feared, for that with our faults we give a cause
of continual provocation to him. But since he hath promised it to
Christ, it must assuredly come to us by him, because Christ, to
whom it is promised, never gave occasion of provocation to him to
take it back. And that it was promised to Christ, it is evident,
because it was promised before the world began: 'In hope of eternal
life,' saith Paul, 'which God, that cannot lie, promised before
the world began' (Titus 1:2). And this is, that we might hope. Men
that use to hope to enjoy that money or estate, that by those that
are faithful is promised to them, and put into the hands of trusty
persons for them; why this is the case, God that cannot lie, has
promised it to the hopers, and has put it into the hand of the
trusty Jesus for us, therefore let us hope that in his times we
shall both see and enjoy the same we hope for.
II. God must be the special object of our hope, and him in special
that must be enjoyed by us in the next world, or nothing can make
us happy. We will suppose now, for the illustrating of this matter,
that which is not to be supposed. As,
Now, for the well managing of our hope, with reference to this
special object of it, there are these things to be considered. And
now I speak to all. We must know him right, we must come to him
right. (1.) We must know him right. It is essential to happiness,
and so to the making of the God of heaven our hope, to know him
rightly (John 17:1-3). It is not every fancy, or every imagination
of God, that thou mayst have, that will prove that therefore thou
knowest God aright. In him there 'is no variableness, neither shadow
of turning' (James 1:17). He only is what he is, what imaginations
soever we have of him. We may set up idols and images of him, as
much in our minds as some do in their houses and in their temples,
and be as great, though not so gross idolaters as they.[14] Now
if thou wouldst know him, thou must diligently feel for him in his
works, in his Word, and in his ways, if perhaps thou mayst find the
knowledge of him (Prov 2:1-5; Acts 17:27). (2.) Beware, when thou
hast found him, that thou go to him by his Son, whom he has sanctified
and sent into the world, to be the way for sinners to go to God;
and see that thou keepest in this path always, for out of him he
is found intolerable, and a consuming-fire. (3.) Busy thyself with
all thy might to make an interest in his Son, and he will willingly
be thy Saviour, for he must become thine before his Father can be
the object of thy hope (John 3:36). He that hath the Son, hath the
Father, but contrariwise, he that hath not him has neither (2 John
9). (4.) Stay not in some transient comforts, but abide restless
till thou seest an union betwixt thee and this Blessed One; to wit,
that he is a root, and thou a branch; that he is head, and thou a
member. And then shalt thou know that the case is so between thee
and him, when grace and his Spirit has made thee to lay the whole
stress of thy justification upon him and has subdued thy heart
and mind to be 'one spirit' with him (Rom 4:4,5; 1 Cor 6:17). (5.)
This done, hope thou in God, for he is become thy hope, that is,
the object of it. And for thy encouragement so to do, consider
that he is able to bear up thy heart, and has said he will do it,
as to this very thing, to all those that thus hope in him. 'Be
of good courage and he shall strengthen thine heart,' all ye that
hope in the Lord (Psa 31:24). It is manifest, as was said before,
that many difficulties lie in the way of hoping; but God will make
those difficulties easy, by strengthening the heart of him that
hopeth, to hope. He has a way to do that, which no creature can
hinder, by the blessed work of his Holy Spirit. He can show us he
loves us, that he may encourage our hope. And as he can work in
us for our encouragement, so he can and will, as was said before,
himself, in his time, answer our hope, by becoming our hope himself.
'The Lord shall be the hope of his people, and the strength of the
children of Israel' (Joel 3:16).
They are put, as you see, under this general term Israel; 'Let
Israel hope in the Lord.' And, 'He shall save Israel from all his
troubles.' Israel is to be taken three ways, in the Scripture. 1.
For such that are Israel after the flesh. 2. For such as are such
neither after the flesh nor the Spirit; but in their own fancies
and carnal imaginations only. 3. For such as are Israel after God,
or the Spirit.
1. Israel is to be taken for those that are such after the flesh;
that is, for those that sprang from the loins of Jacob, and are
called, 'Israel after the flesh, the children of the flesh.' Now
these, as such, are not the persons interested in this exhortation,
for by the flesh comes no true spiritual and eternal grace (Rom
9:6-8; 2 Cor 1:10-18). Men are not within the bounds of the promise
of eternal life, as they are the children of the flesh, either in
the more gross or more refined sense (Phil 3:4-6). Jacob was as
spiritual a father as any HE, I suppose that now professeth the
gospel; but his spiritualness could not convey down to this children,
that were such only after the flesh, that spirit and grace that
causeth sound conversion, and salvation by Jesus Christ. Hence Paul
counts it a carnal thing to glory in this; and tells us plainly,
If he had heretofore known Christ thus, that is, to have been his
brother or kinsman, according to the flesh, or after that, he would
henceforth know him, that is, so, 'no more' (2 Cor 5:16-18). For
though the children of Israel be as the sand of the sea, yet not
that multitude, but the remnant that the Lord hath chosen and shall
call, shall be saved (Rom 9:27; Joel 2:32). This, therefore, is
as an arrow against the face of that false doctrine that the Jews
leaned upon, to wit, that they were in the state of grace, and
everlasting favour of God, because the children and offspring of
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. But,
2. Israel may be taken for such as are neither so after the flesh,
nor the Spirit, but in their own fancy and imagination only. And
such I take to be all those that you read of in Revelation 2:9
which said 'they were Jews, and were not,' 'but did lie' (3:9).
For these are formed for that very end, that they might hope in
the Lord; yea, the word and testament are given to them for this
purpose (Psa 78:5-7). These are prisoners of hope all the time they
are in the state of nature, even as the whole creation is subjected
under hope, all the time of its bondage, by the sin and villainy
of man; and unto them it shall be said, in the dispensation of the
fullness of time, 'Turn you to the strong hold, ye prisoners of
hope' (Zech 9:12); as certainly as that which is called the creature
itself shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption, into the
glorious liberty of the children of God (Rom 8:18-21). Only here,
as I said before, let all men have a care in this thing: this is
the pinnacle, the point; he that is right here, is right in all
that is necessary to salvation; but he that misses here, can by no
means be right anywhere to his soul's advantage in the other world.
Having thus briefly touched upon those three things that are
contained in the matter of the exhortation, I now come to speak a
word to the manner of praises by which the exhortation is presented
to us, 'Let Israel hope'; he doth not say, Israel hath hoped; Israel
did hope; or Israel can hope, but 'let Israel hope in the Lord.'
'Let' is a word very copious, and sometimes signifies this, and
sometimes that, even according as the nature or reason of the thing
under debate, or to be expressed, will with truth and advantage
bear. Let him hope,
And if you take the word in this sense, to wit, for a grant, leave,
or license, to hope in God; then (1.) This shows how liberal God
is of himself, and things, to Israel. Let Israel hope in me, trust
to me, expect good things at my hand; I give him leave and license
to do it. Let him live in a full expectation of being with me, and
with my Son in glory; I give him leave to do so; he has license
from me to do so. (2.) Understand the word thus, and it shows us
with what boldness and confidence God would have us hope in him.
They that have leave and license to do a thing, may do it with
confidence and boldness, without misgivings and reluctance of mind;
this is our privilege; we may live in a full assurance of hope unto
the end, we may hope perfectly to the end, we have leave, license,
and a grant to do it. (3.) Understand the word thus, and it also
shows you how muddy, how dark those of Israel are, and how little
they are acquainted with the goodness of their God, who stand
shrinking at his door like beggars, and dare not in a godly sort
be bold, with his mercy. Wherefore standest thou thus with thy Ifs
and thy O-buts, O thou poor benighted Israelite. Wherefore puttest
thou thy hand in thy bosom, as being afraid to touch the hem of
the garment of the Lord? Thou hast a leave, a grant, a license,
to hope for good to come, thy Lord himself has given it to thee,
saying, 'LET Israel hope in the Lord.'
Third. This word 'let' is also sometimes used by way of rebuke and
snub; 'Let her alone, for her soul is vexed' (2 Kings 4:27). 'Let
her alone, why trouble ye her?' (Mark 14:6). 'Refrain from these
men, and let them alone' (Acts 5:38). And it may also so be taken
here. But if so, then it implies, that God in this exhortation
rebuketh those evil instruments, those fallen angels, with all
others that attempt to hinder us in the exercise of this duty. As
Boaz said to his servants, when Ruth was to glean in his field,
'let her glean even among the sheaves, and reproach her not' (Ruth
2:15,16). We have indeed those that continually endeavour to hinder
us of living in the full assurance of hope, as to being with God
and with Christ in glory: but here is a rebuke for such, 'Let Israel
hope in the Lord.' And it shows us, 1. That what suggestions come
from Satan to make us that are Israelites to doubt, come not for
that end, by virtue of any commission that he hath from God. God
has rebuked him in the text, and you may see it also elsewhere.
These temptations, therefore, are rather forged of malice, and of
despite to our faith and hope; and so should be accounted by us
(Zech 1:1-3). 2. This shows us also that we should take heed of
crediting of that which comes unto us to hinder our hope in the
Lord; lest we take part with Satan, while God rebuketh him, and
countenanceth that which fights against the grace of God in us. 3.
It shows us also that as faith, so hope, cannot be maintained with
great difficulty, and that we should endeavour to maintain it, and
hope through every difficulty.
1. By those mistakes that the soul hath formerly been guilty of,
with reference to the judgment that it hath made of God, and of his
dealings with it. And this is an excellent virtue. 'I said,' once
says the church, that 'my hope is perished from the Lord,' but I
was deceived; 'this I recall to my mind, therefore have I hope';
that is, why, if I give way to such distrusting thoughts, may I not
be wrong again? (Lam 3:18-21). Therefore will I hope! This virtue
is that which belongs to this grace only; for this and this only is
it that can turn unbelief and doubts to advantage. 'I said in my
haste,' said David, 'I am cut off from before thine eyes'; nevertheless
I was mistaken; 'thou heardest the voice of my supplications when
I cried unto thee' (Psa 31:22). And what use doth he make of this?
Why, an exhortation to all good men to hope, and to take advantage
to hope from the same mistakes. I think I am cast off from God,
says the soul; so thou thoughtest afore, says memory, but thou
wast mistaken then, and why not the like again? and therefore will
I hope. When I had concluded that God would never come near me
more, yet after that he came to me again, and as I was then, so I
am now; therefore will I hope.
3. Hope will make use of our calling, to support the soul, and to
help it, by that, to exercise itself in a way of expectation of good
from God. Hence the apostle prays for the Ephesians, that they may
be made to see what is 'the hope of their calling'; that is, what
good that is which by their calling they have ground to hope is
laid up in heaven, and to be brought unto them at the appearance
of Jesus Christ (Eph 1:17,18). For thus the soul by this grace of
hope will reason about this matter: God has called me; surely it is
to a feast. God has called me to the fellowship of his Son, surely
it is that I may be with him in the next world. God has given me
the spirit of faith and prayer; surely it is that I might hope for
what I believe is, and wait for what I pray for. God his given me
some tastes already; surely it is to encourage me to hope that he
purposeth to bring me into the rich fruition of the whole.
4. Therefore hope makes the man, be the trials what they will, to
keep still close to the way and path of God. 'My foot,' said hoping
Job, 'hath held his steps, his way have I kept and not declined,
neither have I gone back from the commandment of his lips' (Job
23:11,12). And again, 'Our heart is not turned back, neither have
our steps declined from thy way: though thou hast sore broken us
in the place of dragons, and covered us with the shadow of death'
(Psa 44:18,19). But how came they thus patiently to endure? Why,
they by hope put patience and prayer into exercise. They knew that
their God was as it were but asleep, and that in his time he would
arise for their help; and when he did arise he would certainly
deliver. Thus is this psalm applied by Paul (Rom 8).
2. Because the Lord's mercy is not the object of it. The worldly
man makes gold, or an arm of flesh his hope; that is, the object
of it, and so he despiseth God (Job 31:24; Jer 3:23). Or if he be
a religious hypocrite, his hope terminates in his own doings: he
trusteth, or hopeth, in himself, that he is righteous (Luke 18:9).
All these things are abhorred of God, nor can he, with honour to
his name, or in a compliance with his own eternal designs, give
any countenance to such a hope as this.
3. This hope has no good effect on the heart and mind of him that
hath it. It purifieth not the soul, it only holds fast a lie, and
keeps a man in a circuit, at an infinite distance from waiting upon
God.
4. This hope busieth all the powers of the soul about things that
are of the world, or about those false objects on which it is pitched;
even as the spider diligently worketh in her web--unto which also
this hope is compared--in vain. This hope will bring that man that
has it, and exercises it, to heaven, when leviathan is pulled out
of the sea with a hook; or when his jaw is bored through with a
thorn: but as he that thinks to do this, hopeth in vain; so, even
so, will the hope of the other be as unsuccessful; 'So are the
paths of all that forget God, and the hypocrite's hope shall perish;
whose hope shall be cut off, and whose trust shall be a spider's
web. He shall lean upon his house, but it shall not stand; he shall
hold it fast, but it shall not endure' (Job 8:13-15, 41:1-9). This
is the hope that is not esteemed of God, nor the persons that have
it, preferred by him a whit before their own dung (Job 20:4-8).
Thus have I gone through the first part of the text, which consists
of an exhortation to hope in the Lord. And have showed you, 1. The
matter contained therein. 2. Something of the reason of the manner
of the phrase. 3. And have drawn, as you see, some inferences from
it.
I now come to the second part of the text, which is a reason urged
to enforce the exhortation, 'Let Israel hope in the Lord.' Why?
'For with the Lord there is mercy.' There is the reason, let him
hope, for there is mercy; let him hope in the Lord, for with him
there is mercy. The reason is full and suitable. For what is the
ground of despair, but a conceit that sin has shut the soul out
of all interest in happiness? and what is the reason of that, but
a persuasion that there is no help for him in God? Besides, could
God do all but show mercy, yet the belief of that ability would
not be a reason sufficient to encourage the soul to hope in God.
For the block SIN, which cannot be removed but by mercy, still
lies in the way. The reason therefore is full and suitable, having
naturally an enforcement in it, to the exhortation. And,
First. To touch upon the reason in a way general, and then [Second]
to come to it more particularly. 'Let Israel hope in the Lord, for
with the Lord there is mercy,' mercy to be bestowed, mercy designed
to be bestowed.
The words being thus briefly touched upon, I shall come to treat
of two things. FIRST, more distinctly, I shall show you what kind
of mercy is with the Lord, as a reason to encourage Israel to
hope. SECONDLY, And then shall show what is to be inferred from
this reason, 'Let Israel hope in the Lord, for with the Lord there
is mercy.'
First, 'With him there is TENDER MERCY, and therefore let Israel
hope' (Psa 25:6, 103:4, 119:156). Tender mercy is mercy in mercy,
and that which Israel of old had in high estimation, cried much for,
and chose that God would deal with their souls by that. 'Withhold
not thou thy tender mercies from me,' said David, and 'according
unto the multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions'
(Psa 40:11, 51:1). And again, 'Let thy tender mercies come unto
me, that I may live' (Psa 119:77). Now of this sort of mercies God
has a great many, a multitude to bestow upon his people. And they
are thus mentioned by the word, to cause us to hope in him. And
is not this alluring, is not this enticing to the Israel of God to
hope, when the object of their hope is a God 'very pitiful, and of
tender mercy?' Yea, a God whose tender mercies are great and many.
There are two things that this word tender mercy importeth. 1. The
first is, that sin will put a believer, if he giveth way thereto,
into a very miserable condition. 2. That God would have them hope,
that though sin may have brought any of them into this condition,
the Lord will restore them with much pity and compassion. 'Let
Israel hope in the Lord,' for with the Lord there is mercy, tender
mercy.
We will wave the first, and come to the second of these. The pains
that guilt will make, when it wounds the conscience, none knows
but those to whom sin is applied by the Spirit of God, in the law.
Yet all may read of it in the experience of the godly; where this
pain is compared to a wound in the flesh, to fire in the bones, to
the putting of bones out of joint, and the breaking of them asunder
(Psa 38:3,5,7,8, 102:3, 22:14; Lam 1:13, 3:4). He that knows what
wounds and broken bones are, knows them to be painful things. And
he that knows what misery sin will bring the soul into with its
guilt, will conclude the one comes no whit short of the other. But
now he that hath these wounds, and also these broken bones, the
very thoughts of a man that can cure, and of a bonesetter, will
make him afraid, yea, quake for fear; especially if he knows that
though he has skill, he has a hard heart, and fingers that are like
iron. He that handleth a wound, had need have fingers like feathers
or down; to be sure the patient wisheth they were! Tenderness is a
thing of great worth to such; and such men are much inquired after
by such; yea, their tenderness is an invitation to such to seek
after them. And the thing is true in spirituals (Isa 42:3). Wherefore
David cried, as I said before, 'Have mercy upon me, O God! according
unto the multitude of thy tender mercies, blot out my transgressions'
(Psa 51:1). O handle me tenderly, Lord, handle me tenderly, cried
David. O cure me, I beseech thee, and do it with thy tender mercy.
And now, cries, he, 'GREAT mercy or NO mercy; for little mercy will
do me no good'; such a poor creature thus expostulateth the case
with God, 'Wilt thou show wonders to the dead? Shall the dead arise
and praise thee?' (Psa 88:10). Lord, I have destroyed myself, can
I live? My sins are more than the sands, can I live? Lord, every
one of them are sins of the first rate, of the biggest size, of the
blackest line, can I live? I never read that expression but once
in all the whole Bible; 'For thy name's sake, O Lord, pardon mine
iniquity, for it is great' (Psa 25:11). Not that there was but one
man in Israel that had committed great iniquities, but because men
that have so done, have rather inclined to despair, than to an
argument so against the wind. If he had said, Pardon, for they are
little, his reason had carried reason in it; but when he saith,
Pardon, for they are great, he seems to stand like a man alone. This
is the common language, 'if our transgressions be upon us, and we
pine away in them, How should we then live?' (Eze 33:10). Or thus,
'Our bones are dried, and our hope is lost, and we are cut off for
our parts' (Eze 37:11). Wherefore to such as these, good wishes,
tender fingers, and compassion, without GREAT mercy, can do
nothing. But behold, O thou man of Israel, thou talkest of great
sins; answerable to this, the Scripture speaks of great mercy; and
thy great sins are but the sins of a man, but these great mercies
are the mercies of a God; yea, and thou art exhorted, even because
there is mercy with him, therefore to trust thy soul with him,
'let Israel trust in the Lord; for with the Lord there is mercy,'
great mercy. This therefore is a truth of singular consolation,
that mercy is with the Lord, that tender mercy is with him, that
great mercy is with him, both TENDER and GREAT. What would man have
more? But,
Fourth. As the mercies that are with the Lord are tender, great,
and rich, so there is a MULTITUDE of them, and they are called
'manifold,' there is a multitude of these rich and virtuous mercies
(Psa 69:13; Rev 9:19). By multitude, I understand mercies of every
sort or kind; mercies for this, and mercies for the other malady;
mercies for every sickness, a salve for every sore. Some things
that are rich and very full of virtue, have yet their excellency
extending itself but to one, or two, or three things for help; and
this is their leanness in the midst of their excellencies. But it
is not thus with the mercy of God. Some things that are rich and
virtuous, are yet so only but at certain seasons; for there are
times in which they can do nothing. But it is not so with this
tender, great, and rich mercy of God. There are some things, though
rich, that are sparingly made use of. But it is not so with this
mercy of God. There is a multitude of them; so if one will not
another will. There is a multitude of them; so one or other of
them is always in their season. There is a multitude of them; and
therefore it must not be supposed that God is niggardly as to the
communicating of them.
I name but these three, for many more might be added, to show you
the plenteousness, as well as the virtuousness of the tender, great,
and rich mercy of God. A multitude! There is converting mercy,
there is preserving mercy, there is glorifying mercy: and how many
mercies are folded up in every one of these mercies, none but God
can tell. A multitude! There are mercies for the faithful followers
of Christ, for those of his that backslide from him, and also
for those that suffer for him; and what mercies will by these be
found folded up in their mercies, they will better know when they
come to heaven. A multitude of preventing mercies in afflictions,
in disappointments, in cross providences, there are with God: and
what mercies are folded up in these afflicting mercies, in these
disappointing mercies, and in these merciful cross providences, must
rest in the bosom of him to be revealed, who only is wonderful in
counsel, and excellent in working. A multitude of common mercies;
of every day's mercies, of every night's mercies, of mercies in
relations, of mercies in food and raiment, and of mercies in what
of these things there is; and who can number them? David said, He
daily was loaded with God's benefits. And I believe, if, as we are
bound, we should at all times return God thanks for all particular
mercies, particularly, it would be a burden intolerable, and would
kill us out of hand! (Psa 68:19). And all this is written, that
Israel might hope in the Lord: 'Let Israel hope in the Lord; for
with the Lord there is mercy.'
Fifth. As the mercies that are with the Lord are tender, great,
rich, a multitude, and manifold; so they are mercies that DIMINISH
NOT in the using, but that rather increase in the exercising of
them. Hence it is said, grace aboundeth, and hath abounded unto
many; and that God is able to make all grace abound towards us
(Rom 5:15; 2 Cor 9:8; Eph 1:7,8). The grace of forgiveness I mean,
wherein he hath abounded towards us. Now, to abound, is to flow,
to multiply, to increase, to greaten, to be more and more; and of
this nature is the mercy that is with the Lord; mercy that will abound
and increase in the using. Hence he is said to pardon abundantly,
to pardon and multiply to pardon: and, again, to exercise
loving-kindness; to exercise it, that is, to draw it out to the
length; to make the best advantage and improvement of every grain
and quality of it (Isa 55:7; Jer 9;24). 'The Lord, the Lord God,
merciful and gracious, long-suffering, and abundant in goodness
and truth' (Exo 34:6).
I tell you, Sirs, you must not trust your own apprehensions nor
judgments with the mercy of God; you do not know how he can cause
it to abound; that which seems to be short and shrunk up to you, he
can draw out, and cause to abound exceedingly. There is a breadth,
and length, and depth, and height therein, when God will please
to open it; that for the infiniteness can swallow up not only all
thy sins, but all thy thoughts and imaginations, and that can also
drown thee at last. 'Now unto him that is able,' 'as to mercy,' 'to
do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think, according
to the power that worketh in us, unto him be glory in the church by
Christ Jesus throughout all ages, world without end. Amen!' (Eph
3:20,21). This, therefore, is a wonderful thing, and shall be
wondered at to all eternity; that that river of mercy, that at first
did seem to be but ankle deep, should so rise, and rise, and rise,
that at last it became 'waters to swim in, a river that could not
be passed over!' (Eze 47:3-5). Now all this is written, that Israel
might hope. 'Let Israel hope in the Lord; for with the Lord there
is mercy.'
This also is the reason why nothing can come at us, but that it
may do us good. If the mercy of God is round about us, about us
on every side; then no evil thing can by any means come at us, but
it must come through this mercy, and so must be seasoned with it,
and must have its deadly poison, by it, taken away. Hence Paul,
understanding this, saith, 'And we know that all things work together
for good to them that love God' (Rom 8:28). But how can that be,
did they not come to us through the very sides of mercy? and how
could they come to us so, since Satan pryeth to wound us deadly in
every, or in some private place, if mercy did not compass us round
about, round about as with a shield? He went round about Job, to
see by what hog-hole he might get at him, that he might smite him
under the fifth rib.[20] But, behold, he found he was hedged out
round about; wherefore he could not come at him but through the
sides of mercy; and, therefore, what he did to him must be for
good. Even thus also shall it be in conclusion with all the wrath
of our enemies, when they have done what they can; by the mercy
of God, we shall be made to stand. 'Why boasteth thou thyself in
mischief,' said David, 'O mighty man? the goodness of God endureth
continually' (Psa 52:1). And that will sanctify to me whatever thou
doest against me! This, therefore, is another singular encouragement
to Israel to hope in the Lord; for that there is with him mercy to
compass us round about.
Here is, I say, room for hope, and for the exercise thereof; when
we feel ourselves after the worst manner assaulted. 'Wherefore
should I fear,' said David, 'in the day of evil, when the iniquity
of my heels shall compass me about?' (Psa 49:5). Wherefore? Why
now there is all the reason in the world to fear the day of evil
is come upon thee, and the iniquity of thy heels doth compass thee
about. The hand of God is upon thee, and thy sins, which are the
cause, stand round about thee, to give in evidence against thee; and
therefore thou must fear. No, saith David, that is not a sufficient
reason; he that trusteth in the Lord, Mercy shall compass him about.
Here is ground also to pray in faith, as David, saying, 'Keep me
as the apple of the eye, hid me under the shadow of thy wings, from
the wicked that oppress me, from my deadly enemies, who compass me
about' (Psa 17:8,9).
3. As the God of our mercy has mercy to guide us, and uphold us; so
by the same will he instruct us when we are at a loss, at a stand.
'I led Israel about,' says God, 'I instructed him, and kept him as
the apple of mine eye' (Deut 32:10). I say we are often at a loss;
David said, after all his brave sayings, in Psalm 119, 'I have
gone astray like a lost sheep: seek thy servant' (v 176). Indeed
a Christian is not so often out of the way, as he is at a stand
therein, and knows not what to do. But here also is his mercy as
to that. 'Thine ears shall hear a word behind thee, saying, This
is the way, walk ye in it, when ye turn to the right hand, and when
ye turn to the left' (Isa 30:21). Mercy follows for this.
4. Mercy shall follow to carry thee when thou art faint. We have
many fainting and sinking fits as we go. 'He shall gather the lambs
with his arm, and carry them in his bosom,' or upon eagles' wings
(Isa 40:11). He made Israel to ride on the high places of the earth,
and made him to suck honey out of the rock (Deut 32:13).
Now, my brethren, I beseech you consider, that God hath not only
showed you mercy, but hath done it with rejoicing. Mercy doth not
only follow you, but it follows you with rejoicing: yea, it doth
not only prevent your ruin, by our repeated transgressions procured,
but it doth it with rejoicing. Here is the very heart of mercy seen,
in that it rejoiceth against judgment. Like unto this is that in
Zephaniah: 'The Lord thy God in the midst of thee is mighty: he
will save, he will rejoice over thee with joy, he will rest in his
love, he will joy over thee with singing' (Zeph 3:17,18).
There are many things that show with what an heart mercy is of God
extended, as is afore described, to Israel for his salvation; but
this, that it acteth with rejoicing, that it saveth with rejoicing,
and gets the victory over judgment with rejoicing! is a wonderful
one, and one that should be taken notice of by Israel, for his
encouragement to hope. 'Let Israel hope in the Lord, for with him
there is mercy,' tender, great, rich, multiplying mercy, mercy that
compasseth us about, that goeth with us all the way, and mercy that
rejoiceth to overcome every judgment that seeketh our destruction,
as we go toward our Father's house and kingdom!
Here also you may see the reason why all God's paths are mercy and
truth to his (Psa 25:10). I have observed that what a man loveth he
will accustom himself unto, whether it be fishing, hunting, or the
like. These are his ways, his course, the paths wherein he spends
his life, and therefore he is seldom found out of one or another
of them. 'Now,' saith David, 'all the paths of the Lord are mercy'
(Psa 25:10). He is never out of them: for wherever he is, still
he is coming towards his Israel in one or other of these paths,
stepping steps of mercy. Hence again it is that you find that at
the end of every judgment there is mercy; and that God in the midst
of this remembers that (Habb 2:3). Yea, judgment is in mercy; and
were it not for that, judgment should never overtake his people
(1 Cor 11:32). Wherefore let Israel hope in the Lord, seeing with
him is all this mercy.
Ninth. Besides all this, the mercy that is with God, and that is
an encouragement to Israel to hope in him, IS EVERLASTING: 'The
mercy of the Lord is from everlasting to everlasting upon them that
fear him' (Psa 103:17). From everlasting to everlasting; that is
more, more than I said. Well,
1. Then from everlasting; that is, from before the world began; so
then, things that are, and are to be hereafter, are to be managed
according to those measures that God in mercy took for his people
then. Hence it is said, that he has blessed us according as he
chose us in Christ, before the world began; that is, according to
those measures and grants that were by mercy allotted to us then
(Eph 1:4). According to that other saying, 'according to his mercy he
saved us,' that is, according as mercy had allotted for us before
the world began (Titus 3:5). 'According to his own purpose and
grace, which was given us in Christ before the world began' (2 Tim
1:9). This is mercy from everlasting, and is the ground and bottom
of all dispensations that have been, are, or are to come to his
people. And now, though it would be too great a step to a side, to
treat of all those mercies that of necessity will be found to stand
upon that which is called mercy from everlasting, yet it will be
to our purpose, and agreeable to our method, to conclude that mercy
to everlasting stands upon that; even as vocation, justification,
preservation, and glorification, standeth upon our being chosen in
Christ before the foundation of the world (Rom 8:29,30). Here then
is the mercy that is with God and that should encourage Israel to
hope. The mercy that has concerned itself with them, is mercy from
everlasting. Nor may it be thought that a few quarrels of some
brain-sick fellows will put God upon taking new measures for his
people; what foundation has been laid for his, before he laid the
foundation of the world, shall stand; for that it was laid in Christ
by virtue of mercy: that is, from everlasting (Rom 9:11). The old
laws, which are the Magna Charta, the sole basis of the government
of a kingdom, may not be cast away for the pet that is taken by every
little gentleman against them.[21] We have indeed some professors
that take a great pet against that foundation of salvation, that
the mercy that is from everlasting has laid; but since the kingdom,
government, and glory of Christ is wrapped up in it, and since
the calling, justification, perseverance, and glorification of his
elect, which are called his body and fulness, is wrapt up therein,
it may not be laid aside nor despised, nor quarrelled against by
any, without danger of damnation.
Here then is the mercy with which Israel is concerned, and which
is with God as an encouragement to them that should hope, to hope
in him. It is mercy from everlasting; it is mercy of an ancient
date; it is mercy in the root of the thing. For it is from this
mercy in the root of the thing. For it is from this mercy, this
mercy from everlasting, that all, and all those sorts of mercies,
of which we have discoursed before, do flow. It is from this that
Christ the Saviour flows; this is it, from which that tender mercy,
that great mercy, that rich mercy that aboundeth towards us, doth
flow; and so of all the rest. Kind brings forth its kind; know the
tree by his fruit; and God by his mercy in Christ; yea, and know
what God was doing before he made the world, by what he has been
doing ever since. And what has God been doing for and to his church
from the beginning of the world, but extending to, and exercising
loving-kindness and mercy for them? therefore he laid a foundation
for this in mercy from everlasting.
And as this shows the cause of the life of the church, notwithstanding
her ghostly and bodily enemies, so it showeth the cause of her
deliverance from her repeated sins. As God said of leviathan 'I will
not conceal his parts,' &c. (Job 41:12). So it is very unbecoming
of God's people to conceal their sins and miscarriages, for it
diminisheth this mercy of God. Let therefore sin be acknowledged,
confessed, and not be hid nor dissembled; it is to the glory of
mercy that we confess to God and one another what we are; still
remembering this, but mercy is everlasting!
As this shows the reason of our life, and the continuance of that,
notwithstanding our repeated sins, so it shows the cause of the
receiving [or renewing] of our graces, from so many decays and
sickness. For this mercy will live, last, and outlast, all things
that are corruptible and hurtful unto Israel. Wherefore 'let Israel
hope in the Lord,' for this reason, 'for with the Lord there is
mercy.' 1. Tender mercy for us. 2. Great mercy for us. 3. Rich mercy.
4. Manifold mercy. 5. Abounding mercy towards us. 6. Compassing
mercy wherewith we are surrounded. 7. Mercy to follow us wherever
we go. 8. Mercy that rejoiceth against judgment. And, 9. Mercy
that is from everlasting to everlasting. All these mercies are with
God, to allure, to encourage, and uphold Israel in hope.
Second. This also showeth how sorely the enemies of Israel are bent
to seek his destruction. The devil is, by way of eminency, called
the enemy of God's people: 'the devil, your adversary' (1 Peter
5:8). And this, that there are so many mercies employed about us,
and all to bring us to the place which God hath appointed for us,
doth demonstrate it. Should you see a man that was not to go from
door to door, but he must be clad in a coat of mail, must have
a helmet of brass upon is head, and for his life-guard not so few
as a thousand men to wait upon him; would you not say, Surely this
man has store of enemies at hand, surely this man goes continually
in danger of his life? Why, this is the case, enemies lie in wait
for poor Israel in every hole; he can neither eat, drink, wake,
sleep, work, sit still, talk, be silent; worship his God in public
or in private, but he is in danger of being stabbed, or being
destroyed. Hence, as was said before, he is compassed about with
mercy as with a shield (Micah 7:20). And again it is said concerning
these, 'God's truth,' his mercy, 'shall be thy shield and buckler'
(Psa 91:4). And again, 'He is a buckler to all them that trust
in him' (2 Sam 22:31). Yea, David being a man sensible of his own
weakness, and of the rage and power of his enemies, cries out to
his God to take hold of shield and buckler, and to stand up for his
help (Psa 35:2). But what need these things be asserted, promised,
or prayed for? if Israel had no enemies, or none but such, he could,
as we say, make his party good with all. Alas, their cries, their
tears, sighs, watchings, and outcries, at sundry times, make this,
beyond all show of doubt, a truth.
To say nothing of the many thousands that dare not so much as once
think of true religion, because of the power of the enemy which
they behold, when alas! they see nobody but the very scarecrows
which the devil hath set up for I count the persecutor of God's
people but the devil's scarecrow, the old one himself lies quat--yet,
I say, how are they frighted! how are they amazed! What a many of
the enemies of religion have these folks seen today![23] yea, and
they will as soon venture to run the hazard of hell-fire, as to be
engaged by these enemies in this way. Why, God's people are fain to
go through them all, and yet no more able than the other to do it
of themselves. They therefore are girded, compassed, and defended by
this mercy, which is the true cause indeed of their godly perseverance.
Third. A third thing that I infer from these words is, What a loving
God has Israel! 'Truly God is good to Israel. Let the redeemed of
the Lord say so.' A loving God, that should take this care of him,
and bestow so many mercies upon him. Mercies of all sorts, for
all cases, for all manner of relief and help against all manner
of perils. What is man that God should so unweariedly attend upon
him, and visit him every moment? Is he a second God? Is he God's
fellow? Is he of the highest order of the angels? or what is he?
O! he is a flea, a worm, a dead dog, sinful dust and ashes; he comes
up like a flower and is cut down, and what a thing is it that God
should so much as open his eyes upon such a one! (1 Sam 26:20; Job
25:6, 45:2,3). But then, what a thing is it that God should magnify
him, and that he should set his heart upon him! (Job 7:17). Yea,
that he should take him into acquaintance with him, give his angels
to be all ministering spirits for him! Yea, engage his mercy for
him, his tender, great, manifold, and everlasting mercy for him,
to compass him round withal, as with a shield, that nothing might
work his ruin for ever and ever!
It may well be said, 'God is love'! (1 John 4:16). Man may well
say so, 'O give thanks unto the Lord, for he is good, for his mercy
endureth for ever. Let the redeemed of the Lord say so, whom he
hath redeemed from the hand of the enemy' (Psa 107:1-3). If it be
love for a fellow-creature to give a bit of bread, a coat, a cup
of cold water, what shall we call this? when God, the great God,
the former of all things, shall not only give an alms, an alms
to an enemy, but shall rise up, take shield and buckler, and be a
guard, a protection, a deliverer from all evil, until we come into
his heavenly kingdom? This love is such as is not found on earth,
nor to be paralleled among the creatures. None hopes this but one
that is good. Nor does any believe as they should, that God doth
love as these things declare he does. Our heart staggereth at the
greatness of the thing, and who is it that has any reason left in
him, and knows anything of what a wretched thing sin hath made him,
that can without starting so much as hear of all this mercy! But,
Fourth. Another thing that I infer from these words is this, What
ground is here to Israel to hope in the Lord! The Lord is not that
broken reed of Egypt, on which if a man lean, it will go into his
hand and pierce it. God's word is steadfast for ever, even the word
by which we are here exhorted to hope. Nor shall we have cause to
doubt of the cause of the exhortation to such a soul-quieting duty;
for mercy is with the Lord: 'Let Israel rejoice in him that made
him; let the children of Zion be joyful in their king' (Psa 149:2).
For with the Lord there is mercy, wherewith to beautify the meek
with salvation. What sayest thou, child of God? Has sin wounded,
bruised thy soul, and broken thy bones? Why, with the Lord there is
tender mercy. Art thou a sinner of the first rate, of the biggest
size? Why, with the Lord there is great mercy for thee? Have thy
sins corrupted thy wounds, and made them putrefy and stink? Why,
with the Lord there is rich, that is, virtuous[24] mercy for thee.
Art thy sins of diverse sorts? Why, here is a multitude of manifold
mercies for thee. Dost thou see thyself surrounded with enemies?
Why, with the Lord there is mercy to compass thee about withal.
Is the way dangerous in which thou art to go? Surely goodness and
mercy shall follow thee all the days of thy life. Doth iniquity
prevail against thee? The mercy of this Lord aboundeth towards thee.
Doth judgments for thy miscarriages overtake thee; There is with
thy Lord mercy that rejoiceth to deliver thee from those judgments.
What shall I say? There is mercy from everlasting to everlasting
upon thee. What wouldst thou have? There is mercy underneath, mercy
above, and mercy for thee on every side; therefore 'let Israel
hope in the Lord!' I will add, it is the greatest unkindness thou
canst return to the Lord to doubt this mercy notwithstanding. Why,
what wilt thou make of God? Is there no truth nor trust to be put
in him, notwithstanding all that he hath said? O the depravedness
of man's nature! Because he speaketh the truth, therefore we believe
him not! (John 8:45). The odiousness of unbelief is manifest
by this, yea, also the unreasonableness thereof. God is true, his
Word is true; and to help us to hope in him, how many times has he
fulfilled it to others, and that before our eyes? Hope then; it is
good that a man should hope. Hope then; it pleases God that thou
shouldest hope. Hope then to the end, for the grace that is to be
brought unto thee will surely come, with Christ thy Saviour.
But I shall pass from this to the third thing found in the text,
and that is the AMPLIFICATION of the reason. I told you that there
were in the text these three things, I. An exhortation to the
children of God to hope in the Lord: 'Let Israel hope in the Lord.'
II. A reason to enforce that exhortation, 'For with the Lord there
is mercy.' III. An amplification of that reason, 'And with him is
plenteous redemption.' I have gone through the two first, and shall
now come to this last.
1. What this person was. This Jesus was and is the natural and eternal
Son of God Almighty, without beginning or end, from everlasting;
the Creator and Upholder of the world (Prov 8; John 1; Heb 1).
(2.) The act itself. Now the redemption is often ascribed particularly
to his blood; yet in general, the act of his redeeming of us must
either more remotely or more nearly be reckoned from his whole
suffering for us in the flesh; which suffering I take to begin at
his agony, and was finished when he was raised again from the dead.
By his flesh I understand his whole man, as distinguished from his
Divine nature; and so that word doth comprehend his soul as well
as his body, as by the 53rd of Isaiah appears. His soul after that
manner which was proper to it; and his body after that manner which
was proper to it.
[II. The nature of the price paid to redeem.] His sufferings began
in his soul, some time before his body was touched, by virtue of
which was his bloody sweat in his body. The sorrows of his soul
began at the apprehension of what was coming from God, for our sakes,
upon him; but the bloody sweat of his body was from that union it
had with such a soul. His sufferings were from the hand of God,
not of man; not by constraint, but of his own will (Lev 1:3; John
10:18); and they differ from ours in these six things. 1. His
sufferings were by the rigour of the law; ours according to the
tenor of the gospel (Gal 3:13; Heb 12:10). 2. His sufferings were
from God's hand immediately; ours by and through a Mediator (Isa
53:6; Heb 9:22). 3. God delighted himself in every stroke he gave
him; he doth not willingly grieve nor afflict his people (Isa 53;
Psa 103; Lam 3:33). 4. He suffereth as a common or public person;
we for our own private offences (1 Cor 15:3; Lam 3:39). 5. He
suffered to make amends to justice for the breach of a holy law;
we to receive some small correction, and to be taught to amend our
lives (Heb 9:26; Rom 10:3,4; Deut 8:5; 2 chron 6:27). 6. He was
delivered from the nature of suffering by the merit of his person
and sufferings; we from ours by the mercy of God through Christ
(Acts 2:24; Eph 4:32, 5:2). Redemption, then, by a price, was this;
the blood of Christ, which he willingly suffered to be spilt on
the cross, before the face of God.
[III. The state from which this price redeemeth.] The cause of
this price was our sins; by which we were justly delivered up to
the curse, the devil, death, and hell; and should everlastingly
have so continued, but that this price of redemption was for us
paid. Hence it is said, Christ died for us. Christ died for our
sins. Christ gave himself for our sins. We have redemption through
his blood, the forgiveness of sins. And that we are bought with
this price. Now, in all this Christ respected the holiness of the
law, and the worth of our souls; giving full satisfaction to the
one, for the love that he bare to the other. And this has redeemed
his people from sin and the curse, the cause of our captivity.
Now, as to redemption from the law, and from those other things from
which we are, and are to be redeemed with power; do but consider
the different language which the Holy Ghost useth, with reference
to our redemption from each.
When it speaketh of our redemption from the just curse of the law,
which we have sufficiently deserved, it is said to be done, not by
destroying, but by fulfilling the law. 'Think not,' says Christ,
'that I am come to destroy the law or the prophets; I am not come
to destroy, but to fulfil. For verily I say unto you, Till heaven
and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from
the law, till all be fulfilled' (Matt 5:17,18). For it became him,
as our Redeemer, to fulfil all, and all manner of righteousness,
by doing and suffering what justly should have been done or borne
of us (Rom 8:3-5; Gal 3:13,14).
But now when our redemption from those other things is made mention
of, the dialect is changed; for then we read, to the end we might
be delivered from them, Christ was to destroy and abolish them (2
Tim 1:10); 'that through death he might destroy him that had the
power of death, that is, the devil,' and so deliver (Heb 2:14).
And again, 'O death, I will be thy plagues! O grace, I will be
thy destruction!' (Hosea 13:14). And again, 'that the body of sin
might be destroyed' (Rom 6:6); and I have the keys of hell and of
death (Rev 1:18). Having thereby sufficiently declared that the
power of it is destroyed as to Israel, who are the people concerned
in this redemption.
(1.) There is yet much sin and many imperfections that cleave to
our persons and to our performances, from which, though we be not
yet in the most full sense delivered, yet this redemption is with
our Lord, and we shall have it in his time; and in the meantime it
is said, It shall not have dominion over us. 'Sin shall not have
dominion over you; for ye are not under the law, but under grace'
(Rom 6:14). We are, by what Christ has done, taken from under the
law, the curse; and must, by what Christ will do, be delivered
from the very being of sin. 'He gave himself for us, that he might
redeem us from all iniquity'; that he might present us to himself
a glorious church, not having spot or wrinkle, or any such thing,
but that we should be without blemish (Titus 2:13,14; Eph 5:25,27).
That we are already without the being of sin, none but fools and
madmen will assert; and that we shall never be delivered from it,
none but such men will affirm neither. It remains then, that there
is a redemption for Israel in reversion, and that from the being
of sin. And of this it is that the text also discourseth, and for
which let the godly hope.
(2.) We are not yet quite free from Satan's assaulting of us, though
our Head by himself, and that for us, has got a complete conquest
over him; but the time is coming, and himself knows that it is but
a little while to it, in which he shall forever be bruised under
our feet. Be wise unto that which is good, and simple concerning
evil, and the God of peace shall bruise, tread down Satan under
your feet shortly (Rom 16:20). Some may think that this text will
have a fulfilling in the ruin and downfall of Antichrist; and so
it may; but yet it will never be wholly fulfilled, as long as Satan
shall have any thing to do with one of the children of God. There
is therefore a redemption in reversion for the children of God from
Satan, which they are to hope for, because this redemption is with
the Lord their Head, and that to manage and bring about for them.
For he shall bruise him under their feet in his time.
But alas! what need we stand to prove the sun is light, the fire
hot, the water wet? What was done by him was done by God, for he
was true God; and what comparison can there be betwixt God and the
creature, betwixt the worth of God's acts, and the merit of the
sin of poor man! And can death, or sin, or the grave hold us, when
God saith, 'Give up?' Yea, where is that, or he, that shall call
into question the superabounding sufficiency that is in the merit
of Christ, when God continueth to discharge, day by day, yea,
hourly, and every moment, sinners from their sin, and death, and
hell, for the sake of the redemption that is obtained for us by
Christ?
First. Add redemption unto mercy, and then things still are
heightened and made greater. And it must, because the text adds
it, and because both the nature of God, the holiness of his law,
and the present state of the sinner that is to be saved, requireth
that it should be so. God is justice as well as mercy; the law is
holy and just; that man that is to be saved is not only a sinner,
but polluted. Now, then, that mercy and justice may meet and kiss
in the salvation of the sinner, there must be a redemption; that the
sinner may be saved, and the law retain its sanction and authority,
there must be a redemption; that the sinner may be purged as well
as pardoned, there must be a redemption. And, I say, as there must,
so there is: 'For with the Lord there is mercy, and with him is
plenteous redemption.' Mercy is the original, the cause, and the
manager of our redemption. Redemption is the manifestation, and
the completing of that mercy. If there had been no mercy, there
had been no redemption. Mercy had been defective as to us, or must
have offered violence to the law and justice of God, and have saved
us contrary to that word, 'In the day thou eatest thou shalt die,'
and 'Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things written
in the book of the law to do them.' But now, redemption coming in
by mercy, the sin is done away, and the sinner saved, in a way of
righteousness.
This is a way that God, nor any child of his, need be ashamed of
before any that shall call in question the legality and justice of
this procedure. For why may not God be merciful, and why may not
God be just? And since he can be both merciful and just in the
salvation of sinners, why may he not also save them from death
and hell? Christ is God's salvation, and to show that he is not
ashamed of him, he hath presented him, and the way of redemption
by him, before the face of all people (Luke 2:30-32). Nor is the
Son, who is become, with respect to the act of redemption, the
author of eternal salvation, ashamed of this his doings. 'I gave
my back to the smiters,' saith he, 'and my cheeks to them that
plucked off the hair; I hid not my face from shame and smiting'
(Isa 50:6). This he speaks to show what were some of his sufferings
when he engaged in the work of our redemption, and how heartily he
did bear and go through them. 'For,' says he, 'the Lord God will
help me,' that is, justify me in it, 'therefore shall I not be
confounded, therefore have I set my face like a flint, and I know
that I shall not be ashamed' (v 7). And if God, and his Son Jesus
Christ, are neither of them ashamed to own this way of salvation,
why should the sinners concerned thereabout be afraid thereupon to
venture their soul? I know, saith he, 'I shall not be ashamed'; I
shall not, that is, when all things come to light, and everything
shall appear above board; when the heart and soul of this undertaking
of mine shall be proclaimed upon the house-tops, I know I shall
not be ashamed.
It was also upon this account that Paul said he was not ashamed of
the gospel (Rom 1). For he knew that it was a declaration of the
highest act of wisdom that ever God did spread before the face of
the sons of men. And of what wisdom is the gospel a declaration
but of that of forgiveness of sins by grace, through the redemption
that is by the blood of Jesus Christ? 'In whom we have redemption
through his blood,' even 'the forgiveness of sins, according to
the riches of his grace, wherein he hath abounded toward us in all
wisdom and prudence' (Eph 1:7,8).
And there are three things that follow upon that opinion that denieth
the absolute necessity of the shedding of the blood of Christ for
the redemption of man, that mercy might be let out to him.
Fourth. Then here you see the reason of that free course that mercy
hath among the sons of men, and why it doth, as has been showed
before what it doth. Why justice is content. Blood hath answered
the demand of justice. The law hath nothing to object against his
salvation that believeth in Jesus Christ. Blood has set the door
open for us with boldness to go to God for mercy, and for God to
come with his abundant grace to us. We have 'boldness, brethren, to
enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus, by a new and living
way, which he hath consecrated for us through the vail, that is to
say, his flesh' (Heb 10:19,20). This is the way that Moses desired
to find, when God so largely spake to him of his mercy. 'Thou hast
said,' says Moses to God, 'I know thee by name, and thou hast also
found grace in my sight. Now, therefore, I pray thee, if I have found
grace in thy sight, show me now thy way that I may know thee,' &c.
(Exo 33:12,13). What if it should be applied thus? thou now talkest
of mercy, but in thy words to us from the Mount, thou spakest fire
and justice; and since thou hast delivered us to holy a law, and
are resolved that the least tittle thereof shall by no means fall
to the ground; by what means is it that mercy should come unto
us? Well, saith God, I will show thee my way, I will put thee in a
clift of the rock, which was a figure of Christ, for Christ says,
'I am the way' (Exo 34; John 14:6). This done, he proclaimed his
name, and showed him how he could be gracious, and gave him the
sign of his being merciful, a promise that his presence should go
with him. The breaking then of the body of Jesus was, the renting
of the vail, that out of which came blood, that the way to God might
be living; and not death, or sword, or flame, to the poor children
of men. Out hence therefore bubbleth continually the tender mercy,
the great mercy, the rich mercy, the abundant mercy, the multiplying
mercy, and every other mercy of God to us for our present and
everlasting good.
Not that God was sparing of his mercy, and would not part with it
unless paid for it; for this way of redemption by blood was his
contrivance, the fruit of his wisdom (Eph 1:8). So then, God was
big with mercy for a sinful world; but to be continually extending
of mercy, since sin and justice, because of the sanction of the
law, lay in the way as a turning flaming sword, there did lie the
work (Gen 3:24); so it was concluded, that mercy might, in a way
of justice, be let out to sinners; Christ, the Son of God, should
die for the sin of man. By which means the outcries of the law
and justice against us for our sins did cease, and mercy flowed
from heaven like the waters of Noah, until it became a sea (Micah
7:18,19).
