The Ten Commandments
by
Thomas Watson
(1620-1686)
First published as part at A Body of Practical Divinity,
1692
Contents
1. INTRODUCTION
1.1 Obedience
1.2 Love
1.3 The Preface
to the Commandments
1.4 The Right
Understanding of the Law
2. THE TEN
COMMANDMENTS
2.1 The First
Commandment
2.2 The Second
Commandment
2.3 The Third
Commandment
2.4 The
Fourth Commandment
2.5 The
Fifth Commandment
2.6 The
Sixth Commandment
2.7 The
Seventh Commandment
2.8 The
Eighth Commandment
2.9 The
Ninth Commandment
2.10 The
Tenth Commandment
3. THE LAW
AND SIN
3.1 Man’s
Inability to keep the Moral Law
3.2 Degrees
of Sin
3.3 The
Wrath of God
4. THE WAY
OF SALVATION
4.1 Faith
4.2 Repentance
4.3 The
Word
4.4 Baptism
4.5 The
Lord’s Supper
4.6 Prayer
1. INTRODUCTION
1.1 Obedience
‘Take
heed, and hearken, O Israel; this day thou art become the people of the
Lord thy God. Thou shalt therefore obey the voice of the Lord thy God,
and do his commandments.’ Deut
27: 9, 10.
What is
the duty which God requireth of man?
Obedience
to his revealed will.
It is
not enough to hear God’s voice, but we must obey. Obedience is a part of
the honour we owe to God. ‘If then I be a Father, where is my honour?’ Mal
1: 6. Obedience carries in it the life-blood of religion. ‘Obey
the voice of the Lord God,’ and do his commandments. Obedience without
knowledge is blind, and knowledge without obedience is lame. Rachel was
fair to look upon, but, being barren, said, ‘Give me children, or I die;’
so, if knowledge does not bring forth the child of obedience, it will die.
‘To obey is better than sacrifice.’ 1
Sam 15: 22. Saul thought it was enough for him to offer sacrifices,
though he disobeyed God’s command; but ‘to obey is better than sacrifice.’
God disclaims sacrifice, if obedience be wanting. ‘I spake not unto your
fathers concerning burnt offerings, but this thing commanded I them, saying,
Obey my voice.’ Jer
7: 22. Not but that God did enjoin those religious rites of
worship; but the meaning is that he looked chiefly for obedience — without
which, sacrifice was but devout folly. The end why God has given us his
laws, is obedience. ‘Ye shall do my judgements, and keep mine ordinances.’ Lev
18: 4. Why does a king publish an edict, but that it may be
observed?
What is
the rule of obedience?
The written
word. That is proper obedience which the word requires; our obedience must
correspond with the word, as the copy with the original. To seem to be
zealous, if it be not according to the word, is not obedience, but will-worship.
Popish traditions which have no footing in the word, are abominable; and
God will say, Quis
quaesivit haec? ‘Who has required
this at your hand?’ Isa
1: 12. The apostle condemns the worshipping of angels, which
had a show of humility. Col
2: 18. The Jews might say they were loath to be so bold as to
go to God in their own persons; they would be more humble, and prostrate
themselves before the angels, and desire them to present their petitions
to God; but this show of humility was hateful to God, because there was
no word to warrant it.
What are
the ingredients in our obedience that make it acceptable?
(1) It
must be cum animi prolubio, free and cheerful, or it is penance, not sacrifice.
‘If ye be willing and obedient.’ Isa
1: 19. Though we serve God with weakness, it may be with willingness.
You love to see your servants go cheerfully about their work. Under the
law, God will have a free-will offering. Deut
16: 10. Hypocrites obey God grudgingly, and against their will; facere
bonum, but not velle
[they do good but not willingly]. Cain brought his sacrifice, but not his
heart. It is a true rule, Quicquid cor non facit, non fit; what the heart
does not do, is not done. Willingness is the soul of obedience. God sometimes
accepts of willingness without the work, but never of the work without
willingness. Cheerfulness shows that there is love in the duty; and love
is to our services what the sun is to fruit; it mellows and ripens them,
and makes them come off with a better relish.
(2) Obedience
must be devout and fervent. ‘Fervent in spirit,’ &c. Rom
12: 11. Quae
ebullit prae ardore. As water that
boils over; so the heart must boil over with hot affections in the service
of God. The glorious angels, who, for burning in fervour and devotion,
are called seraphims, are chosen by God to serve him in heaven. The snail
under the law was unclean, because a dull, slothful creature. Obedience
without fervency, is like a sacrifice without fire. Why should not our
obedience be lively and fervent? God deserves the flower and strength of
our affections. Domitian would not have his statue carved in wood or iron,
but made of gold. Lively affections make golden services. It is fervency
that makes obedience acceptable. Elijah was fervent in spirit, and his
prayer opened and shut heaven; and again he prayed, and fire fell on his
enemies. 2
Kings 1: 10. Elijah’s prayer fetched fire from heaven, because,
being fervent, it carried fire up to heaven; quicquid decorum ex fide proficiscitur.
Augustine.
(3) Obedience
must be extensive, it must reach to all God’s commands. ‘Then shall I not
be ashamed (or, as it is in the Hebrew, lo Ehosh, blush), when I have respect
unto all thy commandments.’ Psa
119: 6. Quicquid
propter Deum fit aequaliter fit
[All God’s requirements demand equal effort]. There is a stamp of divine
authority upon all God’s commands, and if I obey one precept because God
commands, I must obey all. True obedience runs through all duties of religion,
as the blood through all the veins, or the sun through all the signs of
the zodiac. A good Christian makes gospel piety and moral equity kiss each
other. Herein some discover their hypocrisy: they will obey God in some
things which are more facile, and may raise their repute; but other things
they leave undone. ‘One thing thou lackest,’ unum
deest. Mark
10: 21. Herod would hear John Baptist, but not leave his incest.
Some will pray, but not give alms, others will give alms, but not pray.
‘Ye pay tithe of mint and anise, and have omitted the weightier matters
of the law, judgement, mercy and faith.’ Matt
23: 23. The badger has one foot shorter than the other; so these
are shorter in some duties than in others. God likes not such partial servants,
who will do some part of the work he sets them about, and leave the other
undone.
(4) Obedience
must be sincere. We must aim at the glory of God in it. Finis
specificat actionem; in religion
the end is all. The end of our obedience must not be to stop the mouth
of conscience, or to gain applause or preferment; but that we may grow
more like God, and bring more glory to him. ‘Do all to the glory of God.’ 1
Cor 10: 31. That which has spoiled many glorious actions, and
made them lose their reward, is, that men’s aims have been wrong. The Pharisees
gave alms, but blew a trumpet that they might have the glory of men. Matt
6: 2. Alms should shine, but not blaze. Jehu did well in destroying
the Baal-worshippers, and God commended him for it; but, because his aims
were not good (for he aimed at settling himself in the kingdom), God looked
upon it as no better than murder. ‘I will avenge the blood of Jezreel upon
the house of Jehu.’ Hos
1: 4. O let us look to our ends in obedience; it is possible
the action may be right, and not the heart. 2
Chron 25: 2. Amaziah did that which was right in the sight of
the Lord, but not with a perfect heart. Two things are chiefly to be eyed
in obedience, the principle and the end. Though a child of God shoots short
in his obedience, he takes a right aim.
(5) Obedience
must be in and through Christ. ‘He has made us accepted in the beloved.’ Eph
1: 6. Not our obedience, but Christ’s merits procure acceptance.
In every part of worship we must present Christ to God in the arms of our
faith. Unless we serve God thus, in hope and confidence of Christ’s merits,
we rather provoke him than please him. As, when king Uzziah would offer
incense without a priest, God was angry with him, and struck him with leprosy
(2
Chron 26: 20); So, when we do not come to God in and through
Christ, we offer up incense to him without a priest, and what can we expect
but severe rebukes?
(6) Obedience
must be constant. ‘Blessed [is] he that does righteousness at all times.’ Psa
106: 3. True obedience is not like a high colour in a fit, but
it is a right complexion. It is like the fire on the altar, which was always
kept burning. Lev
6: 13. Hypocrites’ obedience is but for a season; it is like
plastering work, which is soon washed off; but true obedience is constant.
Though we meet with affliction, we must go on in our obedience. ‘The righteous
shall hold on his way.’ Job
17: 9. We have vowed constancy; we have vowed to renounce the
pomps and vanities of the world, and to fight under Christ’s banner to
death. When a servant has entered into covenant with his master, and the
indentures are sealed, he cannot go back, he must serve out his time; so
there are indentures drawn in baptism, and in the Lord’s Supper the indentures
are renewed and scaled on our part, that we will be faithful and constant
in our obedience; therefore we must imitate Christ, who became obedient
unto death. Phil
2: 8. The crown is set upon the head of perseverance. ‘He that
keepeth my works unto the end, I will give him the morning star.’ Rev
2: 26, 28.
Use one.
This condemns those who live in contradiction to the text, and have cast
off the yoke of obedience. ‘As for the word that thou hast spoken unto
us in the name of the Lord, we will not hearken unto thee.’ Jer
44: 16. God bids men pray in their family, but they live in
the total neglect of it; he bids them sanctify the Sabbath, but they follow
their pleasures on that day; he bids them abstain from the appearance of
sin, but they do not abstain from the act; they live in the act of revenge,
and in the act of uncleanness. This is a high contempt of God; it is rebellion,
and rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft.
Whence
is it that men do not obey God? They know their duty, but do it not.
(1) The
not obeying God is for want of faith. Quis
credidit? ‘Who has believed our
report?’ Isa
53: 1: Did men believe sin were so bitter, that hell followed
at the heels of it, would they go on in sin? Did they believe there was
such a reward for the righteous, that godliness was gain, would they not
pursue it; but they are atheists, not fully brought into the belief of
these things; hence it is that they obey not. Satan’s master-piece, his
draw-net by which he drags millions to hell, is to keep them in infidelity;
he knows, if he can but keep them from believing the truth, he is sure
to keep them from obeying it.
(2) The
not obeying God is for want of self-denial. God commands one thing, and
men’s lusts command another; and they will rather die than deny their lusts.
If lust cannot be denied, God cannot be obeyed.
Use two.
Obey God’s voice. This is the beauty of a Christian.
What
are the great arguments or incentives to obedience?
(1) Obedience
makes us precious to God, his favourites. ‘If ye will obey my voice, ye
shall be a peculiar treasure unto me above all people;’ you shall be my
portion, my jewels, the apple of mine eye. Exod
19: 5. ‘I will give kingdoms for your ransom.’ Isa
43: 3.
(2) There
is nothing lost by obedience. To obey God’s will is the wav to have our
will. [1] Would we have a blessing in our estates? Let us obey. God. ‘If
thou shalt hearken to the voice of the Lord, to do all his commandments,
blessed shalt thou be in the field: blessed shall be thy basket and thy
store.’ Deut
28: 1, 3, 5. To obey is the best way to thrive in your estates.
[21 Would we have a blessing in our souls? Let us obey God. Obey, and I
will be your God.’ Jer
7: 23. My Spirit shall be your guide, sanctifier, and comforter.
Christ ‘became the author of eternal salvation unto all them that obey
him.’ Heb
5: 9. While we please God, we please ourselves; while we give
him the duty, he gives us the dowry. We are apt to say, as Amaziah, ‘What
shall we do for the hundred talents?’ 2
Chron 25: 9. You lose nothing by obeying. The obedient son has
the inheritance settled on him. Obey, and you shall have a kingdom. ‘It
is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom.’ Luke
12: 32.
(3) What
a sin is disobedience! [1] It is an irrational sin. We are not able to
stand it out in defiance against God. ‘Are we stronger than he?’ Will the
sinner go to measure arms with God? 1
Cor 10: 22. He is the Father Almighty, who can command legions.
If we have no strength to resist him, it is irrational to disobey him.
It is irrational, as it is against all law and equity. We have our daily
subsistence from him; in him we live and move. Is it not just that as we
live by him, we should live to him? that as he gives us our allowance,
so we should give him our allegiance?
[2] It
is a destructive sin. ‘The Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with
his mighty angels, in flaming fire, taking vengeance on them that obey
not the gospel.’ 2
Thess 1: 7, 8. He who refuses to obey God’s will in commanding,
shall be sure to obey his will in punishing. While the sinner thinks to
slip the knot of obedience, he twists the cord of his own damnation, and
he perishes without excuse. ‘The servant which knew his lord’s will, neither
did according to his will, shall be beaten with many stripes.’ Luke
12: 47. God will say, ‘Why did you not obey? you knew how to
do good, but did not; therefore your blood is upon your own head.’
What
means shall we use that we may obey?
(1) Serious
consideration. Consider, God’s commands are not grievous: he commands nothing
unreasonable. 1
John 5: 3. It is easier to obey the commands of God than sin.
The commands of sin are burdensome — let a man be under the power of any
lust, how he tires himself! what hazards he runs, even to endangering his
health and soul, that he may satisfy his lusts! What tedious journeys did
Antiochus Epiphanies take in persecuting the Jews! ‘They weary themselves
to commit iniquity;’ and are not God’s commands more easy to obey? Chrysostom
says, virtue is easier than vice; temperance is less burdensome than drunkenness.
Some have gone with less pains to heaven, than others to hell.
God commands
nothing but what is beneficial. ‘And now, Israel, what does the Lord require
of thee, but to fear the Lord thy God, and to keep his statutes, which
I command thee this day, for thy good?’ Deut
10: 12, 13. To obey God, is not so much our duty as our privilege;
his commands carry meat in the mouth of them. He bids us repent; and why?
That our sins may be blotted out. Acts
3: 19. He commands us to believe: and why? That we may be saved. Acts
16: 31. There is love in every command: as if a king should
bid one of his subjects dig in a gold mine, and then take the gold to himself.
(2) Earnest
supplication. Implore the help of the Spirit to carry you on in obedience.
God’s Spirit makes obedience easy and delightful. If the loadstone draw
the iron, it is not hard for it to move; so if God’s Spirit quicken and
draw the heart, it is not hard to obey. When a gale of the Spirit blows,
we go full sail in obedience. Turn his promise into a prayer. ‘I will put
my Spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes.’ Ezek
36: 27. The promise encourages us, the Spirit enables us to
obey.
1.2 Love
The
rule of obedience being the moral law, comprehended in the Ten Commandments,
the next question is:
What
is the sum of the Ten Commandments?
The sum
of the Ten Commandments is, to love the Lord our God with all our heart,
with all our soul, with all our strength, and with all our mind, and our
neighbour as ourselves.
‘Thou
shalt love the Lord thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul,
and with all thy might.’ Deut
6: 5. The duty called for is love, yea, the strength of love,
‘with all thy heart.’ God will lose none of our love. Love is the soul
of religion, and that which constitutes a real Christian. Love is the queen
of graces; it shines and sparkles in God’s eye, as the precious stones
on the breastplate of Aaron.
What
is love?
It is
a holy fire kindled in the affections, whereby a Christian is carried out
strongly after God as the supreme good.
What
is the antecedent of love to God?
The antecedent
of love is knowledge. The Spirit shines upon the understanding, and discovers
the beauties of wisdom, holiness, and mercy in God; and these are the loadstone
to entice and draw out love to God; Ignoti
nulla cupido: such as know not
God cannot love him; if the sun be set in the understanding, there must
needs be night in the affections.
Wherein
does the formal nature of love consist?
The
nature of love consists in delighting in an object. Complacentia
amantis in amato. [The lover’s
delight in his beloved] Aquinas. This is loving God, to take delight in
him. ‘Delight thyself also in the Lord’ (Psa
37: 4), as a bride delights herself in her jewels. Grace changes
a Christian’s aims and delights.
How
must our love to God be qualified?
(1)
If it be a sincere love, we love God with all our heart. ‘Thou shalt love
the Lord thy God with all thy heart.’ God will have the whole heart. We
must not divide our love between him and sin. The true mother would not
have the child divided, nor will God have the heart divided; it must be
the whole heart.
(2)
We must love God propter
se, for himself, for his own intrinsic
excellencies. We must love him for his loveliness. Meretricius
est amor plus annulum quam sponsum amare:
‘It is a harlot’s love to love the portion more than the person.’ Hypocrites
love God because he gives them corn and wine: we must love God for himself;
for those shining perfections which are in him. Gold is loved for itself.
(3)
We must love God with all our might, in the Hebrew text, our vehemency;
we must love God, quod posse, as much as we are able. Christians should
be like seraphim, burning in holy love. We can never love God so much as
he deserves. The angels in heaven cannot love God so much as he deserves.
(4)
Love to God must be active in its sphere. Love is an industrious affection;
it sets the head studying for God, hands working, feet running in the ways
of his commandments. It is called the labour of love. 1
Thess 1: 3. Mary Magdalene loved Christ, and poured her ointments
on him. We think we never do enough for the person whom we love.
(5)
Love to God must be superlative. God is the essence of beauty, a whole
paradise of delight; and he must have a priority in our love. Our love
to God must be above all things besides, as the oil swims above the water.
We must love God above estate and relations. Great is the love to relations.
There is a story in the French Academy, of a daughter, who, when her father
was condemned to die by hunger, gave him suck with her own breasts. But
our love to God must be above father and mother.Matt
10: 37. We may give the creature the milk of our love, but God
must have the cream. The spouse keeps the juice of her pomegranates for
Christ. Cant
8: 2.
(6)
Our love to God must be constant, like the fire which the Vestal virgins
kept in Rome, which did not go out. Love must be like the motion of the
pulse, which beats as long as there is life. ‘Many waters cannot quench
love,’ not the waters of persecution. Cant
8: 7. ‘Rooted in love.’ Eph
3: 17. A branch withers that does not grow on a root; so love,
that it may not die, must be well rooted.
What
are the visible signs of our love to God?
If we
love God, our desire will be after him. ‘The desire of our soul is to thy
name.’ Isa
26: 8. He who loves God, breathes after communion with him.
‘My soul thirsteth for the living God.’ Psa
42: 2. Persons in love desire to be often conferring together.
He who loves God, desires to be much in his presence; he loves the ordinances:
they are the glass where the glory of God is resplendent; in the ordinances
we meet with him whom our souls love; we have God’s smiles and whispers,
and some foretastes of heaven. Such as have no desire after ordinances,
have no love to God.
The
second visible sign is, that he who loves God cannot find contentment in
any thing without him. Give a hypocrite who pretends to love God corn and
wine, and he can be content without God; but a soul fired with love to
God, cannot be without him. Lovers faint away if they have not a sight
of the object loved. A gracious soul can do without health, but cannot
do without God, who is the health of his countenance. Psa
43: 5. If God should say to a soul that entirely loves him,
‘Take thy ease, swim in pleasure, solace thyself in the delights of the
world; but thou shalt not enjoy my presence:’ this would not content it.
Nay, if God should say, ‘I will let thee be taken up to heaven, but I will
retire into another room, and thou shalt not see my face;’ it would not
content the soul. It is hell to be without God. The philosopher says there
can be no gold without the influence of the sun; certainly there can be
no golden joy in the soul without God’s sweet presence and influence.
The
third visible sign is that he who loves God, hates that which would separate
between him and God, and that is sin. Sin makes God hide his face; it is
like an incendiary, which parts chief friends; therefore, the keenness
of a Christian’s hatred is set against it. ‘I hate every false way.’ Psa
119: 128. Antipathies can never be reconciled; one cannot love
health but he must hate poison; so we cannot love God but we must hate
sin, which would destroy our communion with him.
The
fourth visible sign is sympathy. Friends that love, grieve for the evils
which befall each other. Homer, describing Agamemnon’s grief, when he was
forced to sacrifice his daughter, brings in all his friends weeping with
him, and accompanying him to the sacrifice, in mourning. Lovers grieve
together. If we have true love in our heart to God, we cannot but grieve
for those things which grieve him; we shall lay to heart his dishonours;
the luxury, drunkenness, contempt of God and religion. ‘Rivers of waters
run down mine eyes,’ &c. Psa
119: 136. Some speak of the sins of others, and laugh at them;
but they surely have no love to God who can laugh at that which grieves
his Spirit! Does he love his father who can laugh to hear him reproached?
The
fifth visible sign is, that he who loves God, labours to render him lovely
to others. He not only admires God, but speaks in his praises, that he
may allure and draw others to be in love with him. She that is in love
will commend her lover. The lovesick spouse extols Christ, she makes a
panegyrical oration of his worth, that she might persuade others to be
in love with him. ‘His head is as the most fine gold.’ Cant
5: 11. True love to God cannot be silent, it will be eloquent
in setting forth his renown. There is no better sign of loving God than
to make him appear lovely, and to draw proselytes to him.
The
sixth visible sign is, that he who loves God, weeps bitterly for his absence.
Mary comes weeping, ‘They have taken away my Lord.’ John
20: 13. One cries, ‘My health is gone!’ another, ‘My estate
is gone!’ but he who is a lover of God, cries out, ‘My God is gone! I cannot
enjoy him whom I love.’ What can all worldly comforts do, when once God
is absent? It is like a funeral banquet, where there is much meat, but
no cheer. ‘I went mourning without the sun.’ Job
30: 28. If Rachel mourned greatly for the loss of her children,
what vail or pencil can shadow out the sorrow of that Christian who has
lost God’s sweet presence? Such a soul pours forth floods of tears; and
while it is lamenting, seems to say thus to God, ‘Lord, thou art in heaven,
hearing the melodious songs and triumph of angels; but I sit here in the
valley of tears, weeping because thou art gone. Oh, when wilt thou come
to me, and revive me with the light of thy countenance! Or, Lord, if thou
wilt not come to me, let me come to thee, where I shall have a perpetual
smile of thy face in heaven and shall never more complain, ‘My beloved
has withdrawn himself.’”
The
seventh visible sign is, that he who loves God is willing to do and suffer
for him. He subscribes to God’s commands, he submits to his will. He subscribes
to his commands. If God bids him mortify sin, love his enemies, be crucified
to the world, he obeys. It is a vain thing for a man to say he loves God,
and slight his commands. He submits to his will. If God would have him
suffer for him, he does not dispute, but obeys. ‘Love endureth all things.’ 1
Cor 13: 7. Love made Christ suffer for us, and love will make
us suffer for him. It is true that every Christian is not a martyr but
he has a spirit of martyrdom in him; he has a disposition of mind to suffer,
if God call him to it. ‘I am ready to be offered.’ 2
Tim 4: 6. Not only the sufferings were ready for Paul, but he
was ready for the sufferings. Origin chose rather to live despised in Alexandria,
than with Plotinus to deny the faith, and be great in the prince’s favour. Rev
12: 11. Many say they love God, but will not suffer the loss
of anything for him. If Christ should have said to us, ‘I love you well,
you are dear to me, but I cannot suffer for you, I cannot lay down my life
for you,’ we should have questioned his love very much; and may not the
Lord question ours, when we pretend love to him, but will endure nothing
for his sake?
Use
one. What shall we say to those who have not a drachm of love in their
hearts to God? They have their life from him, yet do not love him. He spreads
their table every day, yet they do not love him. Sinners dread God as a
judge, but do not love him as a father. All the strength in the angels
cannot make the heart love God; judgements will not do it; omnipotent grace
only can make a stony heart melt in love. How sad is it to be void of love
to God. When the body is cold, and has no heat, it is a sign of death;
so he is spiritually dead who has no heat of love in his heart to God.
Shall such live with God that do not love him? Will God lay an enemy in
his bosom? They shall be bound in chains of darkness who will not be drawn
with cords of love.
Use
two. Let us be persuaded to love God with all our heart and might. O let
us take our love off from other things, and place it upon God. Love is
the heart of religion, the fat of the offering; it is the grace which Christ
inquires most after. ‘Simon lovest thou me?’ John
21: 15. Love makes all our services acceptable, it is the musk
that perfumes them. It is not so much duty, as love to duty, God delights
in; therefore serving and loving God are put together. Isa
56: 6. It is better to love him than to serve him; obedience
without love, is like wine without the spirit. O then, be persuaded to
love God with all your heart and might.
(1)
It is nothing but your love that God desires. The Lord might have demanded
your children to be offered in sacrifice; he might have bid you cut and
lance yourselves, or lie in hell awhile; but he only desires your love,
he would only have this flower. Is it a hard request, to love God? Was
ever any debt easier paid than this? Is it any labour for the wife to love
her husband? Love is delightful. Non
potest amor esse, et dulcis non esse
[Love must by definition be sweet]. Bernard. What is there in our love
that God should desire it? Why should a king desire the love of a woman
that is in debt and diseased? God does not need our love. There are angels
enough in heaven to adore and love him. What is God the better for our
love? It adds not the least cubit to his essential blessedness. He does
not need our love, and yet he seeks it. Why does he desire us to give him
our heart? Prov
23: 26. Not that he needs our heart, but that he may make it
better.
(2)
Great will be our advantage if we love God. He does not court our love
that we should lose by it. ‘Eye has not seen, nor ear heard, the things
which God has prepared for them that love him.’ 1
Cor 2: 9. If you will love him, you shall have such a reward
as exceeds your faith. He will betroth you to himself in the dearest love.
‘I will betroth thee unto me for ever, in loving kindness and in mercies.’ Hos
2: 19. ‘The Lord thy God will rest in his love, he will joy
over thee with singing.’ Zeph
3: 17. If you love God, he will interest you in all his riches
and dignities, he will give you heaven and earth for your dowry, he will
set a crown on your head. Vespasian the emperor gave a great reward to
a woman who came to him, and professed she loved him; but God gives a crown
of life to them that love him. James
1: 12.
(3)
Love is the only grace that shall live with us in heaven. In heaven we
shall need no repentance, because we shall have no sin; no faith, because
we shall see God face to face; but love to God shall abide for ever. ‘Love
never faileth.’ 1
Cor 13: 8. How should we nourish this grace which shall outlive
all the graces, and run parallel with eternity!
(4)
Our love to God is a sign of his love to us. ‘We love him because he first
loved us.’ 1
John 4: 19. By nature we have no love to God; we have hearts
of stone. Ezek
36: 26. And how can any love be in hearts of stone? Our loving
him is from his loving us. If the glass burn, it is because the sun has
shone on it; so if our hearts burn in love, it is a sign the Sun of Righteousness
has shone upon us.
What
shall we do in order to love God aright?
(1)
Wait on the preaching of the word. As faith comes by hearing, so does love.
The word sets forth God in his incomparable excellencies; it deciphers
and pencils him out in all his glory, and a sight of his beauty inflames
love.
(2)
Beg of God that he will give you a heart to love him. When king Solomon
asked wisdom of God, it pleased the Lord. 1
Kings 3: 10. So, when thou criest to God, Lord give me a heart
to love thee, it is my grief I can love thee no more; surely this prayer
will please the Lord, and he will pour out his Spirit upon thee. His golden
oil will make the lamp of thy love burn bright.
(3)
You who have love to God, keep it flaming upon the altar of your heart.
Love, like fire, is ever ready to go out. ‘Thou hast left thy first love.’ Rev
2: 4. Through neglect of duty, or too much love of the world,
our love to God will cool. O preserve your love to him. As you would be
careful to preserve the natural heat in your body, so be careful to preserve
the heat of love to God in your soul. Love is like oil to the wheels, it
quickens us in God’s service. When you find love abate and cool, use all
means to quicken it. When the fire is going out, you throw on fuel; so
when the flame of love is going out, make use of the ordinances as sacred
fuel to keep the fire of your love burning.
1.3 The Preface to the Commandments
‘And
God spake all these words, saying, I am the LORD thy God,’ &c. Exod
20: 1, 2.
What
is the preface to the Ten Commandments?
The
preface to the Ten Commandments is, ‘I am the Lord thy God.’
The
preface to the preface is, ‘God spake all these words, saying,’ &c.
This is like the sounding of a trumpet before a solemn proclamation. Other
parts of the Bible are said to be uttered by the mouth of the holy prophets
(Luke
1: 70), but here God spake in his own person.
How
are we to understand that, God spake, since he has no bodily parts or organs
of speech?
God
made some intelligible sound, or fanned a voice in the air, which, to the
Jews was as though God himself was speaking to them. Observe:
(1)
The lawgiver. ‘God spake.’ There are two things requisite in a lawgiver.
[1] Wisdom. Laws are founded upon reason; and he must be wise that makes
laws. God, in this respect, is most fit to be a lawgiver: ‘he is wise in
heart.’ Job
9: 4. He has a monopoly of wisdom. ‘The only wise God.’ 1
Tim 1: 17. Therefore he is the fittest to enact and constitute
laws. [2] Authority. If a subject makes laws, however wise they may be,
they want the stamp of authority. God has the supreme power in his hand:
he gives being to all; and he who gives men their lives, has most right
to give them their laws.
(2)
The law itself. ‘All these words.’ That is, all the words of the moral
law, which is usually styled the decalogue, or ten commandments. It is
called the moral law because it is the rule of life and manners. The Scripture,
as Chrysostom says, is a garden, and the moral law is the chief flower
in it: it is a banquet, and the moral law is the chief dish in it.
The
moral law is perfect. ‘The law of the Lord is perfect.’ Psa
19: 7. It is an exact model and platform of religion; it is
the standard of truth, the judge of controversies, the pole-star to direct
us to heaven. ‘The commandment is a lamp.’ Prov
6: 23. Though the moral law be not a Christ to justify us, it
is a rule to instruct us.
The
moral law is unalterable; it remains still in force. Though the ceremonial
and judicial laws are abrogated, the moral law delivered by God’s own mouth
is of perpetual use in the church. It was written in tables of stone, to
show its perpetuity.
The
moral law is very illustrious and full of glory. God put glory upon it
in the manner of its promulgation. [1] The people, before the moral law
was delivered, were to wash their clothes, whereby, as by a type, God required
the sanctifying of their ears and hearts to receive the law. Exod
19: 10. [2] There were bounds set that none might touch the
mount, which was to produce in the people reverence to the law. Exod
19: 12. [3] God wrote the law with his own finger, which was
such an honour put upon the moral law, as we read of no other such writing. Exod
31: 18. God by some mighty operation, made the law legible in
letters, as if it had been written with his own finger. [4] God’s putting
the law in the ark to be kept was another signal mark of honour put upon
it. The ark was the cabinet in which He put the ten commandments, as ten
jewels. [5] At the delivery of the moral law, many angels were in attendance. Deut
33: 2. A parliament of angels was called, and God himself was
the speaker.
Use
one. Here we may notice God’s goodness, who has not left us without a law.
He often sets down the giving his commandments as a demonstration of his
love. ‘He has not dealt so with any nation: and as for his judgements they
have not known them.’ Psa
147: 20. ‘Thou gavest them true laws, good statutes and commandments.’ Neh
9: 13. What a strange creature would man be if he had no law
to direct him! There would be no living in the world; we should have none
born but Ishmaels — every man’s hand would be against his neighbour. Man
would grow wild if he had not affliction to tame him, and the moral law
to guide him. The law of God is a hedge to keep us within the bounds of
sobriety and piety.
Use
two. If God spake all these words of the moral law, then it condemns: (1)
The Marcionites and Manichees, who speak lightly, yea, blasphemously, of
the moral law; who say it is below a Christian, it is carnal; which the
apostle confutes, when he says, ‘The law is spiritual, but I am carnal.’ Rom
7: 14. (2) The Antinomians, who will not admit the moral law
to be a rule to a believer. We say not that he is under the curse of the
law, but the commands. We say not the moral law is a Christ, but it is
a star to lead to Christ. We say not that it saves, but sanctifies. They
who cast God’s law behind their backs, God will cast their prayers behind
his back. They who will not have the law to rule them, shall have the law
to judge them. (3) The Papists, who, as if God’s law were imperfect, and
when he spake all these words he did not speak enough, add to it their
canons and traditions. This is to tax God’s wisdom, as if he knew not how
to make his own law. This surely is a high provocation. ‘If any man shall
add to these things, God shall add unto him the plagues that are written
in this book.’ Rev
22: 18. As it is a great evil to add anything to a man’s sealed
will, so much more to add anything to the law which God himself spake,
and wrote with his own fingers.
Use
three. If God spake all the words of the moral law, several duties are
enjoined upon us: (1) If God spake all these words, then we must hear all
these words. The words which God speaks are too precious to be lost. As
we would have God hear all our words when we pray, so we must hear all
his words when he speaks. We must not be as the deaf adder, which stoppeth
her ears: he that stops his ears when God cries, shall cry himself, and
not be heard.
(2)
If God spake all these words, then we must attend to them with reverence.
Every word of the moral law is an oracle from heaven. God himself is the
preacher, which calls for reverence. If a judge gives a charge upon the
bench, all attend with reverence. In the moral law God himself gives a
charge, ‘God spake all these words;’ with what veneration, therefore, should
we attend! Moses put off his shoes from his feet, in token of reverence,
when God was about to speak to him. Exod
3: 5, 6.
(3)If
God spake all these words of the moral law, then we must remember them.
Surely all God speaks is worth remembering; those words are weighty which
concern salvation. ‘It is not a vain thing for you, because it is your
life.’ Deut
32: 47. Our memory should be like the chest in the ark where
the law was kept. God’s oracles are ornaments, and shall we forget them?
‘Can a maid forget her ornaments?’ Jer
2: 32.
(4)
If God spake all these words, then believe them. See the name of God written
upon every commandment. The heathens, in order to gain credit to their
laws, reported that they were inspired by the gods at Rome. The moral law
fetches its pedigree from heaven. Ipse
dixit. God spake all these words.
Shall we not give credit to the God of heaven? How would the angel confirm
the women in the resurrection of Christ? ‘Lo (said he), I have told you.’ Matt
28: 7. I speak in the word of an angel. Much more should the
moral law be believed, when it comes to us in the word of God. ‘God spake
all these words.’ Unbelief enervates the virtue of God’s word, and makes
it prove abortive. ‘The word did not profit, not being mixed with faith.’ Heb
4: 2. Eve gave more credit to the devil when he spake than she
did to God.
(5)
If God spake all these words, then love the commandments. ‘Oh, how love
I thy law! it is my meditation all the day.’ Psa
119: 97. ‘Consider how I love thy precepts.’ Psa
119: 159. The moral law is the copy of God’s will, our spiritual
directory; it shows us what sins to avoid, what duties to pursue. The ten
commandments are a chain of pearls to adorn us, they are our treasury to
enrich us; they are more precious than lands of spices, or rocks of diamonds.
‘The law of thy mouth is better unto me than thousands of gold and silver.’ Psa
119: 72. The law of God has truth and goodness in it. Neh
9: 13. Truth, for God spake it; and goodness, for there is nothing
the commandment enjoins, but it is for our good. O then, let this command
our love.
(6)
If God spake all these words, then teach your children the law of God.
‘These words, which I command thee this day, shall be in thy heart, and
thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children.’ Deut
6: 6, 7. He who is godly, is both a diamond and a loadstone:
a diamond for the sparkling of his grace, and a loadstone for his attractive
virtue in drawing others to the love of God’s precepts. Vir
bonus magis aliis prodest quam sibi
[A good man benefits others more than himself]. You that are parents, discharge
your duty. Though you cannot impart grace to your children, yet you may
impart knowledge. Let your children know the commandments of God. ‘Ye shall
teach them your children.’ Deut
11: 19. You are careful to leave your children a portion: leave
the oracles of heaven with them; instruct them in the law of God. If God
spake all these words, you may well speak them over again to your children.
(7)
If God spake all these words, the moral law must be obeyed. If a king speaks,
his word commands allegiance; much more, when God speaks, must his words
be obeyed. Some will obey partially, obey some commandments, not others;
like a slough, which, when it comes to a stiff piece of earth, makes a
baulk; but God, who spake all the words of the moral law, will have all
obeyed. He will not dispense with the breach of one law. Princes, indeed,
for special reasons, sometimes dispense with penal statutes, and will not
enforce the severity of the law; but God, who spake all these words, binds
men with a subpoena to yield obedience to every law.
This
condemns the church of Rome, which, instead of obeying the whole moral
law, blots out one commandment, and dispenses with others. They leave the
second commandment out of their catechism, because it makes against images;
and to fill up the number of ten, they divide the tenth commandment into
two. Thus, they incur that dreadful condemnation: ‘If any man shall take
away from the words of this book, God shall take away his part out of the
book of life.’ Rev
22: 19. As they blot out one commandment, and cut the knot which
they cannot untie, so they dispense with other commandments. They dispense
with the sixth commandment, making murder meritorious in case of propagating
the Catholic cause. They dispense with the seventh commandment, wherein
God forbids adultery; for the Pope dispenses with the sin of uncleanness,
yea, incest, by paying fines and sums of money into his coffer. No wonder
the Pope takes men off their loyalty to kings and princes, when he teaches
them disloyalty to God. Some of the Papists say expressly in their writings,
that the Pope has power to dispense with the laws of God, and can give
men license to break the commandments of the Old and New Testament. That
such a religion should ever again get foot in England, the Lord in mercy
prevent! If God spake all the commandments, then we must obey all; he who
breaks the hedge of the commandments, a serpent shall bite him.
But
what man can obey all God’s commandments?
To
obey the law in a legal sense — to do all the law requires — no man can.
Sin has cut the lock of original righteousness, where our strength lay;
but, in a true gospel-sense, we may so obey the moral law as to find acceptance.
This gospel obedience consists in a real endeavour to observe the whole
moral law. ‘I have done thy commandments’ (Psa
119: 166); not, I have done all I should do, but I have done
all I am able to do; and wherein my obedience comes short, I look up to
the perfect righteousness and obedience of Christ, and hope for pardon
through his blood. This is to obey the moral law evangelically; which,
though it be not to satisfaction, yet it is to acceptation.
We
come now to the preface itself, which consists of three parts: I. I am
the Lord thy God’; II. ‘which have brought thee out of the land of Egypt’;
III. ‘out of the house of bondage’.
I.
I am the Lord thy God. Here we have a description of God; (1) By his essential
greatness, ‘I am the Lord;’ (2) By his relative goodness, ‘Thy God.’
[1]
By his essential greatness, ‘I am the Lord:’ or, as it is in the Hebrew,
JEHOVAH. By this great name God sets forth his majesty. Sanctius
habitum fuit, says Buxtorf. The
name of Jehovah was had in more reverence among the Jews than any other
name of God. It signifies God’s self-sufficiency, eternity, independence,
and immutability. Mal.
3: 6.
Use
one. If God be Jehovah, the fountain of being, who can do what he will,
let us fear him. ‘That thou mayest fear this glorious and fearful name,
Jehovah.’ Deut
28: 58.
Use
two. If God be Jehovah, the supreme Lord, the blasphemous Papists are condemned
who speak after this manner: ‘Our Lord God the Pope.’ Is it a wonder the
Pope lifts his triple crown above the heads of kings and emperors, when
he usurps God’s title, ‘showing himself that he is God’? 2
Thess 2: 4. He seeks to make himself Lord of heaven, for he
will canonise saints there; Lord of earth, for with his keys he binds and
looses whom he pleases; Lord of hell, for he frees men out of purgatory.
God will pull down these plumes of pride; he will consume this man of sin
‘with the breath of his mouth, and the brightness of his coming.’ 2
Thess 2: 8.
[2]
God is described by his relative goodness; ‘thy God.’ Had he called himself
Jehovah only, it might have terrified us, and made us flee from him; but
when he says, ‘thy God,’ it allures and draws us to him. This, though a
preface to the law, is pure gospel. The word Eloeha, ‘thy God,’ is so sweet,
that we can never suck all the honey out of it. ‘I am thy God,’ not only
by creation, but by election. This word, ‘thy God,’ though it was spoken
to Israel, is a charter which belongs to all the saints. For the further
explanation, here are three questions.
How
comes God to be our God?
Through
Jesus Christ. Christ is a middle person in the Trinity. He is Emmanuel,
‘God with us.’ He brings two different parties together: makes our nature
lovely to God, and God’s nature lovely to us; by his death, causes friendship,
yea, union; and brings us within the verge of the covenant, and thus God
becomes our God.
What
is implied by God being our God?
It
is comprehensive of all good things. God is our strong tower; our fountain
of living water; our salvation. More particularly, being our God implies
the sweetest relations.
(1)
The relation of a father. ‘I will be a Father unto you;’ 2
Cor 6: 18. A father is full of tender care for his child. Upon
whom does he settle the inheritance but his child? God being our God, will
be a father to us; a ‘Father of mercies,’ 2
Cor 1: 3; ‘The everlasting Father.’ Isa
9: 6. If God be our God, we have a Father in heaven that never
dies.
(2)
It imports the relation of a husband. ‘Thy Maker is thine husband.’ Isa
54: 5. If God be our husband, he esteems us precious to him,
as the apple of his eye. Zech
2: 8. He imparts his secrets to us. Psa
25: 14. He bestows a kingdom upon us for our dowry. Luke
12: 32.
How
may we know that by covenant union, God is our God?
(1)
By having his grace planted in us. Kings’ children are known by their costly
jewels. It is not having common gifts which shows we belong to God; many
have the gifts of God without God; but it is grace that gives us a true
genuine title to God. In particular, faith is vinculum unionis, the grace
of union, by which we may spell out our interest in God. Faith does not,
as the mariner, cast its anchor downwards, but upwards; it trusts in the
mercy and blood of God, and trusting in God, engages him to be our God.
Other graces make us like God, faith makes us one with him.
(2)
We may know God is our God by having the earnest of his Spirit in our hearts. 2
Cor 1: 22. God often gives the purse to the wicked, but the
Spirit only to such as he intends to make his heirs. Have we had the consecration
of the Spirit? If we have not had the sealing work of the Spirit, have
we had the healing work? ‘Ye have an unction from the Holy One.’ 1
John 2: 20. The Spirit, where it is, stamps the impress of its
own holiness upon the heart; it embroiders and bespangles the soul, and
makes it all glorious within. Have we had the attraction of the Spirit?
‘Draw me, we will run after thee.’ Cant
1: 4. Has the Spirit, by its magnetic virtue, drawn our hearts
to God? Can we say, ‘O thou whom my soul loveth?’ Cant
1: 7. Is God our paradise of delight? our Segullah, or chief
treasure! Are our hearts so chained to God that no other object can enchant
us, or draw us away from him? Have we had the elevation of the Spirit?
Has it raised our hearts above the world? ‘The Spirit lifted me up.’ Ezek
3: 14. Has the Spirit made us, superna
anhelare, seek the things above
where Christ is? Though our flesh is on earth, is our heart in heaven?
Though we live here, trade we above? Has the Spirit thus lifted us up?
By this we may know that God is our God. Where God gives his Spirit for
an earnest, there he gives himself for a portion.
(3)
We may know God is our God, if he has given us the hearts of children.
Have we obediential hearts? Psa
27: 8. Do we subscribe to God’s commands when his commands cross
our will? A true saint is like the flower of the sun, which opens and shuts
with the sun: he opens to God, and shuts to sin. If we have the hearts
of children, God is our Father.
(4)
We may know God is ours, and we have an interest in him, by standing up
for his interest. We shall appear in his cause and vindicate his truth,
wherein his glory is so much concerned. Athanasius was the bulwark of truth;
he stood up for it, when most of the world were Asians. In former times
the nobles of Polonia, when the gospel was read, laid their hands upon
their swords, signifying that they were ready to defend the faith, and
hazard their lives for the gospel. There is no better sign of having an
interest in God than standing up for his interest.
(5)
We may know God is ours, and we have an interest in him, by his having
an interest in us. ‘My beloved is mine, and I am his.’ Cant
2: 16. When God says to the soul, ‘Thou art mine;’ the soul
answers, ‘Lord, I am thine; all I have is at thy service; my head shall
be thine to study for thee; my tongue shall be thine to praise thee.’ If
God be our God by way of donation, we are his by way of dedication; we
live to him, and are more his than we are our own. Thus we may come to
know that God is our God.
Use
one. Above all things, let us get this great charter confirmed, that God
is our God. Deity is not comfortable without propriety. Let us labour to
get sound evidences that God is our God. We cannot call health, liberty,
estate, ours; but let us be able to call God ours, and say as the church,
‘God, even our own God, shall bless us.’ Psa
67: 6. Let every soul labour to pronounce this Shibboleth, ‘My
God.’ That we may endeavour to have God for our God, consider the misery
of such as have not God for their God, in how sad a condition are they,
when the hour of distress comes! This was Saul’s case when he said ‘I am
sore distressed; for the Philistines make war against me, and God is departed
from me.’ 1
Sam 28: 15. A wicked man in time of trouble, is like a vessel
tossed on the sea without an anchor, which strikes on rocks or sands. A
sinner who has not God to be his God, may make a shift while health and
estate last, but when these crutches on which he leaned are broken, his
heart must sink. It is with him as it was with the old world when the flood
came. The waters at first came to the valleys, but then the people would
get to the hills and mountains; but when the waters came to the mountains,
then there might be some trees on the high hills, and they would climb
up to them; ay, but the waters rose above the tops of the trees; and then
their hearts failed them, and all hopes of being saved were gone. So it
is with a man that has not God to be his God. If one comfort be taken away,
he has another; if he lose a child, he has an estate; but when the waters
rise higher, death comes and takes away all, and he has nothing to help
himself with, no God to go to, he must needs die in despair. How great
a privilege it is to have God for our God! ‘Happy is that people whose
God is the Lord.’ Psa
144: 15. Beatitudo
hominis est Deus [Man’s happiness
is God himself]. Augustine. That you may see the privilege of this charter:
—
(1)
If God be our God, then though we may feel the stroke of evil, yet not
the sting. He must needs be happy who is in such a condition, that nothing
can hurt him. If he lose his name, it is written in the book of life; if
he lose his liberty, his conscience is free; if he lose his estate, he
is possessed of the pearl of price; if he meets with storms, he knows where
to put in for harbour; God is his God, and heaven is his heaven.
(2)
If God be our God, our soul is safe. The soul is the jewel, it is a blossom
of eternity. ‘I was grieved in my spirit in the midst of my body;’ in the
Chaldee, it is ‘in the midst of my sheath.’ Dan
7: 15. The body is but the sheath; the soul is the princely
part of man, which sways the sceptre of reason; it is a celestial spark,
as Damascene calls it. If God be our God, the soul is safe, as in a garrison.
Death can do no more hurt to a virtuous heaven-born soul, than David did
to Saul, when he cut off the skirt of his garment. The soul is safe, being
hid in the promises; hid in the wounds of Christ; hid in God’s decree.
The soul is the pearl, and heaven is the cabinet where God will lock it
up safe.
(3)
If God be our God, then all that is in God is ours. The Lord says to a
saint in covenant, as the king of Israel to the king of Syria, ‘I am thine,
and all that I have.’ 1
Kings 20: 4. So saith God, ‘I am thine:’ how happy is he who
not only inherits the gift of God, but inherits God himself! All that I
have shall be thine; my wisdom shall be thine to teach thee; my power shall
be thine to support thee; my mercy shall be thine to save thee. God is
an infinite ocean of blessedness, and there is enough in him to fill us:
as if a thousand vessels were thrown into the sea, there is enough in the
sea to fill them.
(4)
If God be our God, he will entirely love us. Property is the ground of
love. God may give men kingdoms, and not love them; but he cannot be our
God, and not love us. He calls his covenanted saints, Jediduth Naphshi,
‘The dearly beloved of my soul.’Jer
12: 7. He rejoiceth over them with joy, and rests in his love. Zeph
3: 17. They are his refined silver (Zech
13: 9); his jewels (Mal
3: 17); his royal diadem (Isa
62: 3). He gives them the cream and flower of his love. He not
only opens his hand and fills them, but opens his heart and fills them. Psa
145: 16.
(5)
If God be our God, he will do more for us than all the world besides can.
What is that? [1] He will give us peace in trouble. When there is a storm
without, he will make music within. The world can create trouble in peace,
but God can create peace in trouble. He will send the Comforter, who, as
a dove, brings an olive-branch of peace in his mouth. John
14: 16. [2] God will give us a crown of immortality. The world
can give a crown of gold, but that crown has thorns in it and death in
it; but God will give you a crown of glory that fadeth not away. 1
Pet. 5: 4. The garland made of the flowers of paradise never
withers.
(6)
If God be our God, he will bear with many infirmities. He may respite sinners
awhile, but long forbearance is no acquittance; he will throw them to hell
for their sins; but if he be our God, he will not for every failing destroy
us; he bears with his spouse as with the weaker vessel. He may chastise. Psa
89: 32. He may use the rod and the pruning-knife, but not the
bloody axe. ‘He has not beheld iniquity in Jacob.’ Numb
23: 21. He will not see sin in his people so as to destroy them,
but their sins so as to pity them. He sees them as a physician a disease
in his patient, to heal him. ‘I have seen his ways, and will heal him.’ Isa
57: 18. Every failing does not break the marriage-bond asunder.
The disciples had great failings, they all forsook Christ and fled; but
this did not break off their interest in God; therefore, says Christ, at
his ascension, ‘Tell my disciples, I go to my God and to their God.’
(7)
If God be once our God, he is so for ever. ‘This God is our God for ever
and ever.’ Psa
48: 14. Whatever worldly comforts we have, they are but for
a season, and we must part with all. Heb
11: 25. As Paul’s friends accompanied him to the ship, and there
left him (Acts
20: 38), so all our earthly comforts will but go with us to
the grave, and there leave us. You cannot say you have health, and shall
have it for ever; you have a child, and shall have it for ever; but if
God be your God, you shall have him for ever. ‘This God is our God for
ever and ever.’ If God be our God, he will be a God to us as long as he
is a God. ‘Ye have taken away my gods,’ said Micah. Judges
18: 14. But it cannot be said to a believer, that his God is
taken away; He may lose all things else, but cannot lose his God. God is
ours from everlasting in election, and to everlasting in glory.
(8)
If God be our God, we shall enjoy all our godly relations with him in heaven.
The great felicity on earth is to enjoy relations. A father sees his own
picture in a child; and a wife sees herself in her husband. We plant the
flower of love among our relations, and the loss of them is like the pulling
off a limb from the body. But if God be ours, with the enjoyment of God
we shall enjoy all our pious relations in glory. The gracious child shall
see his godly father, the virtuous wife shall see her religious husband
in Christ’s arms; and then there will be a dearer love to relations than
there ever was before, though in a far different manner; then relations
shall meet and never part. ‘And so shall we be ever with the Lord.’
Use
two. To such as can realise this covenant union we have several exhortations.
(1)
If God be our God, let us improve our interest in him, let us cast all
our burdens upon him: the burden of our fears, our wants and our sins.
‘Cast thy burden upon the Lord.’ Psa
55: 22. Wicked men who are a burden to God have no right to
cast their burden upon him; but such as have God for their God are called
upon to cast their burden on him. Where should the child ease all its cares
but in the bosom of its parent? ‘Let all thy wants lie upon me.’ Judges
19: 20. So God seems to say to his children, ‘Let all your wants
lie upon me.’ Christian, what troubles thee? Thou hast a God to pardon
thy sins and to supply thy wants; therefore roll your burden on him. ‘Casting
all your care upon him.’ 1
Pet 5: 7. Why are Christians so disquieted in their minds? They
are taking care when they should be casting care.
(2)
If God be our God, let us learn to be contented, though we have the less
of other things. Contentment is a rare jewel, it is the cure of care. If
we have God to be our God, well may we be contented. ‘I know whom I have
believed.’ 2
Tim 1: 12. There was Paul’s interest in God. ‘As having nothing,
and yet possessing all things.’ 2
Cor 6: 10. Here was his content. That such who have covenant-union
with God may be filled with contentment of spirit, consider what a rich
blessing God is to the soul.
He
is bonum
sufficiens, a sufficient good.
He who has God has enough. If a man be thirsty, bring him to a spring,
and he is satisfied; in God there is enough to fill the heaven-born soul.
He gives ‘grace and glory.’ Psa
84: 11. There is in God not only a sufficiency, but a redundancy;
he is not only full as a vessel, but as a spring. Other things can no more
fill the soul than a mariner’s breath can fill the sails of a ship; but
in God there is a cornucopia, an infinite fulness; he has enough to fill
the angels, therefore enough to fill us. The heart is a triangle, which
only the Trinity can fill.
God
is bonum
sanctificans, a sanctifying good.
He sanctifies all our comforts and turn them into blessings. Health is
blessed, estate is blessed. He gives with the venison a blessing. ‘I will
abundantly bless her provision.’ Psa
132: 15. He gives us the life we have, tanquam
arrhabo, as an earnest of more.
He gives the little meal in the barrel as an earnest of the royal feast
in paradise. He sanctifies all our crosses. They shall not be destructive
punishments, but medicines; they shall corrode and eat out the venom of
sin; they shall polish and refine our grace. The more the diamond is cut,
the more it sparkles. When God stretches the strings of his viol, it is
to make the music better.
God
is bonum
selectum, a choice good. All things,
sub sole, are but bona
scabelli, as Augustine says, the
blessings of the footstool, but to have God himself to be ours, is the
blessing of the throne. Abraham gave gifts to the sons of the concubines,
but he settled the inheritance upon Isaac. ‘Abraham gave all that he had
to Isaac.’ Gen
25: 5. God may send away the men of the world with gifts, a
little gold and silver; but in giving us himself, he gives us the very
essence, his grace, his love, his kingdom: here is the crowning blessing.
God
is bonum
summum, the chief good. In the
chief good there must be delectability; it must have something that is
delicious and sweet: and where can we suck those pure essential comforts,
which ravish us with delight, but in God? In
Deo quadam dulcedine delectatur anima, immo rapitur
[In God’s character there is a certain sweetness which fascinates or rather
enraptures the soul]. ‘At thy right hand there are pleasures.’ Psa
16: 11: In the chief good there must be transcendence, it must
have a surpassing excellence. Thus God is infinitely better than all other
things. It is below the Deity to compare other things with it. Who would
weigh a feather against a mountain of gold? God is fons
et origo, the spring of all entities,
and the cause is more noble than the effect. It is God that bespangles
the creation, that puts light into the sun, that fills the veins of the
earth with silver. Creatures do but maintain life, God gives life. He infinitely
outshines all sublunary glory. He is better than the soul, than angels,
and than heaven. In the chief good, there must be not only fulness, but
variety. Where variety is wanting we are apt to nauseate. To feed only
on honey would breed loathing; but in God is all variety of fulness. Col
1: 19. He is a universal good, commensurate to all our wants.
He is bonum
in quo omnia bona [the good in
which is every good], a son, a portion, a horn of salvation. He is called
the ‘God of all comfort.’ 2
Cor 1: 3. There is a complication of all beauties and delights
in him. Health has not the comfort of beauty, nor beauty of riches, nor
riches of wisdom; but God is the God of all comfort. In the chief good
there must be eternity. God is a treasure that can neither be drawn low,
nor drawn dry. Though the angels are continually spending what is his,
he can never be spent; he abides for ever. Eternity is a flower of his
crown. Now, if God be our God, there is enough to let full contentment
into our souls. What need we of torchlight, if we have the sun? What if
God deny the flower, if he has given us the jewel? How should a Christian’s
heart rest on this rock! If we say God is our God, and we are not content,
we have cause to question our interest in him.
(3)
If we can clear up this covenant-union, that God is our God, let it cheer
and revive us in all conditions. To be content with God is not enough,
but to be cheerful. What greater cordial can you have than union with Deity?
When Jesus Christ was ready to ascend, he could not leave a richer consolation
with his disciples than this, ‘I ascend to my God and to your God.’ John
20: 17. Who should rejoice, if not they who have an infinite,
all-sufficient, eternal God to be their portion, who are as rich as heaven
can make them? What though I want health? I have God who is the health
of my countenance, and my God. Psa
42: 11. What though I am low in the world? If I have not the
earth, I have him that made it. The philosopher comforted himself by saying,
‘Though I have no music or vine-trees, yet here are the household gods
with me;’ so, though we have not the vine or fig-tree, yet we have God
with us. I cannot be poor, says Bernard, as long as God is rich; for his
riches are mine. O let the saints rejoice in this covenant-union! To say
God is ours, is more than to say heaven is ours, for heaven would not be
heaven without him. All the stars cannot make day without the sun; all
the angels, those morning stars, cannot make heaven without Christ the
Sun of Righteousness. And as to have God for our God, is matter of rejoicing
in life, so especially it will be at death. Let a Christian think thus,
I am going to my God. A child is glad when he is going home to his father.
It was Christ’s comfort when he was leaving the world, ‘I ascend to my
God.’ John
20: 17. And this is a believer’s deathbed cordial, ‘I am going
to my God; I shall change my place, but not my kindred; I go to my God
and my Father.’
(4)
If God be our God, let us break forth into praise. ‘Thou art my God, and
I will praise thee.’ Psa
118: 28. Oh, infinite, astonishing mercy, that God should take
dust and ashes into so near a bond of love as to be our God! As Micah said,
‘What have I more?’ Judges
18: 24. So, what has God more? What richer jewel has he to bestow
upon us than himself? What has he more? That God should put off most of
the world with riches and honour, that he should pass over himself to us
by a deed of gift, to be our God, and by virtue of this settle a kingdom
upon us! O let us praise him with the best instrument, the heart; and let
this instrument be screwed up to the highest pitch. Let us praise him with
our whole heart. See how David rises by degrees. ‘Be glad in the Lord,
and rejoice, and shout for joy.’ Psa
32: 11. Be glad, there is thankfulness; rejoice, there is cheerfulness;
shout, there is triumph. Praise is called incense, because it is a sweet
sacrifice. Let the saints be choristers in God’s praises. The deepest springs
yield the sweetest water; the more deeply sensible we are of God’s covenant-love
to us, the sweeter praises we should yield. We should begin here to eternise
God’s name, and do that work on earth which we shall be always doing in
heaven. ‘While I live will I praise the Lord.’ Psa
146: 2.
(5)
Let us carry ourselves as those who have God to be our God; that is, walk
so that others may see there is something of God in us. Live homily. What
have we to do with sin, which if it does not break, will weaken our interest?
‘What have I to do any more with idols?’ Hos
14: 8. So would a Christian say, ‘God is my God; what have I
to do any more with sin, with lust, pride, malice! Bid me commit sin! As
well bid me drink poison. Shall I forfeit my interest in God? Let me rather
die than willingly offend him who is the crown of my joy, the God of my
salvation.’
II.
Which have brought thee out of the land of Egypt. Egypt and the house of
bondage are the same; only they are represented to us under different expressions.
The first expression is, ‘Which have brought thee out of the land of Egypt.’
Why
does the Lord mention the deliverance of Israel out of Egypt?
(1)
Because of the strangeness of the deliverance. God delivered his people
Israel by strange signs and wonders, by sending plague after plague upon
Pharaoh, blasting the fruits of the earth, and killing all the first-born
in Egypt.Exod
12: 29. When Israel marched out of Egypt, God made the waters
of the sea to part, and become a wall to his people, while they went on
dry ground; and he made the same sea a causeway to Israel, and a grave
to Pharaoh and his chariots. Well might the Lord make mention of this strange
deliverance. He wrought miracle upon miracle for the deliverance of that
people.
(2)
God mentions Israel’s deliverance out of Egypt because of the greatness
of the deliverance. He delivered Israel from the pollutions of Egypt. Egypt
was a bad air to live in, it was infected with idolatry; the Egyptians
were gross idolaters; they were guilty of that which the apostle speaks
of in Rom
1: 23. ‘They changed the glory of the uncorruptible God into
an image made like to corruptible man, and to birds, and four-footed beasts,
and creeping things.’ The Egyptians, instead of the true God, worshipped
corruptible man; they deified their king Apis, forbidding all, under pain
of death, to say that he was a man. They worshipped birds, as the hawk.
They worshipped beasts, as the ox. They made the image of a beast to be
their god. They worshipped creeping things, as the crocodile, and the Indian
mouse. God mentions it therefore as a signal favour to Israel, that he
brought them out of such an idolatrous country. ‘I brought thee out of
the land of Egypt.’
The
thing I would note is, that it is no small blessing to be delivered from
places of idolatry. God speaks of it no less than ten times in the Old
Testament, ‘I brought you out of the land of Egypt;’ an idolatrous place.
Had there been no iron furnace in Egypt, yet so many altars being there,
and false gods, it was a great privilege to Israel to be delivered out
of Egypt. Joshua reckons it among the chief and most memorable mercies
of God to Abraham, that he brought him out of Ur of the Chaldees, where
Abraham’s ancestors served strange gods. Josh
24: 2, 3. It is well for the plant that is set in a bad soil,
to be transplanted to a better, where it may grow and flourish; so it is
a mercy when any who are planted among idolaters, are removed and transplanted
into Zion, where the silver drops of God’s word make them grow in holiness.
Wherein
does it appear to be so great a blessing to be delivered from places of
idolatry?
(1)
It is a great mercy, because our nature is prone to idolatry. Israel began
to be defiled with the idols of Egypt. Ezek
22: 3. Dry wood is not more prone to take fire than our nature
is to idolatry. The Jews made cakes to the queen of heaven, that is, to
the moon. Jer
7: 15.
Why
is it that we are prone to idolatry?
Because
we are led much by visible objects, and love to have our senses pleased.
Men naturally fancy a god that they may see; though it be such a god that
cannot see them, yet they would see it. The true God is invisible; which
makes the idolater worship something that he can see.
(2)
It is a mercy to be delivered from idolatrous places, because of the greatness
of the sin of idolatry, which is giving that glory to an image which is
due to God. All divine worship God appropriates to himself; it is a flower
of his crown. The fat of the sacrifice is claimed by him. Lev
3: 3. Divine worship is the fat of the sacrifice, which he reserves
for himself. The idolater devotes this worship to an idol, which the Lord
will by no means endure. ‘My glory will I not give to another, neither
my praise to graven images.’ Isa
42: 8. Idolatry is spiritual adultery. ‘With their idols have
they committed adultery.’ Ezek
23: 37. To worship any other than God, is to break wedlock,
and makes the Lord disclaim his interest in a people. ‘Plead with your
mother, plead: for she is not my wife.’ Hos
2: 2. ‘Thy people have corrupted themselves;’ no more my people,
but thy people. Exod
32: 7. God calls idolatry, blasphemy. ‘In this your fathers
have blasphemed me.’ Idolatry is devil worship. Ezek
20: 27, 31. ‘They sacrificed unto devils, not to God; to new
gods.’ Deut
32: 17. These new gods were old devils. ‘And they shall no more
offer their sacrifices unto devils.’ Lev
17: 7. The Hebrew word La-sairim, is the hairy ones, because
the devils were hairy, and appeared in the forms of satyrs and goats. How
dreadful a sin is idolatry; and what a signal mercy is it to be snatched
out of an idolatrous place, as Lot was snatched by the angels out of Sodom!
(3)
It is a mercy to be delivered out of idolatrous places, because idolatry
is such a silly and irrational religion. I may say, as Jer
8: 9: ‘What wisdom is in them?’ Is it not folly to refuse the
best, and choose the worst? The trees in the field of Jotham’s parable,
despised the vine-tree, which cheers both God and man, and the olive which
is full of fatness, and the fig-tree which is full of sweetness, and chose
the bramble to reign over them — which was a foolish choice. Judg
9. So it is for us to refuse the living God, who has power to
save us, and to make choice of an idol, that has eyes and sees not, feet
but walks not. Psa
115: 6, 7. What a prodigy of madness is this? Therefore to be
delivered from committing such folly is a mercy.
(4)
It is a mercy to be delivered from idolatrous places, because of the sad
judgements inflicted upon idolaters. This is a sin which enrages God, and
makes the fury come up in his face. Ezek
38: 18. Search through the whole book of God, and you shall
find no sin he has followed with more plagues than idolatry. ‘Their sorrows
shall be multiplied that hasten after another god.’ Psa
16: 4. ‘They moved him to jealousy with their graven images.’ Psa
78: 58. ‘When God heard this he was wrath, and greatly abhorred
Israel; so that he forsook the tabernacle of Shiloh.’ Verses
59, 60. Shiloh was a city belonging to the tribe of Ephraim,
where God set his name. Jer
7: 12. But, for their idolatry, God forsook the place, gave
his people up to the sword, caused his priests to be slain, and his ark
to be carried away captive, never more to be returned. How severe was God
against Israel for worshipping the golden calf! Exod
32: 27. The Jews say, that in every misery that befalls them,
there is uncia
aurei vituli, ‘an ounce of the
golden calf in it.’ ‘Come out of her, my people, that ye be not partakers
of her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues.’ Rev.
18: 4. Idolatry, lived in, cuts men off from heaven. 1
Cor 6: 9. So then it is no small mercy to be delivered out of
idolatrous places.
Use
one. See the goodness of God to our nation, in bringing us out of mystic
Egypt, delivering us from popery, which is Romish idolatry, and causing
the light of his truth to break forth gloriously among us. In former times,
and more lately in the Marian days, England was overspread with idolatry.
It worshipped God after a false manner; and it is idolatry, not only to
worship a false god, but the true God in a false manner. Such was our case
formerly; we had purgatory, indulgences, the idolatrous mass, the Scriptures
locked up in an unknown tongue, invocation of saints and angels, and image-worship.
Images are teachers of lies. Hab
2: 18. Wherein do they teach lies? They represent God, who cannot
be seen, in a bodily shape. ‘Ye saw no similitude, only ye heard a voice.’ Deut
4: 12.
Quod invisibile est, pingi non potest.
Ambrose. God cannot be pictured by any finger; not the soul even, being
a spirit, much less God. ‘To whom then will ye liken God?’Isa
40: 18. The Papists say they worship God by the image; which
is a great absurdity, for if it be absurd to fall down to the picture of
a king when the king himself is present, much more to bow down to the image
of God when God himself is present. Jer
23: 24. What is the popish religion but a bundle of ridiculous
ceremonies? Their wax, flowers, pyres, agnus Dei, cream and oil, beads,
crucifixes; what are these but Satan’s policy, to dress up a carnal worship,
fitted to carnal minds? Oh! what cause have we to bless God for delivering
us from popery! It was a mercy to be delivered from the Spanish invasion,
and the powder treason; but it is a far greater to be delivered from the
popish religion, which would have made God give us a bill of divorce.
Use
two. If it be a great blessing to be delivered from the Egypt of popish
idolatry, it shows the sin and folly of those who, being brought out of
Egypt, are willing to return to it again. The apostle says, ‘Flee from
idolatry.’ 1
Cor 10: 14. But these rather flee to idolatry; and are herein
like the people of Israel, who, notwithstanding all the idolatry and tyranny
of Egypt, longed to go back to Egypt. ‘Let us make a captain and let us
return into Egypt.’ Numb
14: 4. But how shall they go back into Egypt? How shall they
have food in the wilderness? Will God rain down man any more upon such
rebels? How will they get over the Red Sea? Will God divide the water again
by miracle, for such as leave his service, and go into idolatrous Egypt?
Yet they say, ‘Let us make a captain.’ And are there not such spirits among
us, who say, ‘Let us make a captain and go back to the Romish Egypt again’?
If we do, what shall we get by it? I am afraid the leeks and onions of
Egypt will make us sick. Do we ever suppose that, if we drink in the cup
of fornication, we shall drink in the cup of salvation? Oh! that any should
so forfeit their reason, as to enslave themselves to the see of Rome; that
they should be willing to hold a candle to a mass-priest, and bow down
to a strange God! Let us not say we will make a captain, but rather say
as Ephraim, ‘What have I to do any more with idols?’ Hos
14: 8.