But this key of heaven is no where but in the Word of the Spirit;
it is not seen in the law, nor in the reason or righteousness of the
world. To punish 'the just for the unjust,' and to make him 'to be
sin for us, who knew no sin, that we might be made the righteousness
of God in him,' seems unreasonable; so cross to the wisdom of man
are the wards of this lock (1 Peter 3:18; 2 Cor 5:21). Wherefore
usually, when they come at this doctrine, they belch out their
frumps, their taunts, their scoffs, and their scorns against it;
and in opposition thereto, comment, exalt, cry up, and set on high,
Socinianism, Mahometanism, man's ragged righteousness, or anything.
But we will pass these things.
These things, sin and justice, are too great to be played with by
him that shall see them in the light of the law, and that shall
feel them in their terror upon a trembling conscience. But when the
soul shall see that a propitiation is made to justice by blood,
then, and not till then, it sees sin taken away: and when it sees, by
this means, sin taken away, then it can behold to hope in the mercy
of God. Yea, and it will be as hard to wring off him that is settled
here, from this belief to another, as it would be to persuade him
that stands upon sound ground to venture his life upon a shaking
bottomless quag. O! It is a pleasant thing for the wounded conscience
to taste the sweetness of redeeming blood! (John 6:51-56). This is
like the best wine that goes down sweetly; this carries with the
last of it the very tang[25] of eternal life! (Heb 9:14). And know
that dead works, or works of death, will abide in the conscience,
notwithstanding all talk and notions of mercy, until that be purged
with blood applied thereto, by the Spirit and faith. This is one
of the three that abide to witness on earth, that 'God hath given
us eternal life, and that this life is in his Son'; because he died
for us, and rose again (1 John 5:8-11).
This, therefore, is that that will establish a man with that peace
that shall not be shaken, because by this such an one seeth the
justice of God is quieted. For peace is made by the blood of the
cross; peace with God for sinners (Col 1:20). Yea, God himself, by
the blood of the cross, has made it, that by him, Christ, he might
reconcile to himself all things, whether they be things on earth,
or things in heaven. Nor will a man that is truly spiritually wise,
rest till he comes where God towards man doth rest; but that can
be only there, where such means are offered for the taking away of
sin, that are of a sweet-smelling savour to God. Now this is the
offering that Christ offered, to wit, himself; for Christ loved
us, and hath given himself for us, an offering and a sacrifice to
God, for a sweet-smelling savour (Eph 5:2). Therefore it is by it,
the body of his flesh, through death, that we are presented holy,
unblameable, and unreproveable in his sight (Col 1:21). Wherefore
it must be true which was said before, to wit, That the knowledge
of redemption, and the faith of redemption, is the only means of
settling, composing, and upholding of the soul of the thoroughly
awakened, in the hope of enjoying a portion in mercy for ever. He
that hath the Son of God, hath the Father, hath life; because with
him is the means of peace with the Father, and so of eternal life
(1 John 2:23). But then, to have the Son, is to believe on him, and
on the Father through him (1 John 5:10-12). On him, that he is the
Saviour by his blood; and on the Father through him, as believing
that he, for his Son's sufferings, is pacified with us, and of his
grace hath forgiven us, through him, all trespasses (2 John 9; Eph
4:32).
1. Did not Christ die for us; and dying for us, are we not become
dead to the law by the death of his body? or will the law slay both
him and us, and that for the same transgression? (Rom 7:1,2). If
this be concluded in the affirmative, what follows but that Christ,
though he undertook, came short in doing for us? But he was raised
up from the dead, and believing marrieth us to him as risen, and
that stops the mouth of all. I am crucified with Christ, our old
man was crucified with him, and we are become dead to the law by
the body of Christ (Rom 5:3,4). What then?
Besides, thus believing setteth thy soul against the fear of death,
and judgment to come; for if Christ be raised from the dead who
died for our sins; and if Christ who died for our sins is entered
into glory: I say again, if Christ who died for our sins has purchased
us to himself, and is purposed that the fruit of this his purchase
shall be, that we may behold his face in glory; then, cast off
slavish fear of death and judgment: for Christ being raised from
the dead, dieth no more; death hath no more dominion over him!
From all which it appears, that mercy by Christ, or from the benefit
of redemption by the precious blood of Christ, I say, from the
faith of that, flows that which is holiness indeed. And I believe
that those very men that are pleased to taunt at this kind of
inference, would condemn a man was he laid under these obligations
concerning things of this life, and yet did carry it as one
not touched thereby. We will make an instance: Suppose a Socinian
should, through his contracting a great debt, be forced to rot in
prison, unless redeemed by silver and gold: and suppose a man, unto
whom this Socinian was an enemy, should lay down the whole debt
to the creditor, that this Socinian might be at liberty, might
trade, and live comfortably in this world; and if, after this, this
Socinian should taunt at them that should tell him he is engaged
to this redeemer, ought to love and respect this redeemer; what
would they say but that this Socinian that was a debtor is an
inconsiderate and stupefied rascal? Why, this is the case; Paul was
a debtor to the law and justice of God; Jesus Christ his Son, that
Paul might not perish for ever, paid for him a price of redemption,
to wit, his most precious blood. But what! Shall Paul now, though
redeemed from perpetual imprisonment in hell, be as one that never
was beholden to Jesus Christ; or if others say he was, taunt at them
for their so saying? No, he scorns it. Though the love of Christ,
in dying to pay a price of redemption, will not engage a Socinian,
yet it will engage a true Christian to think and believe that he
ought to live to Jesus, that died for him and rose again.
Also when David spake for himself to Saul, he put himself upon
this, 'If,' saith he, 'the Lord hath stirred thee up against me,
let him accept an offering, a smell, a sweet-smelling sacrifice; a
figure of the satisfactoriness of the sufferings of Jesus Christ'
(1 Sam 26:19). What is the meaning of all these passages, if not to
show that when we go to pray to God, we should turn away our face
from every thing of ours, and look to God, only by the price of
redemption paid for us by Jesus Christ, and plead that alone with
him as the great prevailing argument, and that by and for the
sake of which he giveth pardon and grace to help in time of need?
Wherefore, wouldst thou be a praying man, a man that would pray
and prevail? why, pray to God in the faith of the merits of Christ,
AND SPEED.[27]
Ninth. For this is the very cause why this is added in the text,
to wit, the plenteousness of redemption, it is, I say, that men
should hope to partake by it, of the goodness and mercy of God.
'Let Israel hope in the Lord, for with the Lord there is mercy,
and with him is plenteous redemption.' Mercy and redemption, mercy
through a Redeemer, therefore 'let Israel hope'! It must also be
noted, that this word redemption is, as it were, the explicatory
part of the text, for the helping of Israel to hope. As who should
say, as there is with God mercy, so there is with him a way to his
mercy, and that way is redemption, or a price paid for your sins;
and that you should not be discouraged through the greatness of
your sins, I tell you there is with God plenty of this redemption,
or a price paid to the full; to an over and above. It also is as
if he had said, Forget not this, for this is the key of all the
rest, and the great support to the saints in prayer, or while they
wait upon God in any of his appointments to encourage them to hope.
Tenth. And lastly, This also should teach the saints, when they
sin or praise the Lord, they should not sing of mercy only, but of
mercy and judgment too; 'I will sing of mercy and judgment; unto
thee, O Lord, will I sing' (Psa 101:1). Of mercy and judgment, or
justice in the manifestation of it, as smiling upon our forgiveness.
When Hannah sang of, and rejoiced in God's salvation, she sang
aloud of holiness, saying, 'There is none holy as the Lord' (1
Sam 2:1,2). Holy in keeping his word, though it cost the blood of
his Son. This also is that that is called a helping of his servant
Israel in remembrance of his mercy, and the performing of the mercy
promised; even the oath that he sware to our father Abraham, that
he would grant unto us, that we being delivered out of the hands
of our enemies--by a Redeemer--might serve him without fear, &c.
(Luke 1:49,54). When you praise, therefore, remember Christ and
his blood, and how justice and judgment took hold on him, that they
might not take hold on thee; yea, how they by taking hold on him,
left a way to thee to escape. Isaac should have been sacrificed,
had not the Lord provided a ram; and thou thyself shouldest have
been damned, had not the Lord provided a lamb (Gen 22; Rev 5).
Hence Christ is called the 'Lamb of God which taketh away the sin
of the world,' that taketh them away by the sacrifice of himself.
Sing therefore in your praises unto God, and to the Lamb!
I would come now to speak one short word of use to the whole. And,
First. This still shows more and more, what a sad state God's
people have brought themselves into by sin. I told you before that
the revelation of so much mercy as is presented unto us by the first
part of the text, sufficiently declared our state to be miserable
by sin. But what shall we say, when there must be added to that
the heart blood of the Son of God, and all to make our salvation
complete? For albeit mercy is essential to our salvation, and that
without which there can be no salvation; yet it is the blood that
maketh the atonement for the soul, THAT propitiates, and so makes
capable of enjoying of it. It was mercy and love, as I said afore,
that sent one to shed his blood for us; and it is the blood of him
that was sent, that puts us into the enjoyment of mercy. O! I have
thought sometimes, what bloody creatures hath sin made us![28] The
beasts of the field must be slain by thousands before Christ came,
to signify to us we should have a Saviour; and after that, he must
come himself, and die a worse death than died those beasts, before
the work of saving could be finished. O redemption, redemption by
blood, is the heart-endearing consideration! This is that which
will make the water stand in our eyes, that will break a heart of
flint, and that will make one do as they do, that are 'in bitterness
for their first-born' (Zech 12:10).
But I say, into what a miserable plight have such people put
themselves, that have cast off coming to God by Christ, as he is
the propitiation for their sins, and that seek to come another way?
Such are lapsed again to Gentilism, to Paganism, to Heathenism; nor
will it help at all to say they rely on the mercy and goodness of
God, for there is no such thing as spiritual and eternal mercy can
come from God to him, that comes not to him by Christ. The Turks,
if I be not mistaken, have this for the beginning of every chapter
of their Alcoran, 'The Lord, God, gracious and merciful,'[30]
yet are counted unbelievers, and are verily so, for they have not
received the faith of Christ. The Lord God, gracious and merciful,
will not save them, no not by grace and mercy, unless repenting of
their presuming upon mercy, without a bloody sacrifice, they come
to him by his Son (Acts 4:12). Men therefore that have laid aside
the necessity of reconciliation to God by the precious blood of
Christ, are in a damned state; nor will it help at all to say they
do indeed believe in him. I am not so void of reason as to think
that they that have cast away Christ, as he is a propitiatory
sacrifice with God for sin, should also cast away his name out
of their mouth; no, his name is too honorable, and the profession
of it too glorious for them to do such a thing. But retaining his
name, and the notion of him as a Saviour, they yet cast him off,
and that in those very things wherein the essential part of his
sacrifice, the merit of it, and his everlasting priesthood, consists;
and in this lies the mystery of their iniquity.
Christ, and faith in him as a Saviour, not in the name only, but
in the true sense thereof, is the mark, as I have said, from which
if any swerve, they err from the saving way, and so come nothing near
that mercy that can save them. Hence Christ is called a standard,
an ensign (Isa 5:26). 'And in that day there shall be a root of
Jesse, which shall stand for an ensign of the people; to it shall
the Gentiles seek, and his rest shall be glorious' (Isa 11:10). And
again, 'Thus saith the Lord God, Behold, I will lift up mine hand
to the Gentiles; and set up my standard to the people' (49:22).
'Go through, go through the gates, prepare ye the way of the
people,--gather out the stones, lift up a standard for the people.
Behold the Lord hath proclaimed to the end of the world; say ye
to the daughter of Zion, behold thy salvation cometh. Behold his
reward is with him, and his work before him' (62:10,11). Hence
again he is called the captain, the chieftain, of our salvation,
and him without whom there neither is nor can be any.
But now the men of this confederacy, rather than they will submit
themselves to the righteousness of God, will lay odiums and scandals
upon them that preach they should (Rom 10:2,4). Not forsooth, if you
will believe them, but that they are highly for the righteousness
of God, let it be that which they count so; but then to be sure it
shall never be the personal performances of Christ, by which they
that believe in him are justified from all things; but that which
they call 'first principles,' 'dictates of human nature,' 'obedience
to a moral precept,' followed and done as they have Christ for an
example; not understanding that Christ, in his own doings, is the
end of all these things to every one that believeth. But if it
be urged that Gentiles and Pagans are possessed with those very
principles, only they have not got the art, as our men have, to
cover them with the name of Christ and principles of Christianity,
then they fall to commending the heathens and their philosophers,
and the natural motives and principles by which they were actuated;
preferring of them much before what by others are called the graces
of the Spirit, and principles upon what the doctrine of the free
grace and mercy of God by Christ are grounded. But, as I said, all
the good that such preachers can do as to the next world, is, to
draw the people away from their ensign and their standard, and so
lead them among the Gentiles and infidels, to seek by their rules
the way to this unspeakable mercy of God. Wherefore their state
being thus deplorable, and their spirits thus incorrigible, they
must be pitied, and left, and fled from, if we would live.
Some, indeed, count their own doings the only darling of their
soul, while others cast it to the dogs. And why should a man cumber
himself with what is his, when the good of all that is in Christ
is laid, and to be laid out for him? Not that a believer casts
off to do good, for he knows that what good thing is done in faith
and love, is acceptable to God, and profitable to his neighbour.
But this is it, he setteth not his good deed against the judgment
of God; he cometh not in his own good. When he comes to God for
forgiveness of sins, then he sees nothing, knows nothing, mentions
nothing as righteousness, but that which Christ wrought out in the
days of his flesh, and that only. But how then is what he doth
accepted of God? Verily as the duty of a son, and as the work
of one that is justified. We must therefore conclude that there
is acceptation, and acceptation: acceptation of the person, and
acceptation of his performance. Acceptation of the person may be
considered with respect to justification from the curse, and so
acceptation there can be none, but through the one offering of the
body of Jesus Christ once for all. Also the acceptation of a duty
done by such a person is, by virtue of the self-same offering,
the person being considered as standing just through Christ before
God. And the reason why a justified person must have his duties
accepted the same way, as is his person, is because justifying
righteousness sets not the person free from sin, save only in the
sight of God and conscience; he remaineth still infirm in himself,
and standeth still in need of the fresh and continual application
of the merits of the Lord Jesus, which also the soul receiveth by
virtue of Christ's intercession. I speak now of acceptation with
reference to the justice of the law, and the judgment of God upon
person or work, according to the self-same law. For so they both
must be accepted through the self-same Mediator, or they cannot be
accepted at all. Nor is it a thing to be wondered at, that a man
should stand just in the sight of God, when polluted and defiled
in his own sight. He stands just before God in the justice of his
Son, upon whom God looks, and for whose sake he accepts him. May not
a scabbed, mangy man, a man all over-run with blains and blotches,
be yet made beautiful to the view of a beholder, through the silken,
silver, golden garment that may be put upon him, and may cover all
his flesh? Why, the righteousness of Christ is not only unto but
upon all them that believe (Rom 3:22). And whoso considers the
parable of the wretched infant, shall find, that before it was
washed with water it was wrapped up or covered, as it was found,
in its blood, in and with the skirt of his garment that found it in
its filth. And then he washed it with water, and then he sanctified
it by the anointing oil of the Spirit of God (Eze 16:8,9). I speak
thus to thee, Christian reader, partly because in the faith of these
things is thy life; and because I would yet enforce the exhortation
upon thee with the reason and the amplification thereof, to wit, to
put thee upon trusting in the Lord through the encouragement that
thou hast in redeeming mercy so to do.
Some may say, Will God see that which is not? and will he judge a
man just that is a sinner? But I will answer, The man that had the
rainbow about his head, was to look on, or be looked upon, while
he shone like a jasper and a sardix-stone (Rev 4:3). The blood of
the paschal lamb was to be looked upon by him that came to destroy
the land of Egypt in their firstborn (Exo 12:13). I add, The rainbow
that God gave to Noah for a token that he would no more destroy the
earth with the waters of the flood, was to be looked upon, that
God might remember to show mercy to his people (Gen 9:8-17). Now
all these meet in the man Christ Jesus, who is the only one, for
the sake of whom the sinner that believeth in him stands acquitted
in the sight of God. His is the blood, he is the prince, that is
more than the token of the covenant: nor do all the colours in the
rainbow appear so beautiful in the eyes of man, as does the garment
of Christ; which is from his loins, even upward, and from his loins,
even downward, in the eyes of the God of heaven (Eze 1:27,28). And
wilt thou say these are things that are not? Also, he can legally
judge a man just, that is a sinner. Do but admit of a diverse
consideration, and God will so consider of that sinner which he
justifieth, in despite of all the teeth in thy proud mouth! 'He
justifieth the ungodly' (Rom 4:5). Not that were, but that are such
now, in the judgment and verdict of the law, might deal with them
in their own persons as men (Rom 5:5-10). He will then consider them
in his Son; in, and under the skirt of his Son. He will consider
them as washed in the blood of his Son, and will also consider
'that in him is no sin,' and so he will deal with them. 'We know
that he was manifested to take away our sins, and in him is no sin'
(1 John 3:5).
Fourth. As the Christian should most labour to get into the power
and glory of this doctrine, so let him see that he holds it fast.
This doctrine is foreign to flesh and blood; it is not earthly,
but from heaven (Matt 16:17). It is with many that begin with this
doctrine, as it is with boys that go to the Latin school; they
learn till they have learned the grounds of their grammar, and then
go home and forget all. How have many, that as to the grounds of
Christian religion, one would think, had been well taught, yet not
taking such heed thereto as they should, they have let slip all,
and their hearts have been filled with the world again, or else
have drunk in some opinion that has been diametrically opposite
to what they professed of the truth before (Heb 2:1-4). Wherefore
hast thou anything of the truth of Christ in thy heart? 'Hold that
fast, that no man take thy crown' (Rev 3:11). Yea 'grow in grace,
and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ' (2 Peter
3:18).
He that will retain and hold fast the doctrine of redemption, and
so by that have, through faith, an inlet into all the abounding
mercy of God, must not deal in God's matters with a slack hand. It
is not enough for them that would do so, to be content with sermons,
family duties, and other public assemblies for worship, but there
must be a continual exercise of the mind about these matters, and
a labour of the soul to retain them in their glory and sweetness;
else they will, first as to their excellency, then as to the very
notion of them, slip from the heart and be gone (Heb 2:1-3). Not
that there is treachery or deceit therein, but the deceit lies in
the heart about them. He that will keep water in a sieve, must use
more than ordinary diligence. Our heart is the leaking vessel; and
'therefore we ought to give the more earnest heed to the things
which we have heard, lest at any time we should let them slip.'
That this doctrine may remain with us, we must also mortify our
carnal reason: for that makes head against the truth thereof, and
what can foolishness do else? And the wisdom of this world, which
is carnal reason in its improvements, is foolishness with God (1
Cor 1:20-25). It is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed
can it be. It judges this doctrine that we have been speaking of,
foolishness; wherefore it must be avoided, opposed and mortified,
and the word of faith the more carefully submitted to. 'Trust in the
Lord with all thine heart, and lean not unto thine own understanding'
(Rom 3:5). See here, that trusting in the Lord, and leaning to our
own understanding, are opposites; wherefore they must either be
reconciled, or one quite adhered unto, in a way of mortification
of the other. Now, it is safest in this matter to keep a continual
guard upon our carnal powers; and to give up ourselves to the
conduct of our God, and in all our ways acknowledge him, that he,
not ourselves, may direct our paths (v 6). It is a great thing for
a man, when the Word and his reason clashes, then to adhere to the
Word, and let his reason fall to the ground. And this indeed is
Christianity in the practical part thereof. The Spirit of Christ
in the Word is to be hearkened unto, above all things (2 Cor 10:3-5).
There must also be a continual war maintained upon all the lusts
of the flesh, that they may not draw away the heart from the study
and delight, the love and faith, of the things that are hid in
Christ (Isa 28:9). This, I say, must be done, else the heart cannot
be at liberty to wait upon the Lord without distraction, for the
further communications of himself in his Son, according to his
blessed gospel to us. Many Christians are lean in their faith and
too barren in their lives, and all for want of being diligent here.
Wherefore having faith in this blessed Lord Jesus Christ, as has
been afore discoursed; in the next place, 'giving all diligence, add
to your faith, virtue; and to virtue, knowledge; and to knowledge,
temperance; and to temperance, patience; and to patience, godliness;
and to godliness, brotherly kindness; and to brotherly kindness,
charity. For if these things be in you and abound, they make you
that ye shall neither be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge
of our Lord' and Saviour 'Jesus Christ' (2 Peter 1:5-8). There is
a method that the Holy Ghost has prescribed in the Word, for them
that hath faith to observe, and without the observation thereof,
though they indeed may be of the number of them that shall be
saved, yet they shall not have much, nor do much, for Christ and
his name, in this world. Now the unskilful, that are so in the word
of righteousness, finding this method, and not discerning to whom
it belongs, forthwith apply it to all; and forgetting that faith
must go before, they press them as duties preparatory to faith, or
else so call that which is not so; and so the blind leading of the
blind, both fall into the ditch, and are smothered. But do thou, O
child of God, distinguish, and keep faith and duty for justification
of thy person in the sight of God far asunder; also be sure to let
faith go before, and be always with thy Saviour, but add unto thy
faith, virtue, &c., not as though thy faith could not lay hold of
Christ, unless accompanied with these, but to show that thy faith
is of the right kind, as also for the emboldening of thee to an
holy endeavour yet to press further into his everlasting kingdom
and his word; for he that lacketh these things is blind, and cannot
see afar off, and has forgotten that he was purged from his old
sins.
Fifth. That thou mayest keep steadfast to this doctrine take heed
of being offended, or of stumbling at the Word, because of the
offensive lives and conversations of some that are professors of
the same. There will be offences, and it is needful there should;
yea, scandals and heresies also, that they that are approved of
God 'may be made manifest among you' (1 Cor 11:19). There are many
causes of the offensive lives of them that profess this faith, some
of which I will give a touch upon here.
1. Many that adhere to, and profess this gospel, are short of the
power and glory of the things which they profess: now the word, the
word only, will not bring those that profess it into a conformity to
it; into a conformity in heart and life (1 Cor 4:18-20). Wherefore
they that know it only in word, live scandalous lives, to the reproach
of the faith, the emboldening of its enemies, the stumbling of the
ignorant, and grief of the godly, that are so indeed, and such must
bear their judgment in the next world.
2. This also flows from the wisdom of hell: the devil knows that
the faith of the gospel rightly professed, is, not only saving to
those in whom it is, but alluring unto beholders: wherefore that he
may prevent the beauteous lustre thereof, he sows his tares among
God's wheat, and goes his way, that is, to the end those that stumble
may not see what he hath done, or whose are the tares indeed. Now
by these the sunshine of the faith of the true professors of the
blessed gospel is clouded; yea, and the world made believe, that such
as the worst are, such are the best; but there is never a barrel
better herring,[34] but that the whole lump of them are, in truth,
a pack of knaves. Now has the devil got the point aimed at, and
has caused many to fall; but behold ye now the good reward these
tares shall have at the day of reward for their doings. 'As therefore
the tares are gathered and burned in the fire, so shall it be in
the end of this world. The Son of man shall send forth his angels,
and they shall gather out of his kingdom all things that offend,
and them which do iniquity, and shall cast them into a furnace of
fire: there shall be wailing and gnashing of teeth' (Mat 13:37-42).
Seventh. And lastly, Sinner, doth not all this discourse make
thy heart twitter after the mercy that is with God, and after the
way that is made by this plenteous redemption thereto? Methinks
it should; yea, thou couldst not do otherwise, didst thou but see
thy condition: look behind thee, take a view of the path thou hast
trodden these many years. Dost thou think that the way that thou
art in will lead thee to the strait gate, sinner? Ponder the path
of thy feet with the greatest seriousness, thy life lies upon it;
what thinkest thou? But make no answer till in the night, till thou
art in the night-watches. 'Commune with your own heart upon your
bed' (Psa 4:4), and then say what thou thinkest of, whether thou
art going?
FOOTNOTES:
[1] The titles to the Psalms have puzzled all the commentators.
Bunyan follows Luther; who adds, that the title to the Psalms of
Degrees does not pertain to any doctrine, but only to the ceremony
of the singers. Ainsworth applies it to the place or tone of voice
of the singers, or to a special excellency of the Psalm. Calmet
and Bishop Horsley consider that the title refers to the progress
of the soul towards eternal felicity, ascending by degrees. Watford
imagines that these Psalms were written or selected to be sung on
the ascent of the Jews from the captivity in Babylon. Luther wisely
concludes that the Christian has only to do with the brief and very
notable doctrine contained in these fifteen steps or degrees.--Ed.
[3] When Diabolus, in the Holy War, marched against Mansoul, his
infernal drum affrighted the backsliding Mansoul with its roaring.
'This, to speak truth, was amazingly hideous to hear; it frighted
all men seven miles round.' This drum was beat every night, and
'when the drum did go, behold darkness and sorrow over Mansoul; the
light was darkened in the heaven thereof, no noise was ever heard
upon earth more terrible; Mansoul trembled, and looked to be
swallowed up.' This awful alarm--this terrible drum--is a want of
a good hope through faith, which purifieth the heart.--Ed.
[4] How comforting is that declaration of the Holy Spirit, 'For now
we see through a glass darkly, but then face to face'! however we
may have had a glimpse of glory to strengthen us in the way. This
revelation was through one who had been 'caught up into paradise,'
and who had 'abundance of revelations,' so great that it was needful
for him to have 'a thorn in the flesh,' to keep him humble. Blessed
is Israel's 'Hope' of happiness, inconceivable and eternal.--Ed.
[11] How forcibly does this remind us of the escape of the poor
doubting pilgrims from the castle of Giant Despair. The outer gate,
like that of the prison in which Peter was confined, was of iron
(Acts 12:10). But Peter had a heavenly messenger as his guide, and
faith was in lively exercise, so that 'the gate opened to them of
his own accord.' 'God cut the gates of iron in sunder' (Psa 107:16).
The pilgrims lay for four days under dreadful sufferings, bordering
on black despair. He had overlooked or laid by the 'key that doth
go too hard'; prayer brought it to his recollection, and he cried
out, 'What a fool am I thus to be in a stinking dungeon, when I may
as well walk at liberty.' He recollected the 'key called promise,'
which will open ALL the gates in Doubting Castle; and although the
lock of that iron gate went damnable hard, yet the key did open
it, and the prisoners escaped; see Grace Abounding, Nos 261-263.
Fellow-pilgrims 'look not over,' nor 'lay by,' those keys that
'go too hard,' the prayerful use of which may save us much bitter
dejection and gloomy doubts.--Ed.
[12] The murder of Sir E. Godfrey, and the fears of a Popish plot,
greatly alarmed the country at this time. The recollection of the
frightful atrocities committed by the Papists upon the unoffending
and unarmed Protestants in Ireland, led to the fears which are here
so forcibly, but naturally, expressed. Although we re here directed
to the sole ground of hope in the spiritual warfare, yet doubtless,
in temporal things, Bunyan felt the necessity of human agency. Had
he lived to witness the punishment inflicted on these murderers by
William III, he would have owned with gratitude the services rendered
to the nation by that warlike king and his brave parliament.--Ed.
[15] Gospellers was the nick-name for those who loved the gospel
at the Reformation, as Puritan or Methodist in a later age.--Ed.
[16] These are solemn and bitter truths. While the public assembly
is at times the gate of heaven to the soul, sincerity is better
evidenced by heart-wrestling with God in private. No duty draws
down such blessings from heaven, nor has greater opposition from
Satan, than earnest closet prayer. While it humbles the soul before
God, it excites our zeal in good works and a heavenly conduct
towards man.--Ed.
[17] 'For whom the Lord loveth, he chasteneth, and scourgeth every
son whom he receiveth' (Heb 12:6,7).--Ed.
[18] In Popish times, the poor wretchedly and lazily depended upon
the alms of the rich, which were especially bestowed at a funeral,
to buy their prayers for the repose of the soul; and at wedding,
for a blessing on the newly-married couple. Happily for them they
are now taught, by gospel light, to depend, under God, upon their
honest exertions to produce the means of existence and enjoyment,
as the most valuable class of society.--Ed.
[19] Bunyan had felt all this. 'Alas!' says he, 'I could neither
hear Christ, nor see him, nor feel him, nor savour any of his
things; I was driven with a tempest, my heart would be unclean, the
Canaanites would come into the land.'--Grace Abounding, No. 78.--Ed.
[20] See 2 Samuel 2:23, 3:27. To smite under the fifth rib is to
give a mortal blow.--Ed.
[21] Human laws we must obey, unless they infringe upon the prerogative
of God and upon conscience; to such we must refuse obedience, and
count it an honour to suffer as Daniel and the Hebrew youths. These
laws we may strive to get repealed or amended; but the laws of God
are immutable and eternal--they must be obeyed, or we perish.--Ed.
[24] The word 'virtuous' is now very rarely used in this sense;
it means, 'efficacious by inherent qualities,' or having great or
powerful properties, as, 'By virtue of our Lord's intercession';
see Imperial Dictionary.--Ed.
[28] There is something about the word blood at which the mind
recoils, as if intended to impress upon us the evils of sin and its
awful punishment--the death, spiritual and eternal, of the sinner.
'Without shedding of blood is no remission.' Blessed are those
who were in Christ when his precious blood was shed as an atoning
sacrifice.--Ed.
[30] The words are, 'In the name of God, gracious and merciful,'
before each of the 114 chapters of which Alcoran consists.--Ed.
[31] No service on the part of those who are out of Christ, can be
accepted (Prov 15:8). We are accepted IN the Beloved (Eph 1:6).--Ed.
[33] What is this to me, O law, that thou accusest me, and sayest
that I have committed many sins? Indeed, I grant that I have
committed many sins, yea, and still do commit sins daily without
number. This toucheth me nothing. Thou talkest to me in vain. I am
dead unto thee.--Luther. In the person of his Surety, the believer
has died, and paid the penalty of the law. It can have no claim on
him.--Ed.
[34] A proverbial saying, which means that all are alike, 'there
is no one barrel better than another, the whole cargo is bad.'--Ed.
***
I WILL PRAY WITH THE SPIRIT AND WITH THE UNDERSTANDING ALSO-
OR,
The great enemy of souls, aided by the perverse state of the human
mind, has exhausted his ingenuity and malice to prevent the exercise
of this holy and delightful duty. His most successful effort has
been to keep the soul in that fatal lethargy, or death unto holiness,
and consequently unto prayer, into which it is plunged by Adam's
transgression. Bunyan has some striking illustrations of Satan's
devices to stifle prayer, in his history of the Holy War. When
the troops of Emmanuel besiege Mansoul, their great effort was to
gain "eargate" as a chief entrance to Mansoul, and at that important
gate there were placed, by order of Diabolous, "the Lord Will-be-will,
who made one old Mr. Prejudice, an angry and ill-conditioned fellow,
captain of that ward, and put under his power sixty men called
Deafmen to keep it," and these were arrayed in the most excellent
armour of Diabolous, "A DUMB AND PRAYERLESS SPIRIT." Nothing but the
irresistible power of Emmanuel could have overcome these obstacles.
He conquers and reigns supreme, and Mansoul becomes happy; prayer
without ceasing enables the new-born man to breathe the celestial
atmosphere. At length Carnal Security interrupts and mars this
happiness. The Redeemer gradually withdraws. Satan assaults the soul
with armies of doubts, and, to prevent prayer, Diabolous "lands up
Mouthgate with dirt."2 Various efforts are made to send petitions,
but the messengers make no impression, until, in the extremity
of the soul's distress, two acceptable messengers are found, not
dwelling in palaces, but in "a very mean cottage,"3 their names
were "Desires Awake and Wet Eyes," illustrating the inspired words,
"Thus saith the High and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity, whose
name is holy: I dwell--with him--that is of a contrite and humble
spirit" (Isa 57:15). By this we are taught the utter worthlessness
of depending upon the prayers of saints on earth, or the glorified
spirits of heaven. Our own prayers alone are availing. Our own
"Desires-awake" and "Wet-eyes," our own aspirations after God, our
own deep repentance and sense of utter helplessness drives us to
the Saviour, through whom ALONE we can find access and adoption
into the family of our Father who is in heaven.
The soul that communes with God attains an aptitude in prayer which
no human learning can give; devotional expressions become familiar;
the Spirit of adoption leads them with deep solemnity to approach
the Infinite Eternal as a father. Private prayer is so essentially
spiritual that it cannot be reduced to writing. "A man that truly
prays one prayer, shall after that never be able to express with
his mouth, or pen the unutterable desires, sense, affection, and
longing that went to God in that prayer". Prayer leads to "pure
religion and undefiled," "to visit the fatherless and widows in
their affliction," and to preserve us "unspotted from the world"
(James 1:27). Blessed indeed are those who enjoy an abiding sense
of the Divine presence; the Christian's divine life may be measured
by his being able to "pray without ceasing," to "seek God's face
continually." Men ought "always to pray," and to "continue in prayer."
This does not consist in perpetually repeating any form of prayer,
but in that devotional frame of mind which enables the soul to say,
"For me to live is Christ." When David was compassed about with the
sorrows of hell, he at once ejaculates, "O Lord, I beseech thee
deliver my soul." When the disciples were in danger they did not
recite the Lord's Prayer, or any other form, but at once cried,
"Lord, save us, we perish." Bunyan, speaking of private prayer,
keenly inquires, will God not hear thee "except thou comest before
him with some eloquent oration?" "It is not, as many take it to
be, even a few babbling, prating, complimentary expressions, but
a sensible feeling in the heart." Sincerity and a dependence upon
the mediatorial office of Christ is all that God requires. "The Lord
is nigh unto all them that call upon him--IN TRUTH" (Psa 145:18).
In all that related to the individual approach of the spirit to its
heavenly Father, our pious author offended not; but having enjoyed
communion with God, he was, as all Christians are, desirous of
communion with the saints on earth, and in choosing the forms of
public worship, he gave great offence to many by rejecting the Book
of Common Prayer.
GEO. OFFOR.
"I WILL PRAY WITH THE SPIRIT, AND I WILL PRAY WITH THE UNDERSTANDING
ALSO"--(I Cor 14:15).
A good sense of sin, and the wrath of God, with some encouragement
from God to come unto him, is a better Common-prayer-book than that
which is taken out of the Papistical mass-book,7 being the scraps
and fragments of the devices of some popes, some friars, and I wot
not what.
Christ is the way through whom the soul hath admittance to God,
and without whom it is impossible that so much as one desire should
come into the ears of the Lord of Sabaoth (John 14:6). "If ye shall
ask anything in my name"; "whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in
my name, I will do it" (John 14:13,14). This was Daniel's way in
praying for the people of God; he did it in the name of Christ.
"Now therefore, O our God, hear the prayer of thy servant, and his
supplications, and cause thy face to shine upon thy sanctuary that
is desolate, for the Lord's sake" (Dan 9:17). And so David, "For
thy name's sake," that is, for thy Christ's sake, "pardon mine
iniquity, for it is great" (Psa 25:11). But now, it is not every one
that maketh mention of Christ's name in prayer, that doth indeed,
and in truth, effectually pray to God in the name of Christ, or
through him. This coming to God through Christ is the hardest part
that is found in prayer. A man may more easily be sensible of his
works, ay, and sincerely too desire mercy, and yet not be able to
come to God by Christ. That man that comes to God by Christ, he
must first have the knowledge of him; "for he that cometh to God,
must believe that he is" (Heb 11:6). And so he that comes to God
through Christ, must be enabled to know Christ. Lord, saith Moses,
"show me now thy way, that I may know thee" (Exo 33:13).
This Christ, none but the Father can reveal (Matt 11:27). And to
come through Christ, is for the soul to be enabled of God to shroud
itself under the shadow of the Lord Jesus, as a man shroudeth himself
under a thing for safeguard (Matt 16:16).8 Hence it is that David
so often terms Christ his shield, buckler, tower, fortress, rock
of defence, &c., (Psa 18:2; 27:1; 28:1). Not only because by him
he overcame his enemies, but because through him he found favour
with God the Father. And so he saith to Abraham, "Fear not, I am
thy shield," &c., (Gen 15:1). The man then that comes to God through
Christ, must have faith, by which he puts on Christ, and in him
appears before God. Now he that hath faith is born of God, born
again, and so becomes one of the sons of God; by virtue of which he
is joined to Christ, and made a member of him (John 3:5,7; 1:12).
And therefore, secondly he, as a member of Christ, comes to God;
I say, as a member of him, so that God looks on that man as a part
of Christ, part of his body, flesh, and bones, united to him by
election, conversion, illumination, the Spirit being conveyed into
the heart of that poor man by God (Eph 5:30). So that now he comes
to God in Christ's merits, in his blood, righteousness, victory,
intercession, and so stands before him, being "accepted in his
Beloved" (Eph 1:6). And because this poor creature is thus a member
of the Lord Jesus, and under this consideration hath admittance to
come to God; therefore, by virtue of this union also, is the Holy
Spirit conveyed into him, whereby he is able to pour out himself,
to wit, his soul, before God, with his audience. And this leads me
to the next, or fourth particular.
Sixth. FOR THE GOOD OF THE CHURCH. This clause reacheth in whatsoever
tendeth either to the honour of God, Christ's advancement, or his
people's benefit. For God, and Christ, and his people are so linked
together that if the good of the one be prayed for, to wit, the
church, the glory of God, and advancement of Christ, must needs
be included. For as Christ is in the Father, so the saints are
in Christ; and he that toucheth the saints, toucheth the apple of
God's eye; and therefore pray for the peace of Jerusalem, and you
pray for all that is required of you. For Jerusalem will never
be in perfect peace until she be in heaven; and there is nothing
that Christ doth more desire than to have her there. That also is
the place that God through Christ hath given to her. He then that
prayeth for the peace and good of Zion, or the church, doth ask
that in prayer which Christ hath purchased with his blood; and also
that which the Father hath given to him as the price thereof. Now
he that prayeth for this, must pray for abundance of grace for the
church, for help against all its temptations; that God would let
nothing be too hard for it; and that all things might work together
for its good, that God would keep them blameless and harmless, the
sons of God, to his glory, in the midst of a crooked and perverse
nation. And this is the substance of Christ's own prayer in John
17. And all Paul's prayers did run that way, as one of his prayers
doth eminently show. "And this I pray, that your love may abound
yet more and more in knowledge, and in all judgment; that ye may
approve things that are excellent; that ye may be sincere, and
without offence, till the day of Christ. Being filled with the
fruits of righteousness, which are by Jesus Christ unto the glory
and praise of God" (Phil 1:9-11). But a short prayer, you see, and
yet full of good desires for the church, from the beginning to the
end; that it may stand and go on, and that in the most excellent
frame of spirit, even without blame, sincere, and without offence,
until the day of Christ, let its temptations or persecutions be
what they will (Eph 1:16-21; 3:14-19; Col 1:9-13).
SECOND. I will pray with the Spirit. Now to pray with the Spirit--for
that is the praying man, and none else, so as to be accepted of
God--it is for a man, as aforesaid, sincerely and sensibly, with
affection, to come to God through Christ, &c.; which sincere,
sensible, and affectionate coming must be by the working of God's
Spirit.
There is no man nor church in the world that can come to God
in prayer, but by the assistance of the Holy Spirit. "For through
Christ we all have access by one Spirit unto the Father" (Eph
2:18). Wherefore Paul saith, "For we know not what we should pray
for as we ought; but the Spirit itself maketh intercession for us
with groanings which cannot be uttered. And he that searcheth the
hearts, knoweth what is the mind of the Spirit, because he maketh
intercession for the saints according to the will of God" (Rom
8:26,27). And because there is in this scripture so full a discovery
of the spirit of prayer, and of man's inability to pray without
it; therefore I shall in a few words comment upon it.
"For we." Consider first the person speaking, even Paul, and, in his
person, all the apostles. We apostles, we extraordinary officers,
the wise master-builders, that have some of us been caught up into
paradise (Rom 15:16; I Cor 3:10; II Cor 12:4). "We know not what
we should pray for." Surely there is no man but will confess, that
Paul and his companions were as able to have done any work for God,
as any pope or proud prelate in the church of Rome, and could as
well have made a Common Prayer Book as those who at first composed
this; as being not a whit behind them either in grace or gifts.9
"For we know not what we should pray for." We know not the matter
of the things for which we should pray, neither the object to whom
we pray, nor the medium by or through whom we pray; none of these
things know we, but by the help and assistance of the Spirit. Should
we pray for communion with God through Christ? should we pray for
faith, for justification by grace, and a truly sanctified heart?
none of these things know we. "For what man knoweth the things of
a man, save the spirit of man which is in him? even so the things
of God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of God" (I Cor 2:11). But
here, alas! the apostles speak of inward and spiritual things,
which the world knows not (Isa 29:11).
Again, as they know not the matter, &c., of prayer, without the
help of the Spirit; so neither know they the manner thereof without
the same; and therefore he adds, "We know not what we should pray
for as we ought"; but the Spirit helpeth our infirmities, with sighs
and groans which cannot be uttered. Mark here, they could not so
well and so fully come off in the manner of performing this duty,
as these in our days think they can.
The apostles, when they were at the best, yea, when the Holy Ghost
assisted them, yet then they were fain to come off with sighs and
groans, falling short of expressing their mind, but with sighs and
groans which cannot be uttered.
But here now, the wise men of our days are so well skilled as that
they have both the manner and matter of their prayers at their
finger-ends; setting such a prayer for such a day, and that twenty
years before it comes. One for Christmas, another for Easter, and
six days after that. They have also bounded how many syllables must
be said in every one of them at their public exercises. For each
saint's day, also, they have them ready for the generations yet
unborn to say. They can tell you, also, when you shall kneel, when
you shall stand, when you should abide in your seats, when you
should go up into the chancel, and what you should do when you come
there. All which the apostles came short of, as not being able to
compose so profound a manner; and that for this reason included in
this scripture, because the fear of God tied them to pray as they
ought.
"For we know not what we should pray for as we ought." Mark this,
"as we ought." For the not thinking of this word, or at least the
not understanding it in the spirit and truth of it, hath occasioned
these men to devise, as Jeroboam did, another way of worship, both
for matter and manner, than is revealed in the Word of God (I Kings
12:26-33). But, saith Paul, we must pray as we ought; and this
WE cannot do by all the art, skill, and cunning device of men or
angels. "For we know not what we should pray for as we ought, but
the Spirit"; nay, further, it must be "the Spirit ITSELF" that
helpeth our infirmities; not the Spirit and man's lusts; what man
of his own brain may imagine and devise, is one thing, and what they
are commanded, and ought to do, is another. Many ask and have not,
because they ask amiss; and so are never the nearer the enjoying
of those things they petition for (James 4:3). It is not to pray at
random that will put off God, or cause him to answer. While prayer
is making, God is searching the heart, to see from what root and
spirit it doth arise (I John 5:14). "And he that searcheth the heart
knoweth," that is, approveth only, the meaning "of the Spirit,
because he maketh intercession for the saints according to the
will of God." For in that which is according to his will only, he
heareth us, and in nothing else. And it is the Spirit only that can
teach us so to ask; it only being able to search out all things,
even the deep things of God. Without which Spirit, though we had a
thousand Common Prayer Books, yet we know not what we should pray
for as we ought, being accompanied with those infirmities that make
us absolutely incapable of such a work. Which infirmities, although
it is a hard thing to name them all, yet some of them are these
that follow.
Third. Nothing but the Spirit can show a man clearly his misery
by nature, and so put a man into a posture of prayer. Talk is but
talk, as we use to say, and so it is but mouth-worship, if there
be not a sense of misery, and that effectually too. O the cursed
hypocrisy that is in most hearts, and that accompanieth many
thousands of praying men that would be so looked upon in this day,
and all for want of a sense of their misery! But now the Spirit,
that will sweetly show the soul its misery, where it is, and what
is like to become of it, also the intolerableness of that condition.
For it is the Spirit that doth effectually convince of sin and
misery, without the Lord Jesus, and so puts the soul into a sweet,
sensible, affectionate way of praying to God according to his word
(John 16:7-9).
Fourth. If men did see their sins, yet without the help of the
Spirit they would not pray. For they would run away from God, with
Cain and Judas, and utterly despair of mercy, were it not for the
Spirit. When a man is indeed sensible of his sin, and God's curse,
then it is a hard thing to persuade him to pray; for, saith his
heart, "There is no hope," it is in vain to seek God (Jer 2:25;
18:12). I am so vile, so wretched, and so cursed a creature, that
I shall never be regarded! Now here comes the Spirit, and stayeth
the soul, helpeth it to hold up its face to God, by letting into
the heart some small sense of mercy to encourage it to go to God,
and hence it is called "the Comforter" (John 14:26).
Sixth. Because without the Spirit, though a man did see his misery,
and also the way to come to God; yet he would never be able to claim
a share in either God, Christ, or mercy, with God's approbation.
O how great a task is it, for a poor soul that becomes sensible
of sin and the wrath of God, to say in faith, but this one word,
"Father!" I tell you, however hypocrites think, yet the Christian
that is so indeed finds all the difficulty in this very thing,
it cannot say God is its Father. O! saith he, I dare not call him
Father; and hence it is that the Spirit must be sent into the hearts
of God's people for this very thing, to cry Father: it being too
great a work for any man to do knowingly and believingly without
it (Gal 4:6). When I say knowingly, I mean, knowing what it is to
be a child of God, and to be born again. And when I say believingly,
I mean, for the soul to believe, and that from good experience, that
the work of grace is wrought in him. This is the right calling of
God Father; and not as many do, to say in a babbling way, the Lord's
prayer (so called) by heart, as it lieth in the words of the book.
No, here is the life of prayer, when in or with the Spirit, a man
being made sensible of sin, and how to come to the Lord for mercy;
he comes, I say, in the strength of the Spirit, and crieth Father.
That one word spoken in faith, is better than a thousand prayers,
as men call them, written and read, in a formal, cold, lukewarm
way. O how far short are those people of being sensible of this,
who count it enough to teach themselves and children to say the
Lord's prayer, the creed, with other sayings; when, as God knows,
they are senseless of themselves, their misery, or what it is to
be brought to God through Christ! Ah, poor soul! Study your misery,
and cry to God to show you your confused blindness and ignorance,
before you be so rife in calling God your Father, or teaching
your children either so to say. And know, that to say God is your
Father, in a way of prayer or conference, without any experiment of
the work of grace on your souls, it is to say you are Jews and are
not, and so to lie. You say, Our Father; God saith, You blaspheme!
You say you are Jew, that is, true Christians; God saith, You
lie! "Behold I will make them of the synagogue of Satan, which say
they are Jews, and are not, but do lie" (Rev 3:9). "And I know the
blasphemy of them that say they are Jews, and are not, but are the
synagogue of Satan" (Rev 2:9). And so much the greater the sin is,
by how much the more the sinner boasts it with a pretended sanctity,
as the Jews did to Christ, in the 8th of John, which made Christ,
even in plain terms, to tell them their doom, for all their
hypocritical pretences (John 8:41-45). And yet forsooth every cursed
whoremaster, thief, and drunkard, swearer, and perjured person;
they that have not only been such in times past, but are even so
still: these I say, by some must be counted the only honest men,
and all because with their blasphemous throats, and hypocritical
hearts, they will come to church, and say, "Our Father!" Nay further,
these men, though every time they say to God, Our Father, do most
abominably blaspheme, yet they must be compelled thus to do. And
because others that are of more sober principles, scruple the truth
of such vain traditions; therefore they must be looked upon to be
the only enemies of God and the nation: when as it is their own
cursed superstition that doth set the great God against them, and
cause him to count them for his enemies (Isa 53:10). And yet just
like to Bonner, that blood-red persecutor, they commend, I say,
these wretches, although never so vile, if they close in with their
traditions, to be good churchmen, the honest subjects; while God's
people are, as it hath always been, looked upon to be a turbulent,
seditious, and factious people (Ezra 4:12-16).
(1.) It may be thy great prayer is to say, "Our Father which art
in heaven," &c. Dost thou know the meaning of the very first words
of this prayer? Canst thou indeed, with the rest of the saints,
cry, Our Father? Art thou truly born again? Hast thou received
the spirit of adoption? Dost thou see thyself in Christ, and canst
thou come to God as a member of him? Or art thou ignorant of these
things, and yet darest thou say, Our Father? Is not the devil thy
father? (John 8:44). And dost thou not do the deeds of the flesh?
And yet darest thou say to God, Our Father? Nay, art thou not a
desperate persecutor of the children of God? Hast thou not cursed
them in thine heart many a time? And yet dost thou out of thy
blasphemous throat suffer these words to come, even our Father? He
is their Father whom thou hatest and persecutest. But as the devil
presented himself amongst the sons of God, (Job 1), when they were
to present themselves before the Father, even our Father, so is it
now; because the saints were commanded to say, Our Father, therefore
all the blind ignorant rabble in the world, they must also use the
same words, Our Father.
(2.) And dost thou indeed say, "Hallowed be thy name" with thy
heart? Dost thou study, by all honest and lawful ways, to advance the
name, holiness, and majesty of God? Doth thy heart and conversation
agree with this passage? Dost thou strive to imitate Christ in all
the works of righteousness, which God doth command of thee, and
prompt thee forward to? It is so, if thou be one that can truly
with God's allowance cry, "Our Father." Or is it not the least of
thy thoughts all the day? And dost thou not clearly make it appear,
that thou art a cursed hypocrite, by condemning that with thy daily
practice, which thou pretendest in thy praying with thy dissembling
tongue?
(3.) Wouldst thou have the kingdom of God come indeed, and also his
will to be done in earth as it is in heaven? Nay, notwithstanding,
thou according to the form, sayest, Thy kingdom come, yet would it
not make thee ready to run mad, to hear the trumpet sound, to see
the dead arise, and thyself just now to go and appear before God,
to reckon for all the deeds thou hast done in the body? Nay, are
not the very thoughts of it altogether displeasing to thee? And if
God's will should be done on earth as it is in heaven, must it not
be thy ruin? There is never a rebel in heaven against God, and if
he should so deal on earth, must it not whirl thee down to hell?
And so of the rest of the petitions. Ah! How sadly would even
those men look, and with what terror would they walk up and down
the world, if they did but know the lying and blaspheming that
proceedeth out of their mouth, even in their most pretended sanctity?
The Lord awaken you, and teach you, poor souls, in all humility,
to take heed that you be not rash and unadvised with your heart,
and much more with your mouth! When you appear before God, as the
wise man saith, "Be not rash with thy mouth, and let not thine
heart be hasty to utter any thing," (Eccl 5:2); especially to call
God Father, without some blessed experience when thou comest before
God. But I pass this.
The want of this is that which God complains of; that they draw
nigh to him with their mouth, and honour him with their lips, but
their hearts were far from him (Isa 29:13; Eze 33), but chiefly
that they walk after the commandments and traditions of men, as
the scope of Matthew 15:8, 9 doth testify. And verily, may I but
speak my own experience, and from that tell you the difficulty of
praying to God as I ought, it is enough to make your poor, blind,
carnal men to entertain strange thoughts of me. For, as for my
heart, when I go to pray, I find it so loth to go to God, and when
it is with him, so loth to stay with him, that many times I am
forced in my prayers, first to beg of God that he would take mine
heart, and set it on himself in Christ, and when it is there, that
he would keep it there. Nay, many times I know not what to pray for,
I am so blind, nor how to pray, I am so ignorant; only, blessed be
grace, the Spirit helps our infirmities (Psa 86:11).
Ninth. The soul that doth rightly pray, it must be in and with
the help and strength of the Spirit; because it is impossible that
a man should express himself in prayer without it. When I say, it
is impossible for a man to express himself in prayer without it, I
mean, that it is impossible that the heart, in a sincere and sensible
affectionate way, should pour out itself before God, with those
groans and sighs that come from a truly praying heart, without
the assistance of the Spirit. It is not the mouth that is the main
thing to be looked at in prayer, but whether the heart is so full
of affection and earnestness in prayer with God, that it is impossible
to express their sense and desire; for then a man desires indeed,
when his desires are so strong, many, and mighty, that all the
words, tears, and groans that can come from the heart, cannot utter
them: "The Spirit--helpeth our infirmities,--and maketh intercession
for us with [sighs and] groanings which cannot be uttered" (Rom
8:26).
The best prayers have often more groans than words: and those
words that it hath are but a lean and shallow representation of the
heart, life, and spirit of that prayer. You do not find any words
of prayer, that we read of, come out of the mouth of Moses, when
he was going out of Egypt, and was followed by Pharaoh, and yet
he made heaven ring again with his cry (Exo 14:15). But it was
inexpressible and unsearchable groans and cryings of his soul in
and with the Spirit. God is the God of spirits, and his eyes look
further than at the outside of any duty whatsoever (Num 16:22). I
doubt this is but little thought on by the most of them that would
be looked upon as a praying people (I Sam 16:7).
The nearer a man comes in any work that God commands him to the doing
of it according to his will, so much the more hard and difficult
it is; and the reason is, because man, as man, is not able to do
it. But prayer, as aforesaid, is not only a duty, but one of the
most eminent duties, and therefore so much the more difficult:
therefore Paul knew what he said, when he said, "I will pray with
the Spirit." He knew well it was not what others writ or said that
could make him a praying person; nothing less than the Spirit could
do it.
Christ tells us, that men ought always to pray, and not to faint
(Luke 18:1). And again tells us, that this is one definition of
a hypocrite, that either he will not continue in prayer, or else
if he do it, it will not be in the power, that is, in the spirit
of prayer, but in the form, for a pretence only (Job 27:10; Matt
23:14). It is the easiest thing of a hundred to fall from the
power to the form, but it is the hardest thing of many to keep in
the life, spirit, and power of any one duty, especially prayer; that
is such a work, that a man without the help of the Spirit cannot
so much as pray once, much less continue, without it, in a sweet
praying frame, and in praying, so to pray as to have his prayers
ascend into the ears of the Lord God of Sabaoth.
Jacob did not only begin, but held it: "I will not let thee go,
unless thou bless me" (Gen 32). So did the rest of the godly (Hosea
12:4). But this could not be without the spirit of prayer. It is
through the Spirit that we have access to the Father (Eph 2:18).
THIRD. And now to the next thing, what it is to pray with the
Spirit, and to pray with the understanding also. For the apostle
puts a clear distinction between praying with the Spirit, and
praying with the Spirit and understanding: therefore when he saith,
"he will pray with the Spirit," he adds, "and I will pray with the
understanding ALSO." This distinction was occasioned through the
Corinthians not observing that it was their duty to do what they
did to the edification of themselves and others too: whereas they
did it for their own commendations. So I judge: for many of them
having extraordinary gifts, as to speak with divers tongues, &c.,
therefore they were more for those mighty gifts than they were
for the edifying of their brethren; which was the cause that Paul
wrote this chapter to them, to let them understand, that though
extraordinary gifts were excellent, yet to do what they did
to the edification of the church was more excellent. For, saith
the apostle, "if I pray in an unknown tongue, my spirit prayeth,
but my understanding," and also the understanding of others, "is
unfruitful" (I Cor 14:3, 4, 12, 19, 24, 25. Read the scope of the
whole chapter). Therefore, "I will pray with the Spirit, and I will
pray with the understanding also."
The people of God are not ignorant how many wiles, tricks, and
temptations the devil hath to make a poor soul, who is truly willing
to have the Lord Jesus Christ, and that upon Christ's terms too;
I say, to tempt that soul to be weary of seeking the face of God,
and to think that God is not willing to have mercy on such a one
as him. Ay, saith Satan, thou mayest pray indeed, but thou shalt
not prevail. Thou seest thine heart is hard, cold, dull, and dread;
thou dost not pray with the Spirit, thou dost not pray in good
earnest, thy thoughts are running after other things, when thou
pretendest to pray to God. Away hypocrite, go no further, it is but
in vain to strive any longer! Here now, if the soul be not well
informed in its understanding, it will presently cry out, "the
Lord hath forsaken me, and my Lord hath forgotten me" (Isa 49:14).
Whereas the soul rightly informed and enlightened saith, Well,
I will seek the Lord, and wait; I will not leave off, though the
Lord keep silence, and speak not one word of comfort (Isa 40:27).
He loved Jacob dearly, and yet he made him wrestle before he had
the blessing (Gen 32:25-27). Seeming delays in God are no tokens
of his displeasure; he may hide his face from his dearest saints
(Isa 8:17). He loves to keep his people praying, and to find them
ever knocking at the gate of heaven; it may be, says the soul, the
Lord tries me, or he loves to hear me groan out my condition before
him.
The woman of Canaan would not take seeming denials for real ones;
she knew the Lord was gracious, and the Lord will avenge his people,
though he bear long with them (Luke 18:1-6). The Lord hath waited
longer upon me than I have waited upon him; and thus it was with
David, "I waited patiently," saith he; that is, it was long before
the Lord answered me, though at the last "he inclined" his ear "unto
me, and heard my cry" (Psa 40:1). And the most excellent remedy
for this is, an understanding well informed and enlightened. Alas,
how many poor souls are there in the world, that truly fear the
Lord, who, because they are not well informed in their understanding,
are oft ready to give up all for lost, upon almost every trick and
temptation of Satan! The Lord pity them, and help them to "pray
with the Spirit, and with the understanding also." Much of mine
own experience could I here discover; when I have been in my fits
of agony of spirit, I have been strongly persuaded to leave off,
and to seek the Lord no longer;10 but being made to understand
what great sinners the Lord hath had mercy upon, and how large his
promises were still to sinners; and that it was not the whole, but
the sick, not the righteous, but the sinner, not the full, but the
empty, that he extended his grace and mercy unto. This made me,
through the assistance of his Holy Spirit, to cleave to him, to hang
upon him, and yet to cry, though for the present he made no answer;
and the Lord help all his poor, tempted, and afflicted people to
do the like, and to continue, though it be long, according to the
saying of the prophet (Hab 2:3). And to help them (to that end) to
pray, not by the inventions of men, and their stinted forms, but
"with the Spirit, and with the understanding also."
Query First. But what would you have us poor creatures to do that
cannot tell how to pray? The Lord knows I know not either how to
pray, or what to pray for.
Answ. Poor heart! thou canst not, thou complainest, pray. Canst
thou see thy misery? Hath God showed thee that thou art by nature
under the curse of his law? If so, do not mistake, I know thou dost
groan and that most bitterly. I am persuaded thou canst scarcely
be found doing any thing in thy calling, but prayer breaketh from
thy heart. Have not thy groans gone up to heaven from every corner
of thy house? (Rom 8:26). I know it is thus; and so also doth thine
own sorrowful heart witness thy tears, thy forgetfulness of thy
calling, &c. Is not thy heart so full of desires after the things
of another world, that many times thou dost even forget the things
of this world? Prithee read this scripture, Job 23:12.
Query Second. Yea, but when I go into secret, and intend to pour
out my soul before God, I can scarce say anything at all.
Answ. 1. Ah! Sweet soul! It is not thy words that God so much
regards, as that he will not mind thee, except thou comest before
him with some eloquent oration. His eye is on the brokenness of
thine heart; and that it is that makes the very bowels of the Lord
to run over. "A broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not
despise" (Psa 51:17).
Objection. But though you have seemed to speak against any other
way of praying but by the Spirit, yet here you yourself can give
direction how to pray.
Answ. My judgment is, that men go the wrong way to teach their
children to pray, in going about so soon to teach them any set
company of words, as is the common use of poor creatures to do.
Ah! Poor sweet babes, the Lord open their eyes, and make them
holy Christians. Saith David, "Come ye children, hearken unto me;
I will teach you the fear of the Lord" (Psa 34:11). He doth not
say, I will muzzle you up in a form of prayer; but "I will teach
you the fear of the Lord"; which is, to see their sad states by
nature, and to be instructed in the truth of the gospel, which doth
through the Spirit beget prayer in every one that in truth learns
it. And the more you teach them this, the more will their hearts
run out to God in prayer. God never did account Paul a praying
man, until he was a convinced and converted man; no more will it
be with any else (Acts 9:11).
Object. But we find that the disciples desired that Christ would
teach them to pray, as John also taught his disciples; and that
thereupon he taught them that form called the LORD'S PRAYER.
Object. But Christ bids pray for the Spirit; this implieth that
men without the Spirit may notwithstanding pray and be heard. (See
Luke 11:9-13).
Quest. Then would you have none pray but those that know they are
the disciples of Christ?
Answ. Yes.
1. Let every soul that would be saved pour out itself to God, though
it cannot through temptation conclude itself a child of God. And,
Thus have I briefly showed you, FIRST, What prayer is; SECOND, What
it is to pray with the Spirit; THIRD, What it is to pray with the
Spirit, and with the understanding also.
For the first to inform you; as prayer is the duty of every one of
the children of God, and carried on by the Spirit of Christ in the
soul; so every one that doth but offer to take upon him to pray to
the Lord, had need be very wary, and go about that work especially
with the dread of God, as well as with hopes of the mercy of God
through Jesus Christ.
(2.) Them also that seek repute and applause for their eloquent
terms, and seek more to tickle the ears and heads of their hearers
than anything else. These be they that pray to be heard of men, and
have all their reward already (Matt 6:5). These persons are discovered
thus, (a.) They eye only their auditory in their expressions. (b.)
They look for commendation when they have done. (c.) Their hearts
either rise or fall according to their praise or enlargement. (d.)
The length of their prayer pleaseth them; and that it might be
long, they will vainly repeat things over and over (Matt 6:7). They
study for enlargements, but look not from what heart they come;
they look for returns, but it is the windy applause of men. And
therefore they love not to be in their chamber, but among company:
and if at any time conscience thrusts them into their closet, yet
hypocrisy will cause them to be heard in the streets; and when their
mouths have done going their prayers are ended; for they wait not
to hearken what the Lord will say (Psa 85:8).
4. Another sort of prayers there are that are not answered; and
those are such as are made by men, and presented to God in their
own persons only, without their appearing in the Lord Jesus. For
though God hath appointed prayer, and promised to hear the prayer
of the creature, yet not the prayer of any creature that comes not
in Christ. "If ye shall ask anything in my name." And whether ye
eat or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all in the name of the Lord
Jesus Christ (Col 3:17). "If ye shall ask anything in my name," &c.,
(John 14:13, 14), though you be never so devout, zealous, earnest
and constant in prayer, yet it is in Christ only that you must be
heard and accepted. But, alas! the most of men know not what it is
to come to him in the name of the Lord Jesus, which is the reason
they either live wicked, pray wicked, and also die wicked. Or else,
that they attain to nothing else but what a mere natural man may
attain unto, as to be exact in word and deed betwixt man and man,
and only with the righteousness of the law to appear before God.
5. The last thing that hindereth prayer is, the form of it without
the power. It is an easy thing for men to be very hot for such
things as forms of prayer, as they are written in a book; but yet
they are altogether forgetful to inquire with themselves, whether
they have the spirit and power of prayer. These men are like a
painted man, and their prayers like a false voice. They in person
appear as hypocrites, and their prayers are an abomination (Prov
28:9). When they say they have been pouring out their souls to God
he saith they have been howling like dogs (Hosea 7:14).
When therefore thou intendest, or art minded to pray to the Lord of
heaven and earth, consider these following particulars. 1. Consider
seriously what thou wantest. Do not, as many who in their words
only beat the air, and ask for such things as indeed they do not
desire, nor see that they stand in need thereof. 2. When thou seest
what thou wantest, keep to that, and take heed thou pray sensibly.
Answ. 2. Take heed that thy heart go to God as well as thy mouth.
Let not thy mouth go any further than thou strivest to draw thine
heart along with it. David would lift his heart and soul to the
Lord; and good reason; for so far as a man's mouth goeth along
without his heart, so far it is but lip-labour only; and though
God calls for, and accepteth the calves of the lips, yet the lips
without the heart argueth, not only senselessness, but our being
without sense of our senselessness; and therefore if thou hast a
mind to enlarge in prayer before God, see that it be with thy heart.
Caution 1. And the first is, take heed thou do not throw off prayer,
through sudden persuasions that thou hast not the Spirit, neither
prayest thereby. It is the great work of the devil to do his best,
or rather worst, against the best prayers. He will flatter your
false dissembling hypocrites, and feed them with a thousand fancies
of well-doing, when their very duties of prayer, and all other,
stink in the nostrils of God, when he stands at a poor Joshua's
hand to resist him, that is, to persuade him, that neither his
person nor performances are accepted of God (Isa 65:5; Zech 3:1).
Take heed, therefore, of such false conclusions and groundless
discouragements; and though such persuasions do come in upon thy
spirit, be so far from being discouraged by them, that thou use them
to put thee upon further sincerity and restlessness of spirit, in
thy approaching to God.
Why so? Because, though God was upon the mercy-seat, yet he
was perfectly just as well as merciful. Now the blood was to stop
justice from running out upon the persons concerned in the intercession
of the high-priest, as in Leviticus 16:13-17, to signify that all
thine unworthiness that thou fearest should not hinder thee from
coming to God in Christ for mercy. Thou criest out that thou art
vile, and therefore God will not regard thy prayers; it is true,
if thou delight in thy vileness, and come to God out of a mere
pretence. But if from a sense of thy vileness thou do pour out thy
heart to God, desiring to be saved from the guilt, and cleansed
from the filth, with all thy heart; fear not, thy vileness will not
cause the Lord to stop his ear from hearing of thee. The value of
the blood of Christ which is sprinkled upon the mercy-seat stops
the course of justice, and opens a floodgate for the mercy of the
Lord to be extended unto thee. Thou hast therefore, as aforesaid,
"boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus," that
hath made "a new and living way" for thee, thou shalt not die (Heb
10:19, 20).
1. This speaks sadly to you who never pray at all. "I will pray,"
saith the apostle, and so saith the heart of them that are Christians.
Thou then art not a Christian that art not a praying person. The
promise is that every one that is righteous shall pray (Psa 32:6).
Thou then art a wicked wretch that prayest not. Jacob got the name
of Israel by wrestling with God (Gen 32). And all his children bare
that name with him (Gal 6:16). But the people that forget prayer,
that call not on the name of the Lord, they have prayer made for
them, but it is such as this, "Pour out thy fury upon the heathen,"
O Lord, "and upon the families that call not on thy name" (Jer 10:25).
How likest thou this, O thou that art so far off from pouring out
thine heart before God, that thou goest to bed like a dog, and risest
like a hog, or a sot, and forgettest to call upon God? What wilt
thou do when thou shalt be damned in hell, because thou couldst
not find in thine heart to ask for heaven? Who will grieve for thy
sorrow, that didst not count mercy worth asking for? I tell thee,
the ravens, the dogs, &c., shall rise up in judgment against thee,
for they will, according to their kind, make signs, and a noise
for something to refresh them when they want it; but thou hast not
the heart to ask for heaven, though thou must eternally perish in
hell, if thou hast it not.
2. This rebukes you that make it your business to slight, mock at,
and undervalue the Spirit, and praying by that. What will you do,
when God shall come to reckon for these things? You count it high
treason to speak but a word against the king, nay, you tremble at
the thought of it; and yet in the meantime you will blaspheme the
Spirit of the Lord. Is God indeed to be dallied with, and will the
end be pleasant unto you? Did God send his Holy Spirit into the
hearts of his people, to that end that you should taunt at it? Is
this to serve God? And doth this demonstrate the reformation of
your church? Nay, is it not the mark of implacable reprobates? O
fearful! Can you not be content to be damned for your sins against
the law, but you must sin against the Holy Ghost?
Must the holy, harmless, and undefiled Spirit of grace, the nature
of God, the promise of Christ, the Comforter of his children, that
without which no man can do any service acceptable to the Father--must
this, I say, be the burthen of your song, to taunt, deride, and
mock at? If God sent Korah and his company headlong to hell for
speaking against Moses and Aaron, do you that mock at the Spirit
of Christ think to escape unpunished? (Num 16; Heb 10:29). Did
you never read what God did to Ananias and Sapphira for telling
but one lie against it? (Acts 5:1-8). Also to Simon Magus for but
undervaluing of it? (Acts 8:18-22). And will thy sin be a virtue,
or go unrewarded with vengeance, that makest it thy business to rage
against, and oppose its office, service, and help, that it giveth
unto the children of God? It is a fearful thing to do despite unto
the Spirit of grace (Compare Matt 12:31, with Mark 3:28-30).
If you desire the clearing of the minor, look into the jails in
England, and into the alehouses of the same; and I trow you will
find those that plead for the Spirit of prayer in the jail, and them
that look after the form of men's inventions only in the alehouse.
It is evident also by the silencing of God's dear ministers, though
never so powerfully enabled by the Spirit of prayer, if they in
conscience cannot admit of that form of Common Prayer. If this be
not an exalting the Common Prayer Book above either praying by the
Spirit, or preaching the Word, I have taken my mark amiss. It is
not pleasant for me to dwell on this. The Lord in mercy turn the
hearts of the people to seek more after the Spirit of prayer; and
in the strength of that, to pour out their souls before the Lord.
Only let me say it is a sad sign, that that which is one of the
most eminent parts of the pretended worship of God is Antichristian,
when it hath nothing but the tradition of men, and the strength of
persecution, to uphold or plead for it.
THE CONCLUSION.
FOOTNOTES:
7 See Mr. Fox's citation of the mass, in the last volume of the
Book of Martyrs.
8 Jesus Christ has opened the way to God the Father, by the
sacrifice He made for us upon the cross. The holiness and justice
of God need not frighten sinners and keep them back. Only let them
cry to God in the name of Jesus, only let them plead the atoning
blood of Jesus, and they shall find God upon a throne of grace,
willing and ready to hear. The name of Jesus is a never-failing
passport to our prayers. In that name a man may draw near to God
with boldness, and ask with confidence. God has engaged to hear him.
Reader, think of this; is not this encouragement?--J. C. Ryle--ED.
***
OR,
The churches of Christ are very much indebted to the Rev. Charles
Doe, for the preservation and publishing of this treatise. It
formed one of the ten excellent manuscripts left by Bunyan at his
decease, prepared for the press. Having treated on the nature of
prayer in his searching work on 'praying with the spirit and with the
understanding also,' in which he proves from the sacred scriptures
that prayer cannot be merely read or said, but must be the spontaneous
effusions of the heart principally in private, or at the domestic
altar upon set times in the morning and evening, or more publicly
in social meetings for praise and prayer, or in the public assembly
of the church--all being acceptable, only as it is offered up in
spirit and in truth--he now directs us to the proper medium which
our mental powers should use in drawing near to the Divine Being. We
have to approach the universal spirit, the creator, the preserver,
the bountiful benefactor of our race; and, at the same time,
the infinitely holy one, the supreme judge and just rewarder or
punisher of all creatures. How shall we, who are impure and unclean
by nature and by practice, draw near unto him who is so infinitely
holy? Others of our race who were equally guilty have held acceptable
converse with God, and received special marks of his favour. We
all know that a talented man, high in office, retired at certain
times for prayer; this gave offence, and a law was made, by which
prayer to God was interdicted for thirty days. He refused obedience
to a human law which interfered with the divine authority, and
for this he was cast into the den of lions; but they hurt him not,
although they devoured his persecutors. When a beloved minister
was seized and imprisoned for his love to Christ, the church held
a prayer meeting on his account, and while they were praying God
sent his angel to the prison. In vain four quaternions of soldiers
kept guard, two of them in the prisoner's cell, while the servant
of Christ, who was loaded with chains and doomed to an ignominious
death, slept sweetly between the armed men. The angel awakes him,
his chains fall off, no noise can awake his guard, the prison
doors open, and he was restored to his beloved charge. They were
yet imploring his deliverance, when he stood in their midst to tell
the wondrous miracle, wrought in answer to their prayer. Again,
two of their much-loved ministers were seized and beaten, and cast
into jail, their feet being made fast in the stocks. In the dark
hour of midnight they prayed and praised God, when an earthquake
was sent, which shook the prison and threw open its doors, and the
jailor, with his house, became converts to the faith. Millions of
instances might have been recorded of prayer heard and answered.
The child Samuel, and also Ishmael. The Magdalene. The thief on the
cross. Ananias, who was directed to relieve the stricken persecutor
Saul, for 'behold he prayeth.' But innumerable prayers have been
read and offered up which have not been answered. What then is the
acceptable form, and what the appointed medium consecrated for our
access to God, by which prayer is sanctified and accepted? If ye
love me, saith the Saviour, keep my commandments, and whatsoever
ye shall ask IN MY NAME that will I do. A sense of our want and
unworthiness leads us to God in that new and living way consecrated
by Christ though the veil, that is to say, his flesh (Heb 10:20).
By that way we can 'come boldly,' because it is 'a throne of grace,'
and there and there only we can 'obtain mercy and find grace to
help in time of need.' Wondrous throne! Blessed encouragement to
the poor pilgrim, traversing the desert surrounded by enemies, his
own heart by nature being one of the most formidable of them!
GEO. OFFOR.
This epistle is indited and left to the church by the Holy Ghost,
to show particularly, and more distinctly, the high priesthood
of Jesus Christ, and the excellent benefits that his people have
thereby. In which both the excellency of his person, and transcendent
glory of his office, beyond either priest or priesthood of the law,
is largely set forth before us, in chapter 1:2, &c.
FIRST, That God hath more thrones than one; else the throne of
grace need not to be specified by name. 'Let us come unto the throne
of grace.' SECOND, That the godly can distinguish one throne from
another. For the throne here is not set forth by where or what
signs it should be known; it is only propounded to us by its name,
and so left for saints to make their approach unto it: 'Let us come
unto the throne of grace.' THIRD, The third thing is, the persons
intended by this exhortation, 'Let us therefore come.' Us: What us?
or who are they that by this exhortation are called upon to come?
'Let us.' FOURTH, The manner of the coming of these persons to this
throne of grace; and that is through the veil, boldly, confidently:
'Let us come boldly unto the throne of grace.' FIFTH, the motive
to this exhortation; and that is twofold, First, Because we have
so great an high priest, one that cannot but be touched with the
feeling of our infirmities: 'Let us therefore come boldly unto the
throne of grace.' And, second, because we are sure to speed: 'That
we may obtain mercy, and find grace,' &c. I shall, as God shall
help me, handle these things in order.
FIRST. For the first, That God hath more thrones than one. He hath
a throne in heaven, and a throne on earth: 'The Lord's throne is
in heaven,' and 'they shall call Jerusalem the throne of the Lord'
(Psa 11:4; Jer 3:17). He ruleth over the angels; he ruleth in his
church. 'He ruleth in Jacob, unto the ends of the earth' (Psa
59:13). Yea, he has a throne and seat of majesty among the princes
and great ones of the world. He ruleth or 'judgeth among the gods'
(Psa 82:1). There is a throne for him as a Father, and a throne
for Christ as a giver of reward to all faithful and overcoming
Christians: 'To him that overcometh, will I grant to sit with me in
my throne, even as I also overcame, and am set down with my Father
in his throne' (Rev 3:21).
Wherefore it is not amiss that I give you this hint, because it may
tend to inform unwary Christians, when they go to God, that they
address not themselves to him at rovers, or at random; but that
when they come to him for benefits, they direct their prayer to the
throne of grace, or to God as considered on a throne of grace.[1]
For he is not to be found a God merciful and gracious, but as he
is on the throne of grace. This is his holy place, out of which he
is terrible to the sons of men, and cannot be gracious unto them.
For as when he shall sit at the last day upon his throne of judgment,
he will neither be moved with the tears of misery of the world to
do any thing for them, that in the least will have a tendency to a
relaxation of the least part of their sorrow; so now let men take
him where they will, or consider him as they list, he gives no
grace, no special grace, but as considered on the throne of grace:
wherefore they that will pray, and speed, they must come to a
throne of grace: to a God that sitteth on a throne of grace: 'Let
us therefore come boldly to the throne of grace, that we may obtain,'
&c.
Were there no objects of pity among those that in the old world
perished by the flood, or that in Sodom were burned with fire from
heaven? doubtless, according to our apprehension, there were many:
but Noah, and he only, found grace in God's eyes; not because that
of himself he was better than the rest, but God acted as a gracious
prince towards him, and let him share in mercy of his own sovereign
will and pleasure. But this at first was not so fully made manifest
as it was afterwards. Wherefore the propitiatory was not called, as
here, a throne of grace, but a mercy-seat, albeit there was great
glory in these terms also; for, by mercy-seat was showed, not only
that God had compassion for men, but that also to be good was as
his continual resting-place, whither he would at length retire, and
where he would sit down and abide, whatever terrible or troublesome
work for his church was on the wheel[3] at present. For a seat is
a place of rest, yea, is prepared for that end; and in that here
mercy is called that seat, it is to show, as I said, that whatever
work is on the wheel in the world, let it be never so dreadful and
amazing, yet to God's church it shall end in mercy, for that is
God's resting-place. Wherefore after God had so severely threatened
and punished his church under the name of a whorish woman, as you
may read in the prophet Ezekiel, he saith, 'So will I make my fury
toward thee to rest, and my jealousy shall depart from thee; and I
will be quiet, and will be no more angry.' And again, speaking of
the same people and of the same punishments, he saith, 'Nevertheless,
I will remember my covenant with thee in the days of thy youth,
and I will establish unto thee an everlasting covenant.' And again,
'I will establish my covenant with thee, and thou shalt know that
I am the Lord; that thou mayest remember and be confounded, and never
open thy mouth any more because of thy shame, when I am pacified
toward thee for all that thou hast done, saith the Lord God' (Eze
16:42,60-63). These, with many more places, show that mercy is
God's place of rest, and thither he will retire at last, and from
thence will bless his church, his people.
But yet these terms, a throne, the throne of grace, doth more exceed
in glory: not only because the word grace shows that God, by all
that he doth towards us in saving and forgiving, acts freely as
the highest Lord, and of his own good-will and pleasure, but also
for that he now saith, that his grace is become a king, a throne of
grace. A throne is not only a seat for rest, but a place of dignity
and authority. This is known to all. Wherefore by this word, a
throne, or the throne of grace, is intimated, that God ruleth and
governeth by his grace. And this he can justly do: 'Grace reigns
through righteousness, unto eternal life,[4] through Jesus Christ
out Lord' (Rom 5:21). So then, in that here is mention made of
a throne of grace, it showeth that sin, and Satan, and death, and
hell, must needs be subdued. For these last mentioned are but weakness
and destruction; but grace is life, and the absolute sovereign over
all these to the ruling of them utterly down. A throne of grace!
But this then God plainly declareth, that he is resolved this way
to rule, and that he pointeth at sin as his deadly foe: and if
so, then, 'where sin aboundeth, grace must much more abound' (Rom
5:20).[5] For it is the wisdom and discretion of all that rule, to
fortify themselves against them that rebel against them what they
can. Wherefore he saith again, 'Sin shall not have dominion over
you; for ye are not under the law, but under grace' (Rom 6:14).
Sin seeks for the dominion, and grace seeks for the dominion; but
sin shall not rule, because it has no throne in the church among
the godly. Grace is king. Grace has the throne, and the people of
God are not under the dominion of sin, but of the grace of God,
the which they are here implicitly bid to acknowledge, in that they
are bid to come boldly to it for help: 'That we may obtain mercy,
and find grace to help; to help in time of need.' For as from the
hand and power of the king comes help and succour to the subject,
when assaulted by an enemy; so from the throne of grace, or from
grace as it reigns, comes the help and health of God's people.
Hence it is said again, 'A glorious high throne from the beginning
is the place of our sanctuary' (Jer 17:12). Here then the saints
take shelter from the roaring of the devil, from the raging of
their lusts, and from the fury of the wicked. That also is a very
notable place, 'He will subdue our iniquities; and thou wilt cast
all their sins into the depths of the sea' (Micah 7:19). He speaks
here of God as solacing himself in mercy, and as delighting of himself
in the salvation of his people, and that without comparison: 'Who
is a God like unto thee, that pardoneth iniquity, and passeth by
the transgression of the remnant of his heritage? he retaineth not
his anger for ever, because he delighteth in mercy' (Micah 7:18).
Thus is mercy and grace got into the throne, reigns, and will
assuredly conquer all; yea, will conquer, and that with a shout.
'Mercy rejoiceth against judgment' (James 2:13). Yea, glorieth
when it getteth the victory of sin, and subdueth the sinner unto
God and to his own salvation, as is yet more fully showed in the
parable of the prodigal son (Luke 15). But this, briefly to show
you something of the nature of the terms, and what must necessarily
be implied thereby.
2. The text implies, that at certain times the most godly man in
the world may be hard put to it by the sin that dwelleth in him;
yea, so hard put to it, as that there can be no ways to save himself
from a fall, but by imploring heaven and the throne of grace for
help. This is called the needy time, the time when the wayfaring
man that knocked at David's door shall knock at ours (2 Sam 12);
or when we are got into the sieve into which Satan did get Peter
(Luke 22:31); or when those fists are about our ears that were
about Paul's; and when that thorn pricks us that Paul said was in
his flesh (2 Cor 12:7,8). But why, or how comes it to pass, that
the godly are so hard put to it at these times, but because there
is in them, that is, in their flesh, no good thing, but consequently
all aptness to close in with the devil and his suggestions, to the
overthrow of the soul? But now here we are presented with a throne
of grace, unto which, as presented with a throne of grace, unto
which, as David says, we must 'continually resort'; and that is the
way to obtain relief, and to find help in time of need (Psa 71:3).
2. This also tendeth to set an edge upon prayer, and to make us the
more fervent in spirit when we come to the throne of grace. Should
a king ordain that the axe and halter should be before all those
that supplicate him for mercy, it would put yet an edge upon all
their petitions for his grace, and make them yet the more humbly
and fervently implore his majesty for favour. But, behold, the
mercy-seat stands above, is set up above the ark and testimony
that is in it. Here, therefore, we have encouragement to look for
good. For observe, though here is the law, and that too in the
holiest of all, whither we go; yet above it is the mercy-seat and
throne of grace triumphant, unto which we should look, and to which
we should direct our prayers. Let us therefore come boldly to the
throne of grace, notwithstanding the ark and testimony is by; for
the law cannot hurt us when grace is so nigh; besides, God is now
not in the law, but upon the throne of grace that is above it, to
gave forth pardons, and grace, and helps at a time of need.
This, then, may serve to inform some whereabout they are, when they
are in their closets, and at prayer. Art thou most dejected when
thou art at prayer? Hear me, thou art not far from the throne of
grace; for thy dejection proceedeth from thy looking into the ark,
into which God hath ordained that whosoever looks shall die (1 Sam
6:19). Now if thou art indeed so near as to see thy sins, by thy
reading of thyself by the tables in the ark, cast but up thine eyes
a little higher, and behold, there is the mercy-seat and throne of
grace to which thou wouldest come, and by which thou must be saved.
When David came to pray to God, he said he would direct his prayer
to God, and would look up (Psa 5:3). As who should say, When I pray,
I will say to my prayers, O my prayers, mount up, stay not at the
ark of the testimony, for there is the law and condemnation; but
soar aloft to the throne that stands above, for there is God, and
there is grace displayed, and there thou mayest obtain what is
necessary to help in time of need. Some, indeed, there be that know
not what these things mean; they never read their sin nor condemnation
for it; when they are upon their knees at their devotion, and so
are neither dejected at the sight of what they are, nor driven with
sense of things to look higher for help at need; for need, indeed,
they see none. Of such I shall say, they are not concerned in our
text, nor can they come hither before they have been prepared so
to do, as may appear before we come to an end.
SECOND. And thus have I showed you what this throne of grace is,
and where it stands. And now I shall come to show you how you shall
find it, and know when you are come to it, by several other things.
Now here again, in the third place, we find a rainbow, a rainbow round
about the throne; round about the throne of grace. A rainbow--that
is, a token of the covenant, a token of the covenant of grace in
its lastingness; and that token is the appearance of the man Christ.
The appearance--that is, his robes, his righteousness, 'from the
appearance of his loins even upward,' and 'from the appearance of
his loins even downward' (Eze 1:27); even down to the foot, as you
have it in the book of the Revelation (1:13). 'As the appearance
of the bow that is in the cloud in the day of rain, so was the
appearance of the brightness round about. This was the appearance
of the likeness of the glory of the Lord' (Eze 1:28). The sum then
is, that by the rainbow round about the throne of grace upon which
God sitteth to hear and answer the petitions of his people, we are
to understand the obedential righteousness of Jesus Christ, which
in the days of his flesh he wrought out and accomplished for
his people; by which God's justice is satisfied, and their person
justified, and they so made acceptable to him. This righteousness,
that shines in God's eyes more glorious than the rainbow in the
cloud doth in ours, saith John, is round about the throne. But for
what purpose? Why, to be looked upon. But who must look upon it?
Why, God and his people; the people when they come to pray, and
God when he is about to hear and give. 'And the bow shall be in
the cloud'; says God, 'and I will look upon it, that I may remember
the everlasting covenant between God and every living creature of
all flesh that is upon the earth' (Gen 9:16). And, I say, as the
bow is for God to look on, so it is also for our sight to behold.
A rainbow round about the throne, in sight; in whose sight? in
John's and his companions, like unto an emerald.
One word more of the rainbow, and then to some other things. As
here you read that the rainbow is round about the throne; so if
you read on even in the same place, you shall find the glorious
effects thereof to be far more than all that I have said. But,
Here then you have before the throne, that is, the throne or
mercy-seat, the high priest; for there it was that God appointed
that the altar of incense, or that to burn incense on, should
be placed (Exo 30:1-7). This incense-altar in the type was to be
overlaid with gold; but here the Holy Ghost implies, that it is all
of gold. This throne then is the mercy-seat, or throne of grace,
to which we are bid to come; and, as you see, here is the angel,
the high priest with his golden censer, and his incense, ready to
wait upon us. For so the text implies, for he is there to offer
his incense with the prayers of all saints that are waiting without
at his time of offering incense within (Luke 1:10). So, then, at
the throne of grace, or before it, stands the high priest of our
propitiation, Christ Jesus, with his golden censer in his hand,
full of incense, therewith to perfume the prayers of saints, that
come thither for grace and mercy to help in time of need.[8] And
he stands there, as you see, under the name of an angel, for he is
the angel of God's presence, and messenger of his covenant.
Nor will it out of my mind, but that his wearing the rainbow
upon his head doth somewhat belong to him as priest, his priestly
vestments being for glory and beauty, as afore was said, compared
to the colour of it (Rev 10:1; Eze 1). But why doth he wear
the rainbow upon his head; but to show, that the sign, that the
everlastingness of the covenant of grace is only to be found in
him; that he wears it as a mitre or frontlet of gold, and can always
plead it with acceptance to God, and for the subduing of the world
and good of his people. But,
And thou must look for this, the rather because without blood is
no remission. He that thinks to find grace at God's hand, and yet
enters not into the holiest by the blood of Jesus, will find himself
mistaken, and will find a DEAD,[9] instead of 'a living way' (Heb
10:19). For if not anything below, or besides blood, can yield
remission on God's part, how should remission be received by us
without our acting faith therein? We are justified by his blood,
through faith in his blood (Rom 5:6-9). Wherefore, I say, look
when thou approachest the throne of grace, that thou give diligence
to see for the Lamb; that is, 'as it had been slain' in the midst
of the throne of grace; and then thou wilt have, not only a sign
that thou presentest thy supplications to God, where, and as thou
shouldst; but there also wilt thou meet with matter to break,
to soften, to bend, to bow, and to make thy heart as thou wouldst
have it; for if the blood of a goat will, as some say, dissolve an
adamant, a stone that is harder than flint;[10] shall not the sight
of 'a Lamb as it had been slain' much more dissolve and melt down
the spirit of that man that is upon his knees before the throne
of grace for mercy; especially when he shall see, that not his
prayers, not his tears, not his wants, but the blood of the Lamb,
has prevailed with a God of grace to give mercy and grace to an
undeserving man? This then is the third sign by which thou shalt
know when thou art at the throne of grace: that throne is sprinkled
with blood; yea, in the midst of that throne there is to be seen
to this day, a Lamb as it had been slain; and he is in the midst
of it, to feed those that come to that throne, and to lead them by
and to 'living fountains of waters' (Rev 7:17). Wherefore,
But there is also by this phrase or term briefly touched the present
state of them that shall come hither to drink; they are not the
healthful, but the sick. It is with the throne of grace, as it is
with the Bath, and other places of sovereign and healing waters,
they are most coveted of them that are diseased, and do also show
their virtues on those that have their health and limbs; so, I say,
is the throne of grace; its waters are for healing, for soul-healing,
that is their virtue (Eze 47:8,9). Wherefore, as at those waters
above mentioned, the lame leave their crutches, and the sick [obtain]
such signs of their recovery as may be a sign of their receiving
health and cure there; so at the throne of grace, it is where true
penitents, and those that are sick for mercy, do leave their sighs
and tears; 'and the Lamb that is in the midst of the throne shall
feed them, and shall lead them unto living fountains of waters;
and God shall,' there, 'wipe away all tears from their eyes' (Rev
7:17). Wherefore, as Joseph washed his face, and dried his tears
away, when he saw his brother Benjamin, so all God's saints shall
here, even at the throne of grace, where God's Benjamin, or the
Son of his right hand, is, wash their souls from sorrow, and have
their tears wiped from their eyes. Wherefore, O thou that are
diseased, afflicted, and that wouldst live, come by Jesus to God
as merciful and gracious; yea, look for this river when thou art
upon thy knees before him, for by that thou shalt find whereabout
is the throne of grace, and so where thou mayest find mercy.
This abundance the throne of grace yieldeth for the help and health
of such as would have the water of life to drink, and to cure their
diseases withal: it yields a river of water of life. Moreover,
since grace is said here to proceed as a river from the throne of
God and of the Lamb, it is to show the commonness of it; rivers you
know are common in the stream, however they are at the head (Judg
5). And to show the commonness of it, the apostle calls it 'the
common salvation'; and it is said in Ezekiel and Zecharias, to go
forth to the desert, and into the sea, the world, to heal the beasts
and fish of all kinds that are there (Eze 47:8; Zech 14:8). This,
therefore, is a text that shows us what it is to come to a throne,
where the token of the covenant of grace is, where the high priest
ministereth, and in the midst of which there is a Lamb, 'as it had
been slain': for from thence there cometh not drops, nor showers,
but rivers of the grace of God, a river of water of life.
These words also show us, that this water of itself can do without
a mixture of anything of ours. What comes from this throne of grace
is pure grace, and nothing else; clear grace, free grace, grace
that is not mixed, nor need be mixed with works of righteousness
which we have done; it is of itself sufficient to answer all our
wants, to heal all our diseases, and to help us at a time of need.
It is grace that chooses, it is grace that calleth, it is grace that
preserveth, and it is grace that brings to glory: even the grace
that like a river of water of life proceedeth from this throne. And
hence it is, that from first to last, we must cry, 'Grace, grace
unto it!'[11]
5. 'And they had on their heads crowns of gold' (Rev 4:4). This
denotes their victory, and also that they are kings, and as kings
shall reign with him for ever and ever (Rev 5:10).
6. But what! were they silent? did they say, did they do nothing
while they sat before the throne? Yes, they were appointed to be
singers there. This was signified by the four and twenty that we
made mention of before, who with their sons were instructed in the
songs of the Lord, and all that were cunning to do so then, were two
hundred fourscore and eight (1 Chron 25:7). These were the figure
of that hundred forty and four thousand redeemed from the earth.
For as the first four and twenty, and their sons, are said to sing
and to play upon cymbals, psalteries, and harps; and as they are
there said to be instructed and cunning in the songs of the Lord;
so these that sit before the throne are said also to sing with
harps in their hands their song before the throne; and such song
it was, and so cunningly did they sing it, that 'no man could learn
it, but the hundred and forty and four thousand which were redeemed
from the earth' (Rev 14:3).
Now, as I said, as he at first began with four and twenty in
David, and ended with four and twenty times twelve, so here in John
he begins with the same number, but ends with such a company that
no man could number. For, he saith, 'After this I beheld, and lo,
a great multitude which no man could number, of all nations, and
kindreds, and people, and tongues stood before the throne, and before
the Lamb, clothed with white robes, and palms in their hands. And
cried with a loud voice, saying, Salvation to our God, which sitteth
upon the throne, and unto the Lamb. And all the angels stood round
about the throne, and the elders, and the four beasts, and fell
before the throne on their faces, and worshipped God' (Rev 7:9-11).
This numberless number seems to have got the song by the end;[12]
for they cry aloud, 'Salvation, salvation to our God and to the
Lamb'; which to be sure is such a song that none can learn but them
that are redeemed from the earth.
This then is a fifth note or sign that doth distinguish the throne
of grace from other thrones. There are, before that, to be seen,
for our encouragement, a numberless number of people sitting and
singing round about it. Singing, I say, to God for his grace, and
to the Lamb for his blood, by which they are secured from the wrath
to come. 'And the four and twenty elders fell down before the Lamb,
having every one of them harps, and golden vials full of odours,
which are the prayers of saints, and they sung a new song, saying,
Thou art worthy to take the book, and to open the seals thereof; for
thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood, out of
every kindred, and tongue, and people, and nation; and hast made us
unto our God, kings and priests, and we shall reign on the earth'
(Rev 5:8-10). Behold, tempted soul, dost thou not yet see what a
throne of grace here is, and what multitudes are already arrived
thither, to give thanks unto his name that sits thereon, and to
the Lamb for ever and ever? And wilt thou hang thy harp upon the
willows, and go drooping up and down the world, as if there was
no God, no grace, no throne of grace, to apply thyself unto, for
mercy and grace to help in time of need? Hark! dost thou not hear
them what they say, 'Worthy,' say they, 'is the Lamb that was
slain, to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and
honour, and glory, and blessing. And every creature which is in
heaven,' where they are, 'and on the earth,' where thou art, 'and
under the earth, and such as are in the sea, and all that are in
them, heard I saying, Blessing, and honour, and glory, and power be
unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb for ever
and ever' (Rev 5:12,13).
All this is written for our learning, that we through patience and
comfort of the scriptures might have hope; and that the drooping
ones might come boldly to the throne of grace, to obtain grace and
find mercy to help in time of need. They bless, they all bless;
they thank, they all thank; and wilt thou hold thy tongue? 'They
have all received of his fulness, and grace for grace'; and will
he shut thee out? Or is his grace so far gone, and so near spent,
that now he has not enough to pardon, and secure, and save one
sinner more? For shame, leave off this unbelief! Wherefore, dost
thou think, art thou told of all this, but to encourage thee to
come to the throne of grace? And wilt thou hang back or be sullen,
because thou art none of the first? since he hath said, 'The
first shall be last, and the last first.' Behold the legions, the
thousands, the untold and numberless number that stand before the
throne, and be bold to hope in his mercy.
Thus therefore you may see how in the darkest sayings of the
Holy Ghost there is as great an harmony with truth as in the most
plain and easy; there must be thunder with light, if thy heart be
well poised and balanced with the fear of God: we have had great
lightnings in this land of late years, but little thunders; and
that is one reason why so little grace is found where light is, and
why so many professors run on their heads in such a day as this is,
notwithstanding all they have seen. Well then, this also should be
a help to a soul to come to the throne of grace; the God of glory
has thundered, has thundered to awaken thee, as well as sent
lightnings to give thee light; to awaken thee to a coming to him,
as well as to the enabling of thee to see his things; this then has
come from the throne of grace to make thee come hither; wherefore
observe, where it is by these signs made mention of before, and by
these effects; and go, and come to the throne of grace.
THIRD. Now the persons here called upon to come to the throne
of grace, are not all or every sort of men, but the men that may
properly be comprehended under this word Us and We; 'let Us therefore
come boldly, that We may obtain.' And they that are here put under
these particular terms, are expressed both before and after, by
those that have explication in them.
They are called [in the epistle to the Hebrews], 1. Such as give
the most earnest heed to the word which they have heard (Heb 2:1).
2. They are such as see Jesus crowned with glory and honour (Heb
2:9). 3. They are called the children (Heb 2:14). 4. They are
called the seed of Abraham (Heb 2:16). 5. They are called Christ's
brethren (Heb 2:17).
So, chapter the third, they are called holy brethren, and said to
be partakers of the heavenly calling, and the people of whom it
is said that Christ Jesus is the apostle and high priest of their
profession (Heb 3:1-6). They are called Christ's own house, and
are said to be partakers of Christ (Heb 3:14). They are said to be
the believers, those that do enter in into rest, those that have
Christ for a high priest, and with the feeling of whose infirmities
he is touched and sympathiseth (Heb 4:3,14,15).
So, in chapter the sixth, they are called beloved, and the heirs
of promise; they that have fled for refuge to lay hold on the hope
set before them; they are called those that have hope as an anchor,
and those for whom Christ as a forerunner hath entered and taken
possession of heaven (Heb 6:9,17-20). So, chapter the seventh, they
are said to be such as draw nigh unto God (Heb 7:19). And, chapter
the eighth, they are said to be such with whom the new covenant is
made in Christ. Chapter the ninth, they are such for whom Christ
has obtained eternal redemption, and such for whom he has entered
the holy place (Heb 9:12,22). Chapter the tenth, they are such as
are said to be sanctified by the will of God, such as have boldness
to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus; such as draw near
with a true heart, in full assurance of faith, or that have liberty
to do so, having their hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience,
and their bodies washed with pure water; they were those that had
suffered much for Christ in the world, and that became companions
of them that so were used (Heb 10:10,19,22-25). Yea, he tells them,
in the eleventh chapter, that they and the patriarchs must be made
perfect together (Heb 11:40). He also tells them, in the twelfth
chapter, that already they are come to Mount Zion, to the city
of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to an innumerable
company of angels; to the general assembly and church of the first
born which are written in heaven, and to God the Judge of all; and
to the spirits of just men made perfect, and to Jesus the mediator
of the New Testament, and to the blood of sprinkling, that speaketh
better things than that of Abel (Heb 12:22-24).
Thus you see what terms, characters, titles, and privileges, they
are invested with that are here exhorted to come to the throne of
grace. From whence we may conclude that every one is not capable
of coming thither, no not every one that is under convictions, and
that hath a sense of the need of and a desire after the mercy of
God in Christ.
First. Then, the mercy-seat was for the church, not for the world;
for a Gentile could not go immediately from his natural state to
the mercy-seat, by the high priest, but must first orderly join
himself, or be joined, to the church, which then consisted of the
body of the Jews (Exo 12:43-49). The stranger then must first be
circumcised, and consequently profess faith in the Messiah to come,
which was signified by his going from his circumcision directly
to the passover, and so orderly to other privileges, specially to
this of the mercy-seat which the high priest was to go but once a
year into (Eze 44:6-9).
Second. The church is again set forth unto us by Aaron and his sons.
Aaron as the head, his sons as the members; but the sons of Aaron
were not to meddle with any of the things of the Holiest, until
they had washed in a laver: 'And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying,
Thou shalt also make a laver of brass, and his foot also of brass,
to wash in; and thou shalt put it between the tabernacle of the
congregation and the altar, and thou shalt put water therein. For
Aaron and his sons shall wash their hands and their feet thereat.
When they go into the tabernacle of the congregation they shall
wash with water, that they die not; or when they come near to the
altar to minister, to burn offerings made by fire unto the Lord.
So they shall wash their hands and their feet that they die not:
and it shall be a statute for ever unto them, even to him, and to
his seed throughout their generations.' See the margin (Exo 30:17-21,
40:30-32).[14]
Third. Nay, so strict was this law, that if any of Israel, as well
as the stranger, were defiled by any dead thing, they were to wash
before they partook of the holy things, or else to abstain: but if
they did not, their sin should remain upon them (Lev 17:15,16). So
again, 'the soul that hath touched any such' uncleanness 'shall be
unclean until even, and shall not eat of the holy things,' much less
come within the inner veil, 'unless he wash his flesh with water'
(Lev 22:4-6). Now, I would ask, what all this should signify, if a
sinner, as a sinner, before he washes, or is washed, may immediately
go unto the throne of grace? Yea, I ask again, why the apostle
supposes washing as a preparation to the Hebrews entering into
the holiest, if men may go immediately from under convictions to a
throne of grace? For thus, he says, 'let us draw near' 'the holiest'
(Heb 12:19), 'with a true heart, in full assurance of faith; having
our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience, and our bodies washed
with pure water' (Heb 12:22). Let us draw near; he saith not that
we may have; but having FIRST been washed and sprinkled.