Use
three. If it be a mercy to be brought out of Egypt, it is not desirable
or safe to plant one’s self in an idolatrous place, where it may be a capital
crime to be seen with a Bible in our hands. Some, for secular gain, thrust
themselves among idolaters, and think there is no danger to live where
Satan’s seat is. They pray God would not lead them into temptation, but
led themselves. They are in great danger of being polluted. It is hard
to be as the fish, which keeps fresh in salt waters. A man cannot dwell
among blackamoors, but he will be discoloured. You will sooner be corrupted
by idolaters, than they will be converted by you. Joseph got no good by
living in an idolatrous court; he did not teach Pharaoh to pray, but Pharaoh
taught him to swear. They ‘were mingled among the heathen, and served their
idols.’ Psalm
106: 35, 36. I fear it has been the undoing of many; that they
have seated themselves amongst idolaters, for advancing their trade, and
at last have not only traded with them in their commodities, but in their
religion.
Use
four. It is a mercy to be brought out of the land of Egypt, a defiled place,
and where sin reigns. It reproaches such parents as show little love for
the souls of their children, whether it be in putting them out to service,
or matching them. In putting them out to service, their care is chiefly
for their bodies, that they may be provided for, and they care not what
becomes of their souls. Their souls are in Egypt, in houses where there
is drinking, swearing, Sabbath-breaking, and where God’s name is every
day dishonoured. In matching their children, they look only at money. ‘Be
ye not unequally yoked.’ 2
Cor 6: 14. If their children be equally yoked for estate, they
care not whether they be unequally yoked for religion. Let such parents
think how precious the soul of their child is; that it is immortal, and
capable of communion with God and angels. Will you let a soul be lost by
placing it in a bad family? If you had a horse you loved, you would not
put him in a stable with other horses that were sick and diseased; and
do you not love your child better than your horse? God has intrusted you
with the souls of your children; you have a charge of souls. God says,
as 1
Kings 20: 39: ‘Keep this man: if he be missing, then shall thy
life be for his life.’ So says God, if the soul of thy child miscarry by
thy negligence, his blood will I require at thy hand. Think of this, all
ye parents; take heed of placing your children in Egypt, in a wicked family;
do not put them in the devil’s mouth. Seek for them a sober, religious
family, such as Joshua’s. ‘As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.’ Josh
14: 15. Such a family as Cranmer’s, which was palaestra
pietatis, a nursery of piety, a
Bethel, of which it may be said, ‘The church which is in his house.’ Col.
4: 15.
Use
five. Let us pray that God would keep our English nation from the defilements
of Egypt, that it may not be again overspread with superstition and idolatry.
Oh, sad religion! not only to have our estates, our bodies enslaved, but
our consciences. Pray that the true Protestant religion may still nourish
among us, that the sun of the gospel may still shine in our horizon. The
gospel lifts a people up to heaven, it is columna
et corona regni, ‘the crown and
glory of the kingdom’; if this be removed, Ichabod, the glory is departed.
The top of the beech tree being cut off, the whole body of the tree withers
apace; so the gospel is the top of all our blessings; if this top be cut,
the whole body politic will soon wither. O pray that the Lord will continue
the visible tokens of his presence among us, his ordinances, that England
may be called, Jehovah-shammah, ‘The Lord is there.’ Ezek
48: 35. Pray that righteousness and peace may kiss each other,
that so glory may dwell in our land.
III.
Out of the house of bondage. Egypt and the house of bondage are the same,
only they are expressed under a different notion. By Egypt is meant a place
of idolatry and superstition; by the house of bondage is meant a place
of affliction. Israel, while in Egypt, were under great tyranny; they had
cruel task-masters set over them, who put them to hard labour, and set
them to make bricks, yet allowed them no straw; therefore, Egypt is called,
in Deut
4: 20, the iron furnace, and here the house of bondage. From
this expression, ‘I brought thee out of the house of bondage,’ two things
are to be noted; God’s children may sometimes be under sore afflictions.
‘In the house of bondage.’ But God will, in due time, bring them out of
their afflicted state. ‘I brought thee out of the house of bondage.’
God’s
children may sometimes be under sore afflictions, in
domo servitutis, in the house of
bondage. God’s people have no writ of ease granted them, no charter of
exemption from trouble in this life. While the wicked are kept in sugar,
the godly are often kept in brine. And, indeed, how could God’s power be
seen in bringing them out of trouble, if he did not sometimes bring them
into it? or how should God wipe away the tears from their eyes in heaven,
if on earth they shed none? Doubtless, God sees there is need that his
children should be sometimes in the house of bondage. ‘If need be, ye are
in heaviness.’ 1
Peter 1: 6. The body sometimes needs a bitter portion more than
a sweet one.
Why
does God let his people be in the house of bondage or in an afflicted state?
He
does it, (1) For probation or trial. ‘Who led thee through that terrible
wilderness, that he might humble thee and prove thee.’ Deut
8: 15, 16. Affliction is the touch-stone of sincerity. ‘Thou
O God, hast proved us; thou hast tried us as silver; thou laidst affliction
upon our loins.’ Psa
66: 10, 11. Hypocrites may embrace the true religion in prosperity,
and court this queen while she has a jewel hung at her ear; but he is a
good Christian who will keep close to God in a time of suffering. ‘All
this is come upon us, yet have we not forgotten thee.’ Psa
44: 17. To love God in heaven, is no wonder; but to love him
when he chastises us, discovers sincerity. (2) For purgation; to purge
our corruption. Ardet
palea, purgatur aurum. ‘And this
is all the fruit, to take away his sin.’ Isa
28: 9. The eye, though a tender part, yet when sore, we put
sharp powders and waters into it to eat out the pearl; so though the people
of God are dear to him, yet, when corruption begins to grow in them, he
will apply the sharp powder of affliction, to eat out the pearl in the
eye. Affliction is God’s flail to thresh off our husks; it is a means God
uses to purge out sloth, luxury, pride, and love of the world. God’s furnace
is in Zion. Isa
31: 5. This is not to consume, but to refine. What if we have
more affliction, if by this means we have less sin!
(3)
For augmentation; to increase the graces of the Spirit. Grace thrives most
in the iron furnace. Sharp frosts nourish the corn; so sharp afflictions
nourish grace. Grace in the saints is often as fire hid in the embers,
affliction is the bellows to blow it up into a flame. The Lord makes the
house of bondage a friend to grace. Then faith and patience act their part.
The darkness of the night cannot hinder the brightness of a star; so, the
more the diamond is cut the more it sparkles; and the more God afflicts
us, the more our graces cast a sparkling lustre.
(4)
For preparation; to fit and prepare the saints for glory. 2
Cor 4: 17. The stones which are cut out for a building, are
first hewn and squared. The godly are called ‘living stones.’ 1
Pet 2: 5. God first hews and polishes them by affliction, that
they may be fit for the heavenly building. The house of bondage prepares
for the house not made with hands. 2
Cor 5: 1: The vessels of mercy are seasoned with affliction,
and then the wine of glory is poured in.
How
do the afflictions of the godly differ from the afflictions of the wicked?
(1)
They are but castigations, but those on the wicked are punishments. The
one come from a father, the other from a judge.
(2)
Afflictions on the godly are fruits of covenant-mercy. 2
Sam 7: 17. Afflictions on the wicked are effects of God’s wrath.
‘He has much wrath with his sickness.’ Eccl
5: 17. Afflictions on the wicked are the pledge and earnest
of hell; they are like the pinioning of a malefactor, which presages his
execution.
(3)
Afflictions on the godly make them better, but afflictions on the wicked
make them worse. The godly pray more; Psa
130: 1: The wicked blaspheme more. ‘Men were scorched with great
heat, and blasphemed the name of God.’ Rev
16: 9. Afflictions on the wicked make them more impenitent;
every plague upon Egypt increased the plague of hardness in Pharaoh’s heart.
To what a prodigy of wickedness do some persons come after great sickness.
Affliction on the godly is like bruising spices, which are most sweet and
fragrant: affliction on the wicked is like pounding weeds with a pestle,
which makes them more unsavoury.
Use
one. (1) We are not to wonder to see Israel in the house of bondage. 1
Pet 4: 12. The holiness of the saints will not excuse them from
sufferings. Christ was the holy one of God, yet he was in the iron furnace.
His spouse is a lily among thorns. Cant
2: 2. Though his sheep have the ear-mark of election upon them,
yet they may have their wool fleeced off. The godly have some good in them,
therefore the devil afflicts them; and some evil in them, therefore God
afflicts them. While there are two seeds in the world, expect to be under
the black rod. The gospel tells us of reigning, but first of suffering. 2
Tim 2: 12.
(2)
Affliction is not always the sign of God’s anger. Israel, the apple of
God’s eye, a peculiar treasure to him above all people, were in the house
of bondage. Exod
19: 5. We are apt to judge and censure those who are in an afflicted
state. When the barbarians saw the viper on Paul’s hand, they said, ‘No
doubt this man is a murderer.’ Acts
28: 4. So, when we see the viper of affliction fasten upon the
godly, we are apt to censure them, and say, these are greater sinners than
others, and God hates them; but this rash censuring is for want of wisdom.
Were not Israel in the house of bondage? Was not Jeremiah in the dungeon,
and Paul a night and day in the deep? God’s afflicting is so far from evidencing
hatred, that his not afflicting does. ‘I will not punish your daughters
when they commit whoredom.’ Hos
4: 14. Deus maxime irascitur cum non irascitur. Bernard. God
punishes most when he does not punish; his hand is heaviest when it seems
to be lightest. The judge will not burn him in the hand whom he intends
to execute.
(3)
If God’s own Israel may be in the house of bondage, then afflictions do
not of themselves demonstrate a man miserable. Indeed, sin unrepented of,
makes one miserable; but the cross does not. If God has a design in afflicting
his children to make them happy, they are not miserable; but God’s afflicting
them is to make them happy, therefore they are not miserable. ‘Happy is
the man whom God correcteth.’ Job
5: 17. The world counts them happy who can keep out of affliction;
but the Scripture calls them happy who are afflicted.
How
are they happy?
Because
they are more holy. Heb
12: 10. Because they are more in God’s favour. Prov
3: 12. The goldsmith loves his gold when in the furnace. Because
they have more of God’s sweet presence. Psa
91: 15. They cannot be unhappy who have God’s powerful presence
in supporting, and his gracious presence in sanctifying, their affliction.
Because the more affliction they have, the more degrees of glory they shall
have; the lower they have been in the iron furnace, the higher they shall
sit upon to throne of glory; the heavier their crosses, the heavier shall
be their crown. So then, if afflictions make a Christian happy, they cannot
call him miserable.
(4)
See the merciful providence of God to his children. Though they may be
in the house of bondage, and smart by affliction, yet they shall not be
hurt by affliction. What hurt does the fan to the corn? it only separates
the chaff from it; or the lance to the body? it only lets out the abscess.
The house of bondage does that which sometimes ordinances will not; it
humbles and reforms. ‘If they be holden in cords of affliction, he openeth
their ear to discipline, and commandeth that they return from iniquity.’ Job
36: 8, 10. Oh! what a merciful providence is it that, though
God bruise his people, yet, while he is bruising them, he is doing them
good! It is as if one should throw a bag of money at another, which bruises
him a little, but yet it enriches him. Affliction enriches the soul and
yields the sweet fruits of righteousness. Heb.
12: 11.
(5)
If Israel be in the house of bondage, if the Lord deals so with his own
children, then how severely will he deal with the wicked! If he be so severe
with those he loves, how severe will he be with those he hates! ‘If they
do these things in a green tree, what shall be done in the dry?’ Luke
13: 31. If they that pray and mourn for sin be so severely dealt
with, what will become of those that swear and break the Sabbath, and are
unclean! If Israel be in the iron furnace, the wicked shall lie in the
fiery furnace of hell. It should be the saddest news to wicked men, to
hear that the people of God are afflicted. Let them think how dreadful
the case of sinners will be. ‘Judgement must begin at the house of God;
and if it first begin at us, what shall the end be of them that obey not
the gospel?’ 1
Pet 4: 17. If God thresh his wheat, he will burn the chaff.
If the godly suffer castigation, the wicked shall suffer condemnation.
If he mingle his people’s cup with wormwood he will mingle the wicked’s
cup with fire and brimstone.
Use
two. If Israel be in the house of bondage,
(1)
Do not entertain too hard thoughts of affliction. Christians are apt to
look upon the cross and the iron furnace as frightful things, and do what
they can to shun them. Nay, sometimes, to avoid affliction, they run themselves
into sin. But do not think too hardly of affliction; do not look upon it
as through the multiplying-glass of fear. The house of bondage is not hell.
Consider that affliction comes from a wise God, who prescribes whatever
befalls us. Persecutions are like apothecaries: they give us the physic
which God the physician prescribes. Affliction has its light side, as well
as its dark one. God can sweeten our afflictions, and candy our wormwood.
As our sufferings abound, so does also our consolation. 2
Cor 1: 5. Argerius dated his letters from the pleasant garden
of the Leonine prison. God sometimes so revives his children in trouble,
that they had rather bear their afflictions than want their comforts. Why
then should Christians entertain such hard thoughts of afflictions? Do
not look at its grim face, but at the message it brings, which is to enrich
us with both grace and comfort.
(2)
If Israel be sometimes in the house of bondage, in an afflicted state,
think beforehand of affliction. Say not as Job (29:
18), ‘I shall die in my nest.’ In the house of mirth think of
the house of bondage. You that are now Naomi, may be Mara. Ruth
1:20. How quickly may the scene turn, and the hyperbole of joy
end in a catastrophe! All outward things are given to change. The forethoughts
of affliction would make us sober and moderate in the use of lawful delight;
it would cure a surfeit. Christ at a feast mentions his burial; a good
antidote against a surfeit. The forethought of affliction would make us
prepare for it; it would take us off the world; it would put us upon search
of our evidences.
We
should see what oil we have in our lamps, what grace we can find, that
we may be able to stand in the evil day. That soldier is imprudent who
has his sword to whet when he is just going to fight. He who forecasts
sufferings, will have the shield of faith, and the sword of the Spirit
ready, that he may not be surprised.
(3)
If afflictions come, let us labour to conduct ourselves wisely as Christians,
that we may adorn our sufferings: that is, let us endure with patience.
‘Take, my brethren, the prophets for an example of suffering affliction
and patience.’ James
5: 10. Satan labours to take advantage of us in affliction,
by making us either faint or murmur; he blows the coals of passion and
discontent, and then warms himself at the fire. Patience adorns sufferings.
A Christian should say as Jesus Christ did, ‘Lord, not my will but thy
will be done.’ It is a sign the affliction is sanctified when the heart
is brought to a sweet submissive frame. God will then remove the affliction:
he will take us out of the iron furnace.
We
may consider these words, ‘Which brought thee out of the house of bondage,’
either, [1] Literally; or [2] Spiritually and Mystically. In the letter,
‘I brought thee out of the house of bondage;’ that is, I delivered you
out of the misery and servitude you sustained in Egypt, where you were
in the iron furnace. Spiritually and mystically, by which ‘I brought thee
out of the house of bondage,’ is a type of our deliverance by Christ from
sin and hell.
[1]
Literally, ‘I brought thee out of the house of bondage,’ out of great misery
and slavery in the iron furnace. The thing I note here is that, though
God brings his people sometimes into trouble, yet he will bring them out
again. Israel was in the house of bondage, but at last was brought out.
We
shall endeavour to show: 1. That God does deliver out of trouble. 2. In
what manner. 3. At what seasons. 4. Why he delivers. 5. How the deliverances
of the godly and wicked out of trouble differ.
God
does deliver his children out of troubles. ‘Our fathers trusted in thee;
they trusted, and thou didst deliver them.’ Psa
22: 4. ‘And I was delivered out of the mouth of the lion,’ namely,
from Nero. 2
Tim 4: 17. ‘Thou laidst affliction upon our loins, but thou
broughtest us out into a wealthy place.’ Psa
66: 11, 12. ‘Weeping may endure for a night, but joy comes in
the morning.’ Psa
30: 5. God brought Daniel out of the lions’ den, Zion out of
Babylon. In his due time he gives an issue out of trouble. Psa
68: 20. The tree which in the winter seems dead, revives in
the spring. Post
nubila Phoebus [The sun emerges
after the storms]. Affliction may leap on us as the viper did on Paul,
but at last it shall be shaken off. It is called a cup of affliction. Isa
51: 17. The wicked drink a sea of wrath, the godly drink only
a cup of affliction, and God will say shortly, ‘Let this cup pass away.’
God will give his people a gaol-delivery.
In
what manner does God deliver his people out of trouble?
He
does it like a God, in wisdom. (1) He does it sometimes suddenly. As the
angel was caused to fly swiftly (Dan
9: 21), so God sometimes makes a deliverance fly swiftly, and
on a sudden turns the shadow of death into the light of the morning. As
he gives us mercies above what we can think (Eph
3: 20), so sometimes before we can think of them. ‘When the
Lord turned again the captivity of Zion, we were like them that dream;’
it came suddenly upon us as a dream. Psa
126: 1. Joseph could not have thought of such a sudden alteration,
to be the same day freed out of prison, and made the chief ruler in the
kingdom. Mercy sometimes does not stick long in the birth, but comes forth
on a sudden. (2) God sometimes delivers his people strangely. Thus the
whale which swallowed up Jonah was the means of bringing him safe to land.
He sometimes delivers his people in the very way which they think will
destroy. In bringing Israel out of Egypt, he stirred up the heart of the
Egyptians to hate them (Psa
105: 25), and that was the means of their deliverance. He brought
Paul to shore by a contrary wind, and upon the broken pieces of the ship. Acts
27: 44.
When
are the times and seasons that God usually delivers his people out of the
bondage of affliction?
(1)
When they are in the greatest extremity. Though Jonah was in the belly
of hell, he says, ‘Thou hast brought up my life from corruption.’ Jonah
2: 6. When there is but a hair’s breadth between the godly and
death, God ushers in deliverance. When the ship was almost covered with
waves Christ awoke and rebuked the wind. When Isaac was upon the altar,
and the knife about to be put to his throat, the angel comes and says,
‘Lay not thy hand upon the child.’ When Peter began to sink, Christ took
him by the hand. Cum
duplicantur lateres, venit Moses:
‘when the tale of brick was doubled, then Moses the temporal saviour comes.
When the people of God are in the greatest danger the morning star of deliverance
appears. When the patient is ready to faint the cordial is given.
(2)
The second season is, when affliction has done its work upon them; when
it has effected that which God sent it for. As, [1] When it has humbled
them. ‘Remembering my affliction, the wormwood and gall, my soul is humbled
in me.’ Lam
3: 19, 20. Then God’s corrosive has eaten out the proud flesh.
[2] When it has tamed their impatience. Before, they were proud and impatient,
like froward children that struggle with their parents; but when their
cursed hearts are tamed, they say, ‘I will bear the indignation of the
Lord, because I have sinned against him’ (Micah
7: 9); and as Eli, ‘It is the Lord; let him do what seemeth
him good:’ ‘Let him hedge me with thorns, if he will plant me with grace.’ 1
Sam 3: 18.
(3)
When they are partakers of more holiness, and are more full of heavenly-mindedness. Heb
12: 10. When the sharp frost of affliction has brought forth
the spring-flowers of grace, the cross is sanctified, and God will bring
them out of the house of bondage. Luctus
in laetitiam vertetur, cineres in corollas
[Sorrow will turn to joy, ashes to garlands]. When the metal is refined
it is taken out of the furnace. When affliction has healed us, God takes
off the smarting plaister.
Why
does God bring his people out of the house of bondage?
Hereby
he makes way for his own glory. His glory is dearer to him than anything
besides; it is a crown jewel. By raising his people he raises the trophies
of his own honour; he glorifies his own attributes; his power, truth, and
goodness are triumphant.
(1)
His power. If God did not sometimes bring his people into trouble, how
could his power be seen in bringing them out? He brought Israel out of
the house of bondage, with miracle upon miracle; he saved them with an
outstretched arm. ‘What ailed thee, O thou sea, that thou fleddest?’ &c. Psa
114: 5. Of Israel’s march out of Egypt it is said, when the
sea fled, and the waters were parted each from other. Here was the power
of God set forth. ‘Is there any thing too hard for me?’ Jer
32: 27. God loves to help when things seem past hope. He creates
deliverance. Psa
124: 8. He brought Isaac out of a dead womb, and the Messiah
out of a virgin’s womb. oh! how does his power shine forth when he overcomes
seeming impossibilities, and works a cure when things look desperate!
(2)
His truth. God has made promises to his people, when they are under great
pressures, to deliver them; and his truth is engaged in his promise. ‘Call
upon me in the day of trouble, I will deliver thee.’ Psa
50: 15. ‘He shall deliver thee in six troubles, yea in seven.’ Job
5: 19. How is the Scripture bespangled with these promises as
the firmament is with stars! Either God will deliver them from death, or
by death; he will make a way of escape. 1
Cor 10: 13. When promises are verified, God’s truth is magnified.
(3)
His goodness. God is full of compassion to such as are in misery. The Hebrew
word, Racham, for mercy, signifies bowels. God has ‘sounding of bowels.’ Isa
63: 15. And this sympathy stirs up God to deliver. ‘In his love
and pity he redeemed them.’ Isa
63: 9. This makes way for the triumph of his goodness. He is
tender-hearted, he will not over afflict; he cuts asunder the bars of iron,
he breaks the yoke of the oppressor. Thus all his attributes ride in triumph
in saving his people out of trouble.
How
do the deliverance of the godly and tricked out of trouble differ?
(1)
The deliverances of the godly are preservations; of the wicked reservations.
‘The Lord knows how to deliver the godly, and to reserve the unjust to
be punished.’ 2
Pet 2: 9. A sinner may be delivered from dangerous sickness,
and out of prison; but all this is but a reservation for some greater evil.
(2)
God delivers the wicked, or rather spares them in anger. Deliverances to
the wicked are not given as pledges of his love, but symptoms of displeasure;
as quails were given to Israel in anger. But deliverances of the godly
are in love. ‘He delivered me because he delighted in me’. 2
Sam 22: 20. ‘Thou hast in love to my soul delivered it from
the pit of corruption;’ or, as in the Hebrew, Chashiaqta Naphshi. Isa
38: 17. Thou hast loved me from the pit of corruption. A wicked
man may say, ‘Lord, thou hast delivered me out of the pit of corruption;’
but a godly man may say, ‘Lord, thou hast loved me out of the pit of corruption.’
It is one thing to have God’s power deliver us, and another thing to have
his love deliver us. ‘O,’ said Hezekiah, ‘Thou hast in love to my soul,
delivered me from the pit of corruption.’
How
may it be known that a deliverance comes in love?
(1)
When it makes our heart boil over in love to God. ‘I love the Lord because
he has heard my voice.’ Psa
116: 1. It is one thing to love our mercies, another thing to
love the Lord. Deliverance is in love when it causes love.
(2)
Deliverance is in love when we have hearts to improve it for God’s glory.
The wicked, instead of improving their deliverance for God’s glory, increase
their corruption; they grow worse, as the metal when taken out of the fire
grows harder; but our deliverance is in love when we improve it for God’s
glory. God raises us out of a low condition, and we lift him up in our
praises, and honour him with our substance. Prov
3: 9. He recovers us from sickness, and we spend ourselves in
his service. Mercy is not as the sun to the fire, to dull it and put it
out, but as oil to the wheel, to make it move faster.
(3)
Deliverance comes in love when it makes us more exemplary in holiness;
and our lives are walking Bibles. A thousand praises and doxologies do
not honour God so much as the mortifying of one lust. ‘Upon mount Zion
there shall be deliverance and holiness,’ Obadiah
17. When these two go together, deliverance and holiness; when,
being made monuments of mercy, we are patterns of piety; then a deliverance
comes in love, and we may say as Hezekiah, ‘Thou hast in love to my soul
delivered it from the pit of corruption.’
Use
one. If God brings his people out of bondage, let none despond in trouble.
Say not ‘I shall sink under this burden;’ or as David, ‘I shall one day
perish by the hand of Saul.’ God can make the text good, personally and
nationally, to bring his people out of the house of bondage. When he sees
a fit season, he will put forth his arm and save them; and he can do it
with ease. ‘Lord, it is nothing with thee to help.’ 2
Chron 14: 11. He that can turn tides, can turn the times; he
that raised Lazarus when he was dead, can raise thee when thou art sick.
‘I looked, and there was none to help, therefore mine own arm brought salvation.’ Isa
63: 5. Do not despond; believe in God’s power: faith sets God
to work to deliver us.
Use
two. Labour, if you are in trouble, to be fitted for deliverance. Many
would have deliverance, but are not fitted for it.
When
are we fitted for deliverance?
When,
by our afflictions, we are conformed to Christ; when we have learned obedience.
‘He learned obedience by the things which he suffered;’ that is, he learned
sweet submission to his Father’s will. Heb
5: 8. ‘Not my will, but thine, be done.’ Luke
22: 42. When we have thus learned obedience by our sufferings,
we are willing to do what God would have us do, and be what God would have
us be. We are conformed to Christ, and are fitted for deliverance.
Use
three. If God has brought you at any time out of the house of bondage,
out of great and eminent troubles, be much in praise. Deliverance calls
for praise. ‘Thou hast put off my sackcloth, and girded me with gladness;
to the end that my glory may sing praise to thee.’Psa
30: 11, 12. My glory, that is, my tongue, which is the instrument
of glorifying thee. The saints are temples of the Holy Ghost. 1
Cor 3: 16. Where should God’s praises be sounded but in his
temple? Beneficium
postulat officium [Gratitude should
follow a favour]. The deepest springs yield the sweetest water; and hearts
deeply sensible of God’s deliverances yield the sweetest praises. Moses
tells Pharaoh, when he was going out of Egypt, ‘We will go with our flocks
and our herds.’ Exod
10: 9. Why so? Because he might have sacrifices of thanksgiving
ready to offer to God for their deliverance. To have a thankful heart for
deliverance is a greater blessing than the deliverance itself. One of the
lepers, ‘when he saw that he was healed, turned back, and with a loud voice
glorified God.’ Luke
17: 15. The leper’s thankful heart was a greater blessing than
to be healed of his leprosy. Have any of you been brought out of the house
of bondage — out of prison, sickness, or any death-threatening danger?
Do not forget to be thankful. Be not graves, but temples. That you may
be the more thankful, observe every emphasis and circumstance in your deliverance;
such as to be brought out of trouble when you were in
articulo mortis [at the brink of
death], when there was but a hair’s breadth between you and death; or,
to be brought out of affliction, without sin, you did not purchase your
deliverance by the ensnaring of your consciences; or, to be brought out
of trouble upon the wings of prayer; or, that those who were the occasions
of bringing you into trouble, should be the instruments of bringing you
out. These circumstances, being well weighed, heighten a deliverance, and
should heighten our thankfulness. The cutting of a stone may be of more
value than the stone itself; and the circumstancing of a deliverance may
be greater than the deliverance itself.
But
how shall we praise God in a right manner for deliverance?
(1)
Be holy persons. In the sacrifice of thanksgiving, whosoever did eat thereof
with his uncleanness upon him, was to be cut off (Lev
7: 20), to typify how unpleasing their praises and thank-offerings
are who live in sin.
(2)
Praise God with humble hearts, acknowledge how unworthy you were of deliverance.
God’s mercies are not debts, but legacies; and that you should have them
by legacy should make you humble. ‘The elders fell upon their faces (an
expression of humility) and worshipped God. Rev
11: 16.
(3)
Praise God for deliverances cordially. ‘I will praise the Lord with my
whole heart.’ Psa
111: 1. In religion there is no music but in concert, when heart
and tongue join.
(4)
Praise God for deliverances constantly. ‘While I live will I praise the
Lord.’ Psa
146: 2. Some will be thankful while the memory of a deliverance
is fresh, and then leave off. The Carthaginians used, at first, to send
the tenth of their yearly revenue to Hercules; but by degrees they grew
weary, and left off sending; but we must be constant in our Eucharistic
sacrifice, or thank-offering. The motion of our praise must be like the
motion of our pulse, which beats as long as life lasts. ‘I will sing praises
unto my God while I have any being.’ Psa
146: 2.
[2]
THESE words are to be understood mystically and spiritually. By Israel’s
deliverance from the house of bondage, is typified their spiritual deliverance
from sin, Satan, and hell.
(1)
From sin. The house of bondage was a type of Israel’s deliverance from
sin. Sin is the true bondage, it enslaves the soul. Nihil
durius servitute. Cicero. ‘Of all
conditions, servitude is the worst.’ ‘I was held before conversion,’ says
Augustine, ‘not with an iron chain, but with the obstinacy of mine own
will.’ Sin is the enslaver; it is called a law, because it has a binding
power over a man (Rom
7: 23); it is said to reign, because it exercises a tyrannical
power (Rom
6: 12); and men are said to be the servants of sin, because
they are so enslaved by it. Rom
6: 17. Thus sin is the house of bondage. Israel was not so enslaved
in the iron furnace as the sinner is by sin. They are worse slaves and
vassals who are under the power of sin, than they are who are under the
power of earthly tyrants.
Other
slaves have tyrants ruling over their bodies only; but the sinner has his
soul tyrannised over. That princely thing, the soul, which sways the sceptre
of reason, and was once crowned with perfect knowledge and holiness, now
goes on foot; it is enslaved, and made a lackey to every base lust.
Other
slaves have some pity shown them: the tyrant gives them meat, and lets
them have hours for their rest; but sin is a merciless tyrant, it will
let men have no rest. Judas had no rest until he had betrayed Christ, and
after that he had less rest than before. How does a man wear himself out
in the service of sin, waste his body, break his sleep, distract his mind!
A wicked man is every day doing sin’s drudgery-work.
Other
slaves have servile work; but it is lawful. It is lawful to work in the
galley, and tug at the oar; but all the laws and commands of sin are unlawful.
Sin says to one man, defraud; to another, be unchaste; to another take
revenge; to another, take a false oath. Thus all sin’s commands are unlawful;
we cannot obey sin’s law, but by breaking God’s law.
Other
slaves are forced against their will. Israel groaned under slavery (Exod
2: 23); but sinners are content to be under the command of sin;
they are willing to be slaves; they love their chains; they will not take
their freedom; they ‘glory in their shame.’ Phil
3: 19. They wear their sins, not as their fetters, but their
ornaments; they rejoice in iniquity. Jer
11: 15.
Other
slaves are brought to correction, but sin’s slaves are without repentance,
and are brought to condemnation. Other slaves lie in the iron furnace:
sin’s slaves lie in the fiery furnace. What freedom of will has a sinner
to his own confusion, when he can do nothing but what sin will have him?
He is enslaved. Thus sinners are in the house of bondage; but God takes
his elect out of the house of bondage, he beats off the chains and fetters
of sin; he rescues them from their slavery; he makes them free, by bringing
them into ‘the glorious liberty of the children of God.’ Rom
8: 21. The law of love now rules, not the law of sin. Though
the life of sin be prolonged, yet not the dominion; as those beasts in
Daniel had their lives prolonged for a season, but their dominion was taken
away. Dan
7: 12. The saints are made spiritual kings, to rule and conquer
their corruptions, to ‘bind these kings in chains.’ It is matter of the
highest praise and thanksgiving, to be taken out of the house of bondage,
to be freed from enslaving hosts, and made kings to reign in glory for
ever.
(2)
The bringing Israel out of the house of bondage, was a type of the deliverance
from Satan. Men naturally are in the house of bondage, they are enslaved
to Satan. Satan is called the prince of this world (John
14: 30); and the god of this world (2
Cor 4: 4); because he has power to command and enslave them.
Though he shall one day be a close prisoner in chains, yet now he insults
and tyrannises over the souls of men. Sinners are under his rule, he exercises
over them a jurisdiction such as Caesar did over the senate. He fills men’s
heads with error, and their hearts with malice. ‘Why has Satan filled thine
heart?’ Act
5: 3. A sinner’s heart is the devil’s mansion house. ‘I will
return into mine house.’
Matt. 12: 44. And sure that must needs be a house of bondage,
which is the devil’s mansion-house. Satan is a complete tyrant. He rules
men’s minds, he blinds them with ignorance. ‘The god of this world has
blinded the minds of them that believe not.’ 2
Cor 4: 4. He rules their memories. They remember that which
is evil, and forget that which is good. Their memories are like a strainer,
that lets go all the pure liquor, and retains only the dregs. He rules
their wills. Though he cannot force the will, he draws it. ‘The lusts of
your father you will do.’ John
8: 44. He has got your hearts, and him you will obey. His strong
temptations draw men to evil more than all the promises of God can draw
them to good. This is the state of every man by nature; he is in the house
of bondage; the devil has him in his power. A sinner grinds in the devil’s
mill; he is at the command of Satan, as the ass is at the command of the
driver. No wonder to see men oppress and persecute; as slaves they must
do what the god of this world will have them. How could those swine but
run, when the devil entered into them? Matt
8: 32. When the devil tempted Ananias to tell a lie, he could
not but speak what Satan had put in his heart. Acts
5: 3. When the devil entered into Judas, and bade him betray
Christ, he would do it, though he hanged himself. It is a sad and dismal
case, to be in the house of bondage, under the power and tyranny of Satan.
When David would curse the enemies of God, how did he pray against them?
That Satan might be at their right hand. Psa
109: 6. He knew he could then lead them into any snare. If the
sinner has Satan at his right hand, let him take heed that he be not at
God’s left hand. Is it not a case to be bewailed, to see men taken captive
by Satan at his will? 2
Tim 2: 26. He leads sinners as slaves before him in triumph;
he wholly possesses them. If people should see their beasts bewitched and
possessed of the devil, they would be much troubled; and yet, though their
souls are possessed by Satan, they are not sensible of it. What can be
worse than for men to be in the house of bondage, and to have the devil
hurry them on in their lusts to perdition? Sinners are willingly enslaved
to Satan; they love their gaoler; are content to sit quietly under Satan’s
jurisdiction; they choose this bramble to rule over them, though after
a while, fire will come out of the bramble to devour them. Judges
9: 15. What an infinite mercy is it when God brings poor souls
out of this house of bondage, when he gives them a gaol-delivery from the
prince of darkness! JESUS CHRIST redeems captives, he ransoms sinners by
price, and rescues them by force. As David took a lamb out of the lion’s
mouth (1
Sam 17: 35), so Christ rescues souls out of the mouth of the
roaring lion. Oh, what a mercy is it to be brought out of the house of
bondage, from captives to the prince of the power of the air, to be made
subjects of the Prince of Peace! This is done by the preaching of the Word.
‘To turn them from the power of Satan unto God.’ Acts
26: 18.
(3)
The bringing of Israel out of the house of bondage was a type of their
being delivered from hell. Hell is domus
servitutis, a house of bondage;
a house built on purpose for sinners to lie in.
There
is such a house of bondage where the damned lie. ‘The wicked shall be turned
into hell.’ Psa
9: 17. ‘How can ye escape the damnation of hell?’ Matt
23: 33. If any one should ask where this house of bondage is,
where is the place of hell? I wish he may never know experimentally. ‘Let
us not so much,’ says Chrysostom, ‘labour to know where hell is, as how
to escape it.’ Yet to satisfy curiosity, it may be observed that hell is locus
subterraneus, some place beneath.
‘Hell beneath.’ Prov
15: 24. Hesiod says, ‘Hell is as far under the earth, as heaven
is above it.’ The devils besought Christ ‘that he would not command them
to go out into the deep.’ Luke
8: 31. Hell is in the deep.
Why
must there be this house of bondage? Why a hell? Because there must be
a place for the execution of divine justice. Earthly monarchs have their
prison for malefactors, and shall not God have his? Sinners are criminals,
they have offended God; and it would not consist with his holiness and
justice, to have his laws infringed, and not inflict penalties.
The
dreadfulness of the place. Could you but hear the groans and shrieks of
the damned for one hour, it would confirm you in the truth, that hell is
a house of bondage. Hell is the emphasis of misery. Besides the poena
damni, ‘the punishment of loss,’
which is the exclusion of the soul from the gloried sight of God, which
divines think the worst part of hell, there will be poena
sensus,’ the punishment of sense.’
If, when God’s wrath is kindled but a little, and a spark of it flies into
a man’s conscience in this life, it is so terrible (as in the case of Spira),
what will hell itself be?
In
hell there will be a plurality of torments, ‘Bonds and chains.’ 2
Pet 2: 4. There will be the worm. Mark
9: 48; This is the worm of conscience. There will be the lake
of fire. Rev
20: 15. Other fire is but painted to this.
This
house of hell is haunted with devils. Matt
25: 41. Anselm says, ‘I had rather endure all torments, than
see the devil with bodily eyes.’ Such as go to hell must not only be forced
to behold the devil, but must be shut up with this lion in his den; they
must keep the devil company. He is full of spite against mankind; a red
dragon that will spit fire in men’s faces.
The
torments of hell abide for ever. ‘The smoke of their torment ascendeth
up for ever and ever.’ Rev
14: 2: Time cannot finish it, tears cannot quench it. Mark
9: 44. The wicked are salamanders, who live always in the fire
of hell, and are not consumed. After they have lain millions of years in
hell, their punishment is as far from ending, as it was at the beginning.
If all the earth and sea were sand, and every thousandth year a bird should
come, and take away one grain, it would be a long time before that vast
heap would be removed; yet, if after all that time the damned might come
out of hell, there would be some hope; but this word EVER breaks the heart.
How
does it seem to comport with God’s justice to punish a sin committed in
a moment, with eternal torment?
Because
there is an eternity of sin in man’s nature. Because sin is crimen
laesae majestatis, ‘committed against
an infinite majesty,’ and therefore the sin itself is infinite, and proportionally
the punishment must be infinite. Because a finite creature cannot bear
infinite wrath, he must be eternally satisfying what he can never satisfy.
If hell be such a house of bondage, what infinite cause have they to bless
God who are delivered from it! Jesus ‘delivered us from the wrath to come.’ 1
Thess 1: 10. Jesus Christ suffered the torments of hell in his
soul, that believers should not suffer them. If we are thankful, when we
are ransomed out of prison, or delivered from fire, oh, how should we bless
God to be preserved from the wrath to come! It may cause more thankfulness
in us, seeing the most part go into the house of bondage, even to hell.
To be of the number of those few that are delivered from it, is matter
of infinite thankfulness. Most, I say, go to that house of bondage when
they die; most go to hell. ‘Broad is the way that leadeth to destruction,
and many there be which go in thereat.’Matt
7: 13. The greatest part of the world lies in wickedness. 1
John 5: 19. Divide the world, says Brerewood, into thirty-one
parts, nineteen parts of it are possessed by Jews and Turks, and seven
parts by heathens; so that there are but five parts of Christians, and
among these Christians so many seduced Papists on the one hand, and so
many formal Protestants on the other, that we may conclude the major part
of the world goes to hell. Scripture compares the wicked to briers. Isa
10: 17. There are but few lilies in your fields, but in every
hedge thorns and briers. It compares them to ‘the mire in the streets.’ Isa
10: 6. Few jewels or precious stones are in the street, but
you cannot go a step without meeting with mire. The wicked are as common
as the dirt in the street. Look at the generality of people. How many drunkards
are there for one that is sober! How many adulterers for one that is chaste!
How many hypocrites for one that is sincere! The devil has the harvest,
and God a few gleanings only. Oh, then, such as are delivered from the
house of bondage, in hell, have infinite cause to admire and bless God.
How should the vessels of mercy run over with thankfulness! When most others
are carried prisoners to hell, they are delivered from the wrath to come.
How
shall I know I am delivered from hell?
(1)
Those whom Christ saves from hell he saves from sin. ‘He shall save his
people from their sins.’ Matt
1: 21. Has God delivered you from the power of corruption, from
pride, malice, and lust? If he has delivered you from the hell of sin,
he has delivered you from the hell of torment.
(2)
If you have got an interest in Christ, and are prizing, trusting, and loving
him, you are delivered from hell and damnation. ‘No condemnation to them
that are in Christ Jesus.’ Rom
8:1. If you are in Christ, he has put the garment of his righteousness
over you, and hell-fire can never singe it. Pliny observes, nothing will
so soon quench fire as salt and blood: the salt tears of repentance and
the blood of Christ will quench the fire of hell, so that it shall never
kindle upon you.
1.4 The Right Understanding of the Law
‘Thou
shalt have no other Gods before me.’ Exod
20: 3.
Before
I come to the commandments, I shall answer questions, and lay down rules
respecting the moral law.
What
is the difference between the moral laud and the gospel?
(1) The
law requires that we worship God as our Creator; the gospel, that we worship
him in and through Christ. God in Christ is propitious; out of him we may
see God’s power, justice, and holiness: in him we see his mercy displayed.
(2) The
moral law requires obedience, but gives no strength (as Pharaoh required
brick, but gave no straw), but the gospel gives strength; it bestows faith
on the elect; it sweetens the law; it makes us serve God with delight.
Of what
use is the moral law to us?
It is
a glass to show us our sins, that, seeing our pollution and misery, we
may be forced to flee to Christ to satisfy for former guilt, and to save
from future wrath. ‘The law was our schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ. Gal
3: 24.
But is
the moral law still in force to believers; is it not abolished to them?
In some
sense it is abolished to believers. (1) In respect of justification. They
are not justified by their obedience to the moral law. Believers are to
make great use of the moral law, but they must trust only to Christ’s righteousness
for justification; as Noah’s dove made use of her wings to fly, but trusted
to the ark for safety. If the moral law could justify, what need was there
of Christ’s dying? (2) The moral law is abolished to believers, in respect
of its curse. They are freed from its curse and condemnatory power. ‘Christ
has redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us.’ Gal
3: 13.
How
was Christ made a curse for us?
Considered
as the Son of God, he was not made a curse, but as our pledge and surety,
he was made a curse for us. Heb
7: 22. This curse was not upon his Godhead, but upon his manhood.
It was the wrath of God lying upon him; and thus he took away from believers
the curse of the law, by being made a curse for them. But though the moral
law be thus far abolished, it remains as a perpetual rule to believers.
Though it be not their Saviour, it is their guide. Though it be not foedus,
a covenant of life; yet it is norma,
a rule of life. Every Christian is bound to conform to it; and to write,
as exactly as he can, after this copy. ‘Do we then make void the law through
faith? God forbid.’ Rom
3: 31. Though a Christian is not under the condemning power
of the law, yet he is under its commanding power. To love God, to reverence
and obey him, is a law which always binds and will bind in heaven. This
I urge against the Antinomians, who say the moral law is abrogated to believers;
which, as it contradicts Scripture, so it is a key to open the door to
all licentiousness. They who will not have the law to rule them, shall
never have the gospel to save them.
Having
answered these questions, I shall in the next place, lay down some general
rules for the right understanding of the Decalogue, or Ten Commandments.
These may serve to give us some light into the sense and meaning of the
commandments.
Rule
I. The commands and prohibitions of the moral law reach the heart. (1)
The commands of the moral law reach the heart. The commandments require
not only outward actions, but inward affections; they require not only
the outward act of obedience, but the inward affection of love. ‘Thou shalt
love the Lord thy God with all thine heart.’ Deut
6: 5.
(2)
The threats and prohibitions of the moral law reach the heart. The law
of God forbids not only the act of sin, but the desire and inclination;
not only does it forbid adultery, but lusting (Matt
5: 28): not only stealing, but coveting (Rom
7: 7). Lex
humana ligat manum, lex divina comprimit animam
‘Man’s law binds the hands only, God’s law binds the heart.’
Rule
2. In the commandments there is a synecdoche, more is intended than is
spoken. (1) Where any duty is commanded, the contrary sin is forbidden.
When we are commanded to keep the Sabbath-day holy, we are forbidden to
break the Sabbath. When we are commanded to live in a calling, ‘Six days
shalt thou labour,’ we are forbidden to live idly, and out of a calling.
(2)
Where any sin is forbidden, the contrary duty is commanded. When we are
forbidden to take God’s name in vain, the contrary duty, that we should
reverence his name, is commanded. ‘That thou mayest fear this glorious
and fearful name, the Lord Thy God.’ Deut
28: 58. Where we are forbidden to wrong our neighbour, there
the contrary duty, that we should do him all the good we can, by vindicating
his name and supplying his wants, is included.
Rule
3. Where any sin is forbidden in the commandment, the occasion of it is
also forbidden. Where murder is forbidden, envy and rash anger are forbidden,
which may occasion it. Where adultery is forbidden, all that may lead to
it is forbidden, as wanton glances of the eye, or coming into the company
of a harlot. ‘Come not nigh the door of her house.’ Prov
5: 8. He who would be free from the plague, must not come near
the infected house. Under the law the Nazarite was forbidden to drink wine;
nor might he eat grapes of which the wine was made.
Rule
4. In
relato subintelligitur correlatum.Where
one relation is named in the commandment, there another relation is included.
Where the child is named, the father is included. Where the duty of children
to parents is mentioned, the duty of parents to children is also included.
Where the child is commanded to honour the parent, it is implied that the
parent is also commanded to instruct, to love, and to provide for the child.
Rule
5. Where greater sins are forbidden, lesser sins are also forbidden. Though
no sin in its own nature is little, yet one may be comparatively less than
another. Where idolatry is forbidden, superstition is forbidden, or bringing
any innovation into God’s worship, which he has not appointed. As the sons
of Aaron were forbidden to worship an idol, so to sacrifice to God with
strange fire. Lev
10: 1. Mixture in sacred things, is like a dash in wine, which
though it gives a colour, yet does but debase and adulterate it. It is
highly provoking to God to bring any superstitious ceremony into his worship
which he has not prescribed; it is to tax God’s wisdom, as if he were not
wise enough to appoint the manner how he will be served.
Rule
6. The law of God is entire. Lex
est copulativa [The law is all
connected]. The first and second tables are knit together; piety to God,
and equity to our neighbour. These two tables which God has joined together,
must not be put asunder. Try a moral man by the duties of the first table,
piety to God, and there you will find him negligent; try a hypocrite by
the duties of the second table, equity to his neighbour, and there you
will find him tardy. If he who is strict in the second table neglects the
first, or he who is zealous in the first, neglects the second, his heart
is not right with God. The Pharisees were the highest pretenders to keeping
the first table with zeal and holiness; but Christ detects their hypocrisy:
‘Ye have omitted judgement, mercy and faith.’ Matt
23: 23. They were bad in the second table; they omitted judgement,
or being just in their dealings; mercy in relieving the poor; and faith,
or faithfulness in their promises and contracts with men. God wrote both
the tables, and our obedience must set a seal to both.
Rule
7. God’s law forbids not only the acting of sin in our own persons, but
being accessory to, or having any hand in, the sins of others.
How
and in what sense may we be said to partake of, and have a hand in the
sins of others?
(1)
By decreeing unrighteous decrees, and imposing on others that which is
unlawful. Jeroboam made the people of Israel to sin; he was accessory to
their idolatry by setting up golden calves. Though David did not in his
own person kill Uriah, yet because he wrote a letter to Joab, to set Uriah
in the forefront of the battle, and it was done by his command, he was
accessory to Uriah’s death, and the murder of him was laid by the prophet
to his charge. ‘Thou hast killed Uriah the Hittite with the sword.’2
Sam 12: 9.
(2)
We become accessory to the sins of others by not hindering them when it
is in our power. Qui
non prohibit cum potest, jubet
[The failure to prevent something, when it lies within your power, amounts
to ordering it]. If a master of a family see his servant break the Sabbath,
or hear him swear, and does not use the power he has to suppress him, he
becomes accessory to his sin. Eli, for not punishing his sons when they
made the offering of the Lord to be abhorred, made himself guilty. 1
Sam 3: 13, 14. He that suffers an offender to pass unpunished,
makes himself an offender.
(3)
By counselling, abetting, or provoking others to sin. Ahithophel made himself
guilty of the fact by giving counsel to Absalom to go in and defile his
father’s concubines. 2
Sam 16: 21. He who shall tempt or solicit another to be drunk,
though he himself be sober, yet being the occasion of another’s sin, he
is accessory to it. ‘Woe unto him that giveth his neighbour drink, that
puttest thy bottle to him.’ Hab
2: 15.
(4)
By consenting to another’s sin. Saul did not cast one stone at Stephen,
yet the Scripture says, ‘Saul was consenting unto his death.’ Acts
8: 1. Thus he had a hand in it. If several combined to murder
a man, and should tell another of their intent, and he should give his
consent to it, he would be guilty; for though his hand was not in the murder,
his heart was in it; though he did not act it, yet he approved it, and
so it became his sin.
(5)
By example. Vivitur
exemplis [We live by example].
Examples are powerful and cogent. Setting a bad example occasions another
to sin, and so a person becomes accessory. If the father swears, and the
child by his example, learns to swear, the father is accessory to the child’s
sin; he taught him by his example. As there are hereditary diseases, so
there are hereditary sins.
Rule
8. The last rule about the commandments is, that though we cannot, by our
own strength, fulfil all these commandments, yet doing quod
posse, what we are able, the Lord
has provided encouragement for us. There is a threefold encouragement.
(1)
That though we have not ability to obey any one command, yet God has in
the new covenant, promised to work that in us which he requires. ‘I will
cause you to walk in my statutes.’ Ezek
36: 27. God commands us to love him. Ah, how weak is our love!
It is like the herb that is yet only in the first degree; but God has promised
to circumcise our hearts, that we may love him. Deut
30: 6. He that commands us, will enable us. God commands us
to turn from sin, but alas! we have not power to turn; therefore he has
promised to turn us, to put his Spirit within us, and to turn the heart
of stone into flesh. Ezek
36: 26. There is nothing in the command, but the same is in
the promise. Therefore, Christian, be not discouraged, though thou hast
no strength of thy own, God will give thee strength. The iron has no power
to move, but when drawn by the loadstone it can move. ‘Thou hast wrought
all our works in us.’ Isa
26: 12.
(2)
Though we cannot exactly fulfil the moral law, yet God for Christ’s sake
will mitigate the rigour of the law, and accept of something less than
he requires. God in the law requires exact obedience, yet will accept of
sincere obedience; he will abate something of the degree, if there be truth
in the inward parts. He will see the faith, and pass by the failing. The
gospel remits the severity of the moral law.
(3)
Wherein our personal obedience comes short, God will be pleased to accept
us in our Surety. ‘He has made us accepted in the Beloved.’ Eph
1: 6. Though our obedience be imperfect, yet, through Christ
our Surety, God looks upon it as perfect. That very service which God’s
law might condemn, his mercy is pleased to crown, by virtue of the blood
of our Mediator. Having given you these rules about the commandments, I
shall come next to the commandments themselves.
2. THE TEN COMMANDMENTS
2.1 The First Commandment
‘Thou
shalt have no other gods before me.’ Exod
20: 3.
Why is
the commandment in the second person singular, Thou? Why does not God say,
You shall have no other gods?
Because
the commandment concerns every one, and God would have each one take it
as spoken to him by name. Though we are forward to take privileges to ourselves,
yet we are apt to shift off duties from ourselves to others; therefore
the commandment is in the second person, Thou and Thou, that every one
may know that it is spoken to him, as it were, by name. We come now to
the commandment, ‘Thou shalt have no other gods before me.’ This may well
lead the van, and be set in the front of all the commandments, because
it is the foundation of all true religion. The sum of this commandment
is, that we should sanctify God in our hearts, and give him a precedence
above all created beings. There are two branches of this commandment: 1.
That we must have one God. 2. That we must have but one. Or thus, 1. That
we must have God for our God. 2. That we must have no other.
1. That
we must have God for our God. It is manifest that we must have a God, and
‘who is God save the Lord?’ 2
Sam 22: 32. The Lord Jehovah (one God in three persons) is the
true, living, eternal God; and him we must have for our God.
[1] To
have God to be a God to us, is to acknowledge him for a God. The gods of
the heathen are idols. Psa
96: 5. And ‘we know that an idol is nothing’ (1
Cor 8: 4); that is, it has nothing of Deity in it. If we cry,
‘Help, O Idol,’ an idol cannot help; the idols themselves were carried
into captivity, so that an idol is nothing. Isa
46: 2. Vanity is ascribed to it, we do not therefore acknowledge
it to be a god. Jer
14: 22. But we have this God to be a God to us, when, ex
animo [from the heart], we acknowledge
him to be God. All the people fell on their faces and said, ‘The Lord he
is the God! the Lord he is the God!’ 1
Kings 18: 39. Yea, we acknowledge him to be the only God. ‘O
Lord God of Israel, which dwellest between the cherubim, thou art the God,
even thou alone.’ 2
Kings 19: 15. Deity is a jewel that belongs only to his crown.
Further, we acknowledge there is no God like him. ‘And Solomon stood before
the altar of the Lord; and he said, Lord God of Israel, there is no God
like thee.’1
Kings 8: 22, 23. ‘For 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. In the Chaldee it is, ‘Who among the angels?’ None can
do as God; he brought the world out of nothing; ‘And hangeth the earth
upon nothing.’Job
26: 7. It makes God to be a God to us, when we are persuaded
in our hearts, and confess with our tongues, and subscribe with our hands,
that he is the only true God, and that there is none comparable to him.
[2] To
have God to be a God to us is to choose him. ‘Choose you this day whom
ye will serve: but as for me and my house we will serve the Lord:’ that
is, we will choose the Lord to be our God. Josh
24: 15. It is one thing for the judgement to approve of God,
and another for the will to choose him. Religion is not a matter of chance,
but choice.
Before
choosing God for our God, there must be knowledge. We must know him before
we can choose him. Before any one choose the person he will marry, he must
have some knowledge of that person; so we must know God before we can choose
him for our God. ‘Know thou the God of thy father.’ 1
Chron 28: 9. We must know God in his attributes, as glorious
in holiness, rich in mercy, and faithful in promises. We must know him
in his Son. As the face is represented in a glass, so in Christ, as in
a transparent glass, we see God’s beauty and love shine forth. This knowledge
must go before choosing God. Lactantius said, all the learning of the philosophers
was without a head, because it wanted the knowledge of God. This choosing
is an act of mature deliberation. The Christian having viewed the superlative
excellences in God, and being stricken with a holy admiration of his perfections,
singles him out from all other objects to set his heart upon, and says
as Jacob, ‘The Lord shall be my God.’ Gen
28: 21. He that chooses God, devotes himself to God. ‘Thy servant
who is devoted to thy fear.’ Psa
119: 38. As the vessels of the sanctuary were consecrated and
set apart from common to holy uses, so he who has chosen God to be his
God, has dedicated himself to God, and will no more be devoted to profane
uses.
[3] To
have God to be a God to us, is to enter into solemn covenant with him,
that he shall be our God. After choice the marriage-covenant follows. As
God makes a covenant with us, ‘I will make an everlasting covenant with
you, even the sure mercies of David’ (Isa
55: 3); so we make a covenant with him, ‘They entered into a
covenant to seek the Lord God of their fathers.’ 2
Chron 15: 12. ‘One shall say, I am the Lord’s: and another shall
subscribe with his hand unto the Lord;’ like soldiers that subscribe their
names in the muster roll. Isa
44: 5. This covenant, ‘That God shall be our God,’ we have often
renewed in the Lord’s Supper; which, like a seal to a bond, binds us fast
to God, and so keeps us that we do not depart from him.
[4] To
have God to be a God to us, is to give him adoration: which consists in
reverencing him: ‘God is to be had in reverence of all them that are about
him.’ Psa
89: 7. The seraphim, who stood about God’s throne, covered their
faces (Isa
6), and Elijah wrapped himself in a mantle when the Lord passed
by, in token of reverence. This reverence shows the high esteem we have
of God’s sacred majesty. Adoration consists in bowing to him, or worshipping
him. ‘Worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness.’ Psa
29: 2. ‘They bowed their heads, and worshipped the Lord with
their faces to the ground.’ Neh
8: 6. Divine worship is the peculiar honour belonging to the
Godhead; which God is jealous of, and will have no creature share in. ‘My
glory will I not give to another.’ Isa
42: 8. Magistrates may have a civil respect or veneration, but
God only should have a religious adoration.
[5] To
have God to be a God to us, is to fear him. ‘That thou mayest fear this
glorious and fearful name, The Lord thy God.’ Deut
28: 58. This fearing God is (1) To have him always in our eye,
‘I have set the Lord always before me.’ Psa
16: 8. ‘Mine eyes are ever towards the Lord.’ Psa
25: 15. He who fears God imagines that whatever he is doing,
God looks on, and as a judge, weighs all his actions. (2) To fear God is
to have such a holy awe of God upon our hearts, that we dare not sin. ‘Stand
in awe and sin not.’ Psa
4: 4. The wicked sin and fear not; the godly fear and sin not.
‘How then can I do this great wickedness and sin against God?’ Gen
39: 9. Bid me sin, and you bid me drink poison. It is a saying
of Anselm, ‘If hell were on one side, and sin on the other, I would rather
leap into hell, than willingly sin against my God.’ He who fears God will
not sin, though it be ever so secret. ‘Thou shalt not curse the deaf, nor
put a stumbling-block before the blind, but shalt fear thy God.’ Lev
19: 14. Suppose you should curse a deaf man, he could not hear
you; or you were to lay a block in a blind man’s way, and cause him to
fall, he could not see you do it; but the fear of God will make you forsake
sins which can neither be heard nor seen by men. The fear of God destroys
the fear of man. The three children feared God, therefore they feared not
the king’s wrath. Dan
3: 16. The greater noise drowns the less; the noise of thunder
drowns the noise of a river; so, when the fear of God is supreme in the
soul, it drowns all other carnal fear. It makes God to be God to us when
we have a holy filial fear of him.
[6] To
have God to be a God to us, is to trust in him. ‘Mine eyes are unto thee,
O God the Lord: in thee is my trust.’ Psa
141: 8. ‘The God of my rock, in him will I trust.’ 2
Sam 22: 3. There is none in whom we can trust but God. All creatures
are a refuge of lies; they are like the Egyptian reed, too weak to support
us, but strong enough to wound us. 2
Kings 18: 21. Omnis
motus fit super immobili [The immovable
is undisturbed by any commotion]. God only is a sufficient foundation to
build our trust upon. When we trust him, we make him a God to us; when
we do not trust him, we make him an idol. Trusting in God is to rely on
his power as a Creator, and on his love as a Father. Trusting in God is
to commit our chief treasure, our soul, to him. ‘Into thy hands I commit
my spirit.’ Psa
31: 5. As the orphan trusts his estate with his guardian, so
we trust our souls with God. Then he becomes a God to us.
But how
shall we know that we trust in God aright? If we trust in God aright, we
shall trust him at one time as well as another. ‘Trust in him at all times.’ Psa
62: 8. Can we trust him in our straits? When the fig-tree does
not flourish, when our earthly crutches are broken, can we lean upon God’s
promise? When the pipes are cut off that used to bring us comfort, can
we live upon God, in whom are all our fresh springs? When we have no bread
to eat but the bread of carefulness (Ezek
12: 19), when we have no water to drink but tears, as in Psa
80: 5: ‘Thou givest them tears to drink in great measure;’ can
we then trust in God’s providence to supply us? A good Christian believes,
that if God feeds the ravens, he will feed his children, he lives upon
God’s all-sufficiency, not only for grace, but for food. He believes if
God gives him heaven, he will give daily bread; he trusts his bond: ‘Verily
thou shalt be fed.’ Psa
37: 3. Can we trust God in our fears? When adversaries grow
high can we display the banner of faith? ‘What time I am afraid, I will
trust in thee.’ Psa
56: 3. Faith cures the trembling in heart; it gets above fear,
as oil swims above the water. To trust in God, makes him to be a God to
us.
[7] To
have God to be a God to us, is to love him. In the godly fear and love
kiss each other.
[8] To
have him to be a God to us, is to obey him. Upon this I shall speak more
at large in the second commandment.
Why must
use cleave to the Lord as our God?
(1) Because
of its equity. It is but just that we should cleave to him from whom we
receive our being. Who can have a better right to us than he that gives
us our breath? For ‘it is he that made us, and not we ourselves.’ Psa
100: 3. It is unjust, yea, ungrateful, to give away our love
or worship to any but God.
(2) Because
of its utility. If we cleave to the Lord as our God, then he will bless
us: ‘God, even our own God, shall bless us.’ Psa
67: 6. He will bless us in our estate. ‘Blessed shall be the
fruit of thy ground: blessed shall be thy basket and thy store.’ Deut
28: 4, 5. We shall not only have our sacks full of corn, but
money in the mouth of the sack. He will bless us with peace. ‘The Lord
will bless his people with peace.’ Psa
29: 11. With outward peace, which is the nurse of plenty. ‘He
maketh peace in thy borders.’ Psa
147: 14. With inward peace, a smiling conscience, which is sweeter
than the dropping of honey. God will turn all evils to our good. Rom
8: 28. He will make a treacle of poison. Joseph’s imprisonment
was a means for his advancement. Gen
50: 20. Out of the bitterest drug he will distil his glory and
our salvation. In short, he will be our guide to death, our comfort in
death, and our reward after death. The utility of it, therefore, may make
us cleave to the Lord as our God. ‘Happy is that people whose God is the
Lord.’ Psa
144: 15.
(3) Because
of its necessity. If God be not our God, he will curse our blessings; and
God’s curse blasts wherever it comes. Mal
2: 2. If God be not our God, we have none to help us in misery.
Will he help his enemies? Will he assist those who disclaim him? If we
do not make God to be our God, he will make himself to be our judge; and
if he condemns, there is no appealing to a higher court. There is a necessity,
therefore, for having God for our God, unless we intend to be eternally
espoused to misery.
Use one.
If we must have the Lord Jehovah for our one God, it condemns the Atheists
who have no God. ‘The fool has said in his heart, There is no God.’ Psa
14: 1. There is no God he believes in, or worships. Such Atheists
were Diagoras and Theodorus. When Seneca reproved Nero for his impieties,
Nero said, ‘Dost thou think I believe there is any God, when I do such
things?’ The duke of Silesia was so infatuated, that he affirmed, Neque
inferos, neque superos esse; that
there was neither God nor devil. We may see God in the works of his fingers.
The creation is a great volume in which we may read a Godhead, and he must
needs put out his own eyes that denies a God. Aristotle, though a heathen,
not only acknowledged God, when he cried out, ‘Thou Being of beings, have
mercy on me,’ but he thought he that did not confess a Deity was not worthy
to live. They who will not believe a God, shall feel him. ‘It is a fearful
thing to fall into the hands of the living God.’ Heb
10: 31.
Use two.
Christians are condemned who profess to own God for their God and yet do
not live as if he were their God. (1) They do not believe in him as a God.
When they look upon their sins, they are apt to say, Can God pardon? When
they look upon their wants, they say, Can God provide, can he prepare a
table in the wilderness? (2) They do not love him as a God. They do not
give him the cream of their love, but are prone to love other things more
than God; they say they love God, but will part with nothing for him. (3)
They do not worship him as God. They do not give him that reverence, nor
pray with that devotion, as if they were praying to a God. How dead are
their hearts! If not dead in sin, they are dead to duty. They pray as to
a god that has eyes and sees not, ears and hears not. In hearing the Word,
how much distraction, and what regardless hearts have many! They are thinking
of their shops and drugs. Would a king take it well at our hands, if, when
speaking to us, we should be playing with a feather? When God is speaking
to us in his Word, and our hearts are taken up with thoughts about the
world, is not this playing with a feather? Oh, how should this humble most
of us, that we do not make God to be a God to us! We do not believe in
him, love him, worship him as God. Many heathens have worshipped their
false gods with more seriousness and devotion than some Christians do the
true God. O let us chide ourselves; did I say chide? Let us abhor ourselves
for our deadness and formality in religion; how we have professed God,
and yet have not worshipped him as God.
II. That
we must have no other god. ‘Thou shalt have no other gods before me.
What is
meant by the words, Before me?
It means
before my face; in conspectu meo, in my sight. ‘Cursed be the man that
maketh any graven image, and putteth it in a secret place.’ Deut
27: 15. Some would not bow to the idol in the sight of others,
but they would secretly bow to it; but though this was out of man’s sight,
it was not out of God’s sight. ‘Cursed, therefore,’ says God, ‘be he that
puts the image in a secret place.’ ‘Thou shalt have no other gods.’ 1.
There is really no other god. 2. We must have no other.
[1] There
is really no other god. The Valentinians held there were two gods; the
Polytheists, that there were many; the Persian worshipped the sun; the
Egyptians, the ox and elephant; the Grecians, Jupiter; but there is no
other than the true God. ‘Know, therefore, this day, and consider it in
thy heart, that the Lord he is God in heaven above, and upon the earth
beneath; there is none else.’ Deut
4: 39. For, (1) There is but one First Cause, that has its being
of itself, and on which all other beings depend. As in the heavens the
Primum Mobile moves all the other orbs, so God is the Great Mover, he gives
life and motion to everything that exists.
(2) There
is but one Omnipotent Power. If there be two omnipotent, we must always
suppose a contest between the two: that which one would do, the other,
being equal, would oppose; and so all things would be brought into confusion.
If a ship should have two pilots of equal power, one would be ever crossing
the other; when one would sail the other would cast anchor; there would
be confusion, and the ship would perish. The order and harmony in the world,
the constant and uniform government of all things, is a clear argument
that there is but one Omnipotent, one God that rules all. ‘I am the first,
and I am the last, and beside me there is no God.’ Isa
44: 6.
[2] We
must have no other god. ‘Thou shalt have no other gods before me.’ This
commandment forbids: (1) Serving a false god, and not the true God. ‘Saying
to a stock, Thou art my father; and to a stone, Thou hast brought me forth.’ Jer
2: 27. (2) Joining a false god with a true. ‘They feared the
Lord, and served their own gods.’ 2
Kings 17: 33. These are forbidden in the commandment; we must
adhere to the true God, and no other. ‘God is a jealous God,’ and he will
endure no rival. A wife cannot lawfully have two husbands at once; nor
may we have two gods. Thou shalt worship no other god, for the Lord is
a jealous God.’ Exod.
34: 14. ‘Their sorrows shall be multiplied that hasten after
another god.’ Psa
16: 4. The Lord interprets it a ‘forsaking of him’ to espouse
any other god. ‘They forsook the Lord, and followed other gods.’ Judges
2: 12. God would not have his people so much as make mention
of idol gods. ‘Make no mention of the name of other gods, neither let it
be heard out of thy mouth.’ Exod
23: 13. ‘God looks upon it as breaking the marriage-covenant,
to go after other gods. Therefore, when Israel committed idolatry with
the golden calf, God disclaimed his interest in them. ‘Thy people have
corrupted themselves.’Exod
32: 7. Before, God called Israel his people; but when they went
after other gods, ‘Now,’ saith the Lord to Moses, ‘they are no more my
people but thy people.’ ‘Plead with your mother, plead; for she is not
my wife.’ Hos
2: 2. She does not keep faith with me, she has stained herself
with idols, therefore I will divorce her, ‘she is not my wife.’ To go after
other gods, is what God cannot bear; it makes the fury rise up in his face.
‘If thy brother, or thy son, or the wife of thy bosom or thy friend, which
is as thine own soul, entice thee secretly, saying, Let us go and serve
other gods, thou shalt not consent unto him, neither shall thine eye pity
him; but thou shalt surely kill him; thine hand shall be first upon him
to put him to death, and afterwards the hand of all the people.’ Deut
13: 6, 8, 9.
What is
it to have other gods besides the true God? I fear upon search, we have
more idolaters among us than we are aware of.
(1) To
trust in any thing more than God, is to make it a god. If we trust in our
riches, we make riches our god. We may take comfort, but not put confidence
in them. It is a foolish thing to trust in them. They are deceitful riches,
and it is foolish to trust to that which will deceive us. Matt
13: 22. They have no solid consistency, they are like landscapes
or golden dreams, which leave the soul empty when it awakes or comes to
itself. They are not what they promise; they promise to satisfy our desires,
and they increase them; they promise to stay with us, and they take wings.
They are hurtful. ‘Riches kept for the owners thereof to their hurt.’ Eccl
5: 13. It is foolish to trust to that which will hurt one. Who
would take hold of the edge of a razor to help him? They are often fuel
for pride and lust. Ezek
28: 5. Jer
5: 7. It is folly to trust in our riches; but how many do, and
make money their god! ‘The rich man’s wealth is his strong city.’ Prov
10: 15. He makes the wedge of gold his hope. Job
31: 24. God made man of the dust of the earth, and man makes
a god of the dust of the earth. Money is his creator, redeemer, comforter:
his creator, for if he has money, he thinks he is made; his redeemer, for
if he be in danger, he trusts to his money to redeem him; his comforter,
for if he be sad, money is the golden harp to drive away the evil spirit.
Thus by trusting to money, we make it a god.
If we
trust in the arm of flesh, we make it a god. ‘Cursed be the man that trusteth
in man, and maketh flesh his arm.’ Jer
17: 5. The Syrians trusted in their army, which was so numerous
that it filled the country; but this arm of flesh withered. 1
Kings 20: 27, 29. What we make our trust, God makes our shame.
The sheep run to the hedges for shelter, and they lose their wool; so we
have run to second causes to help us, and have lost much of our golden
fleece; they have not only been reeds to fail us, but thorns to prick us.
We have broken our parliament-crutches, by leaning too hard upon them.
If we
trust in our wisdom, we make it a god. ‘Let not the wise man glory in his
wisdom.’ Jer
9: 23. Glorying is the height of confidence. Many a man makes
an idol of his wit and parts; he deifies himself, but how often does God
take the wise in their own craftiness! Job
5: 13. Ahithophel had a great wit, his counsel was as the oracle
of God; but his wit brought him to the halter. 2
Sam 17: 23.
If we
trust in our civility, we make it a god. Many trust to this, that none
can charge them with gross sin. Civility is but nature refined and cultivated;
a man may be washed, and not changed; his life may be civil, and yet there
may be some reigning sin in his heart. The Pharisee could say, ‘I am no
adulterer’ (Luke
18: 11); but he could not say, ‘I am not proud.’ To trust to
civility, is to trust to a spider’s web.
If we
trust to our duties to save us, we make them a god. ‘Our righteousnesses
are as filthy rags;’ they are fly-blown with sin. Isa
64: 6. Put gold in the fire, and much dross comes out: so our
most golden duties are mixed with infirmity. We are apt either to neglect
duty, or idolise it. Use duty, but do not trust to it; for then you make
it a god. Trust not to your praying and hearing; they are means of salvation,
but they are not saviours. If you make duties bladders to trust to, you
may sink with them to hell.
If we
trust in our grace, we make a god of it. Grace is but a creature; if we
trust to it we make it an idol. Grace is imperfect, and we must not trust
to that which is imperfect to save us. ‘I have walked in my integrity:
I have trusted also in the Lord.’ Psa
26: 1: David walked in his integrity; but did not trust in his
integrity. ‘I have trusted in the Lord.’ If we trust in our graces, we
make a Christ of them. They are good graces, but bad Christs.
(2) To
love any thing more than God, is to make it a god. If we love our estate
more than God, we make it a god. The young man in the gospel loved his
gold better than his Saviour; the world lay nearer his heart than Christ. Matt
19: 22. Fulgens
hoc aurum praestringit oculos [This
gold with its glitter blinds the eyes]. Varius. The covetous man is called
an idolater. Eph
5: 5. Why so? Because he loves his estate more than God, and
so makes it his god. Though he does not bow down to an idol, if he worships
the graven image in his coins, he is an idolater. That which has most of
the heart, we make a god of.
If we
love our pleasure more than God, we make a god of it. ‘Lovers of pleasures
more than lovers of God.’ 2
Tim 3: 4. Many let loose the reins, and give themselves up to
all manner of sensual delights; they idolise pleasure. ‘They take the timbrel,
and the harp, and rejoice at the sound of the organ. They spend their days
in mirth.’ Job
21: 12, 13, (mg). I have read of a place in Africa, where the
people spend all their time in dancing and making merry; and have not we
many who make a god of pleasure, who spend their time in going to plays
and visiting ball-rooms, as if God had made them like the leviathan, to
play in the water? Psa
104: 26. In the country of Sardinia there is a herb like balm,
that if any one eats too much of it, he will die laughing: such a herb
is pleasure, if any one feeds immoderately on it, he will go laughing to
hell. Let such as make a god of pleasure read but these two Scriptures.
‘The heart of fools is in the house of mirth.’ Eccl
7: 4. ‘How much she has lived deliciously, so much torment give
her.’ Rev
18: 7. Sugar laid in a damp place turns to water; so all the
sugared joys and pleasures of sinners will turn to the water of tears at
last.
If we
love our belly more than God, we make a god of it. ‘Whose god is their
belly.’ Phil
3: 19. Clemens Alexandrinus writes of a fish that had its heart
in its belly; an emblem of epicures, whose heart is in their belly; they
seek sacrificare
lari, their belly is their god,
and to this god they pour drink offerings. The Lord allows what is fitting
for the recruiting of nature. ‘I will send grass, that thou mayest eat
and be full.’ Deut
11: 15. But to mind nothing but the indulging of the appetite,
is idolatry. ‘Whose god is their belly.’ What pity is it, that the soul,
that princely part, which sways the sceptre of reason and is akin to angels,
should be enslaved to the brutish part!
If we
love a child more than God, we make a god of it. How many are guilty in
this kind? They think of their children, and delight more in them than
in God; they grieve more for the loss of their first-born, than for the
loss of their first love. This is to make an idol of a child, and to set
it in God’s room. Thus God is often provoked to take away our children.
If we love the jewel more than him that gave it, God will take away the
jewel, that our love may return to him again.
Use one.
It reproves such as have other gods, and so renounce the true God. (1)
Such as set up idols. ‘According to the number of thy cities are thy gods,
O Judah.’ Jer
2: 28. ‘Their altars are as heaps in the furrows of the field.’ Hos
12: 11. (2) Such as seek to familiar spirits. This is a sin
condemned by the law of God. ‘There shall not be found among you a consulted
with familiar spirits.’ Deut
18: 11. Ordinarily, if people have lost any of their goods,
they send to wizards and soothsayers, to know how they may come by them
again. What is this but to make a god of the devil, by consulting with
him, and putting their trust in him? What! because you have lost your goods
will you lose your souls too? 2
Kings 1: 6. Is it not because you think there is not a God in
heaven, that you ask counsel of the devil? If any be guilty, be humbled.
Use two.
It sounds a retreat in our ears. Let it call us off from idolising any
creature, and lead us to renounce other gods, and cleave to the true God
and his service. If we go away from God, we know not where to mend ourselves.
(1) It
is honourable to serve the true God. Servire
Deo est regnare [To serve God is
to reign]. It is more honour to serve God, than to have kings serve us.
(2) Serving the true God is delightful. ‘I will make them joyful in my
house of prayer.’ Isa
56: 7. God often displays the banner of his love in an ordinance,
and pours the oil of gladness into the heart. All God’s ways are pleasantness,
his paths are strewed with roses. Prov
3: 17. (3) Serving the true God is beneficial. Men have great
gain here, the hidden manna, inward peace, and a great reward to come.
They that serve God shall have a kingdom when they die, and shall wear
a crown made of the flowers of paradise. Luke
12: 32; 1
Pet 5: 4. To serve the true God is our true interest. God has
twisted his glory and our salvation together. He bids us believe; and why?
That we may be saved. Therefore, renouncing all others, let us cleave to
the true God. (4) You have covenanted to serve the true JEHOVAH, renouncing
all others. When one has entered into covenant with his master, and the
indentures are drawn and sealed, he cannot go back, but must serve out
his time. We have covenanted in baptism, to take the Lord for our God,
renouncing all others; and renewed this covenant in the Lord’s Supper,
and shall we not keep our solemn vow and covenant? We cannot go away from
God without the highest perjury. ‘If any man draw back [as a soldier that
steals away from his colours] my soul shall have no pleasure in him.’ Heb
10: 38. ‘I will pour vials of wrath on him, and make mine arrows
drunk with blood.’ (5) None ever had cause to repent of cleaving to God
and his service. Some have repented that they had made a god of the world.
Cardinal Wolsey said, ‘Oh, if I had served my God as I have served my king,
he would never have left me thus!’ None ever complained of serving God:
it was their comfort and their crown on their death-bed.
2.2 The Second Commandment
‘Thou
shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness of any thing
that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in
the water under the earth: thou shalt not bow down thyself to them, nor
serve them: for I the Lord thy God am o jealous God, visiting the iniquity
of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generation of
then that hate me; and shewing mercy unto thousands of them that love me
and keep my commandments.’ Exod
20: 4-6.
I. Thou
shalt not make unto thee any graven image.
In the
first commandment worshipping a false god is forbidden; in this, worshipping
the true God in a false manner.
‘Thou
shalt not make unto thee any graven image.’ This forbids not making an
image for civil use. ‘Whose is this image and superscription? They say
unto him, It is Caesar’s.’ Matt
22: 20, 21. But the commandment forbids setting up an image
for religious use or worship.
‘Nor the
likeness of any thing,’ &c. All ideas, portraitures, shapes, images
of God, whether by effigies or pictures, are here forbidden. ‘Take heed
lest ye corrupt yourselves, and make the similitude of any figure.’ Deut
4: 15, 16. God is to be adored in the heart, not painted to
the eye.
‘Thou
shalt not bow down to them.’ The intent of making images and pictures is
to worship them. No sooner was Nebuchadnezzar’s golden image set up, but
all the people fell down and worshipped it. Dan
3: 7. God forbids such prostrating ourselves before an idol.
The thing prohibited in this commandment is image-worship. To set up an
image to represent God, is debasing him. If any one should make images
of snakes or spiders, saying he did it to represent his prince, would not
the prince take it in disdain? What greater disparagement to the infinite
God than to represent him by that which is unite; the living God, by that
which is without life; and the Maker of all by a thing which is made?
[1] To
make a true image of God is impossible. God is a spiritual essence and,
being a Spirit, he is invisible. John
4: 24. ‘Ye saw no manner of similitude on the day that the Lord
spake with you out of the midst of the fire.’ Deut
4: 15. How can any paint the Deity? Can they make an image of
that which they never saw? Quod
invisibile est, pingi non potest
[There is no depicting the invisible]. Ambrose. ‘Ye saw no similitude.’
It is impossible to make a picture of the soul, or to paint the angels,
because they are of a spiritual nature; much less can we paint God by an
image, who is an infinite, untreated Spirit.
[2] To
worship God by an image, is both absurd and unlawful.
(1) It
is absurd and irrational; for, ‘the workman is better than the work,’ ‘He
who has builded the house has more honour than the house.’ Heb
3: 3. If the workman be better than the work, and none bow to
the workman, how absurd, then, is it to bow to the work of his hands! Is
it not an absurd thing to bow down to the king’s picture, when the king
himself is present? It is more so to bow down to an image of God, when
God himself is everywhere present.
(2) It
is unlawful to worship God by an image; for it is against the homily of
the church, which runs thus: ‘The images of God, our Saviour, the Virgin
Mary, are of all others the most dangerous; therefore the greatest care
ought to be had that they stand not in temples and churches.’ So that image-worship
is contrary to our own homilies, and affronts the authority of the Church
of England. Image-worship is expressly against the letter of Scripture.
‘Ye shall make no graven image, neither shall ye set up any image of stone
to bow down unto it.’ Lev
26: 1. ‘Neither shalt thou set up any image; which the Lord
thy God hateth.’ Deut
16: 22. ‘Confounded be all they that serve graven images.’ Psa
97: 7. Do we think to please God by doing that which is contrary
to his mind, and that which he has expressly forbidden?
[3] Image
worship is against the practice of the saints of old. Josiah, that renowned
king, destroyed the groves and images. 2
Kings 23: 6, 24. Constantine abrogated the images set up in
temples. The Christians destroyed images at Baste, Zurich, and Bohemia.
When the Roman emperors would have thrust images upon them, they chose
rather to die than deflower their virgin profession by idolatry; they refused
to admit any painter or carver into their society, because they would not
have any carved state or image of God. When Seraphion bowed to an idol,
the Christians excommunicated him, and delivered him up to Satan.
Use one.
The Church of Rome is reproved and condemned, which, from the Alpha of
its religion to the Omega, is wholly idolatrous. Romanists make images
of God the Father, painting him in their church windows as an old man;
and an image of Christ on the crucifix; and, because it is against the
letter of this commandment, they sacrilegiously blot it out of their catechism,
and divide the tenth commandment into two. Image worship must needs be
very impious and blasphemous, because it is giving the religious worship
to the creature which is due to God only. It is vain for Papists to say,
they give God the worship of the heart, and the image only the worship
of the body; for the worship of the body is due to God, as well as the
worship of the heart; and to give an outward veneration to an image is
to give the adoration to a creature which belongs to God only. ‘My glory
will I not give to another.’ Isa
42: 8.
The Papists
say they do not worship the image, but only use it as a medium through
which to worship God. Ne
imagini quidem Christi in quantum est lignum sculptum, ulla debetur reverentia
[Not even to a statue of Christ is any reverence owed, since it is only
a piece of carved wood]. Aquinas.
(1) Where
has God bidden them worship him by an effigy or image? ‘Who has required
this at your hands?’ Isa
1: 12. The Papists cannot say so much as the devil, Scriptum
est: It is written.
(2) The
heathen may bring the same argument for their gross idolatry, as the Papists
do for their image-worship. What heathen has been so simple as to think
gold or silver, or the figure of an ox or elephant, was God? These were
emblems and hieroglyphics only to represent him. They worshipped an invisible
God by such visible things. To worship God by an image, God takes as done
to the image itself.
But,
say the Papists, images are laymen’s books, and they are good to put them
in mind of God. One of the Popish Councils affirmed, that we might learn
more by an image than by long study of the Scriptures.
‘What
profiteth the graven image, the molten image, and a teacher of lies.’ Hab
2: 18. Is an image a layman’s book? Then see what lessons this
book teaches. It teaches lies; it represents God in a visible shape, who
is invisible. For Papists to say they make use of an image to put them
in mind of God, is as if a woman should say she keeps company with another
man to put her in mind of her husband.
But did
not Moses make the image of a brazen serpent? Why, then, may not images
be set tip?
That
was done by God’s special command. ‘Make thee a brazen serpent.’ Numb
21: 8. There was also a special use in it, both literal and
spiritual. What! does the setting up of the image of the brazen serpent
justify the setting up images in churches? What! because Moses made an
image by God’s appointment, may we set up an image of our own devising?
Because Moses made an image to heal them that were stung, is it lawful
to set up images in churches to sting them that are whole? Nay, that very
brazen serpent which God himself commanded to be set up, when Israel looked
upon it with too much reverence, and began to burn incense to it, Hezekiah
defaced, and called it Nehushtan, mere brass; and God commended him for
so doing. 2
Kings 18: 4.
But is
not God represented as having hands, and eyes, and cars? Why nay we not,
then, make an image to represent him, and help our devotion?
Though
God is pleased to stoop to our weak capacities, and set himself out in
Scripture by eyes, to signify his omniscience, and hands to signify his
power, yet it is absurd, from such metaphors and figurative expressions,
to bring an argument for images and pictures; for, by that rule, God may
be pictured by the sun and the element of fire, and by a rock; for he is
set forth by these metaphors in Scripture; and, sure, the Papists themselves
would not like to have such images made of God.
If it
be not lawful to make the image of God the Father, yet may we not make
an image of Christ, who took upon him the nature of man?
No! Epiphanies,
seeing an image of Christ hanging in a church, brake it in pieces. It is
Christ’s Godhead, united to his manhood, that makes him to be Christ; therefore
to picture his manhood, when we cannot picture his Godhead, is a sin, because
we make him to be but half Christ — we separate what God has joined, we
leave out that which is the chief thing which makes him to be Christ.
But how
shall we conceive of God aright, if we may not make any image or resemblance
of him?
We must
conceive of God spiritually. (1) In his attributes — his holiness, justice,
goodness — which are the beams by which his divine nature shines forth.
(2) We must conceive of him as he is in Christ. Christ is the ‘Image of
the invisible God’ as in the wax we see the print of the seal. Col
1: 15. Set the eyes of your faith on Christ-God-man. ‘He that
has seen me, has seen the Father.’ John
14: 9.
Use two.
Take heed of the idolatry of image-worship. Our nature is prone to this
sin as dry wood to take fire; and, indeed, what need of so many words in
the commandment: ‘Thou shalt not make any graven image, or the likeness
of anything in heaven, earth, water,’ sun, moon, stars, male, female, fish;
‘Thou shalt not bow down to them.’ I say, what need of so many words, but
to show how subject we are to this sin of false worship? It concerns us,
therefore, to resist this sin. Where the tide is apt to run with greater
force, there we had need to make the banks higher and stronger. The plague
of idolatry is very infectious. ‘They were mingled among the heathen, and
served their idols.’ Psa
106: 35, 36. It is my advice to you, to avoid all occasions
of this sin.
(1) Come
not into the company of idolatrous Papists. Dare not to live under the
same roof with them, or you run into the devil’s mouth. John the divine
would not be in the has where Cerinthus the heretic was.
(2) Go
not into their chapels to see their crucifixes, or hear mass. As looking
on a harlot draws to adultery, so looking on the popish gilded picture
may draw to idolatry. Some go to see their idol-worship. A vagrant who
has nothing to lose, cares not to go among thieves; so such as have no
goodness in them, care not to what idolatrous places they come or to what
temptations they expose themselves; but you who have a treasure of good
principles about you, take heed the popish priests do not rob you of them,
and defile you with their images.
(3) Dare
not join in marriage with image-worshippers. Though Solomon was a man of
wisdom, his idolatrous wives drew his heart away from God. The people of
Israel entered into an oath and curse, that they would not give their daughters
in marriage to idolaters. Neh
10: 30. For a Protestant and Papist to marry, is to be unequally
yoked (2
Cor 6: 14); and there is more danger that the Papist will corrupt
the Protestant, shall hope that the Protestant will convert the Papist.
Mingle wine and vinegar, the vinegar will sooner sour the wine, than the
wine will sweeten the vinegar.
(4) Avoid
superstition, which is a bridge that leads over to Rome. Superstition is
bringing any ceremony, fancy, or innovation into God’s worship, which he
never appointed. It is provoking God, because it reflects much upon his
honour, as if he were not wise enough to appoint the manner of his own
worship. He hates all strange fire to be offered in his temple. Lev
10: 1. A ceremony may in time lead to a crucifix. They who contend
for the cross in baptism, why not have the oil, salt, and cream as well,
the one being as ancient as the other? They who are for altar-worship,
and will bow to the east, may in time bow to the Host. Take heed of all
occasions of idolatry, for idolatry is devil-worship. Psalm
106: 37. If you search through the whole Bible, there is not
one sin that God has more followed with plagues than idolatry. The Jews
have a saying, that in every evil that befalls them, there is uncia
aurei vituli, an ounce of the golden
calf in it. Hell is a place for idolaters. ‘For without are idolaters.’ Rev
22: 15. Senesius calls the devil a rejoicer at idols, because
the image-worshippers help to fill hell.
Use three.
That you may be preserved from idolatry and image-worship. (1) Get good
principles, that you may be able to oppose the gainsayer. Whence does the
popish religion get ground? Not from the goodness of their cause, but from
the ignorance of their people. (2) Get love to God. The wife that loves
her husband is safe from the adulterer; and the soul that loves Christ
is safe from the idolater. (3) Pray that God will keep you. Though it is
true, there is nothing in an image to tempt (for if we pray to an image,
it cannot hear, and if we pray to God by an image, he will not hear), yet
we know not our own hearts, or how soon we may be drawn to vanity, if God
leaves us. Therefore pray that you be not enticed by false worship, or
receive the mark of the beast in your right hand or forehead. Pray, ‘Hold
thou me up, and I shall be safe.’ Psa
119: 117. Lord, let me neither mistake my way for want of light,
nor leave the true way for want of courage. (4) Let us bless God who has
given us the knowledge of his truth, that we have tasted the honey of his
word, and our eyes are enlightened. Let us bless him that he has shown
us the pattern of his house, the right mode of worship; that he has discovered
to us the forgery and blasphemy of the Romish religion. Let us pray that
God will preserve pure ordinances and powerful preaching among us. Idolatry
came in at first by the want of good preaching. The people began to have
golden images when they had wooden priests.
II. I
the Lord thy God am a jealous God. The first reason why Israel must not
worship graven images is, because the Lord is a jealous God. ‘The Lord,
whose name is Jealous, is a jealous God.’ Exod
34: 14. Jealousy is taken, [1] In a good sense, as God is jealous
for his people. [2] In a bad sense, as he is jealous of his people.
[1] In
a good sense; as God is jealous for his people. ‘Thus saith the Lord, I
am jealous for Jerusalem, and for Zion, with a great jealousy.’ Zech
1: 14. God has a dear affection for his people, they are his
Hephzibah, or delight. Isa
62: 4. They are the apple of his eye, Zech
2: 8, to express how dear they are to him, and how tender he
is of them, Nihil
carius pupilla oculi [Nothing is
dearer than the apple of the eye]. Drusius. They are his spouse, adorned
with jewels of grace; they lie near his heart. He is jealous for his spouse,
therefore he will be avenged on those who wrong her. ‘The Lord shall stir
up jealousy like a man of war; he shall roar, he shall prevail against
his enemies.’ Isa
42: 13. What is done to the saints, God takes as done to himself
(2
Kings 19: 22); and the Lord will undo all that afflict Zion.
‘I will undo all that afflict thee.’ Zeph
3: 19.
[2] Jealousy
is taken in a bad sense, in which God is jealous of his people. It is so
taken in this commandment, ‘I the Lord thy God am a jealous God.’ I am
jealous lest you should go after false gods, or worship the true God in
a false manner; lest you defile your virgin-profession by images. God will
have his spouse to keep close to him, and not go after other lovers. ‘Thou
shalt not be for another man’ Hos
3: 3. He cannot bear a rival. Our conjugal love, a love joined
with adoration and worship, must be given to God only.
Use one.
Let us give God no just cause to be jealous. A good wife will be so discreet
and chaste, as to give her husband no just occasion of jealousy. Let us
avoid all sin, especially this of idolatry, or image-worship. It is heinous,
after we have entered into a marriage covenant with God, to prostitute
ourselves to an image. Idolatry is spiritual adultery, and God is a jealous
God, he will avenge it. Image-worship makes God abhor a people. ‘They moved
him to jealousy with their graven images. When God heard this, he was wrath,
and greatly abhorred Israel.’ Psa
78: 58, 59. ‘Jealousy is the rage of a man.’ Prov
6: 34. Image-worship enrages God; it makes God divorce a people.
‘Plead with your mother, plead; for she is not my wife.’ Hos
2: 2. ‘Jealousy is cruel as the grave.’ Cant
8: 6. As the grave devours men’s bodies, so God will devour
image-worshippers.
Use two.
If God be a jealous God, let it be remembered by those whose friends are
popish idolaters, and who are hated by their friends, because they are
of a different religion, and perhaps their maintenance cut off from them.
Oh, remember, God is a jealous God; better move your parents to hatred,
than move God to jealousy! Their anger cannot do you so much hurt as God’s.
If they will not provide for you, God will. ‘When my father and my mother
forsake me, then the Lord will take me up.’ Psa
27: 10.
III.
Visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto the third and
fourth generation. Here is the second reason against image-worship. There
is a twofold visiting. There is God’s visiting in mercy. ‘God will surely
visit you:’ that is, he will bring you into the land of Canaan, the type
of heaven. Gen
50: 25. Thus God has visited us with the sunbeams of his favour;
he has made us swim in a sea of mercy. This is a happy visitation. There
is God’s visiting in anger. ‘Shall I not visit for these things?’ that
is, God’s visiting with the rod. Jer
5: 9. ‘What will ye do in the day of visitation?’ that is, in
the day when God shall visit with his judgements. Isa
10: 3. Thus God’s visiting is taken in this commandment, ‘visiting
iniquity,’ that is, punishing iniquity. Observe here three things.
[1] That
sin makes God visit. ‘Visiting iniquity.’ Sin is the cause why God visits
with sickness, poverty, &c. ‘If they keep not my commandments, then
will I visit their transgressions with the rod.’ Psa
89: 31, 32. Sin twists the cords which pinch us; it creates
all our troubles, is the gall in our cup, and the gravel in our bread.
Sin is the Trojan horse, the Phaeton that sets all on fire; it is the womb
of our sorrows, and the grave of our comfort. God visits for sin.
[2] One
special sin for which God’s visits, is idolatry and image-worship. ‘Visiting
the iniquity of the fathers.’ Most of his envenomed arrows have been shot
among idolaters. ‘Go now unto my place which was in Shiloh, where I set
my name at the first, and see what I did to it.’ Jer
7: 12. For Israel’s idolatry he suffered their army to be routed,
their priests slain, the ark taken captive, of the returns of which to
Shiloh we never read any more. Jerusalem was the most famous metropolis
of the world; there was the temple. ‘Whither the tribes go up, the tribes
of the Lord.’ Psa
122: 4. But for the high places and images, that city was besieged
and taken by the Chaldean forces. 2
Kings 25: 4. When images were set up in Constantinople, the
chief seat of the Eastern empire, a city which in the eye of the world
was impregnable, it was taken by the Turks, and many cruelly massacred.
The Turks in their triumphs at that time reproached the idolatrous Christians,
caused an image or crucifix to be carried through the streets in contempt,
and threw dirt upon it, crying, ‘This is the god of the Christians.’ Here
was God’s visitation for their idolatry. God has set special marks of his
wrath upon idolaters. At a place called Epoletium, there perished by an
earthquake 350 persons, while they were offering sacrifice to idols. Idolatry
brought misery upon the Eastern churches, and removed the golden candlesticks
of Asia. For this iniquity God visits.
[3] Idolatrous
persons are enemies not to their own souls only, but to their children.
‘Visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon their children.’ As an idolatrous
father entails his land of inheritance, so he entails God’s anger and curse
upon his children. A jealous husband, finding his wife has stained her
fidelity, may justly cast her offend her children too, because they are
none of his. If the father be a traitor to his prince, no wonder if all
the children suffer. God may visit the iniquity of image-worshippers upon
their children.
But is
it not said, ‘Every man shall die for his own sin; the son shall not bear
the iniquity of the father?’ 2
Chron 25: 4, Ezek
18: 20. How then does God say, he ‘will visit the iniquity of
the fathers upon the children?’
Though
the son be not damned, yet he may be severely punished for his father’s
sin. ‘God layeth up his iniquity for his children’ (Job
21: 19); that is, God lays up the punishment of his iniquity
for his children — the child smarts for the father’s sin. Jeroboam thought
to have established the kingdom by idolatrous worship, but it brought ruin
upon him, and all his posterity. 1
Kings 14: 10. Ahab’s idolatry wronged his posterity, which lost
the kingdom, and were all beheaded. ‘They took the king’s sons, and slew
seventy persons.’ 2
Kings 10: 7. Here God visited the iniquity of the father upon
the children. As a son catches an hereditary disease from his father, the
stone or gout, so he catches misery from him: his father’s sin ruins him.
Use one.
How sad is it to be the child of an idolater! It had been sad to have been
one of Gehazi’s children, who had leprosy entailed upon them. ‘The leprosy
of Naaman shall cleave unto thee and unto thy seed for ever.’ 2
Kings 5: 27. So it is sad to be a child of an idolater, or image-worshipper;
for his seed are exposed to heavy judgements in this life. ‘God visits
the iniquity of the fathers upon their children.’ Methinks I hear God speak,
as in Isa
14: 21, ‘Prepare slaughter for his children, for the iniquity
of their fathers.’
Use two.
What a privilege it is to be the children of good parents. The parents
are in covenant with God, and God lays up mercy for their posterity. ‘The
just man walketh in his integrity, his children are blessed after him.’ Prov
20: 7. A religious parent does not procure wrath, but helps
to keep off wrath from his child; he seasons his child with religious principles,
he prays down a blessing on it; he is a loadstone to draw his child to
Christ by good counsel and example. Oh, what a privilege is it to be born
of godly, religious parents! Augustine says that his mother Monica travailed
with greater care and pains for his new birth, than for his natural. Wicked
idolaters entail misery on their posterity; God ‘visits the iniquity of
the fathers upon their children;’ but religious parents procure a blessing
upon their children; God reserves mercy for their posterity.
IV. Of
them that hate me. Another reason against image-worship is, that it is
hating God. The Papists, who worship God by an image, hate God. Image-worship
is a pretended love to God, but God interprets it as hating him. Quae
diligit alienum odit sponsum, ‘she
that loves another man, hates her own husband.’ An image-lover is a God
hater. Idolaters are said to go a whoring from God. Exod
34: 15. How can they love God? I shall show that image-worshippers
hate God, whatever love they pretend.
[1] They
who go contrary to his express will hate him. He says, you shall not set
up any statue, image, nor picture, to represent me; these things I hate.
‘Neither shalt thou set up any image; which the Lord thy God hateth.’ Deut
16: 22. Yet the idolater sets up images, and worships them.
This God looks upon as hating him. How does the child love his father that
does all it can to cross him?
[2] They
who turned Jephthah out of doors hated him, therefore they laboured to
shut him out of his father’s house. Judges
11: 7. The idolater shuts the truth out of doors; he blots out
the second commandment; he makes an image of the invisible God; he brings
a lie into God’s worship; which are clear proofs that he hates God.
[3] Though
idolaters love the false image of God in a picture, they hate his true
image in a believer. They pretend to honour Christ in a crucifix, and yet
persecute him in his members. Such hate God.
Use one.
This confutes those who plead for image-worshippers. They are very devout
people; they adore images; they set up the crucifix; kiss it; light candles
to it; therefore they love God. Nay, but who shall be judge of their love?
God says they hate him, and give religious adoration to a creature. They
hate God, and God hates them; and they shall never live with God whom he
hates; he will never lay such vipers in his bosom. Heaven is kept as paradise,
with a flaming sword, that they shall not enter in. He ‘repayeth them that
hate him to their face.’ Deut.
7: 10. He will shoot all his deadly arrows among idolaters.
All the plagues and curses in the book of God shall befall the idolater.
The Lord repays him that hates him to his face.
Use two.
Let it exhort all to flee from Romish idolatry. Let us not be among God-haters.
‘Little children, keep yourselves from idols.’ 1
John 5: 21. As you would keep your bodies from adultery, keep
your souls from idolatry. Take heed of images, they are images of jealousy
to provoke God to anger; they are damnable. You may perish by false devotions
as much as by real scandal; by image-worship, as by drunkenness and whoredom.
A man may die by poison as much as a pistol. We may go to hell by drinking
poison in the Romish cup of fornication, as much as by being pistoled with
gross and scandalous sins. To conclude, ‘God is a jealous God,’ who will
admit of no co-rival; He will ‘visit the iniquities of the fathers upon
their children;’ he will entail a plague upon the posterity of idolaters.
He interprets idolaters to be such as hate him. He that is an image-lover
is a God-hater. Therefore keep yourself pure from Romish idolatry; if you
love your souls, keep yourselves from idols.
V. Showing
mercy unto thousands.
Another
argument against image-worship, is that God is merciful to those who do
not provoke him with their images, and will entail mercy upon their posterity.
‘Shewing mercy unto thousands.’
The golden
sceptre of God’s mercy is here displayed, ‘shewing mercy to thousands.’
The heathen thought they praised Jupiter enough when they called him good
and great. Both excellencies of majesty and mercy meet in God. Mercy is
an innate propensity in God to do good to distressed sinners. God showing
mercy, makes his Godhead appear full of glory. When Moses said to God,
‘I beseech thee, show me thy glory;’ ‘I will,’ said God, ‘show mercy.’ Exod
33: 19. His mercy is his glory. Mercy is the name by which he
will be known. ‘The Lord passed by, and proclaimed, The Lord, the Lord
God, merciful and gracious.’ Exod
34: 6. Mercy proceeds primarily, and originally from God. He
is called the ‘Father of mercies’ (2
Cor 1: 3), because he begets all the mercies which are in the
creature. Our mercies compared with his are scarcely so much as a drop
to the ocean.
What
are the properties of God’s mercy?
(1) It
is free and spontaneous. To set up merit is to destroy mercy. Nothing can
deserve mercy or force it; we cannot deserve it nor force it, because of
our enmity. We may force God to punish us, but not to love us. ‘I will
love them freely.’ Hos
14: 4. Every link in the golden chain of salvation is wrought
and interwoven with free grace. Election is free. ‘He has chosen us in
him according to the good pleasure of his will.’ Eph
1: 4. Justification is free. ‘Being justified freely by his
grace.’ Rom
3: 24. Say not I am unworthy; for mercy is free. If God should
show mercy only to such as deserve it, he must show mercy to none.
(2) The
mercy which God shows is powerful. How powerful is that mercy which softens
a heart of stone! Mercy changed Mary Magdalen’s heart, out of whom seven
devils were cast: she who was an inflexible adamant was made a weeping
penitent. God’s mercy works sweetly, yet irresistibly; it allures, yet
conquers. The law may terrify, but mercy mollifies. Of what sovereign power
and efficacy is that mercy which subdues the pride and enmity of the heart,
and beats off those chains of sin in which the soul is held.
(3) The
mercy which God shows is superabundant. ‘Abundant in goodness and truth,
keeping mercy for thousands.’ Exod
34: 6. God visits iniquity ‘to the third and fourth generation’
only, but he shows mercy to a thousand generations. Exod
20: 5, 6. The Lord has treasures of mercy in store, and therefore
is said to be ‘plenteous in mercy’ (Psa
86: 5), and ‘rich in mercy’ (Eph
2: 4). The vial of God’s wrath drops only, but the fountain
of his mercy runs. The sun is not so full of light as God is of love.
God has
mercy of all dimensions. He has depth of mercy, it reaches as low as sinners;
and height of mercy, it reaches above the clouds.
God has
mercies for all seasons; mercies for the night, he gives sleep; nay, sometimes
he gives a song in the night. Psa
42: 8. He has also mercies for the morning. His compassions
‘are new every morning.’ Lam
3: 23.
God has
mercies for all sorts. Mercies for the poor: ‘He raiseth up the poor out
of the dust.’ 1
Sam 2: 8. Mercies for the prisoner: he ‘despiseth not his prisoners.’ Psa
69: 33. Mercies for the dejected: ‘In a little wrath I hid my
face from thee but with everlasting kindness will I have mercy on thee.’ Isa
54: 8. He has old mercies: ‘Thy mercies have been ever of old.’ Psa
25: 6. New mercies: ‘He has put a new song in my mouth.’ Psa
40: 3. Every time we draw our breath we suck in mercy. God has
mercies under heaven, and those we taste; and mercies in heaven, and those
we hope for. Thus his mercies are superabundant.
(4) The
mercy of God is abiding. ‘The mercy of the Lord is from everlasting to
everlasting.’ Psa
103: 17. God’s anger to his children lasts but a while (Psa
103: 9), but his mercy lasts for ever. His mercy is not like
the widow’s oil, which ran awhile, and then ceased (2
Kings 4: 6), but overflowing and everflowing. As his mercy is
without bounds, so is it without end. ‘His mercy endureth for ever.’ Psa
136. God never cuts off the entail of mercy from the elect.
In how
many ways is God said to show mercy?
(1) We
are all living monuments of his mercy. He shows mercy to us in daily supplying
us. He supplies us with health. Health is the sauce which makes life sweeter.
How would they prize this mercy who are chained to a sick-bed! God supplies
us with provisions. ‘God which fed me all my life long.’ Gen
48: 15. Mercy spreads our tables, and carves for us every bit
of bread we cat; we never drink but in the golden cup of mercy.
(2) God
shows mercy in lengthening out our gospel-liberties. 1
Cor 16: 9. There are many adversaries; many would stop the waters
of the sanctuary that that they should not run. We enjoy the sweet seasons
of grace, we hear joyful sounds, we see the goings of God in his sanctuary,
we enjoy Sabbath after Sabbath; the manna of the word falls about our tents,
when in other parts of the land there is no manna. God shows mercy to us
in continuing our forfeited privileges.
(3) He
shows mercy in preventing many evils from invading us. ‘Thou, O Lord, art
a shield for me.’Psa
3: 3. God has restrained the wrath of men, and been a screen
between us and danger; when the destroying angel has been abroad, and shed
his deadly arrow of pestilence, he has kept off the arrow that it has not
come near us.
(4) He
shows mercy in delivering us. ‘And I was delivered out of the mouth of
the lion’ (viz., Nero). 2
Tim 4: 17. He has restored us from the grave. May we not write
the writing of Hezekiah, ‘when he had been sick, and was recovered of his
sickness?’ Isa
38: 9. When we thought the sun of our life was setting God has
made it return to its former brightness.
(S) He
shows mercy in restraining us from sin. Lusts within are worse than lions
without. The greatest sign of God’s anger is to give men up to their sins.
‘So I gave them up to their own hearts’ lust.’ Psa
81: 12. While they sin themselves to hell, God has laid the
bridle of restraining grace upon us. As he said to Abimelech, ‘I withheld
thee from sinning against me.’ Gen
20: 6. So he has withheld us from those sins which might have
made us a prey to Satan, and a terror to ourselves.
(6) God
shows mercy in guiding and directing us. Is it not a mercy for one that
is out of the way to have a guide? [1] There is a providential guidance.
God guides our affairs for us; chalks out the way he would have us to walk
in. He resolves our doubts, unties our knots, and appoints the bounds of
our habitation. Acts
17: 26. [2] A spiritual guidance. ‘Thou shalt guide me with
thy counsel.’ Psa
73: 24. As Israel had a pillar of fire to go before them, so
God guides us with the oracles of his word, and the conduct of his Spirit.
He guides our heads to keep us from error; and he guides our feet to keep
us from scandal. Oh, what mercy is it to have God to be our guide and pilot!
‘For thy name’s sake, lead me and guide me.’ Psa
31: 3.
(7) God
shows mercy in correcting us. He is angry in love; he smites that he may
save. His rod is not a rod of iron to break us, but a fatherly rod to humble
us. ‘He, for our profit, that we might be partakers of his holiness.’ Heb
12: l0. Either he will mortify some corruption, or exercise
some grace. Is there not mercy in this? Every cross, to a child of God,
is like Paul’s cross wind, which, though it broke the ship, it brought
Paul to shore upon the broken pieces. Acts
27: 44.
(8) God
shows mercy in pardoning us, ‘Who is a God like unto thee, that pardoneth
iniquity?’ Mic
7: 18. It is mercy to feed us, rich mercy to pardon us. This
mercy is spun out of the bowels of the free grace, and is enough to make
a sick man well. ‘The inhabitant shall not say, I am sick; the people that
dwell therein shall be forgiven their iniquity.’ Isa
33: 24. Pardon of sin is a mercy of the first magnitude. God
seals the sinner’s pardon with a kiss. This made David put on his best
clothes, and anoint himself. His child was newly dead, and God had told
him the sword should not depart from his house, yet he anoints himself.
The reason was that God had sent him pardon by the prophet Nathan. ‘The
Lord has put away thy sin.’ 2
Sam 12: 13. Pardon is the only fit remedy for a troubled conscience.
What can give ease to a wounded spirit but pardoning mercy? Offer him the
honours and pleasure of the world. It is as if flowers and music were brought
to one that is condemned.
How may
I know that my sins are pardoned?
Where
God removes the guilt, he breaks the power of sin. ‘He will have compassion:
he will subdue our iniquities.’ Mic
7: 19. With pardoning love God gives subduing grace.
(9) God
shows his mercy in sanctifying us. ‘I am the Lord which sanctify you.’ Lev
20: 8. This is the partaking of the divine nature. 2
Pet 1: 4. God’s Spirit is a spirit of consecration; though it
sanctify us but in part, yet it is in every part. 1
Thess 5: 23. It is such a mercy that God cannot give it in anger.
If we are sanctified, we are elected. ‘God has chosen you to salvation
through sanctification.’ 2
Thess 2: 13. This prepares for happiness, as the seed prepares
for harvest. When the virgins had been anointed and perfumed, they were
to stand before the king (Esth
2: 12); SO, when we have had the anointing of God, we shall
stand before the King of heaven.
(10)
God shows mercy in hearing our prayers. ‘Have mercy upon me, and hear my
prayer.’ Psa
4: 1. Is it not a favour, when a man puts up a petition to the
king, to have it granted? So when we pray for pardon, adoption, and the
sense of God’s love, it is a signal mercy to have a gracious answer. God
may delay an answer, and yet not deny. You do not throw a musician money
at once, because you love to hear his music. God loves the music of prayer,
but does not always let us hear from him at once; but in due season gives
an answer of peace. ‘Blessed be God, which has not turned away my prayer,
nor his mercy from me.’ Psa
66: 20. If God does not turn away our prayer, he does not turn
away his mercy.
(11)
God shows mercy in saving us. ‘According to his mercy he saved us.’ Titus
3: 5. This is the top-stone of mercy, and it is laid in heaven.
Here mercy displays itself in all its orient colours. Mercy is mercy indeed,
when God perfectly refines us from all the lees and dregs of corruption;
when our bodies are made like Christ’s glorious body, and our souls like
the angels. Saving mercy is crowning mercy. It is not merely to be freed
from hell, but enthroned in a kingdom. In this life we desire God, rather
than enjoy him; but what rich mercy will it be to be fully possessed of
him, to see his smiling face, and to lay us in his bosom! This will fill
us with ‘joy unspeakable and full of glory.’ 1
Peter 1: 8. ‘I shall be satisfied, when I awake, with thy likeness.’Psa
17: 15.
Use one.
Let us not despair. What an encouragement we have here to serve God. He
shows mercy to thousands. Who would not be willing to serve a prince who
is given to mercy and clemency? God is represented with a rainbow round
about him, as an emblem of his mercy. Rev
4: 3. Acts of severity are forced from God; judgement is his
strange work. Isa
28: 21. The disciples, who are not said to wonder at the other
miracles of Christ, did wonder when the fig-tree was cursed and withered,
because it was not his manner to put forth acts of severity. God is said
to delight in mercy. Mic
7: 18. Justice is God’s left hand: mercy is his right hand.
He uses his right hand most; he is more used to mercy than to justice. Pronior
est Deus ad parcendum quam ad puniendum
[God is more inclined to mercy than to punishment]. God is said to be slow
to anger (Psa
103: 8), but ready to forgive. Psa
86: 5. This may encourage us to serve him. What argument will
prevail, if mercy will not? Were God all justice, it might frighten us
from him, but his mercy is a loadstone to draw us to him.
Use two.
Hope in God’s mercies. ‘The Lord taketh pleasure in them that fear him,
in those that hope in his mercy.’ Psa
147: 11. He counts it his glory to scatter pardons among men.
But I
have been a great sinner and sure there is no mercy for me!
Not if
thou goest on in sin, and art so resolved; but, if thou wilt break off
thy sins, the golden sceptre of mercy shall be held forth to thee. ‘Let
the wicked forsake his way, and let him return unto the Lord, and he will
have mercy upon him.’ Isa
55: 7. Christ’s blood is ‘a fountain opened for sin and for
uncleanness.’ Zech
13: 1. Mercy more overflows in God, than sin in us. His mercy
can drown great sins, as the sea covers great rocks. Some of the Jews who
had their hands imbrued in Christ’s blood, were saved by that blood. God
loves to magnify his goodness, to display the trophies of free grace, and
to set up his mercy in spite of sin. Therefore, hope in his mercy.
Use three.
Labour to know that God’s mercy is for you. He is ‘the God of my mercy.’ Psa.
59: 17. A man who was being drowned, seeing a rainbow, said,
‘What am I the better, though God will not drown the world, if I am drowned?’
So, what are we the better, though God is merciful, if we perish? Let us
labour to know God’s special mercy is for us.
How shall
we know it belongs to us?
(1) If
we put a high value and estimate upon it. He will not throw away his mercy
on them that slight it. We prize health, but we prize adopting mercy more.
This is the diamond ring; it outshines all other comforts.
(2) If
we fear God, if we have a reverend awe upon us, if we tremble at sin, and
flee from it, as Moses did from his rod turned into a serpent. ‘His mercy
is on them that fear him.’ Luke
1: 50.
(3) If
we take sanctuary in God’s mercy, we trust in it as a man saved by catching
hold of a cable. God’s mercy to us is a cable let down from heaven. By
taking fast hold of this by faith, we are saved. ‘I trust in the mercy
of God for ever.’ Psa
52: 8. As a man trusts his life and goods in a garrison, so
we trust our souls in God’s mercy.
How shall
we get a share in God’s special mercy?
(1) If
we would have mercy, it must be through Christ. Out of Christ no mercy
is to be had. We read in the old law, that none might come unto the holy
of holies, where the mercy-seat stood, but the high-priest: to signify
that we have nothing to do with mercy but through Christ our High-priest;
that the high-priest might not come near the mercy-seat without blood,
to show that we have no right to mercy, but through the expiatory sacrifice
of Christ’s blood, Lev
16: 14; that the high-priest might not, upon pain of death,
come near the mercy-seat without incense, Lev
16: 13, to show that there is no mercy from God without the
incense of Christ’s intercession. If we would have mercy, we must get a
part in Christ. Mercy swims to us through Christ’s blood.
(2) If
we would have mercy, we must pray for it. ‘Show us thy mercy, O Lord, and
grant us thy salvation.’ Psa
85: 7. ‘Turn thee unto me, and have mercy upon me.’ Psa
25: 16. Lord, put me not off with common mercy; give me not
only mercy to feed and clothe me, but mercy to pardon me; not only sparing
mercy, but saving mercy. Lord, give me the cream of thy mercies; let me
have mercy and loving kindness. ‘Who crowneth thee with loving kindness
and tender mercies.’ Psa
103: 4. Be earnest suitors for mercy; let your wants quicken
your importunity. We pray most fervently when we pray most feelingly.
VI. Of
them that love me.
God’s
mercy is for them that love him. Love is a grace that shines and sparkles
in his eye, as the precious stone upon Aaron’s breastplate. Love is a holy
expansion or enlargement of soul, by which it is carried with delight after
God, as the chief good. Aquinas defines love — Complacentia
amantis in amato; a complacent
delight in God, as our treasure. Love is the soul of religion; it is a
momentous grace. If we had knowledge as the angels, or faith of miracles,
yet without love it would profit nothing. 1
Cor 13: 2. Love is ‘the first and great commandment.’ Matt.
22: 38. It is so, because, if it be wanting, there can be no
religion in the heart; there can be no faith, for faith works by love. Gal
5: 6. All else is but pageantry, or a devout compliment. It
meliorates and sweetens all the duties of religion, it makes them savoury
meat, without which God cares not to taste them. It is the first and great
commandment, in respect of the excellence of this grace. Love is the queen
of graces; it outshines all others, as the sun the lesser planets. In some
respects it is more excellent than faith; though in one sense faith is
more excellent, virtute
unionis, as it unites us to Christ.
It puts upon us the embroidered robe of Christ’s righteousness, which is
brighter than any the angels wear. In another sense it is more excellent, respectu
durationis, in respect of the continuance
of it: it is the most durable grace; as faith and hope will shortly cease,
but love will remain. When all other graces, like Rachel, shall die in
travail, love shall revive. The other graces are in the nature of a lease,
for the term of life only; but love is a freehold that continues for ever.
Thus love carries away the garland from all other graces, it is the most
long-lived grace, it is a bud of eternity. This grace alone will accompany
us in heaven.
How must
our love to God be characterised?
(1) Love
to God must be pure and genuine. He must be loved chiefly for himself;
which the schoolmen call amor
amicitiae. We must love God, not
only for his benefits, but for those intrinsic excellencies with which
he is crowned. We must love God not only for the good which flows from
him, but for the good which is in him. True love is not mercenary, he who
is deeply in love with God, needs not be hired with rewards, he cannot
but love God for the beauty of his holiness; though it is not unlawful
to look for benefits. Moses had an eye to the recompense of reward (Heb
11: 26); but we must not love God for his benefits only, for
then it is not love of God, but self-love.
(2) Love
to God must be with all the heart. ‘Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with
all thy heart.’ Mark
12: 30. We must not love God a little, give him a drop or two
of our love; but the main stream must flow to him. The mind must think
of God, the will choose him, the affections pant after him. The true mother
would not have the child divided, nor will God have the heart divided.
We must love him with our whole heart. Though we may love the creature,
yet it must be a subordinate love. Love to God must be highest, as oil
swims above the water.
(3) Love
to God must be flaming. To love coldly is the same as not to love. The
spouse is said to be amore
perculsa, ‘sick of love.’ Cant
2: 5. The seraphim are so called from their burning love. Love
turns saints into seraphim; it makes them burn in holy love to God. Many
waters cannot quench this love.
How may
we know whether we love God?
(1) He
who loves God desires his presence. Lovers cannot be long asunder, they
soon have their fainting fits, for want of a sight of the object of their
love. A soul deeply in love with God desires the enjoyment of him in his
ordinances, in word, prayer, and sacraments. David was ready to faint away
and die when he had not a sight of God. ‘My soul fainteth for God.’ Psa
84: 2. Such as care not for ordinances, but say, When will the
Sabbath be over? plainly discover want of love to God.
(2) He
who loves God, does not love sin. ‘Ye that love the Lord, hate evil.’ Psa
97: 10. The love of God, and the love of sin, can no more mix
together than iron and clay. Every sin loved, strikes at the being of God;
but he who loves God, has an antipathy against sin. He who would part two
lovers is a hateful person. God and the believing soul are two lovers;
sin parts between them, therefore the soul is implacably set against it.
By this try your love to God. How could Delilah say she loved Samson, when
she entertained correspondence with the Philistine, who were his mortal
enemies? How can he say he loves God who loves sin, which is God’s enemy?
(3) He
who loves God is not much in love with anything else. His love is very
cool to worldly things. His love to God moves swiftly, as the sun in the
firmament; to the world it moves slowly, as the sun on the dial. The love
of the world eats out the heart of religion; it chokes good affections,
as earth puts out the fire. The world was a dead thing to Paul. ‘The world
is crucified unto me and I to the world.’ Gal
6: 14. In Paul we may see both the picture and pattern of a
mortified man. He that loves God, uses the world but chooses God. The world
is his pension, but God is his portion. Psa
119: 57. The world engages him, but God delights and satisfies
him. He says as David, ‘God my exceeding joy,’ the gladness or cream of
my joy. Psa
43: 4.
(4) He
who loves God cannot live without him. Things we love we cannot be without.
A man can do without music or flowers, but not food; so a soul deeply in
love with God looks upon himself as undone without him. ‘Hide not thy face
from me, lest I be like them that go down into the pit.’ Psa
143: 7. He says as Job, ‘I went mourning without the sun;’ chap.
30: 28. I have starlight, I want the Sun of Righteousness; I
enjoy not the sweet presence of my God. Is God our chief good, and we cannot
live without him? Alas! how do they show they have no love to God who can
do well enough without him! Let them have but corn and oil, and you shall
never hear them complain of the want of God.
(5)
He who loves God will be at any pains to get him. What pains the merchant
takes, what hazards he runs, to have a rich return from the Indies! Extremos
currit mercator ad Indos [The merchant
races to the farthest Indies]. Jacob loved Rachel, and he could endure
the heat by day, and the frost by night, that he might enjoy her. A soul
that loves God will take any pains for the fruition of him. ‘My soul followeth
hard after thee.’ Psa
63: 8. Love is pondus
animae [the pendulum of the soul].
Augustine. It is as the weight which sets the clock going. It is much in
prayer, weeping, fasting; it strives as in agony, that he may obtain him
whom his soul loves. Plutarch reports of the Gauls, an ancient people of
France, that after they had tasted the sweet wine of Italy, they never
rested till they had arrived at that country. He who is in love with God,
never rests till he has a part in him. ‘I will seek him whom my soul loveth.’ Cant
3: 2. How can they say they love God, who are not industrious
in the use of means to obtain him? ‘A slothful man hideth his hand in his
bosom.’ Prov
19: 24. He is not in agony, but lethargy. If Christ and salvation
would drop as a ripe fig into his mouth, he would be content to have them;
but he is loath to put himself to too much trouble. Does he love his friend,
who will not undertake a journey to see him?
(6)
He who loves God, prefers him before estate and life. [1] Before estate.
‘For whom I have suffered the loss of all things.’ Phil
3: 8. Who that loves a rich jewel would not part with a flower
for it? Galeacius, marquis of Vico, parted with a fair estate to enjoy
God in his pure ordinances. When a Jesuit persuaded him to return to his
popish religion in Italy, promising him a large sum of money, he said,
‘Let their money perish with them who esteem all the gold in the world
worth one day’s communion with Jesus Christ and his Holy Spirit.’ [2] Before
life. ‘They loved not their lives unto the death.’ Rev
12: 2: Love to God carries the soul above the love of life and
the fear of death.
(7)
He who loves God loves his favourites, the saints. 1
John 5: 1. Idem
est motus animi in imaginem et rem
[The mind reacts to the likeness of an object just as it does to the object
itself]. To love a man for his grace, and the more we see of God in him,
the more we love him, is an infallible sign of love to God. The wicked
pretend to love God, but hate and persecute his image. Does he love his
prince who abuses his statue, or tears his picture? They seem indeed to
show great reverence to saints departed; they have great reverence for
St. Paul, and St. Stephen, and St. Luke; they canonise dead saints, but
persecute living saints; and do they love God? Can it be imagined that
he loves God who hates his children because they are like him? If Christ
were alive again, he would not escape a second persecution.
(8)
If we love God we cannot but be fearful of dishonouring him, as the more
a child loves his father the more he is afraid to displease him, and we
weep and mourn when we have offended him. ‘Peter went out and wept bitterly.’ Matt
26: 75. Peter might well think that Christ dearly loved him
when he took him up to the mount where he was transfigured, and showed
him the glory of heaven in a vision. That he should deny Christ after he
had received such signal tokens of his love, broke his heart with grief
‘He wept bitterly.’ Are our eyes dropping tears of grief for sin against
God? It is a blessed evidence of our love to God; and such shall find mercy.
‘He shows mercy to thousands of them that love him.
Use.
Let us be lovers of God. We love our food, and shall we not love him that
gives it? All the joy we hope for in heaven is in God; and shall not he
who shall be our joy then, be our love now? It is a saying of Augustine,
Annon poena satis magna est non amare te? ‘Is it not punishment enough,
Lord, not to love thee?’ And again, Animam
meam in odio haberem. ‘I would
hate my own soul if I did not find it loving God.’
What
are the incentives to provoke and inflame our love to God?
(1)
God’s benefits bestowed on us. If a prince bestows continual favours on
a subject, and that subject has any ingenuity, he cannot but love his prince.
God is constantly heaping benefits upon us, ‘filling our hearts with food
and gladness.’ Acts
14: 17. As streams of water out of the rock followed Israel
whithersoever they went, so God’s blessings follow us every day. We swim
in a sea of mercy. That heart is hard that is not prevailed with by all
God’s blessings to love him. Magnes
amoris amor [Love attracts love].
Kindness works even on a brute: the ox knows his owner.
(2)
Love to God would make duties of religion facile and pleasant. I confess
that to him who has no love to God, religion must needs be a burden; and
I wonder not to hear him say, ‘What a weariness is it to serve the Lord!’
It is like rowing against the tide. But love oils the wheels, it makes
duty a pleasure. Why are the angels so swift and winged in God’s service,
but because they love him? Jacob thought seven years but little for the
love he bare to Rachel. Love is never weary. He who loves money is not
weary of telling it: and he who loves God is not weary of serving him.
(3)
It is advantageous. There is nothing lost by love to God. ‘Eye has not
seen, &c., the things which God has prepared for them that love him.’ 1
Cor 2: 9. Such glorious rewards are laid up for them that love
God, that as Augustine says, ‘they not only transcend our reason, but faith
itself is not able to comprehend them.’ A crown is the highest ensign of
worldly glory; but God has promised a ‘crown of life to them that love
him,’ and a never-fading crown. James
1: 12. 1
Pet 5: 4.
(4)
By loving God we know that he loves us. ‘We love him because he first loved
us.’ 1
John 5: 19. If ice melts, it is because the sun has shone upon
it; so if the frozen heart melts in love, it is because the Sun of Righteousness
has shone upon it.
What
means should be used to excite our love to God?
(1)
Labour to know God aright. The schoolmen say truly, Bonum
non amatur quod non cognoscitur;
‘we cannot love that which we do not know.’ God is the most eligible good;
all excellencies which lie scattered in the creature are united in him;
he is Optimus
maximus. Wisdom, beauty, riches,
love, all concentrate in him. How fair was that tulip which had the colours
of all tulips in it! All perfections and sweetnesses are eminently in God.
Did we know God more, and by the eye of faith see his orient beauty, our
hearts would be fired with love to him.
(2)
Make the Scriptures familiar to you. Augustine says that before his conversion
he took no pleasure in Scripture, but afterwards it was his chief delight.
The book of God discovers God to us, in his holiness, wisdom, veracity,
and truth; it represents him as rich in mercy, and encircled with promises.
Augustine calls the Scripture a golden epistle, or love-letter, sent from
God to us. By reading this love-letter we become more enamoured with God;
as by reading lascivious books, comedies, romances, &c., lust is excited.
(3)
Meditate much upon God, and this will promote love to him. ‘While I was
musing, the fire burned.’ Psa
39: 3. Meditation is as bellows to the affections. Meditate
on God’s love in the gift of Christ. ‘God so loved the world that he gave
his only begotten Son,’ &c. John
3: 16. That God should give Christ to us, and not to angels
that fell, that the Sun of Righteousness should shine in our horizon, that
he is revealed to us, and not to others; what wonderful love is this! ‘Can
one go upon hot coals, and his feet not be burned?’ Prov
6: 28. Who can meditate on God’s love, who can tread on these
hot coals, and his heart not burn in love? Beg a heart to love God. The
affection of love is natural, but not the grace of love. Gal
5: 22. This fire of love is kindled from heaven; beg that it
may burn upon the altar of your heart. Surely the request is pleasing to
God, and he will not deny such a prayer as ‘Lord, give me a heart to love
thee.’
VII.
And keep my commandments.
Love
and obedience, like two sisters, must go hand and hand. ‘If ye love me,
keep my commandments.’ John
14: 15. Probatio
delectionis est exhibitio operis
[We show our love by performing the work]. The son that loves his father
will obey him. Obedience pleases God. ‘To obey is better than sacrifice.’ 1
Sam 15: 22. In sacrifice, a dead beast only is offered; in obedience,
a living soul; in sacrifice, only a part of the fruit is offered; in obedience,
fruit and tree and all; man offers himself up to God. ‘Keep my commandments.’
It is not said, God shows mercy to thousands that know his commandments,
but that keep them. Knowing his commandments, without keeping them, does
not entitle any to mercy. The commandment is not only a rule of knowledge,
but of duty. God gives us his commandments, not only as a landscape to
look upon, but as his will and testament, which we are to perform. A good
Christian, like the sun, not only sends forth light, but makes a circuit
round the world. He has not only the light of knowledge; but moves in a
sphere of obedience.
[1]
We should keep the commandments from faith. Our obedience ought, profluere
a fide ‘to spring from faith.’
It is called, therefore, ‘the obedience of faith.’ Rom
16: 26. Abel, by faith, offered up a better sacrifice than Cain. Heb
11: 4. Faith is a vital principle, without which all our services
are opera
mortua, dead works. Heb
6: 1. It meliorates and sweetens obedience, and makes it come
off with a better relish.
But
why must faith be mixed with obedience to the commandments?
Because
faith eyes Christ in every duty, in whom both the person and offering are
accepted. The high-priest under the law laid his hand upon the head of
the slain beast, which pointed to the Messiah. Exod
29: 10. So faith in every duty lays its hand upon the head of
Christ. His blood expiates their guilt, and the sweet odour of his intercession
perfumes our works of obedience. ‘He has made us accepted in the beloved.’ Eph
1: 6.
[2]
Keeping the commandments must be uniform. We must make conscience of one
commandment as well as of another. ‘Then shall I not be ashamed, when I
have respect unto all thy commandments.’ Psa
119: 6. Every commandment has jus divinum, the same stamp of
divine authority upon it; and if I obey one precept because God commands,
by the same reason I must obey all. Some obey the commands of the first
table, but are careless of the duties of the second: some of the second
and not of the first. Physicians have a rule that when the body sweats
in one part, and is cold in another, it is a sign of a distemper; so when
men seem zealous in some duties of religion, but are cold and frozen in
others, it is a sign of hypocrisy. We must have respect to all God’s commandments.
But
who can keep all his commandments?
There
is a fulfilling God’s commands, and a keeping of them. Though we cannot
fulfil all, yet we may be said to keep them in an evangelical sense. We
may facere,
though not perficere
[build, though not complete]. We keep the commandments evangelically: (1)
When we make conscience of every command, when, though we come short in
every duty, we dare not neglect any. (2) When our desire is to keep every
commandment. ‘O that my ways were directed to keep thy statutes!’ Psa
119: 5. What we want in strength we make up in will. (3) When
we grieve that we can do no better; weep when we fail; prefer bills of
complaint against ourselves; and judge ourselves for our failings. Rom
7: 24. (4) When we endeavour to obey every commandment, elicere
conatum. ‘I press toward the mark.’ Phil
3: 14. We strive as in agony; and, if it lay in our power, we
would fully comport with every commandment. (5) When, falling short, and
unable to come up to the full latitude of the law, we look to Christ’s
blood to sprinkle our imperfect obedience, and, with the grains of his
merits cast into the scales, to make it pass current. This, in an evangelical
sense, is to keep all the commandments; and though it be not to satisfaction,
yet it is to acceptation.
[3]
Keeping God’s commandments must be voluntary. ‘If ye be willing and obedient.’ Isa
1: 19. God required a free-will offering. Deut
16: 10. David will run the way of God’s commandments, that is
freely and cheerfully. Psa
119: 32. Lawyers have a rule that adverbs are better than adjectives;
that it is not the bonum,
but the bene;
not the doing much, but the doing well. A musician is not commended for
playing long, but for playing well. Obeying God willingly is accepted. Virtus
nolentium nulla est [Righteous
deeds done unwillingly are worthless]. The Lord hates that which is forced;
which is paying a tax rather than an offering. Cain served God grudgingly;
he brought his sacrifice, not his heart. To obey God’s commandments unwillingly,
is like the devils who came out of the men possessed, at Christ’s command,
but with reluctance, and against their will. Matt
8: 29. Obedientia
praest and adest non timore poenae, sed amore Dei
[Obedience is the chief thing, and this not through fear of punishment,
but for love of God]. God duties must not be pressed nor beaten out of
us, as the waters came from the rock, when Moses smote it with his rod,
but must drop freely from us as myrrh from the tree, or honey from the
comb. If a willing mind be wanting, the flower is wanting to perfume our
obedience, and to make it a sweet-smelling savour to God.
That
we may keep God’s commandments willingly, let these things be well weighed:
(1) Our willingness is more esteemed than our service. David counsels Solomon
not only to serve God, but with a willing mind. 1
Chron 28: 9. The will makes sin to be worse, and duty to be
better. To obey willingly shows we do it with love; and this crowns all
our services.
(2)
There is that in the law-giver which may make us willing to obey the commandments,
which is God’s indulgence to us. [1] God does not require the summum
jus as absolutely necessary to
salvation; he expects not perfect obedience, he requires sincerity only.
Do but act from a principle of love, and aim at honouring God in your obedience,
and it is accepted. [2] In the gospel a surety is admitted. The law would
not favour us so far; but now God so indulges us, that what we cannot do
of ourselves we may do by proxy. Jesus Christ is ‘a Surety of a better
testament.’Heb
7: 22. We fall short in everything, but God looks upon us in
our Surety; and Christ having fulfilled all righteousness, it is as if
we had fulfilled the law in our own persons. [3] God gives strength to
do what he requires. The law called for obedience, but though it required
brick, it gave no straw; but in the gospel, God, with his commands, gives
power. ‘Make ye a new heart.’ Ezek
18: 31. Alas! it is above our strength, we may as well make
a new world. ‘A new heart also will I give you.’ Ezek
36: 26. God commands us to cleanse ourselves. ‘Wash you, make
you clean.’ Isa
1: 16. But ‘who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean?’ Job
14: 4. Therefore the precept is turned into a promise. ‘From
all your filthiness will I cleanse you.’ Ezek
36: 25. When the child cannot go, the nurse takes it by the
hand. ‘I taught Ephraim also to go, taking them by their arms.’ Hos
11: 3.
(3)
There is that in God’s commandments which may make us willing. They are
not burdensome.
[1]
A Christian, so far as he is regenerate, consents to God’s commands. ‘I
consent to the law that it is good.’ Rom
7: 16. What is done with consent is no burden. If a virgin gives
her consent, the match goes on cheerfully; if a subject consents to his
prince’s laws because he sees the equity and reasonableness of them they
are not irksome. A regenerate person in his judgement approves, and in
his will consents, to God’s commandments and therefore they are not burdensome.
[2]
God’s commandments are sweetened with joy and peace. Cicero questions whether
that can properly be called a burden which is carried with delight and
pleasure. Utrum
onus appellatur quod laetitia fertur
[Is a task performed with joy rightly so called]? If a man carries a bag
of money that has been given him, it is heavy, but the delight takes off
the burden. When God gives inward joy, it makes the commandments delightful.
‘I will make them joyful in my house of prayer.’ Isa
56: 7. Joy is like oil to the wheels, which makes a Christian
run in the way of God’s commandments, so that it is not burdensome.
[3]
God’s commandments are advantageous. They are preventive of evil; a curb-bit
to check us from sin. What mischiefs should we not run into if we had not
afflictions to humble us, and the commandments to restrain us! God’s commandments
keep us within bounds, as the yoke keeps the beast from straggling. We
should be thankful to God for precepts. Had he not set his commandments
as a hedge or bar in our way, we might have run to hell and never stopped.
There is nothing in the commandments but what is for our good. ‘To keep
the commandments of the Lord, and his statutes, which I command thee for
thy good.’ Deut
10: 13. God commands us to read his word; and what hurt is in
this? He bespangles the word with promises; as if a father should bid his
son read his last will and testament, wherein he makes over a fair estate
to him. He bids us pray and tells us if we ‘ask, it shall be given.’ Matt
7: 7. Ask power against sin, ask salvation, and it shall be
given. If you had a friend who should say, ‘Come when you will to me, I
will supply you with money,’ would you think it a trouble to visit that
friend often? God commands us to fear him. ‘But fear thy God.’ Lev
25: 43. There is honey in the mouth of this command. ‘His mercy
is on them that fear him.’ Luke
1: 50. God commands us to believe, and why so? ‘Believe, and
thou shalt be saved.’ Acts
16: 31. Salvation is the crown set upon the head of faith. Good
reason then have we to obey God’s commands willingly, since they are for
our good, and are not so much our duty as our privilege.
[4]
God’s commandments are ornamental. Omnia
quae praestari jubet Deus, non onerant nos sed ornant.
Salvianus. ‘God’s commandments do not burden us, but adorn us.’ It is an
honour to be employed in a king’s service; and much more to be employed
in his ‘by whom kings reign.’ To walk in God’s commandments proves us to
be wise. ‘Behold, I have taught you statutes: keep, therefore, and do them;
for this your wisdom.’ Deut
4: 5, 6. To be wise is a great honour. We may say of every commandment
of God, as Prov
4: 9: It ‘shall give to thy head an ornament of grace.’