The laver then must first be washed in; and he that washed not first
there, has not right to come to the throne of grace; wherefore you
have here also a sea of glass standing before the throne of grace,
to signify this thing (Rev 4:6). It stands before the throne, for
them to wash in that would indeed approach the throne of grace. For
this sea of glass is the same that is shadowed forth by the laver
made mention of before, and with the brazen sea that stood in
Solomon's temple, whereat they were to wash before they went into
the holiest. But you may ask me, What the laver or molten sea
should signify to us in the New Testament? I answer, It signifieth
the word of the New Testament, which containeth the cleansing doctrine
of remission of sins, by the precious blood of Jesus Christ (John
15:3).[15] Wherefore we are said to be clean through the Word,
through the washing of water by the Word (Titus 3:5). The meaning
then is, A man must first come to Christ, as set forth in the
Word, which is this sea of glass, before he can come to Christ in
heaven, as he is the throne of grace. For the Word, I say, is this
sea of glass that stands before the throne, for the sinner to wash
in first. Know therefore, whoever thou art, that art minded to be
saved, thou must first begin with Christ crucified, and with the
promise of remission of sins through his blood; which crucified
Christ thou shalt not find in heaven as such; for there he is alive;
but thou shalt find him in the Word; for there he is to this day
set forth in all the circumstances of his death, as crucified before
our eyes (Gal 3:1,2). There thou shalt find that he died, when he
died, what death he died, why he died, and the Word open to thee
to come and wash in his blood. The word therefore of Christ's
Testament is the laver for all New Testament priests, and every
Christian is a priest to God, to wash in.
And it is yet far more evident; for that those that approach this
throne of grace, they must do it through believing; for, saith the
apostle, 'How shall they call on him in whom they have not believed,'
of whom they have not heard, and in whom they have not believed?
for to that purpose runs the text (Rom 10:14). 'How then shall they
call on him in whom they have not believed,' antecedent to their
calling on him, 'and how shall they believe in him of whom they
have not heard' first? So then hearing goes before believing, and
believing before calling upon God, as he sits on the throne of grace.
Now, believing is to be according to the sound of the beginning of
the gospel, which presenteth us, not first with Christ as ascended,
but as Christ dying, buried, and risen.[16] 'For I delivered unto
you first of all, that which I also received; how that Christ died
for our sins according to the scriptures; and that he was buried,
and that he rose again the third day, according to the scriptures'
(1 Cor 15:3,4).
I conclude then, as to this, that the order of heaven is, that men
wash in the laver of regeneration, to wit, in the blood of Christ,
as held forth in the word of the truth of the gospel, which is the
ordinance of God; for there sinners, as sinners, or men as unclean,
may wash, in order to their approach to God as he sits upon the
throne of grace.
FOURTH. But this will yet be further manifest by what we have yet
to say of the manner of our approach unto the throne of grace.
Indeed the soul should now run to the cross, for there is the
water, or rather the blood and water, that is provided for faith,
as to the maintaining of the comfort of justification; but the
soul whose faith is thus attacked will find hard work to do this,
though much of the well-managing of faith, in the good fight of
faith, will lie in the soul's hearty and constant adhering to the
death and blood of Christ; but a man must do as he can. Thus now
have I showed you the manner of right coming to the throne of grace,
for mercy and grace to help in time of need.
The next thing that I am to handle, is, first, To show you, that
it is the privilege of the godly to distinguish from all thrones
whatsoever this throne of grace. This, as I told you, I gathered from
the apostle in the text, for that he only maketh mention thereof,
but gives no sign to distinguish it by; no sign, I say, though he
knew that there were more thrones than it. 'Let us come boldly,'
saith he, 'to the throne of grace,' and so leaves it, knowing
full well that they had a good understanding of his meaning, being
Hebrews (Heb 9:1-8). They being now also enlightened from what
they were taught by the placing of the ark of the testimony, and
the mercy-seat in the most holy place; of which particular the
apostle did then count it, not of absolute necessity distinctly to
discourse. Indeed the Gentiles, as I have showed, have this throne
of grace described and set forth before them, by those tokens which
I have touched upon in the sheets that go before--for with the book
of Revelation the Gentiles are particularly concerned--for that
it was writ to churches of the Gentiles; also the great things
prophesied of there relate unto Gentile-believers, and to the
downfall of Antichrist, as he standeth among them.
But yet, I think that John's discourse of the things attending the
throne of grace were not by him so much propounded, because the
Gentiles were incapable of finding of it without such description,
as to show the answerableness of the antitype with the type; and
also to strengthen their faith, and illustrate the thing; for they
that know, may know more, and better of what they know; yea, may
be greatly comforted with another's dilating on what they know.
Besides, the Holy Ghost by the word doth always give the most perfect
description of things; wherefore to that we should have recourse
for the completing of our knowledge. I mean not, by what I say, in
the least to intimate, as if this throne of grace was to be known
without the text, for it is that that giveth revelation of Jesus
Christ: but my meaning is, that a saint, as such, has such a working
of things upon his heart, as makes him able by the Word to find
out this throne of grace, and to distinguish it to himself from
others. For,
First. The saint has strong guilt of sin upon his conscience,
especially at first; and this makes him better judge what grace,
in the nature of grace, is, than others can that are not sensible
of what guilt is. What it was to be saved, was better relished by
the jailor when he was afraid of and trembled at the apprehensions
of the wrath of God, than ever it was with him all his life
before (Acts 16:29-33). Peter then also saw what saving was, when
he began to sink into the sea: 'Lord, save me,' said he, I perish
(Matt 14:30). Sin is that without a sense of which a man is not
apprehensive what grace is. Sin and grace, favour and wrath, death
and life, hell and heaven, are opposites, and are set off, or out,
in their evil or good, shame or glory, one by another. What makes
grace so good to us as sin in its guilt and filth? What makes sin
so horrible and damnable a thing in our eyes, as when we see there
is nothing can save us from it but the infinite grace of God?
Further, there seems, if I may so term it, to be a kind of natural
instinct in the new creature to seek after the grace of God; for so
saith the Word, 'They that are after the flesh, do mind the things
of the flesh; but they that are after the Spirit, the things of
the Spirit' (Rom 8:5). The child by nature nuzzles in its mother's
bosom for the breast; the child by grace does by grace seek to live
by the grace of God. All creatures, the calf, the lamb, &c., so
soon as they are fallen from their mother's belly, will by nature
look for, and turn themselves towards the teat, and the new creature
doth so too (1 Peter 2:1-3). For guilt makes it hunger and thirst,
as the hunted hart does pant after the water brooks. Hunger directs
to bread, thirst directs to water; yea, it calls bread and water
to mind. Let a man be doing other business, hunger will put him
in mind of his cupboard, and thirst of his cruse of water; yea, it
will call him, make him, force him, command him, to bethink what
nourishing victuals is, and will also drive him to search out after
where he may find it, to the satisfying of himself. All right talk
also to such an one sets the stomach and appetite a craving; yea,
into a kind of running out of the body after this bread and water,
that it might be fed, nourished, and filled therewith. Thus it is
by nature, and thus it is by grace; thus it is for the bread that
perisheth, and for that which endureth to everlasting life. But,
They have gone to God, as the great Creator, and have beheld how
wonderful his works have been; they have looked to the heavens
above, to the earth beneath, and to all their ornaments, but neither
have these, nor what is of [or resulting from] them, yielded grace
to those that had sensible want thereof. Thus have they gone, as
I said, with these pitchers to their fountains, and have returned
empty and ashamed; they found no water, no river of water of life;
they have been as the woman with her bloody issue, spending and
spending till they have spent all, and been nothing better, but
rather grew worse (Mark 5). Had they searched into nothing but
the law, it had been sufficient to convince them that there was no
grace, nor throne of grace, in the world. For since the law, being
the most excellent of all the things of the earth, is found to
be such as yieldeth no grace--for grace and truth comes by Jesus
Christ, not by Moses (John 1:17)--how can it be imagined that it
should be found in anything inferior? Paul, therefore, not finding
it in the law, despairs to find it in anything else below, but
presently betakes himself to look for it there where he had not yet
sought it--for he sometimes sought it not by faith, but as it were
by the works of the law (Phil 3:6-8)--he looked for it, I say, by
Jesus Christ, who is the throne of grace, where he found it, and
rejoiced in hope of the glory of God (Rom 9:29-31, 5:1-3). But,
Third. Saints come to know and distinguish the throne of grace from
other thrones, by the very direction of God himself; as it is said
of the well that the nobles digged in the wilderness--they digged
it by the direction of the lawgiver, so saints find out the throne
of grace by the direction of the grace-giver. Hence Paul prays,
that the Lord would direct the hearts of the people into the love
of God (2 Thess 3:5). Man, as man, cannot aim directly at this
throne; but will drop his prayers short, besides, or the like, if
he be not helped by the Spirit (Rom 8:26). Hence the Son saith of
himself, 'No man can come to me, except the Father which hath sent
me draw him' (John 6:44). Which text doth not only justify what is
now said, but insinuates that there is an unwillingness in man of
himself to come to this throne of grace; he must be drawn thereto.
He setteth us in the way of his steps, that is, in that way to the
throne by which grace and mercy is conveyed unto us.
First. He took not his honour upon himself without a lawful call
thereto. Thus the priests under the law were put into office; and
thus the Son of God. No man taketh this honour to himself, but he
that is called of God, as was Aaron. So also Christ glorified not
himself to be made a high priest, but he that said unto him, Thou
art my Son, today have I begotten thee. Wherefore he was 'called of
God an high priest after the order of Melchisedec' (Heb 5:4-6,10).
Thus far, therefore, the law of his priesthood answereth to the law
of the priesthood of old; they both were made priests by a legal
call to their work or office. But yet the law by which this Son
was made high priest excelleth, and that in these particulars--
3. The priesthood under the law, with their law and sacrifices,
were fading, and were not suffered to continue, by reason of the
death of the priest, and ineffectualness of his offering (Heb 7:23).
'But this man, because he continueth ever, hath an unchangeable
priesthood' (v 24). 'For the law maketh men high priests which
have infirmity, but the word of the oath which was since the law,
maketh the Son, who is consecrated for evermore' (v 28). From what
hath already been said, we gather, (1.) What kind of person it is
that is our high priest. (2.) The manner of his being called to,
and stated[22] in that office.
(1.) What manner of person he is. He is the Son, the Son of God,
Jesus the Son of God. Hence the apostle saith, 'we have a great
high priest,' such an high priest 'that is passed into the heavens'
(Heb 4:14). Such an high priest as is 'made higher than the heavens'
(Heb 7:26). And why doth he thus dilate upon the dignity of his
person, but because thereby is insinuated the excellency of his
sacrifice, and the prevalency of his intercession, by that, to
God for us. Therefore he saith again, 'Every' Aaronical 'priest
standeth daily ministering and offering oftentimes the same
sacrifices, which can never take away sins: but this man,' this
great man, this Jesus, this Son of God, 'after he had offered one,'
one only, one once, but one (Heb 9:25,26), 'sacrifice for sins for
ever, sat down on the right hand of God; from henceforth expecting
till his enemies be made his footstool. For by one offering he
hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified' (Heb 10:11-14).
Thus, I say, the apostle toucheth upon the greatness of his person,
thereby to set forth the excellency of his sacrifice, and prevalency
of his intercession. 'Wherefore, holy brethren, partakers of
the heavenly calling, consider the Apostle and high priest of our
profession, Christ Jesus' (Heb 3:1). Or, as he saith again, making
mention of Melchisedec, 'consider how great this man was' (Heb
7:4), we have such a high priest, so great a high priest; one that
is entered into the heavens: Jesus the Son of God.
(2.) The manner also of his being called to and stated in his office,
is not to be overlooked. He is made a priest after the power of an
endless life, or is to be such an one as long as he lives, and as
long as we have need of his mediation. Now Christ being raised from
the dead, dies no more; death hath no more dominion over him. He
is himself the Prince of life. Wherefore it follows, 'he hath an
unchangeable priesthood.' And what then? Why, then 'he is able also
to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him, seeing
he ever liveth to make intercession for them' (Heb 7:24,25). But
again, he is made a priest with an oath, 'the Lord sware, and will
not repent, thou art a priest for ever.' Hence I gather, (a) That
before God there is no high priest but Jesus, nor ever shall be.
(b) That God is to the full pleased with his high priesthood; and
so with all those for whom he maketh intercession. For this priest,
though he is not accepted for the sake of another, yet he is upon
the account of another. 'For every high priest taken from among
men is ordained for men in things pertaining to God,' to make
reconciliation for the sins of the people (Heb 5:1,2). And again,
he is entered 'into heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of
God for us' (Heb 9:24). God therefore, in that he hath made him a
priest with an oath, and also determined that he will never repent
of his so doing, declareth that he is, and for ever will be,
satisfied with his offering. And this is a great encouragement to
those that come to God by him; they have by this oath a firm ground
to go upon, and the oath is, 'Thou art a priest for ever,' shalt be
accepted for ever for every one for whom thou makest intercession;
nor will I ever reject any body that comes to me by thee; therefore
here is ground for faith, for hope and rejoicing; for this consideration
a man has ground to come boldly to the throne of grace.
This garment Christ was a great while a-making. What time, you
may ask, was required? And I answer, All the days of his life; for
all things that were written concerning him, as to this, were not
completed till the day that he hanged upon the cross. For then it
was that he said, 'It is finished; and he bowed his head, and gave
up the ghost' (John 19:28-30). This robe is for glory and for beauty.
This is it that afore I said was of the colour of the rainbow, and
that compasseth even round about this throne of grace, unto which
we are bid to come. This is that garment that reaches down to his
feet, and that is girt to him with a golden girdle (Rev 1:13). This
is that garment that covereth all his body mystical, and that hideth
the blemishes of such members from the eye of God, and of the law.
And it is made up of his obedience to the law, by his complete
perfect obedience thereto (Rom 5:19). This Christ wears always, he
never puts it off, as the [former] high priests put off theirs by
a ceremonial command. He ever lives to make intercession; consequently
he ever wears this priestly robe. He might not go into the holy
place without it, upon danger of death, or at least of being sent
back again; but he died not, but lives ever; is not sent back, but
is set down at God's right hand; and there shall sit till his foes
are made his footstool (John 16:10).
This is that for the sake of which all are made welcome, and embraced
and kissed, forgiven and saved, that come unto God by him. This
is that righteousness, that mantle spotless, that Paul so much
desired to be found wrapt in; for he knew that being found in that
he must be presented thereby to God a glorious man, not having
spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing. This therefore is another of
the Lord Jesus' legal qualifications, as preparatory to the executing
of his high priest's office in heaven. But of this something has
been spoken before; and therefore I shall not enlarge upon it here.
Third. When the high priest under the law was thus accomplished
by a legal call, and a garment suitable to his office, then again
there was another thing that must be done, in order to his regular
execution of his office; and that was, he must be consecrated, and
solemnly ushered thereunto by certain offerings, first presented
to God for himself. This you have mention made of in the Levitical
law; you have there first commanded, that, in order to the high
priest's approaching the holiest for the people, there must first
be an offering of consecration for himself, and this is to succeed
his call, and the finishing of his holy garments (Exo 29:5-7,19-22).
For this ceremony was not to be observed until his garments were
made and put upon him; also the blood of the ram of consecration
was to be sprinkled upon him, his garments, &c., that he might be
hallowed, and rightly set apart for the high priest's office (Lev
8). The Holy Ghost, I think, thus signifying that Jesus the Son
of God, our great high priest, was not only to sanctify the people
with his blood; but first, by blood must to that work be sanctified
himself; 'For their sakes,' saith he, 'I sanctify myself, that they
also might be sanctified through the truth' (John 17:19).
But it may be asked, When was this done to Christ, or what sacrifice
of consecration had he precedent to the offering up of himself for
our sins? I answer, It was done in the garden when he was washed in
his own blood, when his sweat was in great drops of blood, falling
down to the ground. For there it was he was sprinkled with his blood,
not only the tip of his ear, his thumb, and toe, but there he was
washed all over; there therefore was his most solemn consecration
to his office; at least, so I think. And this, as Aaron's was, was
done by Moses; it was Moses that sprinkled Aaron's garments. It
was by virtue of an agony also that his bloody sweat was produced;
and what was the cause of that agony, but the apprehension of the
justice and curse of Moses' law, which now he was to undergo for
the sins of the people.
Not but that every act of his obedience was perfect, and carried
in it a length and breadth proportionable to that law by which it
was demanded. Nor was there at any time in his obedience that which
made to interfere one commandment with another. He did all things
well, and so stood in the favour of God. But yet one act was not
actually all, though virtually any one of his actions might carry
in it a merit sufficient to satisfy and quiet the law. Hence, as
I said, it is told us, not only that he is the Son of God's love,
but that he increased in favour with God; that is, by a going on
in doing, by a continuing to do that always that pleased the God
of heaven.
A man that pays money at the day appointed, beginning first at one
shilling, or one pound, and so ceaseth not until he hath in current
coin told over the whole sum to the creditor, does well at the
beginning; but the first shilling, or first pound, not being the
full debt, cannot be counted or reckoned the whole, but a part;
yet is it not an imperfect part, nor doth the creditor find fault
at all, because there is but so much now told; but concludes that
all is at hand, and accepteth of this first, as a first-fruits: so
Christ, when he came into the world, began to pay, and so continued
to do, even until he had paid the whole debt, and so increased in
favour with God. There was then a gradual performance of duties,
as to the number of them, by our Lord when he was in the world, and
consequently a time wherein it might be said that Christ had not,
as to act, done all, as was appointed him to do, to do as preparatory
to that great thing which he was to do for us. Wherefore, in
conclusion, he is said to be made perfect, 'and being made perfect,
he became the author of eternal salvation to all them that obey
him' (Heb 5:9).
Behold then, here is the high priest with his sacrifice; and behold
again, how he comes to offer it. He comes to offer his burnt-offering
at the call of God; he comes to do it in his priestly garments,
consecrated and sanctified in his own blood; he comes with blood and
tears, or by water and blood, and offereth his sacrifice, himself
a sacrifice unto God for the sin of the world; and that too at a
time when God began to be weary of the service and sacrifices of
all the world. 'Wherefore when he cometh into the world, he saith,
Sacrifice and offering thou wouldest not, but a body hast thou
prepared me,' thou hast fitted me; 'in burnt-offerings and sacrifices
for sin thou hast had no pleasure; then said I, Lo I come, in the
volume of the book it is written of me, to do thy will, O God' (Heb
10:5-7).
[Christ the sacrifice as well as the high priest, and how he offered
it.]
Thus you see our high priest proceeded to the execution of his
priestly office; and now we are come to his sacrifice, we will
consider a little of the parts thereof, and how he offered, and
pleads the same. The burnt-offering for sin had two parts, the
flesh and the fat, which fat is called the fat of the inwards, of
the kidneys, and the like (Lev 3:12-16). Answerable to this, the
sacrifice of Christ had two parts, the body and the soul. The body
is the flesh, and his soul the fat; that inward part that must
not by any means be kept from the fire (Isa 53:10). For without
the burning of the fat, the burnt-offering and sin-offering, both
which was a figure of the sacrifice of our high priest, was counted
imperfect, and so not acceptable.
The fat made the flame to increase and to ascend; wherefore God
speaks affectionately of the fat, saying, The fat of mine offerings.
And again, 'He shall see of the travail of his soul and shall
be satisfied' (Isa 53:10-12). The soul-groans, the soul-cries,
the soul-conflicts that the Son of God had, together with his
soul-submission to his Father's will, when he was made a sacrifice
for sin, did doubtless flame bright, ascend high, and cast out
a sweet savour unto the nostrils of God, whose justice was now
appeasing for the sin of men.
His flesh also was part of this sacrifice, and was made to feel
that judgment of God for sin that it was capable of. And it was
capable of feeling much, so long as natural life, and so, bodily
sense, remained. It also began to feel with the soul, by reason of
the union that was betwixt them both; the soul felt, and the body
bled; the soul was in an agony, and the body sweat blood; the soul
wrestled with the judgment and curse of the law, and the body, to
show its sense and sympathy, sent out dolorous cries, and poured
out rivers of tears before God. We will not here at large speak of
the lashes, of the crown of thorns, of how his face was bluft[23]
with blows and blood; also how he was wounded, pierced, and what
pains he felt while life lasted, as he suffered for our sins; though
these things are also prefigured in the old law, by the nipping or
wringing of the head, the cutting of the sacrifice in pieces, and
burning it in the fire (Lev 1). Now, you must know, that as the
high priest was to offer his sacrifice, so he was to bring the
blood thereof to the mercy-seat or throne of grace, where now our
Jesus is; he was to offer it at the door of the tabernacle, and to
carry the blood within the veil; of both which a little.
2. He did it, not only voluntarily, and of a free will, but of love
and affection to the life of his enemies. Had he done thus for the
life of his friends, it had been much; but since he did it out of
love to the life of his enemies, that is much more. 'Scarcely for
a righteous man will one die, yet peradventure for a good man some
would even dare to die; but God commended his love toward us, in
that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us' (Rom 5:7,8).
If the altar be greater than the gift, and yet the gift so great a
thing as the very humanity of Christ, can it--I will now direct my
speech to the greatest fool--can that greater thing be the cross?
Is, was the cross, the wooden cross, the cursed tree, that some
worship, greater than the gift, to wit, than the sacrifice which
Christ offered, when he gave himself for our sins! O idolatry, O
blasphemy![24]
Quest. But what then was the altar? Answ. The divine nature
of Christ, that Eternal Spirit, by and in the assistance of which
he 'offered himself without spot to God'; he, through the Eternal
Spirit 'offered himself' (Heb 9:14).
Quest. Wherefore then served the cross? Answ. I ask, and wherefore
then served the wood by which the sacrifices were burned? The
sacrifices were burned with wood upon the altar; the wood then was
not that altar, the wood was that instrument by which the sacrifice
was consumed, and the cross that by which Christ suffered his torment
and affliction. The altar then was it that did bear both the wood
and sacrifice, that did uphold the wood to burn, and the sacrifice
to abide the burning. And with reference to the matter in hand,
the tree on which Christ was hanged, and the sacrifice of his body,
were both upheld by his divine power; yet the tree was no more a
sacrifice, nor an altar, than was the wood upon the altar; nor was
the wood, but the fire, holy, by which the sacrifice was consumed.
Let the tree then be the tree, the sacrifice the sacrifice, and
the altar the altar; and let men have a care how, in their worship,
they make altars upon which, as they pretend, they offer the body
of Christ; and let them leave off foolishly to dote upon wood, and
the works of their hands: the altar is greater than the gift or
sacrifice that was, or is, upon it.
Thus then he ascended unto, into the holy paradise, where he was
waited for of a multitude of the heavenly host, and of thousands
of millions of the spirits of just men made perfect. So approaching
the highest heavens, the place of the special presence of God, he was
bid sit down at his right hand, in token that, for his sufferings'
sake, God had made him the highest of every creature, and given him
a name above every name, and commanded that at the name of Jesus
now all things in heaven should bow, and promised, that at the day
of judgment, all on earth, and under it, should bow too, to the
glory of God the Father (Phil 2:6-11). Thus he presented himself
on our behalf unto God, a sacrifice of a sweet-smelling savour, in
which God resteth for ever, for that the blood of this sacrifice
has always with him a pleasing and prevailing voice. It cannot be
denied, it cannot be outweighed by the heaviness, circumstances,
or aggravations of any sin whatsoever, of them that come unto God
by him. He is always, as I said before, in the midst of the throne,
and before the throne, 'a Lamb as it had been slain,' now appearing
in the presence of God for us. Of the manner of his intercession,
whether it was vocal or virtual, whether by voice of mouth, or
merit of deed, or both, I will not determine; we know but little
while here, how things are done in heaven, and we may soon be too
carnal, or fantastical in our apprehensions. Intercession he makes,
that is, he manages the efficacy and worth of his suffering with
God for us, and is always prevalent in his thus managing of his
merits on our behalf. And as to the manner, though it be in itself
infinitely beyond what we can conceive while here, yet God hath
stooped to our weakness, and so expressed himself in this matter,
that we might somewhat, though but childishly, apprehend him (1
Cor 13:11,12). And we do not amiss if we conceive as the Word of
God hath revealed; for the scriptures are the green poplar, hazel,
and the chestnut rods that lie in the gutters where we should come
to drink; all the difficulty is, in seeing the white strakes, the
very mind of God there, that we may conceive by it.
The Word says that we have yet but the image of heavenly things,
or of things in the heavens. I do not at all doubt but that many
of those that were saved before Christ came in the flesh, though
they were, as to the main, right, and relied upon him to the saving
of their souls, yet came far short of the knowledge of many of the
circumstances of his suffering for them (Heb 10:1). Did they all
know that he was to be betrayed of Judas? that he was to be scourged
of the soldiers? that he was to be crowned with thorns? that he
was to be crucified between two thieves, and to be pierced till
blood and water came out of his side? or that he was to be buried
in Joseph's sepulchre? I say, did all that were saved by faith
that he was to come and die for them, understand these, with many
more circumstances that were attendants of him to death? It would
be rude to think so; because for it we have neither scripture nor
reason. Even so, we now that believe that 'he ever liveth to make
intercession for us,' are also very short of understanding of the
manner or mode of his so interceding. Yet we believe that he died,
and that his merits have a voice with God for us; yea, that he
manages his own merits before God in way of intercession for us,
far beyond what we, while here, are able to conceive.
The scripture saith that 'all the fulness of the Godhead' dwells
in him 'bodily' (Col 2:9). It also saith that he is the throne of
God, and yet again, that he sits 'on the right hand of the throne' (Isa
22:23; Heb 12:2). These things are so far from being comprehended
by the weakest, that they strain the wits and parts of the strongest,
yet there is a heavenly truth in all. Heavenly things are not easily
believed, no not of believers themselves, while here on earth, and
when they are, they are so but weakly and infirmly.[27] I believe
that the very appearing of Christ before God is an intercession as
a priest, as well as a plea of an advocate; and I believe again,
that his very life there is an intercession there, a continual
intercession (Heb 9:24; Rom 5:10).
1. Letters. I call the ceremonial law so; for there all is set
forth distinctly, everything by itself; as letters are to children:
there you have a priest, a sacrifice, an altar, a holy place a
mercy-seat: and all distinct.
2. Words. Now in the gospel these letters are put all in a word,
and Christ is that word, that word of God's mind; and therefore
the gospel makes Christ that priest, Christ that sacrifice, Christ
that altar, Christ that holy place, Christ that throne of grace,
and all; for Christ is all: all these meet in him as several letters
meet in one word.
3. Meanings. Next to the word you have the meaning, and the meaning
is more difficult to be learned than either the letters or the
word; and therefore the perfect understanding of that is reserved
till we arrive to a higher form, till we arrive to a perfect man;
'But when that which is perfect is come, then that' knowledge
'which is in part, shall be done away' (1 Cor 13:10). Meantime our
business is to learn to bring the letters into a word, to bring the
ceremonies to Christ, and to make them terminate in him; I mean, to
find the priesthood in Christ, the sacrifice in Christ, the altar
in Christ, the throne of grace in Christ, and also God in Christ,
reconciling the world unto himself by him. And if we can learn
this well, while here, we shall not at all be blamed! for this is
the utmost lesson set us, to wit, to learn Christ as we find him
revealed in the gospel: 'I determined,' saith Paul, 'not to know
any thing among you, save Jesus Christ, and him crucified' (1 Cor
2:2). And Christians, after some time, I mean those that pray and
pry into the Word well, do attain to some good measure of knowledge
of him. It is life eternal to know him, as he is to be known here,
as he is to be known by the Holy Scriptures (James 17:3). Keep then
close to the Scriptures, and let thy faith obey the authority of
them, and thou wilt be sure to increase in faith; 'for therein is
the righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith; as it is
written, The just shall live by faith' (Rom 1:17, 16:25-27).[28]
Believe then that Christ died, was buried, rose again, ascended,
and ever liveth to make intercession for thee: and take heed of
prying too far, for in mysteries men soon lose their way. It is
good therefore that thou rest in this, to wit, that he doth so,
though thou canst not tell how he doth it. A man at court gets by
his intercession a pardon for a man in the country; and the party
concerned, after he had intelligence of it, knows that such an one
hath obtained his pardon, and that by his interceding, but for all
that he may be ignorant of his methods of intercession, and so are
we, at least in part, of Christ. The meaning then is that I should
believe, that for Christ's sake God will save me since he has
justified me with his blood; 'being now justified by his blood,
we shall be saved from wrath through him' (Rom 5:9). Through his
intercession, or through his coming between the God whom I have
offended and me, a poor sinner: through his coming between with
the voice of his blood and merits, which speaketh on my behalf to
God, because that blood was shed for me, and because those merits,
in the benefit of them, are made over to me by an act of the grace
of God, according to his eternal covenant made with Christ. This
is what I know of his intercession; I mean with reference to the
act itself; to wit, HOW he makes intercession. And since all the
fulness of the Godhead dwells in him bodily, and sine he also, as
to his humanity, is the throne of grace; yea, and since he also is
the holiest of all, and the rest of God for ever, it has been some
scruple to me, whether it be not too carnal to imagine as if Christ
stood distinct in his humanity; distinct, I say, as to space, from
the Father as sitting upon a throne, and as so presenting his merits,
and making vocal prayers for the life and salvation of his people.
The more true meaning in my apprehension is, that the presence and
worth of the human nature, being with the divine, yea, taken into
union with God for ever, for the service that was done by God for
it, in the world, in reconciling his elect unto him, is still, and
ever will be, so deserving in his sight as to prevail--I know not
how else to express it--with the divine nature, in whom alone is
a power to subdue all impossibilities to itself, to preserve those
so reconciled to eternal life.
When I speak of the human nature, I mean the man Christ, not bereft
of sense and reasons, nor of the power of willing and affecting;[29]
but thus I mean, that the human nature so terminates in the will
of the divine; and again, the will of the divine so terminates,
as to saving of sinners, in the merit and will of the human, that
what the Father would the Son wills, and what the Son wills the
Father acquiesces in for ever. And this the Son wills, and his
will is backed with infinite merit, in which also the Father rests,
that those, all those whom the Father hath given him, be with him
where he is, that they may behold his glory (John 17:24). And now
I am come to the will and affections of the high-priest.
Third. There are other things in Christ Jesus that makes him naturally
of an excellent qualification with reference to his priesthood for
us, and they are the temptations and infirmities wherewith he was
exercised in the days of his humiliation. It is true, temptations
and infirmities, strictly considered, are none of our nature, no
more are they of his; but yet, if it be proper to say temptations
and afflictions have a nature, his and ours were naturally the same;
and that in all points too; for so says the text, 'He was tempted
in all points, like as we are, yet without sin' (Heb 4:15). Are
we tempted to distrust God? so was he: are we tempted to murder
ourselves? so was he: are we tempted with the bewitching vanities
of this world? so was he: are we tempted to commit idolatry, and to
worship the devil? so was he (Matt 4:3-10; Luke 4:1-13). So that
herein we also were alike; yea, from his cradle to his cross he was
a man of sorrows and acquainted with griefs, a man of affliction
throughout the whole course of his life.
And observe it, He was made so, or subjected thereto by the ordinance
of God; nay, further, it behoved him to be made so, that is, to be
made like unto us in all things, the better to capacitate him to
the work of his priesthood, with the more bowels and compassion.
We will read to you the text; 'Wherefore in all things it behoved
him to be made like unto his brethren, that he might be,' qualified
to be, 'a merciful and faithful High Priest in things pertaining
to God, to make reconciliation for the sins of the people. For in
that he himself hath suffered being tempted, he is able to succour
them that are tempted' (Heb 2:17,18). See here how he is qualified,
and to what end; he was tempted as we are, suffered by temptations
as we do, in all points and things as we are; that he might be
bowels, that he might be a merciful and faithful High Priest, in
things pertaining to God, to make up the difference that is made
by sin between God and his people, to make reconciliation for the
sins of the people. Yea, he by being tempted, and by suffering as
he did, he is prepared and enabled so to do; 'for in that he himself
hath suffered, being tempted, he is able to succour them that are
tempted.' Wherefore, I also call this qualification both natural
and necessary; natural, because in kind the same with ours; that
is, his temptations were the same with ours; the same in nature,
the same in design, the same as to their own natural tendency; for
their natural tendency was to have ruined both him and us, but God
prevented. They also were necessary, though not of themselves, yet
made so by him that can bring good out of evil, and light out of
darkness; made so, I say, to us, for whose sakes they were suffered
to assault and afflict him, namely, that he might be able to be
merciful, faithful, and succouring to us.
But we are now about his natural qualifications, and this is one;
that they for whom he ever liveth to make intercession are his
members, the members of his body; 'we are members of his body, of
his flesh, and of his bones,' so saith the Word (Eph 5:30). Wherefore
here is a near concern, for that his church is part of himself; it
is his own concern, it is for our own flesh. 'No man ever yet hated
his own flesh, but nourisheth and cherisheth it' (Eph 5:29).--Things
are thus spoken, because of the infirmity of our flesh.--So that
had Christ no love to us as we are sinners, yet because we are
part of himself, he cannot but care for us, nature puts him upon
it; yea, and the more infirm and weak we are, the more he is touched
with the feeling of our infirmities, the more he is afflicted for
us: 'For we have not an High Priest which cannot be touched with
the feeling of our infirmities' (Heb 4:15). He at no time loseth
this his fellow-feeling, because he always is our head, and we the
members of his. I will add, the infirm member is most cared for,
most pitied, most watched over to be kept from harms, and most
consulted for.[30]
I love to play the child with little children, and have learned
something by so doing; I have met with a child that has had a sore
finger; yea, so sore as to be altogether at present useless; and
not only so, but by reason of its infirmity, has been a let or
hindrance to the use of all the fingers that have been upon that
hand, then have I began to bemoan the child, and said, Alas! my
poor boy, or girl, hast got a sore finger! Ah! quoth the child,
with water in its eyes, and hath come to me to be bemoaned. Then I
have begun to offer to touch the sore finger. O! saith the child,
pray do not hurt me: I then have replied, Canst thou do nothing
with this finger? No, saith the child, nor with this hand either;
then have I said, Shall we cut off this finger, and buy my child
a better, a brave golden finger? At this the child has started,
stared in my face, gone back from me, and entertained a kind of
indignation against me, and has no more cared to be intimate with
me. Then have I begun to make some use of that good sermon which
this little child has preached unto me; and thus have I gone on.
If membership be so dear, if this child has such tenderness to the
most infirm, the most useless of its members; if it counts me its
friend no longer than when I have a mouth to bemoan and carriages
that show tenderness to this useless finger; what an interest doth
membership give on in the body, and what compassions hath the soul
for such an useless thing, because it is a member! and turning all
this over to Jesus Christ, then instead of matter and corruption,
there presently comes honey to me out of this child's sore finger;
I take leave to tell you now how I use to play. And though
I have told this tale upon so grave a truth, as is the membership
of Christians with their head, yet bear with me; no child can be
so tender of its sore finger as is the Son of God of his afflicted
members; he cannot but be touched with the feeling of our
infirmities.[31]
Ah! who would not make many supplications, prayers, and intercessions,
for a leg, for an eye, for a foot, for a hand, for a finger, rather
than they will lose it? And can it be imagined that Christ alone
shall be like the foolish ostrich, hardened against his young, yea,
against his members? It cannot be.
SECOND. I come now to the second motive, to wit, that we may find
grace and mercy to help in time of need; or we shall find grace and
mercy to help, if we come as we should, to the throne of grace. In
this motive we have these three things considerable. First, That
saints are like to meet with needy times while they are in this
world. Second, That nothing can carry us through our needy times
but more, or a continual supply of mercy and grace. Third, That
mercy and grace is to be had at the throne of grace, and we must
fetch it from thence by prayer, if we would, as we should, go
through these needy times.
First. For the first of these, that saints are like to meet with
needy times, or with such times as will show them that they need a
continual assistance of the grace of God, that they may go rightly
through this world. This is therefore a motive, that weareth a
spur in the heel of it, a spur to prick us forward to supplicate
at the throne of grace. This needy time is in other places called
the perilous time, the evil day, the hour and power of darkness,
the day of temptation, the cloudy and dark day (2 Tim 3:1; Eph 6:13;
Luke 22:53; Heb 3:8; Eze 34:12; Gen 47:9; Matt 6:34). And indeed,
in the general, all the days of our pilgrimage here are evil,
yea, every day has a sufficiency of evil in it to destroy the best
saint that breatheth, were it not for the grace of God. But there
are also, as I have hinted, particular special times, times more
eminently dangerous and hazardous unto saints. As,
There are their young days, the days of their youth, and childhood
in grace. This day is usually attended with much evil towards him
or them that are asking the way to Zion with their faces thitherward.
Now the devil has lost a sinner; there is a captive has broke prison,
and one run away from his master: now hell seems to be awakened
from sleep, the devils are come out, they roar, and roaring they
seek to recover their runaway. Now tempt him, threaten him, flatter
him, stigmatise him, throw dust into his eyes, poison him with
error, spoil him while he is upon the potter's wheel; any thing
to keep him from coming to Jesus Christ. And is not this a needy
time; doth not such an one want abundance of grace? is it not
of absolute necessity that thou, if thou art the man thus beset,
shouldst ply it at the throne of grace, for mercy and grace to help
thee in such a time of need as this? To want a spirit of prayer
now, is as much as thy life is worth. O, therefore, you that know
what I say, you that are broke loose from hell, that are fled for
refuge to lay hold on the hope set before you, and that do hear
the lion roar after you, and that are kept awake with the continual
voice of his chinking chain, cry as you fly; yea, the promise is,
that they that come to God with weeping, with supplication, he will
lead them. Well, this is one needy time, now thy hedge is low, now
thy branch is tender, now thou art but in the bud. Pray that thou
beest not marred in the potter's hand.
3. Another needy time is a time when men are low and empty, as to
worldly good; this time is full of temptations and snares. At this
time, men will, if they look not well to their doings and goings,
be tempted to strain curtesies both with conscience and with God's
Word, and adventure to do things that are dangerous, and that have
a tendency to make all their religion and profession vain. This
holy Agur was aware of; so he prayed, Let me not be rich and full,
lest I deny thee; let me not be poor, lest I steal, and take the
name of my God in vain (Prov 30:7-9). There are many inconveniences
that attend him that is fallen into decay in this world. It is
an evil day with him, and the devils will be as busy with him, as
the flies are with a lean and scabbed sheep. It shall go hard but
such a man shall be full of maggots; full of silly, foolish, idle
inventions, to get up, and to abound with fulness again. It is not
a time now, will Satan say, to retain a tender conscience, to regard
thy word or promise, to pay for what thou buyest, or to stick at
pilfering, and filch from thy neighbour.[32] This Agur was afraid
of; therefore he prayed that God would keep him from that which
would be to him a temptation to do it. How many in our day have,
on these very accounts, brought religion to a very ill savour, and
themselves unto the snare of the devil, and all because they have
not addicted themselves to pray to God for grace to help in this
time of need, but rather have left off the thing that is good, and
given up themselves to the temptations of the devil, and the subtle
and ensnaring motions of the flesh.
4. Another needy time is the day of persecution; this is called,
as was hinted before, 'the hour of darkness,' 'the cloudy and dark
day.' This day, therefore, is full of snares, and of evils of every
kind. Here is the fear of man, the terrors of a prison, of loss of
goods and life.[33] Now all things look black, now the fiery trial
is come. He that cannot now pray; he that now applieth not himself
to God on the throne of grace, by the priesthood of Jesus Christ,
is like to take a fall before all men upon the stage; a foul fall,
a fall that will not only break his own bones, but also the hearts
of those that fear God and behold it: 'Come therefore boldly unto
the throne of grace, that ye may obtain mercy, and find grace to
help in time of need.'
Second. I come now to the next thing, which is, to show that nothing
can carry us through our needy times, but more or a continual
supply of mercy and grace. This the text fully implies, because it
directeth us to the throne of grace, for mercy and grace for that
very end. And had there been any thing else that could have done
it, the apostle would have made mention of it, and would also have
directed the saints unto it. But forasmuch as he here makes mention
of the needy time, and directs them to the throne of grace for
mercy and grace to help, it followeth that mercy and grace, and that
only, can help us in the evil time. Now mercy and grace are to be
distinctly considered. 1. Mercy, for that by it we have through
Christ the continuation and multiplication of forgivenesses,
without which there is no salvation. 2. Grace, for that by it we
are upheld, supported, and enabled to go through our needy times,
as Christians, without which there is no salvation neither. The
first all will grant, the second is clear: 'If any man draws back,
my soul shall have no pleasure in him; but we are not of them who
draw back unto perdition, but of them that believe to the saving
of the soul' (Heb 10:38,39).
Nor can any thing help where this is wanting; for our parts, our
knowledge, our attainments, nor our graces, cannot so carry us
through this world, but that we shall be guilty of that that will
sink us down to hell, without God's pardoning mercy. It is not the
grace that we have received can do it, nor the grace that is to be
received that can do it; nothing can do it but the pardoning mercy
of God: for because all our graces are here imperfect, they cannot
produce a spotless obedience. But where there is not a spotless
obedience, there must of necessity follow a continuation of pardon
and forgiveness by mercy, or I know what will become of the soul.
Here, therefore, the apostle lays an obligation upon thee to the
throne of grace, to wit, that thou mayest obtain mercy, a continuation
of mercy, mercy as long as thou art like to live this vain life on
the earth; mercy that will reach through all thy days. For there
is not a day, nor a duty; not a day that thou livest, nor a duty
that thou dost, but will need that mercy should come after to take
away thy iniquity.[36] Nay, thou canst not receive mercy so clearly,
as not to stand in need of another act of mercy to pardon weakness
in thy no better receiving the last. We receive not our mercies
so humbly, so readily, so gladly, and with that thankfulness as
we should: and therefore, for the want of these, have the need of
another, and another act of God's sin-pardoning mercy, and need
shall have thereof, as long as evil time shall last with us.
But is not this great grace, that we should thus be called upon
to come to God for mercy? Yea, is not God unspeakably good, in
providing such a throne of grace, such a sacrifice, such a high
priest, and so much mercy for us, and then to invite us to come
with boldness to him for it? Nay, doth not his kindness yet further
appear, by giving of us items and intimations of needy times, and
evil days, on purpose to provoke us to come to him for mercy? This
then shows us, as also we have hinted before, that the throne of
grace, and Christ Jesus our High Priest, are both provided upon
the account of our imperfections, namely, that we who are called
might not be, by remaining weaknesses, hindered of, but obtain eternal
inheritance. Weaknesses, such weaknesses remain in the justified,
and such slips and failings are found in and upon them, that call
for a course of mercy and forgiveness to attend them. Farther,
this also intimates, that God's people should not be dejected at
the apprehensions of their imperfections; I say, not so dejected,
as therefore to cast off faith, and hope, and prayer; for a throne
of grace is provided for them, to the which they may, they must,
they ought continually to resort for mercy, sin-pardoning mercy.
Grace here I take to be that grace which God has appointed for us,
to dwell in us; and that by and through the continual supply of
which we are to be enabled to do and suffer, and to manage ourselves
in doing and suffering according to the will of God. 'Let us have
grace whereby we may serve God acceptably with reverence and godly
fear' (Heb 12:28). So again, 'he giveth more grace; wherefore he
saith, God resisteth the proud, but giveth grace unto the humble'
(James 4:6; Prov 3:34; 1 Peter 5:5). The grace, therefore, that
this text intends, is grace given or to be given; grace received
or to be received; grace a root, a principle of grace, with its
continual supplies for the perfecting of that salvation that God
has designed for us. This was that which comforted Paul, when the
messenger of Satan was sent to buffet him, it was said unto him
by Christ, 'My grace is sufficient for thee' (2 Cor 12:9). As who
should say, Paul, be not utterly cast down, I have wherewith all
to make thee stand, and overcome, and that is my grace, by which
thou shalt be supported, strengthened, comforted, and made to live
a triumphant life, notwithstanding all that oppress thee. But this
came to him upon his praying; for this I prayed to God thrice,
saith he. So again, 'God is able to make all grace abound toward
you; that ye always have all sufficiency in all things, may abound
to every good work' (2 Cor 9:8). Thus you see, that by grace in
these places is meant that spirit, and those principles of grace,
by the increase and continual supply of which we are inwardly
strengthened, and made to abound to every good work.
Is not this the experience of all the godly? Can they do that at
all times which they can do at some times? Can they pray, believe,
love, fear, repent, and bow before God always alike? No. Why so?
they are the same men, the same human nature, the same saints.
Aye, but the same grace, in the same degree, operation, and life of
grace, doth not so now work on that man, that nature, that saint;
therefore, notwithstanding he is what he is, he cannot do at all
times alike. Thus therefore it is manifest, that nature, simply
as such, is a great way off of doing that which is acceptable with
God. Refined, purified, sanctified nature, cannot do but by the
immediate supplies, lifts, and helps of that spirit and principle
of grace by the which it is so sanctified.
The day of grace is the day of expense: this is our spending time.
Hence we are called pilgrims and strangers in the earth, that is,
travellers from place to place, from state to state, from trial to
trial (Heb 11:13). Now, as the traveller at a fresh inn is made to
spend fresh money; so Christians, at a fresh temptation, at a new
temptation, are made to spend afresh, and a new supply of grace.
Great men, when and while their sons are travellers, appoint
that their bags of money be lodged ready, or conveniently paid in
at such and such a place, for the suitable relief of them; and so
they meet with supplies. Why, so are the sons of the Great One,
and he has allotted that we should travel beyond sea, or at a great
distance from our Father's house: wherefore he has appointed that
grace shall be provided for us, to supply at such a place, such
a state or temptation, as need requires: but withal, as my lord
expecteth his son should acquaint him with the present emptiness
of his purse, and with the difficulty he hath now to grapple with;
so God our Father expects that we should plead by Christ our need
at the throne of grace, in order to a supply of grace:[39] 'Let us
therefore come boldly unto the throne of grace, that we may obtain
mercy, and find grace to help in time of need.'
Now then, this shows the reason why many Christians that are
indeed possessed with the grace of God, do yet walk so oddly, act
so poorly, and live such ordinary lives in the world. They are like
to those gentlemen's sons that are of the more extravagant sort,
that walk in their lousy hue, when they might be maintained better.
Such young men care not, perhaps scorn to acquaint their fathers
with their wants, and therefore walk in their threadbare jackets,
with hose and shoes out at heels! a right emblem of the uncircumspect
child of God. This also shows the reason of all those dreadful
falls and miscarriages that many of the saints sustain, they made
it not their business to watch to see what is coming, and to pray
for a supply of grace to uphold them; they, with David, are too
careless, or, with Peter, too confident, or, with the disciples,
too sleepy, and so the temptation comes upon them; and their want
like an armed man. This also shows the reason why some that, to
one's thinking, would fall every day; for that their want of parts,
their small experience, their little knowledge of God's matters, do
seem to bespeak it; yet stand, walk better, and keep their garments
more white than those that have, when compared with them, twice as
much as they. They are praying saints, they are often at the throne
of grace, they are sensible of their weakness, keep a sight of their
danger before their faces, and will not be contented without more
grace.
Third. And this leads me, in the third place, to show you, that
were we wise, and did we ply it at the throne of grace for grace,
as we should, O what spotless lives might we live! We should then
have always help in time of need; for so the text insinuates, 'That
we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of need.' This
is that which Peter means, when he says, 'And besides this,' that
is, besides your faith in Christ, and besides your happy state of
justification, 'giving all diligence, add to your faith, virtue;
and to virtue, knowledge; and to knowledge, temperance; and to
temperance, patience; and to patience, godliness; and to godliness,
brotherly kindness; and to brotherly kindness, charity. For if
these things be in you and abound,' and be continually supplied
with a supply from the throne of grace, 'they make you that ye shall
neither be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus
Christ. But he that lacketh these things is blind, and cannot see
afar off, and hath forgotten that he was purged from his old sins.
Wherefore the rather, brethren, give diligence to make your calling
and election sure: for if you do these things, ye shall never fall:
for so an entrance shall be ministered unto you abundantly into
the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ' (2
Peter 1:5-11).
But methinks this is the mystery of all as to this, that the soul
should take that pains, contrive such ways, and take such advantages
against itself! For it is the soul that sins, that the soul might
die! O! sin, what art thou? What hast thou done? and what still
wilt thou further do, if mercy, and blood and grace doth not prevent
thee? O silly soul! what a fool has sin made of thee? what an ass
art thou become to sin? that ever an immortal soul, at first made in
the image of God, for God, and for his delight, should so degenerate
from its first station, and so abase itself that it might serve
sin, as to become the devil's ape, and to play like a Jack Pudding
for him upon any stage or theatre in the world! But I recall
myself; for if sin can make one who was sometimes a glorious angel
in heaven, now so to abuse himself as to become, to appearance,
as a filthy frog, a toad, a rat, a cat, a fly, a mouse, a dog, or
bitch's whelp,[41] to serve its ends upon a poor mortal, that it
might gull them of everlasting life, no marvel if the soul is so
beguiled as to sell itself from God, and all good, for so poor a
nothing as a momentary pleasure is. But,
Third. If sin and the soul are such great things, then behold the
love and care of God; the love to souls, the care he hath taken
to deliver them from sin. Sin, as I have said, is such a thing as
from which no man can deliver himself; the soul is such a thing,
so rich and valuable in the nature of it, that scarce one in twenty
thousand counts of it as they should. But God, the lover of mankind,
and the greatest enemy to sin, has provided means effectually
to overthrow the one, and to save and secure the other. Behold,
therefore, the love of God, the care of God for us; for when we
neither loved nor cared for ourselves, God both loved us and cared
for us. God commended his love towards us in sending his Son to be
the propitiation for our sins.
Let it be then concluded that 'GOD IS LOVE,' and that the love that
God hath to us is such as we never had for ourselves. We have been
often tried about our own love to ourselves, and it has been proved
over, and over, and over, that sometimes even we that are Christians
could, and would, had it been possible, have pawned ourselves, our
souls, and our interest in Christ, for a foul and beastly lust. But
God, who is rich in mercy, for his great love wherewith he loved
us, would not suffer it so to be. Now, if we are so fickle and
uncertain in our love to ourselves, as to value our salvation at
so low and so base a rate, can it be imagined that ever we should,
had it been left to our choice, have given the best of what we
have for the salvation of our souls? Yet God gave his Son to be
the Saviour of the world. I say again, if our love is so slender
to our own souls, can any think that it should be more full to the
souls of others? And yet God had such love to us, as to give his
only begotten Son for our sins. Yet again, how should it be that we,
who are usually so affected with the conceit of our own happiness,
since we care no more for our own souls, do our best to secure the
souls of others? and yet God, who is infinitely above all creatures,
has so condescended, as to concern himself, and to give the best
of his flock, even his only beloved Son, for very dust and ashes.