[5]
The commands of God are infinitely better than the commands of sin, which
are intolerable. Let a man be under the command of any lust, and how he
tires himself! What hazards he runs to endangering his health and soul,
that he may satisfy his lust! ‘They weary themselves to commit iniquity.’ Jer
9: 5. And are not God’s commandments more equal, facile, pleasant,
than the commands of sin? Chrysostom says true, ‘To act virtue is easier
than to act vice.’ Temperance is less troublesome than drunkenness; meekness
is less troublesome than passion and envy. There is more difficulty in
the contrivance and pursuit of a wicked design than in obeying the commands
of God. Hence a sinner is said to travail with iniquity. Psa
7: 14. A woman while she is in travail is in pain — to show
what pain and trouble a wicked man has in bringing forth sin. Many have
gone with more pains to hell, than others have to heaven. This may make
us obey the commandments willingly.
[6]
Willingness in obedience makes us resemble the angels. The cherubim, types
representing the angels, are described with wings displayed, to show how
ready the angels are to serve God. God no sooner speaks the word, but they
are ambitious to obey. How are they ravished with joy while praising God!
In heaven we shall be as the angels, and by our willingness to obey God’s
commands, we should be like them here. We pray that God’s will may be done
by us on earth as it is in heaven; and is it not done willingly there?
It is also done constantly. ‘Blessed is he who does righteousness at all
times.’ Psa
106: 3. Our obedience to the command must be as the fire of
the altar, which never went out. Lev
6: 13. It must be as the motion of the pulse, always beating.
The wind blows off the fruit; but the fruits of our obedience must not
be blown off by any wind of persecution. ‘I have chosen you that ye should
go and bring forth fruit, and that your fruit should remain.’ John
15: 16.
Use.
They are reproved who live in a wilful breach of God’s commandments, in
malice, uncleanness, intemperance; and walk antipodes to the commandments.
To live in a wilful breach of the commandment is:
(1)
Against reason. Are we able to stand out against God? ‘Do we provoke the
Lord, are we stronger than he?’ 1
Cor 10: 22. Can we measure arms with God? Can impotence stand
against omnipotence? A sinner acts against reason.
(2)
It is against equity. We have our being from God; and is it not just that
we should obey him who gives us our being? We have all our subsistence
from him; and is it not fitting, that as he gives us our allowance, we
should give him our allegiance? If a general gives his soldiers pay, he
expects them to march at his command; so for us to live in violation of
the divine commands, is manifestly unjust.
(3)
It is against nature. Every creature in its kind obeys God’s law. [1] Animate
creatures obey him. God spake to the fish, and it set Jonah ashore. Jonah
2: 10. [2] Inanimate creatures. The wind and the sea obey him. Mark
4: 41, The very stones, if God give them a commission, will
cry out against the sins of men. ‘The stone shall cry out of the wall,
and the beam out of the timber shall answer it.’ Hab
2: 11. None disobey God but wicked men and devils; and can we
find no better companions?
(4)
It is against kindness. How many mercies have we to allure us to obey!
We have miracles of mercy; the apostle therefore joins these two together,
disobedient and unthankful, which dyes sin with a crimson colour. 2
Tim 3: 2. As the sin is great, for it is a contempt of God,
a hanging out of the flag of defiance against him, and rebellion is as
the sin of witchcraft, so the punishment will be great. It cuts off from
mercy. God’s mercy is for them that keep his commandments, but there is
no mercy for them that live in a wilful breach of them. All God’s judgements
set themselves in battle array against the disobedient: temporal judgements
and eternal. Lev
26: 15, 16. Christ comes in flames of fire, to take vengeance
on them that obey not God. 2
Thess 1: 8. God has iron chains to hold those who break the
golden chain of his commands; chains of darkness by which the devils are
held ever. Jude
6. God has time enough, as long as eternity, to reckon with
all the wilful breakers of his commandments.
How
shall we keep God’s commandments?
Pray
for the Spirit of God. We cannot do it in our strength. The Spirit must
work in us both to will and to do. Phil
2: 13. When the loadstone draws, the iron moves; so, when God’s
Spirit draws, we run in the way of his commandments.
2.3 The Third Commandment
‘Thou
shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain: For the Lord will
not hold him guiltless that taketh his name in vain.’ Exod
20: 7.
This
commandment has two parts: 1. A negative expressed, that we must not take
God’s name in vain; that is, cast any reflections and dishonour on his
name. 2. An affirmative implied. That we should take care to reverence
and honour his name. Of this latter I shall speak more fully, under the
first petition in the Lord’s Prayer, ‘Hallowed be thy name.’ I shall now
speak of the negative expressed in this commandment, or the prohibition,
‘Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain.’ The tongue
is an unruly member. All the parts and organs of the body are defiled with
sin, as every branch of wormwood is bitter; ‘but the tongue is full of
deadly poison.’ James
3: 8. There is no one member of the body breaks forth more in
God’s dishonour than the tongue. We have this commandment, therefore, as
a bridle for the tongue, to bind it to its good behaviour. This prohibition
is backed with a strong reason, ‘For the Lord will not hold him guiltless;’
that is he will not hold him innocent. Men of place and eminence deem it
disgraceful to have their names abused and inflict heavy penalties on the
offenders. ‘The Lord will not hold him guiltless that taketh his name in
vain;’ but looks upon him as a criminal, and will severely punish him.
The thing here insisted on is, that great care must be had, that the holy
and reverend name of God be not profaned by us, or taken in vain. We take
God’s name in vain:
[1] When
we speak slightly and irreverently of his name. ‘That thou mayest fear
this glorious and fearful name, The Lord thy God.’ Deut
28: 58. David speaks of God with reverence. ‘The mighty God,
even the Lord.’ Psa
50: 1. ‘That men may know, that thou, whose name alone is Jehovah,
art the Most High over all the earth. Psa
83: 18. The disciples, when speaking of Jesus, hallowed his
name. ‘Jesus of Nazareth, which was a prophet mighty in deed and word before
God and all the people.’ Luke
24: 19. When we mention the names of kings, we give them some
title of honour, as ‘excellent majesty;’ so should we speak of God with
the sacred reverence that is due to the infinite majesty of heaven. When
we speak slightly of God or his works, he interprets it as a contempt,
and taking his name in vain.
[2] When
we profess God’s name, but do not live answerably to it, we take it in
vain. ‘They profess that they know God, but in works they deny him.’ Titus
1: 16. When men’s tongues and lives are contrary to one another,
when, under a mask of profession, they lie and cozen, and are unclean,
they make use of God’s name to abuse him, and take it in vain. Simulata
sanctitas duplex iniquitas [Pretended
holiness is merely double wickedness]. ‘The name of God is blasphemed among
the Gentiles through you.’ Rom
2: 24. When the heathen saw the Jews, who professed to be God’s
people, to be scandalous, it made them speak evil of God, and hate the
true religion for their sakes.
[3] When
we use God’s name in idle discourse. He is not to be spoken of but with
a holy awe upon our hearts. To bring his name in at every turn, when we
are not thinking of him, to say, ‘O God!’ or, ‘O Christ!’ or, ‘As God shall
save my soul’ — is to take God’s name in vain. How many are guilty here!
Though they have God in their mouths, they have the devil in their hearts.
It is a wonder that fire does not come out from the Lord to consume them,
as it did Nadab and Abihu. Lev
10: 2.
[4] When
we worship him with our lips, but not with our hearts. God calls for the
heart, ‘My son, give me thy heart.’ Prov
23: 26. The heart is the chief thing in religion; it draws the
will and affections after it, as the Primum Mobile draw the other orbs
along with it. The heart is the incense that perfumes our holy things;
is the altar that sanctifies the offering. When we seem to worship God,
but withdraw our heart from him, we take his name in vain. ‘This people
draw near me with their mouth, and with their lips do honour me, but have
removed their heart far from me.’ Isa
29: 13.
(1) Hypocrites
take God’s name in vain: their religion is a lie; they seem to honour God,
but they do not love him; their hearts go after their lusts. ‘They set
their heart on their iniquity.’ Hos
4: 8. Their eyes are lifted up to heaven, but their hearts are
rooted in the earth. Ezek
33: 31. These are devils in Samuel’s mantle. (2) Superstitious
persons take God’s name in vain. They bring him a few ceremonies which
he never appointed, bow at Christ’s name and cringe to the altar, but hate
and persecute God’s image.
[5] When
we pray to him, but do not believe in him. Faith is a grace that greatly
honours God. Abraham ‘was strong in faith, giving glory to God.’ Rom
4: 20. But when we pray to God, but do not mix faith with our
prayer, we take his name in vain. ‘I may pray,’ says a Christian, ‘but
I shall be never the better.’ I question whether God ever hears or answers
such. It is to dishonour God and take his name in vain; it makes him either
an idol, that has ears and hears not; or a liar, who promises mercy to
the penitent, but will not make good his word. ‘He that believeth not God
has made him a liar.’ 1
John 5: 10. When the apostle says (Rom
10: 14): ‘How shall they call on him in whom they have not believed?’
the meaning is, How shall they call on God aright, and not believe in him?
But how many do call on him who do not believe on him! They ask for pardon,
but unbelief whispers their sins are too great to be forgiven. Thus to
pray and not believe, is to take God’s name in vain, and highly dishonours
God, as if he were not such a God as the word represents him. ‘Plenteous
in mercy unto all them that call upon him.’ Psa
86: 5.
[6] When
in any way we profane and abuse his word. The word of God is profaned,
in general, when profane men meddle with it. It is unseemly and unbecoming
a wicked man to talk of sacred things, of God’s providence, and the decrees
of God and heaven. It was very distasteful to Christ to hear the devil
quote Scripture, ‘It is written.’ To hear a wicked man who wallows in sin
talk of God and religion is offensive; it is taking God’s name in vain.
When the word of God is in a drunkard’s mouth, it is like a pearl hung
upon a swine. Under the law, the lips of the leper were to be covered. Lev
13: 45. The lips of a profane, drunken minister ought to be
covered; he is unfit to speak God’s word, because he takes his name in
vain.
More
particularly they profane God’s word, and take his name in vain: (1) That
speak scornfully of his word. ‘Where is the promise of his coming? For
since the fathers fell asleep, all things continue as they were from the
beginning of the creation.’ 2
Pet 3: 4. As if they had said, the preachers make much ado about
the day of judgement, when all must be called to account for their works;
but where is the appearing of that day? We see things keep their course,
and continue as they were since the creation. Thus they speak scornfully
of Scripture, and take God’s name in vain. If sentence be not speedily
executed, men scorn and deride; but, ‘Judgements are prepared for scorners.’ Prov
19: 29.
(2)
That speak jestingly. Such are they who sport and play with Scripture.
This is playing with fire. Some cannot be merry unless they make bold with
God; they make the Scripture a harp to drive away the spirit of sadness.
Eusebius relates of one who made a jest of Scripture, and God struck him
with frenzy. To play with Scripture shows a very profane heart. Some will
rather lose their souls than lose their jests. These are guilty of taking
God’s name in vain. Tremble at it. Such as mock at Scripture, God will
mock at their calamity. Prov
1: 26.
(3)
That bring Scripture to countenance any sin. The word, which was written
for the suppression of sin, is brought by some for the defence of sin.
For instance, if we tell a covetous man of his sin that covetousness is
idolatry, he will say, ‘Has not God bid me live in a calling? Has he not
said, “Six days shalt thou labour;” and “he who provides not for his family
is worse than an infidel”?’ Thus he endeavours to support his covetousness
by Scripture. Now, it is true that God has bid us take pains in our calling,
but not to hurt our neighbour; he has bid us provide for a family, but
not by oppression. ‘Ye shall not oppress one another.’ Lev
25: 25. He has bid us look after a livelihood, but not to the
neglect of the soul: he has bid us lay up treasure in heaven (Matt
6: 20); but he has commanded us to lay out, as well as lay up;
to sow seeds of charity on the backs and bellies of the poor, which is
neglected by such. To bring Scripture therefore to uphold us in sin, is
a high profanation of Scripture, and taking God’s name in vain. Again,
if we tell a man of his inordinate passions — that he may be drunk with
rash anger as well as wine — he will bring Scripture to justify it by saying,
‘Does not the word say, “Be ye angry and sin not”?’ Eph
4: 26. True, anger is good when mixed with holy zeal. Anger
is without sin when it is against sin: but to sin in anger, to speak unadvisedly
with the lips, is to have the tongue set on fire of hell. To bring Scripture
to defend any sin is to profane it, and to take God’s name in vain.
(4)
That adulterate the word, and wrest it in a wrong sense. Such are heretics,
who put their own gloss upon Scripture, and make it speak that which the
Holy Ghost never meant. As, for instance, when they expound those texts
literally, which were meant figuratively. Thus the Pharisees, because God
said in the law, ‘Thou shalt bind them (the commandments) for a sign upon
thy hand, and they shall be as frontlets between thine eyes’ (Deut
6: 8), took it in a literal sense, got two scrolls of parchment,
wherein they wrote the two tables, putting one on their left arms and binding
the other to their eyebrows; and thus wrested that Scripture, and took
God’s name in vain. It was intended to be understood spiritually, of meditating
on God’s law, and putting it in practice. The Papists expound the words,
‘This is my body,’ literally, of the very body of Christ; as though, when
Christ gave the bread, he had two bodies, one in the bread, and the other
out of the bread, whereas he meant it figuratively as a sign of his body.
Again, when those Scriptures are expounded figuratively and allegorically
which the Holy Ghost meant literally. For example, Christ said to Peter,
‘Launch out into the deep, and make a draught,’ Luke
5: 4. This text was spoken in a plain, literal sense of launching
out the ship, but the Papists take it in a mystic and allegorical sense.
‘It proves,’ say they, ‘that the Pope, who is Peter’s successor, shall
launch forth, and catch the ecclesiastical and political power over the
western parts of the world;’ but I think the Papists have launched out
too far beyond the meaning of the text. When men strain their wits to wrest
the word to such a sense as pleases them, they profane God’s word, and
take his name in vain.
[7]
When we swear by God’s name. Many seldom mention God’s name but in oaths,
for which sin the land mourns. ‘Swear not at all,’ that is, rashly and
sinfully, so as to take God’s name in vain. Matt
5: 34. Not but in some cases it is lawful to take an oath before
a magistrate. ‘Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God and serve him, and swear
by his name.’ Deut
6: 13. ‘An oath for confirmation is the end of all strife.’ Heb
6: 16. When Christ says, ‘Swear not at all;’ he forbids such
swearing as takes God’s name in vain. There is a threefold swearing forbidden:
(1)
Vain swearing, as when men in their ordinary discourse, let fly oaths.
Some excuse their swearing. It is a coarse wool that will take no dye,
and a bad sin indeed that has no excuse.
Excuse
1. I swear little trifling oaths; as Faith, or, By the mass. The devil
has two false glasses, which he sets before men’s eyes; the one is a little
glass, in which the sin appears so small that it can hardly be seen, which
the devil sets before men’s eyes when they are going to commit sin; the
other is a great magnifying glass, wherein sin appears so big that it cannot
be forgiven, which the devil sets before men’s eyes when they have sinned.
Thou that sayest, sin is small, when God shall open the eye of thy conscience,
thou wilt see it to be great, and be ready to despair. Thou sayest, they
are but small oaths; but Christ forbids vain oaths. ‘Swear not at all.’
If God will reckon with us for idle words, will not idle oaths be put in
the account?
Excuse
2. I swear to the truth. See how this harlot-sin would paint itself with
an excuse. Though it be true, yet, if it be a rash oath, it is sinful.
Besides, he that swears commonly, must sometimes swear to more than is
true. Where much water runs, some gravel or mud will pass along with it;
so, where there is much swearing, some lies will run along with it.
Excuse
3. I shall not be believed unless I seal up my words with an oath. A man
that is honest will be believed without an oath; his bare word carries
authority with it, and is as good as letters testimonial. Again, the more
a man swears, the less others will believe him. Juris
credit minus [Less trust is placed
in his oaths. Thou art a swearer. Another thinks an oath weighs very light
with him, and he cares not what he swears to, so that the more he swears
the less others believe him. He will trust thy bond, but not thy oath.
Excuse
4. It is a custom of swearing I have got, and I hope God will forgive me.
Though among men custom has influence, and is pleadable in law, yet it
is not so in the case of sin; here custom is no plea. Thou hast got a habit
of swearing, and canst not leave it off, is this an excuse? Is a thing
well done because it is commonly done? This is so far from being an excuse
that it is an aggravation of sin. As if one that had been accused of killing
a man, should plead with the judge to spare him because it was his custom
to murder. Would not this be an aggravation of the offence? So it is here.
Therefore, all excuses for this sin of vain-swearing are taken away. Dare
not to live in this sin, for it is taking God’s name in vain.
(2)
Vile swearing, horrid, prodigious oaths not to be named. Swearers, like
mad dogs, fly in the face of heaven; and when they are angered, spue out
their blasphemous venom on God’s sacred majesty. Some in gaming, when things
go cross and the dice runs against them, run against God in oaths and curses.
Tell them of their sin, seek to bring home these asses from going astray,
and it is but pouring oil on the flame; they will swear the more. Augustine
says, ‘They do no less sin who blaspheme Christ now in heaven, than the
Jews did who crucified him on earth.’ Swearers profane Christ’s blood,
and tear his name. A woman told her husband, that of her three sons, one
of them only was his: the father dying, desired the executors to find out
which was the true natural son, and bequeath all his estate to him. The
father being dead, the executors set up his corpse against a tree and delivered
to every one of these three sons a bow and arrows, telling them, that he
who could shoot nearest the father’s heart should have the whole of the
estate. Two sons shot as near as they could to his heart, but the third
felt nature so to work in him, that he refused to shoot; whereupon the
executors judged him to be the true son, and gave him all the estate. Such
as are the true children of God, fear to shoot at him; but such as are
bastards, and not sons, care not though they shoot at him in heaven with
their oaths and curses. That which makes swearing yet more heinous, is,
that when men have resolved upon any wicked action, they bind themselves
with an oath to do it. Such were they who bound themselves with an oath
and curse to kill Paul. Acts
23: 12. To commit sin is bad enough; but to swear to commit
sin, is a high profanation of God’s name, and as it were, calls God to
approve our sin.
(3)
Forswearing, which is a heaven-daring sin. ‘Ye shall not swear by my name
falsely, neither shalt thou profane my name.’ Lev
19: 12. Perjury is calling God to witness to a lie. It is said
of Philip of Macedon, he would swear and unswear, as might stand best with
his interest. ‘Thou shalt swear, The Lord liveth, in truth, in judgement,
and in righteousness.’Jer
4: 2. In righteousness, therefore, it must not be an unlawful
oath. In judgement therefore it must not be a rash oath. In truth, therefore,
it must not be a false oath. Among the Scythians, if a man did forswear
himself, he was to have his head stricken off; because, if perjury were
allowed, there would be no living in a commonwealth; it would take away
all faith and truth from among men. The perjurer is in as bad a case as
the witch; for, by a false oath, he binds his soul fast to the devil. In
forswearing, or taking a false oath in a court, there are many sins linked
together; plurima peccata
in uno [many sins in one]; for,
besides taking God’s name in vain, the perjurer is a thief; by his false
oath he robs the innocent of his right; he is a perverter of justice; he
not only sins himself, but occasions the jury to give a false verdict,
and the judge to pass an unrighteous sentence. Surely God’s judgements
will find him out. When God’s flying-roll, or curse, goes over the face
of the earth, into whose house does it enter? ‘Into the house of him that
sweareth falsely by my name; and it shall consume the timber and stones
thereof.’ Zech
5: 4. Beza relates of a perjurer, that he had no sooner taken
a false oath, than he was immediately struck with apoplexy, never spake
more, and died. Oh, tremble at such horrid impiety!
[8]
When we prefix God’s name to any wicked action. Mentioning God in connection
with a wicked design, is taking his name in vain. ‘I pray,’ said Absalom,
‘let me pay my vow, which I have vowed unto the Lord, in Hebron.’ 2
Sam 15: 7. This pretence of paying his vow made to God, was
only to cover his treason. ‘As soon as ye hear the sound of the trumpet
ye shall say, Absalom reigneth;’ chap.
15: 10. When any wicked action is baptised with the name of
religion, it is taking God’s name in vain. Herein the Pope is highly guilty,
when he sends out his bulls of excommunication, or curses against the Christian;
he begins with, In
nomine Dei ‘in the name of God.’
What a provoking sin is this! It is to do the devil’s work, and put God’s
name to it.
[9]
When we use our tongues any way to the dishonour of God’s name. As when
we use railing, or curse in our passions; especially when we wish a curse
upon ourselves if a thing be not so, when we know it to be false. I have
read of one who wished his body might rot, if that which he said was not
true; and soon after his body rotted, and he became a loathsome spectacle.
[10]
When we make rash and unlawful vows. It is a good vow when a man binds
himself to do that which the word binds him to; as, if he be sick, he vows
if God restore him, he will live a more holy life. ‘I will pay thee my
vows which my lips have uttered when I was in trouble.’ Psa
66: 13, 14. But Voveri non debet quod Deo displicet; ‘such a
vow should not be made as is displeasing to God;’ as to vow voluntary poverty,
as friars; or to vow to live in nunneries. Jephthah’s vow was rash and
unlawful; he vowed to the Lord to sacrifice that to him which he met with
next, and it was his daughter. Judges
11: 31. He did ill to make the vow, and worse to keep it; he
became guilty of the breach of the third and sixth commandments.
[11]
When we speak evil of God. ‘The people spake against God.’ Numb
21: 5.
How
do we speak against God?
When
we murmur at his providences, as if he had dealt hardly with us. Murmuring
accuses God’s justice. ‘Shall not the judge of all the earth do right?’ Gen
18: 25. Murmuring springs from a bitter root, it comes from
pride and discontent; it reproaches God and thus takes his name in vain.
It is a sin that God cannot bear. ‘How long shall I bear with this evil
congregation which murmur against me?’ Numb.
14: 27.
[12]
When we falsify our promise; as when we say, if God spare our life we will
do a certain thing, and never intend it. Our promise should be sacred and
inviolable; but, if we make a promise, and mention God’s name in it, but
never intend to keep it, it is a double sin; it is telling a lie, and taking
God’s name in vain.
Use.
Take heed of taking God’s name in vain in any of these ways. Remember the
combination and threatening in the text, ‘The Lord will not hold him guiltless.’
Here is a meiosis; less is said, and more intended. ‘He will not hold him
guiltless;’ that is, he will be severely avenged on such a one. ‘The Lord
will not hold him guiltless.’ Here the Lord speaks after the manner of
a judge, who holds the court assize. The judge here, is God himself; the
accusers, Satan, and a man’s own conscience; the charge is, ‘Taking God’s
name in vain;’ the accused is found guilty, and condemned: ‘The Lord will
not hold him guiltless.’ Methinks these words, ‘The Lord will not hold
him guiltless,’ should put a lock upon our lips, and make us afraid of
speaking anything that may bring dishonour upon God, or may be taking his
name in vain. It may be that men may hold such guiltless, when they curse,
swear, speak irreverently of God, may let them alone, and not punish them.
If one takes away another’s good name, he shall be sure to be punished;
but if he takes away God’s good name, where is he that punishes him? He
that robs another of his goods shall be put to death, but he that robs
God of his glory, by oaths and curses, is spared; but God himself will
take the matter into his own hand, and he will punish him who takes his
name in vain.
(1)
Sometimes God punishes swearing and blasphemy in this life. In the county
of Samurtia, when there arose a great tempest of thunder and lightning,
a soldier burst forth into swearing; but the tempest tore up a great tree
by the root, which fell upon him, and crushed him to pieces. German history
tells of a youth, who was given to swearing, and inventing new oaths; the
Lord sent a cancer into his mouth, which ate out his tongue and from which
he died. If a man blasphemed God, the Lord caused him to be stoned to death.
‘The Israelitish woman’s son blasphemed the name of the Lord, and cursed.
And Moses spake to the children of Israel, that they should bring forth
him that had cursed, and stone him with stones.’ Lev.
24: 11, 23. Olympias, an Arian bishop, reproached and blasphemed
the sacred Trinity; whereupon he was suddenly struck with three flashes
of lighting, which burned him to death. Felix, an officer of Julia, seeing
the holy vessels which were used in the sacrament, said, in scorn of Christ,
‘See what precious vessels the Son of Mary is served withal.’ Soon after,
he was taken with vomiting of blood from his blasphemous mouth, of which
he died.
(2)
If God should not execute judgement on the profaners of his name in this
life, their doom is to come. He will not remit their guilt, but deliver
them to Satan the gaoler, to torment them for ever. If God justify a man,
who shall condemn him? But if God condemn him, who shall justify him? If
God lay a man in prison, where shall he get bail? God will take his full
blow at the sinner in hell. ‘It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands
of the living God.’ Heb
10: 31.
2.4 The Fourth Commandment
‘Remember
the Sabbath-day to keep it holy. Six days shalt thou labour, and do all
thy work: but the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God; in it
thou shalt not do any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, thy manservant,
nor thy maid-servant, nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger that is within thy
gates. For in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all
that in them is, and rested the seventh day; wherefore the Lord blessed
the Sabbath-day and hallowed it. Exod
20: 8-11.
This commandment
was engraven in stone by God’s own finger, and it will be our comfort to
have it engraven in our hearts.
The Sabbath-day
is set apart for God’s solemn worship; it is his own enclosure, and must
not be alienated to common uses. As a preface to this commandment, he has
put a memento to it, ‘Remember to keep the Sabbath day holy.’ This word,
‘remember,’ shows that we are apt to forget Sabbath holiness; therefore
we need a memorandum to put us in mind of sanctifying the day.
I. There
is in these words a solemn command. ‘Remember the Sabbath-day to keep it
holy.’
[1] The
matter of it. The sanctifying the Sabbath, which Sabbath sanctification
consists in two things, in resting from our own works, and in a conscientious
discharge of our religious duty.
[2] The
persons to whom the command of sanctifying the Sabbath is given. Either
superiors, and they are, more private, as parents and masters; or more
public, as magistrates; or inferiors, as natives, children, and servants,
‘Thy son, and thy daughter, thy man-servant, and thy maidservant;’ or foreigners,
‘thy stranger that is within thy gates.’
II. The
arguments to obey this commandment of keeping holy the Sabbath are,
[1] From
the rationality of it. ‘Six days shalt thou labour and do all thy work;’
as if God had said, I am not a hard master, I do not grudge thee time to
look after thy calling, and to get an estate. I have given thee six days,
to do all thy work in, and have taken but one day for myself. I might have
reserved six days for myself, and allowed thee but one; but I have given
thee six days for the works of thy calling, and have taken but one day
for my own service. It is just and rational, therefore, that thou shouldest
set this day in a special manner apart for my worship.
[2] The
second argument for sanctifying the Sabbath, is taken from the justice
of it. ‘The seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God;’ as if God
had said, The Sabbath-day is my due, I challenge a special right in it,
and no other has any claim to it. He who robs me of this day, and puts
it to common uses, is a sacrilegious person, he steals from the crown of
heaven, and I will in nowise hold him guiltless.
[3] The
third argument for sanctifying the Sabbath, is taken from God’s own observance
of it. He ‘rested the seventh day;’ as if the Lord should say, Will you
not follow me as a pattern? Having finished all my works of creation, I
rested the seventh day; so having done all your secular work on the six
days, you should now cease from the labour of your calling, and dedicate
the seventh day to me, as a day of holy rest.
[4] The
fourth argument for Sabbath-sanctification, is taken ab
utili, from the benefit which redounds
from a religious observation of the Sabbath. ‘The Lord blessed the seventh
day and hallowed it.’ God not only appointed the seventh day, but he blessed
it. It is not only a day of honour to God, but a day of blessing to us;
it is not only a day wherein we give God worship, but a day wherein he
gives us grace. On this day a blessing drops down from heaven. God himself
is not benefited by it, we cannot add one cubit to his essential glory;
but we ourselves are benefited. This day, religiously observed, entails
a blessing upon our souls, our estate, and our posterity. Not keeping it,
brings a curse. Jer
17: 27. God curses a man’s blessings. Mal
2: 2. The bread which he eats is poisoned with a curse; so the
conscientious observation of the Sabbath, brings all manner of blessings
with it. These are the arguments to induce Sabbath-sanctification.
The thing
I would have you now observe is, that the commandment of keeping the Sabbath
was not abrogated with the ceremonial law, but is purely moral, and the
observation of it is to be continued to the end of the world. Where can
it be shown that God has given us a discharge from keeping one day in seven?
Why has
God appointed a Sabbath?
(1) With
respect to himself. It is requisite that God should reserve one day in
seven for his own immediate service, that thereby he might be acknowledged
to be the great Plenipotentiary, or sovereign Lord, who has power over
us both to command worship, and appoint the time when he will be worshipped.
(2) With
respect to us. The Sabbath-day is for our interest; it promotes holiness
in us. The business of week-days makes us forgetful of God and our souls:
the Sabbath brings him back to our remembrance. When the falling dust of
the world has clogged the wheels of our affections, that they can scarce
move towards God, the Sabbath comes, and oils the wheels of our affections,
and they move swiftly on. God has appointed the Sabbath for this end. On
this day the thoughts rise to heaven, the tongue speaks of God, and is
as the pen of a ready writer, the eyes drop tears, and the soul burns in
love. The heart, which all the week was frozen, on the Sabbath melts with
the word. The Sabbath is a friend to religion; it files off the rust of
our graces; it is a spiritual jubilee, wherein the soul is set to converse
with its Maker.
I should
next show you the modes, or manner, how we should keep the Sabbath day
holy; but before I come to that, we have a great question to consider.
How comes
it to pass that we do not keep the seventh-day Sabbath as it was in the
primitive institution, but have changed it to another day?
The old
seventh-day Sabbath, which was the Jewish Sabbath, is abrogated, and in
the room of it the first day of the week, which is the Christian Sabbath,
succeeds. The morality or substance of the fourth commandment does not
lie in keeping the seventh day precisely, but keeping one day in seven
is what God has appointed.
But how
comes the first day in the week to be substituted in the room of the seventh
day?
Not by
ecclesiastic authority. ‘The church,’ says Mr Perkins, ‘has no power to
ordain a Sabbath.’
(1) The
change of the Sabbath from the last day of the week to the first was by
Christ’s own appointment. He is ‘Lord of the Sabbath.’ Mark
2: 28. And who shall appoint a day but he who is Lord of it?
He made this day. ‘This is the day which the Lord has made.’ Psa
118: 24. Arnobius and most expositors understand it of the Christian
Sabbath, which is called the ‘Lord’s-day.’ Rev
1: 10. As it is called the ‘Lord’s Supper,’ because of the Lord’s
instituting the bread and wine and setting it apart from a common to a
special and sacred use; so it is called the Lord’s-day, because of the
Lord’s instituting it, and setting it apart from common days, to his special
worship and service. Christ rose on the first day of the week, out of the
grave, and appeared twice on that day to his disciples, John
20: 19, 26, which was to intimate to them, as Augustine and
Athanasius say, that he transferred the Jewish Sabbath to the Lord’s day.
(2) The
keeping of the first day was the practice of the apostles. ‘Upon the first
day of the week, when the disciples came together to break bread, Paul
preached unto them.’ Acts
20: 7; 1
Cor 16: 2. Here was both preaching and breaking of bread on
this day. Augustine and Innocentius, and Isidore, make the keeping of our
gospel Sabbath to be of apostolic sanction, and affirm, that by virtue
of the apostles’ practice, this day is to be set apart for divine worship.
What the apostles did, they did by divine authority; for they were inspired
by the Holy Ghost.
(3) The
primitive church had the Lord’s-day, which we now celebrate, in high estimation.
It was a great badge of their religion to observe this day. Ignatius, the
most ancient father, who lived in the time of John the apostle, has these
words, ‘Let every one that loveth Christ keep holy the first day of the
week, the Lord’s-day.’ This day has been observed by the church of Christ
above sixteen hundred years, as the learned Bucer notes. Thus you see how
the seventh-day Sabbath came to be changed to the first-day Sabbath.
The grand
reason for changing the Jewish Sabbath to the Lord’s-day is that it puts
us in mind of the ‘Mystery of our redemption by Christ.’ The reason why
God instituted the old Sabbath was to be a memorial of the creation; but
he has now brought the first day of the week in its room in memory of a
more glorious work than creation, which is redemption. Great was the work
of creation, but greater was the work of redemption. As it was said, ‘The
glory of this latter house shall be greater than of the former.’ Hag
2: 9. So the glory of the redemption was greater than the glory
of the creation. Great wisdom was seen in making us, but more miraculous
wisdom in saving us. Great power was seen in bringing us out of nothing,
but greater power in helping us when we were worse than nothing. It cost
more to redeem than to create us. In creation it was but speaking a word
(Psa
148: 5); in redeeming there was shedding of blood. 1
Pet 1: 19. Creation was the work of God’s fingers, Psa
8: 3, redemption was the work of his arm. Luke
1: 51. In creation, God gave us ourselves; in the redemption,
he gave us himself. By creation, we have life in Adam; by redemption, we
have life in Christ. Col
3: 3. By creation, we had a right to an earthly paradise: by
redemption, we have a title to a heavenly kingdom. Christ might well change
the seventh day of the week into the first, as it puts us in mind of our
redemption, which is a more glorious work than creation.
Use one.
The use I shall make of this is, that we should have the Christian Sabbath,
we now celebrate, in high veneration. The Jews called the Sabbath, ‘The
desire of days, and the queen of days.’ This day we must call a ‘delight,
the holy of the Lord, honourable.’ Isa
58: 13. Metal that has the king’s stamp upon it is honourable,
and of great value. God has set his royal stamp upon the Sabbath; it is
the Sabbath of the Lord, and this makes it honourable. We should look upon
this day as the best day in the week. What the phoenix is among birds,
what the sun is among planets the Lord’s-day is among other days. ‘This
is the day which the Lord has made.’ Psa
118: 24. God has made all the days, but he has blessed this.
As Jacob got the blessing from his brother, so the Sabbath got the blessing
from all other days in the week. It is a day in which we converse in a
special manner with God. The Jews called the Sabbath ‘a day of light;’
so on this day the Sun of Righteousness shines upon the soul. The Sabbath
is the market-day of the soul, the cream of time. It is the day of Christ’s
rising from the grave, and the Holy Ghost’s descending upon the earth.
It is perfumed with the sweet odour of prayer, which goes up to heaven
as incense. On this day the manna falls, that is angels’ food. This is
the soul’s festival-day, on which the graces act their part: the other
days of the week are most employed about earth, this day about heaven;
then you gather straw, now pearl. Now Christ takes the soul up into the
mount, and gives it transfiguring sights of glory. Now he leads his spouse
into the wine-cellar, and displays the banner of his love. Now he gives
her his spiced wine, and the juice of the pomegranate. Cant
2: 4, 8:
2. The Lord usually reveals himself more to the soul on this
day. The apostle John was in the Spirit on the Lord’s-day. Rev
1: 10. He was carried up on this day in divine raptures towards
heaven. This day a Christian is in the altitudes; he walks with God, and
takes as it were a turn with him in heaven. 1
John 1: 3. On this day holy affections are quickened; the stock
of grace is improved; corruptions are weakened; and Satan falls like lightning
before the majesty of the word. Christ wrought most of his miracles upon
the Sabbath; so he does still: dead souls are raised and hearts of stone
are made flesh. How highly should we esteem and reverence this day! It
is more precious than rubies. God has anointed it with the oil of gladness
above its fellows. On the Sabbath we are doing angels’ work, our tongues
are tuned to God’s praises. The Sabbath on earth is a shadow and type of
the glorious rest and eternal Sabbath we hope for in heaven, when God shall
be the temple, and the Lamb shall be the light of it. Rev
21: 22, 23.
Use two.
‘SIX days shalt thou labour.’ God would not have any live out of a calling:
religion gives no warrant for idleness. It is a duty to labour six days,
as well as keep holy rest on the seventh day. ‘We hear that there are some
which walk among you disorderly, working not at all. Now, them that are
such, we command and exhort by our Lord Jesus, that with quietness they
work, and eat their own bread.’ 2
Thess 3: 11. A Christian must not only mind heaven, but his
calling. While the pilot has his eye to the star, he has his hand to the
helm. Without labour the pillars of a commonwealth will dissolve, and the
earth, like the sluggard’s field, will be overrun with briers. Prov
24: 31. Adam in innocence, though monarch of the world, must
not be idle, but must dress and till the ground. Gen
2: 15. Piety does not exclude industry. Standing water putrifies.
Inanimate creatures are in motion. The sun goes its circuit, the fountain
runs, and the fire sparkles. Animate creatures work. Solomon sends us to
the ant and pismire to learn labour. Prov
6: 6; 30:
25. The bee is the emblem of industry; some of the bees trim
the honey, others work the wax, others frame the comb, others lie sentinel
at the door of the hive to keep out the drone. And shall not man much more
innate himself to labour? That law in paradise was never repeated. ‘In
the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread.’ Gen
3: 19. Such professors are to be disliked who talk of living
by faith, but live out of a calling; they are like the lilies which ‘toil
not, neither do they spin.’ Matt
6: 28. It is a speech of holy and learned Mr Perkins, ‘Let a
man be endowed with excellent gifts, and hear the word with reverence,
and receive the sacrament, yet if he practice not the duties of his calling,
all is but hypocrisy.’ What is an idle person good for? What benefit is
a ship that lies always on the shore? or armour that hangs up and rusts?
To live out of a calling exposes a person to temptation. Melanchthon calls
idleness the Devil’s bath, because he bathes himself with delight in an
idle soul. We do not sow seed in ground when it lies fallow; but Satan
sows most of his seed of temptation in such persons as lie fallow, and
are out of a calling. Idleness is the nurse of vice. Seneca, an old heathen,
could say, Nullus
mihi per otium dies exit; ‘No day
passes me without some labour.’ An idle person stands for a cipher in the
world, and God writes down no ciphers in the book of life. We read in Scripture
of eating the ‘bread of idleness,’ and drinking the ‘wine of violence.’ Prov
31: 27; 4:
17. It is as much a sin to eat ‘the bread of idleness,’ as to
‘drink the wine of violence.’ An idle person can give no account of his
time. Time is a talent to trade with, both in our particular and general
callings. The slothful person ‘hides his talent in the earth;’ he does
no good; his time is not lived, but lost. An idle person lives unprofitably,
he cumbers the ground. God calls the slothful servant ‘wicked.’ ‘Thou wicked
and slothful servant.’ Matt
25: 26. Draco, whose laws were written in blood, deprived those
of their life who would not work for their living. In Hetruria they caused
such persons to be banished. Idle persons live in the breach of the commandment,
‘Six days shalt thou labour.’ Let them take heed they be not banished from
heaven. A man may as well go to hell for not working in his calling, as
for not believing.
Having
spoken of the reasons of sanctifying the Sabbath I come now to
III.
The manner of sanctifying the Sabbath.
[1] Negatively.
We must do no work in it. This is the commandment. ‘In it thou shall do
no manner of work.’ God has set apart this day for himself; therefore we
are not to use it in common, by doing any civil work. As when Abraham went
to sacrifice he left his servants and the ass at the bottom of the hill;
so, when we are to worship God on this day, we must leave all worldly business
behind, leave the ass at the bottom of the hill. Gen
22: 5. As Joseph, when he would speak with his brethren, thrust
out the Egyptians, so, when we would converse with God on this day, we
must thrust out all earthly employments. The Lord’s day is a day of holy
rest. All secular work must be forborne and suspended, as it is a profanation
of the day. ‘In those days saw I in Judah some treading winepresses on
the Sabbath, and bringing in sheaves, and lading asses; as also wine, grapes
and figs, and all manner of burdens which they brought into Jerusalem on
the Sabbath-day; and I testified against them. Then I contended with the
nobles of Judah, and said unto them, “What evil thing is this that ye do,
and profane the Sabbath-day?’ ” Neh
13: 15, 17. It is sacrilege to rob for civil work the time which
God has set apart for his worship. He that devotes any time of the Sabbath
to worldly business, is a worse thief than he who robs on the highway;
for the one does but rob man, but the other robs God. The Lord forbade
mamma to be gathered on the Sabbath. Exod
16: 26. One might think it would have been allowed, as manna
was the ‘staff of their life,’ and the time when it fell was between five
and six in the morning, so that they might have gathered it betimes, and
all the rest of the Sabbath might have been employed in God’s worship;
and besides, they needed not to have taken any great journey for it, for
it was but stepping out of their doors, and it fell about their tents:
and yet they might not gather it on the Sabbath; and for purposing only
to do it, God was very angry. ‘There went out some of the people on the
seventh day for to gather, and they found none. And the Lord said, How
long refuse ye to keep my commandments and my laws?’ Exod
16: 27, 28. Surely anointing Christ when he was dead was a commendable
work; but, though Mary Magdalene, and Mary the mother of James, had prepared
sweet ointments to anoint the dead body of Christ, they went not to the
sepulchre to embalm him till the Sabbath was past. ‘They rested the Sabbath-day,
according to the commandment.’ Luke
23: 56. The hand cannot be busied on the Lord’s-day but the
heart will be defiled. The very heathen, by the light of nature, would
not do any secular work in the time which they had set apart for the worship
of their false gods. Clemens Alexandrinus reports of one of the emperors
of Rome, who, on the day of set worship for his gods, put aside warlike
affairs and spent the time in devotion. To do servile work on the Sabbath
shows an irreligious heart, and greatly offends God. To do secular work
on this day is to follow the devil’s slough; it is to debase the soul.
God made this day on purpose to raise the heart to heaven, to converse
with him, to do angels’ work; and to be employed in earthly work is to
degrade the soul of its honour. God will not have his day entrenched upon,
or defiled in the least thing. The man that gathered sticks on the Sabbath
he commanded to be stoned. Numb.
15: 35. It would seem a small thing to pick up a few sticks
to make a fire; but God would not have this day violated in the smallest
matters. Nay, the work which had reference to a religious use might not
be done on the Sabbath, as the hewing of stones for the building of the
sanctuary. Bezaleel, who was to cut the stones, and carve the timber out
for the sanctuary, must forbear to do it on the Sabbath. Exod
31: 15. A temple is a place of God’s worship, but it was a sin
to build a temple on the Lord’s-day. This is keeping the Sabbath-day holy
negatively, in doing no servile work.
Works
of necessity and charity however may be done on this day. In these cases
God will have mercy and not sacrifice. (1) It is lawful to take the necessary
supplies of nature. Food is to the body as oil to the lamp. (2) It is lawful
to do works of mercy, as helping a neighbour when either life or estate
are in danger. Herein the Jews were too nice and precise, who would not
suffer works of charity to be done on the Sabbath. If a man was sick, they
thought they might not on this day use means for his recovery. Christ charges
them with being angry because he had wrought a cure on the Sabbath. John
7: 23. If a house were on fire, the Jews thought they might
not bring water to quench it; if a vessel leaked on this day, they thought
they might not stop it. They were ‘righteous overmuch;’ it was seeming
zeal, but wanted discretion to guide it. Except in these two cases, of
necessity and charity, all secular work is to be suspended and laid aside
on the Lord’s-day. ‘In it thou shalt do no manner of work.’ This arraigns
and condemns many among us who too much foul their fingers with work on
that day; some in dressing great feasts, others in opening their shop-doors,
and selling meat on the Sabbath. The mariner will not put to sea but on
the Sabbath, and so runs full sail into the violation of this command.
Others work on this day privately, put up their shop-windows, and follow
their trade within doors; but though they think to hide their sin under
a canopy, God sees it. ‘Whither shall I flee from thy presence?’ ‘The darkness
hideth not from thee.’ Psa
139: 7, 12. Such profane the day, and God will have an action
of trespass against them.
[2] Positively.
We keep the Sabbath-day holy, by ‘consecrating and dedicating’ this day
to the ‘service of the high God.’ It is good to rest on the Sabbath-day
from the works of our calling; but if we rest from labour and do no more,
the ox and the ass keep the Sabbath as well as we; for they rest from labour.
We must dedicate the day to God; we must not only ‘keep a Sabbath,’ but
‘sanctify’ a Sabbath. Sabbath-sanctification consists in two things: (1)
Solemn preparation for it. If a prince were to come to your house, what
preparation would you make for his entertainment! You would sweep the house,
wash the floor, adorn the room with the richest tapestry and hangings,
that there might be something suitable to the state and dignity of so great
a person. On the blessed Sabbath, God intends to have sweet communion with
you; he seems to say to you, as Christ to Zacchaeus, ‘Make haste and come
down, for this day I must abide at thy house.’ Luke
19: 5. Now, what preparation should you make for entertaining
this King of glory? When Saturday evening approaches, sound a retreat;
call your minds off from the world and summon your thoughts together, to
think of the great work of the approaching day. Purge out all unclean affections,
which may indispose you for the work of the Sabbath. Evening preparation
will be like the tuning of an instrument, it will fit the heart better
for the duties of the ensuing Sabbath.
(2) The
sacred observation of it. Rejoice at the approach of the day, as a day
wherein we have a prize for our souls, and may enjoy much of God’s presence. John
8: 56. ‘Abraham rejoiced to see my day.’ So, when we see the
light of a Sabbath shine, we should rejoice, and ‘call the Sabbath a delight:’
this is the queen of days, which God has crowned with a blessing. Isa
58: 13. As there was one day in the week on which God rained
manna twice as much as upon any other day, so he rains down the manna of
heavenly blessings twice as much on the Sabbath as on any other. This is
the day wherein Christ carries the soul into the house of wine, and displays
the banner of love over it; now the dew of the Spirit falls on the soul,
whereby it is revived and comforted. How many may write the Lord’s day,
the day of their new birth! This day of rest is a pledge and earnest of
the eternal rest in heaven. Shall we not then rejoice at its approach?
The day on which the Sun of Righteousness shines should be a day of gladness.
Get up
betides on the Sabbath morning. Christ rose early on this day, before the
sun was up. John
20: 1. Did he rise early to save us, and shall not we rise early
to worship and glorify him? ‘Early will I seek thee.’ Psa
63: 1. Can we be up betimes on other days? The husband man is
early at his slough, the traveller rises early to go his journey, and shall
not we, who on this day are travelling to heaven? Certainly, if we loved
God as we should, we should rise on this day betimes, that we may meet
with him whom our souls love. Such as sit up late at work on the night
before, are so buried in sleep, that they will hardly be up betides on
a Sabbath morning.
IV. Having
dressed your bodies, you must dress your souls for hearing the word. As
the people of Israel were to wash themselves before the law was delivered
to them, so we must wash and cleanse our souls; and that is done by reading,
meditation, and prayer. Exod
19: 10.
[1] By
reading the word. The word is a great means to sanctify the heart, and
bring it into a Sabbath-frame. ‘Sanctify them through thy truth,’ &c. John
17: 17. Read not the word carelessly, but with seriousness and
affection; as the oracle of heaven, the well of salvation, the book of
life. David, for its preciousness, esteemed it above gold; and for its
sweetness, above honey. Psa
19: 10. By reading the word aright, our hearts, when dull, are
quickened; when hard, are mollified; when cold and frozen are inflamed;
and we can say as the disciples, ‘Did not our heart burn within us?’ Some
step out of their bed to hearing. The reason why many get no more good
on a Sabbath by the word preached, is because they did not breakfast with
God in the morning by reading his word.
[2] Meditation.
Get upon the mount of meditation, and there converse with God. Meditation
is the soul’s retiring within itself, that, by a serious and solemn thinking
upon God, the heart may be raised up to divine affections. It is a work
fit for the morning of a Sabbath. Meditate on four things.
(1) On
the works of creation. This is expressed in the commandment. “The Lord
made heaven and earth, the sea,’ &c. The creation is a looking glass,
in which we see the wisdom and power of God gloriously represented. God
produced this fair structure of the world without any pre-existent matter,
and with a word. ‘By the word of the Lord were the heavens made.’ Psa
33: 6. The disciples wondered that Christ could, with a word,
calm the sea, but it was far more astounding with a word to make the sea. Matt
8: 26. On the Sabbath let us meditate on the infiniteness of
the Creator. Look up to the firmament and see God’s wonders in the deep.’ Psa
107: 24. Look into the earth, where we may behold the nature
of minerals, the power of the loadstone, the virtue of herbs, and the beauty
of flowers. By meditating on these works of creation, so curiously embroidered,
we shall learn to admire God and praise him. ‘O Lord, how manifold are
thy works, in wisdom hast thou made them all.’ Psa
104: 24. By meditating on the works of creation, we shall learn
to confide in God. He who can create, can provide; he that could make us
when we were nothing, can raise us when we are low. ‘Our help is in the
name of the Lord who made heaven and earth.’ Psa
124: 8.
(2) Meditate
on God’s holiness. ‘Holy and reverend is his name.’ Psa
111: 9. ‘Thou art of purer eyes than to behold evil.’ Hab
1: 13. God is essentially, originally, and efficiently holy.
A11 the holiness in men and angels is but a crystal stream that runs from
this glorious fountain. God loves holiness because it is his own image.
A king cannot but love to see his own effigies stamped on coin. God counts
holiness his glory, and the most sparkling jewel of his crown. ‘Glorious
unholiness.’ Exod
15: 2: Here is meditation fit for the first entrance upon a
Sabbath. The contemplation of this would work in us such a frame of heart
as is suitable to a holy God; it would make us reverence his name and hallow
his day. While musing; upon the holiness of God’s nature, we shall begin
to be transformed into his likeness.
(3) Meditate
on Christ’s love in redeeming us. Rev
1: 5. Redemption exceeds creation; the one is a monument of
God’s power, the other of his love. Here is fit work for a Sabbath. Oh,
the infinite stupendous love of Christ in raising poor lapsed creatures
from a state of guilt and damnation! That Christ who was God should die!
that this glorious Sun of Righteousness should be in an eclipse! We can
never admire enough this love, no, not in heaven. That Christ should die
for sinners! not sinful angels, but sinful men. That such clods of earth
and sin should be made bright stars of glory! Oh, the amazing love of Christ!
This was Illustre amoris Christi mnemosynum. Brugensis. That Christ should
not only die for sinners, but die as a sinner! ‘He has made him to be sin
for us’ 2
Cor 5: 21. He who was among the glorious persons of the Trinity,
‘was numbered with the transgressors.’ Isa
53: 12. Not that he had sin, but he was like a sinner, having
our sins imputed to him. Sin did not live in him, but it was laid upon
him. Here was an hyperbole of love enough to strike us with astonishment.
That Christ should redeem us, when he could not expect to gain anything,
or to be advantaged at all by us! Men will not lay out their money upon
purchase unless it will turn to their profit; but what benefit could Christ
expect in purchasing and redeeming us? We were in such a condition that
we could neither deserve nor recompense Christ’s love. We could not deserve
it; for we were in our blood. Ezek
16: 6. We had no spiritual beauty to tempt him. Nay, we were
not only in our blood, but we were in arms against him. ‘When we were enemies,
we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son;’ Rom
5: 10. When he was shedding his blood, we were spitting out
poison. As we could not deserve, so neither could we recompense it. After
he had died for us, we could not so much as love him, till he made us love
him. We could give him nothing in lieu of his love. ‘Who has first given
to him?’ Rom
11: 35. We were fallen into poverty. If we have any beauty,
it is from him, ‘It was perfect through my comeliness which I had put upon
thee.’ Ezek
16: 14. If we bring forth any good fruit, it is not of our own
growth, it comes from him, the true vine. ‘From me is thy fruit found.’ Hos
14: 8. It was nothing but pure love for Christ to lay out his
blood to redeem such as he could not expect to be really bettered by. That
Christ should die so willingly! ‘I lay down my life.’ John
10: 17. The Jews could not have taken it away if he had not
laid it down. He could have called to his Father for legions of angels
to be his life-guard; but what need for even that, when his own Godhead
could have defended himself from all assaults? He laid down his life. The
Jews did not so much thirst for his death, as he thirsted for our redemption.
‘I have a baptism to be baptised with, and how am I straitened till it
be accomplished?’ Luke
12: 50. He called his sufferings a baptism; he was to be baptised
and sprinkled with his own blood; and he thought the time long before he
suffered. To show Christ’s willingness to die, his sufferings are called
an offering. ‘Through the offering of the body of Jesus.’ Heb
10: 10. His death was a free-will offering. That Christ should
not grudge nor think much of all his sufferings! Though he was scourged
and crucified, he was well contented with what he had done, and, if it
were needful, he would do it again. ‘He shall see of the travail of his
soul, and shall be satisfied.’ Isa
53: 11. As the mother who has had hard labour, does not repent
of her pangs when she sees a child brought forth, but is well contented;
so Christ, though he had hard travail upon the cross, does not think much
of it; he is not troubled, but thinks his sweat and blood well bestowed,
because he sees the man-child of redemption brought forth into the world.
That Christ should make redemption effectual to some, and not to others!
Here is surprising love. Though there is sufficiency in his merits to save
all, yet some only partake of their saving virtue; all do not believe.
‘There are some of you that believe not.’ John
6: 64. Christ does not pray for all. John
17: 9. Some refuse him. This is ‘the stone which the builders
refused.’ Psa
118: 22. Others deride him. Luke
16: 14. Others throw off his yoke. ‘We will not have this man
to reign over us.’ Luke
19: 14. SO that all have not the benefit of salvation by him.
Herein appears the distinguishing love of Christ, that the virtue of his
death should reach some, and not others. ‘Not many wise men after the flesh,
not many mighty, not many noble are called.’ 1
Cor 1: 26. That Christ should pass by many of birth and parts,
and that the lot of free grace should fall upon thee; that he should sprinkle
his blood upon thee; ‘Oh, the depth of the love of Christ!’ That Christ
should love us with such a transcendent love! The apostle calls it ‘Love
which passeth knowledge.’ Eph
3: 19. That he should love us more than the angels. He loves
them as his friends, but believers as his spouse. He loves them with such
a kind of love as God the Father bears to him. ‘As the Father has loved
me, so have I loved you.’ John
15: 9. Oh, what an hyperbole of love does Christ show in redeeming
us! That Christ’s love in our redemption should be everlasting! ‘Having
loved his own, he loved them unto the end.’ John
13: 1. As Christ’s love is matchless, so it is endless. The
flower of his love is sweet; and that which makes it sweeter is that it
never dies. His love is eternized. Jer
31: 3. He will never divorce his elect spouse. The failings
of his people cannot quite take off his love; they may eclipse it, but
not wholly remove it; their failings may make Christ angry with them, but
not hate them. Every failing does not break the marriagebond. Christ’s
love is not like the saint’s love. They sometimes have strong affections
towards him, at other times the fit is off, and they find little or no
love stirring in them; but it is not so with Christ’s love to them, it
is a love of eternity. When the sunshine of Christ’s electing love is once
risen upon the soul, it never finally sets. Death may take away our life
from us, but not Christ’s love. Behold here a rare subject for meditation
on a Sabbath morning. The meditation of Christ’s wonderful love in redeeming
us would work in us a Sabbath-frame of heart.
It would
melt us in tears for our spiritual unkindness, that we should sin against
so sweet a Saviour; that we should be no more affected with his love, but
requite evil for good; that like the Athenians, who, notwithstanding all
the good service Aristides had done them, banished him out of their city,
we should banish him from our temple; that we should grieve him with our
pride, rash anger, unfruitfulness, animosities, and strange factions. Have
we none to abuse but our friend? Have we nothing to kick against but the
bowels of our Saviour? Did not Christ suffer enough upon the cross, but
we must needs make him suffer more? Do we give him more ‘gall and vinegar
to drink?’ Oh, if anything can dissolve the heart in sorrow, and melt the
eyes to tears, it is unkindness offered to Christ. When Peter thought of
Christ’s love to him, how he had made him an apostle, and revealed his
bosom-secrets to him, and taken him to the mount of transfiguration, and
yet that he should deny him; it broke his heart with sorrow; ‘he went out
and wept bitterly.’ Matt
26: 75. What a blessed thing is it to have the eyes dropping
tears on a Sabbath! and nothing would sooner fetch tears than to meditate
on Christ’s love to us, and our unkindness to him.
Meditating
on a Lord’s-day morning on Christ’s love, would kindle love in our hearts
to him. How can we look on his bleeding and dying for us and our hearts
not be warmed with love to him? Love is the soul of religion, the purest
affection. It is not rivers of oil, but sparks of love that Christ values.
And sure, as David said, ‘While I was musing the fire burned’ (Psa
39: 3), so, while we are musing of Christ’s love in redeeming
us, the fire of our love will burn towards him; and then the Christian
is in a blessed Sabbath-frame, when, like a seraphim, he is burning in
love to Christ.
(4) On
a Sabbath morning meditate on the glory of heaven. Heaven is the extract
and essence of happiness. It is called a kingdom. Matt
25: 34. A kingdom for its riches and magnificence. It is set
forth by precious stones, and gates of pearl. Rev
21: 19, 21. There is all that is truly glorious; transparent
light, perfect love, unstained honour, unmixed joy; and that which crowns
the joy of the celestial paradise is eternity. Suppose earthly kingdoms
were more glorious than they are, their foundations of gold, their walls
of pearl, their windows of sapphire, yet they are corruptible; but the
kingdom of heaven is eternal; those rivers of pleasure run ‘for evermore.’ Psa
16: 11. That wherein the essence of glory consists, and makes
heaven to be heaven, is the immediate sight and fruition of the blessed
God. ‘I shall be satisfied, when I awake, with thy likeness.’ Psa
17: 15. Oh, think of the Jerusalem above!
This
is proper for a Sabbath. The meditation of heaven would raise our hearts
above the world. oh, how would earthly things disappear and shrink into
nothing, if our minds were mounted above visible things, and we had a prospect
of glory! How would the meditation of heaven make us heavenly in our Sabbath
exercises! It would quicken affection, would add wings to devotion, and
cause us to be ‘in the Spirit on the Lord’s-day.’ Rev
1: 10. How vigorously does he serve God who has a crown of glory
always in his eye!
[3] We
dress our souls on a Sabbath-morning by prayer; ‘When thou prayest, enter
into thy closet,’ &c. Matt
6: 6. Prayer sanctifies a Sabbath.
(1) The
things we should pray for in the morning of the Sabbath. Let us beg a blessing
upon the word which is to be preached; that it may be a savour of life
to us; that by it our minds may be more illuminated, our corruptions more
weakened, and our stock of grace more increased. Let us pray that God’s
special presence may be with us, that our hearts may burn within us while
God speaks, that we may receive the word into meek and humble hearts, and
that we may submit to it, and bring forth fruits. James
1: 21. Nor should we only pray for ourselves, but for others.
Pray
for him who dispenses the word; that his tongue may be touched with a coal
from God’s altar; that God would warm his heart who is to help to warm
others. Your prayers may be a means to quicken the minister. Some complain
they find no benefit by the word preached; perhaps they did not pray for
their minister as they should. Prayer is like the whetting and sharpening
of an instrument, which makes it cut better. Pray with and for your family.
Yea, pray for all the congregations that meet on this day in the fear of
the Lord; that the dew of the Spirit may fall with the manna of the word;
that some souls may be converted, and others strengthened; that gospel
ordinances may be continued, and have no restraint put upon them. These
are the things we should pray for. The tree of mercy will not drop its
fruit, useless it be shaken by the hand of prayer.
(2) The
manner of our prayer. It is not enough to say a prayer; to pray in a dull,
cold manner, which asks God to deny; but we must pray with reverence, humility,
fervency, and hope in God’s mercy. Luke
22: 44. Christ prayed more earnestly. That we may pray with
more fervency, we must pray with a sense of our wants. He who is pinched
with wants, will be earnest in craving alms. He prays most fervently who
prays most feelingly. This is to sanctify the morning of a Sabbath; and
it is a good preparation for the word preached. When the ground is broken
up by the slough, it is fit to receive the seed; when the heart has been
broken by prayer, it is fit to receive the seed of the preached word.
V. Having
thus dressed your souls on a morning, for the further sanctification of
the Sabbath, address yourself to the hearing of the preached word.
When
you sit down in your seat, lift up your eyes to heaven for a blessing upon
the word to be dispensed; for you must know that the word preached does
not work as physic, by its own inherent virtue, but by a virtue from heaven,
and the co-operation of the Holy Ghost. Therefore put up a short ejaculatory
prayer for a blessing upon the word, that it may be made effectual to you.
The word
being begun to be preached, hear it with reverence and holy attention.
‘A certain woman, named Lydia, attended unto the things which were spoken
of Paul.’ Acts
16: 14. Constantine, the emperor, was noted for his reverent
attention to the word. Christ taught daily in the temple: and ‘all the
people were very attentive to hear him.’ Luke
19: 48. In the Greek, ‘they hung upon his lip.’ Could we tell
men of a rich purchase, they would diligently attend; and should they not
much more, when the gospel of grace is preached unto them? That we may
sanctify and hallow the Sabbath by attentive hearing, beware of these two
things in hearing: distraction and drowsiness.
[1] Distraction.
‘That ye may attend open the Lord without distraction.’ 1
Cor 7: 35. It is said of Bernard, that when he came to the church-door,
he would say, ‘Stay here all my earthly thoughts.’ So should we say to
ourselves, when we are at the door of God’s house, ‘Stay here all my worldly
cares and wandering cogitations; I am now going to hear what the Lord will
say to me.’ Distraction hinders devotion. The mind is tossed with vain
thoughts, and diverted from the business in hand. It is hard to make a
quicksilver heart fix. Jerome complains of himself, ‘Sometimes when I am
about God’s service, per
porticus diambulo, I am walking
in the galleries, and sometimes casting up accounts.’ How often in hearing
the word, the thoughts dance up and down; and, when the eye is upon the
minister, the mind is upon other things. Distracted hearing is far from
sanctifying the Sabbath. It is very sinful to give way to vain thoughts
at this time; because, when we are hearing the word, we are in God’s special
presence. To do any treasonable action in the king’s presence is high great
impudence. ‘Yea, in my house have I found their wickedness.’ Jer
23: 11. So the Lord may say, ‘In my house, while they are hearing
my word, I have found wickedness; they have wanton eyes, and their soul
is set on vanity.’
Whence
do these roving and distracting thoughts in hearing come?
(1) Partly
from Satan. The devil is sure to be present in our assemblies. If he cannot
hinder us from hearing, he will hinder us in hearing. ‘When the sons of
God came to present themselves before the Lord, Satan came also among them.’ Job
1: 6. The devil sets vain objects before the fancy to cause
a diversion. His great design is to render the word fruitless. As when
one is writing, another jogs him that he cannot write even, so when we
are hearing, the devil will be jogging us with a temptation, that we should
not attend to the word preached. ‘He shewed me Joshua the high-priest standing
before the angel of the Lord, and Satan standing at his right hand to resist
him.’ Zech
3: 1.
(2) These
wandering thoughts in hearing come partly from ourselves. We must not lay
all the blame upon Satan.
They
come from the eye. A wandering eye causes wandering thoughts. As a thief
may come into the house at a window, so vain thoughts may be at the eye.
As we are bid to keep our feet when we enter into the house of God (Eccl
5: 1), so we had need make a covenant with our eyes, that we
be not distracted by beholding other objects. Job
31: 1.
Wandering
thoughts in hearing rise out of the heart. These sparks come out of our
own furnace. Vain thoughts are the mud which the heart, as from a troubled
sea, casts up. ‘For from within, out of the heart of men, proceed evil
thoughts.’ Mark
7: 21. As the foulness of the stomach sends up fumes into the
head, so the corruption of the heart sends up evil thoughts into the mind.
Distracted
thoughts in hearing proceed from an evil habit. We inure ourselves to vain
thoughts at other times, and therefore we cannot hinder them on a Sabbath.
Habit is a second nature. ‘Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard
his spots? then may ye also do good that are accustomed to do evil?’ Jer
13: 23. He that is used to bad company, knows not how to leave
it; so such as have vain thoughts to keep them company all the week, know
not how to get rid of them on the Sabbath. Let me show you how evil these
vain distracting thoughts in hearing are: —
[1] To
have the heart distracted in hearing, is a disrespect to God’s omniscience.
God is an all-seeing Spirit; and thoughts speak louder in his ears than
words do in ours. ‘He declareth unto man what is his thought.’ Amos
4: 13. To make no conscience of wandering thoughts in hearing,
is an affront to God’s omniscience, as if he knew not our heart, or did
not hear the language of our thoughts.
[2] To
give way to wandering thoughts in hearing is hypocrisy. We pretend to hear
what God says, and our minds are quite upon another thing. We present God
with our bodies, but do not give him our hearts. Hos
7: 11. This hypocrisy God complains of. ‘This people draw near
me with their mouth, and with their lips do honour me, but have removed
their hearts far from me.’ Isa
29: 13. This is to prevaricate and deal falsely with God.
[3] Vain
thoughts in hearing discover much want of love to God. Did we love him
we should listen to his words as oracles, and write them upon the table
of our heart. Prov
3: 3. When a friend whom we love speaks to us, and gives us
advice, we attend with seriousness, and suck in every word. Giving our
thoughts leave to ramble in holy duties, shows a great defect in our love
to God.
[4] Vain
impertinent thoughts in hearing defile an ordinance. They are as dead flies
in the box of ointment. When a string of a lute is out of tune, it spoils
the music; so distraction of thought puts the mind out of tune, and makes
our services sound harsh and unpleasant. Wandering thoughts poison a duty,
and turn it into sin. ‘Let his prayer become sin.’ Psa
109: 7. What can be worse than to have a man’s praying and hearing
of the word become sin? Would it not be sad, if the meat we eat should
increase bad humours? How much more when hearing the word, which is the
food of the soul, is turned into sin!
[5] Vain
thoughts in hearing offend God. If the king were speaking to one of his
subjects, and he should not give heed to what the king says, but be thinking
on another business, or playing with a feather, would not the king be provoked?
So, when we are in God’s presence, and he is speaking to us in his word,
and we mind not much what he says, but our hearts go after covetousness,
will it not offend God to be thus slighted? Ezek
33: 31. He has pronounced a curse upon such. ‘Cursed be the
deceiver, which has in his flock a male, and sacrificeth unto the Lord
a corrupt thing.’Mal
1: 14. To have strong lively affections is to have a male in
the flock; but to hear the word with distraction, is to give God duties
fly-blown with vain thoughts, and to offer to the Lord a corrupt thing,
which brings a curse. ‘Cursed be the deceiver.’
[6] Vain
thoughts in hearing, when allowed and not resisted, make way for hardening
the heart. A stone in the heart is worse than in the kidneys. Distracted
thoughts in hearing do not better the heart, but harden it. Vain thoughts
take away the holy awe of God which should be upon the heart; they make
conscience less tender, and hinder the efficacy the word should have upon
the heart.
[7] Vain
and distracting thoughts rob us of the comfort of an ordinance. A gracious
soul often meets with God in the sanctuary, and can say, ‘I found him whom
my soul loveth.’ Cant
3: 4. He is like Jonathan, who, when he had tasted the honey
on the rod, had his eyes enlightened. But vain thoughts hinder the comfort
of an ordinance, as a black cloud hides the warm comfortable beams of the
sun. Will God speak peace to us when our minds are wandering and our thoughts
are travelling to the ends of the earth? Prov
17: 24. If ever you would hear the word with attention, do as
Abraham when he drove away the fowls from the sacrifice. Gen
15: 2. When you find these excursions and sinful wanderings
in hearing, labour to drive away the fowls; get rid of these vain thoughts;
they are vagrants, and must not be entertained.
How shall
we get rid of these vagabond thoughts?
(1) Pray
and watch against them. (2) Let the sense of God’s omniscient eye overawe
your hearts. The servant will not sport in his master’s presence. (3) Labour
for a holy frame of heart. Were the heart more spiritual, the mind would
be less feathery. (4) Bring more love to the word. We fix our minds upon
that which we love. He that loves his pleasures and recreations, fixes
his mind upon them, and can follow them without distraction. Were our love
more set upon the preached word, our minds would be more fixed upon it;
and surely there is enough to make us love the word preached; for it is
the word of life, the inlet to knowledge, the antidote against sin, the
quickener of all holy affections. It is the true manna, which has all sorts
of sweet tastes in it; the pool of Bethesda, in which the rivers of life
spring forth to heal the broken in heart; and a sovereign elixir or cordial
to revive the sorrowful spirit. Get love to the word preached, and you
will not be so distracted in hearing. What the heart delights in, the thoughts
dwell upon.
[2] Take
heed of drowsiness in hearing. Drowsiness shows much irreverence. How lively
are many when they are about the world, but in the worship of God how drowsy,
as if the devil had given them opium to make them sleep! A drowsy feeling
here is very sinful. Are you not in prayer asking pardon of sin? Will the
prisoner fall asleep when he is begging pardon? In the preaching of the
word, is not the bread of life broken to you? and will a man fall asleep
over his food? Which is worse, to stay from a sermon, or sleep at a sermon?
While you slept, perhaps the truth was delivered which might have converted
your souls. Besides, sleeping is very offensive in a holy assembly; it
not only grieves the Spirit of God, but makes the hearts of the righteous
sad. Ezek
13: 22. It troubles them to see any show such contempt of God
and his worship; to see them busy in the shop, but drowsy in the temple.
Therefore, as Christ said, ‘Could ye not watch one hour?’ so, can ye not
wake one hour? Matt
26: 40. I deny not but a child of God may sometimes, through
weakness and indisposition of body, drop asleep at a sermon, but not voluntarily
or ordinarily. The sun may be in an eclipse, but not often. If sleeping
be customary and allowed, it is a very bad sign, and a profanation of the
ordinance. A good remedy against drowsiness is to use a spare diet upon
the Sabbath. Such as indulge their appetite too much on a Sabbath, are
fitter to sleep on a couch than pray in the temple. That you may throw
off distracting thoughts and drowsiness on the Lord’s-day, and may hear
the word with reverend attention, consider —
(1) It
is God that speaks to us in his word; therefore the preaching of the word
is called the ‘breath of his lips.’ Isa
11: 4. Christ is said now to speak to us ‘from heaven,’ as a
king speaks in his ambassador. Heb
12: 25. Ministers are but pipes and organs, it is the Spirit
of the living God that breathes in them. When we come to the word, we should
think within ourselves, God is speaking in this preacher. The Thessalonians
heard the word Paul preached, as if God himself had spoken unto them. ‘When
ye received the word of God, which ye heard of us, ye received it not as
the word of men, but (as it is in truth) the word of God.’ 1
Thess 2: 13. When Samuel knew it was the Lord that spake to
him, he lent his ear. 1
Sam 3: 10. If we do not regard God when he speaks to us, he
will not regard us when we pray to him.
(2) Consider
how serious and weighty the matters delivered to us are. Moses said, ‘I
call heaven and earth to record this day, that I have set before you life
and death.’ Deut
30: 19. Can men be regardless of the word, or drowsy when the
weighty matters of eternity are set before them? We preach faith, and holiness
of life, and the day of judgement and eternal retribution. Here life and
death are set before you; and does not all this call for serious attention?
If a letter were read to one of special business, wherein his life and
estate were concerned, would he not be very serious in listening to it?
In the preaching of the word your salvation is concerned; and if ever you
would attend, it should be now. ‘It is not a vain thing for you; because
it is your life.’ Deut
32: 47.
(3) To
give way to vain thoughts and drowsiness in hearing, gratifies Satan. He
knows that not to mind a duty, is all one in religion as not to do it.
‘What the heart does not do, is not done.’ Therefore Christ says of some,
‘Hearing, they hear not.’ Matt
13: 13. How could that be? Because, though the word sounded
in their ear, yet they minded not what was said to them, their thoughts
were upon other things; therefore, it was all as one as if they did not
hear. Does it not please Satan to see men come to the word, and as good
stay away? They are haunted with vain thoughts; they are taken off from
the duty while they are in it; their body is in the assembly, their heart
in their shop. ‘Hearing, they hear not.’
(4) Each
Sabbath may be the last we shall ever keep; we may go from the place of
hearing to the place of judging; and shall not we give reverend attention
to the word? Did we think when we come into God’s house ‘Perhaps this will
be the last time that ever God will counsel us about our souls, and before
another sermon death’s alarm will sound in our ears; with what attention
and devotion should we feel, and our affections would be all on fire in
hearing!
(5) You
must give an account for every sermon you hear. Redde
rationem: ‘Give an account of thy
stewardship.’ Luke
16: 2. So will God say, ‘Give an account of thy hearing. Hast
thou been affected with the word? Hast thou profited by it?’ How can we
give a good account, if we have been distracted in hearing, and have not
taken notice of what has been said to us? The judge to whom we must give
an account is God. Were we to give account to man, we might falsify accounts;
but we must give an account to God. Nec
donis corrumpitur, nec blanditiis fallitur.
Bernard. ‘He is so just a God that he cannot be bribed, and so wise that
he cannot be deceived.’ Therefore, having to give an account to such an
impartial Judge, how should we observe every word preached, remembering
the account! Let all this make us shake off distraction and drowsiness
in hearing, and have our ears chained to the word.
VI. IN
order to hear the word aright, let the following things be attended to:
—
[1] Lay
aside those dispositions which may render the preached word ineffectual.
As,
(1) Curiosity.
Some go to hear the word preached, not so much to get grace, as to enrich
themselves with notions: having ‘itching ears.’ 2
Tim 4: 3. Augustine confesses that, before his conversion, he
went to hear Ambrose for his eloquence rather than for the spirituality
of the matter. ‘Thou art unto them as a very lovely song of one that has
a pleasant voice, and can play well on an instrument.’ Ezek
33: 32. Many go to the word to feast their ears only; they like
the melody of the voice, the mellifluous sweetness of the expression, and
the novelty of the opinions. Acts
17: 21. This is to love the garnishing of the dish more than
the food; it is to desire to be pleased rather than edified. Like a woman
that paints her face, but neglects her health — they paint and adorn themselves
with curious speculations, but neglect their soul’s health. This hearing
neither sanctifies the heart nor the Sabbath.
(2) Lay
aside prejudice. Prejudice is sometimes against the truths preached. The
Sadducees were prejudiced against the doctrine of the resurrection. Luke
20: 27. Sometimes prejudice is against the person preaching.
‘There is one Micaiah, by whom we may inquire of the Lord, but I hate him.’ 1
Kings 22: 8. This hinders the power of the word. If a patient
has an ill opinion of his physician, he will not take any of his medicines,
however good they may be. Prejudice in the mind is like an obstruction
in the stomach, which hinders the nutritive virtue of the meat. It poisons
the word, and causes it to lose its efficacy.
(3) Lay
aside covetousness. Covetousness is not only getting worlds gain unjustly,
but loving it inordinately. This is a great hindrance to the preached word.
The seed which fell among thorns was choked, Matt
13: 22; a fit emblem of the word when preached to a covetous
hearer. The covetous man is thinking on the world when he is hearing; his
heart is in his shop. ‘They sit before thee as my people, and they hear
thy words, but their heart goes after their covetousness.’ Ezek
33: 31. A covetous hearer derides the word. ‘The Pharisees,
who were covetous, heard all these things, and they derided him.’ Luke
16: 14.
(4) Lay
aside partiality. Partiality in hearing is, when we like to hear some truths
preached, but not all. We love to hear of heaven, but not of self-denial;
of reigning with Christ, but not of suffering with him; of the more facile
duties of religion, but not those which are more knotty and difficult;
as mortification, laying the axe to the root, and hewing down our beloved
sin. ‘Speak smooth things’ (Isa
30: 10), such as may not grate upon the conscience. Many like
to hear of the love of Christ, but not of loving their enemies; they like
the comforts of the word, but not its reproofs. Herod heard John the Baptist
gladly; he liked many truths, but not when he spake against his incest.
(5) Lay
aside censoriousness. Some, instead of judging themselves for sin, sit
as judges upon the preacher; his sermon had either too much gall in it,
or it was too long. They would sooner censure a sermon than practice it.
God will judge the judger.Matt
7: 1.
(6) Lay
aside disobedience. ‘All day long I have stretched forth my hands unto
a disobedient people.’ Rom
10: 21. It is said of the Jews that God stretched out his hands
in the preaching of the word, but they rejected Christ. Let there be none
among you that wilfully refuse the counsels of the word. It is sad to have
an adder’s ear and an adamant heart. Zech
7: 11, 12. If, when God speaks to us in his word, we are deaf,
when we speak to him in prayer, he will be dumb.
[2] If
you would hear the word aright, have good ends in hearing. ‘Come to the
word to be made better.’ Some have no other end in hearing but because
it is in fashion, or to gain repute, or stop the mouth of conscience; but
come to the word to be made more holy. There is a great difference between
one who goes to a garden for flowers to wear in her bosom, and another
that goes for flowers to make syrups and medicines. We should go to the
word for medicine to cure us; as Naaman the Syrian went to Jordan to be
healed of his leprosy. ‘Desire the sincere milk of the word, that ye may
grow thereby.’ 1
Pet 2: 2. Go to the word to be changed into its similitude.
As the seal leaves its print upon the wax, so labour that the word preached
may leave the print of its own holiness upon your heart.
Labour
that the ‘word’ may have such a virtue in you, as the water of jealousy,
to kill and make fruitful; that it may kill your sins, and make your souls
fruitful in grace. Numb
5: 27.
[3] If
you would hear the word aright, go to it with delight. The word preached
is a feast of fat things. With what delight do men go to a feast! The word
preached anoints the blind eye; mollifies the rocky heart; it beats off
our fetters, and turns us from the ‘power of Satan unto God.’ Acts
26: 18. The word is the seed of regeneration, and the engine
of salvation. James
1: 18. Hear the word with delight and complacency. ‘Thy words
were found, and I did eat them; and thy word was the joy and rejoicing
of mine heart.’ Jer
15: 16. ‘How sweet are thy words unto my taste! yea, sweeter
than honey to my mouth.’ Psa
119: 103. Love the word that comes most home to the conscience;
bless God when your corruptions have been met with, when the sword of the
Spirit has divided between you and your sins. Who cares for the physic
which will not work?
[4] If
you would hear the word aright, mix it with faith. Believe the truth of
the word preached, that it is the word by which you must be judged. Not
only give credence to the word preached, but apply it to your own souls.
Faith digests the word, and turns it into spiritual nourishment. Many hear
the word, but it may be said of them, as in Psa
106: 24 ‘They believed not his word.’ As Melanchthon once said
to some Italians ‘Ye Italians worship God in the bread, when ye do not
believe him to be in heaven;’ so, many hear God’s words, but do not believe
that God is; they question the truth of his oracles. If we do not mix faith
with the word, it is like leaving out the chief ingredient in a medicine,
which makes it ineffectual. Unbelief hardens men’s hearts against the word.
‘Divers were hardened, and believed not.’ Acts
19: 9. Men hear many truths delivered concerning the preciousness
of Christ, the beauty of holiness, and the felicity of a glorified estate;
but, if through unbelief and atheism, they question these truths, we may
as well speak to stones and pillars of the church as to them. That word
which is not believed, can never be practised. Ubi
male creditur, ibi nec bene vivitur
[When belief is unstable, conduct also wavers]. Jerome. Unbelief makes
the word preached of no effect. ‘The word preached did not profit, not
being mixed with faith in them that heard it.’ Heb
4: 2. The word to an unbeliever is like a cordial put into a
dead man’s mouth, which loses all its virtue. If there be any unbelievers
in our congregations, what shall ministers say of them to God at the last
day? Lord, we have preached to the people thou sentest us to, we have showed
them our commission, we have declared unto them thy whole counsel, but
they have not believed a word we spake. We told them what would be the
fruit of sin, but they would not heed. They would drink their sugared draught,
though there was death in the cup. Lord, we are free from their blood.
God forbid that ministers should ever have to make this report to him of
their people. But this they will be forced to do if their hearers live
and die in unbelief. Would you sanctify a Sabbath by hearing the word aright?
Hear it with faith. The apostle puts the two together, ‘belief and salvation.’
‘We are of them that believe to the saving of the soul.’ Heb
10: 39.
[5] If
you would hear the word aright, hear it with meek spirits. James
1: 21. Receive the word in mansuetudine,
‘with meekness’. Meekness is a submissive frame of heart to the word. Contrary
to this meekness is fierceness of spirit, when men rise up in rage against
the word; as if the patient should be angry with the physician when he
gives him a medicine to purge out his bad humours. ‘When they heard these
things, they were cut to the heart, and gnashed on him [Stephen] with their
teeth.’ Acts
7: 54. ‘Asa was wroth with the seer, and put him in a prison
house.’2
Chron 16: 10. Pride and guilt make men fret at the word. What
made Asa enraged but pride? He was a king, and thought he was too good
to be told of his sin. What made Cain angry when God said to him, ‘Where
is Abel, thy brother?’ He replied, ‘Am I my brother’s keeper?’ What made
him so touchy but guilt? He had imbrued his hands in his brother’s blood.
If you would hear the word aright, lay aside your passions. ‘Receive the
word with meekness;’ get humble hearts to submit to the truths delivered.
God takes the meek person for his scholar. ‘The meek will he teach his
way.’ Psa
25: 9. Meekness makes the word preached to be an ‘ingrafted
word.’ James
1: 21. A good scion grafted in a bad stock changes the nature
of it, and makes it bear good and generous fruit; so, when the word preached
is grafted into men’s hearts, it sanctifies them and makes them bring forth
the sweet fruits of righteousness. By meekness it becomes an ingrafted
word.
[6] If
you would hear the word aright, be not only attentive, but retentive. Lay
it up in your memories and hearts. The seed ‘on the good ground are they,
which, having heard the word, keep it.’ Luke
8: 15. The Greek word for ‘to keep,’ signifies to hold the word
fast, that it does not run from us. If the seed be not kept in the ground,
but is presently washed away, it is sown to little purpose; so if the word
preached be not kept in your memories and hearts, it is preached in vain.
Many persons have memories like leaky vessels. If the word goes out as
fast as it comes in, how can it profit? If a treasure be put in a chest
and the chest be not locked, it may easily be taken out; so a bad memory
is a chest without a lock, out of which the devil can easily take all the
treasure. ‘Then comes the devil and taketh away the word out of their hearts.’ Luke
8: 12. Labour to keep in memory the truths you hear. The things
we esteem are not easily forgotten. ‘Can a maid forget her ornaments or
a bride her attire?’ Jer
2: 32. Did we prize the word more, we should not forget it so
soon. If meat does not stay in the stomach, but rises up as fast as we
eat it, it cannot nourish; so, if the word stays not in the memory, but
is presently gone, it can do the soul but little good.
[7] If
you would hear aright, practice what you hear. Practice is the life of
all. ‘Blessed are they that do his commandments, that they may have right
to the tree of life.’ Rev
22: 14. Hearing only will be no plea at the day of judgement
— merely to say, ‘Lord, I have heard many sermons.’ God will say, ‘What
fruits of obedience have ye brought forth?’ The word preached is not only
to inform you but reform you; not only to mend your sight, but to mend
your pace in the way to heaven. A good hearer opens and shuts to God as
the heliotrope to the sun.
(1) If
you do not hear the word to practice it, you lose all your labour. How
many a weary step have you taken, your body has been crowded, and your
spirit faint, if you are not bettered by hearing! If you are as proud,
as vain, and as earthly as ever, all your hearing is lost. You would be
loath to trade in vain, and why not to hear sermons in vain? ‘Why then
labour I in vain?’ Job
9: 29. Put this question to your own soul: Why labour I in vain?
Why do I take all these pains to hear, and yet have not grace to practice
it? I am as bad as ever! Why then do I labour in vain?
(2) If
you hear the word, and are not bettered by it, you are like the salamander,
no hotter in the fire; and your hearing will increase your condemnation.
‘That servant which knew his lord’s will, neither did according to his
will, shall be beaten with many stripes.’ Luke
12: 47. We pity such as know not where to hear; it will be worse
with such as care not how they hear. To graceless disobedient hearers,
every sermon will be a faggot to heat hell. It is sad to go loaded to hell
with ordinances. Oh, beg the Spirit to make the word preached effectual!
Ministers can but speak to the ear, the Spirit speaks to the heart. ‘While
Peter spake, the Holy Ghost fell on all them which heard the word.’ Acts
10: 44.
[8] Having
heard the word in a holy and spiritual manner, for the further sanctification
of the Sabbath, confer with the word. We are forbidden on this day to speak
our own words, but we must speak of God’s word. Isa
58: 13. Speak of the sermons as you sit together; which is one
part of sanctifying the Sabbath. Good discourse brings holy truths into
our memories, and fastens them upon our hearts. ‘Then they that feared
the Lord, spake often one to another.’ Mal
3: 16. There is great power and efficacy in good discourse.
‘How forcible are right words!’ Job
6: 25. By holy conference on a Sabbath, one Christian helps
to warm another when he is frozen, and to strengthen another when he is
weak. Latimer confessed he was much furthered in religion by having conference
with Mr. Bilney the martyr. ‘My tongue shall speak of thy word.’ Psa
119: 172. One reason why preaching the word on a Sabbath does
no more good is because there is so little good conference. Few speak of
the word they have heard, as if sermons were such secrets that they must
not be spoken of again, or as if it were a shame to speak of that which
will save us.
[9] Close
the Sabbath evening with repetition, reading, singing Psalms, and prayer.
Ask that God would bless the word you have heard. Could we but thus spend
a Sabbath, we might be ‘in the Spirit on the Lord’s-day,’ our souls would
be nourished and comforted; and the Sabbaths we now keep, would be earnests
of the everlasting Sabbaths which we shall celebrate in heaven.
Use one.
See here the Christian’s duty, ‘to keep the Sabbath-day holy.’
(1) The
whole Sabbath is to be dedicated to God. It is not said, Keep a part of
the Sabbath holy, but the whole day must be religiously observed. If God
has given us six days, and taken but one to himself, shall we grudge him
any part of that day? It were sacrilege. The Jews kept a whole day to the
Lord; and we are not to abridge or curtail the Sabbath, as Augustine says,
more than the Jews did. The very heathen, by the light of nature, set apart
a whole day in honour of false gods; and Scaevola, a high-priest of theirs,
affirms that the wilful transgression of that day could have no expiation
or pardon. If any one robs any part of the Christian Sabbath for servile
work or recreation, Scaevola, the high priest of the heathenish gods, shall
rise up in judgement to condemn him. Let those who say, that to keep a
whole Sabbath is too Judaical, show where God has made any abatement of
the time of worship; where he has said, you shall keep but a part of the
Sabbath; and if they cannot show that, it robs God of his due. That a whole
day be designed and set apart for his special worship, is a perpetual statute,
while the church remains upon the earth, as Peter Martyr says. Of this
opinion also were Theodore, Augustine, Irenaeus, and the chief of the fathers.
(2) As
the whole Sabbath is to be dedicated to God, so it must be kept holy. You
have seen the manner of sanctifying the Lord’s-day by reading, meditation,
prayer, hearing the word, and by singing of psalms to make melody to the
Lord. Now, besides what I have said upon keeping this day holy, let me
make a short comment or paraphrase on that Scripture. ‘If thou turn away
thy foot from the Sabbath, from doing thy pleasure on my holy day; and
call the Sabbath a delight, the holy of the Lord, honourable: and shalt
honour him, not doing thine own ways, nor finding thine own pleasure, nor
speaking thine own words.’ Isa
58: 13. Here is a description of rightly sanctifying a Sabbath.
‘If thou
turn away thy foot from the Sabbath.’ This may be understood either literally
or spiritually. Literally, that is, if thou withdrawest thy foot from taking
long walks or journeys on the Sabbath-day. So the Jewish doctors expound
it. Or, spiritually, if thou turn away thy affections (the feet of thy
soul) from inclining to any worldly business.
‘From
doing thy pleasure on my holy day.’ That is, thou must not do that which
may please the carnal part, as in sports and pastimes. This is to do the
devil’s work on God’s day.
‘And
call the Sabbath a delight.’ Call it a delight, that is, esteem it so.
Though the Sabbath be not a day for carnal pleasure, yet holy pleasure
is not forbidden. The soul must take pleasure in the duties of a Sabbath.
The saints of old counted the Sabbath a delight: the Jews called the Sabbath
dies lucis, a day of light. The Lord’s day, on which the Sun of Righteousness
shines, is both a day of light and delight. This is the day of sweet intercourse
between God and the soul. On this day a Christian makes his sallies out
to heaven; his soul is lifted above the earth; and can this be without
delight? The higher the bird flies, the sweeter it sings. On the Sabbath
the soul fixes its love on God; and where love is, there is delight. On
this day the believer’s heart is melted, quickened, and enlarged in holy
duties; and how can all this be, and not a secret delight go along with
it? On a Sabbath a gracious soul can say, ‘I sat down under his shadow
with great delight, and his fruit was sweet to my taste.’Cant
2: 3. How can a spiritual heart choose but call the Sabbath
a delight? Is it not delightful to a queen to be putting on her wedding
robes in which she shall meet the king her bridegroom? When we are about
Sabbath exercises, we are dressing ourselves, and putting on our wedding
robes in which we are to meet our heavenly bridegroom the Lord Jesus; and
is not this delightful? On the Sabbath God makes a feast of fat things;
he feasts the ear with his word, and the heart with his grace. Well then
may we call the Sabbath a delight. To find this holy delight, is to ‘be
in the Spirit on the Lord’s-day.’
‘The
holy of the Lord, honourable.’ In the Hebrew, it is glorious. To call the
Sabbath honourable, is not to be understood so much of an outward honour
given to it, by wearing richer apparel, or having better diet on this day,
as the Jewish doctors corruptly gloss. This is the chief honour that some
give to this day; but by calling the Sabbath honourable, is meant that
honour of the heart which we give to the day, reverencing it, and esteeming
it as the queen of days. We are to count the Sabbath honourable, because
God has honoured it. All the persons in the Trinity have honoured it. God
the Father blessed it, God the Son rose upon it, God the Holy Ghost descended
on it. Acts
2: 1: This day is to be honoured by all good Christians, and
had in high veneration. It is a day of renown, on which a golden sceptre
of mercy is held forth. The Christian Sabbath is the very crepusculum
and dawning of the heavenly Sabbath. It is honourable, because on this
day ‘God comes down to us and visits us.’ To have the King of heaven present
in a special manner in our assemblies, makes the Sabbath-day honourable.
Besides, the work done on this day makes it honourable. The six days are
filled up with servile work, which makes them lose much of their glory;
but on this day sacred work is done. The soul is employed wholly about
the worship of God; it is praying, hearing, meditating; it is doing angels’
work, praising, and blessing God. Again, the day is honourable by virtue
of a divine institution. Silver is of itself valuable; but when the royal
stamp is put upon it, it is honourable; so God has put a sacred stamp upon
this day, the stamp of divine authority, and the stamp of divine benediction.
This makes it honourable; and this is sanctifying the Sabbath, to call
it a delight, and honourable.
‘Not
doing thine own ways.’ That is, thou shalt not defile the day by doing
any servile work.
‘Nor
finding thine own pleasure.’ That is, not gratifying the fleshly part by
walks, visits, or pastimes.
‘Nor
speaking thine own Words.’ That is, words heterogeneous and unsuitable
for a Sabbath; vain, impertinent words; discourses of worldly affairs.
Use
two. If the Sabbath-day is to be kept holy, they are reproved who, instead
of sanctifying the Sabbath, profane it. They take the time which should
be dedicated wholly to God, and spend it in the service of the devil and
their lusts. The Lord has set apart this day for his own worship, and they
make it common. He has set a hedge about this commandment, saying, ‘Remember;’
and they break this hedge; but he who breaks this hedge, a serpent shall
bite him. Eccl
10: 8. The Sabbath day in England lies bleeding; and oh! that
our parliament would pour some balm into the wounds which it has received!
How is this day profaned, by sitting idle at home, by selling meat, by
vain discourse, by sinful visits, by walking in the fields, and by sports!
The people of Israel might not gather manna on the Sabbath, and may we
use sports and dancings on this day? Truly it should be matter of grief
to us to see so much Sabbath-profanation. When one of Darius’s eunuchs
saw Alexander setting his feet on a rich table of Darius’s, he wept. Alexander
asked him why he wept? He said it was to see the table which his master
so highly esteemed now made a footstool. So may we weep to see the Sabbath-day,
which God highly esteems, and has honoured and blessed, made a footstool,
and trampled upon by the feet of sinners. To profane the Sabbath is a great
sin; it is a wilful contempt of God; it is not only casting his law behind
our back, but trampling it under foot. He says, ‘Keep the Sabbath holy;’
but men pollute it. This is to despise God, to hang out the flag of defiance,
to throw down the gauntlet, and challenge God himself. Now, how can God
endure to be thus saucily confronted by proud dust? Surely he will not
suffer this high impudence to go unpunished. God’s curse will come upon
the Sabbath-breaker; and it will blast where it comes. The law of the land
lets Sabbath-breakers alone, but God will not. No sooner did Christ curse
the fig-tree, but it withered. God will take the matter into his own hand;
he will see after the punishing of Sabbath violation. And how does he punish
it?
(1)
With spiritual plagues. He gives up Sabbath profaners to hardness of heart,
and a scared conscience. Spiritual judgements are sorest. ‘So I gave them
up unto their own hearts’ lust.’ Psa
81: 12. A sear in the conscience is a brand-mark of reprobation.
(2)
God punishes this sin by giving men up to commit other sins. To revenge
the breaking of his Sabbath, he suffers them to break open houses, and
so come to be punished by the magistrate. How many such confessions have
we heard from thieves going to be executed! They never regarded the Sabbath,
and God suffered them to commit those sins for which they are to die.
(3)
God punishes Sabbath-breaking by sudden visible judgements on men for this
sin. He punishes them in their estates and in their persons. While a certain
man was carrying corn into his barn on the Lord’s-day, both house and corn
were consumed with fire from heaven. In Wiltshire there was a dancing match
appointed upon the Lord’s-day; and while one of the company was dancing,
he suddenly fell down dead. The ‘Theatre of God’s Judgements’ relates of
one, who used every Lord’s-day to hunt in sermon-time, who had a child
by his wife with a head like a dog, and it cried like a hound. His sin
was monstrous, and it was punished with a monstrous birth. The Lord threatened
the Jews, that if they would not hallow the Sabbath-day, he would kindle
a fire in their gates. Jer
17: 27. The dreadful fire which broke out in London began on
the Sabbath-day; as if God would tell us from heaven he was then punishing
us for our Sabbath profanation. Nor does he punish it only in this life
with death, but hereafter with damnation. Let such as break God’s Sabbath
see if they can break those chains of darkness in which they and the devils
shall be held.
Use
three. It exhorts us to Sabbath holiness.
Make
conscience of keeping this day holy. The other commandments have an affirmative
in them only, or a negative; this fourth commandment has both an affirmative
in it and a negative. ‘Thou shalt keep the Sabbath day holy,’ and, ‘thou
shalt not do any manner of work in it,’ shows how carefully God would have
us observe this day. Not only must you keep this day yourselves, but have
a care that all under your charge keep it; ‘Thou, and thy son, and thy
daughter, and thy man-servant, and thy maidservant;’ that is, thou who
art a superior, a parent or a master, thou must have a care that not only
thou thyself, but those who are under thy trust and tuition, sanctify the
day. Those masters of families are to blame who are careful that their
servants serve them, but have no care that they serve God; who care not
though their servants should serve the devil, so long as their bodies do
them service. That which Paul says to Timothy, Serva
depositum, ‘That good thing, which
was committed unto thee, keep,’ is of large meaning. 1
Tim 1: 11. Not only have a care of thy own soul, but have a
care of the souls thou art entrusted with. See that they who are under
thy charge sanctify the Sabbath. God’s law provided, that if a man met
with an ox or an ass going astray, he should bring him back again; much
more, when thou sees the soul of thy child or servant going astray from
God, and breaking his Sabbath, thou shouldest bring him back again to a
religious observation of this day.
That
I may press you to Sabbath-sanctification, consider what great blessings
God has promised to the strict observers of this day. Isa
58: 14. (1) A promise of joy. ‘Then shalt thou delight thyself
in the Lord.’ Delighting in God is both a duty and a reward. In this text
it is a reward, ‘Then shalt thou delight thyself in the Lord;’ as if God
had said, If thou keep the Sabbath conscientiously, I will give thee that
which will fill thee with delight; if thou keep the Sabbath willingly,
I will make thee keep it joyfully. I will give thee those enlargements
in duty, and that inward comfort, which shall abundantly satisfy thee;
thy soul shall overflow with such a stream of joy, that thou shalt say,
‘Lord, in keeping thy Sabbath there is great reward. (2) Of honour. And
‘I will cause thee to ride upon the high places of the earth.’ That is,
I will advance thee to honour, ascendere
faciam; so Munster interprets it.
Some, by the high places of the earth, understand Judea; so Grotius. I
will bring thee into the land of Judea, which is situated higher than the
other countries adjacent. (3) Of earth and heaven. ‘And I will feed thee
with the heritage of Jacob;’ that is, I will feed thee with all the delicious
things of Canaan, and afterwards I will translate thee to heaven, whereof
Canaan was but a type. Another promise is, ‘Blessed is the man that does
this, that keepeth the Sabbath from polluting it.’ Isa
56: 2. ‘Blessed is the man;’ in the Hebrew it is, ‘blessednesses.’
To him that keeps the Sabbath holy, here is blessedness upon blessedness
belonging to him; he shall be blessed with the upper and nether springs;
he shall be blessed in his name, estate, soul, progeny. Who would not keep
the Sabbath from polluting it that shall have so many blessings entailed
upon him and his posterity after him? Again, a conscientious keeping of
the Sabbath seasons the heart for God’s service all the week after. Christian
the more holy thou art on a Sabbath, the more holy thou wilt be on the
week following.
2.5 The Fifth Commandment
‘Honour
thy father and thy mother: that thy days may be long upon the land which
the Lord thy God giveth thee.’ Exod
20: 12.
Having
done with the first table, I am next to speak of the duties of the second
table. The commandments may be likened to Jacob’s ladder: the first table
respects God, and is the top of the ladder that reaches to heaven; the
second respects superiors and inferiors, and is the foot of the ladder
that rests on the earth. By the first table, we walk religiously towards
God; by the second, we walk religiously towards man. He cannot be good
in the first table that is bad in the second. ‘Honour thy father and thy
mother.’ In this we have a command, ‘honour thy father and thy mother;’
and, second, a reason for it, ‘That thy days may be long in the land.’
The command will chiefly be considered here, ‘Honour thy father.’
I. Father
is of different kinds; as the political, the ancient, the spiritual, the
domestic, and the natural.
[1] The
political father, the magistrate. He is the father of his country; he is
to be an encourager of virtue, a punisher of vice, and a father to the
widow and orphan. Such a father was Job. ‘I was a father to the poor, and
the cause which I knew not, I searched out.’ Job
29: 16. As magistrates are fathers, so especially the king,
who is the head of magistrates, is a political father; he is placed as
the sun among the lesser stars. The Scripture calls kings, ‘fathers.’ ‘Kings
shall be thy nursing fathers.’ Isa
49: 23. They are to train up their subjects in piety, by good
edicts and examples; and nurse them up in peace and plenty. Such nursing
fathers were David, Hezekiah, Josiah, Constantine, and Theodosius. It is
well for a people to have such nursing fathers, whose breasts milk comfort
to their children. These fathers are to be honoured, for —
(1) Their
place deserves honour. God has set these political fathers to preserve
order and harmony in a nation, and to prevent those state convulsions which
otherwise might ensue. When ‘there was no king in Israel, every man did
that which was right in his own eyes.’ Judges
17: 6. It is a wonder that locusts have no king, yet they go
forth by bands.
(2) God
has promoted kings, that they may promote justice. As they have a sword
in their hand, to signify their power; so they have a sceptre, an emblem
of justice. It is said of the Emperor Marcus Aurelius, that he allotted
one hour of the day to hear the complaints of those who were oppressed.
Kings place judges as cherubim about the throne, for distribution of justice.
These political fathers are to be honoured. ‘Honour the king.’ 1
Pet 2: 17. This honour is to be shown by a civil respect to
their persons, and a cheerful submission to their laws; so far as they
agree and run parallel with God’s law. Kings are to be prayed for, which
is a part of the honour we give them. ‘I exhort that supplications, prayers,
intercessions, be made for kings, that we may lead a quiet, peaceable life,
in all godliness and honesty.’ 1
Tim 2: 1. We are to pray for kings, that God would honour them
to be blessings; that under them we may enjoy the gospel of peace, and
the peace of the gospel. How happy was the reign of Numa Pompilius, when
swords were beaten into ploughshares, and bees made hives of the soldiers’
helmets!
[2] There
is the grave ancient father, who is venerable for old age; whose grey hairs
are resembled to the white flowers of the almond-tree. Eccl
12: 5. There are fathers for seniority, on whose wrinkled brows,
and in the furrows of whose cheeks is pictured the map of old age. These
fathers are to be honoured. ‘Thou shalt rise up before the hoary head,
and honour the face of the old man. Lev
19: 32. Especially those are to be honoured who are fathers
not only for their seniority, but for their piety; whose souls are flourishing
when their bodies are decaying. It is a blessed sight to see springs of
grace in the autumn of old age; to see men stooping towards the grave,
yet going up the hill of God; to see them lose their colour, yet keep their
savour. They whose silver hairs are crowned with righteousness, are worthy
of double honour; they are to be honoured, not only as pieces of antiquity,
but as patterns of virtue. If you see an old man fearing God, whose grace
shines brightest when the sun of his life is setting, O honour him as a
father, by reverencing and imitating him.
[3] There
are spiritual fathers, as pastors and ministers. These are instruments
of the new birth. ‘Though ye have ten thousand instructors, yet have ye
not many fathers; for in Christ Jesus I have begotten you through the gospel.’ 1
Cor 4: 15. The spiritual fathers are to be honoured in respect
of their office. Whatever their persons are, their office is honourable;
they are the messengers of the Lord of Hosts. Mal
2: 7. They represent no less than God himself. ‘Now then we
are ambassadors for Christ.’ 2
Cor 5: 20. Jesus Christ was of this calling; he had his mission
and sanction from heaven, and this crowns the ministerial calling with
honour. John
8: 18.
These
spiritual fathers are to be honoured ‘for their work’s sake.’ They come,
like the dove, with an olive branch in the mouth; they preach glad tidings
of peace; their work is ‘to save souls.’ Other callings have only to do
with men’s bodies or estates, but the minister’s calling is employed about
the souls of men. Their work is to redeem spiritual captives, and turn
men ‘from the power of Satan unto God.’ Acts
26: 18. Their work is ‘to enlighten them who sit in the region
of darkness,’ and make them ‘shine as stars in the kingdom of heaven.’
These spiritual fathers are to be ‘honoured for their work’s sake;’ and
this honour is to be shown three ways: —
(1) By
giving them respect. ‘Know them which labour among you and are over you
in the Lord, and esteem them very highly in love for their work’s sake.’ 1
Thess 5: 12, 13. I confess the scandalous lives of some ministers
have been a great reproach, and have made the ‘offering of the Lord to
be abhorred’ in some places of the land. The leper in the law was to have
his lip covered; so such as are angels by office, but lepers in their lives,
ought to have their lips covered, and to be silenced. But though some deserve
‘no honour’, yet such as are faithful, and make it their work to bring
souls to Christ, are to be reverenced as spiritual fathers. Obadiah honoured
the prophet Elijah. 1
Kings 18: 7. Why did God reckon the tribe of Levi for the first-born, Num
3: 13; why did he appoint that the prince should ask counsel
of God by the priest, Num
27: 21; why did the Lord show, by that miracle of Aaron’s rod
flourishing, that he had chosen the tribe of ‘Levi to minister before him,’ Num
17; why does Christ call his apostles ‘the lights of the world’;
why does he say to all his ministers, ‘Lo, I am with you to the end of
the world;’ but because he would have these spiritual fathers reverenced?
In ancient times the Egyptians chose their kings out of their priests.
They are far from showing this respect and honour to their spiritual fathers
who have slight thoughts of such as have the charge of the sanctuary, and
do minister before the Lord. ‘Know them,’ says the apostle, ‘which labour
among you.’ Many can be content to know their ministers in their infirmities,
and are glad when they have anything against them, but do not know them
in the apostle’s sense, so as to give them ‘double honour.’ Surely, were
it not for the ministry, you would not be a vineyard but a desert. Were
it not for the ministry, you would be destitute of the two seals of the
covenant, baptism and the Lord’s Supper; you would be infidels; ‘for faith
comes by hearing; and how shall they hear without a preacher?’ Rom
10: 14.
(2) Honour
these spiritual fathers, by becoming advocates for them, and wiping off
those slanders and calumnies which are unjustly cast upon them. 1
Tim 5: 19. Constantine was a great honourer of the ministry;
he vindicated them; he would not read the envious accusations brought against
them, but burnt them. Do the ministers open their mouths to God for you
in prayer, and will not you open your mouths in their behalf? Surely, if
they labour to preserve you from hell, you should preserve them from slander;
if they labour to save your souls, you ought to save their credit.
(3) Honour
them by conforming to their doctrine. The greatest honour you can put upon
your spiritual fathers, is to believe and obey their doctrine. He is an
honourer of the ministry who is not only a hearer, but a follower of the
word. As disobedience reproaches the ministry, so obedience honours it.
The apostle calls the Thessalonians his crown. ‘What is our crown of rejoicing?
are not ye?’ 1
Thess 2: 19. A thriving people are a minister’s crown. When
there is a metamorphosis, a change wrought; when people come to the word
proud, but go away humble; when they come earthly, but they go away heavenly;
when they come, as Naaman to Jordan, lepers, but they go away healed; then
the ministry is honoured. ‘Need we, as some others, epistles of commendation?’ 2
Cor 3: 1. Though other ministers might need letters of commendation,
yet Paul needed none; for, when men heard of the obedience wrought in these
Corinthians by Paul’s preaching, it would be a sufficient certificate that
God had blessed his labours. The Corinthians were a sufficient honour to
him; they were his letters-testimonial. You cannot honour your spiritual
fathers more, than by thriving under their ministry, and living upon the
sermons which they preach.
[4] There
is the domestic father, that is, the master. He is paterfamilias, ‘the
father of the family’; therefore Naaman’s servants called their master,
father. 2
Kings 5: 13. The centurion calls his servant, son. Matt
8: 6. (Greek.) The servant is to honour his master, as the father
of the family. Though the master be not so qualified as he should be, yet
the servant must not neglect his duty, but show some kind of honour to
him.
(1) In
obeying his master in
licitis et honestis, ‘in things
that are lawful and honest.’ ‘Servants, be subject to your masters; not
only to the good and gentle, but also to the froward.’ 1
Pet 2: 18. God has nowhere given a charter of exemption to free
you from your duty. You cannot disobey your earthly master but you disobey
your master in heaven. Think not that birth, or high parts, no, nor even
grace, will exempt you from obedience to your master. To obey him is an
ordinance of God; and an apostle says, ‘They that resist the ordinance,
shall receive to themselves damnation.’ Rom
13: 2.
(2) The
servant’s honouring his master, is seen in being diligent in his service.
Apelles painted a servant with his hands full of tools, as an emblem of
diligence. The loitering servant is a kind of thief, who, though he does
not steal his master’s goods, steals the time which he should have employed
in his master’s service. The slothful servant is called a ‘wicked servant.’ Matt
25: 26.
(3) The
servant is to honour his master by being faithful. ‘Who then is a faithful
and wise servant?’ Matt
24: 45. Faithfulness is the chief thing in a servant. Faithfulness
in a servant is seen in six things: [1] In tenaciousness; in concealing
the secrets the master has intrusted you with. If those secrets are not
sins, you ought not to betray them. What is whispered in your ear you are
not to publish on the house-top. Servants who do this are spies. Who would
keep a glass that is cracked? Who would keep a servant that has a crack
in his brain, and cannot keep a secret? [2] Faithfulness in a servant is
seen in designing the master’s advantage. A faithful servant esteems his
master’s goods as his own. Such a servant had Abraham; who, when his master
sent him to transact business for him, was as careful about it, as if it
had been his own. ‘O Lord God of my master Abraham, I pray thee send me
good speed this day, and show kindness unto my master Abraham.’ Gen
24: 12. Doubtless Abraham’s servant was as glad he had got a
wife for his master’s son, as if he had got a wife for himself. [3] Faithfulness
in a servant is seen in standing up for the honour of his master. When
he hears him spoken against, he vindicates him. As the master is careful
of the servant’s body, so the servant should be careful of the master’s
name. When the master is unjustly reproached the servant cannot be excused
if he be possessed with a dumb devil. [4] Faithfulness is, when a servant
is true to his word. He dares not tell a lie, but will speak the truth,
though it be against himself. A lie doubles the sin. ‘He that telleth lies,
shall not tarry in my sight.’ Psa
101: 7. A liar is near akin to the devil. John
8: 44. And who would let any of the devil’s kindred live with
him? The lie that Gehazi told his master Elisha, entailed leprosy on Gehazi
and his seed for ever. 2
Kings 5: 27. In a faithful servant, the tongue is the true index
of the heart. [5] Faithfulness is, when a servant is against impropriation.
He dares not convert his master’s goods to his own use. ‘Not purloining.’ Tit
2: 10. What a servant filches from his master, is damnable gain.
He who enriches himself by stealing from his master, stuffs his pillow
with thorns, on which his head will lie very uneasy when he comes to die.
[6] Faithfulness consists in preserving the master’s person, if unjustly
in danger. Banister betrayed his master the Duke of Buckingham, in King
Richard the Third’s reign; and the judgements of God fell upon the traitorous
servant. His eldest son became mad; his daughter, of a singular beauty,
was suddenly struck with leprosy; his younger son was drowned, and he himself
was arraigned, and would have been executed, had he not been saved by his
clergy. That servant who is not true to his master, will never be true
to God or his own soul.
(4) The
servant is to honour his master, by serving him, as with love, so with
silence, that is, without repining, and without replying. ‘Exhort servants
to be obedient unto their own masters, not answering again.’ Tit
2: 9. In the Greek, ‘not giving cross answers.’ Some servants
who are slow at work, are quick at speech; and instead of being sorry for
a fault, provoke by unbecoming language. Were the heart more humble, the
tongue would be more silent. The apostle’s words are, ‘not answering again.’
To those servants who honour their masters, or family-fathers, by submission,
diligence, faithfulness, love, and humble silence, great encouragement
is given. ‘Servants, obey in all things your masters according to the flesh,
not with eye-service, knowing that of the Lord ye shall receive the reward
of the inheritance, for ye serve the Lord Christ.’ Col
3: 22, 24. In serving your masters, you serve Christ, and he
will not let you lose your labour; ye shall receive the ‘reward of the
inheritance.’ From serving on earth, you shall be taken up to reign in
heaven, and shall sit with Christ upon his throne. Rev
3: 21.
Having
shown how servants are to honour their masters, I shall next show how masters
are to conduct themselves towards their servants, so as to be honoured
by them.
In general,
masters must remember that they have a master in heaven, who will call
them to account. ‘Knowing that your Master also is in heaven.’ Eph
6: 9. More particularly: —
(1) Masters
must take care to provide for their servants. As they appoint them work,
so they must give them their meat in due season. Luke
17: 7. They should see that the food be wholesome and sufficient.
It is most unworthy of some governors of families, to lay out so much upon
their own back, as to pinch their servants’ bellies.
(2) Masters
should encourage their servants in their work, by commending them when
they do well. Though a master is to tell a servant of his faults, yet he
is not always to beat on one string, but sometimes to take notice of that
which is praiseworthy. This makes a servant more cheerful in his work,
and gains the master the love from his servant.
(3) Masters
must not overburden their servants, but proportion their work to their
strength. They must not lay too much load on their servants, to make them
faint under it. Christianity teaches compassion.
(4) Masters
must seek the spiritual good of their servants. They must be seraphim to
kindle their love to religion; they must be monitors to put them in mind
of their souls; they must bring them to the pool of the sanctuary, to wait
till the angel stir the waters. John
5: 4. They must seek God for them, that their servants may be
his servants; and must allow them time convenient for secret devotion.
Some are cruel to the souls of their servants; they expect them to do the
work about the house, but abridge them of the time they should employ in
working out their salvation.
(5) Masters
should be mild and gentle in their behaviour towards servants. ‘Forbearing
threatening.’ Eph.
6: 9. ‘Thou shalt not rule over him with rigour, but shalt fear
thy God.’ Lev
25: 43. It requires wisdom in a master to know how to keep up
his authority, and yet avoid austerity. We have a good copy to write after
our Master in heaven, who is ‘slow to anger, and of great mercy.’ Psa
145: 8. Some masters are so harsh and implacable that they are
enough to spoil a good servant.
(6) Be
very exact and punctual in the agreements you make with your servants.
Do not prevaricate; keep not back any of their wages; nor deal deceitfully
with them, as Laban did with Jacob, changing his wages. Gen
31: 7. Falseness in promise is as bad as false weights.
(7) Be
careful of your servants, not only in health, but in sickness. If they
have become sick while in your service, use what means you can for their
recovery; and be not like the Amalekite, who forsook his servant when he
was sick; but be as the good centurion, who kept his sick servant, and
sought to Christ for a cure. 1
Sam 30: 13; Matt
8: 6. If you have a beast that falls sick, you will not turn
it off, but have it looked to, and pay for its cure; and will you be kinder
to your horses than to your servants? Thus should masters carry themselves
prudently and piously, that they may gain honour from their servants, and
may give up their accounts to God with joy.
[S] The
natural father, the father of the flesh. Heb
12: 9. Honour thy natural father. This is so necessary a duty,
that Philo the Jew placed the fifth commandment in the first table, as
though we had not performed our whole duty to God till we had paid this
debt of honour to our natural parents. Children are the vineyard of the
parent’s planting, and honour done to the parent is some of the fruit of
the vineyard.
II. Children
are to show honour to their parents,
{I] By
a reverential esteem of their persons. They must ‘give them a civil veneration.’
Therefore, when the apostle speaks of fathers of our bodies, he speaks
also of ‘giving them reverence.’ Heb
12: 9. This veneration or reverence must be shown: —
(1) Inwardly,
by fear mixed with love. ‘Ye shall fear every man his mother and his father.’ Lev
19: 3. In the commandment the father is named first, but here
the mother is first named. Partly to put honour upon the mother, because,
by reason of many weaknesses incident to her sex, she is apt to be more
slighted by children. And partly because the mother endures more for the
child.
(2) Reverence
must be shown to parents outwardly, both in word and gesture.
In word:
and that either in speaking to parents, or speaking of them. In speaking
of parents, children must speak respectfully. ‘Ask on, my mother,’ said
king Solomon to his mother Bathsheba. 1
Kings 2: 20. In speaking of parents, children must speak honourably.
They ought to speak well of them, if they deserve well. ‘Her children arise
up, and call her blessed’ (Prov
31: 28); and, in case a parent betrays weakness and indiscretion,
the child should make the best of it, and, by wise apologies, cover his
parent’s nakedness.
In gesture.
Children are to show reverence to their parents by submissive behaviour,
by uncovering the head, and bending the knee. Joseph, though a great prince,
and his father had grown poor, bowed to him, and behaved himself as humbly
as if his father had been the prince, and he the poor man. Gen
46: 29. King Solomon, when his mother came to him, ‘rose off
his throne, and bowed himself unto her.’ 1
Kings 2: 19. Among the Lacedemonians, if a child had carried
himself arrogantly or saucily to his father, it was lawful for the father
to appoint whom he would to be his heir. Oh, how many children are far
from thus giving reverence to their parents! They despise their parents;
they carry themselves with such pride and neglect towards them, that they
are a shame to religion, and bring their parents’ grey hairs with sorrow
to the grave. ‘Cursed be he that setteth light by his father or his mother.’ Deut
27: 16. If all that set light by their parents are cursed, how
many children in our age are under a curse! If such as are disrespectful
to parents live to have children, their own children will be thorns in
their sides, and God will make them read their sins in their punishment.
[2] The
second way of showing honour to parents is by careful obedience. ‘Children,
obey your parents in all things.’ Col
3: 20. Our Lord Christ herein set a pattern to children. He
was subject to his parents. Luke
2: 51. He to whom angels were subject was subject to his parents.
This obedience to parents is shown three ways: —
(1) In
hearkening to their counsel, ‘Hear the instruction of thy father, and forsake
not the law of thy mother.’ Prov
1: 8. Parents are, as it were, in the room of God; if they would
teach you the fear of the Lord, you must listen to their words as oracles,
and not be as the deaf adder to stop your ears. Eli’s sons hearkened not
to the voice of their father, but were called ‘sons of Belial.’ 1
Sam 2: 12, 25. And as children must hearken to the counsel of
their parents in spiritual matters, so in affairs which relate to this
life as in the choice of a calling, and in case of entering into marriage.
Jacob would not dispose of himself in marriage, though he was forty years
old, without the advice and consent of his parents. Gen
28: 1, 2. Children are, as it were, the parents’ proper goods
and possession, and it is great injustice in a child to give herself away
without the parents’ leave. If parents should indeed counsel a child to
match with one that is irreligious or Popish, I think the case is plain,
and many of the learned are of opinion that here the child may have a negative
voice, and is not obliged to be ruled by the parent. Children are to ‘marry
in the Lord;’ not, therefore, with persons irreligious, for that is not
to marry in the Lord.1
Cor 7: 39.
(2) Obedience
to parents is shown in complying with their commands. A child should be
the parents’ echo; when the father speaks, the child should echo back obedience.
The Rechabites were forbidden by their father to drink wine; and they obeyed
him, and were commended for it. Jer
35: 14. Children must obey their parents in all things. Col
3: 20. In things against the grain, to which they have most
reluctance, they must obey their parents. Esau would obey his father, when
he commanded him to fetch him venison, because it is probable he took pleasure
in hunting; but refused to obey him in a matter of greater concernment,
in the choice of a wife. But though children must obey their parents ‘in
all things,’ yet restringitur
ad licita et honesta; ‘it is with
the limitation of things just and honest.’ ‘Obey in the Lord,’ that is,
so far as the commands of parents agree with God’s commands. Eph
6: 1. If they command against God, they lose their right of
being obeyed, and in this case we must unchild ourselves.
[3] Honour
is to be shown to parents in relieving their wants. Joseph cherished his
father in his old age. Gen
47: 12. It is but paying a just debt. Parents brought up children
when they were young, and children ought to nourish their parents when
they are old. The young storks, by an instinct of nature, bring meat to
the old ones when, by reason of age, they are not able to fly. Pliny calls
it Lex
pelargica [a law of the storks].
The memory of Aeneas was honoured for carrying his aged father out of Troy
when it was on fire. I have read of a daughter, whose father being condemned
to be starved to death, who gave him in his prison suck with her own breasts;
which, being known to the governors, procured his freedom. Such children,
or monsters shall I say, are to blame who are ashamed of their parents
when they are old and fallen into decay; and when they ask for bread give
them a stone. When houses are shut up, we say the plague is there; when
children’s hearts are shut up against their parents, the plague is there.
Our blessed Saviour took great care for his mother. When on the cross,
he charged his disciple John to take her home to him as his mother, and
see that she wanted nothing. John
19: 26, 27.
III. The
reasons why children should honour their parents are: —
[1] It
is a solemn command of God, ‘Honour thy father,’ &c. As God’s word
is the rule, so his will must be the reason of our obedience.
[2] They
deserve honour in respect of the great love and affection which they bear
to their children; and the evidence of that love both in their care and
cost. Their care in bringing up their children is a sign their hearts are
full of love to them. Parents often take more care of their children than
for themselves. They take care of them when they are tender, lest, like
wall fruit, they should be nipped in the bud. As children grow older, the
care of parents grows greater. They are afraid of their children falling
when young, and of worse than falls when they are older. Their love is
evidenced by their cost. 2
Cor 12: 14. They lay up and they lay out for their children;
and are not like the raven or ostrich, which are cruel to their young. Job
39: 16. Parents sometimes impoverish themselves to enrich their
children. Children never can equal a parent’s love, for parents are the
instruments of life to their children, and children cannot be so to their
parents.
[3] To
honour parents is well pleasing to the Lord. Col
3: 20. As it is joyful to parents, so it is pleasing to the
Lord. Children! is it not your duty to please God? In honouring and obeying
your parents, you please God as well as when you repent and believe. And
that you may see how well it pleases God, he bestows a reward upon it.
‘That thy days may be long in the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee.’
Jacob would not let the angel go till he had blessed him; and God would
not part with this commandment till he had blessed it. Paul calls this
the first commandment with promise. Eph
6: 2. The second commandment has a general promise to mercy;
but this is the first commandment that has a particular promise made to
it. Long life is mentioned as a blessing. ‘Thou shalt see thy children’s
children.’ Psa
128: 6. It was a great favour of God to Moses that, though he
was a hundred and twenty years old, he needed no spectacles: ‘His eye was
not dim, nor his natural force abated.’ Deut
34: 7. God threatened it as a curse to Eli, that there should
not be an old man in his family. 1
Sam 2: 31. Since the flood, life is much abbreviated and cut
short: to some the womb is their tomb; others exchange their cradle for
their grave; others die in the flower of their age; death serves its warrant
every day upon one or other. Now, when death lies in ambush continually
for us, if God satisfies us with long life, saying (as in Psa
91: 16), ‘With long life will I satisfy him;’ it is to be esteemed
a blessing. It is a blessing when God gives a long time to repent, and
a long time to do service, and a long time to enjoy the comforts of relations.
Upon whom is this blessing of long life entailed, but obedient children?
‘Honour thy father, that thy days may be long.’ Nothing sooner shortens
life than disobedience to parents. Absalom was a disobedient son, who sought
to deprive his father of his life and crown; and he did not live out half
his days. The mule he rode upon, being weary of such a burden, left him
hanging in the oak betwixt heaven and earth, so as not fit to tread upon
the one, or to enter into the other. Obedience to parents spins out the
life. Nor does obedience to parents lengthen life only, but sweetens it.
To live long, and not to have a foot of land, is a misery; but obedience
to parents settles land of inheritance upon the child. ‘Hast thou but one
blessing, O my father,’ said Esau. Behold, God has more blessings for an
obedient child than one; not only shall he have a long life, but a fruitful
land: and not only shall he have land, but land given in love, ‘the land
which the Lord thy God giveth thee.’ Thou shalt have thy land not only
with God’s leave, but with his love. All these are powerful arguments to
make children honour and obey their parents.
Use one.
If we are to honour our fathers on earth, much more our Father in heaven.
‘If then I be a father, where is mine honour?’ Mal
1: 6. A father is but the instrument of conveying life, but
God is the original cause of our being. ‘For it is he that has made us,
and not we ourselves.’ Psa
100: 3. Honour and adoration is a pearl which belongs to the
crown of heaven only.
(1) We
show honour to our heavenly Father by obeying him. Thus Christ honoured
his Father. ‘I came down from heaven, not to do mine own will, but the
will of him that sent me.’ John
6: 38. This he calls honouring God. ‘I do always those things
which please him.’ ‘I honour my Father.’ John
8: 29, 49. The wise men not only bowed the knee to Christ, but
presented him with ‘gold and myrrh.’ Matt
2: 11. So we must not only bow the knee, give God adoration,
but bring him presents, give him golden obedience.
(2) We
show honour to our heavenly Father by advocating his cause, and standing
up for his truth in an adulterous generation. That son honours his father
who stands up in his defence, and vindicates him when he is calumniated
and reproached. Do they honour God who are ashamed of him? ‘Many believed
on him, but did not confess him.’ John
12: 42. They are bastard-sons who are ashamed to own their heavenly
Father. Such as are born of God, are steeled with courage for his truth;
they are like the rock, which no waves can break; like the adamant, which
no sword can cut. Basil was a champion for truth in the time of the emperor
Valens; and Athanasius, when the world was Arian, appeared for God.
(3) We
show honour to our heavenly Father by ascribing the honour of all we do
to him. ‘I laboured more abundantly than they all, yet not I, but the grace
of God which was with me.’ 1
Cor 15: l0. If a Christian has any assistance in duty, any strength
against corruption, he rears up a pillar and writes upon it, ‘Hitherto
has the Lord helped me.’ As when Joab had fought against Rabbah, and had
like to have taken it, sent for king David, that he might carry away the
honour of the victory; so when a child of God has any conquest over Satan,
he give all the honour to God. 2
Sam 12: 27, 28. Hypocrites, whose lamp is fed with the oil of
vain glory, while they do any eminent service to God, seek to honour themselves;
and so their very serving him is dishonouring him.
(4) We
show honour to our heavenly Father by celebrating his praise. ‘Let my mouth
be filled with thy praise, and with thy honour all the day.’ Psa
71: 8. ‘Blessing and honour and glory and power, be unto him
that sitteth upon the throne.’ Rev
5: 13. Blessing God is honouring God. It lifts him up in the
eyes of others, and spreads his fame and renown in the world. In this manner
the angels, the choristers of heaven, are now honouring God; they trumpet
forth his praise. In prayer, we act like saints, in praise like angels.
(5) We
show honour to our heavenly Father, by suffering dishonour, yea, death
for his sake. Paul did bear in his body the ‘marks of the Lord Jesus.’ Gal
6: 17. As they were the marks of honour to him, so they were
trophies of honour to the gospel. The honour which comes to God, is not
by bringing the outward pomp and glory to him, which we do to kings; but
it comes in another way, by the suffering of his people, by which they
let the world see what a good God they serve, and how they love him, and
will fight under his banner to the death.
God is
‘worthy of honour.’ ‘Thou art clothed with honour and majesty.’ Psa
104: 1: What are all his attributes but glorious beams shining
from this sun? He deserves more honour than men or angels can give him.
‘I will call on the Lord who is worthy to be praised.’ 2
Sam 22: 4. He is worthy of honour. We often confer honour upon
those that do not deserve it. To many noble persons, who are sordid and
vicious, we give titles of honour: they do not deserve honour; but God
is worthy of honour. ‘Blessed be thy glorious name, which is exalted above
all blessing and praise.’Neh
9: 5. He is above all the acclamations and triumphs of the archangels.
O then, let every true child of God honour his heavenly Father! Though
the wicked dishonour him by their flagitous lives, let not his own children
dishonour him. Sins in them are worse than in others. A fault in a stranger
is not so much taken notice of as in a child. A spot in black cloth is
not so much observed, but a spot in scarlet attracts every one’s eye; so
a sin in the wicked is not so much wondered at, it is a spot in black;
but a sin in a child of God is a spot in scarlet, which is more visible,
and brings odium and dishonour upon the gospel. The sins of God’s own children
go nearer to his heart. ‘When the Lord saw it, he abhorred them, because
of the provoking of his sons and of his daughters.’ Deut
32: 19. O forbear doing anything that may reflect dishonour
upon God. Will you disgrace your heavenly Father? Let not God complain
of the provocations of his sons and daughters; let him not cry out, ‘I
have nourished and brought up children, and they have rebelled against
me.’ Isa
1: 2.
Use two.
Does God command us to honour father and mother? Then let children put
this great duty in practice; be living commentaries upon this commandment.
Honour and reverence your parents; not only obey their commands, but submit
to their rebukes. You cannot honour your Father in heaven unless you honour
your earthly parents. To deny obedience to parents, entails God’s judgements
upon children. ‘The eye that mocketh at his father, and despiseth to obey
his mother, the ravens of the valley shall pick it out, and the young eagle
shall eat it.’ Prov
30: 17. Eli’s two disobedient sons were slain. 1
Sam 4: 2: God made a law that the ‘rebellious son should be
stoned;’ the same death the blasphemer had. Lev
24: 14. ‘If a man have a stubborn and rebellious son, which
will not obey the voice of his father, or the voice of his mother; then
shall his father and his mother lay hold on him, and bring him out unto
the elders of his city, and all the men of his city shall stone him with
stones, that he die.’ Deut
21: 18, 19, 21. A father having once complained, ‘Never had
a father a worse son than I have;’ ‘Yes,’ said the son, ‘my grandfather
had.’ This was a prodigy of impudence hardly to be paralleled. Manlius,
when grown old and poor, had a son very rich, of whom he desired some food,
but the son denied him relief, yea, disowned him from being his father,
and sent him away with reproachful language. The poor old father let fall
tears in grief. But God, to revenge the disobedience, struck the unnatural
son with madness, of which he could never be cured. Disobedient children
stand in a place where all God’s arrows fly.
Use three.
Let parents so act that they may gain honour from their children.
How should
parents so act towards their children as to be honoured and reverenced
by them?
(1) Be
careful to bring them up in the fear and nurture of the Lord. ‘Bring them
up in the admonition of the Lord.’ Eph
6: 4. You conveyed the plague of sin to them, therefore endeavour
to get them healed and sanctified. Augustine says that his mother, Monica,
travailed more for his spiritual birth than his natural. Timothy’s mother
instructed him from a child. 2
Tim 3: 15. She not only gave him her breast-milk, but ‘the sincere
milk of the word.’ Season your children with good principles betides, that
they may, with Obadiah, fear the Lord from their youth. 1
Kings 18: 12. When parents instruct not their children, they
seldom prove blessings. God often punishes the carelessness of parents
with undutifulness in their children. It is not enough that in baptism
your child is dedicated to God, but it must be educated for him. Children
are young plants which you must be continually watering with good instruction.
‘Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will
not depart from it.’ Prov
22: 6. The more your children fear God, the more they will honour
you.
(2) If
you would have your children honour you, keep up parental authority: be
kind, but do not spoil them. If you let them get too much ahead, they will
condemn you instead of honouring you. The rod of discipline must not be
withheld. ‘Thou shalt beat him with the rod, and deliver his soul from
hell.’ Prov
23: 14. A child indulged and humoured in wickedness, will be
a thorn in the parent’s eye. David spoiled Adonijah. ‘His father had not
displeased him at any time, in saying, Why hast thou done so?’ 1
Kings 1: 6, 7, 9. Afterwards he became a grief of heart to his
father, and was false to the crown. Keep up your authority, and you keep
up your honour.
(3) Provide
for your children what is fitting, both in their minority and when they
come to maturity. ‘The children ought not to lay up for the parents, but
the parents for the children.’ 2
Cor 12: 14. They are your own flesh and, as the apostle says,
‘No man ever yet hated his own flesh.’ Eph
5: 29. The parents’ bountifulness will cause dutifulness in
the child. If you pour water into a pump, the pump will send water again
out freely; so, if parents pour in something of their estate to their children,
children worthy of the name will pour out obedience again to their parents.
(4) When
your children are grown up, put them to some lawful calling, wherein they
may serve their generation. It is good to consult the natural genius and
inclination of a child, for forced callings do as ill, sometimes, as forced
matches. To let a child be out of a calling, is to expose him to temptation.
Melanchthon says, Odium
balneum diaboli [Idleness is the
devil’s pleasure resort]. A child out of a calling is like fallow ground;
and what can you expect should grow up but weeds of disobedience.
(5) Act
lovingly to your children. In all your counsels and commands let them read
love. Love will command honour; and how can a parent but love the child
who is his living picture, nay, part of himself. The child is the father
in the second edition.
(6) Act
prudently towards your children. It is a great point of prudence in a parent
not to provoke his children to wrath. ‘Fathers, provoke not your children
to anger, lest they be discouraged.’ Col
3: 21.
How may
a parent provoke his children to wrath?
(1) By
giving them opprobrious terms. ‘Thou son of the perverse rebellious woman,’
said Saul to his son Jonathan. 1
Sam 20: 30. Some parents use imprecations and curses to their
children, which provoke them to wrath. Would you have God bless your children,
and do you curse them?
(2) Parents
provoke children to wrath when they strike them without a cause, or when
the correction exceeds the fault. This is to be a tyrant rather than a
father. Saul cast a javelin at his son to smite him, and his son was provoked
to anger. ‘So Jonathan arose from the table in fierce anger.’ 1
Sam 20: 33, 34. In
filium pater obtinet non tyrannicum imperium, set basilicum
[A father exercises a kingly power over his son, not that of a tyrant].
Davenant.
(3) When
parents deny their children what is absolutely needful. Some have thus
provoked their children: they have stinted them, and kept them so short,
that they have forced them upon indirect courses, and made them put forth
their hands to iniquity.
(4) When
parents act partially towards their children, showing more kindness to
one than to another. Though a parent may have a greater love to one child,
yet discretion should lead him not to show more love to one than to another.
Jacob showed more love to Joseph than to all his other children, which
provoked the envy of his brethren. ‘Now Israel loved Joseph more than all
his children, and when his brethren saw that, they hated him, and could
not speak peaceably to him.’ Gen
37: 3, 4.
(5) When
a parent does anything which is sordid and unworthy, which casts disgrace
upon himself and his family, as to defraud or take a false oath, it provokes
the child to wrath. As the child should honour his father, so the father
should not dishonour the child.
(6) When
parents lay commands upon their children which they cannot perform without
wronging their consciences. Saul commanded his son Jonathan to bring David
to him. ‘Fetch him to me, for he shall surely die.’ 1
Sam 20: 31. Jonathan could not do this with a good conscience;
but was provoked to anger. ‘Jonathan arose from the table in fierce anger.’ 1
Sam 20: 34. The reason why parents should show their prudence
in not provoking their children to wrath, is this: ‘Lest they be discouraged.’ Col
3: 21. This word ‘discouraged’ implies three things. Grief.
The parent’s provoking the child, the child so takes it to heart, that
it causes premature death. Despondency. The parents’ austerity dispirits
the child, and makes it unfit for service; like members of the body stupefied,
which are unfit for work. Contumacy and refractoriness. The child being
provoked by the cruel and unnatural carriage of the parent, grows desperate,
and often studies to irritate and vex his parents; which, though it be
evil in the child, yet the parent is accessory to it, as being the occasion
of it.
(7) If
you would have honour from your children, pray much for them. Not only
lay up a portion for them, but lay up a stock of prayer for them. Monica
prayed much for her son Augustine; and it was said, it was impossible that
a son of so many prayers and tears should perish. Pray that your children
may be preserved from the contagion of the times; pray that as your children
bear your images in their faces, they may bear God’s image in their hearts;
pray that they may be instruments and vessels of glory. One fruit of prayer
may be, that the child will honour a praying parent.
(8) Encourage
that which you see good and commendable in your children. Virtus
laudata crescit [Goodness increases
when praised]. Commending that which is good in your children makes them
more in love with virtuous actions; and is like the watering of plants,
which makes them grow more. Some parents discourage the good they see in
their children, and so nip virtue in the bud, and help to damn their children’s
souls. They have their children’s curses.
(9) If
you would have honour from your children, set them a good example. It makes
children despise parents, when the parents live in contradiction to their
own precepts; when they bid their children be sober, and yet they themselves
get drunk; or bid their children fear God, and are themselves loose in
their lives. Oh if you would have your children honour you, teach them
by a holy example. A father is a looking-glass, which the child often dresses
himself by; let the glass be clear and not spotted. Parents should observe
great decorum in their whole conduct, lest they give occasion to their
children to say to them, as Plato’s servant, ‘My master has made a book
against rash anger, but he himself is passionate;’ or, as a son once said
to his father, ‘If I have done evil, I have learned it of you.’
2.6 The Sixth Commandment
‘Thou
shalt not kill.’ Exod
20: 13.
In this
commandment is a sin forbidden, which is murder, ‘Thou shalt not kill,’
and a duty implied, which is, to preserve our own life, and the life of
others.
The sin
forbidden is murder: ‘Thou shalt not kill.’ Here two things are to be understood,
the not injuring another, nor ourselves.
I. The
not injuring another.