Wherefore, 'Herein is love, not that we loved God,' or our neighbour,
'but that God loved us, and sent his Son to be the propitiation
for our sins' (1 John 4:10).
Ah, Lord! when will foolish man be wise, and come to God with his
hands upon his head, and with his face covered with shame, to ask
him forgiveness for that wickedness which he has committed? which
is wickedness committed not only against holiness and justice,
against which also men by nature have an antipathy, but against
mercy and love, without which man cannot tell what to do. Blush,
sinner, blush. Ah, that thou hadst grace to blush! But this is God's
complaint, 'Were they ashamed when they had committed abomination?
Nay, they were not at all ashamed, neither could they blush' (Jer
8:12). It is a sad thing that men should be thus void of consideration,
and yet they are so. They are at a continual jest with God and his
Word, with the devil and sin, with hell and judgment. But they will
be in earnest one day; but that one day will be too late!
FOOTNOTES:
1. How many thousands rush into the presence of God with unholy,
thoughtless familiarity, by repeating the form called the Lord's
prayer. His infinite holiness should make us tremblingly apply
to his throne of grace. In the name of the Redeemer, and in his
mediation alone, the sinner can find access, and be emboldened to
draw nigh and receive grace to help in our everyday time of need.--Ed.
11. What laid the cornerstone of this throne, but grace? What brings
in the inhabitants, preserves them, perfects them, but grace?--Traill.
14. Bunyan here refers to the marginal note in the Genevan bible,
Exodus 30. The high priest's washing 'signifying that he that cometh
to God must be washed from all sin and corruption.'--Ed.
15. This sea was full of pure water, a figure of the word, without
mixture of men's inventions. See the typical meaning of the molten
sea and the laver, fully explained and illustrated by Bunyan, in
Solomon's Temple Spiritualized of this edition.--Ed.
'The priest having retired a little behind the altar, the deacon
takes the cross (a plain wooden cross without the figure), covered
with a veil, and gives it to the priest, who turns to the people
and shows the top of the cross, before which they all prostrate
themselves and kiss the ground, singing Ecce lignum crucis. He
then removes the veil from the right limb of the cross, and lifts
it up, singing, still louder, Behold the wood of the cross; again
the people prostrate themselves. The priest then comes to the
middle of the altar, and taking off the veil, exhibits the wooden
cross to be adored; then setting it down, he goes on his knees,
and rising, takes off his shoes and approaches the cross to worship
it, making three genuflections, and kisses it. All the clergy who
are present take off their shoes, prostrate themselves, worship and
kiss the cross in the order of their dignity. All the officers of
the church, and all the people, follow in the same manner to adore
it, while solemn music and chanting attends and completes the
ceremony.' Thus a wooden board, made into the shape of a cross by
some joiner, receives Divine honours. Talk not of heathen idols. Who
can wonder that honest John Bunyan felt indignation, and exclaimed,
'O idolatry! O blasphemy!'--Ed.
25. An extraneous taste that leaves a sting behind, as, 'She had
a tongue with a tang.' 'The wine has a tang of the cask.'--Ed.
26. This use of the word 'resent' has been long obsolete; it expressed
a deep sense or strong perception of good as well as evil; in this
place it means, 'proved to have been satisfactory or gratifying.'--Ed.
30. Bunyan's daughter, Mary, was blind, and thus became an object
of his tenderest solicitude. When he was sent to prison for
preaching, he felt for her far more than for all other worldly
objects. 'My poor blind child. O the thoughts of the hardship she
might go under would break my heart to pieces.'--Grace Abounding,
No. 320 and 329.--Ed.
35. The late Rev. John Newton, who lived to a good old age,
in his latter days used to tell his friends--'I am like a parcel,
packed up and directed, only waiting the carrier to take me to my
destination'; blessed tranquility under such solemn circumstances.--Ed.
40. How truly and solemnly is the downward road of a sinner here
portrayed. 1. Drawn aside by lust. 2. A lie to conceal his wicked
folly. 3. Intoxication, to drown his convictions and harden his
conscience. 4. The consequent ruin of his worldly prospects; and,
5. A vain effort by fraud to keep up his credit!!!--Ed.
***
OR,
BEING THE LAST WORKS OF THAT EMINENT PREACHER AND FAITHFUL MINISTER
OF JESUS CHRIST, MR. JOHN BUNYAN, OF BEDFORD.
GEO. OFFOR.
The day in which we live, and the present circumstances which the
people of God and these nations are under, do loudly proclaim a
very great necessity of being in this broken and tender frame; for
who can foresee what will be the issue of these violent fermentations
that are amongst us? Who knows what will become of the ark of God?
Therefore it is a seasonable duty with old Eli to sit trembling
for it. Do we not also hear the sound of the trumpet, the alarm of
wars; and ought we not, with the prophet, to cry out, 'My bowels,
my bowels! I am pained at my very heart; my heart maketh a noise
in me, I cannot hold my peace,' &c. (Jer 4:19). Thus was that holy
man affected with the consideration of what might befall Jerusalem,
the temple and ordinances of God, &c., as the consequence of the
present dark dispensations they were under. Will not a humble posture
best become us when we have humbling providences in prospect? Mercy
and judgment seem to be struggling in the same womb of providence;
and which will come first out we know not; but neither of them can
we comfortably meet, but with a broken and a contrite spirit. If
judgment comes, Josiah's posture of tenderness will be the best we
can be found in; and also to say, with David, 'My flesh trembleth
for fear of thee, and I am afraid of thy judgments' (Psa 119:120).
It is very sad when God smites, and we are not grieved; which the
prophet complains of, 'Thou hast stricken them, but they have not
grieved,' &c. 'They have made their faces harder than a rock, they
have refused to return' (Jer 5:3).
But such as know the power of his anger will have a deep awe of
God upon their hearts, and, observing him in all his motions, will
have the greatest apprehensions of his displeasure. So that when he
is coming forth in any terrible dispensation, they will, according
to their duty, prepare to meet him with a humble and broken heart.
But if he should appear to us in his goodness, and farther lengthen
out the day of our peace and liberty, yet still the contrite frame
will be most seasonable; then will be a proper time, with Job, to
abhor ourselves in dust and ashes, and to say, with David, 'Who am
I that thou hast brought me hitherto'! (Job 42:6; 2 Sam 7:18).
But we must still know that this broken tender heart is not a plant
that rows in our own soil, but is the peculiar gift of God himself.
He that made the heart must break the heart. We may be under
heart-breaking providences, and yet the heart remain altogether
unbroken; as it was with Pharaoh, whose heart, though it was under
the hammers of ten terrible judgments, immediately succeeding one
another, yet continued hardened against God. The heart of man is
harder than hardness itself, till God softeneth and breaks it. Men
move not, they relent not, let God thunder never so terribly; let
God, in the greatest earnest, cast abroad his firebrands, arrows,
and death, in the most dreadful representations of wrath and judgment,
yet still man trembles not, nor is any more astonished than if in
all this God were but in jest, till he comes and falls to work with
him, and forces him to cry out, What have I done? What shall I do?
And the like instance we have in the jailor, who was a most barbarous,
hard-hearted wretch; yet, when God came to deal with him, he was
soon tamed, and his heart became exceeding soft and tender (Acts
16:29,30).
Men may speak long enough, and the heart not at all be moved; but
'The voice of the Lord is powerful, the voice of the Lord is full
of majesty,' and breaketh the rocks and cedars (Psa 29:4). He
turns 'the rock into a standing water, the flint into a fountain
of waters' (Psa 114:8). And this is a glorious work indeed, that
hearts of stone should be dissolved and melted into waters of godly
sorrow, working repentance not to be repented of (2 Cor 7:10).
When God speaks effectually the stoutest heart must melt and
yield. Wait upon God, then, for the softening thy heart, and avoid
whatsoever may be a means of hardening it; as the apostle cautions
the Hebrews, 'Take heed,--lest any of you be hardened through the
deceitfulness of sin' (Heb 3:13).
Sin is deceitful, and will harden all those that indulge it. The
more tender any man is to his lust, the more will he be hardened
by it. There is a native hardness in every man's heart; and though
it may be softened by gospel means, yet if those means be afterwards
neglected, the heart will fall to its native hardness again: as it
is with the wax and the clay. Therefore, how much doth it behove
us to keep close to God, in the use of all gospel-means, whereby
our hearts being once softened, may be always kept so; which is
best done by repeating the use of those means which were at first
blessed for the softening of them.
O let none who peruse this book herd with that generation of
hardened ones, but be a companion of all those that mourn in Zion
and whose hearts are broken for their own, the church's, and the
nation's provocations; who, indeed, are the only likely ones that
will stand in the gap to divert judgments. When Shishak, king of
Egypt, with a great host, came up against Judah, and having taken
their frontier fenced cities, they sat down before Jerusalem, which
put them all under a great consternation; but the king and princes
upon this humbled themselves; the Lord sends a gracious message to
them by Shemaiah the prophet, the import whereof was, That because
they humbled themselves, the Lord would not destroy them, nor pour
out his wrath upon them, by the hand of Shishak (2 Chron 12:5-7).
OR,
The demonstration of this is plain: for that heart God will not
despise it. 'A broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not
despise.' Whence I draw this conclusion: That a spirit rightly
broken, a heart truly contrite, is to God an excellent thing. That
is, a thing that goeth beyond all external duties whatever; for that
is intended by this saying, The sacrifices, because it answereth
to all sacrifices which we can offer to God; yea it serveth in
the room of all: all our sacrifices without this are nothing; this
alone is all.
There are four things that are very acceptable to God. The
Third. To walk holily and humbly, and obediently, towards and before
God, is another. Hath the Lord as great delight in burnt-offerings
and sacrifices, as in obeying the voice of the Lord?--'Behold, to
obey is better than sacrifice; and to hearken than the fat of rams'
(Micah 6:6-8; 1 Sam 15:22).
Fourth. And this in our text is the fourth: 'The sacrifices of God
are a broken spirit: a broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou
wilt not despise.'
But note by the way, that this broken, this broken and contrite
heart, is thus excellent only to God: 'O God,' saith he, 'THOU
wilt not despise it.' By which is implied, the world have not this
esteem or respect for such a heart, or for one that is of a broken
and a contrite spirit. No, no, a man, a woman, that is blessed with
a broken heart, is so far off from getting by that esteem with the
world, that they are but burdens and trouble houses wherever they
are or go. Such people carry with them molestation and disquietment:
they are in carnal families as David was to the king of Gath,
troublers of the house (1 Sam 21).
Their sighs, their tears, their day and night groans, their cries
and prayers, and solitary carriages, put all the carnal family out
of order.[1] Hence you have them brow-beaten by some, contemned by
others, yea, and their company fled from and deserted by others.
But mark the text, 'A broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt
not despise,' but rather accept; for not to despise is with God to
esteem and set a high price upon.
'To this man will I look,' with this man will I be delighted; for
so to look doth sometimes signify. 'Thou hast ravished my heart,
my sister, my spouse,' saith Christ to his humble-hearted, 'thou
hast ravished my heart with one of thine eyes' (Cant 4:9). While
it is as a conduit to let the rivers out of thy broken heart. I am
taken, saith he, 'with one chain of thy neck' (Can 4:9). Here you
see he looks and is ravished, he looks and is taken, as it saith
in another place, 'The king is held in the galleries'; that is, is
taken with his beloved, with the dove's eyes of his beloved, with
the contrite spirit of his people (Cant 7:5, 1:15). But it is not
thus reported of him with respect to heaven or earth: them he sets
more lightly by, them he 'reserves unto fire against the day of
judgment and perdition of ungodly men' (2 Peter 3:7), but the broken
in heart are his beloved, his jewels.
Third. Yet further, God doth not only prefer such an one, as has
been said, before heaven and earth, but he loveth, he desireth to
have that man for an intimate, for a companion; he must dwell; he
must cohabit with him that is of a broken heart, with such as are
of a contrite spirit. 'For thus saith the high and lofty One that
inhabiteth eternity, whose name is Holy, I will dwell in the high
and holy place, with him also that is of a contrite and humble
spirit' &c. (Isa 57:15).
Behold here both the majesty and condescension of the high and lofty
One; his majesty, in that he is high, and the inhabiter of eternity;
'I am the high and lofty One,' saith he, 'I inhabit eternity.'
Verily this consideration is enough to make the broken-hearted man
creep into a mouse-hole to hide himself from such a majesty! But
behold his heart, his condescending mind; I am for dwelling also
with him that hath a broken heart, with him that is of a contrite
spirit; that is the man that I would converse with, that is the
man with whom I will cohabit; that is, he, saith God, I will choose
for my companion. For to desire to dwell with one supposeth all
these things; and verily, of all the men in the world, none have
acquaintance with God, none understand what communion with him, and
what his teachings mean, but such as are of a broken and contrite
heart. 'He is nigh unto them that are of a broken spirit' (Psa 34:18).
These are they intended in the 14th Psalm, where it is said, 'The
Lord looked down from heaven,--to see if any did understand and
seek God'; that he might find some body in the world with whom he
might converse; for indeed there is none else that either understand,
or that can tend to hearken to him. God, as I may say, is forced
to break men's hearts, before he can make them willing to cry to
him, or be willing that he should have any concerns with them; the
rest shut their eyes, stop their ears, withdraw their hearts, or
say unto God, Be gone (Job 21:14). But now the broken in heart can
tend it; he has leisure, yea, leisure, and will, and understanding,
and all; and therefore is a fit man to have to do with God. There
is room also in this man's house, in this man's heart, in this
man's spirit, for God to dwell, for God to walk, for God to set up
a kingdom.
Fourth. God doth not only prefer such a heart before all sacrifices,
nor esteems such a man above heaven and earth; nor yet only desire
to be of his acquaintance, but he reserveth for him his chief comforts,
his heart-reviving and soul-cherishing cordials. 'I dwell,' saith
he, with such to revive them, and to support and comfort them, 'to
revive the spirit of the humble, and to revive the heart of the
contrite ones' (Isa 57:15). The broken-hearted man is a fainting
man; he has his qualms, his sinking fits; he ofttimes dies away
with pain and fear; he must be stayed with flagons, and comforted
with apples, or else he cannot tell what to do: he pines, he pines
away in his iniquity; nor can any thing keep him alive and make him
well but the comforts and cordials of Almighty God (Exo 33:10,11).
Wherefore with such an one God will dwell, to revive the heart,
to revive the spirit. 'To revive the spirit of the humble, and to
revive the heart of the contrite ones.'
God has cordials, but they are to comfort them that are cast down
(2 Cor 7:6); and such are the broken-hearted; as for them that are
whole, they need not the physician (Mark 2:17). They are the broken
in spirit that stand in need of cordials; physicians are men of
no esteem but with them that feel their sickness; and this is one
reason why God is so little accounted of in the world, even because
they have not been made sick by the wounding stroke of God. But
now when a man is wounded, has his bones broken, or is made sick,
and laid at the grave's mouth, who is of that esteem with him as
is an able physician? What is so much desired as are the cordials,
comforts, and suitable supplies of the skilful physician in those
matters. And thus it is with the broken-hearted; he needs, and God
has prepared for him plenty of the comforts and cordials of heaven,
to succour and relieve his sinking soul.
Wherefore such a one lieth under all the promises that have succour
in them, and consolation for men, sick and desponding under the
sense of sin and the heavy wrath of God; and they, says God, shall
be refreshed and revived with them. Yea, they are designed for them;
he hath therefore broken their hearts, he hath therefore wounded
their spirits, that he might make them apt to relish his reviving
cordials, that he might minister to them his reviving comforts.
For indeed, so soon as he hath broken them, his bowels yearn, and
his compassions roll up and down within him, and will not suffer
him to abide afflicting. Ephraim was one of these; but so soon as
God had smitten him, behold his heart, how it works towards him.
'Is Ephraim,' saith he, 'my dear son?' that is, he is so; 'is he
a pleasant child?' that is, he is so; 'for since I spake against
him, I do earnestly remember him still; therefore my bowels are
troubled for him; I will surely have mercy upon him, saith the
Lord' (Jer 31:18-20). This therefore is another demonstration.
Fifth. As God prefers such a heart, and esteems the man that has
it above heaven and earth; as he covets intimacy with such an one,
and prepares for him his cordials; so when he sent his Son Jesus
into the world to be a Saviour, he gave him in special a charge to
take care of such; yea, that was one of the main reasons he sent
him down from heaven, anointed for his work on earth. 'The Spirit
of the Lord God is upon me,' saith he; 'because he hath anointed
me to preach the gospel to the poor; he hath sent me to bind up the
broken-hearted,' &c. (Luke 4:18; Isa 61:1). Now that this is meant
of Christ, is confirmed by his own lips; for in the days of his
flesh he takes this book in his hand, when he was in the synagogue
at Nazareth, and read this very place unto the people; and then
tells them that that very day that Scripture was fulfilled in their
ears (Luke 6:16-18).
But see, these are the souls whose welfare is contrived in the
heavens. God consulted their salvation, their deliverance, their
health, before his Son came down from thence. Doth not therefore
this demonstrate, that a broken-hearted man, that a man of a contrite
spirit, is of great esteem with God. I have often wondered at David
that he should give Joab and the men of war a charge, that they
take heed that they carry it tenderly to that young rebel Absalom
his son (2 Sam 18:5). But that God, the high God, the God against
whom we have sinned, should, so soon as he has smitten, give his Son
a command, a charge, a commission to take care of, to bind up and
heal the broken in heart; this is that which can never be sufficiently
admired or wondered at by men or angels.
And behold again into whose care a broken heart and a contrite
spirit hath put this poor creature; he is under the care of God,
the care and cure of Christ. If a man was sure that his disease
had put him under the special care of the king and the queen, yet
could he not be sure of life, he might die under their sovereign
hands. Ay, but here is a man in the favour of God, and under the
hand of Christ to be healed; under whose hand none yet ever died
for want of skill and power in him to save their life; wherefore
this man must live; Christ has in commission not only to bind up
his wounds, but to heal him. He has of himself so expounded it in
reading his commission; wherefore he that has his heart broken,
and that is of a contrite spirit, must not only be taken in hand,
but healed; healed of his pain, grief, sorrow, sin, and fears
of death and hell-fire; wherefore he adds, that he must give unto
such 'beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, the garment
of praise for the spirit of heaviness,' and must 'comfort all that
mourn' (Isa 61:2,3). This, I say, he has in the commission, the
broken-hearted are put into his hand, and he has said himself he
will heal him. Hence he says of that same man, 'I have seen his
ways, and will heal him; I will lead him also, and restore comforts
unto him, and to his mourners;--and I will heal him' (Isa 57:18,19).
And this is a fifth demonstration.
Sixth. As God prefers such a heart, and so esteems the man that has
it; as he desires his company, has provided for him his cordials,
and given a charge to Christ to heal him, so he has promised in
conclusion to save him. 'He saveth such as be of a contrite spirit,'
or, as the margin has it, that be 'contrite of spirit' (Psa 34:18).
And this is the conclusion of all; for to save a man is the end of
all special mercy. 'He saveth such as be of a contrite spirit.' To
save, is to forgive; for without forgiveness of sins we cannot be
saved. To save, is to preserve one in this miserable world, and
to deliver one from all those devils, temptations, snares, and
destructions that would, were we not kept, were we not preserved
of God, destroy us body and soul for ever. To save, is to bring
a man body and soul to glory, and to give him an eternal mansion
house in heaven, that he may dwell in the presence of this good God,
and the Lord Jesus, and to sing to them the songs of his redemption
for ever and ever. This it is to be saved; nor can any thing less
than this complete the salvation of the sinner. Now, this is to
be the lot of him that is of a broken heart, and the end that God
will make with him that is of a contrite spirit. 'He saveth such
as be contrite of spirit.' He saveth such! This is excellent!
But, do the broken in spirit believe this? Can they imagine that
this is to be the end that God has designed them to, and that he
intended to make with them in the day in which he began to break
their hearts? No, no; they, alas! think quite the contrary. They
are afraid that this is but the beginning of death, and a token
that they shall never see the face of God with comfort, either in
this world or that which is to come. Hence they cry, 'Cast me not
away from thy presence'; or, Now I am 'free among the dead whom
God remembers no more' (Psa 51:11, 88:4,5). For indeed there goes
to the breaking of the heart a visible appearance of the wrath
of God, and a home charge from heaven of the guilt of sin to the
conscience. This to reason is very dreadful; for it cuts the soul
down to the ground; 'for a wounded spirit who [none] can bear?'
(Prov 18:14).
It seems also now to this man, that this is but the beginning of
hell; but as it were the first step down to the pit; when, indeed,
all these are but the beginnings of love, and but that which makes
way for life. The Lord kills before he makes alive; he wounds
before his hands make whole. Yea, he does the one in order to, or
because he would do the other; he wounds, because his purpose is to
heal; 'he maketh sore, and bindeth up; he woundeth, and his hands
make whole' (Deut 32:39; 1 Sam 2:6; Job 5:18). His design, I say,
is the salvation of the soul. He scourgeth, he breaketh the heart
of every son whom he receiveth, and woe be to him whose heart God
breaketh not.
I come now in order to show you what a broken heart and what a
contrite spirit is. This must be done, because in the discovery of
this lies both the comfort of them that have it, and the conviction
of them that have it not. Now, that I may do this the better, I
must propound and speak to these four things. FIRST. I must show
you what an one that heart is that is not broken, that is not
contrite. SECOND. I must show you how, or with what the heart is
broken and made contrite. THIRD. Show you how, and what it is, when
broken and made contrite. And, FOURTH. I shall, last of all, give
you some signs of a broken and contrite heart.
FIRST. For the first of these, to wit, What an one that heart is,
that is not a broken, that is not a contrite heart.
Fifth. It is an unbelieving heart, and one that will turn away from
God to sin (Heb 3:12; Deut 17:17).
Ninth. It is a heart that will give place to Satan, but will resist
the Holy Ghost (Acts 5:3, 7:51).
That the heart before it is broken is such, and worse than I have
described it to be, is sufficiently seen by the whole course of
the world. Where is the man whose heart has not been broken, and
whose spirit is not contrite, that according to the Word of God
deals honestly with his own soul? It is one character of a right
heart, that it is sound in God's statutes, and honest (Psa 119:18;
Luke 8:15). Now, an honest heart will not put off itself, nor
be put off with that which will not go for current money with the
merchant; I mean, with that which will not go for saving grace at
the day of judgment. But alas! alas! but few men, how honest soever
they are to others, have honesty towards themselves; though he is
the worst of deceivers who deceiveth his own soul, as James has
it, about the things of his own soul (1:22,26). But,
SECOND. I now come to show you with what and how the heart is
broken, and the spirit made contrite.
[First. With what the heart is broken, and the spirit made contrite.]
The instrument with which the heart is broken, and with which the
spirit is made contrite, is the Word. 'Is not my word like as a
fire, saith the Lord; and like a hammer, that breaketh the rock in
pieces?' (Jer 23:29). The rock, in this text, is the heart, which
in another place is compared to an adamant, which adamant is harder
than flint (Zech 7:11,12; Eze 3:9). This rock, this adamant, this
stony heart, is broken and made contrite by the Word. But it only
is so, when the Word is as a fire, and as a hammer to break and
melt it. And then, and then only, it is as a fire, and a hammer to
the heart to break it, when it is managed by the arm of God. No
man can break the heart with the Word; no angel can break the heart
with the Word; that is, if God forbears to second it by mighty power
from heaven. This made Balaam go without a heart rightly broken,
and truly contrite, though he was rebuked by an angel; and the
Pharisees die in their sins, though rebuked for them, and admonished
to turn from them, by the Saviour of the world. Wherefore, though
the Word is the instrument with which the heart is broken, yet it
is not broken with the Word, till that Word is managed by the might
and power of God.
This made the prophet Isaiah, after long preaching, cry out, that
he had laboured for nought, and in vain; and this made him cry to
God, 'to rend the heavens and come down,' that the mountains, or
rocky hills, or hearts, might be broken, and melt at his presence
(Isa 44:4, 64:1,2). For he found by experience, that as to this
no effectual work could be done, unless the Lord put to his hand.
This also is often intimated in the Scriptures, where it saith,
when the preachers preached effectually to the breaking of men's
hearts, 'the Lord wrought with them;[2] the hand of the Lord was
with them,' and the like (Mark 16:20; Acts 11:21).
Now when the hand of the Lord is with the Word, then it is mighty:
it is 'mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holds' (2
Cor 10:4). It is sharp, then, as a sword in the soul and spirit;
it sticks like an arrow in the hearts of sinners, to the causing
of the people to fall at his foot for mercy (Heb 4:12). Then it
is, as was said afore, as a fire and as a hammer to break this rock
in pieces (Psa 110:3). And hence the Word is made mention of under
a double consideration. 1. As it stands by itself. 2. As attended
with power from heaven.
2. But when seconded by mighty power, then the same Word is as the
roaring of a lion, as the piercing of a sword, as a burning fire
in the bones, as thunder and as a hammer that dashes all to pieces
(Jer 25:30; Amos 1:2, 3:8; Acts 2:37; Jer 20:9; Psa 29:3-9). Wherefore,
from hence it is to be concluded, that whoever has heard the Word
preached, and has not heard the voice of the living God therein,
has not as yet had their hearts broken, nor their spirits made
contrite for their sins.
[Second. How the heart is broken, and the spirit made contrite.]
And this leads me to the second thing, to wit, To show how the heart
is broken and the spirit made contrite by the Word, and verily it
is when the Word comes home with power. But yet this is but general;
wherefore, more particularly,
THIRD. I am therefore come to show you how and what the heart is
when broken and made contrite. And this I must do, by opening unto
you the two chief expressions in the text. First. What is meant by
this word broken. Second. What is meant by this word contrite.
Men, whatever they say with their lips, cannot conclude, if yet
their hearts want breaking, that sin is a foolish thing. Hence it
says, 'The foolishness of fools is folly' (Prov 14:24). That is,
the foolishness of some men, is that they take pleasure in their
sins; for their sins are their foolishness, and the folly of their
soul lies in their countenancing of this foolishness. But the man
whose heart is broken, he is none of these, he cannot be one of
these, no more than he that has his bones broken can rejoice that
he is desired to play a match at football. Hence, to hear others
talk foolishly, is to the grief of those whom God has wounded: or,
as it is in another place, their words are 'like the piercings of
a sword' (Psa 69:26; Prov 12:18). This, therefore, I take to be
the meaning of these two words, a broken and a contrite spirit.
You know broken bones occasion pain, strong pain, yea, pain that will
make a man or woman groan 'with the groanings of a deadly wounded
man' (Eze 30:24). Soul pain is the sorest pain, in comparison to
which the pain of the body is a very tolerable thing (Prov 18:14).
Now here is soul pain, here is heart pain; here we are discoursing
of a wounded, of a broken spirit; wherefore this is pain to be felt
to the sinking of the whole man, neither can any support this but
God. Here is death in this pain, death for ever, without God's
special mercy. This pain will bring the soul to, and this the
broken-hearted man doth feel. 'The sorrows of death,' saith David,
'compassed me, and the pains of hell gat hold upon me, I found
trouble and sorrow' (Psa 116:3). Ay, I'll warrant thee, poor man,
thou foundest trouble and sorrow indeed; for the pains of hell and
sorrows of death are pains and sorrow the most intolerable. But
this the man is acquainted with that has his heart broken.[5]
You must know that the broken-hearted loves God, loves his soul,
loves good, and hates evil. Now, for such an one to find in himself
an opposition and continual contradiction to this holy passion, it
must needs cause sorrow, godly sorrow, as the apostle Paul calls
it. For such are made sorrow after a godly sort. To be sorry for
that thy nature is with sin depraved, and that through this depravity
thou art deprived of ability to do what the Word and thy holy mind
doth prompt thee to, is to be sorry after a godly sort. For this
sorrow worketh that in thee of which thou wilt never have cause to
repent; no, not to eternity (2 Cor 7:9-11).
Third. The man with a broken heart is a very humble man; or, true
humility is a sign of a broken heart. Hence, brokenness of heart,
contrition of spirit, and humbleness of mind, are put together.
'To revive the spirit of the humble, and to revive the heart of
the contrite ones' (Isa 57:15).
Man, before his heart is broken, counts time his own, and therefore
he spends it lavishly upon every idle thing. His soul is far from
fear, because the rod of God is not upon him; but when he sees
himself under the wounding hand of God, or when God, like a lion,
is breaking all his bones, then he humbleth himself before him,
and falleth at his foot. Now he has learned to count every moment
a mercy, and every small morsel a mercy.
2. Now also the least hopes of mercy for his soul, O how precious
is it! He that was wont to make orts[8] of the gospel, and that
valued promises but as stubble, and the words of God but as rotten
wood; now, with what an eye doth he look on the promise? Yea, he
counted a peradventure of mercy more rich, more worth, than the
whole world. Now, as we say, he is glad to leap at a crust; now,
to be a dog in God's house is counted better by him than to 'dwell
in the tents of the wicked' (Matt 15:16,27; Luke 15:17-19).
3. Now he that was wont to look scornfully upon the people of God,
yea, that used to scorn to show them a gentle cast of his countenance;
now he admires and bows before them, and is ready to lick the dust
of their feet, and would count it his greatest, the highest honour,
to be as one of the least of them. 'Make me as one of thy hired
servants,' says he (Luke 15:19).
4. Now he is, in his own eyes, the greatest fool in nature; for
that he sees he has been so mistaken in his ways, and has not yet
but little, if any true knowledge of God. Every one now, says he,
have more knowledge of God than I; every one serves him better than
I (Psa 73:21,22; Prov 30:2,3).
6. Now, when he talketh with God or men, how doth he debase himself
before them! If with God, how does he accuse himself, and load
himself with the acknowledgments of his own villanies, which he
committed in the days wherein he was the enemy of God! 'Lord,' said
Paul, that contrite one, 'I imprisoned and beat in every synagogue
them that believed on thee. And when the blood of thy martyr Stephen
was shed, I also was standing by, and consenting unto his death,
and kept the raiment of them that slew him' (Acts 22:19,20). Yea,
I punished thy saints 'oft in every synagogue, and compelled them
to blaspheme; and being exceedingly mad against them, I persecuted
them even unto strange cities' (Acts 26:9-11).
1. The broken-hearted now knows his wants, and he knew it not till
now. As he that has a broken bone, knew no want of a bone-setter
till he knew his bone was broken. His broken bone makes him know
it; his pain and anguish makes him know it; and thus it is in
spirituals. Now he sees to be poor indeed is to want the sense of
the favour of God; for his great pain is a sense of wrath, as hath
been shown before. And the voice of joy would heal his broken bones
(Psa 51:8). Two things he thinks would make him rich. (1) A right
and title to Jesus Christ, and all his benefits. (2) And saving
faith therein. They that are spiritually rich are rich in him, and
in the faith of him (2 Cor 8:9; James 2:5).
He then is the poor man, that knows his spiritual want, and also
knows he cannot supply or help himself. But this the broken-hearted
knows, therefore he in his own eyes is the only poor man. True, he
may have something of his own, but that will not supply his want,
and therefore he is a poor man still. I have sacrifices, says
David, but thou dosts not desire them, therefore my poverty remains
(Psa 51:16). Lead is not gold, lead is not current money with the
merchants. There is none has spiritual gold to sell but Christ (Rev
3:18). What can a man do to procure Christ, or procure faith, or
love? Yea, had he never so much of his own carnal excellencies, no,
not one penny of it will go for pay in that market where grace is
to be hand. 'If a man would give all the substance of his house
for love, it would utterly be contemned' (Can 8:7).
1. I say, anguish will make thee cry. 'Trouble and anguish,' saith
David, 'have taken hold on me' (Psa 119:143). Anguish, you know,
doth naturally provoke to crying; now, as a broken bone has anguish,
a broken heart has anguish. Hence the pains of one that has a broken
heart are compared to the pangs of a woman in travail (John 16:20-22).
Anguish will make one cry alone, cry to one's self; and this
is called a bemoaning of one's self. 'I have surely heard Ephraim
bemoaning himself,' saith God (Jer 31:18). That is, being at present
under the breaking, chastising hand of God. 'Thou hast chastised
me,' saith he, 'and I was chastised, as a bullock unaccustomed
to the yoke.' This is his meaning also who said, 'I mourn in my
complaint, and make a noise.' And why? Why, 'My heart is sore pained
within me' (Psa 4:2-4).
Could some of you carnal people but get behind the chamber-door,
to hear Ephraim when he is at the work of self-bemoaning, it would
make you stand amazed to hear him bewail that sin in himself in
which you take delight; and to hear him bemoan his misspending of
time, while you spend all in pursuing your filthy lusts; and to
hear him offended with his heart, because it will not better comply
with God's holy will, while you are afraid of his Word and ways,
and never think yourselves better than when farthest off from God.
The unruliness of the passions and lusts of the broken-hearted make
them often get into a corner, and thus bemoan themselves.
But, I say, few women cry out thus; few women are so in love with
their own eternal salvation, as to be willing to part with all
their lusts and vanities for Jesus Christ and a pitcher. Good Jacob
also was thus: 'If the Lord,' said he, 'will give me bread to eat,
and raiment to put on, then he shall be my God.' Yea, he vowed it
should be so. 'And Jacob vowed a vow, saying, If God will be with
me, and will keep me in this way that I go, and will give me bread
to eat, and raiment to put on; so that I come again to my father's
house in peace: then shall the Lord be my God' (Gen 28:20).
See how God himself words it. 'My pleasant portion,' says he, is
become 'a desolate wilderness, and being desolate, it mourneth unto
me' (Jer 12:11). And this also is natural to those whose hearts are
broken. Whether goes the child, when it catcheth harm, but to its
father, to its mother? Where doth it lay its head, but in their laps?
Into whose bosom doth it pour out its complaint, more especially,
but into the bosom of the father, of a mother, because there are
bowels, there is pity, there is relief and succour? And thus it is
with them whose bones, whose hearts are broken. It is natural to
them; they must cry; they cannot but cry to him. 'Lord, heal me,'
said David, 'for my bones are vexed; Lord, heal me, for my soul
is also sore vexed' (Psa 6:1-3). He that cannot cry feels no pain,
sees no want, fears no danger, or else is dead.
It is a sign the Word of God has had place, and wrought powerfully,
when the heart trembleth at it, is afraid, and stands in awe of it.
When Joseph's mistress tempted him to lie with her, he was afraid
of the Word of God. 'How then can I do this great wickedness,' said
he, 'and sin against God?' He stood in awe of God's Word, durst
not do it, because he kept in remembrance what a dreadful thing it
was to rebel against God's Word. When old Eli heard that the ark
was taken, his very heart trembled within him; for he read by that
sad loss that God was angry with Israel, and he knew the anger of
God was a great and terrible thing. When Samuel went to Bethlehem,
the elders of the town trembled; for they feared that he came to
them with some sad message from God, and they had had experience of
the dread of such things before (Gen 39:7-9; 1 Sam 4:13, 16:1-4).
When Ezra would have a mourning in Israel for the sins of the
land, he sent, and there came to him 'every one that trembled at
the words of the God of Israel, because of the transgressions of
those that had been carried away' (Ezra 9:4).
But what necessity is there that the heart must be broken? Cannot
a man be saved unless his heart be broken? I answer, Avoiding secret
things, which only belong to God, there is a necessity of breaking
the heart, in order to salvation; because a man will not sincerely
comply with the means conducing thereunto until his heart is broken.
For,
Many ways God has manifested this. He has threatened men with
temporal judgments; yea, sent such judgments upon them, once and
again, over and over, but they will not do. What! says he, 'I have
given you cleanness of teeth in all your cities; I have withholden
the rain from you; I have smitten you with blasting and mildew; I
have sent among you the pestilence; I have overthrown some of you,
as God overthrew Sodom and Gomorrah. Yet have ye not returned unto
me, saith the Lord' (Amos 4:6-11). See here! Here is judgment upon
judgment, stroke after stroke, punishment after punishment, but
all will not do, unless the heart is broken. Yea, another prophet
seems to say that such things, instead of converting the soul, sets
it further off. If heart-breaking work attend such strokes, 'Why
should ye be stricken any more?' says he, 'ye will revolt more and
more' (Isa 1:5).
Because these shield and fence the heart from all gospel doctrine,
and from all legal punishments, nothing can come at it till these
are removed. Therefore, in order unto conversion, the heart is said
to be circumcised; that is, this foreskin is taken away, and this
coat of mail is spoiled. 'I will circumcise thy heart,' saith
he, 'to love the Lord thy God with all thine heart'--and then the
devil's goods are spoiled--'that thou mayst live' (Deut 30:6; Luke
11:22).
And now the heart lies open, now the Word will prick, cut, and pierce
it; and it being cut, pricked, and pierced, it bleeds, it faints,
it falls, and dies at the foot of God, unless it is supported by
the grace and love of God in Jesus Christ. Conversion, you know,
begins at the heart; but if the heart be so secured by sin and
Satan, as I have said, all judgments are, while that is so, in
vain. Hence Moses, after he had made a long relation of mercy and
judgment unto the children of Israel, suggests that yet the great
thing was wanting to them, and that thing was, an heart to perceive,
and eyes to see, and ears to hear unto that day (Deut 29:2,3). Their
hearts were as yet not touched to the quick, were not awakened,
and wounded by the holy Word of God, and made tremble at its truth
and terror.
But I say, before the heart be touched, pricked, made smart, &c.,
how can it be thought, be the danger never so great, that it should
repent, cry, bow, and break at the foot of God, and supplicate there
for mercy! and yet thus it must do; for thus God has ordained, and
thus God has appointed it; nor can men be saved without it. But, I
say, can a man spiritually dead, a stupid man, whose heart is past
feeling, do this; before he has his dead and stupid heart awakened,
to see and feel its state and misery without it? But,
Second. Man, take him as he comes into the world--and how wise soever
he is in worldly and temporal things--he is yet a fool as to that
which is spiritual and heavenly. Hence Paul says, 'the natural
man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God; for they are
foolishness unto him,' because he is indeed a fool to them; 'neither,'
says the text, 'can he know them, because they are spiritually
discerned' (1 Cor 2:14). But how now must this fool be made wise?
Why, wisdom must be put into his heart (Job 38:36). Now, none can
put it there but God; and how doth he put it there, but by making
room there for it, by taking away the thing which hinders, which is
that folly and madness which naturally dwelleth there? But how doth
he take that away but by a severe chastising of his soul for it,
until he has made him weary of it? The whip and stripes are provided
for the natural fool, and so it is for him that is spiritually so
(Prov 19:29).
We say, Wisdom is not good till it is bought; and he that buys it,
according to the intention of that proverb, usually smarts for it.
The fool is wise in his own conceit; wherefore there is a double
difficulty attends him before he can be wise indeed. Not only his
folly, but his wisdom, must be removed from him; and how shall that
be, but by ripping up of his heart by some sore conviction, that
may show him plainly that his wisdom is his folly, and that which
will undo him. A fool loves his folly; that is, as treasure, so
much is he in love with it. Now then, it must be a great thing that
must make a fool forsake his folly. The foolish will not weigh,
nor consider, nor compare wisdom with their folly. 'Folly is joy
to him that is destitute of wisdom.' 'As a dog returneth to his
vomit, so a fool returneth to his folly' (Prov 15:21, 26:11). So
loth are they when driven from it to let it go, to let it depart
from them. Wherefore there must go a great deal to the making of
a man a Christian; for as to that, every man is a fool, yea, the
greatest fool, the most unconcerned fool, the most self-willed fool
of all fools; yea, one that will not be turned from his folly but
by the breaking of his heart. David was one of these fools; Manasseh
was one of these fools; Saul, otherwise called Paul, was one of
these fools; and so was I--and that the biggest of all.[11]
Third. Man, take him as he comes into the world, and he is not only
a dead man, and a fool, but a proud man also. Pride is one of those
sins that first showeth itself to children, yea, and it grows up
with them, and mixeth itself with all they do: but it lies most hid,
most deep in man as to his soul-concerns. For the nature of sin,
as sin, is not only to be vile, but to hide its vileness from the
soul. Hence many think they do well when they sin. Jonah thought
he did well to be angry with God (Jonah 4:9). The Pharisees thought
they did well when they said, Christ had a devil (John 8:48).
And Paul thought verily, that he ought to do many things against,
or contrary to, the name of Jesus; which he also did with great
madness (Acts 26:9,10). And thus sin puffs up men with pride, and
a conceit of themselves, that they are a thousand times better than
they are. Hence they think they are the children of God, when they
are the children of the devil; and that they are something as to
Christianity, when they neither are such, nor know what it is that
they must have to make them such (John 8:41-44; Gal 6:3).
Nor is there any thing that will prevail with these to the saving
of their souls, until their hearts are broken. David, after he had
defiled Bathsheba, and slain her husband, yet boasted himself in
his justice and holiness, and would by all means have the man put
to death that had but taken the poor man's lamb, when, alas! poor
soul, himself was the great transgressor. But would he believe
it? No, no; he stood upon the vindicating of himself to be a just
doer; nor would he be made to fall until Nathan, by authority from
God, did tell him that he was the man whom himself had condemned;
'Thou art the man,' said he: at which word his conscience was
awakened, his heart wounded, and so his soul made to fall under the
burden of his guilt, at the feet of the God of heaven for mercy (2
Sam 12:1-13).
Ah! pride, pride! thou art that which holds many a man in the chains
of his sins; thou art it, thou cursed self-conceit, and keepest them
from believing that their state is damnable. 'The wicked, through
the pride of his countenance, will not seek after God' (Psa 10:4).
And if there is so much in the pride of his countenance, what is
there, think you, in the pride of his heart? Therefore Job says it
is to hide pride from man, and so to save his soul from hell, that
God chasteneth him with pain upon his bed, until the multitude of
his bones stick out, and until his life draws nigh to the destroyer
(Job 33:17-22).
It is a hard thing to take a man off his pride, and make him, instead
of trusting in, and boasting of his goodness, wisdom, honesty,
and the like, to see himself a sinner, a fool, yea, a man that is
cruel, as to his own immortal soul. Pride of heart has a power in
it, and is therefore compared to an iron sinew, and an iron chain,
by which they are made stout, and with which they are held in that
stoutness, to oppose the Lord, and drive his Word from their hearts
(Lev 26:19; Psa 73:6).
This was the sin of devils, and it is the sin of man, and the sin,
I say, from which no man can be delivered until his heart is broken;
and then his pride is spoiled, then he will be glad to yield. If
a man be proud of his strength or manhood, a broken leg will maul
him; and if a man be proud of his goodness, a broken heart will
maul him; because, as has been said, a broken heart comes by the
discovery and charge of sin, by the power of God upon the conscience.
Fourth. Man, take him as he comes into the world, and he is not only
a dead man, a fool, and proud, but also self-willed and headstrong
(2 Peter 2:10). A stubborn ungain creature is man before his heart
is broken. Hence they are so often called rebels, rebellious, and
disobedient: they will only do what they list. 'All day long,' says
God, 'have I stretched out my hand to a disobedient and gainsaying
people.' And hence, again, they are compared to a self-willed or
headstrong horse, that will, in spite of his rider, rush into the
battle. 'Every one,' says God, 'turneth to his course, as the horse
rusheth into battle' (Jer 8:6). They say, 'With our tongue will we
prevail, our lips are our own; who is lord over us' (Psa 12:4).
Hence they are said to stop their ears, to pull away their shoulder,
to shut their eyes, and harden their hearts, 'against the words of
God, and contemned the counsel of the Most High' (Psa 107:11; Zech
7:10,12). They are fitly compared to the rebellious son who would
not be ruled by his parents, or to the prodigal, who would have
all in his own hand, and remove himself far away from father and
father's house (Deut 21:20; Luke 15:13). Now for such creatures,
nothing will do but violence. The stubborn son must be stoned till
he dies; and the prodigal must be famished out of all; nothing else,
I say, will do. Their self-willed stubborn heart will not comply
with the will of God before it is broken (Deut 21:21; Luke 15:14-17).
These are they that are called the stout-hearted; these are said
to be far from righteousness, and so will remain until their hearts
are broken; for so they must be made to know themselves (Isa 9:9-11).
Fifth. Man, as he comes into the world, is not only a dead man, a
fool, proud, and self-willed, but also a fearless creature. 'There
is,' saith the text, 'no fear of God before their eyes' (Rom 3:18).
No fear of God! There is fear of man, fear of losing his favour,
his love, his good-will, his help, his friendship; this is seen
everywhere. How do the poor fear the rich, the weak fear the strong,
and those that are threatened, them that threaten! But come now to
God; why, none fear him; that is, by nature, none reverence him;
they neither fear his frowns, nor seek his favour, nor inquire how
they may escape his revenging hand that is lifted up against their
sins and their souls because of sin. Little things they fear the
losing of them; but the soul they are not afraid to lose. 'They
fear not me, saith the Lord' (Mal 3:5).
How many times are some men put in mind of death by sickness upon
themselves, by graves, by the death of others? How many times are
they put in mind of hell by reading the Word, by lashes of conscience,
and by some that go roaring in despair out of this world? How many
times are they put in mind of the day of judgment. As, 1. By God's
binding the fallen angels over to judgment. 2. By the drowning of
the old world (2 Peter 2:4,5; Jude 6,7). 3. By the burning of Sodom
and Gomorrah with fire from heaven (2 Peter 2:6; Jude 7). 4. By
appointing a day (Acts 17:29-31). 5. By appointing a judge (Acts
10:40-42). 6 By reserving their crimes in records (Isa 30:8; Rev
20:12). 7. By appointing and preparing of witnesses (Rom 2:15).
8. And by promising, yea, threatening, yea, resolving, to call the
whole world to his bar, there to be judged for all which they have
done and said, and for every secret thing (Matt 25:31-33, 12:36;
Eccl 11:9, 12:14).
And yet they fear not God: alas! they believe not these things.
These things, to carnal men, are like Lot's preaching to his sons
and daughters that were in Sodom. When he told them that God would
destroy that place, he seemed unto them as one that mocked; and
his words to them were as idle tales (Gen 19:14). Fearless men are
not won by words; blows, wounds, and killings, are the things that
must bring them under fear. How many struggling fits had Israel
with God in the wilderness? How many times did they declare that
there they feared him not? And observe, they were seldom, if ever,
brought to fear and dread his glorious name, unless he beset them
round with death and the grave. Nothing, nothing but a severe hand,
will make the fearless fear. Hence, to speak after the manner of
man, God is put upon it to go this way with sinners when he would
save their souls; even bring them, and lay them at the mouth, and
within sight of hell and everlasting damnation: and there also
charge them with sin and guilt, to the breaking of their hearts,
before they will fear his name.
Sixth. Man, as he comes into the world, is not only a dead man, a
fool, proud, self-willed, and fearless, but he is a false believer
concerning God. Let God report of himself never so plainly, man
by nature will not believe this report of him. No, they are become
vain in their imaginations, and their foolish heart is darkened;
wherefore they turn the glory of God, which is his truth, into a
lie (Rom 1:21-25). God says, He sees; they say, He seeth not; God
saith, He knows; they say, He doth not know: God saith, None is like
himself; yet they say, He is altogether like to them: God saith,
None shall keep his door for naught; they say, It is in vain, and
to no profit to serve him: he saith, He will do good; they say,
He will neither do good nor evil (Job 22:13,14; Psa 50:21; Job
21:14,15; Mal 3:14; Zeph 1:12). Thus they falsely believe concerning
God; yea, as to the word of his grace, and the revelation of his
mercy in Christ, they stick not to say by their practice--for a
wicked man speaketh with his feet (Prov 6:13)--that that is a stark
lie, and not to be trusted to (1 John 5:10).
Seventh. Man, as he comes into the world, is not only a dead man,
a fool, proud, self-willed, fearless, and a false believer, but
a great lover of sin; he is captivated, ravished, drowned in the
delights of it. Hence it [the Word] says, they love sin, delight
in lies, do take pleasure in iniquity, and in them that do it; that
they sport themselves in their own deceivings, and glory in their
shame (John 3:19; Psa 62:4; Rom 1:32; 2 Peter 2:13; Phil 3:19).
This is the temper of man by nature; for sin is mixed with and
has the mastery of all the powers of his soul. Hence they are said
to be captives to it, and to be led captive into the pleasures of
it, at the will of the devil (2 Tim 2:26). And you know it is not
an easy thing to break love, or to take the affections off that
object on which they are so deeply set, in which they are so deeply
rooted, as man's heart is in his sins. Alas! how many are there
that contemn all the allurements of heaven, and that trample upon
all the threatenings of God, and that say, 'Tush,' at all the flames
of hell, whenever these are propounded as motives to work them off
their sinful delights! so fixed are they, so mad are they, upon
these beastly idols. Yea, he that shall take in hand to stop their
course in this their way, is as he that shall attempt to prevent
the raging waves of the sea from their course, when driven by the
mighty winds.
When men are somewhat put to it, when reason and conscience shall
begin a little to hearken to a preacher, or a judgment that shall
begin to hunt for iniquity, how many tricks, evasions, excuses,
demurs, delays, and hiding-holes will they make, invent, and find,
to hide and preserve their sweet sins with themselves and their
souls, in the delights of them, to their own eternal perdition?
Hence they endeavour to stifle conscience, to choke convictions,
to forget God, to make themselves atheists, to contradict preachers
that are plain and honest, and to heap to themselves such of them
only as are like themselves, that speak unto them smooth things,
and prophesy deceits; yea, they say themselves to such preachers,
'Get you out of the way; turn aside out of the path; cause the Holy
One of Israel to cease from before us' (Isa 30:8-11). If they be
followed still, and conscience and guilt shall, like blood-hounds,
find them out in their secret places, and roar against them for
their wicked lives, then they will flatter, cogg, dissemble, and
lie against their soul, promising to mend, to turn, to repent,
and grow better shortly; and all to daff[13] off convictions and
molestations in their wicked ways, that they may yet pursue their
lusts, their pleasures, and sinful delights, in quiet, and without
control.