[1] We
must not injure another in his name. ‘A good name is a precious balsam.’
It is a great cruelty to murder a man in his name. We injure others in
their name, when we calumniate and slander them. David complains, ‘They
laid to my charge things that I knew not.’ Psa
35: 11. The primitive Christians were traduced for incest, and
killing their children, as Tertullian says, Dicimur
infanaticidii incestus rei [They
charge us with infanticide and label us incestuous]. This is to behead
others in their good name; it is an irreparable injury. No physician can
heal the wounds of the tongue.
[2] We
must not injure another in his body. Life is the most precious thing; and
God has set this commandment as a fence about it, to preserve it. He made
a statute which has never to this day been repealed. ‘Whose sheddeth man’s
blood, by man shall his blood be shed.’ Gen
9: 6. In the old law, if a man killed another unawares, he might
take sanctuary; but if he killed him willingly, though he fled to the sanctuary,
the holiness of the place would not defend him. ‘If a man come presumptuously
upon his neighbour, to slay him with guile, thou shalt take him from mine
altar, that he may die.’ Exod
21: 14. In the commandment, ‘Thou shalt do no murder,’ all sins
are forbidden which lead to it, and are the occasions of it: As,
(1) Unadvised
anger. Anger boils in the veins, and often produces murder. ‘In their anger
they slew a man.’ Gen
49: 6.
(2) Envy.
Satan envied our first parents the robe of innocence, and the glory of
paradise, and could not rest till he had procured their death. Joseph’s
brethren, because his father loved him, and gave him a ‘coat of divers
colours,’ envied him, and took counsel to slay him. Gen
37: 20. Envy and murder are near akin, therefore the apostle
puts them together. ‘Envyings, murders.’ Gal
5: 21. Envy is a sin which breaks both tables at once; it begins
in discontent against God, and ends in injury against man, as we see in
Cain. Gen
4: 6, 8. Envious Cain was first discontented with God, by which
he broke the first table; and then fell out with his brother and slew him,
and thus broke the second table. Anger is sometimes ’soon over,’ like fire
kindled in straw, which is quickly out; but envy is deep rooted, and will
not quench its thirst without blood. ‘Who is able to stand before envy?’ Prov
27: 4.
(3) Hatred.
The Pharisees hated Christ because he excelled them in gifts, and had more
honour among the people than they. They never left him till they had nailed
him to the cross, and taken away his life. Hatred is a vermin which lives
upon blood. ‘Because thou hast had a perpetual hatred, and hast shed the
blood of the children of Israel.’Ezek
35: 5. Haman hated Mordecai because he would not bow to him,
and presently sought revenge, by getting a bloody warrant sealed for the
destruction of the whole race and seed of the Jews. Esth
3: 9. Hatred is ever cruel. All these sins are forbidden in
this commandment.
How many
ways is murder committed?
We may
be said to murder another twelve ways. (1) With the hand; as Joab killed
Abner and Amass. ‘He smote him in the fifth rib, and shed out his bowels.’ 2
Sam 20: 10. (2) With the mind. Malice is mental murder. ‘Whosoever
hates his brother is a murderer.’ 1
John 3: 15. To malign another, and wish evil against him in
the heart, is murdering him. (3) With the tongue, by speaking to the prejudice
of another, and causing him to be put to death. Thus the Jews killed the
Lord of life, when they inveighed against him, and accused him falsely
to Pilate. John
18: 30. (4) With the pen. Thus David killed Uriah by writing
to Joab to ‘set Uriah in the forefront of the battle.’ 2
Sam 11:15. Though the Ammonites’ sword cut off Uriah, yet David’s
pen was the cause of his death; and therefore the Lord tells David by the
prophet Nathan, ‘Thou hast killed Uriah.’ 2
Sam 12: 9. (5) By plotting another’s death. Thus, though Jezebel
did not lay her own hands upon Naboth, yet because she contrived his death,
and caused two false witnesses to swear against him, and bring him within
the compass of treason, she was the murderer. 1
Kings 21: 9, 10. (6) By putting poison into cups. Thus the wife
of Commodes the emperor killed her husband by poisoning the wine which
he drank. So, many kill little children by medicines that cause their death.
(7) By witchcraft and sorcery — which were forbidden under the law. ‘There
shall not be found among you an enchanter, or a witch, or a consulter with
familiar spirits.’ Deut
18: 10, 11. (8) By having an intention to kill another; as Herod,
under a pretence of worshipping Christ, would have killed him. Matt
2: 8, 13. So, when Saul made David go against the Philistines,
he designed that the Philistine should have killed him. ‘Saul said, Let
not mine hand be upon him, but let the hand of the Philistines be upon
him.’ 1
Sam 18: 17. Here was intentional murder, and it was in God’s
account as bad as actual murder. (g) By consenting to another’s death;
as Saul to the death of Stephen. ‘I also was standing by and consenting
unto his death.’ Acts
22: 20. He that gives consent is accessory to the murder. (10)
By not hindering the death of another when in our power. Pilate knew Christ
was innocent. ‘I find no fault in him,’ he said, but did not hinder his
death; therefore he was guilty. Washing his hands in water could not wash
away the guilt of Christ’s blood. (11) By unmercifullness. By taking away
that which is necessary for the support of life; as to take away the tools
or utensils by which a man gets his living. ‘No man shall take the upper
or the nether millstone to pledge, for he taketh a man’s life.’ Deut
24: 6. Or by not helping him when he is ready to perish. You
may be the death of another, as well by not relieving him, as by offering
him violence. If thou dost not feed him that is starving, thou killest
him. How many are thus guilty of the breach of this commandment! (12) By
not executing the law upon capital offenders. A felon having committed
six murders, the judge may be said to be guilty of five of them, because
he did not execute the felon for his first offence.
What
are the aggravations of this sin of murder?
(1) To
shed the blood of another ceaselessly; as to kill another in a humour or
frolic. A bee will not sting unless provoked, but many when not provoked,
will take away the life of another. This makes the sin of blood more bloody.
The less provocation to a sin the greater sin.
(2) To
shed the blood of another contrary to promise. Thus, after the princes
of Israel had sworn to the Gibeonites that they should live, Saul slew
them. Josh
9: 15. 2
Sam 21: 1. Here were two sins bound together, perjury and murder.
(3) To
take away the life of any public person enhances the murder, and makes
it greater, as to kill a judge upon the bench, because he represents the
king’s person. To murder a person whose office is sacred, and comes on
the King of heaven’s embassage; the murdering of whom may be the murdering
of many. Herod added this sin above all, that he shut up John the Baptist
in prison, much more to behead him in prison. Luke
3: 20. To stain one’s hands with royal blood. David’s heart
smote him because he did but cut off the lap of king Saul’s garment. 1
Sam 24: 5. How would David’s heart have smitten him if he had
cut off Saul’s head?
(4) To
shed the blood of a near relation aggravates the murder, and dyes it of
a deeper crimson. For a son to kill his father is horrid. Parricides are
monsters in nature. Qui
occidit patrem, plurima committit peccata in uno.
Cicero. ‘He who takes away his father’s life, commits many sins in one;’
he is not guilty of murder only, but of disobedience, ingratitude, and
diabolical cruelty. ‘He who striketh his father or mother, shall be surely
put to death.’ Exod
21: 15. Then how many deaths is he worthy of that destroys his
father or mother! Such a monster was Nero, who caused his mother, Agrippina,
to be slain.
(5) To
shed the blood of any righteous person aggravates the sin. Hereby justice
is perverted. Such a person being innocent, is unworthy of death. A saint
being a public blessing, lies in the breach to turn away wrath; so that
to destroy him is to pull down the pillars of a nation. He is precious
to God. Psa
116: 15. He is a member of Christ’s body; therefore what injury
is offered to him is done to God himself. Acts
9: 4.
Though,
however, this commandment forbids private persons to shed the blood of
another, unless in their own defence, yet, such as are in office must punish
public offenders, even with death. To kill an offender is not murder, but
justice. A private person sins if he draws the sword; a public person sins
if he puts up the sword. A magistrate ought not to let the sword of justice
rust in the scabbard. As he should not let the sword be too sharp by severity,
so neither should the edge of it be blunted by too much levity.
Neither
does this commandment prohibit a just war. When men’s sins grow ripe, and
long plenty has bred surfeit, God says, ‘Sword, go through the land.’ Ezek
14: 17. He encouraged the war between the tribes of Israel and
Benjamin. When the iniquity of the Amorites was full, he sent Israel to
war against them. Judges
11: 21.
Use one.
It should be for a lamentation that this land is defiled with blood. Numb
35: 33. How common is this sin in this boasting age! England’s
sins are written in letters of blood. Some make no more of killing men
than sheep. ‘In thy skirts is found the blood of the poor innocents.’ Jer
2: 34. Junius reads it, in alis; and so in Hebrew, ‘in thy wings’
is found the blood of innocents. It alludes to the birds of prey, which
stain their wings with the blood of other birds. May not the Lord justly
take up a controversy with the inhabitants of the land, because ‘blood
toucheth blood’? Hos
4: 2. There are wholesale murders. And that which should increase
our lamentation is, that not only man’s blood is shed among us, but Christ’s
blood. Profane flagitious sinners are said to ‘crucify the son of God afresh.’ Heb
6: 6. (1) They swear by his blood, and so, as it were, make
his wounds bleed afresh. (2) They crucify Christ in his members. ‘Why persecutes
thou me?’ Acts
9: 4. The foot being trodden on, the head cries out. (3) If
it lay in their power, were Christ alive on earth, they would nail him
again to the cross. Thus men crucify Christ afresh; and, if man’s blood
so cries, how loud will Christ’s blood cry against sinners?
Use two.
Beware of having your hands imbrued in the blood of others.
But such
a one has wronged me by defamation, or otherwise; and if I spill his blood,
I shall but revenge my own quarrel!
If he
has done you wrong, the law is open; but take heed of shedding blood. What!
Because he has wronged you, will you therefore wrong God? Is it not doing
wrong to God to take his work out of his hand? He has said ‘Vengeance is
mine; I will repay.’ Rom
12: 19. You would undertake to revenge yourself; would be plaintiff,
and judge, and executioner, in yourself. This is a great wrong done to
God, and he will not hold you guiltless.
To deter
all from having their hands defiled with blood, consider what a sin murder
is. It is (1) A God-affronting sin. It is a breach of his command, and
trampling upon his royal edict. It is a wrong offered to God’s image. ‘In
the image of God made he man.’ Gen
9: 6. It is tearing God’s picture, and breaking in pieces the
King of heaven’s broad seal. Man is the temple of God. ‘Know ye not that
your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost?’ 1
Cor 6: 19. The man-slayer destroys God’s temple; and will God
endure to be thus confronted by proud dust?
(2) It
is a crying sin. Clamitat
in coelum vox sanguinis [The voice
of blood cries to Heaven]. There are three sins in Scripture which are
said to cry. Oppression. Psa
12: 5. Sodomy. Gen
18: 21. Bloodshed. This cries so loud, that it drowns all the
other cries. ‘The voice of thy brother’s blood crieth unto me from the
ground.’ Gen
4: 10. Abel’s blood had as many tongues as drops, to cry aloud
for vengeance. This sin of blood lay heavy on David’s conscience; though
he had sinned by adultery, yet, what he cried out for most was, this crimson
sin of blood. ‘Deliver me from blood-guiltiness, O God.’ Psa
51: 14. Though the Lord visits for every sin, yet he will in
a special manner make ‘inquisition for blood.’ Psa
9: 12. If a beast killed a man it was to be stoned, and its
flesh was not to be eaten. Exod
21: 28. If God would have a beast stoned that killed a man,
which had not the use of reason to restrain it, much more will he be incensed
against those who, against both reason and conscience, take away the life
of a man.
(3) Murder
is a diabolical sin. It makes a man the devil’s first born, for he was
a murderer from the beginning. John
8: 44. By saying to our first parents, ‘Ye shall not die,’ he
brought death into the world.
(4) It
is a cursed sin. If there be a curse for him that smites his neighbour
secretly, he is doubly cursed that kills him. Deut
27: 24. The first man that was born was a murderer. ‘And now
art thou cursed from the earth.’ Gen
4: 11. He was an excommunicated person, banished from the place
of God’s public worship. God set a mark upon bloody Cain. Gen
4: 15. Some think that mark was horror of mind, which, above
all sins, accompanies the sin of blood. Others think it was a continual
shaking and trembling in his flesh. He carried a curse along with him.
(5) It
is a wrath-procuring sin. 2
Kings 24: 4.
It procures
temporal judgements. Phocas, to get the empire, put to death all the sons
of Mauritius the emperor, and then slew the emperor himself; but he was
pursued by Priscus, his son-in-law, who cut off his ears and feet, and
then killed him. Charles IX, who caused the massacre of so many Christians
at Paris, died from blood issuing out of several parts of his body. Albania
killed a man and made of his skull a cup to drink in. His own wife, soon
afterwards, caused him to be murdered in his bed. Vengeance as a bloodhound
pursues the murderer. ‘Bloody men shall not live out half their days.’ Psa
55: 23. It brings eternal judgements. It binds men over to hell.
The Papists make nothing of massacres, because theirs is a bloody religion;
they give a dispensation for murder, if it be to propagate the Catholic
cause. If a cardinal puts his red hat upon the head of a murderer going
to execution, he saves him from death. Let all impenitent murderers read
their doom in Rev
21: 8: ‘Murderers shall have their part in the lake which burneth
with fire and brimstone, which is the second death.’ We read of ‘fire mingled
with blood.’ Rev
8: 7. Such as have their hands full of blood must undergo the
wrath of God. Here is fire mingled with blood, and this fire is inextinguishable. Mark
9: 44. Time will not finish it, tears will not quench it.
[3] We
must not injure another in his soul. This is the greatest murder of all,
because there is more of God’s image in the soul than in the body. Though
the soul cannot be annihilated, it is said to be murdered when it is deprived
of its happiness, and is for ever in torment. How many are soul murderers!
(1) Such
as corrupt others by bad example. The world is led by example; especially
by the examples of great ones, which are very pernicious. We are apt to
do as we see others before us, especially those above us. Such as are placed
in high power, are like the pillar of cloud; where that went, Israel went.
When great ones move, others will follow them, though it be to hell. Evil
magistrates, like the tail of the dragon, draw the ‘third part of the stars
after them.’
(2) Such
as entice others to sin. The harlot by curling her hair, rolling her eyes,
laying open her breasts, does what in her lies to be both a tempter and
a murderer. Such a one was Messalina, wife to Claudius the emperor. ‘I
discerned a young man, and there met him a woman with the attire of a harlot;
so she caught him and kissed him.’ Prov
7: 10, 13. Better are the reproofs of a friend, than the kisses
of a harlot.
(3) Ministers
are murderers, who either starve, or poison, or infect souls. [1] That
starve souls. ‘Feed the flock of God which is among you.’ 1
Pet 5: 2. These feed themselves and starve the flock; either
through non-residing, they do not preach, or through insufficiency, they
cannot. There are many in the ministry so ignorant that they had need to
be taught the ‘first principles of the oracles of God.’ Heb
5: 12. Was he fit to be a preacher in Israel, think ye, who
being asked something concerning the decalogue, answered he never saw any
such book? [2] That poison souls. Such are heterodox ministers, who poison
people with error. The basilisk poisons herbs and flowers by breathing
on them; so the breath of heretical ministers poisons souls. The Socinian,
who would rob Christ of his Godhead; the Armenian, who by advancing the
power of the will, would take off the crown from the head of free-grace;
the Antinomian, who denies the use of the moral law to a believer, as if
it were antiquated and out of date — poison men’s souls. Error is as damnable
as vice. ‘There shall be false teachers among you, who privily shall bring
in damnable heresies, denying the Lord that bought them.’ 2
Pet 2: 1. [3] That infect souls by their scandalous lives. ‘Let
the priests which come near to the Lord sanctify themselves.’ Exod
19: 22. Ministers who by their places are nearer to God, should
be holier than others. The higher the elements are, the purer they are;
air is purer than water; fire is purer than air. The higher men are in
office, the holier they should be. John the Baptist was a shining lamp.
But there are many who infect their people with their bad life; they preach
one thing, and live another. Qui
Curios simulant et bacchanalia vivunt
[They make a show of goodness, but live a life of riot]. Like Eli’s sons,
they are in white linen, but have scarlet sins. Some say, that Prester
John, the lord of Africa, caused to be carried before him a golden cup
full of dirt; a fit emblem of such ministers as have a golden office, but
are dirty and polluted in their lives. They are murderers, and the blood
of souls will cry against them at the last day.
(4) Such
as destroy others by getting them into bad company, and so make them proselytes
to the devil. Vitia
in proximum quamque transiliunt
[Our vices leap on to the man next to us]. Seneca. A man cannot live in
the Ethiopian climate but he will be discoloured with the sun, nor can
he be in bad company but he will partake of their evil. One drunkard makes
another; as the prophet speaks in another sense. ‘I set before them pots
full of wine, and cups, and said unto them, Drink ye wine;’ so the wicked
set pots of wine before others, and made them drink till reason be stupefied,
and lust inflamed. Jer
35: 5. Such are guilty of the breach of this commandment. How
sad will it be with those who have not only their own sins, but the blood
of others to answer for! So much for the first thing forbidden in the commandment,
the injuring of others.
II. THE
second thing forbidden in this commandment is, injuring ourselves. ‘Thou
shalt not kill:’ thou shalt do no hurt to thyself.
Thou
shalt not hurt thy own body. One may be guilty of self-murder, either 1.
Indirectly or occasionally. Or, 2. Directly and absolutely.
[1] Indirectly
and occasionally; as
(1) When
a man thrusts himself into danger which he might prevent. If a company
of archers were shooting, and one should put himself in the place where
the arrows fly, so that an arrow kills him, he is accessory to his own
death. In the law, God would have the leper shut up, to keep others from
being infected. Lev
13: 4. If any should be so presumptuous as to go to a leper,
and get the plague of leprosy, he might thank himself for his own death.
(2) A person may be guilty of his own death, in some sense, by neglecting
the use of means for preserving life. If sick, and he uses no remedy; if
he has received a wound, and will not apply a cure, he hastens his own
death. God commanded Hezekiah to lay a ‘lump of figs upon the boil.’ Isa
38: 21. If he had not done so, he would have been the cause
of his own death. (3) By immoderate grief. ‘The sorrow of the world worketh
death.’ 2
Cor 7: 10. When God takes away a dear relation, and any one
is swallowed up with sorrow, he endangers his life. How many weep themselves
into their graves! Queen Mary grieved so excessively for the loss of Calais,
that it broke her heart. (4) By intemperance or excess in diet. Surfeiting
shortens life. Plures
periere crapula, quam gladio [More
perish by drink than by the sword]. Many dig their grave with their teeth.
Too much oil chokes the lamp. The cup kills more than the cannon. Excessive
drinking causes untimely death.
{2] One
may be guilty of self-murder, directly and absolutely.
(1) By
envy. Envy is tristitia
de bonis alienis, ‘a secret repining
at the welfare of another.’ Invidus
alterius rebus macrescit opimis.
‘An envious man is more sorry at another’s prosperity, than at his own
adversity.’ He never laughs but when another weeps. Envy is a self-murder,
a fretting canker. Cyprian calls it vulnus
occultum, ‘a secret wound;’ it
hurts a man’s self most. Envy corrodes the heart, dries up the blood, rots
the bones. Envy is ‘the rottenness of the bones.’ Prov
14: 30. It is to the body what the moth is to the cloth, that
eats it and makes its beauty consume. Envy drinks its own venom. The viper,
which leaped on Paul’s hand, thought to have hurt Paul, but fell into the
fire itself. Acts
28: 3. So, while the envious man thinks to hurt another, he
destroys himself.
(2) By
laying violent hands on himself, and thus he commits felo
de se; as Saul fell upon his own
sword and killed himself. It is the most unnatural and barbarous kind of
murder for a man to butcher himself and imbrue his hands in his own blood.
A man’s self is most near to him, therefore this sin of self-murder breaks
both the law of God, and the bonds of nature. The Lord has placed the soul
in the body, as in a prison; and it is a sin to break open this prison
till God opens the door. Self-murderers are worse than the brute-creatures,
which will tear and gore open one another, but not destroy themselves.
Self-murder is occasioned usually by discontent, and a sullen melancholy.
The bird that beats itself in the cage, and is ready to kill itself, is
a true emblem of a discontented spirit.
Whence
comes this discontent?
This
discontent arises — (1) From pride. A man who swells with a high opinion
of himself, and thinks he deserves better than others, when any great calamity
befalls him, is discontented, and in a sudden passion will make away with
himself. Ahithophel had high thoughts of himself, his words were esteemed
oracles, and he could not bear to have his wise counsel rejected. ‘He put
his household in order, and hanged himself.’ 2
Sam 17: 23. (2) From poverty. Poverty is a sore temptation.
‘Give me not poverty.’ Prov
30: 8. Many have brought themselves to poverty by their sin;
and when a great estate is boiled away to nothing, they are discontented,
and think it better to die quickly, than languish in misery, and the devil
soon helps them to dispatch themselves. (3) From covetousness. Avarice
is a dry drunkenness, a horse-leech that is never satisfied. The covetous
man is like behemoth. ‘Behold he drinketh up a river,’ and yet his thirst
is not allayed. Job
40: 33. The covetous miser hoards up corn; and if he hears the
price of corn begins to fall, he is troubled, and there is no cure for
his discontent but a halter. (4) From horror of mind. A man has sinned
a great sin, has swallowed down some pills of temptation the devil has
given him, and these pills begin to work in his conscience, and the horror
becomes so great, that he chooses strangling. Judas having betrayed innocent
blood, was in such an agony of conscience, that he hanged himself; as if,
to avoid the stinging of a gnat, any one should endure the bite of a serpent.
I can see no ground of hope for such as make away with themselves; for
they die in the very act of sin, and cannot have time to repent.
Hurting
our own souls is forbidden in the command, ‘Thou shalt not kill.’ Many
who are free from other murders, are guilty here. They murder their own
souls. They wilfully damn themselves, and throw themselves into hell.
Who are
they that murder their own souls?
(1) They
wilfully murder their souls who have no sense of God, or the world to come,
and are past feeling. Eph
4: 19. Tell them of God’s holiness and justice, and they are
not at all affected. ‘They made their hearts as an adamant stone.’ Zech
7: 12, ‘The adamant,’ says Pliny, ‘is insuperable, the hammer
cannot conquer it.’ Sinners have adamantine hearts. When the prophet spake
to the altar of stone, it rent asunder, but sinner’s hearts are so hardened
in sin (1
Kings 13: 5), nothing will work upon them, neither ordinances
nor judgements. They do not believe in a God; they laugh at hell. Thus
they murder their own souls, and throw themselves into hell as fast as
they can.
(2) They
wilfully murder their own souls who resign themselves to their lusts, let
what will come of it. The soul cries out in you, I am killing myself; I
am murdering myself. They ‘have given themselves over to work all uncleanness
with greediness.’ Eph
4: 19. Let ministers speak to them about their sins, let conscience
speak, let affliction speak, they will have their lusts, even though they
go to hell for them. Do not these murder their own souls? As Agrippina,
mother of Nero, said, occidat
modo imperet, let my son kill me,
so he may reign; so many say in their hearts, let our sins damn us, so
that they but please us. Herod will have his incestuous lusts, though it
costs him his soul; and for a drop of pleasure men will drink a sea of
wrath. Do not these massacre and damn their own souls?
(3) They
murder their souls who avoid all means of saving them. They will go to
plays, to drunken meetings, but will not set their foot in God’s house,
or come near the sound of the gospel-trumpet; as if one that is diseased
should shun the bath for fear of being healed. These are self murderers
as much as one who has the means of cure offered him, but chooses rather
to die.
(4) They
voluntarily murder their souls who take false prejudices against religion;
as if it were so strict and severe that they must live a melancholy life,
like hermits and anchorites, and drown all their joys in tears. It is a
slander which the devil casts upon religion, for there is no true joy but
in believing.Rom
15: 1, 3. No honey is so sweet as that which drops from a promise.
Some men foolishly take up a prejudice against religion; they are resolved
never to go to heaven, rather than go through the strait gate. I may say
of prejudice, as Paul to Elymas, ‘O prejudice, thou child of the devil,
thou enemy of all righteousness,’ how many souls hast thou damned? Acts
13: 10.
(5) They
wilfully murder their own souls who will neither be good themselves, nor
suffer others to be so. ‘Ye neither go [into the kingdom of heaven] yourselves,
neither suffer ye them that are entering to go in.’ Matt
23: 13. Such are they who persecute others for their religion.
Drunken meetings may escape punishments from them, but if men meet to serve
God, all severity will be used. They are resolved to shipwreck others,
though they themselves are cast away in the storm. Oh! take heed of murdering
your own souls. No creature but man willingly kills itself.
III.
THE positive duty implied in the command is, that we should do all the
good we can to ourselves and others.
[1] In
reference to others. We should endeavour to preserve the lives and souls
of others. [2] In reference to ourselves. We should preserve our own life
and soul.
[1] In
reference to others. We are to preserve the life of others. We should comfort
them in their sorrows, relieve them in their wants, and like the good Samaritan,
pour wine and oil into their wounds. ‘I was a father to the poor.’ Job
29: 16. ‘The blessing of him that was ready to perish came upon
me.’Ver
13. It is a great means of preserving the life of another to
relieve him when he is ready to perish. When there was a great dearth in
Rome, Pompey provided corn for its relief; and when the mariners were afraid
to sail thither in a tempest, he said, ‘It is not necessary that we should
live, but it is necessary that Rome be relieved.’ Grace makes the heart
tender, it causes sympathy and charity. As it melts the heart in contrition
towards God, so in compassion towards others. ‘He has dispersed, he has
given to the poor.’ Psa
29: 9. This commandment implies that we should be so far from
ruining others, that we should do all we can to preserve the lives of others.
When you see the picture of death drawn in their faces, administer to their
necessities; be temporal saviours to then; draw them out of the waters
of affliction with a silver cord of charity. That I may persuade you to
this, let me lay before you some arguments: —
(1) Works
of charity evidence grace. As Faith. ‘I will show thee my faith by my works.’ James
2: 18. Works are faith’s letters of credence. We judge of the
health of the body by the pulse where the blood stirs and operates; so
Christian, judge of the health of thy faith by the pulse of charity. The
word of God is the rule of faith, and good works are the witnesses of faith.
It evidences also Love. Love loves mercy; it is a noble bountiful grace.
Mary loved Christ, and how liberal was her love! She bestowed on Christ
her tears, kisses, and costly ointments. Love, like a full vessel, will
have vent; it vents itself in acts of liberality.
(2) To
communicate to the necessities of others is not left to our choice, but
is an incumbent duty. ‘Charge them that are rich in this world that they
do good; that they be rich in good works.’ 1
Tim 6: 17, 18. This is not only a counsel, but a charge. If
God should lay a charge upon the inanimate creatures, they would obey;
if he should charge the rocks, they would send forth water; if he should
charge the clouds, they would melt into showers; if he should charge the
stones, they would become bread. And shall we be harder than the stones,
not to obey God when he charges us to ‘be rich in good works?’
(3) God
supplies our wants, and shall not we supply the wants of others? ‘We could
not live without mercy.’ God makes every creature helpful to us: the sun
to enrich us with its golden beams; the earth to yield us its increase,
veins of gold, crops of corn, and store of flowers. God opens the treasury
of his mercy; he feeds us every day out of the alms-basket of his providence.
‘Thou openest thy hand, and satisfies the desire of every living thing.’ Psa
145: 16. Does God supply our wants, and shall we not minister
to the wants of others? Shall we be as a sponge to suck in mercy, and not
as breasts to milk it out to others?
(4) Herein
we resemble God, to be doing good to others. It is our excellence to be
like God. ‘Godliness is Godlikeness.’ When are we more like him than in
acts of bounty and munificence? ‘Thou art good, and does good.’ Psa
119: 68. ‘Thou art good,’ there is his essential goodness; and
‘doest good,’ there is his communicative goodness. The more helpful we
are to others, the more like we are to God. We cannot be like God in omniscience,
or in working miracles; but we may be like him in doing works of mercy.
(5) God
remembers all our deeds of charity, and takes them kindly at our hands.
‘God is not unrighteous to forget your labour of love which ye have shewed
towards his name, in that you have ministered to the saints.’ Heb
6: 10. The chief butler may forget Joseph’s kindness, but the
Lord will not forget any kindness we show to his people. ‘I was an hungred
and ye gave me meat; thirsty, and ye gave me drink.’ Matt
25: 35. Christ takes the kindness done to his saints as done
to himself. God has a bottle for your tears, and a book to write down your
alms. ‘A book of remembrance was written before him.’ Mal
3: 16. Tamerlane had a register to write down all the names
and good services of his soldiers; so God has a book of remembrance to
write down all your charitable works; and at the day of judgement there
shall be an open and honourable mention made of them in the presence of
the angels.
(6) Hardheartedness
to others in misery reproaches the gospel. When men’s hearts are like pieces
of rock, or as the scales of the leviathan, ‘shut up as with a close seal,’
you may as well extract oil out of flint, as the golden oil of charity
out of them.Job
41: 15. They unchristianize themselves. Unmercifullness is the
sin of the heathen. ‘Unmerciful.’ Rom
1: 31. It eclipses the glory of the gospel. Does the gospel
teach uncharitableness? Does it not bid us ‘draw out thy soul to the hungry’? Isa
58: 10. ‘These things I will that thou affirm, that they which
have believed in God, might be careful to maintain good works.’ Tit
3: 8. While you relieve not such as are in want, you walk in
opposition to the gospel; you cause it to be evil spoken of, and lay it
open to the lash and censure of others.
(7) There
is nothing lost by relieving the necessitous. The Shunammite woman was
kind to the prophet, she welcomed him to her house, and she received kindness
from him another way; he restored her dead child to life. 2
Kings 4: 35. Such as are helpful to others, shall ‘find grace
to help in time of need.’ Such as pour out the golden oil of compassion
to others, shall have the golden oil of salvation by God poured out to
them; for ‘a cup of cold water’ they shall have ‘rivers of pleasure.’ God
will make it up some way or other in this life. ‘The liberal soul shall
be made fat.’ Prov
11: 25. It shall be as the loaves in breaking multiplied; or,
as the widow’s oil, increased in pouring out. 1
Kings 17: 16. An estate may be imparted without being impaired.
(8) To
do good to others in necessity keeps up the credit of religion. Works of
mercy adorn the gospel, as the fruit adorns the tree. When ‘one light so
shines that others see our good works,’ it glorifies God, crowns religion,
and silences the lips of gainsayers. Basil says nothing rendered the true
religion more famous in the primitive times, and made more proselytes to
it, than the bounty and charity of Christians.
(9) The
evil that accrues by not preserving the lives of others, and helping them
in their necessities. God often sends a secret moth into their estate.
‘There is that withholdeth more than is meet, but it tendeth to poverty.’ Prov
11: 24. ‘Whose stoppeth his ears at the cry of the poor, he
also shall cry himself, but shall not be heard.’ Prov
21: 13. ‘He shall have judgement without mercy, that has shewed
no mercy.’ James
2: 13. Dives denied Lazarus a crumb of bread, and Dives was
denied a drop of water. ‘Depart from me, ye cursed; for I was an hungred,
and ye gave me no meat.’ Matt
15: 41. Christ says not, ‘Ye took away my meat;’ but ‘Ye gave
me no meat;’ ye did not feed my members, therefore ‘depart from me.’ By
all this, be ready to distribute to the necessities of others. This is
included in the commandment, ‘Thou shalt not kill.’ Not only thou shalt
not destroy another’s life, but thou shalt preserve it by ministering to
his necessities.
It is
implied that we should endeavour to preserve the souls of others: counsel
them about their souls; set life and death before them; help them to heaven.
In the law, if one met his neighbour’s ox or ass going astray, he must
bring him back again. Exod
23: 4. Much more, if we see our neighbour’s soul going astray,
we should use all means to bring him back to God by repentance.
[2] In
reference to ourselves. The commandment, ‘Thou shalt not kill,’ requires
that we should preserve our own life and soul. It is engraven upon every
creature that he should preserve his own natural life. We must be so far
from self-murder, that we must do all we can to preserve natural life.
We must use all means of diet, exercise, and lawful recreation, which,
like oil, preserves the lamp of life from going out. Some have been tempted
by Satan to believe they are such sinners that they do not deserve a bit
of bread, and so they have been ready to starve themselves. This is contrary
to the commandment, ‘Thou shalt do no murder,’ which implies that we are
to use all proper means for the preservation of life. ‘Drink no longer
water, but use a little wine for thy stomach’s sake.’1
Tim 5: 23. Timothy was not, by drinking too much water, to overcool
his stomach, and weaken nature, but to use means for self-preservation
— to drink ‘a little wine,’ &c.
This
commandment requires that we should also endeavour to preserve our own
souls. Omnia
si perdas animam servare memento
[Though you lose all else, remember to save your soul]. It is engraven
upon every creature, as with the point of a diamond, to look to its own
preservation. If the life of the body must be preserved, much more the
life of the soul. If he who does not provide for his own house is worse
than an infidel, much more he who does not provide for his own soul. 1
Tim 5: 8. A main thing implied in the commandment is a special
care for preserving our souls. The soul is a jewel, a diamond set in a
ring of clay; Christ puts the soul in balance with the world, and it outweighs
all. Matt
16: 26. The soul is a glass. in which some rays of divine glory
shine; it has in it some faint idea and resemblance of a Deity; it is a
celestial spark lighted by the breath of God. The body was made of the
dust, but the soul is of a more noble origin. God breathed into man a living
soul. Gen
2: 7.
(1) The
soul is excellent in its nature. It is a spiritual being, ‘it is a kind
of angelical thing.’ The mind sparkles with knowledge, the will is crowned
with liberty, and all the affections are as stars shining in their orb.
The soul being spiritual, it is of quick operation. How quick are the motions
of a spark! How swift the wing of a cherubim! So quick and agile is the
motion of the soul! What is quicker than thought? How many miles can the
soul travel in an instant! The soul, being spiritual, moves upwards, it
contemplates God and glory. ‘Whom have I in heaven but thee?’ Psa
73: 25. The motion of the soul is upward; but sin has put a
wrong bias upon it, and made it move downward. The soul, being spiritual,
has a self-moving power; it can subsist and move when the body is dead,
as the mariner can subsist when the ship is broken. The soul, being spiritual,
is immortal (Scaliger), aeternitatis
gemma, ‘a bud of eternity.’
(2) As
the soul is excellent in its nature, so in its capacities. It is capable
of grace, it is fit to be an associate and companion of angels. It is capable
of communion with God, of being Christ’s spouse. ‘I have espoused you to
one husband that I may present you as a chaste virgin to Christ.’ 2
Cor 11: 2. It is capable of being crowned with glory for ever.
Oh! then, carrying such precious souls about you, created with the breath
of God, redeemed with the blood of God, what endeavours should you use
for the saving of these souls! Let not the devil have your souls. Heliogabalus
fed his lions with pheasants: the devil is called a roaring lion: feed
him not with your souls. Besides the excellence of the soul, which may
make you labour to get it saved, consider how sad it will be not to have
the soul saved; it is such a loss as there is none like it; because in
losing the soul, you lose many things with it. A merchant in losing his
ship, loses many things with it: he loses money, jewels, spices, &c.;
so he that loses his soul, loses Christ and the company of angels in heaven.
It is an infinite loss — an irreparable loss; it can never be made up again.
‘Two eyes and one soul.’ Chrysostom. Oh! what care should be taken of the
immortal soul! I would request but this of you, that you take as much care
for the saving of your souls as you do for getting an estate. Nay, do but
take as much care for saving your souls as the devil does for destroying
them. Oh! how industrious is Satan to damn souls! How does he play the
serpent in his subtle laying of snares to catch souls! How does he shoot
the fiery darts! He is never idle; he is a busy bishop in his diocese;
he ‘walketh about seeking whom he may devour.’ 1
Pet 5: 8. Now, is it not a reasonable request to take as much
care for saving your souls as the devil does for destroying them?
How can
we have our souls saved?
By having
them sanctified. Only the ‘pure in heart shall see God.’ Get your souls
inlaid and enamelled with holiness. 1
Pet 1: 16. It is not enough that ‘we cease to do evil;’ which
is all the evidence some have to show, and lose heaven by short shooting;
but we must be inwardly sanctified. Not only the ‘unclean spirit’ must
go out, but we must be filled with the Holy Ghost. Eph
5: 19. This holiness must needs be, if you consider God is to
dwell with you here, and you are to dwell with him hereafter.
God is
to dwell with you here. He takes up the soul for his own lodging. ‘That
Christ may dwell in your hearts.’ Eph
3: 17. Therefore the soul must be consecrated. A king’s palace
must be kept clean, especially his presence chamber. The body is the temple
of the Holy Ghost. 1
Cor 6: 19. The soul is the sanctum sanctorum; how holy should
it be!
You are
to dwell with God. Heaven is a holy place. ‘An inheritance undefiled.’ 1
Pet 1: 4. And how can you dwell with God till you are sanctified?
We do not put wine into a musty vessel; and God will not put the new wine
of glory into a sinful heart. Oh, then, as you love your souls, and would
have them saved eternally, endeavour after holiness! By this means you
will have a fitness for the kingdom of heaven, and your souls will be saved
in the day of the Lord Jesus.
2.7 The Seventh Commandment
‘Thou
shalt not commit adultery.’ Exod
20: 14.
God is
a pure, holy spirit, and has an infinite antipathy against all uncleanness.
In this commandment he has entered his caution against it; non moechaberis,
‘Thou shalt not commit adultery.’ The sum of this commandment is, The preservations
of corporal purity. We must take heed of running on the rock of uncleanness,
and so making shipwreck of our chastity. In this commandment there is something
tacitly implied, and something expressly forbidden.
1. The
thing implied is that the ordinance of marriage should be observed. ‘Let
every man have his own wife, and let every woman have her own husband.’ 1
Cor 7: 2. ‘Marriage is honourable and the bed undefiled.’ Heb
13: 4. God instituted marriage in paradise; he brought the woman
to the man. Gen
2: 22. He gave them to each other in marriage. Jesus Christ
honoured marriage with his presence. John
2: 2. The first miracle he wrought was at a marriage, when he
turned the ‘water into wine.’ Marriage is a type and resemblance of the
mystical union between Christ and his church. Eph
5: 32.
In marriage
there are general and special duties. The general duty of the husband is
to rule. ‘The husband is the head of the wife.’ Eph
5: 23. The head is the seat of rule and judgement; but he must
rule with discretion. He is head, therefore must not rule without reason.
The general duty on the wife’s part is submission. ‘Wives, submit yourselves
unto your own husbands, as unto the Lord.’ Eph
5: 22. It is observable that the Holy Ghost passed by Sarah’s
failings, not mentioning her unbelief; but he takes notice of that which
was good in her, as her reverence and obedience to her husband. ‘Sarah
obeyed Abraham, calling him lord.’ 1
Pet 3: 6.
The special
duties belonging to marriage, are love and fidelity. Love is the marriage
of the affections. Eph
5: 25. There is, as it were, but one heart in two bodies. Love
lines the yoke and makes it easy; it perfumes the marriage relation; and
without it there is not conjugium
but conjurgium
[not harmony but constant wrangling]. Like two poisons in one stomach,
one is ever sick of the other. In marriage there is mutual promise of living
together faithfully according to God’s holy ordinance. Among the Romans,
on the day of marriage, the woman presented to her husband fire and water:
signifying that as fire refines, and water cleanses, she would live with
her husband in chastity and sincerity.
II. The
thing forbidden in the commandment is infecting ourselves with bodily pollution
and uncleanness. ‘Thou shalt not commit adultery.’ The fountain of this
sin is lust. Since the fall, holy love has degenerated to lust. Lust is
the fever of the soul. There is a twofold adultery.
[1] Mental.
‘Whosoever looketh on a woman to lust after her has committed adultery
with her already in his heart.’ Matt
5: 28. As a man may die of an inward bleeding, so he may be
damned for the inward boilings of lust, if it be not mortified.
{2] Corporal;
as when sin has conceived, and brought forth in the act. This is expressly
forbidden under a sub
poena. ‘Thou shalt not commit adultery.’
This commandment is set as a hedge to keep out uncleanness; and they that
break this hedge a serpent shall bite them. Job calls adultery a ‘heinous
crime.’ Job
31: 2: Every failing is not a crime; and every crime is not
a heinous crime; but adultery is flagitium, ‘a heinous crime.’ The Lord
calls it villany. ‘They have committed villany in Israel, and have committed
adultery with their neighbours’ wives.’ Jer
29: 23.
Wherein
appears the greatness of this sin?
(1)
It is a breach of the marriage-oath. When persons come together in a matrimonial
way, they bind themselves by covenant to each other, in the presence of
God, to be true and faithful in the conjugal relation. Unchastity falsifies
this solemn oath; and herein adultery is worse than fornication, because
it is a breach of the conjugal bond.
(2)
The greatness of the sin lies in this: that it is a great dishonour done
to God. God says, ‘Thou shalt not commit adultery.’ The adulterer sets
his will above God’s law, tramples upon his command, affronts him to his
face; as if a subject should tear his prince’s proclamation. The adulterer
is highly injurious to all the Persons in the Trinity. To God the Father.
Sinner, God has given thee thy life, and thou dost waste the lamp of life,
the flower of thine age in lewdness. He has bestowed on thee many mercies,
health, and estate, and thou spendest all on harlots. Did God give thee
wages to serve the devil? It is injurious to God the Son, in two ways.
As he has purchased thee with his blood. ‘Ye are bought with a price.’ 1
Cor 6: 20. Now he who is bought is not his own; it is a sin
for him to go to another, without consent, from Christ, who has bought
him with a price. As by virtue of baptism thou art a Christian, and professes
that Christ is thy head, and thou art a member of Christ; therefore, what
an injury is it to Christ, to ‘take the members of Christ, and make them
the members of a harlot’? 1
Cor 6: 15. It is injurious to God the Holy Ghost; for the body
is his temple. ‘Know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost
which is in you?’ 1
Cor 6: 19. And how great a sin is it to defile his temple!
(3)
The sin of adultery lies in this: that it is committed with mature deliberation.
There is contriving the sin in the mind, then consent in the will, and
then the sin is put forth into act. To sin against the light of nature,
and to sin deliberately, is like the dye to the wool, it gives sin a tincture,
and dyes it of a crimson colour.
(4)
That which makes adultery so sinful is, that it is needless. God has provided
a remedy to prevent it. ‘To avoid fornication, let every man have his own
wife.’ 1
Cor 7: 2. Therefore, after this remedy prescribed, to be guilty
of fornication or adultery, is inexcusable; it is like a rich thief, that
steals when he has no need. This increases the sin.
Use
one. The church of Rome is here condemned, which allows the sin of fortification
and adultery. It suffers not its priests to marry, but they may have their
courtesans. The worst kind of uncleanness, incest with the nearest of kin,
is dispensed with for money. It was once said of Rome, Urbs
est jam tota lupanar, Rome was
become a common stew. And no wonder, when the Pope, for a sum of money,
could give a license and patent to commit uncleanness; and, if the patent
were not enough, he would give them a pardon. Many of the Papists judge
fornication to be venial. God condemns the very lusting. Matt
5: 28. If God condemns the thought, how dare they allow the
fact of fornication? You see what a cage of unclean birds the church of
Rome is. They call themselves the Holy Catholic Church; but how can they
be holy who are so steeped and parboiled in fornication, incest, sodomy,
and all manner of uncleanness?
Use
two. It is a matter for lamentation to see this commandment so slighted
and violated among us. Adultery is the reigning sin of the times. ‘They
are all adulterers, as an oven heated by the baker.’ Hos
7: 4. The time of King Henry VIII was called the golden age,
but this may be called the unclean age, wherein whore-hunting is common.
‘In thy filthiness is lewdness.’ Ezek
24: 13. Luther tells us of one who said, ‘If he might but satisfy
his lust, and be carried from one whore-house to another, he would desire
no other heaven’; and who afterwards breathed out his soul betwixt two
notorious strumpets. This is to love forbidden fruit, to love to drink
of stolen waters. ‘Son of man, dig in the wall; and when I had digged,
behold a door; and he said, Go in and behold the wicked abominations that
they do here.’ Ezek
8: 8, 9. Could we, as the prophet, dig in the walls of many
houses, what vile abominations should we see there! In some chambers we
might see fornication; dig further, and we may see adultery; dig further,
and we may see incest, &c. And may not the Lord go from his sanctuary?
‘Sees thou the great abominations that the house of Israel committeth,
that I should go far off from my sanctuary?’ Ezek
8: 6. God might remove his gospel, and then we might write Ichabod
on this nation, ‘The glory is departed.’ Let us mourn for what we cannot
reform.
Use
three. For exhortation, to keep ourselves from the sin of adultery. ‘Let
every man have his own wife,’ says Paul, not his concubine, nor his courtesan. 1
Cor 7: 2. That I may deter you from adultery, let me show you
the great evil of it.
(1)
It is a thievish sin. It is the highest sort of theft. The adulterer steals
from his neighbour that which is more than his goods and estate; he steals
away his wife from him, who is flesh of his flesh.
(2)
Adultery debases a person; it makes him resemble the beasts; therefore
the adulterer is described like a horse neighing. ‘Every one neighed after
his neighbour’s wife.’ Jer
5: 8. Nay, it is worse than brutish; for some creatures that
are void of reason, yet by the instinct of nature, observe some decorum
and chastity. The turtle dove is a chaste creature, and keeps to its mate;
and the stork, wherever he flies, comes into no nest but his own. Naturalists
write that if a stork, leaving his own mate, joins with any other, all
the rest of the storks fall upon it, and pull its feathers from it. Adultery
is worse than brutish, it degrades a person of his honour.
(3)
Adultery pollutes. The devil is called an unclean spirit. Luke
11: 24. The adulterer is the devil’s first-born; he is unclean;
he is a moving quagmire; he is all over ulcerated with sin; his eyes sparkle
with lust; his mouth foams out filth; his heart burns like mount Etna,
in unclean desires; and he is so filthy, that if he die in this sin, all
the flames of hell will never purge away his uncleanness. And, as for the
adulteress, who can paint her black enough? The Scriptures calls her a
deep ditch. Prov
23: 27. She is a common drain; whereas a believer’s body is
a living temple, and his soul a little heaven, be spangled with the graces,
as so many stars. The body of a harlot is a walking dung hill, and her
soul a lesser hell.
(4)
Adultery is destructive to the body. ‘And thou mourn at the last, when
thy flesh and thy body are consumed.’ Prov
5: 11. It brings into a consumption. Uncleanness turns the body
into a hospital, it wastes the radical moisture, rots the skull, and eats
the beauty of the face. As the flame wastes the candle, so the fire of
lust consumes the bones. The adulterer hastens his own death. ‘Till a dart
strike through his liver.’ Prov
7: 23. The Romans had their funerals at the gate of Venus’s
temple, to signify that lust brings death. Venus is lust.
(5.)
Adultery is a drain upon the purse; it wastes not the body only, but the
estate. ‘By means of a whorish woman, a man is brought to a piece of bread.’ Prov
6: 26. Whores are the devil’s horse-leeches, sponges that suck
in money. The prodigal son spent his portion when he fell among harlots. Luke
15: 30. The concubine of King Edward III, when he was dying,
got all she could from him, and even plucked the rings off his fingers,
and so left him. He that lives in luxury, dies in beggary.
(6)
Adultery destroys reputation. ‘Whoso committeth adultery with a woman,
a wound and dishonour shall he get, and his reproach shall not be wiped
away.’ Prov
6: 32, 33. Some, when they get wounds, get honour. The soldier’s
wounds are full of honour; the martyr’s wounds for Christ are full of honour;
but the adulterer gets wounds, but no honour to his name. ‘His reproach
shall not be wiped away.’ Wounds of reputation no physician can heal. When
the adulterer dies, his shame lives. When his body rots underground, his
name rots above ground. His base-born children are living monuments of
his shame.
(7)
This sin impairs the mind; it steals away the understanding; it stupefies
the heart. ‘Whoredom and wine take away the heart.’ Hos
4: 11. It cats out all heart for good. Solomon besotted himself
with women, and they enticed him to idolatry.
(8)
This sin incurs temporal judgements. The Mosaic law made adultery death.
‘The adulterer and adulteress shall surely be put to death;’ and the usual
death was stoning. Lev
20: 10; Deut
22: 24. The Salons commanded persons taken in this sin to be
burnt. The Romans caused their heads to be stricken off. Like a scorpion,
this sin carries a sting in its tail. The adultery of Paris and Helen was
the death of both, and the ruin of Troy. ‘Jealousy is the rage of a man.’ Prov
6: 34. The adulterer is often killed in the act of his sin.
Adultery cost Otho the emperor, and Pope Sixtus IV their lives. Laeta
venire Venus, tristis abire solet
[Lust’s practice is to make a joyful entrance, but she leaves in misery].
I have read of two citizens in London, in 1583, who, having defiled themselves
with adultery on the Lord’s-day, were immediately struck dead with fire
from heaven. If all who are now guilty of this sin were to be punished
in this manner, it would rain fire again, as on Sodom.
(9)
Adultery, without repentance, damns the soul. ‘Neither fornicators, nor
adulterers, nor effeminate, shall enter into the kingdom of God.’ 1
Cor 6: 9. The fire of lust brings to the fire of hell. ‘Whoremongers
and adulterers God will judge.’ Heb
13: 4. Though men may neglect to judge them, yet God will judge
them. But will not God judge all other sinners? Yes. Why then does the
apostle say, ‘Whoremongers and adulterers God will judge’? The meaning
is, he will judge them assuredly; they shall not escape the hand of justice;
and he will punish them severely. ‘The Lord knoweth how to reserve the
unjust to the day of judgement to be punished, but chiefly them that walk
in the lust of uncleanness.’ 2
Pet 2: 9, 10. The harlot’s breast keeps from Abraham’s bosom. Momentaneum
est quod delectat, auternum quod cruciat
[The delight lasts a moment, the torment an eternity]. Who for a cup of
pleasure would drink a sea of wrath? ‘Her guests are in the depths of hell.’ Prov
9: 18. A wise traveller, though many pleasant dishes are set
before him at the inn, forbears to taste, because of the reckoning. We
are all travellers to Jerusalem above; and when many baits of temptation
are set before us, we should refrain, and think of the reckoning which
will be brought in at death. With what stomach could Dionysius eat his
dainties, when he imagined there was a naked sword hung over his head as
he sat at meat? While the adulterer feeds on strange flesh, the sword of
God’s justice hangs over his head. Causinus speaks of a tree growing in
Spain, that is of a sweet smell, and pleasant to the taste, but the juice
of it is poisonous. This is an emblem of a harlot; who is perfumed with
powders, and fair to look on, but poisonous and damnable to the soul. ‘She
has cast down many wounded, yea, many strong men have been slain by her.’ Prov
7: 26.
(10)
The adulterer not only wrongs his own soul, but does what in him lies to
destroy the soul of another, and so kills two at once. He is worse than
the thief; for, suppose a thief robs a man, yea, takes away his life, the
man’s soul may be happy; he may go to heaven as well as if he had died
in his bed. But he who commits adultery, endangers the soul of another,
and deprives her of salvation so far as in him lies. Now, what a fearful
thing is it to be an instrument to draw another to hell!
(11)
The adulterer is abhorred of God. ‘The mouth of strange women is a deep
pit: he that is abhorred of the Lord shall fall therein.’ Prov
22: 14. What can be worse than to be abhorred of God? God may
be angry with his own children; but for God to abhor a man, is the highest
degree of hatred.
How
does the Lord show his abhorrence of the adulterer?
In giving
him up to a reprobate mind, and a seared conscience. Rom
1: 28. He is then in such a condition that he cannot repent.
He is abhorred of God. He stands upon the threshold of hell; and when death
gives him a push, he tumbles in. All this should sound a retreat in our
ears, and call us off from the pursuit of so damnable a sin as uncleanness.
Hear what the Scriptures say: ‘Come not nigh the door of her house.’ Prov
5: 8. ‘Her house is the way to hell.’ Prov
7: 27.
(12)
Adultery sows discord. It destroys peace and love, the two best flowers
that grow in a family. It sets husband against wife, and wife against husband;
and so causes the ‘joints of the same body to smite one against another.’
This division in a family works confusion; for ‘A house divided against
a house falleth.’ Luke
11: 17.
Omne divisibile est corruptibile.
Use
four. I shall give some directions, by way of antidote, to keep from the
infection of this sin.
(1)
Come not into the company of a whorish woman; avoid her house, as a seaman
does a rock. ‘Come not nigh the door of her house.’ Prov
5: 8. He who would not have the plague, must not come near infected
houses; every whore-house has the plague in it. Not to beware of the occasion
of sin, and yet pray, ‘Lead us not into temptation,’ is, as if one should
put his finger into the candle, and yet pray that it may not be burnt.
(2)
Look to your eyes. Much sin comes in by the eye. ‘Having eyes full of adultery.’ 2
Pet 2: 14. The eye tempts the fancy, and the fancy works upon
the heart. A wanton amorous eye may usher in sin. Eve first saw the tree
of knowledge, and then she took. Gen
3: 6. First she looked and then she loved. The eye often sets
the heart on fire; therefore Job laid a law upon his eyes. ‘I made a covenant
with my eyes, why then should I think upon a maid?’ Job
31: 1. Democritus the philosopher plucked out his eyes, because
he would not be tempted with vain objects; the Scripture does not bid us
do this, but to set a watch before our eyes.
(3)
Look to your lips. Take heed of any unseemly word that may enkindle unclean
thoughts in yourselves or others. ‘Evil communications corrupt good manners.’ 1
Cor 15: 33. Impure discourse is the bellows to blow up the fire
of lust. Much evil is conveyed to the heart by the tongue. ‘Set a watch,
O Lord, before my mouth.’ Psa
141: 3.
(4)
Look in a special manner to your heart. ‘Keep thy heart with all diligence.’ Prov
4: 23. Every one has a tempter in his own bosom. ‘Out of the
heart proceed evil thoughts.’ Matt
15: 19. Thinking of sin makes way for the act of sin. Suppress
the first risings of sin in your heart. As the serpent, when danger is
near, keeps his head, so keep your heart, which is the spring from whence
all lustful motions proceed.
(5)
Look to your attire. We read of the attire of a harlot. Prov
7: 10. A wanton dress is a provocation to lust. Cuttings and
braidings of the hair, a painted face, naked breasts, are allurements to
vanity. Where the sign is hung out, people will go in and taste the liquor.
Jerome says, they who by their lascivious attire endeavour to draw others
to lust, though no evil follows, are tempters, and shall be punished, because
they offered the poison to others, though they would not drink.
(6)
Take heed of evil company. Serpunt
vitia et in proximum quemque transiliunt
[Vices spread abroad and spring on to any standing by]. Seneca. Sin is
a very catching disease; one tempts another to sin, and hardens him in
it. There are three cords that draw men to adultery: the inclination of
the heart, the persuasion of evil company, and the embraces of the harlot;
and this threefold cord is not easily broken. ‘A fire was kindled in their
company.’ Psa
106: 18. The fire of lust is kindled in bad company.
(7)
Beware of going to plays. A play-house is often a preface to a whorehouse. Ludi
praebent semina nequitiae [Plays
furnish the seeds of wickedness]. We are bid to avoid all appearance of
evil: and are not plays the appearance of evil? Such sights are there that
are not fit to be beheld with chaste eyes. Both Fathers and Councils have
shown their dislike to going to plays. A learned divine observes, that
many have on their death-beds confessed, with tears, that the pollution
of their bodies has been occasioned by going to plays.
(8)
Take heed of mixed dancing. Instrumenta
luxuriae tripudia [Dances are instruments
of wantonness]. From dancing, people come to dalliance with another, and
from dalliance to uncleanness. ‘There is,’ says Calvin, ‘for the most part,
some unchaste behaviour in dancing.’ Dances draw the heart to folly by
wanton gestures, by unchaste touches, and by lustful looks. Chrysostom
inveighed against mixed dancing in his time. ‘We read,’ he says, ‘of a
marriage feast, and of virgins going before with lamps, but of dancing
there we read not.’ Matt
25: 7. Many have been ensnared by dancing; as the duke of Normandy,
and others. Saltatio
adadulteras non ad pudicas pertinet
[Dancing is the province not of the chaste woman, but of the adulteress].
Ambrose. Chrysostom says, where dancing is, there the devil is. I speak
chiefly of mixed dancing. We read of dances in Scripture, but they were
sober and modest. Exod
15: 20. They were not mixed dances, but pious and religious,
being usually accompanied with singing praises to God.
(9)
Take heed of lascivious books, and pictures that provoke to lust. As the
reading of the Scripture stirs up love to God, so reading bad books stirs
up the mind to wickedness. I could name one who published a book to the
world full of effeminate, amorous, and wanton expressions, who, before
he died, was much troubled for it, and burned the book which made so many
burn in lust. To lascivious books I may add lascivious pictures, which
bewitch the eye, and are incendiaries to lust. They secretly convey poison
to the heart. Qui aspicit innocens aspectu fit nocens. Popish pictures
are not more prone to stir up idolatry than unclean pictures are to stir
up to concupiscence.
(10)
Take heed of excess in diet. When gluttony and drunkenness lead the van,
chambering and wantonness bring up the rear. Vinum fomentum libidinis;
‘any wine inflames lust;’ and fulness of bread is made the cause of Sodom’s
uncleanness. Ezek
16: 49. The rankest weeds grow out of the fattest soil. Uncleanness
proceeds from excess. ‘When I had fed them to the full, every one neighed
after his neighbour’s wife.’ Jer
5: 8. Get the ‘golden bridle of temperance.’ God allows recruits
of nature, and what may fit us the better for his service; but beware of
surfeit. Excess in the creature clouds the mind, chokes good affections,
and provokes lust. Paul did ‘keep under his body.’ 1
Cor 9: 27. The flesh pampered is apt to rebel. Corpus impinguatum
recalcitrat.
(11)
Take heed of idleness. When a man is out of a calling, he is ready to receive
any temptation. We do not sow seed in fallow-ground; but the devil sows
most seed of temptation in such as lie fallow. Idleness is the cause of
sodomy and uncleanness. Ezek
16: 49. When David was idle on the top of his house, he espied
Bathsheba, and took her to him. 2
Sam 11: 4. Jerome gave his friend counsel to be always well
employed in God’s vineyard, that when the devil came, he might have no
leisure to listen to temptation.
(12)
To avoid fornication and adultery, let every man have a chaste, entire
love to his own wife. Ezekiel’s wife was the desire of his eyes. Chap
24: 16. When Solomon had dissuaded from strange women, he prescribed
a remedy against it. ‘Rejoice with the wife of thy youth.’ Prov
5: 18. It is not having a wife, but loving a wife, that makes
a man live chastely. He who loves his wife, whom Solomon calls his fountain,
will not go abroad to drink of muddy, poisoned waters. Pure conjugal love
is a gift of God, and comes from heaven; but, like the vestal fire, it
must be cherished, that it go not out. He who loves not his wife, is the
likeliest person to embrace the bosom of a stranger.
(13)
Labour to get the fear of God into your hearts. ‘By the fear of the Lord
men depart from evil.’ Prov
16: 6. As the embankment keeps out the water, so the fear of
the Lord keeps out uncleanness. Such as want the fear of God, want the
bridle that should check them from sin. How did Joseph keep from his mistress’s
temptation? The fear of God pulled him back. ‘How can I do this great wickedness,
and sin against God?’ Gen.
39: 9. Bernard calls holy fear, janitor animae, ‘the door-keeper
of the soul.’ As a nobleman’s porter stands at the door, and keeps out
vagrants, so the fear of God stands and keeps out all sinful temptations
from entering.
(14)
Take delight in the word of God. ‘How sweet are thy words unto my taste.’ Psa
119: 103. Chrysostom compares God’s word to a garden. If we
walk in this garden, and suck sweetness from the flowers of the promises,
we shall never care to pluck the ‘forbidden fruit.’ Sint
castae deliciae meae scripturae
[Let the Scriptures be my pure pleasure]. Augustine. The reason why persons
seek after unchaste, sinful pleasures, is because they have no better.
Caesar riding through a city, and seeing the women play with dogs and parrots,
said, ‘Sure they have no children.’ So they that sport with harlots have
no better pleasures. He that has once tasted Christ in a promise, is ravished
with delight; and how would he scorn a motion to sin! Job said, the word
was his ‘appointed food.’ Job
23: 12. No wonder then he made a ‘covenant with his eyes.’
(15)
If you would abstain from adultery, use serious consideration. Consider,
[1] God sees thee in the act of sin. He sees all thy curtain wickedness.
He is totus
oculus, ‘all eye.’ The clouds are
no canopy, the night is no curtain to hide thee from God’s eye. Thou canst
not sin, but thy Judge looks on. ‘I have seen thy adulteries and thy neighings.’ Jer
13: 27. ‘They have committed adultery with their neighbours’
wives; even I know, and am a witness, saith the Lord.’ Jer
29: 23. [2] Few that are entangled in the sin of adultery, recover
from the snare. ‘None that go to her return again.’ Prov
2: 19. This made some of the ancients conclude that adultery
was an unpardonable sin; but it is not so. David repented. Mary Magdalene
was a weeping penitent; upon her amorous eyes that sparkled with lose,
she sought to be revenged, by washing Christ’s feet with her tears. Some,
therefore have recovered from the snare. ‘None that go to her return,’
that is, ‘very few;’ it is rare to hear of any who are enchanted and bewitched
with this sin of adultery, that recover from it. Her ‘heart is snares and
nets, and her hands are bands.’ Eccl
7: 26. Her ‘heart is snares,’ that is, she is subtle to deceive
those who come to her; and ‘her hands are bands,’ that is her embraces
are powerful to hold and entangle her lovers. Plutarch said of the Persian
kings, ‘They were captives to their concubines,’ they were so inflamed,
that they had no power to leave their company. This consideration should
make all fearful of this sin. Soft pleasures harden the heart. [3] Consider
what Scripture says, which may ponere
obicem, ‘lay a bar in the way’
to this sin. ‘I will be a swift witness against the adulterers.’ Mal
3: 5. It is good when God is a witness ‘for us’, when he witnesses
to our sincerity, as he did to Job’s; but it is sad to have God a ‘witness
against us.’ ‘I,’ says God, ‘will be a witness against the adulterer.’
And who shall disprove his witness? He is both witness and judge. ‘Whoremongers
and adulterers God will judge.’ Heb
13: 4. [4] Consider the sad farewell the sin of adultery leaves.
It leaves a hell in the conscience. ‘The lips of a strange woman drop as
a honeycomb, but her end is bitter as wormwood.’ Prov
5: 4. The goddess Diana was so artificially drawn, that she
seemed to smile upon those that came into her temple, but frown on those
that went out. So the harlot smiles on her lovers as they come to her,
but at last come the frown and the sting. ‘Till a dart strike through his
liver.’ Prov
7: 23. ‘Her end is bitter.’ When a man has been virtuous, the
labour is gone, but the comfort remains; but when he has been vicious and
unclean, the pleasure is gone, but the sting remains. Delectat
in momentum, cruciat in aeternum
[He gains momentary pleasure and then eternal torment]. Jerome. When the
senses have been feasted with unchaste pleasures, the soul is left to pay
the reckoning. Stolen waters are sweet; but, as poison, though sweet in
the mouth, it torments the bowels. Sin always ends in a tragedy. Memorable
is that which Fincelius reports of a priest in Flanders, who enticed a
maid to uncleanness. She objected how vile a sin it was, he told her that
by authority from the Pope he could commit any sin; so at last he drew
her to his wicked purpose. But when they had been together a while, in
came the devil, and took away the harlot from the priest’s side, and, notwithstanding
all her crying out, carried her away. If the devil should come and carry
away all that are guilty of bodily uncleanness in this nation, I fear more
would be carried away than would be left behind.
(16)
Pray against this sin. Luther gave a lady this advice, that when any lust
began to rise in her heart, she should go to prayer. Prayer is the best
armour of proof; it quenches the wild fire of lust. If prayer will ‘cast
out the devil,’ why may it not cast out those lusts that come from the
devil?
Use
five. If the body must be kept pure from defilement, much more the ‘soul
of a Christian must be kept pure.’ The meaning of the commandment is not
only that we should not stain our bodies with adultery, but that we should
keep our souls pure. To have a chaste body, but an unclean soul, is like
a fair face with bad lungs; or a gilt chimney-piece, that is all soot within.
‘Be ye holy, for I am holy.’ 1
Pet 1: 16. The soul cannot be lovely to God till it has Christ’s
image stamped upon it, which consists in righteousness and true holiness. Eph
4: 24. The soul must especially be kept pure, because it is
the chief place of God’s residence. Eph
3: 17. A king’s palace must be kept clean, especially his presence-chamber.
If the body is the temple, the soul is the ‘Holy of holies,’ and must be
consecrated. We must not only keep our bodies from carnal pollution, but
our souls from envy and malice.
How
shall we know our souls are pure?
(1)
If our souls are pure, we flee from the appearance of evil. 1
Thess 5: 22. We shall not do that which looks like sin. When
Joseph’s mistress courted and tempted him, he ‘left his garment in her
hand, and fled.’ Gen
39: 12 He was suspicious to be near her. Polycarp would not
be seen in company with Marcion the heretic, because it would not be good
report.
(2)
If our souls are pure, the light of purity will shine forth. Aaron had
‘Holiness to the Lord’ written upon his golden plate. Where there is sanctity
in the soul, there ‘Holiness to the Lord’ is engraven upon the life. We
are adorned with patience, humility, good works, and shine as ‘Lights in
the world.’ Phil
2: 15. Carry Christ’s picture in your conversation. 1
John 2: 6. O let us labour for this soul purity! Without it
there is no seeing God. Heb
12: 14. ‘What communion has light with darkness?’ 2
Cor 6: 14. To keep the soul pure, have recourse to the blood
of Christ: which is the ‘fountain open for sin and uncleanness.’ Zech
13: 1. A soul steeped in the briny tears of repentance, and
bathed in the blood of Christ, is made pure. Pray much for a pureness of
soul. ‘Create in me a clean heart, O God.’ Psa
51: 10. Some pray for children, others for riches; but pray
thou for soul purity. Say, ‘Lord, though my body is kept pure, yet my soul
is defiled, I pollute all I touch. O purge me with hyssop, let Christ’s
blood sprinkle me, let the Holy Ghost come upon me and anoint me. O make
me evangelically pure, that I may be translated to heaven, and placed among
the cherubim, where I shall be as holy as thou wouldst have me to be, and
as happy as I can desire to be.’
2.8 The Eighth Commandment
‘Thou
shalt not steal.’ Exod
20: 15.
AS the
holiness of God sets him against uncleanness, in the command ‘Thou shalt
not commit adultery;’ so the justice of God sets him against rapine and
robbery, in the command, ‘Thou shalt not steal.’ The thing forbidden in
this commandment, is meddling with another man’s property. The civil lawyers
define furtum,
stealth or theft to be ‘the laying hands unjustly on that which is another’s;’
the invading another’s right.
I. The
causes of theft.
[1]
The internal causes are, (1) Unbelief. A man has a high distrust of God’s
providence. ‘Can God furnish a table in the wilderness?’ Psa
78: 19. Can God spread a table for me? says the unbeliever.
No, he cannot. Therefore he is resolved he will spread a table for himself,
but it shall be at other men’s cost, and both first and second course shall
be served in with stolen goods. (2) Covetousness. The Greek word for covetousness
signifies ‘an immoderate desire of getting;’ which is the root of theft.