Yea, further, I have known some that have been made to roar like
bears, to yell like dragons, and to howl like dogs, by reason of
the weight of guilt, and the lashes of hell upon their conscience
for their evil deeds; who have, so soon as their present torments
and fears were gone, returned again with the 'dog to his vomit; and
as the sow that was washed, to her wallowing in the mire' (Hosea
7:14; 2 Peter 2:20-22).
Once again, some have been made taste of the good Word of God, of
the joy of heaven, and of the powers of the world to come, and yet
could not by any one, nay, by all of these, be made to break their
league for ever with their lusts and sins (Heb 6:4,5; Luke 8:13;
John 5:33-35). O Lord! what is man, that thou art mindful of him?
Wherein is he to be accounted of? He has sinned against thee; he
loves his sins more than thee. He is a lover of pleasures more than
he is a lover of God!
But now, how shall this man be reclaimed from this sin? How shall
he be brought, wrought, and made, to be out of love with it?
Doubtless it can be by no other means, by what we can see in the
Word, but by the wounding, breaking, and disabling of the heart
that loves it, and by that means making it a plague and gall unto
it. Sin may be made an affliction, and as gall and wormwood to
them that love it; but the making of it so bitter a thing to such
a man, will not be done but by great and sore means. I remember we
had in our town some time since, a little girl that loved to eat
the heads of foul tobacco-pipes, and neither rod nor good words
could reclaim her, and make her leave them. So her father takes
advice of a doctor, to wean her from them, and it was this: Take,
saith he, a great many of the foulest tobacco-pipe heads you can
get, and boil them in milk, and make a posset of that milk, and
make your daughter drink the posset-drink up. He did so, and gave
his girl it, and made her drink it up; the which became so irksome
and nauseous to her stomach, and made her so sick, that she could
never abide to meddle with tobacco-pipe heads any more, and so was
cured of that disease. Thou lovest thy sin, and neither rod nor
good words will as yet reclaim thee. Well, take heed; if thou wilt
not be reclaimed, God will make thee a posset of them, which shall
be so bitter to thy soul, so irksome to thy taste, so loathsome to
thy mind, and so afflicting to thy heart, that it shall break it
with sickness and grief, till it be loathsome to thee. I say, thus
he will do if he loves thee; if not, he will suffer thee to take
thy course, and will let thee go on with thy tobacco-pipe heads!
The children of Israel will have flesh, must have flesh; they weep,
cry, and murmur, because they have not flesh; the bread of heaven,
that is but light and sorry stuff in their esteem (Num 11:1-6).
Moses goes and tells God how the people despised his heavenly bread,
and how they longed, lusted, and desired to be fed with flesh.
Well, says God, they shall have flesh, they shall have their fill
of flesh; I will feed them with it; they shall have to the full;
and that 'ye shall not eat one day, nor two days, nor five days,
neither ten days, nor twenty days; but even a whole month, until
it come out at your nostrils, and it be loathsome unto you; because
ye have despised the Lord' (Num 11:11-20). He can tell how to make
that loathsome to thee on which thou most dost set thine evil heart.
And he will do so, if he loves thee; else, as I said, he will not
make thee sick by smiting of thee nor punish thee for or when thou
committest whoredom, but will let thee alone till the judgment-day,
and call thee to a reckoning for all thy sins then. But to pass
this.
Eighth. Man, as he comes into the world, is not only a dead man, a
fool, proud, self-willed, fearless, a false believer, and a lover
of sin, but a wild man. He is of the wild olive tree, of that
which is wild by nature (Rom 11:17,24). So, in another place, man
by nature is compared to the ass, to a wild ass. 'For vain or empty
man would be wise, though man be born like a wild ass's colt' (Job
11:12). Isaac was a figure of Christ, and of all converted men
(Gen 4:28). But Ishmael was a figure of man by nature; and the
Holy Ghost, as to that, saith this of him, 'And he will be a wild
man' (Gen 16:12). This man, I say, was a figure of all carnal
men, in their wildness or estrangedness from God. Hence it is said
of the prodigal, at his conversion, that he came to himself then;
implying that he was mad, wild, or out of his wits before (Luke
15:17). I know there is a difference sometimes betwixt one's being
wild and mad; yet sometimes wildness arriveth to that degree as to
give one rightly the denomination of being mad. And it is always
true in spirituals; namely, that he that is wild, as to God, is
mad, or besides himself, and so not capable, before he is tamed, of
minding his own eternal good as he should. There are these several
things that are tokens of one wild or mad; and they all meet in a
carnal man.
1. A wild or mad man gives no heed to good counsel; the frenzy of his
head shuts all out, and by its force leads him away from men that
are wise and sober. And thus it is with carnal men; good counsel
is to them as pearls are that are cast afore swine; it is trampled
under foot of them, and the man is despised that brings it (Matt
7:6). 'The poor man's wisdom is despised, and his words are not
heard' (Eccl 9:16).
2. A wild or mad man, let him alone, and he will greatly busy
himself all his life to accomplish that which, when it is completed,
amounts to nothing. The work, the toil, the travel of such a one
comes to nothing, save to declare that he was out of his wits that
did it. David, imitating of such a one, scrabbled upon the gate of
the king, as fools do with chalk; and like to this is all the work
of all carnal men in the world (1 Sam 21:12,13). Hence, such a one
is said to labour for the wind, or for what will amount to no more
than if he filled his belly with the east wind (Eccl 5:16; Job
15:2).
3. A wild or mad man, if you set him to do anything, and he does it,
he will yet do it, not by or according to your bidding, but after
the folly of his own wild fancy; even as Jehu executed the commandment
of the Lord; he did it in his own madness, taking no heed to the
commandment of the Lord (2 Kings 9:20, 10:31). And thus do carnal
men do, when they meddle with any of God's matters, as hearing,
praying, reading, professing; they do all according to their own
wild fancy; they take no heed to do these after the commandment of
the Lord.
O the wildness, the frenzy, the madness, that possesses the heart
and mind of carnal men! they walk according to the course of this
world, according to or after that spirit which is in truth the
spirit of the devil, which worketh in the children of disobedience
(Eph 2:1-3). But do they believe that thus it is with them? No,
they are, in their own account, as other madmen are, the only ones
in the world. Hence they are so taken and tickled with their own
frantic notions, and deride all else that dwell in the world. But
which is the way to make one that is wild, or a madman, sober? To
let him alone will not do it; to give him good words only will not
do it; no, he must be tamed; means must be used to tame him. 'He
brought down their hearts with labour,' or by continual molestation;
as you have it (Psa 107:10-12). He speaketh there of madmen that
are kept up in darkness, and bound in afflictions and irons, because
they rebelled against the words of God, and contemned the counsel
of the Most High.
This, therefore, is the way to deal with such, and none but God
can so deal with them. They must be taken, they must be separated
from men; they must be laid in chains, in darkness, afflictions,
and irons; they must be blooded, half-starved, whipped, purged,
and be dealt with as mad people are dealt with. And thus they must
be dealt with till they come to themselves, and cry out in their
distresses. And then they cry to the Lord in their troubles, and
he saveth them out of their distresses; then he brings them out of
darkness, and the shadow of death, and breaks their bands in sunder
(Psa 107:13-15). Thus, I say, God tames the wild, and brings mad
prodigals to themselves, and so to him for mercy.
Ninth. Man, as he comes into the world, is not only a dead man, a
fool, proud, self-willed, fearless, a false believer, a lover of
sin, and a wild man; but a man that disrelishes the things of the
kingdom of God. I told you before, that unconverted man is such as
did not taste things; but now I add, that he disrelishes things;
he calls bitter things sweet, and sweet bitter; he judges quite
amiss. These are they that God threateneth with a woe. 'Woe unto
them that call evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for
light, and light for darkness; that put bitter for sweet, and sweet
for bitter' (Isa 5:20).
This latter part of this text shows us evidently that the things
of God are disrelished by some. They call his sweet things bitter,
and the devil's bitter things sweet; and all this is for want
of a broken heart. A broken heart relishes otherwise than a whole
or unbroken one doth. A man that has no pain, or bodily distress,
cannot find or feel virtue or good in the most sovereign plaister,
were it applied to arm or leg; no, he rather says, Away with these
stinking daubing things. O! but lay the same plaisters where there
is need, and the patient will relish, and taste, and savour the
goodness of them; yea, will prize and commend them to others.
Thus it is in spirituals. The world, they know not what the
anguish or pain of a broken heart means; they say, 'Who will show
us any good,' that is, better than we find in our sports, pleasures,
estates, and preferments. 'There be many,' says the Psalmist, speak
after this sort. But what says the distressed man? Why, 'Lord,
lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us'; and then adds,
'Thou hast put gladness in my heart'; namely, by the light of thy
countenance, for that is the plaister for a broken heart. 'Thou
hast put gladness in my heart, more than in the time that their
corn and their wine increaseth' (Psa 4:1-7). O! a broken heart
can savour pardon, can savour the consolations of the Holy Ghost.
Yea, as a hungry or thirsty man prizes bread and water in the want
thereof, so do the broken in heart prize and set a high esteem on
the things of the Lord Jesus. His flesh, his blood, his promise,
and the light of his countenance, are the only sweet things both
to scent and taste, to those that are of a wounded spirit. The full
soul loatheth the honey-comb; the whole despise the gospel, they
savour not the things that are of God.
If twenty men were to hear a pardon read, and but one of those
twenty were condemned to die, and the pardon was for none but such;
which of these men, think you, would taste the sweetness of that
pardon, they who are not, or he that was condemned? The condemned
man, doubtless. This is the case in hand. The broken in heart is
a condemned man; yea, it is a sense of condemnation, with other
things, that has indeed broken his heart; nor is there anything
but sense of forgiveness that can bind it up, or heal it. But could
that heal it, could he not taste, truly taste, or rightly relish
this forgiveness? no; forgiveness would be to him as it is to him
that has not sense of want of it.
But, I say, what is the reason some so prize what others so despise,
since they both stand in need of the same grace and mercy of God
in Christ? Why, the one sees, and the other sees nothing, of this
woeful miserable state. And thus have I showed you the necessity
of a broken heart. 1. Man is dead, and must be quickened. 2. Man is
a fool, and must be made wise. 3. Man is proud, and must be humbled.
4. Man is self-willed, and must be broken. 5. Man is fearless, and
must be made to consider. 6. Man is a false believer, and must be
rectified. 7. Man is a lover of sin, and must be weaned from it.
8. Man is wild, and must be tamed. 9. Man disrelishes the things
of God, and can take no savour in them, until his heart is broken.
And thus have I done with this, and shall come next to the reasons
of the point, namely, to show you, why or how it comes to pass, that
a broken heart, a heart truly contrite, is to God such an excellent
thing. That to him it is so, we have proved by six demonstrations;
what it is, we have showed by the six signs thereof; that it must
be, is manifest by those nine reasons but now urged; and why it
is with God or in his esteem an excellent thing, that is shown by
that which follows.
This is that that is meant by his bending of men for himself, and
of his working in them that which is pleasing in his sight (Zech
9:13). The heart, soul, or spirit, as in itself, as it came from
God's fingers, a precious thing, a thing in God's account worth more
than all the world. This heart, soul, or spirit, sin has hardened,
the devil has bewitched, the world has deceived. This heart, thus
beguiled, God coveteth and desireth: 'My son,' saith he, 'give me
thine heart, and let thine eyes observe my ways' (Prov 23:26).
This man cannot do this thing: for that his heart has the mastery
of him, and will not but carry him after all manner of vanity. What
now must be done? Why, God must take the heart by storm, by power,
and bring it to a compliance with the Word; but the heart of
itself will not; it is deluded, carried away to another than God.
Wherefore God now betakes him to his sword, and bring down the
heart with labour, opens it, and drives out the strong man armed
that did keep it; wounds it; and makes it smart for its rebellion,
that it may cry; so he rectifies it for himself. 'He maketh sore,
and bindeth up; he woundeth, and his hands make whole' (Job 5:18).
Thus having wrought it for himself, it becomes his habitation, his
dwelling-place: 'That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith'
(Eph 3:17).
But I would not swerve from the thing in hand. I have told you
a broken heart is the handiwork of God, a sacrifice of his own
preparing; a material fitted for himself.
2. The heart, when broken, is like sweet gums and spices when
beaten; for as such cast their fragrant scent into the nostrils of
men, so the heart when broken casts its sweet smells in the nostrils
of God. The incense, which was a type of prayer of old, was to be
beaten or bruised, and so to be burned in the censer. The heart
must be beaten or bruised, and then the sweet scent will come out:
even groans, and cries, and sighs, for the mercy of God; which
cries, &c. to him, are a very excellent thing, and pleasing in
his nostrils.
This also is evident by their practice; God may say what he will,
but they will do what they list. Keep my sabbath, says God; I will
not, says the sinner. Leave your whoring, says God; I will not, says
the sinner. Do not tell lies, nor swear, nor curse, nor blaspheme
my holy name, says God; O but I will, says the sinner. Turn to
me, says God; I will not, says the sinner. The right of dominion
is mine, says God; but, like that young rebel (1 Kings 1:5), I
will be king, says the sinner. Now, this is intolerable, this is
unsufferable, and yet every sinner by practice says thus; for they
have not submitted themselves unto the righteousness of God.
And now God has overcome, and his right hand and his holy arm has
gotten him the victory. Now he rides in triumph with his captive
at his chariot wheel; now he glories; now the bells in heaven do
ring; now the angels shout for joy, yea, are bid to do so, 'Rejoice
with me, for I have found my sheep which was lost' (Luke 15:1-10).
Now also the sinner, as a token of being overcome, lies grovelling
at his foot, saying, 'Thine arrows are sharp in the heart of the
king's enemies, whereby the people fall under thee' (Psa 45:3-5).
Now the sinner submits, now he follows his conqueror in chains, now
he seeks peace, and would give all the world, were it his own, to
be in the favour of God, and to have hopes by Christ of being saved.
Now this must be pleasing, this cannot but be a thing acceptable
in God's sight: 'A broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt
not despise.' For it is the desire of his own heart, the work of
his own hands.
But none will, none can do this, but the broken-hearted; because
they, and they only, are sensible of the want and worth of an
interest in him.
I dare appeal to all the world as to the truth of this; and do say
again, that these, and none but these, have hearts of esteem in
the sight of God. Alas! 'the heart of the wicked is little worth,'
for it is destitute of a precious esteem of Christ, and cannot but
be destitute, because it is not wounded, broken, and made sensible
of the want of mercy by him (Prov 10:20).
And who can be thankful for a mercy that is not sensible that they
want it, have it, and have it of mercy? Now, this the broken-hearted,
this the man that is of a contrite spirit, is sensible of; and
that with reference to mercies of the best sort, and therefore must
needs be a thankful man, and so have a heart of esteem with God,
because it is a thankful heart.
Third. A tender hearts has always repentance at hand for the least
fault or slip, or sinful thought that the soul is guilty of. In many
things the best offend; but if a Christian loseth his tenderness,
if he says he has his repentance to seek, his heart is grown
hard--has lost that spirit, that kind spirit of repentance, it was
wont to have. Thus it was with the Corinthians; they were decayed,
and lost their tenderness; wherefore their sin--yea, great
sins--remained unrepented of (2 Cor 12:20).
Sixth. A tender heart will deny itself, and that in lawful things,
and will forbear even that which may be done--for some Jew, or Gentile,
or the church of God, or any member of it, should be offended, or
made weak thereby; whereas the Christian that is not tender, that
has lost his tenderness, is so far off of denying himself in lawful
things, that he will even adventure to meddle in things utterly
forbidden, whoever is offended, grieved, or made weak thereby. For
an instance of this, we need go no further than to the man in the
text, who, while he was tender, trembled at little things; but
when his heart was hardened, he could take Bathsheba to satisfy
his lust, and kill her husband to cover his wickedness.
Many a needless rebuke and wound doth happen to the saints of God
through their unwise behaviour. When I say needless, I mean they are
not necessary, but to reclaim us from our vanities; for we should
not feel the smart of them, were it not for our follies. Hence the
afflicted is called a fool, because his folly brings his affliction
upon him. 'Fools,' says David, 'because of their transgression,
and because of their iniquities, are afflicted' (Psa 107:17).
And therefore it is, as was said before, that he call his sin his
foolishness. And again, 'God will speak peace unto his people, and
to his saints; but let them not turn again to folly' (Psa 38:5,
85:8). 'If his children transgress my laws, then will I visit their
transgression with the rod, and their iniquity with stripes' (Psa
89:30-32).
QUEST. But what should a Christian do, when God has broke his heart,
to keep it tender?
ANSW. To this I will speak briefly. And, first, give you several
cautions; secondly, several directions.
[First--Several cautions.]
1. Take heed that you choke not those convictions that at present
do break your hearts, by labouring to put those things out of your
minds which were the cause of such convictions; but rather nourish
and cherish those things in a deep and sober remembrance of them.
Think, therefore, with thyself thus, What was it that at first did
wound my heart? And let that still be there, until, by the grace
of God, and the redeeming blood of Christ, it is removed.
2. Shun vain company. The keeping of vain company has stifled many
a conviction, killed many a desire, and made many a soul fall into
hell, that once was hot in looking after heaven. A companion that
is not profitable to the soul, is hurtful. 'He that walketh with
wise men shall be wise, but a companion of fools shall be destroyed'
(Prov 13:20).
3. Take heed of idle talk, that thou neither hear nor join with
it. 'Go from the presence of a foolish man, when thou perceivest
not in him the lips of knowledge' (Prov 14:7). 'Evil communications
corrupt good manners. And a fool's lips are the snare of his soul.'
Wherefore take heed of these things (Prov 18:7; 1 Cor 15:33).
2. Labour to get and keep a deep sense of sin in its evil nature,
and in its soul-destroying effects upon thy heart; be persuaded,
that it is the only enemy of God, and that none hate, or are hated
of God, but through that. (1.) Remember it turned angels into
devils, thrust them down from heaven to hell. (2.) That it is the
chain in which they are held and bound over to judgment (2 Peter
2:4; Jude 6). (3.) That it was for that that Adam was turned out
of paradise; that for which the old world was drowned; that for
which Sodom and Gomorrah was burned with fire from heaven; and
that which cost Christ his blood to redeem thee from the curse it
has brought upon thee; and that, if anything, will keep thee out of
heaven for ever and ever. (4.) Consider the pains of hell. Christ
makes use of that as an argument to keep the heart tender; yea,
to that end repeats and repeats, and repeats, both the nature and
durableness of the burning flame thereof, and of the gnawing of
the neverdying worm that dwells there (Mark 9:43-48).
FIRST USE. From the truth of the matter, namely, that the man who
is truly come to God has had his heart broken--his heart broken
in order to his coming to him. And this shows us what to judge of
the league that is between sin and the soul, to wit, that it is so
firm, so strong, so inviolable, as that nothing can break, disannul,
or make it void, unless the heart be broken for it. It was so with
David, yea, his new league with it could not be broken until his
heart was broken.
SECOND USE. Is this a truth, that the man that truly comes to
God in order thereto has had his heart broken? then this shows us
a reason why some men's hearts are broken; even a reason why God
breaks some men's hearts for sin; namely, because he would not have
them die in it, but rather come to God that they might be saved?
Behold, therefore, in this how God resolved as to the saving of some
men's souls! He will have them, he will save them, he will break
their hearts, but he will save them; he will kill them, that they
may live; he will wound them, that he may heal them. And it seems
by our discourse that now there is no way left but this; fair means,
as we say, will not do; good words, a glorious gospel, entreatings,
beseeching with blood and tears, will not do. Men are resolved to
put God to the utmost of it; if he will have them he must fetch
them, follow them, catch them, lame them; yea, break their bones,
or else he shall not save them.
Hence men are said to be drawn from these breasts, that come, or
that are brought to him (Isa 26:9; John 6:44). Wherefore John might
well say, 'Behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed
upon us!' Here is cost bestowed, pains bestowed, labour bestowed,
repentance bestowed; yea, and an heart made sore, wounded, broken,
and filled with pain and sorrow, in order to the salvation of the
soul.
THIRD USE. This then may teach us what estimation to set upon a
broken heart. A broken heart is such as God esteems, yea, as God
counts better than all external service: a broken heart is that
which is in order to salvation, in order to thy coming to Christ
for life. The world know not what to make of it, nor what to say
to one that has a broken heart, and therefore do despise it, and
count that man that carries it in his bosom a moping fool, a miserable
wretch, an undone soul: 'But a broken and a contrite spirit, O God,
thou wilt not despise'; a broken heart takes thine eye, thy heart:
thou choosest it for thy companion, yea, has given thy Son a charge
to look well to such a man, and has promised him thy salvation, as
has afore been proved.
Sinner, hast thou obtained a broken heart? has God bestowed a contrite
spirit upon thee? He has given thee what himself is pleased with;
he has given thee a cabinet to hold his grace in; he has given thee
a heart that can heartily desire his salvation, an heart after his
own heart, that is, such as suits his mind. True, it is painful
now, sorrowful now, penitent now, grieved now; now it is broken,
now it bleeds, now, now it sobs, now it sighs, now it mourns and
crieth unto God. Well, very well; all this is because he hath a
mind to make thee laugh; he has made thee sorry on earth that thou
mightest rejoice in heaven. 'Blessed are they that mourn, for they
shall be comforted.--Blessed are ye that weep now, for ye shall
laugh' (Matt 5:4; Luke 6:21).
But, soul, be sure thou hast this broken heart. All hearts are
not broken hearts, nor is every heart that seems to have a wound,
a heart that is truly broken. A man may be cut to, yet not into the
heart; a man may have another, yet not a broken heart (Acts 7:54;
1 Sam 10:9). We know there is a difference betwixt a wound in the
flesh and a wound in the spirit; yea, a man's sin may be wounded,
and yet his heart not broken: so was Pharaoh's, so was Saul's, so
was Ahab's; but they had none of them the mercy of a broken heart.
Therefore, I say, take heed; every scratch with a pin, every prick
with a thorn, nay, every blow that God giveth with his Word upon
the heart of sinners, doth not therefore break them. God gave Ahab
such a blow that he made him stoop, fast, humble himself, gird
himself with and lie in sackcloth, which was a great matter for a
king, and go softly, and yet he never had a broken heart (1 Kings
21:27,29). What shall I say? Pharaoh and Saul confessed their sins,
Judas repented himself of his doings, Esau sought the blessing,
and that carefully with tears, and yet none of these had a heart
rightly broken, or a spirit truly contrite; Pharaoh, Saul, and
Judas, were Pharaoh, Saul, and Judas still; Esau was Esau still;
there was no gracious change, no thorough turn to God, no unfeigned
parting with their sins, no hearty flight for refuge, to lay hold
on the hope of glory, though they indeed had thus been touched (Exo
10:16; 1 Sam 26:21; Matt 27:3; Heb 12:14-17).
Second. Or, which may and will be great help to thee if thou shalt
be sincere therein, namely, to betake thyself to the search of the
Word, especially where thou readest of the conversion of men, and
try if thy conversion be like, or has a good resemblance or oneness
with theirs. But in this have a care that thou dost not compare
thyself with those good folk of whose conversion thou readest
not, or of the breaking of whose heart there is no mention made in
Scripture; for all that are recorded in the Scripture for saints
have not their conversion, as to the manner or nature of it, recorded
in the Scripture.
Fourth. Or else, take into consideration how God has said, they
shall be in their spirits that he intends to save. And for this
read these scriptures: (1.) That in Jeremiah 31, 'They shall come
with weeping, and with supplications will I lead them' &c. (v
9). (2.) Read Jeremiah 50:4,5: 'In those days, and in that time,
the children of Israel shall come, they and the children of Judah
together, going and weeping: they shall go, and seek the Lord their
God. They shall ask the way to Zion with their faces thitherward,
saying, Come, and let us join ourselves to the Lord in a perpetual
covenant that shall not be forgotten.' (3.) Read Ezekiel 6:9: 'And
they that escape of you shall remember me among the nations whither
they shall be carried captives, because I am broken with their
whorish heart, which have departed from me, and with their eyes,
which go a-whoring after their idols: and they shall loathe themselves
for the evils which they have committed in all their abominations.'
(4.) Read Ezekiel 7:16: 'But they that escape of them shall escape,
and shall be on the mountains like doves of the valleys, all of them
mourning, every one for his iniquity.' (5.) Read Ezekiel 20:43:
'And there shall ye remember your ways, and all your doings, wherein
ye have been defiled; and ye shall loathe yourselves in your own
sight for all your evils that ye have committed.' (6.) Read Ezekiel
37:31: 'Then shall ye remember your own evil ways, and your doings
that were not good, and shall loathe yourselves in your own sight
for your iniquities and for your abominations.' (7.) Read Zechariah
12:10: 'And I will pour upon the house of David, and upon the
inhabitants of Jerusalem, the spirit of grace and of supplications:
and they shall look upon me whom they have pierced, and they shall
mourn for him, as one mourneth for his only son, and shall be in
bitterness for him, as one that is in bitterness for his first-born.'
Now all these are the fruits of the Spirit of God, and of the
heart, when it is broken: wherefore, soul, take notice of them, and
because these are texts by which God promiseth that those whom he
saveth shall have this heart, this spirit, and these holy effects
in them; therefore consider again, and examine thyself, whether
this is the state and condition of thy soul. And that thou mayest
do it fully, consider again, and do thou,
3. Remember also that here are prayers and tears for mercy, with
desires to be now out of love with sin for ever, and to be in heart
and soul firmly joined and knit unto God.
4. Remember also that this people here spoken of have all the way
from Satan to God, from sin to grace, from death to life, scattered
with tears and prayers, with weeping and supplication; they shall
go weeping, and seeking the Lord their God.
God alloweth poor creatures that can, without lying, thus to plead
and argue with him. 'I am poor and sorrowful,' said the good man
to him, 'let thy salvation, O God, set me up on high' (Psa 69:29).
Wherefore thou that hast a broken heart take courage, God bids thee
take courage; say therefore to thy soul, 'Why are thou cast down,
O my soul?' as usually the broken-hearted are. 'And why art thou
disquieted within me? Hope thou in God.' 'I had fainted,' if I had
not been of good courage; therefore 'be of good courage, and he
shall strengthen thine heart' (Psa 42:11, 43:5, 27:12-14).
But alas! the broken-hearted are far off from this; they faint;
they reckon themselves among the dead; they think God will remember
them no more: the thoughts of the greatness of God, and his holiness,
and their own sins and vilenesses, will certainly consume them.
They feel guilt and anguish of soul; they go mourning all the day
long; their mouth is full of gravel and gall, and they are made to
drink draughts of wormwood and gall; so that he must be an artist
indeed at believing, who can come to God under his guilt and horror,
and plead in faith that the sacrifices of God are a broken heart,
such as he had; and that 'a broken and a contrite spirit God will
not despise.'
But do these people know what they do? Yes, think they, for such
preachers, such books, such discourses tend to make one melancholy
or mad; they make us that we cannot take pleasure in ourselves, in
our concerns, in our lives. But, O fool in grain![16] let me speak
unto thee. Is it a time to take pleasure, and to recreate thyself
in anything, before thou hast mourned and been sorry for thy sins?
That mirth that is before repentance for sin will certainly end
in heaviness. Wherefore the wise man, putting both together, saith
that mourning must be first. There is 'a time to weep, and a time
to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance' (Eccl 3:4). What,
an unconverted man, and laugh! Shouldst thou see one singing merry
songs that is riding up Holborn to Tyburn,[17] to be hanged for
felony, wouldst thou not count him besides himself, if not worse?
and yet thus it is with him that is for mirth while he standeth
condemned by the Book of God for his trespasses. Man! man! thou
hast cause to mourn; yea, thou must mourn if ever thou art saved.
Wherefore my advice is, that instead of shunning, thou covet both
such books, such preachers, and such discourses, as have a tendency
to make a man sensible of, and to break his heart for sin; and the
reason is, because thou wilt never be as thou shouldst, concerned
about, nor seek the salvation of thine own soul, before thou hast
a broken heart, a broken and a contrite spirit. Wherefore be not
afraid of a broken heart; be not shy of a contrite spirit. It is
one of the greatest mercies that God bestows upon a man or a woman.
The heart rightly broken at the sense of, and made truly contrite
for transgression, is a certain forerunner of salvation. This is
evident from those six demonstrations which were laid down to prove
the point in hand, at first.
And for thy awakening in this matter, let me tell thee, and thou
wilt find it so, thou must have thy heart broken whether thou wilt
or no. God is resolved to break ALL hearts for sin some time or
other. Can it be imagined, sin being what it is, and God what he
is--to wit, a revenger of disobedience--but that one time or other
man must smart for sin? smart, I say, either to repentance or to
condemnation. He that mourns not now, while the door of mercy is
open, must mourn for sin when the door of mercy is shut.
Shall men despise God, break his law, contemn his threats, abuse
his grace, yea, shut their eyes when he says, See; and stop their
ears when he says, Hear; and shall they so escape? No, no, because
he called, and they refused; he stretched out his hand, and they
regarded it not; therefore shall calamity come upon them, as upon
one in travail; and they shall cry in their destruction, and then
God will laugh at their destruction, and mock when their fear
cometh. Then, saith he, 'they shall cry' (Prov 1:24-26). I have
often observed that this threatening is repeated at least seven
times in the New Testament, saying, 'There shall be weeping and
gnashing of teeth'; 'there shall be wailing and gnashing of teeth'
(Matt 8:12, 13:42,50, 22:13, 24:51, 25:30; Luke 13:28). There.
Where? In hell, and at the bar of Christ's tribunal, when he comes
to judge the world, and shall have shut to the door to keep them
out of glory, that have here despised the offer of his grace, and
overlooked the day of his patience. 'There shall be wailing and
gnashing of teeth.' They shall weep and wail for this.
There are but two scriptures that I shall use more, and then I shall
draw towards a conclusion. One is that in Proverbs, where Solomon
is counselling of young men to beware of strange, that is, of wanton,
light, and ensnaring women. Take heed of such, said he, lest 'thou
mourn at the last,' that is, in hell, when thou art dead, 'when
thy flesh and thy body are consumed, and say, How have I hated
instruction, and my heart despised reproof, and have not obeyed the
voice of my teachers, nor inclined mine ears to them that instructed
me!' (Prov 5:11-13).
Wherefore, let me advise that you be not afraid of, but that you
rather covet a broken heart, and prize a contrite spirit; I say,
covet it now, now the white flag is hung out, now the golden sceptre
of grace is held forth to you. Better mourn now God inclines to
mercy and pardon, than mourn when the door is quite shut up. And
take notice, that this is not the first time that I have given you
this advice.
Nor are such professors tender of God's name, nor of the credit of
that gospel which they profess; nor can they, for they want that
which should oblige them thereunto, which is a sense of pardon and
forgiveness, by the which their broken hearts have been replenished,
succoured, and made to hope in God. Paul said, the love of Christ
constrained him. But what was Paul but a broken-hearted and a contrite
sinner? (Acts 9:3-6; 2 Cor 5:14). When God shows a man the sin he
has committed, the hell he has deserved, the heaven he has lost;
and yet that Christ, and grace, and pardon may be had; this will
make him serious, this will make him melt, this will break his heart,
this will show him that there is more than air, than a noise, than
an empty sound in religion; and this is the man, whose heart, whose
life, whose conversation and all, will be engaged in the matters
of the eternal salvation of his precious and immortal soul.
Object. First. But some may object, that in this saying I seem too
rigid and censorious; and will, if I moderate not these lines with
something milder afterward, discourage many an honest soul.
Answ. I answer, Not a jot, not an honest soul in all the world will
be offended at my words; for not one can be an honest soul, I mean
with reference to its concerns in another world, that has not had
a broken heart, that never had a contrite spirit. This I will say,
because I would be understood aright, that all attain not to the
same degree of trouble, nor lie so long there under, as some of
their brethren do. But to go to heaven without a broken heart, or
to be forgiven sin without a contrite spirit, is no article of my
belief. We speak not now of what is secret; revealed things belong
to us and our children; nor must we venture to go further in our
faith. Doth not Christ say, 'The whole have no need of a physician';
that is, they see no need, but Christ will make them see their
need before he ministers his sovereign grace unto them; and good
reason, otherwise he will have but little thanks for his kindness.
Object. Second. But there are those that are godly educated from
their childhood, and so drink in the principles of Christianity
they know not how.
Answ. I count it one thing to receive the faith of Christ from men
only, and another to receive it from God by the means. If thou art
taught by an angel, yet if not taught of God, thou wilt never come
to Christ; I do not say thou wilt never profess him. But if God
speaks, and thou shalt hear and understand him, that voice will
make such work within thee as was never made before. The voice of
God is a voice by itself, and is so distinguished by them that are
taught thereby (John 6:44,45; Psa 29; Habb 3:12-16; Eph 4:20,21;
1 Peter 2:2,3).
Object. Third. But some men are not so debauched and profane as
some, and so need not to be so hammered and fired as others; so
broken and wounded as others.
Answ. God knows best what we need. Paul was as righteous before
conversion as any that can pretend to civility now, I suppose; and
yet that notwithstanding he was made to shake, and was astonished
at himself at his conversion. And truly I think the more righteous
any is in his own eyes before conversion, the more need he has of
heart-breaking work, in order to his salvation; because a man is
not by nature so easily convinced that his righteousness is to God
abominable, as he is that his debauchery and profaneness is.
I say, heart must be set to heart, and back to back, or the sap
will not be conveyed from the root to the branch; and I say, this
must be done by a wound. The Lord opened the heart of Lydia, as a
man openeth the stock to graft in the scions, and so the word was
let into her soul, and so the word and her heart cemented, and
became one (Acts 16:14).
Why is Christ bid to gird his sword upon his thigh? and why must
he make his arrows sharp, and all, that the heart may with this
sword and these arrows be shot, wounded, and made to bleed? Yea,
why is he commanded to let it be so, if the people would bow and
fall kindly under him, and heartily implore his grace without it?
(Psa 45; 55:3,4). Alas! men are too lofty, too proud, too wild, too
devilishly resolved in the ways of their own destruction; in their
occasions, they are like the wild asses upon the wild mountains;
nothing can break them of their purposes, or hinder them from
ruining of their own precious and immortal souls, but the breaking
of their hearts.
FOOTNOTES:
[5] No one could speak more feelingly upon this subject than our
author. He had been in deep waters--in soul-harrowing fear, while
his heart--hard by nature--was under the hammer of the Word.--'My
soul was like a broken vessel. O, the unthought of imaginations,
frights, fears, and terrors, that are affected by a thorough
application of guilt, yielded to desperation!' Like the man that
had his dwelling among the tombs.--Grace Abounding, No. 186.
[11] However hard, and even harsh, these terms may appear, they
are fully justified; and with all the author's great ability and
renown, he has the grace of humility to acknowledge that, by nature
and practice, he had been the biggest of fools.--Ed.
[14] 'Sin will at first, just like a beggar, crave One penny or one
halfpenny to have; And if you grant its first suit, 'twill aspire
From pence to pounds, and so will still mount higher To the whole
soul!'--Bunyan's Caution Against Sin.--Ed.
[15] This is faithful dealing. How many millions of lies are told
to the All-seeing God, with unblushing effrontery, every Lord's
day--when the unconcerned and careless, or the saint of God, happy,
most happy in the enjoyment of Divine love, are led to say, 'Have
mercy upon us miserable sinners.'--Ed.
[16] 'In grain' is a term used in dyeing, when the raw material is
dyed before being spun or wove; the colour thus takes every grain,
and becomes indelible. So with sin and folly; it enters every grain
of human nature.--Ed.
***
OR,
This treatise was one of those ten excellent manuscripts found already
prepared for the press, after the unexpected decease of its pious
author. It bears the marks of having been composed, and perhaps
preached, towards the end of his pilgrimage. Had his valuable life
been spared a few months longer, this work would, very probably,
have been enlarged, and the sub-divisions somewhat improved. The
principal heads are now inserted as separate lines, to assist the
reader in referring to its several parts; and notes are added to
explain old words and customs, and, in some cases, to point out a
few of the beautiful and striking passages with which it abounds.
Many of these ought to be indelibly impressed upon our minds. 'The
words of the Lord are pure words; as silver tried in a furnace of
earth, purified seven times' (Psa 12:6). The question naturally
arises--What is this 'furnace of earth' in which the Lord's words
are purified? Seven being the number of perfection, conveys the idea
that it will be in the furnace until it appears perfectly refined.
Bunyan considers that these earthen furnaces are the bodies of the
saints. In the trials, troubles, and persecutions to which they are
subjected, the Word bears them up triumphantly, so that the purity
and excellency of the holy oracles conspicuously appears, like the
trial of faith mentioned by Peter (1 Peter 1:7). Dr. Gill considers
that these crucibles mean Christ and his ministers; while Bunyan,
with his enlarged mind, identifies them with the whole of Christ's
followers. Some of these crucibles prove not to be genuine, and
perish in the using, not being able to abide the fire. Such was the
case with one of Mr. Bunyan's friends. John Childs, who, for fear
of persecution, conformed, became horror-stricken for the denial
of his Master, and notorious for having destroyed himself.
GEO. OFFOR.
First, That the murders and outrage that our brethren suffer at the
hands of wicked men should not discourage those that live, from a
full and faithful performance of their duty to God and man, whatever
may be the consequence thereof. Or thus, when we see our brethren
before us fall to the earth by death, through the violence of the
enemies of God, for their holy and Christian profession, we should
covet to make good their ground against them, though our turn
should be the next. We should valiantly do in this matter, as is
the custom of soldiers in war; take great care that the ground be
maintained, and the front kept full and complete. 'Thou, therefore,'
saith Paul, 'endure hardness as a good soldier of Jesus Christ'
(2 Tim 2:3). And in another place, We should not be moved by these
afflictions, but endure by resisting even unto blood (1 Thess 3:3).
Wherefore Paul saith again, 'Be not thou therefore ashamed of the
testimony of our Lord, nor of me, his prisoner; but be thou partaker
of the afflictions of the gospel, according to the power of God'
(2 Tim 1:8). Thus let the spirit of Moses rest upon Joshua (Num
27:20), and the spirit of Elijah rest upon Elisha (2 Kings 2:15).
Stand up, therefore, like valiant worthies, as the ministers of my
God, and fly not every man to his own, while the cause, and ways,
and brethren of our Lord are buffeted and condemned by the world.
And remember, that those that keep the charge of the Lord when
most go a-whoring from under their God, they, when he turns the
captivity of his people, shall be counted worthy to come nigh unto
him, 'to offer the fat and the blood, saith the Lord God.' But
for the rest, though they may yet stand before the people, because
they stood before them in a way of idolatry, yet it shall not be
to their honour, nor to their comfort; but to their shame, as the
same scripture saith (Eze 44:10-16).
1. Paul's peace and comfort now at the time of his death, which he
signifieth to Timothy by these three expressions, 'I have fought
a good fight--I have finished my course--I have kept the faith.'
2. By the blessed reward he should have for his labour from Christ
in another world, together with all those that love the appearing
of the Lord, at 'that great and notable day.'
3. That now his last act should not be inferior to any act he did
for God, while he was alive and preached in the world; for his
body should now be an offering, a sacrifice well-pleasing to God.
To all which I shall speak something in my discourse upon these
words; and, therefore, to come to them:
[WHAT IT IS TO BE OFFERED.]
FIRST. For the first of these. Paul, by saying he was 'to be offered,'
alludeth to some of the sacrifices that of old were under the law;
and thereby signifieth to Timothy that his death and martyrdom
for the gospel should be both sweet in the nostrils of God, and of
great profit to his church in this world; for so were the sacrifices
of old. Paul, therefore, lifts his eyes up higher than simply to
look upon death, as it is the common fate of men; and he had good
reason to do it, for his death was violent; it was also for Christ,
and for his church and truth; and it is usual with Paul thus to set
out the suffering of the saints, which they undergo for the name
and testimony of Jesus. Yea, he will have our prayers a sacrifice;
our praises, thanksgiving, and mortification, sacrifices; almsdeed,
and the offering up of the Gentiles, sacrifices, being sanctified
by the Holy Ghost; and here his death also must be for a sacrifice,
and an acceptable offering to God (Heb 13:15,16; Rom 12:1,2, 15:16).
First. That the blood of the saints, that they lose for his name,
is a sweet savour to God. And so saith the Holy Ghost, 'Precious
in the sight of the Lord is the death of his saints' (Psa 116:15).
And again, 'He shall redeem their soul from deceit and violence,
and precious shall their blood be in his sight' (Psa 72:14).
Second. Those that suffer for Christ are of great benefit to his
church, as the sacrifices of old were confirming and strengthening
to Israel; wherefore Paul saith, his bonds encouraged his brethren,
and made them much more bold in the way of God to speak his word
without fear (Phil 1:14).
2. We learn also from hence, the reason why some in days before us
have made light of the rage of the world; but they have laughed at
destruction when it cometh (Job 5:21,22). And have gone forth to
meet the armed men; and with Job's war-horse, 'mocketh at fear,
and is not affrighted, neither turneth he back from the sword; the
quiver rattleth against him, the glittering spear and the shield,
he said among the trumpets, Ha, ha' (Job 39:22,25). It hath been
their [God's fearers] glory to suffer for Christ; as it is said of
the saints of old, 'they departed from the presence of the counsel,
rejoicing that they were counted worthy to suffer shame for his
name' (Acts 5:41). As Paul also saith, 'most gladly I will,' mark,
'most gladly, rather glory in mine infirmities, that the power of
Christ may rest upon me' (2 Cor 12:9,10). Therefore I take pleasure
in infirmities, in reproaches, in necessities, in persecutions, in
distresses, for Christ's sake, &c. Let those that suffer for theft
and murder hang down their heads like a bulrush, and carry it like
those that are going to hanging; but let those whose trials are
for the Word of God know, by these very things they are dignified.
SECOND. The second thing that I would inquire into is this: What
it is to be 'ready to be offered up'? Or how we should understand
this word 'ready': 'I am now ready to be offered up.' Which I think
may be understood three manner of ways.
First. For the first of these: The enemies of God and his truth,
they never want will and malice to oppose the Word of God; they
are also always so far forth in readiness to murder and slaughter
the saints, as the prophet cries to Jerusalem, 'Behold the princes
of Israel, every one were in thee to their power to shed blood' (Eze
22:6), that is, they had will and malice always at hand to oppose
the upright in heart. And therefore our Lord Jesus saith, 'they
are they that kill the body'; he doth not say they can do it as
relating to their will, and their custom, if let loose; and we may
understand thereby that it is no more to them to kill the people
of God, than it is to butchers to kill sheep and oxen. For though
it be indeed a truth that God's hand is always safe upon the hilt
of their sword, yet by them we are killed all the day long, and
accounted as sheep for the slaughter (Psa 44:22; Rom 8:36). That is,
in their desires always, as well as by their deeds, when they are
let loose, as Paul's kinsman said to the captain, 'There lie in wait
for him of them more than forty men, which have bound themselves
with a curse,[2] that they will neither eat nor drink till they
have killed him; and now are they ready, looking for a promise from
thee' (Acts 23:12,13,21). And hence it is, that by the Word they
are called dragons, lions, bears, wolves, leopards, dogs, and the
like; all which are beasts of prey, and delight to live by the
death of others.[3] Paul therefore seeing and knowing that this
readiness was in his enemies to pour out his bowels to the earth,
he cried out to Timothy, saying, 'make thou full proof of thy
ministry, for' I am now ready to be slain; 'I am now ready to be
offered' (2 Tim 4:5,6). These words thus understood may be useful
many ways.
3. This shows us the true effects of a right sight and sense of the
sufferings that attend the gospel; that they shall become truly
profitable to those that shall bear them aright. What made he
ready for? it was for sufferings; and why made he ready for them
but because he saw they wrought out for him a 'far more exceeding
and eternal weight of glory?' (2 Cor 4:17). This made Moses also
spurn at a crown and a kingdom; to look with a disdainful eye
upon all the glory of Egypt. He saw the reward that was laid up in
heaven for those that suffered for Christ. Therefore, 'he refused
to be called the son of Pharaoh's daughter; choosing rather to suffer
affliction with the people of God than to enjoy the pleasures of
sin for a season; esteeming the reproach of Christ grater riches
than the treasures in Egypt: for he had respect unto the recompense
of reward. By faith he forsook Egypt, not fearing the wrath of the
king, for he endured, as seeing him who is invisible' (Heb 11:21-27).
Every one cannot thus look upon the afflictions and temptations
that attend the gospel; no, not every one that professeth it, as
appears by their shrinking and shirking at the noise of the trumpet,
and alarum to war. They can be content, as cowards in a garrison,
to lie still under some smaller pieces of service, as hearing the
Word, entering in, to follow with loving in word and in tongue,
and the like; but to 'go forth unto him without the camp, bearing
his reproach,' and to be in jeopardy every hour for the truth of
the glorious gospel, that they dare not do (Heb 13:13; 1 Cor 15:30).
Nay, instead of making ready with Paul to engage the dragon and
his angels, they study how to evade and shun the cross of Christ;
secretly rejoicing if they can but delude their conscience, and
make it still and quiet, while they do yet unworthily (Rev 12:7-9).
[Paul ready to depart, having done his work for God in this world.]
This truth I might further urge from the very words of the text,
they being written on purpose by Paul to stir up Timothy and all
the godly to press hard after this very thing. But to pass that,
and to mind you of some other scriptures that press it hard as a
duty, and then to proceed to some few examples of the wise and most
eminent saints. Which when I have done I shall, 1. Show you reason
for it. 2. Give you encouragement to it. 3. Press it with several
motives. 4. Make some use and application of the whole, and so
conclude.
That this is the duty and wisdom of those that fear God, you may
see by Christ's exhortation to watchfulness, and to prepare for
his second coming; 'Therefore be ye also ready; for in an hour as
ye think not, the Son of man cometh' (Matt 24:44). These words,
as they are spoken to stir up the godly to be ready to meet their
Lord at his coming, so because the godly must meet him as well in
his judgments and providences here, as at his personal appearing
at the last day; therefore they should be diligent to be fitting
themselves to meet him in all such dispensations. 'And because,'
saith God, 'I will do this unto thee; prepare to meet thy God, O
Israel' (Amos 4:12). Now death is one of the most certain of those
dispensations; yea, and such, that it leaveth to those no help at
all, or means to perform for ever, that which, shouldst thou want
it, that is lacking to thy work. Wherefore Solomon also doth press
us to this very work, and that from this consideration, 'whatsoever
thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might, for there is no work,
nor device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom, in the grave, whither thou
goest' (Eccl 9:10). Baulk nothing of thy duty, neither defer to
do it; for thou art in thy way to thy grave, and there thou canst
not finish ought that by neglect thou leavest undone; therefore be
diligent while life lasts.[6]
Third. Another reason, why those that fear God should so manage
their time and work for God in this world, that they may not have
part to do when they should be departing this life, it is, because
loitering in thy work doth, as much as in it lieth, defer and hold
back the second coming of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. One
thing, amongst many, that letteth[12] the appearing of Christ in
the clouds of heaven, is, that his body, with the several members
thereof, are not yet complete and full; they are not all yet come
to the knowledge of the Son of God, 'to the measure of the stature
of the fulness of Christ' (Eph 4:8-13); that is, to the complete
making up of his body; for as Peter saith, 'The Lord is not
slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness, but is
long-suffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but
that all should come to repentance' (2 Peter 3:9). And so also to
the complete performance of all their duty and work they have for
God in this world. And I say, the faster the work of conversion,
repentance, faith, self-denial, and the rest of the Christian duties,
are performed by the saints in their day, the more they make way
for the coming of the Lord from heaven. Wherefore Peter saith again,
'Seeing then that' we look for such things, 'what manner of persons
ought we to be in all holy conversation and godliness, looking for,
and hasting unto,' or, as it is in the margin, 'hasting the coming
of the day of God, wherein the heavens being on fire shall be
dissolved, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat' (2 Peter
3:11,12). When the bride hath made herself ready, 'the marriage
of the Lamb is come' (Rev 19:7). That is, the Lord will then wait
upon the world no longer, when his saints are fit to receive him.
As he said to Lot when he came to burn down Sodom, 'Haste thee'
to Zoar, 'for I cannot do anything till thou be come thither' (Gen
19:20-22). So concerning the great day of judgment to the world,
which shall be also the day of blessedness and rest to the people
of God, it cannot come until the Lamb's wife hath made herself
ready; until all the saints that belong to glory are ready. And
before I go further, what might I yet say to fasten this reason
upon the truly gracious soul? What! wilt thou yet loiter in the work
of thy day? wilt thou still be unwilling to hasten righteousness?
dost thou not know that thou by so doing deferrest the coming of thy
dearest Lord? Besides, that is the day of his glory, the day when
he shall come in the glory of his Father and of the holy angels;
and wilt not thou by thy diligence help it forwards? Must also the
general assembly and church of the first-born wait upon thee for
their full portions of glory? Wilt thou by thus doing endeavour to
keep them wrapt up still in the dust of the earth, there to dwell
with the worm and corruption? The Lord awaken thee, that thou mayst
see thy loitering doth do this, and doth also hinder thy own soul
of the inheritance prepared for thee.[13]
Having thus given you the reasons why God's people should be
diligent in that work that God hath allotted for them to be doing
for him in this world, I shall, in the next place, give you some
directions, as helps to further you in this work. And they are such
as tend to take away those hindrances that come upon thee, either
by discouragement, or by reason of hardness and benumbedness of
spirit; for great hindrances overtake God's people from both these
impediments.
1. Daily bring thy heart and the Word of God together, that thy
heart may be levelled by it, and also filled with it. The want of
performing this sincerely, is a great cause of that unfaithfulness
that is in us to God. Bring, then, thy heart to the Word daily, to
try how thou believest the Word today, to try how it agrees with
the Word today. This is the way to make clean work daily, to keep
thy soul warm and living daily. 'Wherewithal shall a young man
cleanse his way?' saith David. 'By taking heed thereto according
to thy Word' (Psa 119:9). So again, 'Concerning the works of men,
by the word of thy lips, I have kept me from the paths of the
destroyer' (Psa 17:4). And again, 'Thy Word have I hid in mine
heart, that I might not sin against thee' (Psa 119:11). He that
delighteth 'in the law of the Lord, and in his law doth meditate
day and night, he shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of
water, that bringeth forth his fruit in his season; his leaf also
shall not wither, and whatsoever he doeth shall prosper' (Psa
1:2,3).