A man covets more than his own, and this itch of covetousness makes him
scratch what he can from another. Achan’s covetous humour made him steal
the wedge of gold, a wedge which cleaved asunder his soul from God. Joshua
7: 21.
[2]
The external cause of theft is Satan’s solicitation. Judas was a thief. John
12: 6. How came he to be a thief? ‘Satan entered into him’. John
13: 27. The devil is the great master-thief, he robbed us of
our coat of innocence, and he persuades men to take up his trade; he tells
men how bravely they shall live by thieving, and how they may catch an
estate. As Eve listened to the serpent’s voice, so do they. As birds of
prey, they live upon spoil and plunder.
II.
The kinds of theft.
[1]
There is stealing from God. They are thieves who rob God of any part of
his day. ‘Remember to keep holy the Sabbath day.’ Not a part of the day
only, but the whole day must be dedicated to God. And, lest any should
forget this, the Lord has prefixed a memento, ‘remember.’ Therefore, after
morning sacrifice, to spend the other part of the Sabbath in vanity and
pleasure, is spiritual theft. It robs God of his due, and the very heathen
will rise up in judgement against such Christians; for the heathen, as
Macrobius notes, observed a whole day to their false gods.
[2]
There is stealing from others. A stealing away souls, as heretics, by robbing
men of the truth, rob them of their souls. Stealing money and goods. There
is
(1)
The highway thief, who takes a purse, contrary to the letter of the commandment.
‘Thou shalt not rob thy neighbour.’ Lev
19: 13. ‘Do not steal.’ Mark
10: 19. This is not the violence which takes the ‘kingdom of
heaven by force.’ Matt
11: 12.
(2)
The house-thief, who purloins and filches out of his master’s cash, or
steals his wares and drugs. The apostle says, ‘Some have entertained angels
unawares’ (Heb
13: 2), but many masters have entertained thieves in their houses
unawares. The house-thief is a hypocrite as well as a thief; for he has
demure looks, and pretends to be helping his master, when he only helps
himself.
(3)
The thief that shrouds himself under law, as the unjust attorney or lawyer,
who prevaricates and deals falsely with his client. This is to steal from
the client. By deceit and prevarication, the lawyer robs the client of
his land, and may be the means of ruining his family, and is no better
than a thief in God’s account.
(4)
The church-thief or pluralist, who holds several benefices, but seldom
or never preaches to the people. He gets the golden fleece, but lets the
flock starve. ‘Woe be to the shepherds of Israel.’Ezek
34: 2. They ‘fed themselves, and fed not my flock;’ ver.
8. These ministers will be indicted for thieves at God’s bar.
(5)
The shop-thief, who steals in selling. He who uses false weights and measures
steals from others what is their due. ‘Making the ephah small.’ Amos
8: 5. The ephah was a measure the Jews used in selling. Some
made the ephah small, and gave scant measure, which was plainly stealing.
‘The balances of deceit are in his hand.’ Hos
12: 7. By making their weights lighter, men make their accounts
heavier. He steals in selling who puts excessive prices on his commodities.
He takes thrice as much for an article as it cost him, or as it is worth.
To overreach others in selling, is to steal money from them. ‘Thou shalt
not defraud thy neighbour, neither rob him.’ Lev
19: 13. To defraud him is to rob him; to overreach others in
selling is a cunning way of stealing, and is against both law and gospel.
It is against the law of God. ‘If thou sell ought to thy neighbour, ye
shall not oppress one another.’ Lev
25: 14. It is against the gospel. ‘That no man go beyond, and
defraud his brother.’ 1
Thess 4: 6.
(6)
The usurer, who takes by extortion from others. He seems to help another
by letting him have money in his necessity, but gets him into bonds, and
sucks out his very blood and marrow. I read of a woman whom Satan had bound
(Luke
13: 16), and truly he is almost in as bad a condition whom the
usurer has bound. The usurer is a robber. A usurer once asked a prodigal
when he would leave off spending? The prodigal replied, ‘I will leave off
spending what is my own, when thou leanest off stealing from others.’ Zacchaeus
was an extortioner who, after his conversion, made restitution. Luke
19: 8. He thought all he got by extortion was theft.
(7)
The trustee, who has the orphan’s estate committed to him, is deputed to
be his guardian, and manages his estate for him; if he curtails the estate,
and gets a fleece out of it for himself, and wrongs the orphan, he is a
thief. This is worse than taking a purse by violence, because he betrays
his trust, which is the highest piece of treachery and injustice.
(8)
The borrower, who borrows money from others, with an intention never to
pay them again. ‘The wicked borroweth, and payeth not again.’ Psa
37: 21. What is it but thievery to take money and goods from
others, and not restore them again. The prophet Elisha bade the widow sell
her oil, and pay her debts, and then live upon the rest. 2
Kings 4: 7.
(9)
The last sort of theft is, the receiver of stolen goods. The receiver,
if he be not the principal, yet is accessory to the theft, and the law
makes him guilty. The thief steals the money, and the receiver holds the
sack to put it in. The root would die if it were not watered, and thieving
would cease if it were not encouraged by the receiver. I am apt to think
that he who does not scruple to take stolen goods into his house, would
as little scruple to have stolen them.
What
are the aggravations of this sin?
(1)
To steal when there is no need; to be a rich thief.
(2)
To steal sacrilegiously; to devour things set apart to holy uses. ‘It is
a snare to the man who devoureth that which is holy.’ Prov
20: 25. Such an one was Dionysius, who robbed the temple, and
took away the silver vessels.
(3)
To commit the sin of theft against checks of conscience, and examples of
God’s justice; which, like the dye to the wool, dyes the sin of a crimson
colour.
(4)
To rob the widow and orphan. ‘Ye shall not afflict the widow or fatherless.’ Peccatum
clamans [This sin shrieks aloud].
‘If they cry unto me, I will surely hear them.’ Exod
22: 23.
(5)
To rob the poor. How angry was David that the rich man should take away
the poor man’s lamb! ‘As the Lord lives, he shall surely die.’ 2
Sam 12: 5. What is inclosing of commons but robbing the poor!
[3]
There is a stealing from a man’s self. A man may be a thief to himself.
How
so?
(1)
By niggardliness. The niggard is a thief; he steals from himself in not
allowing himself what is needful. He thinks that lost which is bestowed
upon himself; he robs himself of necessaries. ‘A man to whom God has given
riches, yet God giveth him not power to eat thereof’ Eccl
6: 2. He gluts his chest and starves his belly; he is like the
ass that is loaded with gold, but feeds upon thistles; he robs himself
of what God allows him. This is to be punished with riches; to have an
estate and want a heart to take the comfort of it.
(2)
A man may rob himself by foolishly wasting his estate. The prodigal lavishes
gold out of the bag; he is like Crates, the philosopher, who threw his
gold into the sea. The prodigal boils a great estate to nothing. He is
a thief to himself who spends away that estate which might conduce to the
comfort of life.
(3)
He is a thief to himself, by idleness, when he misspends his time. He who
spends his hours in pleasure and vanity robs himself of that precious time
which God has given him to work out salvation in. Time is a rich commodity,
because on well spending present time a happy eternity depends. He that
spends his time idly and vainly, is a thief to himself; he robs himself
of golden seasons, and by consequence, of salvation.
(4)
A man may be a thief to himself by suretiship. ‘Be not thou one of them
that are sureties for debts.’ Prov
22: 26. The creditor comes upon the surety for debt, and so,
by paying another’s debt, he is a thief to himself. Let not any man say
he would have been counted unkind if he had not entered into a bond for
his friend. Better thy friend should count thee unkind than all men count
thee unwise. Lend another what you can spare; nay, give him if he needs,
but never be a surety. It is no wisdom for a man so to help another as
to undo himself. It is to rob himself and his family.
Use
one. For confutation of the doctrine of community, that all things are
common, and one man has a right to another’s estate. This is confuted by
Scripture. ‘When thou comest into the standing corn of thy neighbour, thou
shalt not move a sickle unto thy neighbour’s corn.’ Deut
23: 25. Property must be respected; God has set this eighth
commandment as a hedge about a man’s estate, and this hedge cannot be broken
without sin. If all things be common, there can be no theft, and so this
commandment would be in vain.
Use
two. For reproof of such as live by stealing. Instead of living by faith,
they live by their shifts. The apostle exhorts that ‘every man eat his
own bread.’ 2
Thess 3: 12. The thief does not eat his own bread, but another’s.
If there be any who are guilty of this sin, let them labour to recover
out of the snare of the devil, by repentance, and let them show their repentance
by restitution. Non
remittitur peccatum nisi restituatur ablatum.
Augustine. ‘Without restitution, no remission.’ ‘If I have taken away any
thing from any man by false accusation, I restore him fourfold.’ Luke
19: 8. Ill-gotten things may be restored by one’s own hand,
or by proxy. Better a thousand times restore goods unlawfully gotten, than
stuff your pillow with thorns, and have guilt trouble your conscience upon
a death-bed.
Use
three. For exhortation to all to take heed of the sin of thieving; which
is against the light of nature. Some may endeavour to excuse this sin.
It is a coarse wool that will take no dye, and a bad sin that has no excuse.
I am
(says one) grown low in the world, and trading is bad, and I have no other
way to a livelihood.
(1)
This shows great distrust in God, as if he could not provide for thee without
thy sin. (2) It shows sin to be at a great height, that, because a man
is grown low in the world, therefore he will Acheronta
movere [knock at Hell’s door],
go to the devil for a livelihood. Abraham would not have it said, that
‘the king of Sodom had made him rich.’ Gen
14: 22. O let it never be said, that the devil has made thee
rich! (3) Thou oughtest not to undertake any action upon which thou canst
not pray for a blessing; but thou canst not pray for a blessing upon stolen
goods. Therefore take heed of this sin; lucrum
in arca, damnum in conscientia
[you gain materially, but your conscience suffers loss]. Augustine. Take
heed of getting the world with the loss of heaven.
Use
four. To dissuade all from this horrid sin, consider — (1) Thieves are
the caterpillars of the earth, enemies to civil society. (2) God hates
them. In the law, the cormorant was unclean, because a thievish, devouring
creature, a bird of prey; by which God showed his hatred of this sin. Lev
11: 17. (3) The thief is a terror to himself, he is always in
fear. ‘There were they in great fear,’ is true of the thief. Psa
53: 5. Guilt breeds fear: if he hears but the shaking of a tree,
his heart shakes. It is said of Catiline, he was afraid of every noise.
If a briar does but take hold of a thief’s garment, he is afraid it is
the officer to apprehend him; and fear has torment in it. 1
John 4: 18. (4) The judgements that follow this sin. Achan the
thief was stoned to death. Josh
7: 25. ‘What sees thou? And I answered, A flying roll. . . .
This is the curse that goes forth over the face of the whole earth; I will
bring it forth, saith the Lord, and it shall enter into the house of the
thief’ Zech
5: 2, 3, 4. Fabius, a Roman censor, condemned his own son to
die for theft. Thieves die with ignominy, the ladder is their preferment:
and there is a worse thing than death; for while they rob others of money,
they rob themselves of salvation.
What
is to be done to avoid stealing?
(1)
Live in a calling. ‘Let him that stole steal no more, but rather let him
labour, working with his hands.’ Eph
4: 28, &c. The devil hires such as stand idle, and puts
them to the pilfering trade. An idle person tempts the devil to tempt him.
(2)
Be content with the estate that God has given you. ‘Be content with such
things as ye have.’ Heb
13: 5. Theft is the daughter of avarice. Study contentment.
Believe that condition best which God has carved out to you. He can bless
the little meal in the barrel. We shall not need these things long: we
shall carry nothing out of the world with us but our winding sheet. If
we have but enough to bear out our charges to heaven, it is sufficient.
2.9 The Ninth Commandment
‘Thou
shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour.’ Exod
20: 16.
THE tongue
which at first was made to be an organ of God’s praise, is now become an
instrument of unrighteousness. This commandment binds the tongue to its
good behaviour. God has set two natural fences to keep in the tongue, the
teeth and lips; and this commandment is a third fence set about it, that
it should not break forth into evil. It has a prohibitory and a mandatory
part: the first is set down in plain words, the other is clearly implied.
I. The
prohibitory part of the commandment, or, what it forbids in general. It
forbids anything which may tend to the disparagement or prejudice of our
neighbour. More particularly, two things are forbidden in this commandment.
[1] Slandering
our neighbour. This is a sin against the ninth commandment. The scorpion
carries his poison in his tail, the slanderer carries his poison in his
tongue. Slandering ‘is to report things of others unjustly.’ They laid
to my charge things that I knew not.’ Psa
35: 11. It is usual to bring in a Christian beheaded of his
good name. They raised for a slander of Paul, that he preached ‘Men might
do evil that good might come of it.’ ‘We be slanderously reported; and
some affirm that we say, “Let us do evil, that good may come”.’ Rom
3: 8. Eminence is commonly blasted by slander. Holiness itself
is no shield from slander. The lamb’s innocence will not preserve it from
the wolf. Christ, the most innocent upon earth, was reported to be a friend
of sinners. John the Baptist was a man of a holy and austere life, and
yet they said of him, ‘He has a devil.’ Matt
11: 18. The Scripture calls slandering, smiting with the tongue.
‘Come, and let us smite him with the tongue.’ Jer
18: 18. You may smite another and never touch him. Majora
sunt linguae vulnera quam gladii
[The tongue inflicts greater wounds than the sword]. Augustine. The wounds
of the tongue no physician can heal; and to pretend friendship to a man,
and slander him, is most odious. Jerome says: ‘The Arian faction made a
show of kindness; they kissed my hands, but slandered me, and sought my
life.’ As it is a sin against this commandment to raise a false report
of another, so it is to receive a false report before we have examined
it. ‘Lord, who shall dwell in thy holy hill?’ Psa
15: 1.
Quis ad coelum? ‘He that backbiteth
not, nor taketh up a reproach against his neighbour;’ ver.
3. We must not only not raise a false report, but not take it
up. He that raises a slander, carries the devil in his tongue; and he that
receives it, carries the devil in his car. [2] The second thing forbidden
in this commandment is false witness. Here three sins are condemned: (1)
Speaking. (2) Witnessing. (3) Swearing that which is false, contra
proximum [against your neighbour].
(1) Speaking
that which is false. ‘Lying lips are abomination to the Lord.’ Prov
12: 22. To lie is to speak that which one knows to be an untruth.
There is nothing more contrary to God than a lie. The Holy Ghost is called
the ‘Spirit of Truth.’ 1
John 4: 6. Lying is a sin that does not go alone; it ushers
in other sins. Absalom told his father a lie, when he said that he was
going to pay his vow at Hebron, and this was a preface to his treason. 2
Sam 15: 7. Where there is a lie in the tongue, the devil is
in the heart. ‘Why has Satan filled thine heart to lie?’ Acts
5: 3. Lying is a sin that unfits men for civil society. How
can you converse or bargain with a man when you cannot trust a word he
says? This sin highly provokes God. Ananias and Sapphire were struck dead
for telling a lie. Acts
5: 5. The furnace of hell is heated for liars. ‘Without are
sorcerers, and whosoever loveth and maketh a lie.’ Rev
22: 15. O abhor this sin! Quicquid
dixeris jura tum putes [Consider
your every word an oath]. Jerome. When thou speakest, let thy word be as
authentic as thy oath. Imitate God, who is the pattern of truth. Pythagoras
being asked what made men like God, answered, cum
vera loquuntur, ‘when they speak
the truth.’ The character of a man that shall go to heaven, is that ‘He
speaketh the truth in his heart.’ Psa
15: 2.
(2) That
which is condemned in the commandment is, witnessing that which is false.
‘Thou shalt not bear false witness.’ There is a twofold bearing false witness:
1. There is bearing false witness for another. 2. Bearing false witness
against another.
Bearing
false witness for another; as when we give our testimony for a person who
is criminal and guilty, and we justify him as if he were innocent. ‘Which
justify the wicked for reward.’ Isa
5: 23. He that seeks to make a wicked man just, makes himself
unjust.
It is
bearing false witness against another, when we accuse him in open court
falsely. This is to imitate the devil, who is the ‘accuser of the brethren.’
Though the devil is no adulterer, yet he is a false witness. Solomon says,
‘A man that beareth false witness against his neighbour, is a maul and
a sword.’ Prov
25: 18. In his face he is hardened like a hammer: he cannot
blush, he cares not what lie he witnesses to; and he is a sword: his tongue
is a sword to wound the person he witnesses against in his goods or life.
‘There came in two men, children of Belial, and witnessed against Naboth,
saying, Naboth did blaspheme God and the king:’ and their witness took
away his life. 1
Kings 21: 13. The queen of Persia being sick, the magicians
accused two godly virgins of having by charms procured the queen’s sickness;
whereupon she caused those virgins to be sawn asunder. A false witness
perverts the place of judicature; he corrupts the judge by making him pronounce
a wrong sentence, and causes the innocent to suffer. Vengeance will find
out the false witness. ‘A false witness shall not be unpunished.’ Prov
19: 5. ‘If the witness be a false witness, and has testified
falsely against his brother; then shall ye do unto him, as he had thought
to have done unto his brother;’ if, for instance, he had thought to have
taken away his life, his own life shall go for it. Deut
19: 18, 19.
(3) That
which is condemned in the commandment is, swearing to what is false; as
when men take a false oath, and by that take away the life of another.
‘Love no false oath.’ Zech
8: 17. ‘What seest thou? I said, a flying roll,’ chap.
5: 2. ‘This is the curse that goes forth, and it shall enter,
saith the Lord, into the house of him that sweareth falsely by my name;
and it shall consume it, with the timber and stones thereof;’ ver
3, 4. The Scythians made a law that when a man bound together
a lie with an oath, he was to lose his head; because these sins took away
all truth and faith from among men. The devil has taken great possession
of those who dare swear to a lie.
Use one.
For reproof. (1) The church of Rome is reproved, which dispenses with a
lie, or a false oath, if it promotes the Catholic cause. It approves of
an officious lie; and holds some sins to be lawful. It may as well hold
some lies to be lawful. God has no need of our lie. It is not lawful to
tell a lie, propter
Dei gloriam [for the glory of God],
if we were sure to bring glory to God by it, as Augustine speaks.
(2) They
are reproved who make no conscience of slandering others. ‘Thou fittest
and slenderest thine own mother’s son.’ Psa
50: 20. ‘Report, say they, and we will report.’ Jer
20: 10. ‘This city (i.e. Jerusalem) is a rebellious city, and
hurtful to kings and provinces.’ Ezra
4: 15. Paul was slandered as a mover of sedition, and the head
of a faction. Acts
24: 5. The same word signifies both a slanderer and a devil. 1
Tim 3: 11. ‘Not slanderers;’ in the Greek, ‘not devils.’ Some
think it is no great matter, to misrepresent and slander others; but it
is to act the part of a devil. Clipping a man’s credit, to make it weigh
lighter, is worse than clipping coin. The slanderer wounds three at once:
he wounds him that is slandered; he wounds him to whom he reports the slander,
by causing uncharitable thoughts to arise up in his mind against the party
slandered; and he wounds his own soul, by reporting of another what is
false. This is a great sin; and I wish I could say it is not common. You
may kill a man in his name as well as in his person. Some are loath to
take away their neighbour’s goods — conscience would fly in their face;
but better take away their corn out of their field, their wares out of
their shop, than take away their good name. This is a sin for which no
reparation can be made; a blot in a man’s name, being like a blot on white
paper, which will never be got out. Surely God will visit for this sin.
If idle words shall be accounted for, shall not unjust slanders? The Lord
will make inquisition one day, as well for names as for blood. Oh therefore
take heed of this sin! Was it not a sin under the law to defame a virgin? Deut
22: 19. And is it not a greater sin to defame a saint, who is
a member of Christ? The heathen, by the light of nature, abhorred the sin
of slandering. Diogenes used to say, ‘Of all wild beasts, a slanderer is
the worst.’ Antonius made a law, that, if a person could not prove the
crime he reported another to be guilty of, he should be put to death.
(3) They
are reproved who are so wicked as to bear false witness against others.
These are monsters in nature, unfit to live in a civil society. Eusebius
relates of one Narcissus, a man famous for piety, who was accused by two
false witnesses of unchastity. To prove their accusations, they endeavoured
to confirm it with oaths and curses. One said, ‘If I speak not true, I
pray God I may perish by fire:’ the other said, ‘If I speak not true, I
wish I may be deprived of my sight.’ It pleased God that the first witness
who forswore himself should be burned in the flames, his house being set
on fire: the other being troubled in conscience, confessed his perjury,
and continued to weep so long that he wept himself blind. Jezebel, who
suborned two false witnesses against Naboth, was thrown down from a window
and ‘the dogs licked her blood.’ 2
Kings 9: 33. Oh, tremble at this sin! A perjured person is the
devil’s excrement. He is cursed in his name, and seared in his conscience.
Hell gapes for such a windfall.
Use two.
For exhortation. (1) Let all take heed of breaking this commandment, by
lying, slandering, and bearing false witness. To avoid these sins get the
fear of God. Why does David say, ‘The fear of the Lord is clean’? Psa
19: 9. Because it cleanses the heart from malice, and the tongue
from slander. ‘The fear of the Lord is clean:’ it is to the soul as lightning
to the air, which cleanses it. Get love to your neighbour. Lev
19: 18. If we love a friend, we shall not speak or attest anything
to his prejudice. Men’s minds are cankered with envy and hatred; hence
come slandering and false witnessing. Love is a lovely grace; love ‘thinketh
no evil.’ 1
Cor 13: 5. It puts the best interpretation upon another’s words.
Love is a well-wisher, and it is rare to speak ill of him we wish well
to. Love is that which cements Christians together; it is the healer of
division, and the hinderer of slander.
(2) Let
those whose lot it is to meet with slanderers and false accusers — [1]
Labour to make a sanctified use of it. When Shimei railed on David, David
made a sanctified use of it. ‘The Lord has said unto him, Curse David.’ 2
Sam 16: 10. So, if you are slandered, or falsely accused, make
a good use of it. See if you have no sin unrepented of, for which God may
suffer you to be calumniated and reproached. See if you have not at any
time wronged others in their name, and said that of them which you cannot
prove; then lay your hand on your mouth, and confess the Lord is righteous
to let you fall under the scourge of the tongue. [2] If you are slandered,
or falsely accused, but know your own innocence, be not too much troubled;
let your rejoicing be the witness of your conscience. Murus
aheneus esto nil conscire sibi
[Let this be a bulwark, to know oneself guiltless]. A good conscience is
a wall of brass, that will be able to stand against a false witness. As
no flattery can heal a bad conscience, so no slander can hurt a good one.
God will clear up the names of his people. ‘He shall bring forth thy righteousness
as the light.’ Psa
37: 6. As he will wipe away tears from the eyes, so will he
wipe off reproaches from the name. Believers shall come forth out of all
their slanders and reproaches, as ‘the wings of a dove, covered with silver,
and her feathers with yellow gold.’
(3) Be
very thankful to God, if he has preserved you from slander and false witness.
Job calls it ‘the scourge of the tongue;’ chap
5: 21. As a rod scourges the back, so the slanderer’s tongue
scourges the name. It is a great mercy to be kept from the scourge of a
tongue; a mercy that God stops malignant mouths from bearing false witness.
What mischief might not a lying report or a false oath do! One destroys
the name, the other the life. It is the Lord who muzzles the mouths of
the wicked, and keeps those dogs, that snarl at us, from flying upon us.
‘Thou shalt keep them secretly in a pavilion, from the strife of tongues.’ Psa
31: 20. There is, I suppose, an allusion to kings, who being
resolved to protect their favourites against the accusation of men, take
them into their bed-chamber, or bosom, where none may touch them. So God
has a pavilion, or secret hiding-place for his favourites, where he preserves
their credit and reputation untouched; he keeps them from the ’strife of
tongues.’ We ought to acknowledge this to be a great mercy before God.
II. The
mandatory part of the commandment implied is that we stand up for others
and vindicate them when they are injured by lying lips. This is the sense
of the commandment, not only that we should not slander falsely or accuse
others; but that we should witness for them, and stand up in their defence,
when we know them to be traduced. A man may wrong another as well by silence
as by slander, when he knows him to be wrongfully accused, yet does not
speak in his behalf. If others cast false aspersions on any, we should
wipe them off. When the apostles were filled with the wine of the Spirit,
and were charged with drunkenness, Peter openly maintained their innocence.
‘These are not drunken, as ye suppose.’ Acts
2: 15. Jonathan knowing David to be a worthy man, and all those
things Saul said of him to be slanders, vindicated him. ‘David has not
sinned against thee; his works have been to thee-ward very good. Wherefore
then wilt thou sin against innocent blood, to slay David without a cause?’ 1
Sam 19: 4, 5. When the primitive Christians were falsely accused
for incest, and killing their children, Tertullian wrote a famous apology
in their vindication. This is to act the part both of a friend and of a
Christian, to be an advocate for another, when he is wronged in his good
name.
2.10The Tenth Commandment
‘Thou
shalt not covet thy neighbour’s house, thou shalt not covet thy neighbour’s
wife, nor his man-servant, nor his maid-servant, nor his ox, nor his ass,
nor any thing that is thy neighbour’s.’ Exod
20: 17.
THIS commandment
forbids covetousness in general, ‘Thou shalt not covet;’ and in particular,
‘Thy neighbour’s house, thy neighbour’s wife, &c.
I. It forbids
covetousness in general. ‘Thou shalt not covet.’ It is lawful to use the
world, yea, and to desire so much of it as may keep us from the temptation
of poverty: ‘Give me not poverty, lest I steal, and take the name of my
God in vain’ (Prov
30: 8, 9); and as may enable us to honour God with works of
mercy. ‘Honour the Lord with thy substance.’ Prov
3: 9. But all the danger is, when the world gets into the heart.
Water is useful for the sailing of the ship: all the danger is when the
water gets into the ship; so the fear is, when the world gets into the
heart. ‘Thou shalt not covet.’
What is
it to covet?
There are
two words in the Greek which set forth the nature of covetousness. Pleonexia,
which signifies an ‘insatiable desire of getting the world.’ Covetousness
is a dry dropsy. Augustine defines covetousness Plus
velle quam sat est; ‘to desire
more than enough;’ to aim at a great estate; to be like the daughter of
the horse-leech, crying, ‘Give, give.’ Prov
30: 15. Or like behemoth, ‘He trusteth that he can draw up Jordan
into his mouth.’ Job
40: 23. The other word is Philarguria, which signifies an ‘inordinate
love of the world.’ The world is the idol: it is so loved, that a man will
not part with it for any good use. He may be said to be covetous not only
who gets the world unrighteously, but who loves it inordinately.
[1] For
a more full answer to the question, ‘What is it to covet?’ I shall show
in six particulars, when a man may be said to be given to covetousness:
—
(1) When
his thoughts are wholly taken up with the world. A good man’s thoughts
are in heaven; he is thinking of Christ’s love and eternal recompense.
‘When I awake I am still with thee,’ that is, in divine contemplation. Psa
139: 18. A covetous man’s thoughts are in the world; his mind
is wholly taken up with it; he can think of nothing but his shop or farm.
The fancy is a mint-house, and most of the thoughts in a covetous man’s
mint are worldly. He is always plotting and projecting about the things
of this life; like a virgin whose thoughts all centre upon her suitor.
(2) A man
may be said to be given to covetousness, when he takes more pains for getting
earth than for getting heaven. He will turn every stone, break his sleep,
take many a weary step for the world; but will take no pains for Christ
or heaven. After the Gauls, who were an ancient people of France, had tasted
the sweet wine of the Italian grape, they inquired after the country, and
never rested till they had arrived at it; so a covetous man, having had
a relish of the world, pursues after it, and never ceases till he has got
it; but he neglects the things of eternity. He would be content if salvation
were to drop into his mouth, as a ripe fig into the mouth of the eater
(Nahum
3: 12); but he is loath to put himself to too much sweat or
trouble to obtain Christ or salvation. He hunts for the world, he wishes
only for heaven.
(3) A
man may be said to be given to covetousness, when all his discourse is
about the world. ‘He that is of the earth, speaketh of the earth.’ John
3: 31. It is a sign of godliness to be speaking of heaven, to
have the tongue turned to the language of Canaan. ‘The words of a wise
man’s mouth are gracious;’ he speaks as if he had been already in heaven. Eccl.
10: 12. So it is a sign of a man given to covetousness to speak
always of secular things, of his wares and drugs. A covetous man’s breath,
like a dying man’s, smells strong of the earth. As it was said to Peter,
‘Thy speech bewrayeth thee;’ so a covetous man’s speech betrayeth him. Matt
26: 73. He is like the fish in the gospel, which had a piece
of money in its mouth. Matt
17: 27. Verba
sunt speculum mentis. Bernard.
‘The words are the looking-glass of the heart,’ they show what is within. Ex
abundantia cordis [From the abundance
of the heart].
(4) A
man is given to covetousness when he so sets his heart upon worldly things,
that for the love of them, he will part with heavenly; for the ‘wedge of
gold,’ he will part with the ‘pearl of price.’ When Christ said to the
young man in the gospel, ‘Sell all, and come and follow me;’ abiit
tristis, ‘he went away sorrowful.’ Matt
19: 22. He would rather part with Christ than with all his earthly
possessions. Cardinal Bourbon said, he would forego his part in paradise,
if he might keep his cardinalship in Paris. When it comes to the critical
point that men must either relinquish their estate or Christ, and they
will rather part with Christ and a good conscience than with their estate,
it is a clear case that they are possessed with the demon of covetousness.
(5) A
man is given to covetousness when he overloads himself with worldly business.
He has many irons in the fire; he is in this sense a pluralist; he takes
so much business upon him, that he cannot find time to serve God; he has
scarce time to eat his meat, but no time to pray. When a man overcharges
himself with the world, and as Martha, cumbers himself about many things,
that he cannot have time for his soul, he is under the power of covetousness.
(6) He
is given to covetousness whose heart is so set upon the world, that, to
get it, he cares not what unlawful means he uses. He will have the world per
fas et nefas [by fair means or
foul]; he will wrong and defraud, and raise his estate upon the ruins of
another. ‘The balances of deceit are in his hand, he loveth to oppress.
. . . Ephraim said, ‘Yet I am become rich.’ Hos
12: 7, 8. Pope Sylvester II sold his soul to the devil for a
popedom.
Use. ‘Take
heed and beware of covetousness.’ Luke
12: 15. It is a direct breach of the tenth commandment. It is
a moral vice, it infects and pollutes the whole soul.
(1) It
is a subtle sin, a sin that many cannot so well discern in themselves;
as some have the scurvy, but do not know it. This sin can dress itself
in the attire of virtue. It is called the ‘cloak of covetousness.’ 1
Thess 2: 5. It is a sin that wears a cloak, it cloaks itself
under the name of frugality and good husbandry. It has many pleas and excuses
for itself; more than any other sin: as providing for one’s family. The
more subtle the sin is, the less discernible it is.
(2) Covetousness
is a dangerous sin, as it checks all that is good. It is an enemy to grace;
it damps good affections, as the earth puts out the fire. The hedgehog,
in the fable, came to the cony-burrows, in stormy weather, and desired
harbour; but when once he had got entertainment, he set up his prickles,
and never ceased till he had thrust the poor conies out of their burrows;
so covetousness, by fair pretences, winds itself into the heart; but as
soon as you have let it in, it will never leave till it has choked all
good beginnings, and thrust all religion out of your hearts. ‘Covetousness
hinders the efficacy of the word preached.’ In the parable, the thorns,
which Christ expounded to be the care of this life, choked the good seed. Matt
13: 22. Many sermons lie dead and buried in earthly hearts.
We preach to men to get their hearts in heaven; but where covetousness
is predominant, it chains them to earth, and makes them like the woman
which Satan had bowed together, that she could not lift up herself. Luke
13: 11. You may as well bid an elephant fly in the air, as a
covetous man live by faith. We preach to men to give freely to Christ’s
poor; but covetousness makes them like the man in the gospel, who had ‘a
withered hand.’ Mark
3: 1. They have a withered hand, and cannot stretch it out to
the poor. It is impossible to be earthly-minded and charitably-minded.
Covetousness obstructs the efficacy of the word, and makes it prove abortive.
They whose hearts are rooted in the earth, will be so far from profiting
by the word, that they will be ready rather to deride it. The Pharisees,
who were covetous, ‘derided him.’ Luke
16: 14.
(3) Covetousness
is a mother sin, a radical vice. ‘The love of money is the root of all
evil.’ 1
Tim 6: 10. Quid
non mortalia pectora cogis, auri sacra fames!
[O accursed lust for gold! what crimes do you not urge upon the human heart!]
Virgil. He who has an earthly itch, a greedy desire of getting the world,
has in him the root of all sin. Covetousness is a mother sin. I shall make
it appear that covetousness is a breach of all the ten commandments. It
breaks the first commandment; ‘Thou shalt have no other gods but one.’
The covetous man has more gods than one; Mammon is his god. He has a god
of gold, therefore he is called an idolater. Col
3: 5. Covetousness breaks the second commandment: ‘Thou shalt
not make any graven image, thou shalt not bow thyself to them.’ A covetous
man bows down, though not to the graven image in the church, yet to the
graven image in his coin. Covetousness is a breach of the third commandment;
‘Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain.’ Absalom’s design
was to get his father’s crown, which was covetousness; but he talked of
paying his ‘vow to God,’ which was to take God’s name in vain. Covetousness
is a breach of the fourth commandment; ‘Remember the Sabbath-day to keep
it holy.’ A covetous man does not keep the Sabbath holy; he will ride to
fairs on a Sabbath; instead of reading in the Bible, he will cast up his
accounts. Covetousness is a breach of the fifth commandment; ‘Honour thy
father and thy mother.’ A covetous person does not honour his father, if
he does not feed him with money. Nay; he will get his father to make over
his estate to him in his lifetime, so that the father may be at his son’s
command. Covetousness is a breach of the sixth commandment; ‘Thou shalt
not kill.’ Covetous Ahab killed Naboth to get his vineyard. 1
Kings 21: 13. How many have swum to the crown in blood? Covetousness
is a breach of the seventh commandment, ‘Thou shalt not commit adultery.’
It causes uncleanness; you read of the ‘hire of a whore.’ Deut
23: 18. An adulteress for money sets both conscience and chastity
to sale. Covetousness is a breach of the eighth commandment ‘Thou shalt
not steal.’ It is the root of theft: covetous Achan stole the wedge of
gold. Thieves and covetous are put together. 1
Cor 6: 10. Covetousness is a breach of the ninth commandment;
‘Thou shalt not bear false witness.’ What makes the perjurer take a false
oath but covetousness? He hopes for a reward. It is plainly a breach of
the last commandment; ‘Thou shalt not covet.’ The mammonist covets his
neighbour’s house and goods, and endeavours to get them into his own hands.
Thus you see how vile a sin covetousness is; it is a mother sin; it is
a plain breach of every one of the ten commandments.
(4) Covetousness
is a sin dishonourable to religion. For men to say their hopes are above,
while their hearts are below; to profess to be above the stars, while they
‘lick the dust’ of the serpent; to be born of God, while they are buried
in the earth; how dishonourable is this to religion! The lapwing, which
wears a little coronet on its head, and yet feeds on dung, is an emblem
of such as profess to be crowned kings and priests unto God, and yet feed
immoderately on terrene dunghill comforts. ‘And seekest thou great things
for thyself? seek them not.’ Jer
45: 5. What, thou Baruch, who art ennobled by the new birth,
and art illustrious by thy office, a Levite, dost thou seek earthly things,
and seek them now? When the ship is sinking, art thou trimming thy cabin?
O do not so degrade thyself, nor blot thy escutcheon! Seekest thou great
things? seek them not. The higher grace is, the less earthly should Christians
be; as the higher the sun is, the shorter is the shadow.
(5) Covetousness
exposes us to God’s abhorrence, ‘The covetous, whom the Lord abhorreth.’ Psa
10: 3. A king abhors to see his statue abused, so God abhors
to see man, made in his image, having the heart of a beast. Who would live
in such a sin as makes him abhorred of God? Whom God abhors he curses,
and his curse blasts wherever it comes.
(6) Covetousness
precipitates men to ruin, and shuts them out of heaven. ‘This ye know,
that no covetous man, who is an idolater, has any inheritance in the kingdom
of Christ and of God.’ Eph
5: 5. What could a covetous man do in heaven? God can no more
converse with him than a king can converse with a swine. ‘They that will
be rich fall into a snare, and many hurtful lusts, which drown men in perdition.’ 1
Tim 6: 9. A covetous man is like a bee that gets into a barrel
of honey, and there drowns itself. As a ferry man takes in so many passengers
to increase his fare, that he sinks his boat; so a covetous man takes in
so much gold to increase his estate, that he drowns himself in perdition.
I have read of some inhabitants near Athens, who, living in a very dry
and barren island, took much pains to draw a river to the island to water
it and make it fruitful; but when they had opened the passages, and brought
the river to it, the water broke in with such force, that it drowned the
land, and all the people in it. This is an emblem of a covetous man, who
labours to draw riches to him, and at last they come in such abundance,
that they drown him in perdition. How many, to build up an estate, pull
down their souls! Oh, then, flee from covetousness! I shall next prescribe
some remedies against covetousness.
[2] I
AM, in the next place, to solve the question, What is the cure for this
covetousness?’
(1) Faith.
‘This is the victory that overcometh the world, even our faith.’ 1
John 5: 4. The root of covetousness is distrust of God’s providence.
Faith believes that God will provide; that he who feeds the birds will
feed his children; that he who clothes the lilies will clothe his lambs;
and thus faith overcomes the world. Faith is the cure of care. It not only
purifies the heart, but satisfies it; it makes God our portion, and in
him we have enough. ‘The lord is the portion of mine inheritance, the lines
are fallen unto me in pleasant places; yea, I have a goodly heritage.’ Psa
16: 5, 6. Faith, by a divine chemistry, extracts comfort out
of God. A little with God is sweet. Thus faith is a remedy against covetousness;
it overcomes, not only the fear of the world, but the love of the world.
(2) The
second remedy is, judicious considerations. As what poor things these things
below are that we should covet them! They are far below the worth of the
soul, which carries in it an idea and resemblance of God. The world is
but the workmanship of God, the soul is his image. We covet that which
will not satisfy us. ‘He that loveth silver, shall not be satisfied with
silver.’ Eccl
5: 10. Solomon had put all the creatures in a retort, and distilled
out their essence, and behold, ‘All was vanity.’ Eccl
2: 11. Covetousness is a dry dropsy — the more a man has the
more he thirsts. Quo
plus sunt potae, plus sitiuntur aquae
[The more water is drunk, the more is craved]. Ovid. Worldly things cannot
remove trouble of mind. When King Saul was perplexed in conscience, his
crown jewels could not comfort him. 1
Sam 28: 15. The things of the world can no more ease a troubled
spirit than a gold cap can cure the headache. The things of the world cannot
continue with you. The creature has a little honey in its mouth, but it
has wings to fly away. These things either go from us, or we from them.
What poor things are they to covet!
The second
consideration is the frame and texture of the body. God has made the face
look upward towards heaven. Os
homini sublime dedit, coelumque tueri jussit
[He gave man an uplifted face, with the order to gaze up to Heaven]. Ovid.
Anatomists observe, that whereas other creatures have but four muscles
to their eyes, man has a fifth muscle, by which he is able to look up to
heaven; and as for the heart, it is made narrow and contracted downwards,
but wide and broad upwards. As the frame and texture of the body teaches
us to look to things above, so especially the soul is planted in the body,
as a divine spark, to ascend upwards. Can it be imagined that God gave
us intellectual and immortal souls to covet earthly things only? What wise
man would fish for gudgeons with golden hooks? Did God give us glorious
souls only to fish for the world? Sure our souls are made for a higher
end; to aspire after the enjoyment of God in glory.
The third
consideration is the examples of those who have been condemners and despisers
of the world. The primitive Christians, as Clemens Alexandrinus observes,
were sequestered from the world, and were wholly taken up in converse with
God; they lived in the world above the world; like the birds of paradise,
who soar above in the air, and seldom or never touch the earth with their
feet. Luther says that he was never tempted to the sin of covetousness.
Though the saints of old lived in the world they traded in heaven. ‘Our
conversation is in heaven.’ Phil
3: 20. The Greek word signifies our commerce, or traffic, or
citizenship, is in heaven. ‘Enoch walked with God.’ Gen
5: 24. His affections were sublimated, and took a turn in heaven
every day. The righteous are compared to a palm-tree. Psa
92: 12. Philo observes, that whereas all other trees have their
sap in their root, the sap of the palm-tree is towards the top; and thus
is an emblem of saints, whose hearts are in heaven, where their treasure
is.
(3) The
third remedy for covetousness is to covet spiritual things more. Covet
grace, for it is the best blessing, it is the seed of God. 1
John 3: 9. Covet heaven, which is the region of happiness —
the most pleasant clime. If we covet heaven more, we shall covet earth
less. To those who stand on the top of the Alps, the great cities of Campania
seem but as small villages; so if our hearts were more fixed upon the Jerusalem
above, all worldly things would disappear, would diminish, and be as nothing
in our eyes. We read of an angel coming down from heaven, and setting his
right foot on the sea, and his left foot on the earth. Rev
10: 2. Had we been in heaven, and viewed its superlative glory,
how should we, with holy scorn, trample with one foot upon the earth and
with the other foot upon the sea! O covet after heavenly things! There
is the tree of life, the mountains of spices, the rivers of pleasure, the
honeycomb of God’s love dropping, the delights of angels, and the flower
of joyfully ripe and blown. There is the pure air to breathe in; no fogs
or vapours of sin arise to infect that air, but the Sun of Righteousness
enlightens the whole horizon continually with his glorious beams. O let
your thoughts and delights be always taken up with the city of pearls,
the paradise of God! It is reported of Lazarus that, after he was raised
from the grave, he was never seen to smile or take delight in the world.
Were our hearts raised by the power of the Holy Ghost up to heaven we should
not be much taken with earthly things.
(4) The
fourth remedy is to pray for a heavenly mind. Lord, let the loadstone of
thy Spirit draw my heart upward. Lord, dig the earth out of my heart; teach
me how to possess the world, and not love it; how to hold it in my hand,
and not let it get into my heart.
II. Having
spoken of the command in general, I proceed to speak of it more particularly.
‘Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour’s house, thou shalt not covet thy neighbour’s
wife,’ &c. Observe the holiness and perfection of the law that forbids
the motus
primo primi, the first motions
and risings of sin in the heart. ‘Thou shalt not covet.’ The laws of men
take hold of actions, but the law of God goes further, it forbids not only
actions, but desires. ‘Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour’s house.’ It
is not said, ‘Thou shalt not take away his house;’ but ‘Thou shalt not
covet it.’ These lusts and desires after the forbidden fruit are sinful.
The law has said, ‘Thou shalt not covet.’ Rom
7: 7. Though the tree bears no bad fruit, it may be faulty at
the root; so though a man does not commit any gross sin, he cannot say
his heart is pure. There may be faultiness at the root: there may be sinful
covetings and lustings in the soul.
Use. Let
us be humbled for the sin of our nature, the risings of evil thoughts coveting
that which we ought not. Our nature is a seed-plot of iniquity; like charcoal
that is ever sparkling, the sparks of pride, envy, covetousness, arise
in the mind. How should this humble us! If there be not sinful acting,
there are sinful covetings. Let us pray for mortifying grace, which like
the water of jealousy, may make the thigh of sin to rot.
Why is
the house here put before the wife? In Deuteronomy the wife is put first.
‘Neither shalt thou desire thy neighbour’s wife, neither shalt thou covet
thy neighbour’s house.’ Deut
5: 21.
In Deuteronomy
the wife is set down first, in respect of her value. She (if a good wife)
is of far greater value and estimate than the house. ‘Her price is far
above rubies.’ Prov
31: 10. She is the furniture of the house and this furniture
is more worth than the house. When Alexander had overcome King Darius in
battle, Darius seemed not to be much dismayed, but when he heard his wife
was taken prisoner, his eyes, like spouts gushed forth water, for he valued
his wife more than his life. But in Exodus the house is put before the
wife, because the house is first in order, the house is erected before
the wife can live in it; the nest is built before the bird is in it; the
wife is first esteemed, but the house must be first provided.
[1] Then,
‘Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour’s house.’ How depraved is man since
the fall! He knows not how to keep within bounds, but covets more than
his own. Ahab, one would think, had enough: he was a king; and we should
suppose his crown-revenues would have contented him; but he was coveting
more. Naboth’s vineyard was in his eye, and stood near the smoke of his
chimney, and he could not be quiet till he had it in possession. Were there
not so much coveting, there would not be so much bribing. One man takes
away another’s house from him. It is only the prisoner who lives in such
a tenement that he may be sure none will seek to take it from him.
[2] ‘Thou
shalt not covet thy neighbour’s wife.’ This is a bridle to check the inordinate
and brutish lusts. It was the devil that sowed another man’s ground. Matt
13: 25. But how is the hedge of this commandment trodden down
in our times! There are many who do more than covet their neighbours’ wives!
they take them. ‘Cursed be he that lieth with his father’s wife; and all
the people shall say, Amen.’ Deut
27: 20. If it were to be proclaimed, ‘Cursed be he that lieth
with his neighbour’s wife,’ and all that were guilty should say, ‘Amen,’
how many would curse themselves!
[3] ‘Thou
shalt not covet thy neighbour’s man-servant, nor his maidservant.’ Servants,
when faithful, are a treasure. What a true and trusty servant had Abraham!
He was his right hand. How prudent and faithful he was in the matter entrusted
with him, of getting a wife for his master’s son! Gen
24: 9. It would surely have grieved Abraham if any one had enticed
away his servant from him. But this sin of coveting servants is common.
If one has a good servant, others will be laying snares for him, and endeavour
to draw him away from his master. This is a sin against the tenth commandment.
To steal away another’s servant by enticement, is no better than direct
thieving.
[4] ‘Nor
his ox, nor his ass, nor any thing that is thy neighbour’s.’ Were there
no coveting ox and ass, there would not be so much stealing. First men
break the tenth commandment by coveting, and then the eighth commandment
by stealing. It was an excellent appeal that Samuel made to the people
when he said, ‘Witness against me before the Lord, whose ox have I taken,
or whose ass, or whom have I defrauded?’ 1
Sam 12: 3. It was a brave speech of Paul, when he said, ‘I have
coveted no man’s silver, or gold, or apparel.’ Acts
20: 33.
What means
should we use to keep us from coveting that which is our neighbour’s?
The best
remedy is contentment. If we are content with our own, we shall not covet
that which is another’s. Paul could say, ‘I have coveted no man’s gold
or silver.’ Whence was this? It was from contentment. ‘I have learned,
in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content.’ Phil
4: 11. Content says, as Jacob did, ‘I have enough. ‘Gen
33: 11. I have a promise of heaven, and have sufficient to bear
my charges thither; I have enough. He who has enough, will not covet that
which is another’s. Be content: and the best way to be contented, is, (1)
Believe that condition to be best which God by his providence carves out
to you. If he had seen fit for us to have more, we should have had it.
Perhaps we could not manage a great estate; it is hard to carry a full
cup without spilling, and a full estate without sinning. Great estates
may be snares. A boat may be overturned by having too much sail. The believing
that estate to be best which God appoints us, makes us content; and being
contented, we shall not covet that which is another’s. (2) The way to be
content with such things as we have, and not to covet another’s, is to
consider the less we have, the less account we shall have to give at the
last day. Every person is a steward, and must be accountable to God. They
who have great estates have the greater reckoning. God will say, What good
have you done with your estates? Have you honoured me with your substance?
Where are the poor you have fed and clothed? If you cannot give a good
account, it will be sad. It should make us contented with a less portion,
to consider, the less riches, the less reckoning. This is the way to have
contentment. There is no better antidote against coveting that which is
another’s than being content with that which is our own.
3. THE LAW AND SIN
3.1 Man’s Inability to keep the Moral
Law
Is any
man able perfectly to keep the commandments of God?
No mere
man, since the fall, is able in this life perfectly to keep the commandments
of God, but does daily break them, in thought, word, and deed.
‘In many
things we offend all.’ James
3: 2. Man in his primitive state of innocence, was endowed with
ability to keep the whole moral law. He had rectitude of mind, sanctity
of will, and perfection of power. He had the copy of God’s law written
on his heart; no sooner did God command but he obeyed. As the key is suited
to all the wards in the lock, and can open them, so Adam had a power suited
to all God’s commands, and could obey them. Adam’s obedience ran parallel
with the moral law, as a well made dial goes exactly with the sun. Man
in innocence was like a well tuned organ, he was sweetly in tune to the
will of God; he was adorned with holiness as the angels, but not confirmed
in holiness as the angels. He was holy, but mutable; he fell from his purity,
and we with him. Sin cut the lock of original righteousness where our strength
lay; it brought a languor and faintness into our souls; and has so weakened
us, that we shall never recover our full strength till we put on immortality.
What I am now to demonstrate, is, that we cannot yield perfect obedience
to the moral law.
I. The case
of an unregenerate man is such, that he cannot perfectly obey all God’s
commands. He may as well touch the stars, or span the ocean, as yield exact
obedience to the law. A person unregenerate cannot act spiritually, he
cannot pray in the Holy Ghost, he cannot live by faith, he cannot do duty
out of love to duty; and if he cannot do duty spiritually, much less perfectly.
Now, that a natural man cannot yield perfect obedience to the moral law,
is evident. (1) Because he is spiritually dead. Eph
2: 1. How can he, being dead, keep the commandments of God perfectly?
A dead man is not fit for action. A sinner has the symptoms of death upon
him. He has no sense; he has no sense of the evil of sin, of God’s holiness
and veracity; therefore he is said to be without feeling. Eph
4: 19. He has no strength. Rom
5: 6. What strength has a dead man? A natural man has no strength
to deny himself, or to resist temptation; he is dead; and can a dead man
fulfil the moral law? (2) A natural man cannot perfectly keep all God’s
commandments, because he is born in sin, and lives in sin. Psa
51: 5. ‘He drinketh iniquity like water.’ Job
15: 16. All the imaginations of his thoughts are evil, and only
evil. Gen
6: 5. The least evil thought is a breach of the royal law; and
if there be defection, there cannot be perfection. As a natural man has
no power to keep the moral law, so he has no will. He is not only dead,
but worse than dead. A dead man does no hurt, but there is a life of resistance
against God that accompanies the death of sin. A natural man not only cannot
keep the law through weakness, but he breaks it through wilfulness. ‘We
will do whatsoever goes out of our own mouth, to burn incense unto the
queen of heaven.’ Jer
44: 17.
II. As the
unregenerate cannot keep the moral law perfectly, so neither can the regenerate.
‘There is not a just man upon earth, that does good and sinneth not;’ nay,
that ‘sins not in doing good.’ Eccl
7: 20. There is that in the best actions of a righteous man
that is damnable, if God should weigh him in the balance of justice. Alas!
how are his duties fly-blown! He cannot pray without wandering, nor believe
without doubting. ‘To will is present with me, but how to perform I find
not.’ In the Greek it is, ‘How to do it thoroughly I find not.’ Rom
7: 18. Paul, though a saint of the first magnitude, was better
at willing than at performing. Mary asked where they had laid Christ; for
she had a mind to have carried him away, but she wanted strength: so the
regenerate have a will to obey God’s law perfectly, but they want strength;
their obedience is weak and sickly. The mark they are to shoot at, is perfection
of holiness; but though they take a right aim, yet do what they can, they
come short of the mark. ‘The good that I would, I do not.’ Rom
7: 19. A Christian, while serving God, like a ferry man that
plies the oar, and rows hard, is hindered, for a gust of wind carries him
back again: so says Paul, ‘The good I would, I do not,’ I am driven back
by temptation. Now, if there be any failure in a man’s obedience, he cannot
be a perfect commentary upon God’s law. The Virgin Mary’s obedience was
not perfect; she needed Christ’s blood to wash her tears. Aaron was to
make atonement for the altar, to show that the most holy offering has defilement
in it, and needs atonement to be made for it. Exod
29: 37.
If a man
has no power to keep the whole moral law, why does God require it of him?
Is this justice?
Though man
has lost his power of obeying, God has not lost his right of commanding.
If a master entrusts a servant with money to lay out, and the servant spends
it dissolutely, may not the master justly demand it? God gave us power
to keep the moral law, which by tampering with sin, we lost; but may not
God still call for perfect obedience, or, in case of default, justly punish
us?
Why does
God permit such an inability in man to keep the law?
He does
it: (1) To humble us. Man is a self-exalting creature; and if he has but
anything of worth, he is ready to be puffed up; but when he comes to see
his deficiencies and failings, and how far short he comes of the holiness
and perfection which God’s law requires, it pulls down the plumes of his
pride, and lays them in the dust; he weeps over his inability; he blushes
over his leprous spots; he says with Job, ‘I abhor myself in dust and ashes.’
(2) God lets this inability be upon us, that we may have recourse to Christ
to obtain pardon for our defects, and to sprinkle our best duties with
his blood. When a man sees that he owes perfect obedience to the law, but
has nothing to pay, it makes him flee to Christ to be his friend, and answer
for him all the demands of the law, and set him free in the court of justice.
Use one.
Here is matter of humiliation for our fall in Adam. In the state of innocence
we were perfectly holy; our minds were crowned with knowledge, and our
wills, as a queen, swayed the sceptre of liberty; but now we may say, ‘The
crown is fallen from our head.’ Lam
5: 16. We have lost that power which was inherent in us. When
we look back to our primitive glory, when we shone as earthly angels, we
may take up Job’s words, ‘Oh that I were as in months past!’ chap
29: 2. that it were with us as at first, when there was no stain
upon our virgin nature, when there was a perfect harmony between God’s
law and man’s will! But, alas! how is the scene altered, our strength is
gone from us; we tread awry at every step: we come below every precept;
our dwarfishness will not reach the sublimity of God’s law; we fail in
our obedience; and while we fail, we forfeit. This should put us in deep
mourning, and spring a leak of sorrow in all our souls.
Use two.
Of confutation. (1) It confutes the Armenians, who cry up the power of
the will. They hold they have a will to save themselves. But by nature,
we not only want strength, but we want will to that which is good. Rom
5: 6. The will is not only full of weakness, but obstinacy.
‘Israel would none of me.’ Psa
81: 11. The will hangs forth a flag of defiance against God.
Such as speak of the sovereign power of the will, forget ‘It is God that
worketh in you both to will and to do.’ Phil
2: 13. If the power be in the will of man, then what need is
there for God to work in us to will? If the air can enlighten itself, what
need is there for the sun to shine? Such as talk of the power of nature,
and their ability to save themselves, disparage Christ’s merits. I may
say (as Gal
5: 4), ‘Christ has become of no effect to them.’ They who advance
the power of their will in matters of salvation, without the medicinal
grace of Christ, do absolutely put themselves under the covenant of works.
I would ask, ‘Can they perfectly keep the moral law?’ Malum
oritur ex quolibet defectu [Evil
is manifested in any blemish at all]. If there be but the least defect
in their obedience, they are lost. For one sinful thought the law of God
curses them, and the justice of God condemns them. Confounded be their
pride, who cry up the power of nature, as if, by their own inherent abilities,
they could rear up a building, the top whereof should reach to heaven.
(2) It
confutes that sort of people who brag of perfection; and who, according
to that principle, can keep all God’s commandments perfectly. I would ask
such whether at no time a vain thought has come into their minds? If there
has, then they are not perfect. The Virgin Mary was not perfect. Though
her womb was pure (being overshadowed by the Holy Ghost), yet her soul
was not perfect. Christ tacitly supposes a failing in her. Luke
2: 49. And are they more perfect than the blessed Virgin was?
Such as hold perfection, need not confess sin. David confessed sin, and
Paul confessed sin. Psa
32: 5; Rom
7: 25. But they are got beyond David and Paul; they are perfect,
they never transgress; and where there is no transgression, what need for
confession? Again, if they are perfect, they need not ask pardon. They
can pay God’s justice what they owe; therefore, why pray, ‘Forgive us our
debts’? Oh, that the devil should rock men so fast asleep, as to make them
dream of perfection! Do they plead, ‘Let us therefore as many as be perfect
be thus minded’? Phil
3: 15. Perfection there, is meant of sincerity. God is best
able to interpret his own word. He calls sincerity perfection. ‘A perfect
and an upright man.’ Job
1: 8. But who is exactly perfect? A man full of diseases may
as well say he is healthful, as a man full of sins say he is perfect.
Use three.
For encouragement to regenerate persons. Though you fail in your obedience,
and cannot keep the moral law exactly, yet be not discouraged.
What comfort
may be given to a regenerate person under the failures and imperfections
of his obedience?
That a
believer is not under the covenant of works, but under the covenant of
grace. The covenant of works requires perfect, personal, perpetual obedience;
but in the covenant of grace, God will make some abatements; he will accept
less than he required in the covenant of works. (1) In the covenant of
works God required perfection of degrees; in the covenant of grace he accepts
perfection of parts. There he required perfect working, here he accepts
sincere believing. In the covenant of works, God required us to live without
sin; in the covenant of grace he accepts of our combat with sin. (2) Though
a Christian cannot, in his own person, perform all God’s commandments;
yet Christ, as his Surety, and in his stead, has fulfilled the law for
him: and God accepts of Christ’s obedience, which is perfect, to satisfy
for that obedience which is imperfect. Christ being made a curse for believers,
all the curses of the law have their sting pulled out. (3) Though a Christian
cannot keep the commands of God to satisfaction, yet he may to approbation.
How is
that?
(1) He
gives his full assent and consent to the law of God. ‘The law is holy and
just:’ there was assent in the judgement. Rom
7: 12. ‘I consent unto the law;’ there was consent in the will. Rom
7: 16.
(2) A Christian
mourns that he cannot keep the commandments fully. When he fails he weeps;
he is not angry with the law because it is so strict but he is angry with
himself because he is so deficient.
(3) He
takes a sweet complacent delight in the law. ‘I delight in the law of God
after the inward man.’ Rom
7: 22. Greek: ‘I take pleasure in it.’ ‘O! how love I thy law.’ Psa
119: 97. Though a Christian cannot keep God’s law, yet he loves
his law; though he cannot serve God perfectly, yet he serves him willingly.
(4) It
is his cordial desire to walk in all God’s commands. ‘O that my ways were
directed to keep thy statutes.’ Psa
119: 5. Though his strength fails, yet his pulse beats.
(5) He
really endeavours to obey God’s law perfectly; and wherein he comes short
he runs to Christ’s blood to supply his defects. This cordial desire, and
real endeavour, God esteems as perfect obedience. ‘If there be a willing
mind, it is accepted.’2
Cor 8: 12. ‘Let me hear thy voice, for sweet is thy voice.’ Cant
2: 14. Though the prayers of the righteous are mixed with sin,
yet God sees they would pray better. He picks out the weeds from the flowers;
he sees the faith and bears with the failing. The saints’ obedience, though
short of legal perfection, yet having sincerity in it, and Christ’s merits
mixed with it, finds gracious acceptance. When the Lord sees endeavours
after perfect obedience, he takes it well at our hands; as a father who
receives a letter from his child, though there be blots in it, and false
spellings, takes all in good part. Oh! what blotting are there in our holy
things; but God is pleased to take all in good part. He says, ‘It is my
child, and he would do better if he could; I will accept it.’
3.2 Degrees of Sin
Are all
transgressions of the law equally heinous?
Some sins
in themselves, and by reason of several aggravations, are more heinous
in the sight of God than others.
‘He that
delivered me unto thee, has the greater sin.’ John
19: 11. The Stoic philosophers held that all sins were equal;
but this Scripture clearly holds forth that there is a gradual difference
in sin; some are greater than others; some are ‘mighty sins,’ and crying
sins.’ Amos
5: 12; Gen
18: 21. Every sin has a voice to speak, but some sins cry. As
some diseases are worse than others, and some poisons more venomous, so
some sins are more heinous. ‘Ye have done worse than your fathers, your
sins have exceeded theirs.’ Jer
16: 12; Ezek
16: 47. Some sins have a blacker aspect than others; to clip
the king’s coin is treason; but to strike his person is a higher degree
of treason. A vain thought is a sin, but a blasphemous word is a greater
sin. That some sins are greater than others appears, (1) Because there
was difference in the offerings under the law; the sin offering was greater
than the trespass offering. (2) Because some sins are not capable of pardon
as others are, therefore they must needs be more heinous, as the blasphemy
against the Holy Ghost. Matt
12: 31. (3) Because some sins have a greater degree of punishment
than others. ‘Ye shall receive the greater damnation.’ Matt
23: 14. ‘Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?’ God
would not punish one more than another if his sin was not greater. It is
true, ‘all sins are equally heinous in respect of the object,’ or the infinite
God, against whom sin is committed, but, in another sense, all sins are
not alike heinous; some sins have more bloody circumstances in them, which
are like the dye to the wool, to give it a deeper colour.
[1] Such
sins are more heinous as are committed without any occasion offered; as
when a man swears or is angry, and has no provocation. The less the occasion
of sin, the greater is the sin itself.
[2] Such
sins are more heinous that are committed presumptuously. Under the law
there was no sacrifice for presumptuous sins. Num
15: 30.
What is
the sin of presumption, which heightens and aggravates sin, and makes it
more heinous?
To sin
presumptuously, is to sin against convictions and illuminations, or an
enlightened conscience. ‘They are of those that rebel against the light.’ Job
24: 13. Conscience, like the cherubim, stands with a flaming
sword in its hand to deter the sinner; and yet he will sin. Did not Pilate
sin against conviction, and with a high hand, in condemning Christ? He
knew that for envy the Jews had delivered him. Matt
27: 18. He confessed he ‘found no fault in him.’ Luke
23: 14. His own wife sent to him saying, ‘Have nothing to do
with that just man.’ Matt
27: 19. Yet for all this, he gave the sentence of death against
Christ. He sinned presumptuously, against an enlightened conscience. To
sin ignorantly does something to extenuate and pare off the guilt. ‘If
I had not come and spoken unto them, they had not had sin,’ that is, their
sin had been less. John
15: 22. But to sin against illuminations and convictions enhances
men’s sins. These sins make deep wounds in the soul; other sins fetch blood;
they are a stab at the heart.
How many
ways may a man sin against illuminations and convictions?
(1) When
he lives in the total neglect of duty. He is not ignorant that it is a
duty to read the Word, yet he lets the Bible lie by as rusty armour, seldom
made us of. He is convinced that it is a duty to pray in his family, yet
he can go days and months, and God never hears of him; he calls God Father,
but never asks his blessing. Neglect of family-prayer, as it were, uncovers
the roof of men’s houses, and makes way for a curse to be rained down upon
their table.
(2) When
a man lives in the same sins he condemns in others. ‘Thou that judges,
does the same things.’ Rom
2: 1. As Augustine says of Seneca, ‘He wrote against superstition,
yet he worshipped those images which he reproved.’ One man condemns another
for rash censuring, yet lives in the same sin himself; a master reproves
his apprentice for swearing, yet he himself swears. The snuffers of the
tabernacle were of pure gold: they who reprove and snuff the vices of others,
had need themselves be free from those sins. The snuffers must be of gold.
(3) When
a man sins after vows. ‘Thy vows are upon me, O God.’ Psa
56: 12. A vow is a religious promise made to God, to dedicate
ourselves to him. A vow is not only a purpose, but a promise. Every votary
makes himself a debtor; he binds himself to God in a solemn manner. Now,
to sin after a vow, to vow himself to God, and give his soul to the devil,
must needs be against the highest convictions.
(4) When
a man sins after counsels, admonitions, warnings, he cannot plead ignorance.
The trumpet of the gospel has been blown in his ears, and sounded a retreat
to call him off from his sins, he has been told of his injustice, living
in malice, keeping bad company, yet he would venture upon sin. This is
to sin against conviction; it aggravates the sin, and is like a weight
put into the scale, to make his sin weigh the heavier. If a sea-mark be
set up to give warning that there are shelves and rocks in that place,
yet if the mariner will sail there, and split his ship, it is presumption;
and if he be cast away, who will pity him?
(5) When
a man sins against express combinations and threatening. God has thundered
out threatenings against such sins. ‘God shall would the hairy scalp of
such an one as goes on still in his trespasses.’ Psa
68: 21. Though God set the point of his sword to the breast
of a sinner, he will still commit sin. The pleasure of sin delights him
more than the threatenings affright him. Like the leviathan, ‘he laugheth
at the shaking of a spear.’ Job
41: 29. Nay, he derides God’s threatenings. ‘Let him make speed,
and hasten his work, that we may see it:’ we have heard much what God intends
to do, and of judgement approaching, we would fain see it. Isa
5: 19. For men to see the flaming sword of God’s threatening
brandished, yet to strengthen themselves in sin, is in an aggravated manner
to sin against illumination and conviction.
(6) When
a man sins under affliction. God not only thunders by threatening, but
lets his thunderbolt fall. He inflicts judgements on a person so that he
may read his sins in his punishment, and yet he sins. His sin was uncleanness,
by which he wasted his strength, as well as his estate. He has had a fit
of apoplexy; and yet while feeling the smart of sin, he retains the love
of sin. This is to sin against conviction. ‘In his distress did he trespass
yet more; this is that king Ahab’ 2
Chron 28: 22. It makes the sin greater to sin against an enlightened
conscience. It is full of obstinacy. Men give no reason, make no defence
for their sins, and yet are resolved to hold fast iniquity. Voluntas
est regula et mensura actionis
[An action can be measured and judged by the will involved], the more of
the will in a sin, the greater the sin. ‘We will walk after our own devices.’ Jer
18: 12. Though there be death and hell at every step, we will
march on under Satan’s colours. What made the sin of apostate angels so
great was that it was wilful; they had no ignorance in their mind, no passion
to stir them up; there was no tempter to deceive them, but they sinned
obstinately and from choice. To sin against convictions and illuminations,
is joined with rejection and contempt of God. It is bad for a sinner to
forget God, but it is worse to condemn him. ‘Wherefore does the wicked
condemn God?’ Psa
10: 13. An enlightened sinner knows that by his sin he disobliges
and angers God; but he cares not whether God be pleased or not, he will
have his sin; therefore such a one is said to reproach God. ‘The soul that
does ought presumptuously, the same reproacheth the Lord.’ Numb
15: 30. Every sin displeases God, but sins against an enlightened
conscience reproach the Lord. To condemn the authority of a prince, is
a reproach done to him. It is accompanied with impudence. Fear and shame
are banished, the veil of modesty is laid aside. ‘The unjust knoweth no
shame.’ Zeph
3: 5. Judas knew Christ was the Messiah; he was convinced of
it by an oracle from heaven, and by the miracles he wrought, and yet he
impudently went on in his treason, even when Christ said, ‘He that dips
his hand with me in the dish, he shall betray me:’ and he knew Christ meant
him. When he was going about his treason, and Christ pronounced a woe to
him, yet, for all that, he proceeded in his treason. Luke
22: 22. Thus to sin presumptuously, against an enlightened conscience,
dyes the sin of a crimson colour, and makes it greater than other sins.
[3] Such
sins are more heinous than others, which are sins of continuance. The continuing
of sin is the enhancing of sin. He who plots treason, makes himself a greater
offender. Some men’s heads are the devil’s minthouse, they are a mint of
mischief. ‘Inventors of evil things.’ Rom
1: 30. Some invent new oaths, others new snares. Such were those
presidents that invented a decree against Daniel, and got the king to sign
it. Dan
6: 9.