3. Let thy heart be more affected with what concerns the honour
of God, and the profit and glory of the gospel, than with what are
thy concernments as a man, with all earthly advantages. This will
make thee refuse things that are lawful, if they appear to be
inexpedient. Yea, this will make thee, like the apostles of old,
prefer another man's peace and edification before thine own profit,
and to take more pleasure in the increase of the power of godliness
in any, than in the increase of thy corn and wine.
4. Reckon with thy own heart every day, before thou lie down to
sleep, and cast up both what thou hast received from God, done for
him, and where thou hast also been wanting. This will beget praise
and humility, and put thee upon redeeming the day that is past;
whereby thou wilt be able, through the continual supplies of grace,
in some good measure to drive thy work before thee, and to shorten
it as thy life doth shorten; and mayst comfortably live in the hope
of bringing both ends sweetly together. But to pass this.
Now, for thy better performing this piece of service for our
Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ: O it is hard work to pocket up the
reproaches of all the foolish people, as if we had found great
spoil; and to suffer all their revilings, lies, and slanders,
without cursing them, as Elisha did the children; to answer them
with prayers and blessings for their cursings. It is far more easy
to give them taunt for taunt, and reviling for reviling; to give
them blow for blow; yea, to call for fire from heaven against
them. But to 'bless them that curse you, and to pray for them
that despitefully use you, and persecute you'--even of malice, of
old grudge, and on purpose to vex and afflict our mind, and to make
us break out into a rage--this is work above us; now our patience
should look up to unseen things; now remember Christ's carriage to
them that spilt his blood; or all is in danger of bursting, and
thou of miscarrying in theses things. I might here also dilate
upon Job's case, and the lesson God set him, when, at one stroke,
he did beat down all (Job 1:15), only spared his life, but made
that also so bitter to him that his soul chose strangling rather
than it (Job 7:15). O when every providence of God unto thee is like
the messengers of Job, and the last to bring more heavy tidings
than all that went before him (Job 1); when life, estate, wife,
children, body, and soul, and all at once, seem to be struck at by
heaven and earth; here are hard lessons; now to behave myself even
as a weaned child, now to say, 'The Lord gave, and the Lord hath
taken away, and blessed be the name of the Lord' (Job 1:21). Thus,
with few words, Job ascribeth righteousness to his Maker; but
though they were but few, they proceeded from so blessed a frame
of heart, that causeth the penman of the Word to stay himself and
wonder, saying, 'In all this Job sinned not' with his lips, 'nor
charged God foolishly.' In all this--what a great deal will the
Holy Ghost make of that which seems but little when it flows from
an upright heart! and it indeed may well be so accounted of all
that know what is in man, and what he is prone unto.
1. Labour to believe that all these things are tokens of the love
of God (Heb 12:6; Rev 3:19). 2. Remember often that thou art not
the first that hath met with these things in the world. 'It hated
me,' saith Christ, 'before it hated you' (John 15:18). 3. Arm
thyself with a patient and quiet mind to bear and suffer for his
sake (1 Peter 4:1-3). 4. Look back upon thy provocations wherewith
thou mayst have provoked God (Deut 9:7; Lev 26:41,42); then wilt
thou accept of the punishment for thy sins, and confess it was less
than thine iniquities deserve (Ezra 9:13). 5. Pray thou mayst hear
the voice of the rod, and have a heart to answer the end of God
therein (Micah 6:9). 6. Remember the promise--'All things work
together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called
according to his purpose' (Rom 8:28).
(1.) It is that which God doth mostly give to those that are not
his; for the poor receive the gospel; not many rich, 'not many
mighty, not many noble are called' (1 Cor 1:26).
2. As to the things of God, what shall I say? the things of his Word,
and Spirit, and kingdom, they so far go beyond the conceivings of
the heart of man, that none can utter them but by the Holy Spirit;
but there is no deceit in them; 'no lie is of the truth,' what they
promise they will perform with additions of amazing glory (1 John
2:21). Taste them first, and then thou shalt see them. 'O' come
'taste and see that the Lord is good: blessed is the man that
trusteth in him' (Psa 34:8). To stoop low is a good work, which is
an act of thine, if it be done in faith and love, though but by a
cup of cold water; it is really more worth in itself, and of higher
esteem with God, than all worldly and perishing glory; there is no
comparison, the one perisheth with the using, and for the other is
laid up 'a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory' (2 Cor
4:17). But again, as thou shouldst labour to possess thy heart with
a right understanding of the perishing nature of the riches and
pleasures of this world, and of the durable riches and righteousness
that is in Christ, and all heavenly things; so thou shouldst labour
to keep always in thy eye what sin is, what hell is, what the wrath
of God and everlasting burnings are. Transfer them to thyself, as
it were on a finger,[23] that thou mayst learn to think of nothing
more highly than is meet, but to give to what thou beholdst their
own due weight; then thou wilt fear where thou shouldst fear, love
what is worthy thy love, and slight that which is of no worth.
These are just weights, and even balances; now thou dealest not with
deceitful weights; and this is the way to be rich in good works,
and to bring thy work, that God hath appointed, to a good issue
against thy dying day.
And I say, that the opportunity may not slip thee, either for
want of care or provision, (1.) Sit always loose from an overmuch
affecting thine own concernments, and believe that thou wast not
born for thyself; 'a brother is born for adversity' (Prov 17:17).
(2.) Get thy heart tenderly affected with the welfare and prosperity
of all things that bear the stamp and image of God (2 Cor 11:29).
(3.) Study thy own place and capacity that God hath put thee in,
in this world; for suitable to thy place thy work and opportunities
are (1 Cor 7:24). (4.) Make provision beforehand, that when things
present themselves thou mayst come up to a good performance;
be 'prepared to every good work' (2 Tim 2:21). (5.) Take heed of
carnal reasonings, keep thy heart tender; but set thy face like a
flint for God (Gal 1:9). (6.) And look well to the manner of every
duty.
1. Luke renders it thus, 'Sell that ye have and give alms; provide
yourselves bags which wax not old, a treasure in the heavens that
faileth not, where no thief approacheth, neither moth corrupteth,'
the latter part of the verse expounding the former (Luke 12:33).
2. Paul saith thus, 'Charge them that are rich in this world, that
they be not high-minded, nor trust in uncertain riches, but in the
living God, who giveth us richly all things to enjoy: that they do
good, that they be rich in good works, ready to distribute, willing
to communicate: laying up in store for themselves a good foundation
against the time to come, that they may lay hold on eternal life'
(1 Tim 6:17,19).
[Objections answered.]
The First Objection. The first is this; some godly heart may say,
I dare not own that what I do shall ever be regarded, much less
rewarded by God in another world because of the unworthiness of my
person, and because of the many infirmities and sinful weaknesses
that attend me every day.
You must remind and look back to what but now hath been proved,
namely, That both Christ and his apostles do all agree in this,
that there is a reward for the righteous, and that their good deeds
are laid up as treasures for them in heaven, and are certainly to
be bestowed upon them in the last day with abundance of eternal
glory. 2. Now then, to speak to thy case, and to remove the
bottom of thy objection, that the unworthiness of thy person, and
thy sinful infirmities, that attend thee in every duty, do make
thee think thy works shall not be either regarded or rewarded in
another world. But consider, first, as to the unworthiness of thy
person. They that are in Christ Jesus are always complete before
God, in the righteousness that Christ hath obtained, how infirm,
and weak, and wicked soever they appear to themselves. Before God,
therefore, in this righteousness thou standest all the day long, and
that upon a double account; first, by the act of faith, because
thou hast believed in him that thou mightest be justified by
the righteousness of Christ; but if this fail, I mean the act of
believing, still thou standest justified by God's imputing this
righteousness to thee, which imputation standing purely upon the
grace and good pleasure of God to thee, that holds thee still as
just before God, though thou wantest at present the comfort thereof.
Thus, therefore, thy person stands always acccepted; and, indeed,
no man's works can at all be regarded, if his person, in the first
place, be not respected. The Lord had respect first to Abel, and
after to his offering (Gen 4:4; Heb 11:4). But he can have respect
to no man before works done, unless he find them in the righteousness
of Christ; for they must be accepted through a righteousness, which,
because they have none of their own, therefore they have one of
God's imputing, even that of his Son, which he wrought for us when
he was born of the Virgin, &c. As to thy sinful infirmities that
attend thee in every work, they cannot hinder thee from laying up
treasure in heaven, thy heart being upright in the way with God;
nor will he be unrighteous at all to forget thy good deeds in the
day when Christ shall come from heaven.
1. Because by the same reason then he must disown all the good works
of all his prophets and apostles; for they have all been attended
with weaknesses and sinful infirmities; from the beginning hitherto
there is not a man, 'not a just man upon earth, that doeth good
and sinneth not' (Eccl 7:20). The best of our works are accompanied
with sin: 'When I would do good,' saith Paul, 'evil is present
with me' (Rom 7:21). This, therefore, must not hinder. And for
thy further satisfaction in this, consider, as Christ presents thy
person before God, acceptable without thy works, freely and alone
by his righteousness, so his office is to take away the iniquity
of thy holy things, that they also by him may be accepted of God
(Exo 28:36-38; 1 Peter 2:5). Wherefore, it is further said, for the
encouragement of the weak and feeble, He shall not break a bruised
reed, nor quench the smoking flax, but shall bring forth judgment
unto victory (Matt 12:20). The bruised reed, you know, is weak;
and by bruises we should understand sinful infirmities. And so also
concerning the smoking flax; by smoking you must understand sinful
weakness; but none of these shall either hinder the justification
of thy person, or the acceptation of thy performance, they being
done in faith and love, let thy temptations be never so many,
because of Jesus Christ his priestly office now at the right hand
of God. By him, therefore, let us offer spiritual sacrifices; for
they shall be acceptable to God and our Father.
2. Because otherwise God and Christ would prove false to their own
word, which is horrible blasphemy once to imagine; who hath promised
that when the Son of God shall come to judgment, he shall render to
'every man according to his work' (Rev 22:12); and doth upon this
very account encourage his servants to a patient enduring of the
hottest persecutions: 'for great is your reward in heaven' (Matt
5:12; Luke 6:23,35; Matt 6:1, 10:41,42). From this also he bindeth
his saints and servants to be sincerely liberal, and good, and
kind to all; first, because otherwise, they have no reward of their
Father which is in heaven, that is, for what they do not; but if
they do it, then, though it be but a cup of cold water given to a
prophet or righteous man, they shall receive a prophet's reward,
a righteous man's reward; yea, they shall receive it in any wise,
'they shall in no wise lose their reward.'
The Second Objection. And now I come to the second objection, and
that ariseth from our being completely justified freely by the
grace of God through Christ; and by the same means alone brought to
glory; and may be framed thus:--but seeing we are freely justified,
and brought to glory by free grace, through the redemption that is
in Jesus Christ; and seeing the glory that we shall be possessed
of upon the account of the Lord Jesus, is both full and complete,
both for happiness and continuing therein, what need will there
be that our work should be rewarded? Nay, may not the doctrine
of reward for good works be here not only needless, but indeed an
impairing and lessening the completeness of that glory to which
we are brought, and in which we shall live inconceivably happy for
ever, by free grace?
The Third Objection. But is not the reward that God hath promised
to his saints, for their good works to be enjoyed only here?
2. Dost thou love thy friends, dost thou love thine enemies, dost
thou love thy family or relations, or the church of God? then cry
for strength from heaven, and for wisdom, and a heart from heaven
to walk wisely before them. For if a man be remiss, negligent, and
careless in his conversation, not much mattering whom he offends,
displeases, or discourages, by doing this or that, so he may save
himself, please his foolish heart, and get this world, or the like,
this man hath lost a good report of them that are without, and is
fallen into reproach and the snare of the devil (1 Tim 3:7). He
is fallen into reproach, and is slighted, disdained, both he, his
profession, and all he says, either by way of reproof, rebuke, or
exhortation: physician, cure thyself, say all to such a one; this
man is a sayer, but not a doer, say they; he believeth not what he
says; yea, religion itself is made to stink by this man's ungodly
life. This is he that hardens his children, that stumbleth the
world, that grieveth the tender and godly Christian; but I say, he
that walketh uprightly, that tenders[26] the name of God, the credit
of the gospel, and the welfare of others, seeking with Paul, not
his own profit, but the profit of others, that they may be saved;
this man holds forth the Word of life, this man is a good savour
of Christ amongst them that are saved; yea, may prove, by so doing,
the instrument in God's hand of the salvation of many souls.
3. This is the way to be clear from the blood of all men, the way
not to be charged with the ruin and everlasting misery of poor
immortal souls. Great is the danger that attends an ungodly life,
or an ungodly action, by them that profess the gospel (Jer 2:33).
When wicked men learn to be wicked of professors, when professors
cause the enemies of God to blaspheme, doubtless sad and woeful
effects must needs be the fruit of so doing (2 Sam 12:14). How
many in Israel were destroyed for that which Aaron, Gideon, and
Manasseh, unworthily did in their day? (Exo 32:25; Judg 8:24-27).
A godly man, if he take not heed to himself, may do that in his life
that may send many to everlasting burnings, when he himself is in
everlasting bliss. But on the contrary, let men walk with God, and
there they shall be excused; the blood of them that perish shall
lie at their own door, and thou shalt be clear. 'I am pure from
the blood of all men,' saith Paul (Acts 20:26). And again, 'your
blood be upon your own heads, I am clean' (Acts 18:6). Yea, he that
doth thus, shall leave in them that perish an accusing conscience,
even begotten by his good conversation, and by that they shall be
forced to justify God, his people, and way, in the day of their
visitation; in the day when they are descending into the pit to
the damned (1 Peter 2:12).
5. The godly man that walketh with God, that chiefly careth to
do the work that God hath allotted him to do for his name in this
world, he hath not only these advantages, but further, he hath as
it were a privilege of power with God, he can sway much with him;
as it is said of Jacob, as a prince he had power with God to prevail
in times of difficulty (Gen 32:28). And so again, it is said of
Judah, being faithful with the saints, he ruled with God (Hosea
11:12). How many times did that good man Moses turn away the wrath
of God from the many thousands of Israel; yea, as it were, he held
the hands of God, and staved off the judgments not once nor twice;
the effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much (2
Sam 5:10). One man that walketh much with God, may work wonders in
this very thing; he may be a means of saving whole countries and
kingdoms from those judgments their sins deserve. How many times,
when Israel provoked the Lord to anger, did he yet defer to destroy
them? and the reason of that forbearance, he tells them it was for
David's sake; for my servant David's sake I will not do it. As the
Lord said also concerning Paul, 'Lo, God hath given thee all them
that sail with thee'; that is, to save their lives from the rage of
the sea (Acts 27:24). Yea, when a judgment is not only threatened,
but the decree gone forth for its execution, then godly upright
men may sometimes cause the very decree itself to cease without
bringing forth (Zech 2:1-3). Or else may so time the judgment that
is decreed, that the church shall best be able to bear it (Matt
24:20).
6. The man that is tender of God's glory in this world, still ruling
and governing his affairs by the Word, and desirous to be faithful
to the work and employment that God hath appointed him to do for
his name; that man shall still be let into the secrets of God; he
shall know that which God will reserve and hide from many; 'Shall
I hide from Abraham that thing which I do,' saith the Lord?--'For
I know him, that he will command his children and his household
after him, and they shall keep the way of the Lord,' &c. (Gen
18:17,19). So again, 'The secret of the Lord is with them that fear
him; and he will shew them his covenant' (Psa 25:14). 'And to him
that ordereth his conversation aright, will I shew the salvation
of God' (Psa 50:23). Such a man shall have things new as well as
old. His converse with the Father, and the Son, and the Spirit,
shall be turned into a kind of familiarity; he shall be led into
the Word, and shall still increase in knowledge: when others shall
be stinted and look with old faces, being black and dry as a stick,
he shall be like a fatted calf, like the tree that is planted by
the rivers of water, his flesh shall be fresh as the flesh of a
child, and God will renew the face of his soul.
(1.) Upon the faithful upright man, though he also may be corrected
and chastised for sin, yet, I say, he abiding close with God,
afflictions come rather for trial and for the exercise of grace
received, than as rebukes for this or that wickedness; when upon
the backsliding heartless Christian these things shall come from
fatherly anger and displeasure, and that for their sins against
him. Job did acknowledge himself a sinner, and that God therefore
might chastise him: but yet he rather believed it was chiefly for
the trial of his grace, as indeed, and in truth, it was (Job 7:20,
23:10). 'He is a perfect man,' saith God to Satan, 'and one that
feareth God, and escheweth evil, and still he holdeth fast his
integrity, although thou movedst me against him, to destroy him
without cause' (Job 2:3). God will not say thus of every one when
affliction is laid upon them, though they yet may be his children;
but rather declareth and pronounceth that it is for their
transgressions, because they have wickedly departed from him (Psa
39:11, 38:1-4).
(2.) Now, affliction arising from these two causes, their effects
in the manner of their working, though grace turns them both
for good, is very different one from the other; he who hath been
helped to walk with God, is not assaulted with those turnings and
returnings of guilt when he is afflicted, as he who hath basely
departed from God; the one can plead his integrity, when the other
blusheth for shame. See both these cases in one person, even that
goodly beloved David. When the Lord did rebuke him for sin, then he
cries, O blood guiltiness, O 'cast me not away from thy presence'
(Psa 51:11). But when he at another time knew himself guiltless,
though then also sorely afflicted, behold with what boldness he
turns his face unto God; 'O Lord, my God,' saith he, 'if I have
done this; if there be iniquity in my hands; if I have rewarded
evil unto him that was at peace with me; [yea, I have delivered
him that without cause is mine enemy] let the enemy persecute my
soul, and take it; yea, let him tread down my life upon the earth,
and lay mine honour in the dust. Selah,' &c. (Psa 7:3-5).
9. When men are faithful with God in this world, to do the work he
hath appointed for them, by this means a dying bed is made easier,
and that upon a double account. (1.) By reason of that present
peace such shall have, even in their time of languishing. (2.) By
reason of the good company such shall have at their departure.
(1.) Such souls usually abound in present peace; they look not
back upon the years they have spent with that shame as the idle and
slothful Christian does. 'Remember now, Lord,--how I have walked
before thee in truth, and with a perfect heart' (Isa 38:3). Blessed
is the man that considereth the poor, the Lord will deliver him in
time of trouble. The Lord will preserve him, and keep him alive,
and he shall be blessed upon the earth; and thou wilt not deliver
him unto the will of his enemies. The Lord will strengthen him upon
the bed of languishing; thou wilt make all his bed in his sickness
(Psa 41:1-3).
Ah! when God makes the bed,[27] he must needs lie easy that weakness
hath cast thereon; a blessed pillow hath that man for his head,
though to all beholders it is hard as a stone. Jacob, on his
deathbed, had two things that made it easy:--(a) The faith of his
going to rest, 'I am to be gathered unto my people'; that is, to
the blessed that have yielded up the ghost before me (Gen 49:29).
(b) The remembrance of the sealings of the countenance of God upon
him, when he walked before him in the days of his pilgrimage: when
Joseph came to see him, before he left this world, Israel, saith
the Word, 'strengthened himself and sat upon his bed'; and the
first word that dropt out of this good man's mouth, O how full of
glory was it! 'God Almighty appeared unto me,' saith he, 'at Luz,
in the land of Canaan, and blessed me,' &c. (Gen 48:1-3). O blessed
discourse for a sick bed, when those can talk thus that lie thereon,
from as true a ground as Jacob; but thus will God make the bed of
those who walk close with him in this world.
(2.) The dying bed of such a man is made easy by reason also of
the good company such shall have at their departure; and that is,
(1) The angels; (b) Their good works they have done for God in the
world.
(a) The angels of heaven shall wait upon them, as they did upon
blessed Lazarus, to carry them into Abraham's bosom (Luke 16:22).
I know all that go to paradise are by these holy ones conducted
thither; but yet, for all that, such as die under the clouds for
unchristian walking with God, may meet with darkness in that day--may
go heavily hence, notwithstanding that (Job 5:14). Yea, their bed
may be as uncomfortable to them as if they lay upon nothing but
the cords, and their departing from it, as to appearance, more
uncomfortable by far. But as for those who have been faithful to
their God, they shall see before them, shall know their tabernacles,
'shall be in peace' (Job 5:24), 'the everlasting gates shall be
opened unto them,' in all which, from earth, they shall see the
glory (Acts 7:55,56).[28] I once was told a story of what happened
at a good man's death, the which I have often remembered, with
wonderment and gladness. After he had lain for some time sick, his
hour came that he must depart, and behold, while he lay, as we call
it, drawing on, to the amazement of the mourners, there was heard
about his bed such blessed and ravishing music as they never heard
before; which also continued till his soul departed, and then
began to cease, and grow, as to its sound, as if it was departing
the house, and so still seemed to go further and further off, till
at last they could hear it not longer. 'Eye hath not seen, nor ear
heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things that
God hath prepared for them that love him': behold, then, how God
can make thy sick bed easy! (1 Cor 2:9).
(b) A dying bed is made easy by those good works that men have done
in their life for the name of God: 'Blessed are the dead which die
in the Lord: yea, saith the Spirit, that they may rest from their
labours, and their works do follow them'; yea, and go before them
too (Rev 14:13). No man need be afraid to be accompanied by good
deeds to heaven. Be afraid of sins, they are like bloodhounds at
the heels; and be sure thy sins will find thee out, even thee who
hast not been pardoned in the precious blood of Christ; but as for
those who have submitted themselves to the righteousness of God
for their justification, and who have, through faith and love to
his name, been frequent in deeds of righteousness, they shall not
appear empty before their God, 'their works,' their good works,
'follow them.' These shall enter into rest, and walk with Christ
in white. I observe, when Israel had passed over Jordan, they were
to go to possess between Mount Ebal and Mount Gerizim, from whence
was to be pronounced the blessing and the cursing (Deut 27). The
gospel meaning of which I take to be as followeth: I take Jordan
to be a type of death: and these two mountains, with the cursing
and blessing, to be a type of the judgment that comes on every man,
so soon as he goes from hence--'and after death the judgment'--so
that he that escapes the cursing, he alone goes into blessedness;
but he that Mount Ebal smiteth, he falls short of heaven! O! none
knows the noise that doth sound in sinners' souls from Ebal and
Gerizim when they are departed hence; yet it may be they know not
what will become of them till they hear these echoings from these
two mountains: but here the good man is sure Mount Gerizim doth
pronounce him blessed. Blessed, then, are the dead that die in
the Lord, for their works will follow them till they are past all
danger. These are the Christian's train that follow him to rest;
these are a good man's company that follow him to heaven.
FOOTNOTES:
[4] The lions growled and roared upon the pilgrims in Bunyan's days,
to prevent their making a public profession of Christ by uniting
with one of his churches; represented in the Pilgrim's Progress
by the palace justly called Beautiful. Many were then kept back,
to their serious injury or ruin, by fear of enormous penalties or
imprisonment, but NOW, what keeps you back, O Christian. Fears for
the loss of property, liberty, or life, would have been a wretched
plea for the loss of the soul, how much less the fear of ridicule
from ungodly friends or relatives.--Ed.
[6] Would you be ready to die in peace? then seek a close walk
and communion with God in time of health. A life of faith ensures
a life of glory. Live and walk in the Spirit; as strangers and
pilgrims abstain from fleshly lusts. To live thus is Christ; to
die is gain, the more sudden the more joyful and glorious.--Ed.
[9] How delightfully does this exclamation flow from the lips of the
pious patriarch, overcome by his exertion in this solemn death-bed
scene. He pauses, and then, with his recovering breath, appeals to
heaven--'I have waited for thy salvation, O Lord.' Poor old man,
the cold sweat of death is on thy brow, the angels stand ready to
open the gate of the celestial city; finish thy solemn instructions
to thy children, and then thou shalt enter upon the fruition of all
thy patient waiting, thy fearing, fighting, trembling, doubting,
shall be absorbed in immeasurable, eternal bliss.--Ed.
[11] These are solemn and most weighty arguments to press upon us
the fulfilment of our daily duties. How incomprehensible are the
ways of God. His love is proved by bitterly convicting us of sin,
of righteousness, and of judgment. Like Christian and Hopeful in
Doubting Castle, sometimes so overwhelming as to drive us to the
verge of despair and self-destruction. We fall not down the precipice,
for still there is hope and pardon in his bosom, and at the proper
time it will be revealed.--Ed.
[22] Upon the opening of the sixth seal in the book of Revelation,
there was 'a great earthquake, and the sun became black as sackcloth
of hair, and the moon as blood.' A preternatural and awful darkness
broods over nature, preparatory to its final dissolution. Thus
Satan darkens the things above to the natural man, so that he
cannot discern spiritual things, while those of time and sense are
magnified and multiplied in his estimation.--Ed.
[24] There are no idlers in God's Israel, every one has his appointed
work to fulfil against his appointed day. Christian, watch against
idleness.
[25] Godliness, saith Paul, has the 'promise of the life that now
is, and of that which is to come.' This should be more dwelt upon
by our ministers, as Bunyan sets the example. The mind of a Christian
has the richest enjoyments, however his body may be persecuted,
for over that only the enemy has power. A prison may be the gate
of heaven. With God as our Father, a wall of fire round about, and
the glory in our midst, 'what can we want beside?'--Ed.
[27] How tenderly does the Psalmist exhibit the love of God to
his chosen under this figure, 'Thou wilt make all his bed in his
sickness.' He will never leave nor forsake them; and, when heart
and flesh shall fail, he will guide them and receive them to his
glory. 'Wonders of grace to God belong.' Christian women! with
such an example, can you hesitate to go and make the bed of a poor
sick and afflicted neighbour?--Ed.
[28]
***
OR,
Deeply are the churches of Christ indebted to the Holy Spirit for
having assisted his honoured servant to write this treatise; and we
are under great obligation to his friend, Charles Doe, for having
handed it down to us, as he found it prepared for the press, with
other excellent treatises, among the author's papers after his
decease. It abounds with those striking ideas peculiar to the works
of the author of the Pilgrim's Progress; most faithful home thrusts
at conscience, which those who really desire to know themselves
will greatly prize. It has been very properly observed that the
words used by the author, as descriptive of the text, may, with
great propriety, be applied to this treatise--'It is a sharp and
smart description' of the desires of a righteous man.
GEO. OFFOR.
'The fear of the wicked, it shall come upon him; but the desite of
the righteous shall be granted.'--Proverbs 10:24
[First.] The words then, in the first place, present us with the
general condition of the whole world; for all men are ranked under
one of these conditions, the wicked or the righteous; for he that
is not wicked is righteous, and he that is not righteous is wicked.
So again, 'Lay not wait, O wicked man, against the dwelling of
the righteous, spoil not his resting-place.' I might give you out
of this book many such instances, for it flows with such; but the
truth hereof is plain enough.
Of the wicked there are several sorts, some more ignorant, some more
knowing; the more ignorant of them are such as go to be executed,
as the ox goes to the slaughter, or as a fool to the correction
of the stocks; that is, as creatures whose ignorance makes them as
unconcerned, while they are going down the stairs to hell. But,
alas! their ignorance will be no plea for them before the bar of God;
for it is written, 'It is a people of no understanding; therefore
he that made them will not have mercy on them, and he that formed
them will show them no favour' (Isa 27:11; Prov 7:22).
Though, I must confess, the more knowing the wicked is, or the
more light and goodness such a one sins against, the greater will
his judgment be; these shall have greater damnation: it shall be
more tolerable at the judgment for Sodom than for them (Luke 10:12,
20:47). There is a wicked man that goes blinded, and a wicked man
that goes with his eyes open to hell; there is a wicked man that
cannot see, and a wicked man that will not see the danger he is
in; but hell-fire will open both their eyes (Luke 16:23). There
are that are wicked, and cover all with a cloak of religion, and
there are that proclaim their profaneness; but they will meet both
in the lake that burns with fire and brimstone; 'The wicked shall
be turned into hell, and all the nations that forget God' (Psa
9:17).
A wicked man, though he may hector it at times with his proud heart,
as though he feared neither God nor hell, yet again, at times, his
soul is even drowned with terrors. 'The morning is to them even as
the shadow of death; if one knew them, they are in the terrors of
the shadow of death' (Job 24:14-17). At times, I say, it is thus
with them, especially when they are under warm convictions that
the day of judgment is at hand, or when they feel in themselves
as if death was coming as a tempest, to steal them away from their
enjoyments, and lusts, and delights; then the bed shakes on which
they lie, then the proud tongue doth falter in their mouth, and
their knees knock one against another; then their conscience stares,
and roars, and tears, and arraigns them before God's judgment-seat,
or threatens to follow them down to hell, and there to wreck its
fury on them, for all the abuses and affronts this wicked wretch
offered to it in the day in which it controlled his unlawful
deeds. O! none can imagine what fearful plights a wicked man is
in sometimes; though God in his just judgment towards them suffers
them again and again to stifle and choke such awakenings, from a
purpose to reserve them unto the day of judgment to be punished (2
Peter 2:7-9).
[Third.] In the third place, as the wicked has his fears, so the
righteous has his desires. 'The desire of the righteous shall be
granted'; but this must not be taken exclusively, as if the wicked
had nothing but fears, and the righteous nothing but desires. For,
both by Scripture and experience also, we find that the wicked has
his desires, and the righteous man his fears.
1. For the wicked, they are not without their desires. 'Let me die
the death of the righteous, and let my last end be like his,' was
the desire of wicked Balaam (Num 23:10), and another place saith,
'the wicked boasteth of his heart's desire'; that he is for heaven
as well as the best of you all, but yet, even then, 'he blesseth
the covetous, whom the Lord abhorreth' (Psa 10:3). Wicked men
have their desires and their hopes too, but the hope and desire of
unjust men perisheth (Prov 11:7, 14:32). Yea, and though they look
and long, too, all the day long, with desires of life and glory,
yet their fears, and them only, shall come upon them; for they are
the desires of the righteous that shall be granted (Psa 112:10).
The desires of the wicked want a good bottom; they flow not from a
sanctified mind, nor of love to the God, or the heaven now desired;
but only from such a sense as devils have of torments, and so, as
they, they cry out, 'I beseech thee torment me not' (Luke 8:28,
16:24). But their fears have a substantial foundation, for they
are grounded upon the view of an ill-spent life, the due reward of
which is hell-fire; 'the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom
of God,' their place is without; 'for without are dogs and sorcerers,
and whoremongers, and murderers, and idolaters, and whosoever loveth
and maketh a lie' (1 Cor 6:9,10; Rev 22:15).
Their fears, therefore, have a strong foundation; they have also
matter to work upon, which is guilt and justice, the which they
shall never be able to escape, without a miracle of grace and mercy
(Heb 2:3). Therefore it saith, and that with emphasis, 'The fear
of the wicked it shall come upon him'; wherefore his desires must
die with him: for the promise of a grant of that which is desired
is only entailed to righteousness. 'The desire of the righteous shall
be granted,' but 'grant not, O Lord, the desires of the wicked,'
saith David (Psa 140:8).
2. Nor are the righteous without their fears, and that even all
their life long. Through fear of death, they, some of them, are all
their life time subject to bondage (Heb 2:15). But as the desires
of the wicked shall be frustrate, so shall also the fears of
the godly; hence you have them admonished, yea commanded, not to
be afraid neither of devils, death, nor hell; for the fear of the
righteous shall not come upon them to eternal damnation (Isa 35:4,
41:10-14, 43:1, 44:28; Luke 8:50, 12:32; Rev 1:17).
'The desire of the righteous shall be granted.' No, they are not
to fear what sin can do unto them, nor what all their sins can do
unto them; I do not say they should not be afraid of sinning, nor
of those temporal judgments that sin shall bring upon them, for
of such things they ought to be afraid, as saith the Psalmist, 'My
flesh trembleth for fear of thee, and I am afraid of thy judgments'
(Psa 119:120). But of eternal ruin, of that, they ought not to be
afraid of with slavish fear. 'Wherefore should I fear,' said the
prophet, 'in the days of evil, when the iniquity of my heels shall
compass me about?' (Psa 49:5). And again, 'Ye have done all this
wickedness, yet turn not aside from following the Lord;--for the
Lord will not forsake his people, for his great name's sake' (1
Sam 12:20-22).
The reason is, because the righteous are secured by their faith in
Christ Jesus; also their fears stand upon a mistake of the nature
of the covenant, in which they are wrapped up, which is ordered
for them in all things, and sure (2 Sam 23:5; Isa 55:3). Besides,
God has purposed to magnify the riches of his grace in their
salvation; therefore goodness and mercy shall, to that end, follow
them all the days of their life, that they may 'dwell in the house
of the Lord for ever' (Psa 23:6; Eph 1:3-7). They have also their
intercessor and advocate ready with God, to take up matters for
them in such a way as may maintain true peace betwixt their God and
them; and as may encourage them to be sober, and hope to the end,
for the grace that is to be brought unto them at the revelation of
Jesus Christ (1 Peter 1:13; 1 John 2:1,2). Wherefore, though the
godly have their fears, yea, sometimes dreadful fears, and that
of perishing for ever and ever; yet the day is coming, when their
fears and tears shall be done away, and when their desires only
shall be granted. 'The fear of the wicked, it shall come upon them;
but the desire of the righteous shall be granted.'
But I shall here leave off this short way of paraphrasing upon the
text, and shall come more distinctly to inquire into the nature
of the words; but my subject-matter shall be the last part of the
verse, 'The desire of the righteous shall be granted.' From which
words there are these things to be inquired into.
FIRST. What, or who is the righteous man? SECOND. What are the
desires of a righteous man? THIRD. What is meant or to be understood
by the granting of the desires of the righteous? 'The desire of
the righteous shall be granted.'
FIRST. For the first of these, namely, 'WHAT OR WHO IS THE RIGHTEOUS
MAN?
FIRST. There is one that is righteous in his own eyes, and is yet
far enough off from the blessing of the text: 'There is a generation
that are pure' or righteous 'in their own eyes, and yet is not washed
from their filthiness' (Prov 29:12). These are they that you also
read of in the evangelist Luke, that are said to trust 'in themselves
that they were righteous, and despised others' (Luke 18:9). These
are set so low, by this their foolish confidence, in the eyes of
Jesus Christ, that he even preferred a praying publican before them
(Luke 18:13,14). Wherefore these cannot be the men, I mean those
righteous men, to whom this promise is made.
THIRD. There are those that indeed are righteous when compared
with others: 'I came not to call the righteous'; 'for scarcely for
a righteous man will one die,' and the like, are texts thus to be
understood. For such as these are, as to life moral, better than
others. But these, if they are none otherwise righteous than by
acts and works of righteousness of their own, are not the persons
contained in the text that are to have their desires granted.
FOURTH. The righteous man therefore in the text is, and ought to be,
thus described: 1. He is one whom God makes righteous, by reckoning
him so. 2. He is one that God makes righteous, by possessing of him
with a principle of righteousness. 3. He is one that is practically
righteous.
First. He is one that God makes righteous. Now, if God makes him
righteous, his righteousness is not his own, I mean this sort of
righteousness: 'Their righteousness is of me, saith the Lord' (Isa
54:17). God then makes a man righteous by putting righteousness
upon him--by putting the righteousness of God upon him (Phil 3:6-9).
Hence we are said to be made the righteousness of God in Christ:
'For God hath made him to be sin for us, who knew no sin, that we
might be made the righteousness of God in him' (2 Cor 5:21). Thus
God, therefore, reckoneth one righteous, even by imputing that
unto us which is able to make us so: 'Christ of God is made unto
us--righteousness' (1 Cor 1:30). Wherefore he saith again, 'In the
Lord shall all the seed of Israel be justified and shall glory'
(Isa 45:25).
Second. And this leads me to the second thing, namely, That God
makes a man righteous by possessing[3] of him with a principle of
righteousness, even with the spirit of righteousness (Rom 4:4,5).
For though, as to justification before God from the curse of the
law, we are made righteous while we are ungodly, and yet sinners;
yet being made free from sin thus, we forthwith become, through
a change which the Holy Ghost works in our minds, the servants
of God (Rom 5:7-9). Hence it is said, 'There is therefore now no
condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after
the flesh, but after the Spirit' (Rom 8:1). For though, as the apostle
also insinuates here, that being in Christ Jesus is antecedent to
our walking after the Spirit; yet a man can make no demonstration
of his being in Christ Jesus, but by his walking in the Spirit; because
the Spirit is an inseparable companion of imputed righteousness,
and immediately follows it, to dwell with whosoever it is bestowed
upon. Now it dwelling in us, principles[4] us in all the powers of
our souls, with that which is righteousness in the habit and nature
of it. Hence the fruits of the Spirit are called 'the fruits of
goodness and righteousness,' as the fruits of a tree are called
the fruit of that tree (Eph 5:9).
Mark his order: first we are made free from sin; now that is by
being justified freely by the grace of God through the redemption
which is in Jesus Christ, whom God has set forth to be a propitiation
through faith in his blood. Now this is God's act, without any
regard at all to any good that the sinner has or can accomplish;
'not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according
to his mercy' thus he saveth us (Titus 3:5; Rom 3:24; 2 Tim 1:9).
Now, being made free from sin, what follows? We become the servants
of God, that is, by that turn which the Holy Ghost makes upon our
heart when it reconciles it to the Word of God's grace. For that,
as was said afore, is the effect of the indwelling and operation
of the Holy Ghost. Now having our hearts thus changed by God and
his Word, the fruits of righteousness put forth themselves by us.
For as when we were in the flesh, the motions of sin, which is in
our members, did bring forth fruit unto death, so now, if we are
in the Spirit, and we are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit, if
so be the Spirit of Christ dwells in us, by the motions and workings
of that we have our fruit unto holiness, and the end everlasting
life (Rom 8:6,9).
But now by these fruits we are neither made righteous nor good;
for the apple maketh not the tree good, it only declares it so to
be. Here therefore all those are mistaken that think to be righteous
by doing of righteous actions, or good by doing good. A man must
first be righteous, or he cannot do righteousness; to wit, that
which is evangelically such. Now if a man is, and must be righteous,
before he acts righteousness, then all his works are born too late
to make him just before God; for his works, if they be right, flow
from the heart of a righteous man, of a man that had, before he
had any good work, a twofold righteousness bestowed on him; one
to make him righteous in the sight of God, the other to principle
him to be righteous before the world. 'That he might be called a
tree of righteousness, the planting of the Lord, that he might be
glorified' (Isa 63:3).
Reason also says the same, for how can Blacks beget white children,
when both father and mother are black? How can a man without grace,
and the spirit of grace, do good; nature is defiled even to the
mind and conscience; how then can good fruit come from such a stock?
(Titus 1:15). Besides, God accepteth not any work of a person which
is not first accepted of him; 'The Lord hath respect unto Abel and
to his offering' (Gen 4:4). To Abel first, that is, before that
Abel offered. But how could God have respect to Abel, if Abel was
not pleasing in his sight? and how could Abel be yet pleasing in
his sight, for the sake of his own righteousness, when it is plain
that Abel had not yet done good works? he was therefore first
made acceptable in the sight of God, by and for the sake of that
righteousness which God of his grace had put upon him to justification
of life; through and by which also the Holy Ghost in the graces
of it dwelt in Abel's soul. Now Abel being justified, and also
possessed with this holy principle, he offers his sacrifice to God.
Hence it is said, that he offered 'by faith,' by the faith which
he had precedent to his offering; for if through faith he offered,
he had that faith before he offered; that is plain. Now his faith
looked not for acceptance for the sake of what he offered, but
for the sake of that righteousness which it did apprehend God had
already put upon him, and by which he was made righteous; wherefore
his offering was the offering of a righteous man, of a man made
righteous first; and so the text saith, 'By faith Abel offered
unto God a more excellent sacrifice than Cain, by which he obtained
witness that he was righteous' (Heb 11:4); that is antecedent to
his offering; for he had faith in Christ to come, by which he was
made righteous; he also had the spirit of faith, by which he was
possessed with a righteous principle; and so being in this manner
made righteous, righteous before God, and also principled to work,
he comes and offereth his more acceptable sacrifice to God. For
this, all will grant, namely, that the works of a righteous man are
more excellent than are even the best works of the wicked. Hence
Cain's works came behind; for God had not made him righteous, had
no respect unto his person, had not given him the Spirit and faith,
whereby alone men are made capable to offer acceptably: 'But unto
Cain and to his offering, the Lord had not respect' (Gen 4:5).
SECOND. I come now to the second thing into which we are to inquire,
and that is,
[Desires in general.]
When Eve saw that the forbidden fruit was a beautiful tree--though
her sight deceived her--then she desired it, and took thereof
herself, and gave to her husband, and he did eat; yea, saith the
text, 'when she saw that it was a tree to be desired, to make one
wise, she took' (Gen 3:6). Hence that which is called 'coveting'
in one place, is called 'desiring' in another; for desires are
craving; and by desires a man seeks to enjoy what is not his (Exo
20:17; Deut 5:21). From all these things, therefore, we see what
desire is. It is the working of the heart, after that which the
soul is persuaded that it is good to be enjoyed; and of them there
are these two effects.
Second. The second effect is, If desires be strong, they carry all
away with them; they are all like Samson, they will pull down the
gates of a city; but they will go out abroad; nothing can stop
the current of desires, but the enjoyment of the thing desired, or
a change of opinion as to the worth or want of worth of the thing
that is desired.
SECOND. But we will now come to the thing more particularly intended,
which is, To show what are the desires of the righteous; that is
that which the text calls us to the consideration of, because it
saith, 'The desire of the righteous shall be granted.'
First. For their desires in the general: the same Solomon that
saith, 'The desire of the righteous shall be granted,' saith also,
'The desire of the righteous is only good' (Prov 11:23). This
text giveth us, in the general, a description of the desires of a
righteous man; and a sharp and smart description it is: for where,
may some say, is then the righteous man, or the man that hath
none but good desires? and if it be answered they are good in the
main, or good in the general, yet that will seem to come short of
an answer: for in that he saith 'the desires of the righteous are
only good,' it is as much as to say, that a righteous man has none
but good desires, or desireth nothing but things that are good.
Wherefore, before we go any further, I must labour to reconcile
the experience of good men with this text, which thus gives us a
description of the desires of the righteous.
From all these texts we find that a righteous man has other workings,
lusts, and desires than such only that are good; here then, if we
consider of a righteous man thus generally, is no place of agreement
betwixt him and this text. We must consider of him, then, in the
next place, more strictly, as he may and is to be distinguished
from his flesh, his carnal lusts, and sinful nature.
But I trow, Sir, your consenting to what is good is not by that part
which doth do what you would not; no, no, saith he, that which doth
do what I would not, I disown, and count it no part of sanctified
Paul: 'Now then it is no more I that do it, but sin that dwelleth
in me; for--in me, that is, in my flesh, dwelleth no good thing: for
to will is present with me; but how to perform that which is good,
I find not: for the good that I would, I do not; but the evil which
I would not, that I do: Now, if I do that I would not, it is no
more I that do it, but sin that dwells in me' (Rom 7). Thus you
see Paul is forced to make two men of himself, saying, I and I; I
do; I do not; I do, I would not do; what I hate, that I do. Now it
cannot be the same I unto whom these contraries are applied; but
his sinful flesh is one I, and his godly mind the other: and indeed
so he concludes it in this chapter, saying, 'So then with the mind
I myself serve the law of God, but with the flesh the law of sin.'
(2.) As the righteous man must here be taken for the best part, for
the I that would do good, for the I that hates the evil; so again,
we must consider of the desires of this righteous man, as they flow
from that fountain of grace, which is the Holy Ghost within him;
and as they are immediately mixed with those foul channels, in and
through which they must pass, before they can be put forth into
acts. For though the desire, as to its birth, and first being, is
only good; yet before it comes into much motion, it gathers that
from the defilements of the passages through which it comes, as
makes it to bear a tang of flesh and weakness in the skirts of it;
and the evil that dwells in us is so universal, and also always
so ready, that as sure as there is any motion to what is good, so
sure evil is present with it; 'for when' or whenever 'I would do
good,' says Paul, 'evil is present with me' (Rom 7:21). Hence it
follows, that all our graces, and so our desires, receive disadvantage
by our flesh, that mixing itself with what is good, and so abates
the excellency of the good.
There is a spring that yieldeth water good and clear, but the
channels through which this water comes to us are muddy, foul,
or dirty: now, of the channels the waters receive a disadvantage,
and so come to us as savouring of what came not with them from the
fountain, but from the channels. This is the cause of the coolness,
and of the weakness, of the flatness, and of the many extravagancies
that attend some of our desires. They come warm from the Spirit and
grace of God in us; but as hot water running through cold pipes,
or as clear water running through dirty conveyances, so our desires
[cool and] gather soil.
The inward man I call the new creature, of which the Spirit of God
is the support, as my soul supports my body. But, I say, this new
man is not always well. He knows nothing that knows not this. Now
being sick, things fail. As when a man is not in health of body,
his pulse beats so as to declare that he is sick; so when a man
is not well within, his inward pulse, which are his desires--for
I count the desires for the pulse of the inward man--they also
declare that the man is not well within. They beat too little after
God, weak and faintly after grace; they also have their halts, they
beat not evenly, as when the soul is well, but so as to manifest
all is not well there.
We read that the church of Sardis was under sore sickness, insomuch
that some of her things were quite dead, and they that were not so
were yet ready to die (Rev 3:2). Yet 'life is life,' we say, and
as long as there is a pulse, or breath, though breath scarce able
to shake a feather, we cast not away all hope of life. Desires,
then, though they be weak, are, notwithstanding, true desires, if
they be the desires of the righteous thus described, and therefore
are truly good, according to our text. David says he 'opened
his mouth and panted,' for he longed for God's commandments (Psa
119:131). This was a sickness, but not such a one as we have been
speaking of. The spouse also cried out that she was 'sick of love.'
Such sickness would do us good, for in it the pulse beats strongly
well (Cant 5:8).
Answ. There is not a Christian under heaven but has desires that
run both ways, as is manifest from what hath been said already.
Flesh will be flesh; grace shall not make it otherwise. By flesh
I mean that body of sin and death that dwelleth in the godly (Rom
6:6). As grace will act according to its nature, so sin will act
according to the nature of sin (Eph 2:3). Now, the flesh has desires,
and the desires of the flesh and of the mind are both one in the
ungodly; thank God it is not so in thee! (Rom 7:24). The flesh,
I say, hath its desires in the godly; hence it is said to lust
enviously; it lusts against the Spirit; 'The flesh lusteth against
the Spirit' (Gal 5:17). And if it be so audacious as to fly in the
face of the Holy Ghost, wonder that thou art not wholly carried
away with it! (Rom 7:25).
Object. But those desires that run to the world and sin seem most
and strongest in me.
Answ. The works of the flesh are manifest; that is, more plainly
discovered even in the godly than are the works of the Holy Ghost
(Gal 5:19). And this their manifestation ariseth from these following
particulars:
Quest. But since I have lusts and desires both ways, how shall I
know to which my soul adheres?
Answ. This may be known thus: 1. Which wouldest thou have prevail?
the desires of the flesh, or the lusts of the spirit, whose side
art thou of? Doth not thy soul now inwardly say, and that with
a strong indignation, O let God, let grace, let my desires that
are good, prevail against my flesh, for Jesus Christ his sake? 2.
What kind of secret wishes hast thou in thy soul when thou feelest
the lusts of thy flesh to rage? Dost thou not inwardly, and with
indignation against sin, say, O that I might never, never feel one
such motion more? O that my soul were so full of grace, that there
might be longer no room for ever for the least lust to come into
my thoughts! 3. What kind of thoughts hast thou of thyself, now
thou seest these desires of thine that are good so briskly opposed
by those that are bad? Dost thou not say, O! I am the basest of
creatures, I could even spew at myself? There is no man in all the
world in my eyes so loathsome as myself is. I abhor myself; a toad
is not so vile as I am.[8] O Lord, let me be anything but a sinner,
anything, so thou subduest mine iniquities for me! 4. How dost thou
like the discovery of that which thou thinkest is grace in other
men? Dost thou not cry out, O, I bless them in my heart! O, methinks
grace is the greatest beauty in the world! Yea, I could be content
to live and die with those people that have the grace of God in
their souls. A hundred times, and a hundred, when I have been upon
my knees before God, I have desired, were it the will of God, that
I might be in their condition. 5. How art thou when thou thinkest
that thou thyself hast grace? O then, says the soul, I am as if I
could leap out of myself; joy, joy, joy then is with my heart. It
is, methinks, the greatest mercy under heaven to be made a gracious
man.
And is it thus with thy soul indeed? Happy man! It is grace that
has thy soul, though sin at present works in thy flesh. Yea, all
these breathings are the very actings of grace, even of the grace
of desire, of love, of humility, and of the fear of God within
thee. Be of good courage, thou art on the right side. Thy desires
are only good; for that thou hast desired against thy sin, thy
sinful self; which indeed is not thyself, but sin that dwells in
thee.[9]
First. For the first of these, the desires of the righteous are for
such good things as they could have accomplished here; that is, in
this world, while they are on this side glory. And they, in general,
are comprised under these two general heads:--1. Communion with their
God in spirit, or spiritual communion with him; 2. The liberty of
the enjoyment of his holy ordinances. And, indeed, this second is,
that they may both attain to, and have the first maintained with
them. But for the first:
1. They desire now communion with God. 'With my soul,' said she,
'have I desired thee in the night; yea, with my spirit within me
will I seek thee early' (Isa 26:9). The reason of this she renders
in the verse foregoing, saying, 'The desire of our soul is to thy
name, and to the remembrance of thee.'
Now, thus to desire, declares one already made righteous. For herein
there appears a mind reconciled to God. Wherefore the wicked are
set on the other side, even in that opposition to these; 'they
say unto God, Depart from us, for we desire not the knowledge of
thy ways' (Job 21:14). They neither love his presence, nor to be
frequenters of his ordinances. 'What is the Almighty that we should
serve him? and what profit should we have if we pray unto him?'
(Job 21:15). So, again, speaking of the wicked, he saith, 'Ye have
said it is vain to serve God, and what profit is it that we have
kept his ordinance?' (Mal 3:14). This, then, to desire truly to
have communion with God, is the property of a righteous man, of
a righteous man only; for this desire arises from a suitableness
which is in the righteous unto God; 'Whom,' said the Prophet, 'have
I in heaven but thee? and there is none upon earth that I desire
beside thee' (Psa 73:25). This could never be the desire of a man,
were he not a righteous man, a man with a truly sanctified mind.
'The carnal mind is enmity against God, for it is not subject to
the law of God, neither indeed can be' (Rom 8:7).
When Moses, the man of God, was with the children of Israel in the
wilderness, he prays that God would give them his presence unto
Canaan, or else to let them die in that place. It was death to him
to think of being in the wilderness without God! And he said unto
God, 'If thy presence go not with me, carry us not up hence' (Exo
33:14,15). Here, then, are the desires of a righteous man--namely,
after communion with God. He chooses rather to be a stranger with
God in the world, than to be a citizen of the world and a stranger
to God. 'For I am,' said David, 'a stranger with thee, and a sojourner,
as all my fathers were' (Psa 39:12). Indeed, he that walketh with
God is but a stranger to this world. And the righteous man's desires
are to, for, and after communion with God, though he be so.
The reasons of these desires are many. In communion with God is life
and favour; yea, the very presence of God with a man is a token of
it (Psa 30:3-5). For by his presence he helps, succours, relieves,
and supports the hearts of his people, and therefore is communion
with him desired. 'I will,' said David, 'behave myself wisely in
a perfect way; O when wilt thou come unto me?' (Psa 101:2). The
pleasures that such a soul finds in God that has communion with
him are surpassing all pleasures and delights, yea, infinitely
surpassing them. 'In thy presence is fulness of joy, at thy right
hand there are pleasures for evermore' (Psa 16:11). Upon this account
he is called the desire of all nations--of all in all nations that
know him. Job desired God's presence, that he might reason with
God. 'Surely,' said he, 'I would speak to the Almighty, and I desire
to reason with God' (Job 13:3). And again, 'O that one would hear
me! Behold my desire is that the Almighty would answer me' (Job
31:35). But why doth Job thus desire to be in the presence of God!
O! he knew that God was good, and that he would speak to him that
which would do him good. 'Will he plead against me with his great
power? No: but he would put strength into me. There the righteous
might dispute with him; so should I be delivered for ever from my
judge' (Job 23:6,7).
God's presence is the safety of a man. If God be with one, who can
hurt one? As HE said, 'If God be for us, who can be against us?'
Now, if so much safety flows from God's being for one, how safe
are we when God is with us? 'The beloved of the Lord,' said Moses,
'shall dwell in safety by him, and the Lord shall cover him all the
day long, and he shall dwell between his shoulders' (Deut 33:12).
God's presence keeps the heart awake to joy, and will make a man
sing in the night (Job 35:10). 'Can the children of the bridechamber
mourn, as long as the bridegroom is with them?' (Matt 9:15). God's
presence is feasting, and feasting is made for mirth (Rev 3:20;
Eccl 10:19). God's presence keeps the heart tender, and makes it
ready to fall in with what is made known as duty or privilege (Isa
64:1). 'I will run the ways of thy commandments,' said the Psalmist,
'when thou shalt enlarge my heart' (Psa 119:32). The presence of
God makes a man affectionately and sincerely good; yea, makes him
willing to be searched and stripped from all the remains of iniquity
(Psa 26:1-3).
They are then best known to themselves. They know they are his
people, because God's presence is with them. Therefore he saith,
'My presence shall go with thee, and I will give thee rest' (Exo
33:14). That is, let thee know that thou hast found grace in my
sight, and art accepted of me. For if God withdraws himself, or
hides his presence from his people, it is hard for them to bear
up in the steadfast belief that they belong to him. 'Be not silent
to me,' O Lord, said David, 'lest I become like them that go down
into the pit' (Psa 28:1). 'Be not silent unto me,' that is, as
he has it in another place, 'Hide not thy face from me. Hear me
speedily, O Lord,' saith he, 'my spirit faileth; hide not thy face
from me, lest I be like unto them that go down into the pit' (Psa
143:7). So that God's presence is the desire of the righteous for
this cause also, even for that by it they gather that God delighteth
in them. 'By this I know that thou favourest me, because mine
enemies doth not triumph over me' (Psa 41:11). And is this all? No.
'And as for me, thou upholdest me in mine integrity, and settest
me before thy face for ever' (Psa 41:12).
Thus Abimelech saw that God was with Abraham (Gen 21:22). Thus
Abimelech saw that God was with Isaac (Gen 26:20,29). Pharaoh knew
that God was with Joseph (Gen 41:38). Saul 'saw and knew that the
Lord was with David' (1 Sam 18:28). Saul's servant knew that the
Lord was with Samuel (1 Sam 9:6). Belshazzar's queen knew, also, that
God was with Daniel. Darius knew, also, that God was with Daniel.
And when the enemy saw the boldness of Peter and John, 'they took
knowledge of them that they had been with Jesus' (Acts 4:13). The
girl that was a witch, knew that Paul was a servant of the most
high God (Acts 16:17). There is a glory upon them that have God
with them, a glory that sometimes glances and flashes out into the
faces of those that behold the people of God; 'And all that sat in
the council, looking stedfastly upon him, saw Stephen's face, as
it had been the face of an angel'; such rays of Divine majesty did
show themselves therein (Acts 6:15).
The reason is, for that, (1.) such have with them the wisdom
of God (2 Sam 14:17-20). (2.) Such, also, have special bowels and
compassions of God for others. (3.) Such have more of his majesty
upon them than others (1 Sam 16:4). (4.) Such, their words and
ways, their carriages and doings, are attended with that of God
that others are destitute of (1 Sam 3:19,20). (5.) Such are holier,
and of more convincing lives in general, than other people are (2
Kings 4:9). Now there is both comfort and honour in this; for what
comfort like that of being a holy man of God? And what honour like
that of being a holy man of God? This, therefore, is the desire
of the righteous, to wit, to have communion with God. Indeed none
like God, and to be desired as he, in the thoughts of a righteous
man.
'One thing,' said David, 'have I desired of the Lord, that will
I seek after,' namely, 'that I may dwell in the house of the Lord
all the days of my life, to behold the beauty of the Lord, and to
inquire in his temple' (Psa 27:4). The temple of the Lord was the
dwelling-house of God, there he recorded his name, and there he
made known himself unto his people (Psa 11:4; Habb 2:20). Wherefore
this was the cause why David so earnestly desired to dwell there
too, 'To behold,' saith he, 'the beauty of the Lord, and to inquire
in his temple.' There he had promised his presence to his people,
yea, and to bring thither a blessing for them; 'In all places where
I record my name, I will come unto thee, and I will bless thee'
(Exo 20:24). For this cause, therefore, as I said, it is why the
righteous do so desire that they may enjoy the liberty of the ordinances
and appointments of their God; to wit, that they may attain to, and
have communion maintained with him. Alas! the righteous are as it
were undone, if God's ordinances be taken from them: 'How amiable
are thy tabernacles, O Lord of hosts. My soul longeth, yea, even
fainteth for the courts of the Lord, my heart and my flesh crieth
out for the living God' (Psa 84:1,2). Behold what a taking the good
man was in, because at this time he could not attain to so frequent
a being in the temple of God as his soul desired. It even longed
and fainted, yea, and his heart and his flesh cried out for the
God that dwelt in the temple at Jerusalem.
Yea, he seems in the next words to envy the very birds that could
more commonly frequent the temple than he: 'The sparrow,' saith
he, 'hath found a house, and the swallow a nest for herself, where
she may lay her young, even thine altars, O Lord of hosts, my
King, and my God' (Psa 84:3). And then blesseth all them that had
the liberty of temple worship, saying, 'Blessed are they that dwell
in thy house, they will be still praising thee' (Psa 84:4). Then
he cries up the happiness of those that in Zion do appear before
God (Psa 84:7). After this he cries out unto God, that he would
grant him to be partaker of this high favour, saying, 'O Lord God
of hosts, hear my prayer,' &c. 'For a day in thy courts is better
than a thousand: I had rather be a door-keeper in the house of my
God, than to dwell in the tents of wickedness' (Psa 84:8-10).
But why is all this? what aileth the man thus to express himself?
Why, as I said, the temple was the great ordinance of God; there
was his true worship performed, there God appeared, and there his
people were to find him. This was, I say, the reason why the Psalmist
chose out, and desired this one thing, above all the things that
were under heaven, even 'to behold there the beauty of the Lord,
and to inquire in his temple.' There were to be seen the shadows
of things in the heavens; the candlestick, the table of shewbread,
the holiest of all, where was the golden censer, the ark of the
covenant overlaid round about with gold, the golden pot that had
manna, Aaron's rod that budded, the tables of the covenant, and the
cherubims of glory overshadowing the mercy-seat, which were all of
them then things by which God showed himself merciful to them (Heb
9:1-5 compared with 9:23 and 8:5).
No marvel then if this be the one thing that David desired, and
that which he would seek after, namely, 'to dwell in the house of
the Lord all the days of his life.' And this also shows you the reason
why God's people of old used to venture so hardly for ordinances,
and to get to them with the peril of their lives, 'because of the
sword of the wilderness' (Lam 5:9).[12]
They were their bread, they were their water, they were their milk,
they were their honey. Hence the sanctuary was called 'the desire
of their eyes, and that which their soul pitieth, or the pity of
their soul.' They had rather have died than lost it, or than that
it should have been burned down as it was (Eze 24:21,25).
When the children of Israel had lost the ark, they count that
the glory was departed from Israel. But when they had lost all,
what a complaint made they then! 'He hath violently taken away
his tabernacles, as if it were of a garden, he hath destroyed his
places of the assembly. The Lord hath caused the solemn feasts and
sabbaths to be forgotten in Sion, and hath despised, in the indignation
of his anger, the king and the priest' (Lam 2:6). Wherefore, upon
this account, it was that the church in those days counted the
punishment of her iniquity greater than the punishment of Sodom
(Lam 4:6; 1 Sam 4:22).
By these few hints you may perceive what is the 'desire of the
righteous.' But this is spoken of with reference to things present,
to things that the righteous desire to enjoy while they are here;
communion with God while here; and his ordinances in their purity
while here. I come, therefore, in the second place, to show you
that the righteous have desires that reach further, desires that
have so long a neck as to look into the world to come.
Second. Then the desires of the righteous are after that which
yet they know cannot be enjoyed till after death. And those are
comprehended under these two heads--1. They desire that presence of
their Lord which is personal. 2. They desire to be in that country
where their Lord personally is, that heavenly country.
1. [They desire that presence of their Lord which is personal.] For
the first of these, says Paul, 'I have a desire to depart, and to
be with Christ.' Thus you have it in Philippians 1:23, 'I have a
desire to be with Christ.'
In our first sort of desires, I told you that the righteous desired
spiritual communion with God; and now I tell you they desire to
be with Christ's person--'I have a desire to be with Christ'; that
is, with his person, that I may enjoy his personal presence, such
a presence of his as we are not capable to enjoy while here. Hence
he says, 'I have a desire to depart, that I might be with him;
knowing,' as he says in another place, 'that whilst we are at home
in the body, we are,' and cannot but be, 'absent from the Lord' (2
Cor 5:6). Now this desire, as I said, is a desire that hath a long
neck; for it can look over the brazen wall of this, quite into
another world; and as it hath a long neck, so it is very forcible
and mighty in its operation.
(3.) The strength of this desire shows itself in this also, namely,
in that it is willing to grapple with the king of terrors, rather
than to be detained from that sweet communion that the soul looks
for when it comes into the place where its Lord is. Death is not
to be desired for itself; the apostle chose rather to be clothed
upon with his house which is from heaven, 'that mortality might be
swallowed up of life' (2 Cor 5:1-4). But yet, rather than he would
be absent from the Lord, he was willing to be absent from the body.
Death, in the very thoughts of it, is grievous to flesh and blood;
and nothing can so master it in our apprehensions as that by which
we attain to these desires. These desires do deal with death, as
Jacob's love to Rachel did deal with the seven long years which he
was to serve for her. It made them seem few, or but a little time;
now so, I say, doth these desires deal with death itself. They
make it seem little, nay, a servant, nay, a privilege; for that,
by that a man may come to enjoy the presence of his beloved Lord.
'I have a desire to depart,' to go from the world and relations,
to go from my body, that great piece of myself; I have a desire to
venture the tugs and pains, and the harsh handling of the king of
terrors, so I may be with Jesus Christ! These are desires of the
righteous.
Are not these therefore strong desires? is there not life and mettle
in them? have they not in them power to loose the bands of nature,
and to harden the soul against sorrow? flow they not, think you,
from faith of the finest sort, and are they not bred in the bosom
of a truly mortified soul? are these the effects of a purblind
spirit? are they not rather the fruits of an eagle-eyed confidence?
O these desires! they are peculiar to the righteous; they are none
others but the desires of the righteous.
Answ. And I ask, Why doth the wife--that is, as the loving hind--love
to be in the presence of her husband?
1. Christ in glory is worth the being with. If the man out of whom
the Lord Jesus did cast a legion, prayed that he might be with him,
notwithstanding all the trials that attended him in this life, how
can it be but that a righteous man must desire to be with him now
he is in glory? What we have heard concerning the excellency of
his person, the unspeakableness of his love, the greatness of his
sufferings, and the things that he still is doing for us, must
needs command our souls into a desire to be with him. When we have
heard of a man among us that has done for us some excellent thing,
the next thing that our hearts doth pitch upon is, I would I could
set mine eyes upon him. But was ever heard the like to what Jesus
Christ has done for sinners? who then that hath the faith of
him can do otherwise but desire to be with him? It was that which
some time comforted John, that the time was coming that he should
see him (1 John 3:2). But that consideration made him bray like a
hart,[13] to hasten the time that he might set his eyes upon him
quickly (Rev 22:20). To see Jesus Christ, then, to see him as he
is, to see him as he is in glory, is a sight that is worth going
from relations, and out of the body, and through the jaws of death
to see; for this is to see him head over all, to see him possessed
of heaven for his church, to see him preparing of mansion-houses
for those his poor ones that are now by his enemies kicked to and
fro, like footballs in the world; and is not this a blessed sight?
Answ. Though thine is a case that must be excepted, for that thy
desires may not as yet be grown so high; yet if thou art a righteous
man, thy heart has in it the very seeds thereof. There are therefore
desires, and desires to desire; as one child can reach so high, and
the other can but desire to do so. Thou, if thou art a righteous
man, hast desires, these desires ready to put forth into act,
when they are grown a little stronger, or when their impediment is
removed. Many times it is with our desires as it is with saffron,[14]
it will bloom and blossom, and be ripe, and all in a night. Tell
me, dost thou not desire to desire? Yea, dost thou not vehemently
desire to desire to depart and to be with Christ? I know, if thou
art a righteous man, thou dost. There is a man sows his field with
wheat, but as he sows, soon it is covered with great clods; now,
that grows as well as the rest, though it runs not upright as yet;
it grows, and yet is kept down, so do thy desires; and when one
shall remove the clod, the blade will soon point upwards.
I know thy mind; that which keeps thee that thou canst not yet arrive
to this--to desire to depart and to be with Christ, is because some
strong doubt or clod of unbelief, as to thy eternal welfare, lies
hard upon thy desiring spirit. Now let but Jesus Christ remove
this clod, and thy desires will quickly start up to be gone. I say,
let but Jesus Christ give thee one kiss, and with his lips, as he
kisses thee, whisper to thee the forgiveness of thy sins, and thou
wilt quickly break out, and say, Nay then, Lord, let me die in
peace, since my soul is persuaded of thy salvation!
The desires of some good Christians are pinioned, and cannot stir,
especially these sort of desires; but Christ can and will cut the
cord some time or other: and then thou that wouldst shalt be able
to say, 'I have a desire to depart, and to be with Jesus Christ.'
Meantime, be thou earnest to desire to know thy interest in the
grace of God; for there is nothing short of the knowledge of that
can make thee desire to depart, that thou mayest be with Christ.
This is that that Paul laid as the ground of his desires to be gone:
'We know,' says he, 'that if our earthly house of this tabernacle
were dissolved, we have a building of God, an house not made with
hands, eternal in the heavens. For in this we groan, earnestly
desiring to be clothed upon with our house, which is from heaven'
(2 Cor 5:1,2). And know, that if thy desires be right they will
grow as other graces do, from strength to strength; only in this
they can grow no faster than faith grows as to justification, and
then hope grows as to glory. But we will leave this and come to
the second thing.
Mark, they desire a country, and God prepareth for them a city; he
goes beyond their desires, beyond their apprehensions, beyond what
their hearts could conceive to ask for. There is none that are
weary of this world from a gracious disposition that they have to
an heavenly, but God will take notice of them, will own them, and
not be ashamed to own them; yea, such shall not lose their longing.
They desire a handful, God gives them a seaful; they desire a
country, God prepares for them a city; a city that is an heavenly;
a city that has foundation, a city whose builder and maker is God
(Heb 11:10; Rev 3:12). And all this is, that the promise to them
might be fulfilled,, 'The desire of the righteous shall be granted.'
And this is the last thing propounded to be spoken to from the
text. Therefore,
First. In that the desires of God, and the desires of the righteous,
jump or agree in one, they are of one mind in their desires: God's
desire is to the work of his hands, and the righteous are for
surrendering that up to him. 1. In giving up the heart unto him;
'My son,' says God, 'give me thy heart' (Prov 23:26). 'I lift my
soul to thee,' says the righteous man (Psa 25:1, 86:4; Lam 3:41).
Here, therefore, there is an agreement between God and the righteous;
it is, I say, agreed on both sides that God should have the heart:
God desires it, the righteous man desires it, yea, he desires it
with a groan, saying, 'Incline my heart unto thy testimony' (Psa
119:36). 'Let my heart be sound in thy statutes' (Psa 119:80). 2.
They are also agreed about the disposing of the whole man: God is
for body, and soul, and spirit; and the righteous desires that God
should have it all. Hence they are said to give themselves to the
Lord (2 Cor 8:5), and to addict themselves to his service (1 Cor
15:16). 3. God desireth truth in the inward parts, that is, that truth
may be at the bottom of all (Psa 51:6,16), and this is the desire
of the righteous man likewise: 'Thy word have I hid in my heart,'
said David, 'that I might not sin against thee' (Psa 119:11). 4.
They agree in the way of justification, in the way of sanctification,
in the way of preservation, and in the way of glorification, to wit,
which way to come at and enjoy all: wherefore, who should hinder
the righteous man, or keep him back from enjoying the desire of
his heart? 5. They also agree about the sanctifying of God's name
in the world, saying, 'Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.'
There is a great agreement between God and the righteous; 'he that
is joined to the Lord is one spirit' (1 Cor 6:17). No marvel, then,
if their desires in the general, so far as the righteous man doth
know the mind of his God, are one, consequently their desires must
be granted, or God must deny himself.
Second. The desires of the righteous are the life of all their prayers;
and it is said, 'The prayer of the upright is God's delight.'
Jesus Christ put a difference betwixt the form and spirit that is
in prayer, and intimates the soul of prayer is in the desires of
a man; 'Therefore,' saith he, 'I say unto you, What things soever
ye desire when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall
have them' (Mark 11:24). If a man prays never so long, and has never
so many brave expressions in prayer, yet God counts it prayer no
further than there are warm and fervent desires in it, after those
things the mouth maketh mention of. David saith, 'Lord, all my
desire is before thee, and my groaning is not hid from thee' (Psa
38:9). Can you say you desire, when you pray? or that your prayers
come from the braying, panting, and longing of your hearts? If not,
they shall not be granted: for God looks, when men are at prayer,
to see if their heart and spirit is in their prayers; for he counts
all other but vain speaking. Ye shall seek me, and find me, says
he, when you shall search for me with all your heart (Rom 8:26,27;
Matt 6:7; Jer 29:12). The people that you read of in 2 Chronicles
15 are there said to do what they did 'with all their heart, and
with all their soul.' 'For they sought God with their whole desire'
(2 Chron 15:11-15). When a man's desires put him upon prayer, run
along with him in his prayer, break out of his heart and ascend up
to heaven with his prayers, it is a good sign that he is a righteous
man, and that his desire shall be granted.
Third. By desire a righteous man shows more of his mind for God,
than he can by any manner of way besides; hence it is said, 'The
desire of man is his kindness, and a poor man,' that is sincere
in his desires, 'is better than' he that with his mouth shows much
love, if he be 'a liar' (Prov 19:22).
Desires, desires, are copious things; you read that a man may 'enlarge
his desire as hell' (Habb 2:5), that is, if they be wicked; yea,
and a righteous man may enlarge his desires as heaven (Psa 73:25).
No grace is so extensive as desires. Desires out-go all. Who believes
as he desires to believe? and loves as he desires to love? and
fears as he desires to fear God's name? (Neh 1:11). Might it be
as a righteous man doth sometimes desire it should be, both with
God's church, and also with his own soul, stranger things would be
than there are; faith, and love, and holiness, would flourish more
than it does! O! what does a righteous man desire? What do you think
the prophet desired, when he said, 'O that thou wouldest rend the
heavens and--come down?' (Isa 54:1). And Paul, when he said, he
could wish that himself were accursed from Christ, for the vehement
desire that he had that the Jews might be saved? (Rom 9:1-3, 10:1).
Yea, what do you think John desired, when he cried out to Christ
to come quickly?
Fourth. Desires, true and right desires, they are they by which a
man is taken up from the ground, and brought away to God, in spite
of all opposers. A desire will take a man upon its back, and carry
him away to God, if ten thousand men stand by and oppose it. Hence
it is said, that 'through desire a man having separated himself,'
to wit, from what is contrary to the mind of God, and so 'seeketh
and intermeddleth with all wisdom' (Prov 18:1).
All convictions, conversions, illuminations, favours, tastes,
revelations, knowledge, and mercies, will do nothing if the soul
abides without desires. All, I say, is but like rain upon stones,
or favours bestowed upon a dead dog. O! but a poor man with desires,
a man that sees but little, that knows but little, that finds in
himself but little, if he has but strong desires, they will supply
all. His desires take him up from his sins, from his companions,
from his pleasures, and carry him away to God. Suppose thou wast
a minister, and wast sent from God with a whip, whose cords were
made of the flames of hell, thou mightest lash long enough before
thou couldest so much as drive one man that abides without desires
to God, or to his kingdom, by that thy so sore a whip. Suppose again
that thou wast a minister, and wast sent from God to sinners with
a crown of glory in thy hand, to offer to him that first comes to
thee for it; yet none can come without desires: but desire takes
the man upon its back, and so brings him to thee.[16] What is the
reason that men will with mouth commend God, and commend Christ,
and commend and praise both heaven and glory, and yet all the while
fly from him, and from his mercy, as from the worst of enemies?
Why, they want good desires; their desires being mischievous, carry
them another way. Thou entreatest thy wife, thy husband, and the
son of thy womb, to fall in with thy Lord and thy Christ, but they
will not. Ask them the reason why they will not, and they know
none, only they have no desires. 'When we shall see him, there is
no beauty in him that we should desire him' (Isa 53:1-3). And I
am sure if they do not desire him, they can by no means be made to
come to him.
But now, desires, desires that are right, will carry a man quite
away to God, and to do his will, let the work be never so hard.
Take an instance or two for this.
You may see it in Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. The text says plainly,
they were not mindful of that country from whence they came out,
through their desires of a better (Heb 11:8-16). God gave them
intimation of a better country, and their minds did cleave to it
with desires of it; and what then? Why, they went forth, and desired
to go, though they did not know whither they went. Yea, they all
sojourned in the land of promise, because it was but a shadow of
what was designed for them by God, and looked to by their faith,
as in a strange country; wherefore they also cast that behind their
back, looking for that city that had foundations, of which mention
was made before. Had not now these men desires that were mighty?
They were their desires that thus separated them from their dearest
and choice relations and enjoyments. Their desires were pitched upon
the heavenly country, and so they broke through all difficulties
for that.
You may see it in Moses, who had a kingdom at his foot, and was
the alone visible heir thereof; but desire of a better inheritance
made him refuse it, and choose rather to take part with the people
of God in their afflicted condition, than to enjoy the pleasures
of sin for a season. You may say, the Scripture attributes this
to his faith. I answer, so it attributes to Abraham's faith his
leaving of his country. But his faith begat in him these desires
after the country that is above. So indeed Moses saw these things
by faith; and therefore his faith begat in him these desires. For
it was because of his desires that he did refuse, and did choose as
you read. And here we may opportunely take an opportunity to touch
upon the vanity of that faith that is not breeding, and that knows
not how to bring forth strong desires of enjoying what is pretended to
be believed; all such faith is false. Abraham's, Isaac's, Jacob's,
and Moses' faith, bred in them desires, strong desires; yea, desires
so strong as to take them up, and to carry them after what, by
their faith, was made known unto them. Yea, their desires were so
mightily set upon the things made known to them by their faith, that
neither difficulties nor dangers, nor yet frowns nor flatteries,
could stop them from the use of all lawful attempts of enjoying what
they believed was to be had, and what they desired to be possessed
of.
The women also that you read of, and others that would not, upon
unworthy terms, accept of deliverance from torments and sundry
trials, that they might,, or because they had a desire to, be made
partakers of a better resurrection. 'And others,' saith he, 'had
trial of cruel mockings and scourgings; yea, moreover, of bonds
and imprisonments. They were stoned, they were sawn asunder, were
tempted, were slain with the sword; they wandered about in sheep
skins, and goat skins, being destitute, afflicted, tormented; of
whom the world was not worthy. They wandered in deserts, and in
mountains, and caves of the earth' (Heb 11:35-38).
But we will come to the Lord Jesus himself. Whither did his desires
bring him? Whither did they carry him? and to what did they make
him stoop? For they were his desires after us, and after our good,
that made him humble himself to do as he did (Cant 7:10). What
was it, think you, that made him cry out, 'I have a baptism to be
baptized with, and how am I straitened till it be accomplished'!
(Luke 12:50). What was that baptism but his death? and why did
he so long for it, but of desire to do us good? Yea, the passover
being to be eaten on the even of his sufferings, with what desires
did he desire to eat it with his disciples? (Luke 22:15). Yea, his
desires to suffer for his people made him go with more strength to
lay down his life for them than they, for want of them, had to go
to see him suffer. And they were in their way going up to Jerusalem,
he to suffer, and they to look on, 'And Jesus went before them,
and they were amazed, and as they followed, they were afraid' (Mark
10:32; Matt 20:17).
THE FIRST USE SHALL BE A USE OF INFORMATION. You have heard what
hath been said of desires, and what pleasing things right desires
are unto God. But you must know that they are the desires of his
people, of the righteous, that are so. No wicked man's desires are
regarded (Psa 112:10). This men must be informed of, lest their
desires become a snare to their souls. You read of a man whose
'desire killeth him' (Prov 21:25). And why? but because he rests in
desiring, without considering what he is, whether such a one unto
whom the promise of granting desires is made; he coveteth greedily
all the day long, but to little purpose. The grant of desires, of
the fulfilling of desires, is entailed to the righteous man. There
are four sorts of people that desire, that desire the kingdom of
heaven; consequently, desires have a fourfold root from whence they
flow.
Third. There are the desires of the cold formal professor; the
desires, I say, of him whose religion lies in a few of the shells
of religion; even as the foolish virgins who were content with
their lamps, but gave not heed to take oil in their vessels. These
I take to be those whom the wise man calls the slothful: 'The soul
of the sluggard desireth, and hath nothing; but the soul of the
diligent shall be made fat' (Prov 13:4). The sluggard is one that
comes to poverty through idleness--that contents himself with forms:
'that will not plough' in winter 'by reason of the cold; therefore
shall he beg in harvest,' or at the day of judgment, 'and have
nothing' (Prov 20:4).
Thus you see that there are many that desire; the natural man, the
hypocrite, the formalist, they all desire. For heaven is a brave
place, and nobody would go to hell. 'Lord, Lord, open to us,' is
the cry of many in this world, and will be the cry of more in the
day of judgment. Of this therefore thou shouldst be informed; and
that for these reasons:--
Thou hast heard it over and over that the grant of desires belong
to the righteous: shouldst thou then not inquire into thy condition,
and examine thyself whether thou art a righteous man or no? The
apostle said to the Corinthians, 'Examine yourselves whether ye be
in the faith; prove your own selves; know you not--how that Jesus
Christ is in you, except ye be reprobates?' (2 Cor 13:5). You may
be reprobates and not be aware of it, if you do not examine and
prove your own selves. It is therefore FOR THY LIFE, wherefore do
not deceive thyself. I have given you before a description of a
righteous man, namely, that he is one made so of God by imputation--by
an inward principle, and one that brings forth fruit to God. Now,
this last thou mayst think thou hast; for it is easy and common for
men to think when they bring forth fruit to themselves, that they
bring it forth to God. Wherefore examine thyself.
First. Art thou righteous? If thou sayest, Yea; I ask, How comest
thou righteous? If thou thinkest that obedience to the law of
righteousness has made thee so, thou art utterly deceived; for he
that thus seeks righteousness, yet is not righteous, because he
cannot, by so doing, attain that thing he seeketh for (Rom 9:31,32).
Did not I tell thee before, that a man must be righteous before he
doth one good work, or he can never be righteous? The tree must be
good first, even before it brings forth one good apple.
Third. Art thou righteous in the judgment of God? Who told thee so?
or dost thou but dream thereof? Indeed, to be righteous in God's
sight is that, and only that, which can secure a man from wrath
to come; for 'if God justifies, who is he that condemns?' (Rom
8:33,34). And this only is the man whose desires shall be granted.
Fourth. But still, I say, the question is, How comest thou to know
that thou art righteous in the judgment of God? Dost thou know by
what it is that God makes a man righteous? Dost thou know where
that is by or with which God makes a man righteous? and also how
God doth make a man righteous with it? These are questions, in the
answer of which thou must have some heavenly skill, or else all that
thou sayest about thy being righteous will seem without a bottom.
Sixth. How camest thou to see thy need of this righteousness? And
by what is this righteousness by thee applied to thyself? For this
righteousness is bestowed upon those that see their need thereof.
This righteousness is the refuge whereto the guilty fly for succour,
that they may be sheltered from the wrath to come. Hast thou then
fled, or dost thou indeed fly to it? (Heb 6:16-19).
Seventh. None flies to this righteousness for life, but those who
feel the sentence of condemnation by God's law upon their conscience;
and that in that extremity have sought for righteousness first
elsewhere, but cannot find it in all the world.
Ninth. But being wearied out of this, and if God loves him he will
weary him out of it, then he looks unto heaven and cries to God
for righteousness; the which God shows him in his own good time he
hath reckoned to him, for the sake of Jesus Christ.
Eleventh. Nor can anything but faith make a man see himself thus
made righteous; for this righteousness is revealed from faith
to faith, from the object of faith to the grace of faith, by the
Spirit of faith. A faithless man, then, can see this no more than
a blind man can see colours; nor relish this, no more than a dead
man tasteth victuals. As, therefore, blind men talk of colours, and
as dead men relish food, so do carnal men talk of Jesus Christ; to
wit, without sense or savour; without sense of the want, or savour
of the worth and goodness of him to the soul.
First. Take heed of taking such things for grants of desires, that
accidentally fall out; accidentally, I mean, as to thy desires; for
it is possible that that very thing that thou desirest may come to
pass in the current of providence, not as an answer of thy desires.
Now, if thou takest such things for a grant of thy desires, and
consequently concludest thyself a righteous man, how mayest thou
be deceived? The ark of God was delivered into the hand of the
Philistines, which they desired; but not for the sake of their
desires, but for the sins of the children of Israel. The land of
Canaan was given unto Israel, not for the sake of their desires,
but for the sins of those whom God cast out before them; and to
fulfil the promise that God, before they were born, had made unto
their fathers (Deut 9:5,6). Israel was carried away captive out of
their own land, not to fulfil the desires of their enemies, but to
punish them for their transgressions. These, with many of smaller
importance, and more personal, might be mentioned, to show that
many things happen to us, some to our pleasing, and some to the
pleasing of our enemies; which, if either we or they should count
the returns of our prayer, or the fruits of our desires, and so
draw conclusions of our estate to be for the future happy, because
in such things we seemed to be answered of God, we might greatly
swerve in our judgments, and become the greatest at self-deceiving.
Second. Or shouldest thou take it for granted that what thou enjoyest
thou hast it as the fruit of thy desires; yet if the things thou
boast of are things pertaining to this life, such may be granted
thee as thou art considered of God as his creature, though thyself
art far enough off from being a righteous man. 'Thou openest
thy hand,' says the Psalmist, 'and satisfiest the desire of every
living thing' (Psa 145:16). Again, 'He feeds the young ravens that
cry to him; and the young lions seek their meat from God' (Psa
147:9, 104:21). Cain, Ishmael, Ahab too, had in some things their
desires granted them of God (Gen 4:14,15, 21:17,18; 1 Kings 21:29).
For if God will hear the desire of the beast of the field, the
fishes of the sea, and of the fowls of heaven; no marvel if the
wicked also may boast him of his heart's desire (Psa 10:3). Into
whose hand, as he saith in another place, 'God bringeth abundantly.'
Take heed, therefore, neither these things, nor the grant of them,
are any signs that thou art a righteous man, or that the promise
made to the righteous in granting their desires are accomplished
upon thee. I think a man may say, that the men that know not God
have a fuller grant, I mean generally, of their desires of temporal
things, than has the child of God himself; for his portion lying
in better things, his desires are answered another way.
Third. Take heed, God grants to some men their desires in anger,
and to their destruction. He gave to some 'their own desire,' 'but
sent leanness into their soul' (Psa 78:29, 106:15; Jer 42:22). All
that God gives to the sons of men, he gives not in mercy; he gives
to some an inferior, and to some a superior portion; and yet so also
he answereth them in the joy of their heart. Some men's hearts are
narrow upwards, and wide downwards; narrow as to God, but wide for
the world; they gape for the one, but shut themselves up against
the other; so as they desire they have of what they desire; 'whose
belly thou fillest with thy hid treasure,' for that they do desire;
but 'as for me,' said David, these things will not satisfy, 'I
shall be satisfied when I awake, with thy likeness' (Psa 17:14,15).
I told you before, that the heart of a wicked man was widest downward,
but it is not so with the righteous: therefore the portion of Jacob
is not like them; God has given to him himself. The temple that
Ezekiel saw in the vision was still widest upward; it spread itself
toward heaven (Eze 41:7). So is the church, and so is the righteous,
and so are his desires. Thy great concern, therefore, is to consider,
since thou art confident that God also heareth thy desires; I say,
to consider, whether he answereth thee in his anger; for if he doth
so, thy desires come with a woe; therefore, I say, look to thyself.
A full purse and a lean soul, is a sign of a great curse. 'He gave
them their desire, but he sent leanness into their soul.' Take
heed of that; many men crave by their desires, as the dropsical man
craves drink; his drinking makes his belly swell big, but consumes
other parts of his body. O! it is a sad grant, when the desire is
granted, only to make the belly big, the estate big, the name big;
when even by this bigness the soul pines, is made to dwindle, to
grow lean, and to look like an anatomy.
I am persuaded that it is thus with many, who, while they were lean
in estates, had fat souls; but the fattening of their estates has
made their souls as to good, as lean as a rake. They cannot now
breathe after God; they cannot now look to their hearts; they cannot
now set watch and ward over their ways; they cannot now spare time
to examine who goes out, or who comes in. They have so much their
desires in things below, that they have no leisure to concern
themselves with, or to look after things above; their hearts are
now as fat as grease; their eyes do now too much start out, to be
turned and made to look inward (Psa 119:70, 83:7). They are now
become, as to their best part, like the garden of the slothful, all
grown over with nettles and briars, that cover the face thereof;
or, like Saul, removed from a little estate, and low condition, to
much, even worse and worse. Men do not know what they do in desiring
things of this life, things over and above what are necessary;
they desire them, and they have them with a woe. 'Surely he shall
not feel quietness in his belly,' his belly is taken for his conscience
(Prov 20:27). 'He shall not save of that which he desired,' to
help him in an evil day (Job 20:20, 1 Tim 6:17-19).
I shall not here give my caution to the righteous, but shall reserve
that for the next use. But, O! that men were as wise in judging
of the answering of the desires, as they are in judging of the
extravagancies of their appetites. You shall have a man even from
experience reclaim himself from such an excess of eating, drinking,
smoking, sleeping, talking, or pleasurable actions, as by his
experience he finds is hurtful to him, and yet all this may but hurt
the body, at least the body directly; but how blind, how unskilled
are they in the evils that attend desires! For, like the man in
the dropsy, made mention of before, they desire this world, as he
doth drink, till they desire themselves quite down to hell. Look to
it, therefore, and take heed; God's granting the things pertaining
to this life unto thee, doth neither prove that thou art righteous,
nor that he acts in mercy towards thee, by giving of thee thy
desires.
Answ. That is true; but God gives to no man for his worthiness,
nor rejects any for their sinfulness, that come to him sensible of
the want and worth of mercy for them. Besides, I told thee before,
that the desires of a righteous man, and the desires of his God,
do jump or agree. God has a desire to thee; thou hast a desire to
him (Job 14:15). God desires truth in the inward parts, and so dost
thou with all thy heart (Psa 5:1-6; Hosea 6:5). God desires mercy,
and to show it to the needy; that is it thou also wantest, and that
which thy soul craves at his hand. Seek, man, ask, knock, and do
not be discouraged; the Lord grant all thy desires. Thou sayest
thou art unworthy to ask the biggest things, things spiritual
and heavenly; well, will carnal things serve thee, and answer the
desires of thy heart? Canst thou be content to be put off with a
belly well filled, and a back well clothed? O! better I never had
been born!
See, thou wilt not ask the best, and yet canst not make shift without
them. Shift, no, no shift without them; I am undone without them,
undone for ever and ever, sayest thou; well then desire; so I do,
sayest thou. Ah! but desire with more strong desires, desire with
more large desires, desire spiritual gifts, covet them earnestly,
thou hast a licence too to do so (1 Cor 14:1). God bids thee do
so; and I, says the apostle, 'desire that ye faint not' (Eph 3:13),
that is, in the prosecution of your desires, what discouragements
soever you may meet with in the way; for he hath said, 'The desire
of the righteous shall be granted.'
Object. But I find it not so, says one: for though I have desired
and desired, a thousand times upon my knees, for something that
I want, yet I have not my desire; and indeed the consideration of
this hath made me question whether I am one of those to whom the
promise of granting desires is made.
First. By way of question; what are the things thou desirest, are
they lawful or unlawful? for a Christian may desire unlawful things;
as the mother of Zebedee's children did when she came to Christ,
nay, her sons themselves had their hearts therein, saying, 'Master,
we would that thou shouldest do for us whatsoever we shall desire'
(Mark 10:35; Matt 20:20). They came with a wide mouth, but their
desire was unlawful, as is evident, for that Christ would not grant
it. James also himself caught those unto whom he wrote, in such
a fault as this, where he says, 'Ye kill, and desire to have, and
cannot obtain' (James 4:2).
Are they lawful things which thou desirest? Yet the question is, Are
they absolutely or conditionally promised? If absolutely promised,
hold on in desiring; if conditionally promised, then thou must
consider whether they are such as are essential to the well-being
of thy soul in thy Christian course in this life. Or whether they
are things that are of a more inferior sort.
Second. By way of answer; but we will suppose that the thing thou
desirest is good; and that thy heart may be right in asking; as
suppose thou desirest more grace; or as David has it, more 'truth
in the inward and hidden part' (Psa 51:6). Yet there are several
things for thy instruction, may be replied to thy objection, as,
2. Hast thou well improved what thou hast received already? Fathers
will hold back more money, when the sons have spent that profusely
which they had received before. 'He that is faithful in that which
is least, is faithful also in much; and he that is unjust in the
least, is unjust also in much.' 'And if ye have not been faithful
in that which is another man's, who shall give you that which is
your own?' (Luke 16:10,12). See here an objection made against a
further supply, or rather against such a supply as some would have,
because they have misspent, or been unfaithful in what they have
already had. If thou, therefore, hast been faulty here, go, humble
thyself to thy friend, and beg pardon for thy faults that are past,
when thou art desiring of him more grace.
But how, if whilst thou lookest for it to come to thee at one door,
it should come to thee in at another? And that we may a little
inquire into the truth of this, let us a little consider what are
the effects of grace in its coming to the soul, and then see if
it has not been coming unto thee almost ever since thou hast set
upon this fresh desire after it. (1.) Grace, in the general effect
of it, is to mend the soul, and to make it better disposed. Hence
when it comes, it brings convincing light along with it, by which
a man sees more of his baseness than at other times. More, I say,
of his inward baseness. It is through the shinings of the Spirit
of grace that those cobwebs and stinks that yet remain in thee are
discovered: 'In thy light shall we see light.' And again, whatsoever
makes manifest is light. If then thou seest thyself more vile than
formerly, grace by its coming to thee has done this for thee. (2.)
Grace, when it comes, breaks and crumbles the heart, in the sense
and sight of its vileness. A man stands amazed and confounded in
himself; breaks and falls down on his face before God; is ashamed
to lift up so much as his face to God, at the sight and apprehension
of how wicked he is. (3.) Grace, when it comes, shows to a man
more of the holiness and patience of God; his holiness to make
us wonder at his patience, and his patience to make us wonder at
his mercy, that yet, even yet, such a vile one as I am, should be
admitted to breathe in the land of the living, yea more, suffered
to come to the throne of grace. (4.) Grace is of a heart-humbling
nature: it will make a man count himself the most unworthy of
anything, of all saints. It will make a man put all others afore
him, and be glad too, if he may be one beloved, though least beloved,
because most unworthy. It will make him with gladness accept of
the lowest room, as counting all saints more worthy of exaltation
than himself. (5.) Grace will make a man prize other men's graces
and gracious actions above his own. As he thinks every man's candle
burns brighter than his, every man improves grace better than he,
every good man does more sincerely his duty than he. And if these
be not some of the effects of the renewings of grace, I will confess
I have taken my mark amiss. (6.) Renewings of grace beget renewed
self-bemoanings, self-condemnation, self-abhorrences.
And say thou prayest for communion with, and the presence of God.
God can have communion with thee, and grant thee his presence,
and all this shall, instead of comforting of thee at present, more
confound thee, and make thee see thy wickedness (Isa 6:1-5). Some
people think they never have the presence and the renewings of
God's grace upon them but when they are comforted, and when they
are cheered up; when, alas! God may be richly with them, while they
cry out, By these visions my sorrows are multiplied; or, because
I have seen God, I shall die (Dan 10:8-17; Judg 13:22).
And tell me now, all these things considered, has not grace, even
the grace of God, which thou hast so much desired, been coming
to thee, and working in thee in all these hidden methods? And so
doing, has it not also accommodated thee with all the aforenamed
conveniences? The which when thou considerest, I know thou wouldest
not be without for all the good of the world. Thus, therefore,
thy desire is accomplishing; and when it is accomplished, will be
sweet to thy soul (Prov 13:19).
5. But we will follow thee a little in the way of thy heart. Thou
sayest thou desirest, and desirest grace, yea, hast been a thousand
times upon thy knees before God for more grace, and yet thou canst
not attain. I answer,
(1.) It may be the grace which thou prayest for, is worthy thy being
upon thy knees yet a thousand times more. We find, that usually
they that go to king's courts for preferment, are there at great
expenses; yea, and wait a great while, even until they have spent
their whole estates, and worn out their patience too. Yet they at
last prevail, and the thing desired comes. Yea, and when it is come,
it sets them up anew, and makes them better men--though they did
spend all that they had to obtain it--than ever they were before.
Wait, therefore, wait, I say, on the Lord (Psa 27:14). Wait therefore
with David, wait patiently; bid thy soul cheer up, and wait (Psa
37:7, 62:5). 'Blessed are all they that wait for him' (Isa 30:18).
(2.) Thou must consider, that great grace is reserved for great
service; thou desirest abundance of grace, thou dost well, and thou
shalt have what shall qualify and fit thee for the service that
God has for thee to do for him, and for his name in the world. The
apostles themselves were to stay for great grace until the time
of their work was come (Acts 1:4-8, 4:33). I will not allot thy
service, but assure thyself, when thy desire cometh, thou wilt have
occasion for it; new work, new trials, new sufferings, or something
that will call for the power and virtue of all the grace thou shalt
have to keep thy spirit even, and thy feet from slipping, while
thou art exercised in new engagements. Assure thyself, thy God will
not give thee straw, but he will expect brick: 'For unto whomsoever
much is given, of him shall be much required; and to whom men
have committed much, of him they will ask the more' (Luke 12:48).
Wherefore, as thou art busy in desiring more grace, be also desirous
that wisdom to manage it with faithfulness may also be granted unto
thee. Thou wilt say, Grace, if I had it, will do all this for me.
It will, and will not. It will, if thou watch and be sober; it will
not, if thou be foolish and remiss. Men of great grace may grow
consumptive in grace, and idleness may turn him that wears a plush
jacket into rags.[20] David was once a man of great grace, but his
sin made the grace which he had to shrink up, and dwindle away, as
to make him cry out, O! 'take not thy holy spirit' utterly 'from
me' (Psa 51:11, 119:8). Or, perhaps God withholds what thou wouldest
have, that it may be the more prized by thee when it comes: 'Hope
deferred maketh the heart sick, but when the desire cometh, it is
a tree of life' (Prov 13:12).
6. Lastly, but dost thou think that thy more grace will exempt thee
from temptations? Alas! the more grace, as was hinted, the greater
trials. Thou must be, for all that, like the ship of which thou
readest, sometimes high, sometimes low; sometimes steady, sometimes
staggering; sometimes in, and sometimes even at the end of thy very
wits. For 'so he brings us to our desired haven' (Psa 107:23-30).
Yet grace is the gold and preciousness of the righteous man: yea,
and herein appears the uprightness of his soul, in that though all
these things attend the grace of God in him, yet he chooseth grace
here above all, for that it makes him the more like God and his
Christ, and for that it seasons his heart best to his own content;
and also for that it capacitates him to glorify God in the world.
[THE CONCLUSION.]
Is it so? Is this the sum of all, namely, That 'the fear of the
wicked it shall come upon him,' and that 'the desire of the righteous
shall be granted?' Then this shows us what is determined concerning
both. Concerning the wicked, that all his hopes shall not bring him
to heaven; and concerning the righteous, that all his fears shall
not bring him to hell. But what a sad thing is it for one to be a
wicked man! Nothing can help him, his wickedness is too strong for
him: 'His own iniquities shall take the wicked himself, and he
shall be holden with the cords of his sins' (Prov 5:22). He may
twist and twine, and seek to work himself from under the sentence
passed upon him; but all will do him no pleasure: 'the wicked is
driven away in his wickedness. But the righteous hath hope in his
death' (Prov 14:32). Loth he is to be righteous now; and as loth he
will be to be found in his sins at the dreadful day of doom. But
so it must be: 'Upon the wicked God shall rain snares, fire, and
brimstone, and a horrible' burning 'tempest: this shall be the
portion of their cup' (Psa 11:6).
'Woe unto the wicked' therefore: 'it shall be ill with him, for the
reward of his hands shall be given him' (Isa 3:10). The just God
will recompense both the righteous and the wicked, even according
to their works. And yet for all this the wicked will not hear! When
I read God's Word, and see how the wicked follow their sins, yea,
dance in the ways of their own destruction, it is astonishing to
me. Their actions declare them, though not Atheists in principle,
yet such in practice.[21] What do all their acts declare, but this,
that they either know not God, or fear not what he can do unto
them? But, O! how will they change their note, when they see what
will become of them! How wan will they look! Yea, the hair of their
heads will stand on end for fear; for their fear is their portion;
nor can their fears, nor their prayers, nor their entreaties, nor
their wishes, nor their repentings, help them in this day. And thus
have I showed you what are the 'desires of the righteous,' and that
the 'fear of the wicked shall come upon him, but the desire of the
righteous shall be granted.'
FOOTNOTES:
[4] Establishes our opinions, or fixes them in us. 'Our young men
being principled by these new philosophers.'--Cudworth.
[10] This is one of the very few instances, if not the only one,
in which Bunyan's attachment to believers' baptism appears, except
when writing expressly upon the subject. Of all men, he was the
most eminent for non-sectarian feelings, arising from his soul
being so baptized into Christ as to leave no room for controversy
upon ceremonial observances. I feel bound to confirm the truth of
his observation, for if ever I enjoyed a heaven upon earth, it was
on the Lord's day morning, when, publicly professing my faith in
the Redeemer, I was solemnly baptized. Nor have I ever witnessed
this ceremony since without the strongest emotions of love, and
joy, and hope.--Ed.
[12] Blessed be God the sword is for the present sheathed. Marvellous
was the indomitable courage of the martyrs under papacy, and, in
a later day, of the Scottish Covenanters. They saw their friends
and ministers tortured and murdered--the pain of the boots must have
been inconceivable--the bones of their legs were crushed between
pieces of iron, and, even when death had released the victim, savage
barbarity was practised upon his mutilated remains; the head and
hands were cut off and exhibited upon a pike, the hands fixed as
in the attitude of prayer, to mock the holiest duty. Can we wonder
that lambs became lions, overthrew the horrid enemy, and drove out
State Episcopacy for ever?--Ed.
[13] The noise made by animals of the stag or hart species is
called, by Goldsmith, bellowing. It strikes the ear as something
beneath the dignity of a hart to bray like an ass. Bunyan found
the word in the margin of Psalm 42:1, 'The hart panteth.' Heb.
'Brayeth, after the water brooks.'--Ed.
[16] How striking the contrast, but yet how true! A whip, whose
cords were made of the flames of hell, could no more arouse a sinner
dead in trespass and sins than a crown of glory could allure him.
With all the dread realities of the world to come pressed upon the
conscience by a faithful minister, still, alas! how many maintain
their downward course. The duty is ours to prophesy upon the dry
bones. God and his gracious Spirit alone can raise them up to holy,
happy enjoyments.--Ed.
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