[4] Those
sins are greater which proceed from a spirit of malignity. To malign holiness
is diabolical. It is a sin to want grace, it is worse to hate it. In nature
there are antipathies, as between the vine and laurel. Some have an antipathy
against God because of his purity. ‘Cause the Holy One of Israel to cease
from before us.’ Isa
30: 11. Sinners, if it lay in their power, would not only enthrone
God, but annihilate him; if they could help it, God should no longer be
God. Thus sin is boiled up to a greater height.
[5] Those
sins are of greater magnitude, which are mixed with ingratitude. Of all
things God cannot endure to have his kindness slighted. His mercy is seen
in reprieving men so long, in wooing them by his Spirit and ministers to
be reconciled, in crowning them with so many temporal blessings: and to
abuse all this love — when God has been filling up the measure of his mercy,
for men to fill up the measure of their sins — is high ingratitude, and
makes their sins of a deeper crimson. Some are worse for mercy. ‘The vulture,’
says Aelian, ‘draws sickness from perfumes.’ So the sinner contracts evil
from the sweet perfumes of God’s mercy. The English chronicle reports of
one Parry, who being condemned to die, Queen Elizabeth sent him her pardon;
and after he was pardoned, he conspired and plotted the queen’s death.
Just so some deal with God, he bestows mercy, and they plot treason against
him. ‘I have nourished and brought up children, and they have rebelled
against me.’ Isa
1: 2. The Athenians, in lieu of the good service Themistocles
had done them, banished him their city. The snake, in the fable, being
frozen, stung him that gave it warmth. Certainly sins against mercy are
more heinous.
[6] Those
sins are more heinous than others which are committed with delectation.
A child of God may sin through a surprisal, or against his will. ‘The evil
which I would not, that I do.’ Rom
7: 19. He is like one that is carried down the stream involuntarily.
But to sin with delight heightens and greatens the sin. It is a sign the
heart is in the sin. ‘They set their heart on their iniquity,’ as a man
follows his gain with delight. Hos
4: 8. ‘Without are dogs, and whosoever loveth and maketh a lie.’ Rev
22: 15. To tell a lie is a sin; but to love to tell a lie is
a greater sin.
[7] Those
sins are more heinous than others which are committed under a pretence
of religion. To cheat and defraud is a sin, but to do it with a Bible in
one’s hand, is a double sin. To be unchaste is a sin; but to put on a mask
of religion to play the whore makes the sin greater. ‘I have peace offerings
with me; this day have I paid my vows; come let us take our fill of love.’ Prov
7: 14, 15. She speaks as if she had been at church, and had
been saying her prayers: who would ever have suspected her of dishonesty?
But, behold her hypocrisy; she makes her devotion a preface to adultery.
‘Which devour widows’ houses, and for a show make long prayers.’ Luke
20: 47. The sin was not in making long prayers; for Christ was
a whole night in prayer; but to make long prayers that they might do unrighteous
actions, made their sin more horrid.
[8] Sins
of apostasy are more heinous than others. Demas forsook the truth and afterwards
became a priest in an idol temple, says Dorotheus. 2
Tim 4: 10. To fall is a sin; but to fall away is a greater sin.
Apostates cast a disgrace upon religion. ‘The apostate,’ says Tertullian,
‘seems to put God and Satan in the balance; and having weighed both their
services, prefers the devil’s, and proclaims him to be the best master.’
In which respect the apostate is said to put Christ to ‘open shame.’ Heb
6: 6. This dyes a sin in grain, and makes it greater. It is
a sin not to profess Christ, but it is a greater to deny him. Not to wear
Christ’s colours is a sin, but to run from his colours is a greater sin.
A pagan sins less than a baptised renegade.
[9] To
persecute religion makes sin greater. Acts
7: 52. To have no religion is a sin, but to endeavour to destroy
religion is a greater. Antiochus Epiphanes took more tedious journeys and
ran more hazards, to vex and oppose the Jews, than all his predecessors
had done to obtain victories. Herod ‘added this above all, that he shut
up John in prison.’Luke
3: 20. He sinned before by incest; but by imprisoning the prophet
he added to his sin and made it greater. Persecution fills up the measure
of sin. ‘Fill ye up the measure of your fathers.’ Matt
23: 32. If you pour a porringer of water into a cistern it adds
something to it, but if you pour in a bucketful or two it fills up the
measure of the cistern; so persecution fills up the measure of sin, and
makes it greater.
[10] To
sin maliciously makes sin greater. Aquinas, and other of the schoolmen,
place the sin against the Holy Ghost in malice. The sinner does all he
can to vex God, and despite the Spirit of grace. Heb
10: 29. Thus Julia threw up his dagger in the air, as if he
would have been revenged upon God. This swells sin to its full size, it
cannot be greater. When a man is once come to this, blasphemously to despite
the Spirit, there is but one step lower he can fall, and that is to hell.
[11] It
aggravates sin, and makes it greater, when a man not only sins himself,
but endeavours to make others sin. (1) Such as teach errors to the people,
who decry Christ’s deity, or deny his virtue, making him only a political
head, not a head of influence: who preach against the morality of the Sabbath,
or the immortality of the soul; these men’s sins are greater than others.
If the breakers of God’s law sin, what do they that teach men to break
them? Matt
5: 19. (2) Such as destroy others by their bad example. The
swearing father teaches his son to swear, and damns him by his example.
Such men’s sins are greater than others, and they shall have a hotter place
in hell.
Use. You
see all sins are not equal; some are more grievous than others, and bring
greater wrath; therefore especially take heed of these sins. ‘Keep back
thy servant from presumptuous sins.’ Psa
19: 13. The least sin is bad enough; you need not aggravate
your sins, and make them more heinous. He that has a little wound will
not make it deeper. Oh, beware of those circumstances which increase your
sin and make it more heinous! The higher a man is in sinning, the lower
he shall lie in torment.
3.3 The Wrath of God
What
does every sin deserve?
God’s
wrath and curse, both in this life, and in that which is to come.
‘Depart
from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire.’ Matt
25: 41. Man having sinned, is like a favourite turned out of
the king’s favour, and deserves the wrath and curse of God. He deserves
God’s curse. Gal
3: 10. As when Christ cursed the fig-tree, it withered; so,
when God curses any, he withers in his soul. Matt
21: 19. God’s curse blasts wherever it comes. He deserves also
God’s wrath, which is nothing else but the execution of his curse.
What is
this wrath?
I. It
is privative; that is, deprives of the smiles of God’s face. It is hell
enough to be excluded his presence: in whose ‘presence is fulness of joy.’ Psa
16: 11. His smiling face has that splendour and beauty in it
that ravishes the angels with delight. This is the diamond in the ring
of glory. If it were such a misery for Absalom, that he might not see the
King’s face, what will it be for the wicked to be shut out from beholding
God’s pleasant face! Privatio
Divinae visionis omnium suppliciorum summum
[To be deprived of the sight of God is the greatest of all punishments].
II. This
wrath has something in it positive. It is ‘wrath come upon them to the
uttermost.’ 1
Thess 2: 16.
[I] God’s
wrath is irresistible. ‘Who knoweth the power of thine anger?’ Psa
90: 2: Sinners may oppose God’s ways, but not his wrath. Shall
the briers contend with the fire? Shall finite contend with infinite? ‘Hast
thou an arm like God?’ Job
40: 9.
[2] God’s
wrath is terrible. The Spanish proverb is, The lion is not so fierce as
he is painted. We are apt to have slight thoughts of God’s wrath; but it
is very tremendous and dismal, as if scalding lead should be dropped into
one’s eyes. The Hebrew word for wrath signifies heat. To show that the
wrath of God is hot, therefore it is compared to fire in the text. Fire,
when in its rage, is dreadful. So the wrath of God is like fire, it is
the terrible of terrible. Other fire is but painted to this. If when God’s
wrath is kindled but a little, and a spark of it flies into a wicked man’s
conscience in this life, it is so terrible, what will it be when God shall
‘stir up all his wrath’? Psa
78: 38. How sad is it with a soul in desertion! God then dips
his pen in gall, and ‘writes bitter things;’ his poisoned arrows stick
fast into the heart. ‘While I suffer thy terrors, I am distracted; thy
fierce wrath goes over me.’ Psa
88: 15, 16. Luther, in desertion, was in such horror of mind,
that nec
calor, nec sanguis superesset [no
warmth or blood remained]; he had no blood seen in his face, but he lay
as one dead. Now, if God’s wrath be such towards those whom he loves, what
will it be towards those whom he hates? If they who sip of the cup find
it so bitter, what will they do who drink its dregs? Psal
75: 8. Solomon says, ‘The king’s wrath is as the roaring of
a lion.’Prov
19: 12. What then is God’s wrath? When God musters up all his
forces, and sets himself in
battalia against a sinner, how
can his heart endure? Ezek
22: 14. Who is able to lie under mountains of wrath? God is
the sweetest friend but the sorest enemy.
(1) The
wrath of God shall seize upon every part of a sinner. Upon the body. The
body, which was so tender that it could not bear heat or cold, shall be
tormented in the wine press of God’s wrath. Those eyes which before could
behold amorous objects, shall be tormented with the sight of devils. The
ears, which before were delighted with music, shall be tormented with the
hideous shrieks of the damned. The wrath of God shall seize upon the soul
of a reprobate. Ordinary fire cannot touch the soul. When the martyrs’
bodies were consuming, their souls triumphed in the flames; but God’s wrath
burns the soul. The memory will be tormented to remember what means of
grace have been abused. The conscience will be tormented with self-accusations.
The sinner will accuse himself for presumptuous sins, for misspending his
precious hours, and for resisting the Holy Ghost.
(2) The
wrath of God is without intermission. Hell is an abiding place, but no
resting place; there is not a minute’s rest. Outward pain has some abatement.
If it be the stone or colic, the patient has sometimes ease; but the torments
of the damned have no intermission; he who feels God’s wrath never says,
‘I have ease.’
(3) The
wrath of God is eternal. So says the text. ‘Everlasting fire.’ No tears
can quench the flame of God’s anger; no, though we could shed rivers of
tears. In all pains of this life men hope for cessation — the suffering
will not continue long; either the tormentor dies or the tormented; but
the wrath of God is always feeding upon the sinner. The terror of natural
fire is, that it consumes what it burns; but what makes the fire of God’s
wrath terrible is, that it does not consume what it burns. Sic
morientur damnati ut semper vivunt
[Those that are lost will so die as to remain always alive]. Bernard. The
sinner will ever be in the furnace. After innumerable millions of years
the wrath of God is as far from ending as it was at the beginning. If all
the earth and sea were sand, and every thousand years a bird should come
and take away a grain, it would be a long while ere that vast heap of sand
were emptied; but if, after all that time, the damned might come out of
hell, there would be some hope; but this word ‘Ever’ breaks the heart.
How does
it consist with God’s justice to punish sin, which perhaps was committed
in a moment, with eternal fire?
On account
of the heinous nature of sin. Consider the Person offended; it is Crimen
laesae majestatis [a charge of
the highest treason]. Sin is committed against an infinite majesty, therefore
it is infinite, and the punishment must be infinite. Because the nature
of man is but finite, and a sinner cannot at once bear infinite wrath,
therefore he must be satisfying in enmity what he cannot satisfy at once.
(4) While
the wicked lie scorching in the flames of wrath, they have none to commiserate
them. It is some ease of grief to have some to condole with us; but the
wicked have wrath and no pity shown them. Who will pity them? God will
not. They derided his Spirit, and he will now laugh at their calamity. Prov
1: 26. The saints will not pity them. They persecuted them upon
earth, therefore they will rejoice to see God’s justice executed on them.
‘The righteous shall rejoice when he sees the vengeance.’ Psa
58: 10.
(5) The
sinner under wrath has no one to speak a good word for him. If an elect
person sins, he has one to intercede for him. ‘We have an advocate, Jesus
Christ the righteous.’1
John 2: 1. Christ will say, ‘It is one of my friends, one for
whom I have shed my blood; Father, pardon him.’ But the wicked who die
in sin have none to solicit for them; they have an accuser, but no advocate;
Christ’s blood will not plead for them; they slighted Christ and refused
to come under his government, therefore Christ’s blood cries against them.
[3] God’s
wrath is just. The Greek word for vengeance signifies justice. The wicked
shall drink a sea of wrath, but not one drop of injustice, It is just that
God’s honour be repaired, and how can that be but by punishing offenders?
He who infringes the king’s laws deserves the penalty. Mercy goes by favour,
punishment by desert. ‘To us belongeth confusion of face.’ Dan
9: 8. Wrath is that which belongs to us as we are simmers; it
is due to us as any wages that are paid.
Use one.
For information. (1) God is justified in condemning sinners at the last
day. They deserve wrath, and it is no injustice to give them that which
they deserve. If a malefactor deserves death, the judge does him no wrong
in condemning him.
(2) See
what a great evil sin is, which exposes a person to God’s wrath for ever.
You may know the lion by his paw; and you may know what an evil sin is
by the wrath and curse it brings. When you see a man drawn upon a hurdle
to execution, you conclude he is guilty of some capital crime that brings
such a punishment; so when a man lies under the torrid zone of God’s wrath,
and roars out in flames, you must say, ‘How horrid an evil sin is!’ They
who now see no evil in swearing, or Sabbath breaking, will see it looks
black in the glass of hell-torments.
(3) See
here a handwriting upon the wall; that which may check a sinner’s mirth.
He is now brisk and frolicsome, he chants to the sound of the viol, and
invents instruments of music (Amos
6: 5); he drinks ‘stolen waters,’ and says, ‘they are sweet;’
but let him remember that the wrath and curse of God hang over him, which
will shortly, if he repent not, be executed on him. Dionysus thought, as
he sat at table, that he saw a naked sword hang over his head; but the
sword of God’s justice hangs over a sinner, and when the slender thread
of life is cut asunder it falls upon him. ‘Rejoice, O young man, in thy
youth; and let thy heart cheer thee in the days of thy youth . . . but
know thou, that for all these things God will bring thee into judgement.’ Eccl
11: 9. For a drop of pleasure thou must drink a sea of wrath.
Your pleasure cannot be so sweet as wrath is bitter. The delights of the
flesh cannot countervail the horror of conscience. Better want the devil’s
honey than be stung with the wrath of God. The garden of Eden, which signifies
pleasure, had a flaming sword placed at the east end of it. Gen
3: 24. The garden of carnal and sinful delight is surrounded
with the flaming sword of God’s wrath.
Use two.
For reproof. The stupidity of sinners is reproved who are no more affected
with the curse and wrath of God which is due to them. ‘None considereth
in his heart.’ Isa
44: 19. If they were in debt and the sergeant was about to arrest
them, they would be affected with that; but though the fierce wrath of
God is ready to arrest them, they remember it not. Though a beast has no
shame, he has fear: he is afraid of fire; but sinners are worse than brutish,
for they fear not the ‘fire of hell’ till they are in it. Most have their
consciences asleep, or seared; but when they shall see the vials of God’s
wrath dropping, they will cry out as Dives, ‘Oh! I am tormented in this
flame!’ Luke
16: 24.
Use three.
For exhortation. (1) Let us adore God’s patience, who has not brought this
wrath and curse upon us all this while. We have deserved wrath, yet God
has not given us our desert. We may all subscribe to Psa
103: 8, ‘The Lord is slow to anger;’ and to ver
10, ‘He has not rewarded us according to our iniquities.’ God
has deferred his wrath, and given us space to repent. Rev
2: 21. He is not like a hasty creditor, who requires the debt,
and gives no time for payment; he shoots off his warning-piece, that he
may not shoot off his murdering-piece. ‘The Lord is long suffering to usward,
not willing that any perish.’ 2
Pet 3: 9. God adjourns the assizes, to see if sinners will turn;
he keeps off the storm of his wrath: but if men will not be warned, let
them know that long forbearance is no forgiveness.
(2) Let
us labour to prevent the wrath we have deserved. How careful are men to
prevent poverty or disgrace! O labour to prevent God’s eternal wrath, that
it may not only be deferred, but removed.
What
shall we do to prevent and escape the wrath to come?
[1] By
getting an interest in Jesus Christ. Christ is the only screen to stand
betwixt us and the wrath of God; he felt God’s wrath that they who believe
in him should never feel it. ‘Jesus which delivered us from the wrath to
come.’ 1
Thess 1: 10. Nebuchadnezzar’s fiery furnace was a type of God’s
wrath, and that furnace did not singe the garments of the three children,
nor had ‘the smell of fire passed upon them.’ Dan
3: 27. Jesus Christ went into the furnace of his Father’s wrath;
and the smell of the fire of hell shall never pass upon those that believe
in him.
[2] If
we would prevent the wrath of God, let us take heed of those sins which
will provoke it. Edmund, successor of Anselm, had a saying, ‘I had rather
leap into a furnace of fire, than willingly commit a sin against God.’
There are several fiery sins we must take heed of, which will provoke the
fire of God’s wrath. The fire of rash anger. Some who profess religion
cannot bridle their tongue; they care not what they say in their anger;
they will even curse their passions. James says, ‘The tongue is set on
fire of hell;’ chap
3: 6. Oh! take heed of a ‘fiery tongue,’ lest it bring thee
to ‘fiery torment.’ Dives begged a drop of water to cool his tongue. Cyprian
says he had offended most in his tongue, and now that was most set on fire.
Take heed of the fire of malice. Malice is a malignant humour, whereby
we wish evil to others; it is a vermin that lives on blood; it studies
revenge. Caligula had a chest where he kept deadly poisons for those against
whom he had malice. The fire of malice brings men to the fiery furnace
of God’s wrath. Take heed of the sin of uncleanness. ‘Whoremongers and
adulterers God will judge.’ Heb
13: 4. Such as burn in uncleanness are in great danger to burn
one day in hell. Let one fire put out another; let the fire of God’s wrath
put out the fire of lust.
(3) To
you who have a well-grounded hope that you shall not feel this wrath, which
you have deserved, let me exhort you to be very thankful to God, who has
given his Son to save you from this tremendous wrath. Jesus has delivered
you from wrath to come. The Lamb of God was scorched in the fire of God’s
wrath for you. Christ felt the wrath which he did not deserve, that you
might escape the wrath which you have deserved. Pliny observes, that there
is nothing better to quench fire than blood. Christ’s blood has quenched
the fire of God’s wrath for you. ‘Upon me be thy curse,’ said Rebekah to
Jacob. Gen
27: 13. So said Christ to God’s justice, ‘Upon me be the curse,
that my elect may inherit the blessing.’ Be patient under all the afflictions
which you endure. Affliction is sharp, but it is not wrath, it is not hell.
who would not willingly drink in the cup of affliction that knows he shall
never drink in the cup of damnation? Who would not be willing to bear the
wrath of man that knows he shall never feel the wrath of God?
Christian,
though thou mayest feel the rod, thou shalt never feel the bloody axe.
Augustine once said, ‘Strike, Lord, where thou wilt, if sin be pardoned.’
So say, ‘Afflict me, Lord, as thou wilt in this life, seeing I shall escape
the wrath to come.’
4. THE WAY OF SALVATION
4.1 Faith
What
does God require of us, that we may escape his wrath and curse due to us
for our sin?
Faith in
Jesus Christ, repentance unto life, with the diligent use of all the outward
means, whereby Christ communicateth to us the benefits of redemption.
I begin
with the first, faith in Jesus Christ. ‘Whom God has set forth to be a
propitiation through faith in his blood.’ Rom
3: 25. The great privilege in the text is, to have Christ for
a propitiation; which is not only to free us from God’s wrath, but to ingratiate
us into his love and favour. The means of having Christ to be our propitiation
is, ‘Faith in his blood.’ There is a twofold faith, Fides
quae creditur [the faith which
is believed], which is ‘the doctrine of faith;’ and Fides
qua creditur [the faith by which
we believe], which is ‘the grace of faith.’ The act of justifying faith
lies in recumbency; we rest on Christ alone for salvation. As a man that
is ready to drown catches hold on the bough of a tree, so a poor trembling
sinner, seeing himself ready to perish, catches hold by faith on Christ
the tree of life, and is saved. The work of faith is by the Holy Spirit;
therefore faith is called the ‘fruit of the Spirit.’ Gal
5: 22. Faith does not grow in nature, it is an outlandish plant,
a fruit of the Spirit. This grace of faith is sanctissimum
humani pectoris bonum [the most
hallowed possession of the human heart]; of all others, the most precious
rich faith, and most holy faith, and faith of God’s elect: hence it is
called ‘precious faith.’ 2
Pet 1: 1. As gold is most precious among metals, so is faith
among the graces. Faith is the queen of the graces; it is the condition
of the gospel. ‘Thy faith has saved thee,’ not thy tears. Luke
7: 50. Faith is the ‘vital artery of the soul’ that animates
it. ‘The just shall live by his faith.’ Hab
2: 4. Though unbelievers breathe, they want life. Faith, as
Clemens Alexandrinus calls it, is a mother grace; it excites and invigorates
all the graces; not a grace stirs till faith sets it to work. Faith sets
repentance to work; it is like fire to the still; it sets hope to work.
First we believe the promise, then we hope for it. If faith did not feed
the lamp of hope with oil, it would soon die. It sets love to work. ‘Faith
which worketh by love.’ Gal
5: 6. Who can believe in the infinite merits of Christ, and
his heart not ascend in a fiery chariot of love? It is a catholicon, or
remedy against all troubles; a sheet anchor cast into the sea of God’s
mercy to keep us from sinking in despair. Other graces have done worthily;
thou, O faith, excellest them all. In heaven love will be the chief grace;
but while we are here love must give place to faith. Love takes possession
of glory, but faith gives a title to it. Love is the crowning grace in
heaven, but faith is the conquering grace upon earth. ‘This is the victory
that overcometh the world, even our faith.’ 1
John 5: 4. Faith carries away the garland from all the other
graces. Other graces help to sanctify us, but faith only has the honour
to justify us. ‘Being justified by faith.’ Rom
5: 1.
How comes
faith to be so precious?
Not that
it is a more holy quality, or has more worthiness than other graces, but respectu
objecti [with respect to its object],
‘as it lays hold on Christ the blessed object,’ and fetches in his fulness. John
9: 36. Faith in itself considered, is but manus
mendica, ‘the beggar’s hand;’ but
as this hand receives the rich alms of Christ’s merits, so it is precious,
and challenges a superiority over the rest of the graces.
Use one.
Of all sins, beware of the rock of unbelief ‘Take heed lest there be in
any of you an evil heart of unbelief’ Heb
3: 12. Men think, as long as they are not drunkards or swearers,
it is no great matter to be unbelievers. This is the gospel sin, it dyes
your other sins in grain.
(1) Unbelief
is a Christ-reproaching sin. It disparages Christ’s infinite merit as if
it could not save; it makes the wound of sin to be broader than the plaister
of Christ’s blood. This is a high contempt offered to Christ, and is a
deeper spear than that which the Jews thrust into his side.
(2) Unbelief
is an ungrateful sin. Ingratus
vitandus est ut dirum selus, tellus ipsa foedius nihil creat
[The ungrateful man is to be avoided like a fearful crime; the world herself
produces nothing more shameful]. Ingratitude is a prodigy of wickedness;
and unbelief is being ungrateful for the richest mercy. Suppose a king,
to redeem a captive, should part with his crown of gold, and when he had
done this should say to the redeemed man, ‘All I desire of thee in lieu
of my kindness, is to believe that I love thee.’ If he should say ‘No,
I do not believe any such thing, or that thou carest at all for me;’ I
appeal to you whether this would not be odious ingratitude? So is the case
here. God has sent his Son to shed his blood; he requires us only to believe
in him, that he is able and willing to save us. No, says unbelief, his
blood was not shed for me, I cannot persuade myself that Christ has any
purpose of love to me. Is not this horrid ingratitude? This enhances a
sin, and makes it of a crimson colour.
(3) Unbelief
is a leading sin. It is the breeder of sin. Qualitas
malae vitae initium summit ab infidelitate
[A life of wickedness has unbelief as its point of origin]. Unbelief is
a root sin, and the devil labours to water this root, that the branches
may be fruitful. It breeds hardness of heart; therefore they are put together. Mark
16: 14. Christ upbraids them with their unbelief and hardness
of heart. Unbelief breeds the stone of the heart. He who believes not in
Christ, is not affected with his sufferings, he melts not in tears of love.
Unbelief freezes the heart; first it defiles and then hardens. Unbelief
breeds profaneness. An unbeliever will stick at no sin, neither at false
weights, nor false oaths. He will swallow down treason. Judas was first
an unbeliever, and then a traitor. John
6: 64. He who has no faith in his heart, will have no fear of
God before his eyes.
(4) Unbelief
is a wrath procuring sin. It is inimica
salutis [an enemy of salvation].
Bernard. John
3: 18. Jam
condemnatus est [he is already
condemned], dying so, he is as sure to be condemned as if he were so already.
‘He that believeth not on the Son of God, the wrath of God abideth on him.’ John
3: 36. He who believes not in the blood of the Lamb, must feel
the wrath of the Lamb. The Gentiles that believe not in Christ will be
damned as well as the Jews who blaspheme him. And if unbelief be so fearful
and damnable a sin, shall we not be afraid to live in it?
Use two.
Above all graces set faith to work on Christ. ‘That whosoever believeth
in him should not perish.’ John
3: 15. ‘Above all, taking the shield of faith.’ Eph
6: 16. Say as queen Esther, ‘I will go in unto the king: and
if I perish, I perish.’ She had nothing to encourage her; she ventured
against law, yet the golden sceptre was held forth to her. We have promises
to encourage our faith. ‘Him that comes unto me, I will in no wise cast
out.’ John
6: 37. Let us then advance faith by a holy recumbency on Christ’s
merits. Christ’s blood will not justify without believing; they are both
put together in the text, ‘Faith in his blood.’ The blood of God, without
faith in Christ, will not save. Christ’s sufferings are the plaister to
heal a sin-sick soul, but this plaister must be applied by faith. It is
not money in a rich man’s hand, though offered to us, that will enrich
us, unless we receive it. So Christ’s virtues or benefits will do us no
good unless we receive them by the hand of faith. Above all graces set
faith on work. It is a faith most acceptable to God upon many accounts.
(1) Because
it is a God-exalting grace. It glorifies God. Abraham ‘was strong in faith,
giving glory to God.’ Rom
4: 20. To believe that there is more mercy in God and merit
in Christ than sin in us, and that Christ has answered all the demands
of the law, and that his blood has fully satisfied for us, is in a high
degree to honour God. Faith in the Mediator brings more glory to God than
martyrdom, or the most heroic act of obedience.
(2) Faith
in Christ is acceptable to God because it is a self-denying grace; it makes
a man go out of himself, renounce all self-righteousness, and wholly rely
on Christ for justification. It is very humble, it confesses its own indigence,
and lives wholly upon Christ. As the bee sucks sweetness from the flower,
so faith sucks all its strength and comfort from Christ.
(3) Faith
is a grace acceptable to God, because by faith we present a righteousness
to him which best pleases him; we bring the righteousness of Christ into
court, which is called the righteousness of God. 2
Cor 5: 21. To bring Christ’s righteousness, is to bring Benjamin
with us. A believer may say, Lord, it is not the righteousness of Adam,
or of the angels, but of Christ who is God-Man, that I bring before thee.
The Lord cannot but smell a sweet savour in Christ’s righteousness.
Use three.
Let us try our faith. There is something that looks like faith, and is
not. Pliny says there is a Cyprian stone which is in colour like a diamond,
but it is not of the right kind; so there is a spurious faith in the world.
Some plants have the same leaf with others, but the herbalist can distinguish
them by the root and taste; so something may look like true faith, but
it may be distinguished several ways: —
(1) True
faith is grounded upon knowledge. Knowledge carries the torch before faith.
There is a knowledge of Christ’s orient excellencies. Phil
3: 8. He is made up of all love and beauty. True faith is a
judicious intelligent grace, it knows whom it believes, and why it believes.
Faith is seated as well in the understanding as in the will. It has an
eye to see Christ, as well as a wing to fly to him. Such therefore as are
veiled in ignorance, or have only an implicit faith to believe as the church
believes, have no true and genuine faith.
(2) Faith
lives in a broken heart. ‘The father cried out with tears, Lord, I believe.’ Mark
9: 24. True faith is always in a heart bruised for sin. They,
therefore, whose hearts were never touched for sin, have no faith. If a
physician should tell us there was a herb that would help us against all
infections, but it always grows in a watery place; if we should see a herb
like it in colour, leaf, smell, blossom, but growing upon a rock, we should
conclude that it was the wrong herb. So saving faith always grows in a
heart humbled for sin, in a weeping eye and a tearful conscience. If, therefore,
there be a show of faith, but it grows upon the rock of a hard impenitent
heart, it is not the true faith.
(3) True
faith is at first nothing but an embryo, it is minute and small; it is
full of doubts, temptations, fears; it begins in weakness. It is like the
smoking flax. Matt
12: 20. It smokes with desires, but does not flame with comfort;
it is at first so small, that it is scarce discernible. They who, at the
first dash, have a strong persuasion that Christ is theirs, who leap out
of sin into assurance, have a false and spurious faith, The faith which
comes to its full stature on its birth-day is a monster. The seed that
sprung up suddenly withered. Matt
13: 5, 6.
(4) Faith
is a refining grace, it consecrates and purifies. Moral virtue may wash
the outside, but faith washes the inside. ‘Purifying their hearts by faith.’ Acts
15: 9. Faith makes the heart a temple with this inscription,
‘Holiness to the Lord.’ They whose hearts have legions of lust in them,
were never acquainted with the true faith. For one to say he has faith,
and yet live in sin, is, as if one should say he was in health when his
vitals are perished. Faith is a virgin grace, it is joined with sanctity.
‘Holding the mystery of the faith in a pure conscience.’ 1
Tim 3: 9. The jewel of faith is always put in the cabinet of
a pure conscience. The woman that touched Christ by faith, fetched a healing
and cleansing virtue from him.
(5) True
faith is obediential. ‘The obedience of faith.’ Rom
16: 26. Faith melts our will into the will of God. If God commands
duty, though cross to flesh and blood, faith obeys. ‘By faith Abraham obeyed.’ Heb
11: 8. It not only believes the promise, but obeys the command.
It is not having a speculative knowledge that will evidence you to be believers.
The devil has knowledge; but that which makes him a devil is that he has
no obedience.
(6) True
faith is increasing. ‘From faith to faith,’ i.e. from one degree of faith
to another. Rom
1: 17. Faith does not lie in the heart, as a stone in the earth,
but as seed that grows. Joseph of Arimathaea was a disciple of Christ,
but was afraid to confess him; afterwards he went boldly to Pilate and
begged the body of Jesus. John
19: 38. A Christian’s increase in faith is known two ways: —
By steadfastness.
He is a pillar in the temple of God, ‘Rooted and built up in him; and established
in the faith.’ Col
2: 7. Unbelievers are sceptics in religion; they are unsettled;
they question every truth; but when faith is on the increasing hand, it
does stabilire
animum [strengthen the spirit],
it corroborates a Christian. He is able to prove his principles; he holds
no more than he will die for; as that martyr woman said, ‘I cannot dispute
for Christ, but I can burn for him.’ An increasing faith is not like a
ship in the midst of the sea, that fluctuates, and is tossed upon the waves;
but like a ship at anchor, which is firm and steadfast.
A Christian’s
increase in faith is known by his strength. He can do that now which he
could not do before. When one is man-grown, he can do that which he was
not able to do when he was a child; he can carry a heavier burden: so a
growing Christian can bear crosses with more patience.
But I
fear I have no faith, it is so weak!
If you
have faith, though but in its infancy, be not discouraged. For, (1) A little
faith is faith, as a spark of fire is fire. (2) A weak faith may lay hold
on a strong Christ; as a weak hand can tie the knot in marriage as well
as a strong one. She, in the gospel, who but touched Christ, fetched virtue
from him. (3) The promises are not made to strong faith, but to true. The
promise does not say, he who has a giant faith, who can believe God’s love
through a frown, who can rejoice in affliction, who can work wonders, remove
mountains, stop the mouth of lions, shall be saved, but whosoever believes,
be his faith never so small. A reed is but weak, especially when it is
bruised; yet a promise is made to it. ‘A bruised reed shall he not break.’ Matt
12: 20. (4) A weak faith may be fruitful. Weakest things multiply
most. The vine is a weak plant, but it is fruitful. The thief on the cross,
who was newly converted, was but weak in grace; but how many precious clusters
grew upon that tender plant! He chided his fellow-thief. ‘Dost thou not
fear God?’ Luke
23: 40. He judged himself, ‘We indeed suffer justly.’ He believed
in Christ, when he said, ‘Lord.’ He made a heavenly prayer, ‘Remember me
when thou comest into thy kingdom.’ Weak Christians may have strong affections.
How strong is the first love, which is after the first planting of faith!
(5) The weakest believer is a member of Christ as well as the strongest;
and the weakest member of the body mystic shall not perish. Christ will
cut off rotten members, but not weak members. Therefore, Christian, be
not discouraged. God, who would have us receive them that are weak in faith,
will not himself refuse them. Rom
14: 1.
4.2 Repentance
‘Then
has God also to the Gentiles granted repentance unto life.’ Acts
11: 18.
Repentance
seems to be a bitter pill to take, but it is to purge out the bad humour
of sin. By some Antinomian spirits it is cried down as a legal doctrine;
but Christ himself preached it. ‘From that time Jesus began to preach,
and to say, Repent,’ &c. Matt
4: 17. In his last farewell, when he was ascending to heaven,
he commanded that ‘Repentance should be preached in his name.’ Luke
24: 47. Repentance is a pure gospel grace. The covenant of works
would not admit of repentance; it cursed all that could not perform perfect
and personal obedience. Gal
3: 10. Repentance comes in by the gospel; it is the fruit of
Christ’s purchase that repenting sinners shall be saved. It is wrought
by the ministry of the gospel, while it sets before our eyes Christ crucified.
It is not arbitrary, but necessary; there is no being saved without it.
‘Except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish.’ Luke
13: 3. We may be thankful to God that he has left us this plank
after shipwreck.
I. I shall
show first the counterfeits of repentance.
[1] Natural
softness and tenderness of spirit. Some have a tender affection, arising
from their constitution, whereby they are apt to weep and relent when they
see any object of pity. These are not repenting tears: for many weep to
see another’s misery, who cannot weep at their own sin.
[2] Legal
terrors. A man who has lived in a course of sin, at last is made sensible;
he sees hell ready to devour him, and is filled with anguish and horror;
but after a while the tempest of conscience is blown over, and he is quiet.
He then concludes he is a true penitent, because he has felt some bitterness
in sin, but this is not repentance. Judas had some trouble of mind. If
anguish and trouble were sufficient for repentance, then the damned would
be most penitent, for they are most in anguish of mind. There may be trouble
of mind where there is no grieving for the offence against God.
[3] A
slight superficial sorrow. When God’s hand lies heavy upon a man, as when
he is sick or lame, he may vent a sigh or tear, and say, ‘Lord, have mercy;’
yet this is not true repentance. Ahab did more than all this. ‘He rent
his clothes, and fasted, and lay in sackcloth, and went softly.’ 1
Kings 21: 27. His clothes were rent, but not his heart. The
eye may be watery, and the heart flinty. An apricot may be soft without,
but it has a hard stone within.
[4] God
motions rising in the heart. Every good motion is not repentance. Some
think if they have motions in their hearts to break off their sins, and
become religious, it is repentance. As the devil may stir up bad motions
in the godly, so the Spirit of God may stir up good motions in the wicked.
Herod had many good thoughts and inclinations stirred up in him by John
Baptist’s preaching, yet he did not truly repent, for he still lived in
incest.
[5] Vows
and resolutions. What vows and solemn protestations do some make in their
sickness, that if God should recover them they will be new men, but afterwards
they are as bad as ever! ‘Thou saidst, I will not transgress;’ here was
a resolution: but for all this, she ran after her idols. ‘Under every green
tree thou wanderest, playing the harlot.’ Jer
2: 20.
[6] Leaving
off some gross sin. (1) A man may leave off some sins, and keep others.
Herod reformed many things that were amiss, but kept his Herodias. (2)
An old sin may be left to entertain a new one. A man may leave off riot
and prodigality, and turn covetous; which is merely to exchange one sin
for another.
These
are the counterfeits of repentance. Now, if you find that yours is a counterfeit
repentance, and you have not repented aright, mend what you have done amiss.
As in the body, if a bone be set wrong, the surgeon has no way but to break
it again, and set it aright; so you must do by repentance; if you have
not repented aright, you must have your heart broken again in a godly manner,
and be more deeply afflicted for sin than ever.
II. This
brings me to show wherein repentance consists. It consists in two things:
humiliation and transformation.
[1] Humiliation.
‘If their uncircumcised hearts be humbled.’ Lev
26: 41. There is, as the schoolmen say, a twofold humiliation,
or breaking of the heart. (1) Attrition; as when a rock is broken in pieces.
This is done by the law, which is a hammer to break the heart. (2) Contrition;
as when ice is melted into water. This is done by the gospel, which is
as a fire to ‘melt the heart.’ Jer
23: 9. The sense of abused kindness causes contrition.
[2] Transformation,
or change. ‘Be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind.’ Rom
12: 2. Repentance works a change in the whole man. As when wine
is put into a glass of water, it runs into every part of the water, and
changes its colour and taste; so true repentance does not rest in one part,
but diffuses and spreads itself into every part.
(1) Repentance
causes a change in the mind. Before, a man liked sin well, and said in
defence of it, as Jonah, ‘I do well to be angry;’ chap 4: 9; or I did well
to swear, and break the Sabbath. When he becomes penitent, his judgement
is changed, he looks upon sin as the greatest evil. The Greek word for
repentance signifies after-wisdom; when, having seen how deformed and damnable
a thing sin is, we change our mind. Paul, before conversion, verily thought
he ought to do many things contrary to the name of Jesus (Acts
26: 9); but, when he became a penitent, he was of another mind.
‘I count all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ
Jesus.’Phil
3: 8. Repentance causes a change of judgement.
(2) Repentance
causes a change in the affections, which move under the will as the commander-in-chief.
It metamorphoses the affections. It turns rejoicing in sin into sorrowing
for sin; it turns boldness in sin into holy shame; it turns the love of
sin into hatred. As Ammon hated Tamar more than ever he loved her (2
Sam 13: 15), so the true penitent hates sin more than ever he
loved it. ‘I hate every false way.’ Psa
119: 104.
(3) Repentance
works a change in the life. Though repentance begins at the heart, it does
rest there, but goes into the life. It begins at the heart. ‘O Jerusalem,
wash thy heart.’ Jer
4: 14. If the spring be corrupt, no pure stream can run from
it. But though repentance begins at the heart, it does not rest there,
but changes the life. What a change did repentance make in Paul! It changed
a persecutor into a preacher. What a change did it make in the jailer! Acts
16: 33. He took Paul and Silas, and washed their stripes, and
set meat before them. What a change did it make in Mary Magdalene! She
who before kissed her lovers with wanton embraces, now kisses Christ’s
feet; she that used to curl her hair, and dress it with costly jewels,
now makes it a towel to wipe Christ’s feet; her eyes that used to sparkle
with lust, and with impure glances to entice her lovers, now become fountains
of tears to wash her Saviour’s feet; her tongue that used to speak vainly
and loosely, now is an instrument set in tune to praise God. This change
of life has two things in it: —
[1] The
terminus a quo, a breaking off sin. ‘Break off thy sins by righteousness.’ Dan
4: 27. This breaking off sin must have three qualifications.
(1) It must be universal, a breaking off all sin. One disease may kill
as well as more. One sin lived in, may damn as well as more. The real penitent
breaks off secret, gainful, habitual sins; he takes the sacrificing knife
of mortification, and runs it through the heart of his dearest lusts. (2)
Breaking off sin must be sincere; it must not be out of fear, but upon
spiritual grounds; as from antipathy and disgust, and a principle of love
to God. If sin had not such evil effects, a true penitent would forsake
it out of love to God. The best way to separate things that are frozen,
is by fire. When sin and the heart are frozen together, the best way to
separate them is by the fire of love. Shall I sin against a gracious Father,
and abuse that love which pardons me? (3) The breaking off sin must be
perpetual, so as never to have to do with sin any more. ‘What have I to
do any more with idols?’ Hos
14: 8. Repentance is a spiritual divorce, which must be till
death.
[2] Change
of life has in it terminus
ad quem, a returning unto the Lord.
It is called ‘Repentance towards God.’ Acts
20: 21. It is not enough, when we repent, to leave old sins;
but we must engage in God’s service; as when the wind leaves the west,
it turns into a contrary corner. The repenting prodigal not only left his
harlots, but arose and went to his father. Luke
15: 18. In true repentance the heart points directly to God,
as the needle to the north pole.
Use.
Let us all set upon this great work of repentance; let us repent sincerely
and speedily: let us repent of all our sins, our pride, rash anger, and
unbelief. ‘Without repentance, no remission.’ It is not consistent with
the holiness of God’s nature to pardon a sinner while he is in the act
of rebellion. O meet God, not with weapons, but tears in your eyes. To
stir you up to a melting penitent frame: —
(1) Consider
what there is in sin, that you should continue in the practice of it. It
is the ‘accursed thing.’ Josh
7: 11. It is the spirits of mischief distilled. It defiles the
soul’s glory; it is like a stain to beauty. It is compared to a plague-sore. 1
Kings 8: 38. Nothing so changes one’s glory into shame as sin.
Without repentance sin tends to final damnation. Peccatum
transit actu, manet reatu [The
moment of sin passes, the guilt remains]. Sin at first shows its colour
in the glass, but afterwards it bites like a serpent. Those locusts in Rev
9: 7, are an emblem of sin: ‘On their heads were crowns like
gold, and they had hair as the hair of women, and their teeth were as the
teeth of lions, and there were stings in their tails.’ Sin unrepented of
ends in a tragedy. It has the devil for its father, shame for its companion,
and death for its wages. Rom
6: 23. What is there in sin then, that men should continue in
it? Say not it is sweet. Who would desire the pleasure which kills?
(2) Repentance
is very pleasing to God. No sacrifice like a broken heart. ‘A broken and
a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not despise.’ Psa
51: 17. Augustine caused this sentence to be written over his
bed when he was sick. When the widow brought empty vessels to Elisha, the
oil was poured into them. 2
Kings 4: 6. Bring God the broken vessel of a contrite heart,
and he will pour in the oil of mercy. Repenting tears are the joy of God
and of angels. Luke
15: 7. Doves delight to be about the waters; and surely God’s
Spirit, who once descended in the likeness of a dove, takes great delight
in the waters of repentance. Mary stood at Jesus’ feet weeping. Luke
7: 38. She brought two things to Christ, tears and ointment;
but her tears were more precious to Christ than her ointment.
(3) Repentance
ushers in pardon. Therefore they are joined together. ‘Repentance and remission.’ Luke
24: 47. Pardon of sin is the richest blessing; it is enough
to make a sick man well. ‘The inhabitant shall not say, I am sick; the
people that dwell therein shall be forgiven their iniquity.’ Isa
33: 24. Pardon settles upon us the richer charter of the promises.
Pardoning mercy is the sauce that makes all other mercies relish the sweeter;
it sweetens our health, riches, and honour. David had a crown of pure gold
set upon his head. Psa
21: 3. That which David most blessed God for, was not that God
had set a crown of gold upon his head, but that he had set a crown of mercy
upon his head. ‘Who crowneth thee with mercies.’ Psa
103: 4. What was this crown of mercy? You may see in ver
3: ‘Who forgiveth all thine iniquities.’ David more rejoiced
that he was crowned with forgiveness than that he wore a crown of pure
gold. Now, what is it that makes way for pardon of sin but repentance?
When David’s soul was humbled and broken, the prophet Nathan brought him
good news. ‘The Lord has put away thy sin.’ 2
Sam 12: 13.
But my
sins are so great, that if I should repent, God would not pardon them!
God will
not go from his promise. ‘Return, thou backsliding Israel, saith the Lord,
and I will not cause mine anger to fall upon you, for I am merciful.’ Jer
3: 12. If thy sins are as rocks, yet upon thy repentance, the
sea of God’s mercy can drown them. ‘Wash you, make you clean.’ Isa
1: 16. Wash in the lever of repentance. ‘Come now, and let us
reason together, saith the Lord: though your sins be as scarlet, they shall
be as white as snow;’ ver
18. Manasseh was a crimson sinner; but when he humbled himself
greatly, the golden sceptre of mercy was held forth. When his head was
a fountain to weep for sin, Christ’s side was a fountain to wash away sin.
It is not the greatness of sin, but impenitence, that destroys. The Jews,
who had a hand in crucifying Christ, upon their repentance found the blood
they had shed was a sovereign balm to heal them. When the prodigal came
home to his father, he had the robe and the ring put upon him, and his
‘father kissed him.’ Luke
15: 20, 22. If you break off your sins, God will become a friend
to you; all that is in God shall be yours; his power shall be yours, to
help you; his wisdom shall be yours, to counsel you; his Spirit shall be
yours, to sanctify you; his promises shall be yours, to comfort you; his
angels shall be yours, to guard you; his mercy shall be yours, to save
you.
(4) There
is much sweetness in repenting tears. The soul is never more enlarged and
inwardly delighted than when it can melt kindly for sin. Weeping days are
festival days. The Hebrew word to repent, nicham, signifies consolari,
‘to take comfort.’ ‘Your sorrow shall be turned into joy.’ John
16: 20. Christ turns the water of tears into wine. David, who
was the great mourner in Israel, was the sweet singer. And the joy which
a true penitent finds, is a pre-libation and foretaste of the joy of paradise.
The wicked man’s joy turns to sadness: the penitent’s sadness turns to
joy. Though repentance seems at first to be thorny and bitter, yet of this
thorn a Christian gathers grapes. All which considerations may open a vein
of godly sorrow in our souls, that we may both weep for sin, and turn from
it. If ever God restores comfort, it is to his mourners. Isa
57: 18. When we have wept, let us look up to Christ’s blood
for pardon. Say, as that holy man, lava,
Domine, lacrimas meas: ‘Lord, wash
my tears in thy blood.’ We drop sin with our tears, and need Christ’s blood
to wash them. This repentance must be not for a few days only, like the
mourning for a friend, which is soon over, but it must be the work of our
lives; the issue of godly sorrow must not be stopped till death. After
sin is pardoned, we must repent. We run afresh upon the score, ‘we sin
daily, therefore must repent daily.’ Some shed a few tears for sin; and
when, like the widow’s oil, they have run awhile, they cease. Many, if
the plaister of repentance begin to smart a little, pluck it off; whereas
the plaister of repentance must still lie on, and not be plucked off till
death, when, as all other tears, so these of godly sorrow shall be wiped
away.
What
shall we do to obtain a penitential frame of heart?
Seek
to God for it. It is his promise to give a ‘heart of flesh’ (Ezek
36:26); and to pour on us a spirit of mourning. Zech
12: 10. Beg God’s ‘Holy Spirit.’ ‘He causeth his wind to blow,
and the waters flow.’ Psa
147: 18. When the wind of God’s Spirit blows upon us, then the
waters of repentant tears will flow from us.
4.3 The Word
The
third way to escape the wrath and curse of God, and obtain the benefit
of redemption by Christ, is the diligent use of ordinances, in particular,
‘the word, sacraments, and prayer.’
I begin
with the best of these ordinances.
The ‘word
. . . which effectually worketh in you that believe.’ 1
Thess 2:13.
What
is meant by the word’s working effectually?
The word
of God is said to work effectually when it has the good effect upon us
for which it was appointed by God; when it works powerful illumination
and thorough reformation. ‘To open their eyes, and turn them from the power
of Satan unto God.’ Acts
26: 18. The opening of their eyes denotes illumination; and
turning them from Satan to God denotes reformation.
How is
the word to be read and heard that it may become effectual to salvation.
This
question consists of two branches.
How may
the word be read effectually?
That
we may so read the word that it may conduce effectually to our salvation,
(1)
Let us have a reverend esteem of every part of canonical Scripture. ‘More
to be desired are they than gold.’ Psa
19: 10. Value the book of God above all other books. It is a
golden epistle, indited by the Holy Ghost, and sent us from heaven. More
particularly to raise our esteem, the Scripture is a spiritual glass, to
dress our souls by. It shows us more than we can see by the light of natural
conscience. This may discover gross sins; but the glass of the word shows
us heart-sins, vain thoughts, unbelief, &c. It not only shows us our
spots, but washes them away. The Scripture is a magazine out of which we
may fetch spiritual artillery to fight against Satan. When our Saviour
was tempted by the devil, he fetched armour and weapons from Scripture;
‘it is written.’ Matt
4: 4, 7. The holy Scripture is a panacea, or universal medicine
for the soul; it gives a recipe to cure deadness of heart, Psa
119: 50; pride, 1
Pet 5: 5; and infidelity, John
3: 36. It is a physic garden where we may gather a herb or antidote
to expel the poison of sin. The leaves of Scripture, like the leaves of
the tree of life, are for the ‘healing of the nations.’ Rev
22: 2. Should not this cause a reverential esteem of the word?
(2)
If we would have the written word effectual to our souls, let us peruse
it with ‘intenseness of mind.’ ‘Search the Scriptures.’ John
5: 39. The Greek word, ereunate, signifies to search as for
a ‘vein of silver.’ The Bereans ’searched the Scriptures daily.’ Acts
17: 11. The word anakrinontes signifies to make a curious and
critical search. Apollo was mighty in the Scriptures. Acts
18: 24. Some gallop over a chapter in haste and get no good
by it. If we would have the word effectual and saving, we must mind and
observe every passage of Scripture. That we may be diligent in the perusal
of Scripture, consider that the word written is norma
cultus [the only standard of conduct],
the rule and platform by which we are to square our lives. It contains
in it all things needful to salvation; what duties we are to do, and what
sins we are to avoid. Psa
19: 7. God gave Moses a pattern how he would have the tabernacle
made; and he was to go exactly according to the pattern. Exod
25: 9. The word is the pattern God has given us in writing,
for modelling our lives. How careful, therefore, should we be in pursuing
and looking over this pattern!
As the
written word is our pattern, so it will be our judge. ‘The word that I
have spoken, the same shall judge him at the last day.’ John
12: 48. We read of the opening of the books. Rev
20: 12. One book which God will open is the book of the Scripture,
and will judge men out of it. He will say, ‘Have you lived according to
the rule of this word?’ The word has a double work — to teach, and to judge.
(3)
If we would have the written word effectual, we must bring faith to the
reading of it; believe it to be the word of the eternal Jehovah. It comes
with authority, and shows its commission from heaven. ‘Thus saith the Lord.’
It is of divine inspiration. 2
Tim 3: 16. The oracles of Scripture must be surer to us than
a voice from heaven. 2
Pet 1: 18, 19. Unbelief enervates the virtue of Scripture, and
renders it ineffectual. First men question the truth of the Scripture,
and then fall away from it.
(4)
If we would have the written word effectual to salvation, we must delight
in it as our spiritual cordial. ‘Thy words were found, and I did eat them,
and thy word was the joy and rejoicing of my heart.’ Jer
15: 16. All true solid comfort is fetched out of the word. The
word, as Chrysostom says, is a spiritual garden, and the promises are the
fragrant flowers or spices in this garden. How should we delight to walk
among these beds of spices! Is it not a comfort, in all dubious perplexed
cases, to have a counsellor to advise us? ‘Thy testimonies are my counsellors.’ Psa
119: 24, is it not a comfort to find our evidences for heaven?
And where should we find them but in the word? 1
Thess 1: 4, 5. The word written is a sovereign elixir, or comfort,
in an hour of distress. ‘This is my comfort in my affliction, for thy word
has quickened me.’ Psa
119: 50. It can turn all our ‘water into wine.’ How should we
take a great complacence and delight in the word! They only who come to
the word with delight, go from it with success.
(5)
If we would have the Scripture effectual and saving, we must be sure, when
we have read the word, to hide it in our hearts. ‘Thy word have I hid in
my heart.’ Psa
119: 11. The word, locked up in the heart, is a preservative
against sin. Why did David hide the word in his heart? ‘That I might not
sin against thee.’ As one would carry an antidote about him when he comes
near a place infected, so David carried the word in his heart as a sacred
antidote to preserve him from the infection of sin. When the sap is hid
in the root, it makes the branches fruitful; when the seed is hid in the
ground, the corn springs up; so, when the word is hid in the heart, it
brings forth good fruit.
(6)
If we would have the written word effectual, let us labour not only to
have the light of it in our heads, but its power in our hearts. Let us
endeavour to have it copied out, and written a second time in our hearts.
‘The law of his God is in his heart.’ Psa
37: 31. The word says, ‘Be clothed with humility.’ 1
Pet 5: 5. Let us be low and humble in our own eyes. The word
calls for sanctity. Let us labour to partake of the divine nature, and
to have something conceived in us which is of the Holy Ghost. 2
Pet 1: 4. When the word is thus copied out into our hearts,
and we are changed into its similitude, it is made effectual to us, and
becomes a savour of life.
(7)
When we read the holy Scriptures let us look up to God for a blessing.
Let us beg the Spirit of wisdom and revelation, that we may see the ‘deep
things of God.’ Eph
1: 17, 1
Cor 2: 10. Pray God that the same Spirit that wrote the Scripture
would enable us to understand it. Pray that God would give us the ‘savour
of his knowledge,’ that we may relish a sweetness in the word we read. 2
Cor 2: 14. David tasted it as ‘sweeter than the honeycomb.’ Psa
19: 10. Let us pray that God would not only give us his word
as a rule of holiness, but his grace as a principle of holiness
How
may we hear the word that it may be effectual and saving to our souls?
(1)
Give great attention to the word preached. Let nothing pass without taking
special notice of it. ‘All the people were very attentive to hear him.’ Luke
19: 48. They hung upon his lips. ‘Lydia, a seller of purple,
which worshipped God, heard us, whose heart the Lord opened, that she attended
unto the things which were spoken of Paul.’ Acts
16: 14. Give attention to the word, as to a matter of life and
death. For this purpose have a care to banish vain impertinent thoughts,
which will distract yell, and take you off from the work in hand. These
fowls will be coming to the sacrifice, therefore we must drive them away. Gen
15: 2. An archer may take a right aim; but if one stand at his
elbow, and jog him when he is going to shoot, he will not hit the mark.
Christians may have good aims in hearing; but take heed of impertinent
thoughts which will jog and hinder you in God’s service. Banish dullness.
The devil gives many hearers a sleepy sop, so that they cannot keep their
eyes open at a sermon. They eat so much on the Lord’s-day that they are
more fit for the pillow and couch than the temple. Frequent and customary
sleeping at a sermon shows high contempt and irreverence of the ordinance.
It gives a bad example to others; it makes your sincerity to be called
in question; it is the devil’s seedtime. ‘While men slept, his enemy came
and sowed tares.’ Matt
13: 25 O shake off drowsiness, as Paul shook off the viper!
Be serious and attentive in hearing the word. ‘For it is not a vain thing
for you, it is your life.’ Deut
32: 47. When people do not mind what God speaks to them in his
word, God as little minds what they say to him in prayer.
(2)
If you would have the word preached effectual, come with a holy appetite
to the word. 1
Pet 2: 2. The thirsting soul is the thriving soul. In nature
one may have an appetite and no digestion; but it is not so in religion.
Where there is a great appetite for the word, there is for the most part
good digestion. Come with hungering of soul after the word, and desire
it, that it may not only please you but profit you. Look not at the garnishing
of the dish more than at the meat — at eloquence and rhetoric more than
solid matter. It argues both a wanton palate and surfeited stomach to feed
on salads and dainties rather than on wholesome food.
(3)
If you would have the preaching of the word effectual, come to it with
tenderness upon your heart. ‘Because thy heart was tender.’ 1
Chron 22: 5. If we preach to hard hearts, it is like shooting
against a brazen wall, the word does not enter. It is like setting a gold
seal upon marble, which takes no impression. O come to the word preached
with a melting frame of heart! It is the melting wax that receives the
stamp of the seal; so, when the heart is in a melting frame, it will better
receive the stamp of the preached word. When Paul’s heart was melted and
broken for sin, he cried, ‘Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?’ Acts
9: 6. Come not hither with hard hearts. Who can expect a crop
when the seed is grown UPON stony ground?
(4)
If you would have the word effectual, receive it with meekness. ‘Receive
with meekness the ingrafted word.’ James
1: 21. Meekness is a submissive frame of heart to the word —
a willingness to hear the counsels and reproofs of the word. Contrary to
this meekness is fierceness of spirit, whereby men are ready to rise up
in rage against the sword. Proud men, and guilty, cannot endure to hear
of their faults. Proud Herod put John in prison. Mark
6: 17. The guilty Jews, being told of their crucifying Christ,
stoned Stephen. Acts
7: 59. To tell men of sin, is to hold a glass to one that is
deformed, who cannot endure to see his own face. Contrary to meekness is
stubbornness of heart, whereby men are resolved to hold fast their sins,
let the word say what it will. ‘We will burn incense unto the queen of
heaven.’ Jer
44: 17. O take heed of this! If you would have the word preached
effectually, lay aside fierceness and stubbornness, receive the word with
meekness. By meekness the word preached comes to be ingrafted. As a good
scion that is grafted in a bad stock changes the nature of the fruit and
makes it taste sweet, so, when the word is ingrafted into the soul, it
sanctifies it, and makes it bring forth the sweet fruit of righteousness.
(5)
Mingle the word preached with faith. ‘The word preached did not profit
them, not being mixed with faith.’ Heb
4: 2. If you leave out the chief ingredient in a medicine, it
hinders the operation; do not leave out the ingredient of faith. Believe
the word, and so believe it as to apply it. When you hear Christ preached,
apply him to yourselves. This is to put on the Lord Jesus. Rom
13: 14. When you hear a promise spoken, apply it. This is to
suck the flower of the promise, and turn it to honey.
(6)
Be not only attentive in hearing, but retentive after hearing. ‘We ought
to give the more earnest heed to the things which we have heard, lest at
any time we should let them slip;’ lest we should let them run out as water
out of a sieve. Heb
2: 1. If the ground retain not the seed sown into it, there
can be no good crop. Some have memories like leaking vessels: the sermons
they hear are presently gone, and there is no good done. If meat does not
stay and digest in the stomach, it will not nourish. Satan labours to steal
the word out of the mind. ‘When they have heard, Satan comes immediately,
and taketh away the word that was sown.’ Mark
4: 15. Our memories should be like the chest of the ark, where
the law was put.
(7)
Reduce your hearing to practice. Live on the sermons you hear. ‘I have
done thy commandments.’ Psa
119: 166. Rachel was not content that she was beautiful, but
her desire was to be fruitful. What is a knowing head without a fruitful
heart? ‘Filled with the fruits of righteousness.’ Phil
1: 11. It is obedience that crowns hearing. That hearing will
never save the soul which does not reform the life.
(8)
Beg of God that he will accompany his word with his presence and blessing.
The Spirit must make all effectual. Ministers may prescribe physic, but
it is God’s Spirit must make it work. ‘He has his pulpit in heaven that
converts souls.’ Augustine. ‘While Peter yet spake, the Holy Ghost fell
on all them which heard.’ Acts
10: 44. It is said, the alchemist can draw oil out of iron.
God’s Spirit can produce grace in the most obdurate heart.
(9)
If you would have the word work effectually to your salvation, make it
familiar to you. Discourse of what you have heard when you come home. ‘My
tongue shall speak of thy word.’Psa
119: 172. One reason why some people get no more good by what
they hear, is that they never speak to one another of what they have heard;
as if sermons were such secrets that they must not be spoken of again;
or as if it were a shame to speak of matters of salvation. ‘They that feared
the Lord spake often one to another... and a book of remembrance was written.’ Mal
3: 16.
Use
one. Take heed, as you love your souls, that the word become not ineffectual
to you. There are some to whom the word preached is ineffectual. (1) Such
as censure the word; who, instead of judging themselves, judge the word.
(2) Such as live in contradiction to the word. Isa
30: 9. (3) Such as are more hardened by the word. ‘They made
their hearts as an adamant stone.’ Zech
7: 12. And when men harden their hearts wilfully, God hardens
them judicially. ‘Make their ears heavy.’ Isa
6: 10. The word to these is ineffectual. Would it not be sad,
if a man’s meat did not nourish him; nay, if it should turn to poison?
O take heed that the word preached be not ineffectual and to no purpose!
Use
two. Consider three things: —
(1)
If the word preached does us no good, there is no other way by which we
can be saved. This is God’s institution, and the main engine he uses to
convert souls. ‘If they hear not Moses and the prophets, neither will they
be persuaded though one rose from the dead.’ Luke
16: 31. If an angel should come to you out of heaven, and preach
of the excellency of the glorified estate, and the joys of heaven, and
that in the most pathetic manner — if the word preached does not persuade,
neither would you be wrought upon by such an oration from heaven. If a
damned spirit should come from hell, and preach to you in flames, and tell
you what a place hell is, and roar out the torments of the damned, it might
make you tremble, but it would not convert, if the preaching of the word
will not do it.
(2)
To come to the word, and not be savingly wrought upon, is that which the
devil is pleased with. He cares not though you hear frequently, if it be
not effectually; he is not an enemy to hearing, but profiting. Though the
minister holds out the breasts of the ordinances to you, he cares not as
long as you do not suck the sincere milk of the word. The devil cares not
how many sermon-pills you take, so long as they do not work upon your conscience.
(3)
If the word preached be not effectual to men’s conversion, it will be effectual
to their condemnation. The word will be effectual one way or other; if
it does not make your hearts better, it will make your chains heavier.
We pity those who have not the word preached, but it will be worse with
those who are not sanctified by it. Dreadful is their case who go loaded
with sermons to hell. But I will conclude with the apostle, I am ‘persuaded
better things of you, and things that accompany salvation.’ Heb
6: 9.
4.4 Baptism
‘Go
ye, therefore, and teach all nations, baptising them in the name of the
Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost; teaching them,’ &c. Matt
28: 19.
I. The
way whereby Christ communicates to us the benefits of redemptions, is,
in the use of the sacraments.
What are
the sacraments in general?
They are
visible signs of invisible grace.
Is not
the word of God sufficient to salvation? What need then is there of sacraments?
We must
not be wise above what is written. It is God’s will that his church should
have sacraments; and it is God’s goodness thus to condescend to weak capacities.
‘Except ye see signs, ye will not believe.’ John
4: 48. To strengthen our faith, God confirms the covenant of
grace, not only by promises but by sacramental signs.
What are
the sacraments of the New Testament?
Two:
Baptism and the Lord’s Supper.
Are there
no more? The Papists tell us of five more, viz., confirmation, penance,
matrimony, orders, and the extreme unction.
(1) There
were but two sacraments under the law, therefore there are no more now. 1
Cor 10: 2, 3, 4.
(2) These
two sacraments are sufficient; the one signifying our entrance into Christ,
and the other, our growth and perseverance in him.
II. The
first sacrament is baptism. ‘Go ye, therefore, and teach all nations, baptising
them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost;
teaching them,’ &c. ‘Go, teach all nations;’ the Greek word is ‘Make
disciples of all nations.’ If it be asked, how should we make them disciples?
It follows, ‘Baptising them and teaching them.’ In a heathen nation, first
teach, and then baptise them; but in a Christian church, first baptise,
and then teach them.
What
is baptism?
In general,
it is a matriculation, or visible admission of children into the congregation
of Christ’s flock. More particularly, ‘Baptism is a sacrament, wherein
the washing or sprinkling with water, in the name of the Father, Son, and
Holy Ghost, does signify and seal our ingrafting into Christ, and partaking
of the benefits of the covenant of grace, and our engagement to be the
Lord’s.’
What
is meant by the parent when he presents his child to be baptised?
The parent,
in presenting the child to be baptised, (1) Makes a public acknowledgement
of original sin; that the soul of his child is polluted, therefore needs
washing from sin by Christ’s blood and Spirit; both which washings are
signified by the sprinkling of water in baptism. (2) The parent by bringing
his child to be baptised, solemnly devotes it to the Lord, and enrols it
in God’s family; and truly it is a great satisfaction to a religious parent
to have given up his child to the Lord in baptism. How can a parent look
with comfort on that child who was never dedicated to God?
What
is the benefit of baptism?
The party
baptised has, (1) An entrance into the visible body of the church. (2)
He has a right sealed to the ordinances, which is a privilege full of glory. Rom
9: 4. (3) The child baptised is under a more special providential
care of Christ, who appoints the tutelage of angels to be the infant’s
life-guard.
Is this
all the benefit?
No! To
such as belong to the election, baptism is a ‘seal of the righteousness
of faith,’ a laver of regeneration, and a badge of adoption. Rom
4: 11.
How does
it appear that children have a right to baptism?
Children
are parties in the covenant of grace. The covenant was made with them.
‘I will establish my covenant between me and thee, and thy seed after thee,
for an everlasting covenant, to be a God unto thee, and to thy seed after
thee.’ Gen
17: 7. ‘The promise is to you and to your children.’ Acts
2: 39. The covenant of grace may be considered either, (1) More
strictly, as an absolute promise to give saving grace; and so none but
the elect are in covenant with God. Or, (2) More largely, as a covenant
containing in it many outward glorious privileges, in which respects the
children of believers do belong to the covenant of grace. The promise is
to you and to your seed. The infant seed of believers may as well lay a
claim to the covenant of grace as their parents; and having a right to
the covenant, they cannot justly be denied baptism, which is its seal.
It is certain the children of believers were once visibly in covenant with
God, and received the seal of their admission into the church; where now
do we find this covenant interest, or church membership of infants, repealed
or made void? Certainly Jesus Christ did not come to put believers and
their children into a worse condition than they were in before. If the
children of believers should not be baptised, they are in worse condition
now than they were in before Christ’s coming.
[1] Objections.
The Scripture is silent herein and does not mention infant baptism.
Though
the word infant baptism is not in Scripture, yet the thing is. Mention
is not made in Scripture of woman’s receiving the sacrament; but who doubts
but the command, ‘Take, eat, this is my body,’ concerns them? Does not
their faith need strengthening as well as others? So the word Trinity is
not to be found in Scripture, but there is that which is equivalent to
it. ‘There are Three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word,
and the Holy Ghost; and these Three are one.’ 1
John 5: 7. So, though the word infant baptism is not mentioned
in Scripture, the practice of baptising infants may be drawn from Scripture
by undeniable consequence.
How is
that proved?
The Scripture
mentions whole families baptised; as the household of Lydia, Crispus, and
the jailer. ‘He was baptised, he and all his.’ Acts
16: 33. Wherein we must rationally imagine there were some little
children. If it be said, there is no mention here made of children; I answer,
neither are servants named; and yet it cannot be supposed but that, in
so great a family, there were some servants.
But infants
are not capable of the end of baptism; for baptism signifies the washing
away of sin by the blood of Christ. Infants cannot understand this; therefore
what benefit can baptism be to them?
Neither
could the child that was to be circumcised understand circumcision; yet
the ordinance of circumcision was not to be omitted or deferred. Though
an infant understand not the meaning of baptism it may partake of the blessing
of baptism. The little children that Christ took in his arms, understood
not Christ’s meaning, but they had Christ’s blessing. ‘He put his hands
upon them and blessed them.’ Mark
10: 16.
But what
benefit can the child have of baptism if it understand not the nature of
baptism?
It may
have a right to the promise sealed up, which it shall have an actual interest
in when it comes to have faith. A legacy may be of use to the child in
the cradle; though it now understand not the legacy, yet when it is grown
up to years, it is fully possessed of it. But it may be further objected:
—
The party
to be baptised is to be engaged to God; but how can the child enter into
such an engagement?
The parents
can engage for it, which God is pleased to accept as equivalent to the
child’s personal engagement.
If baptism
comes in the room of circumcisions, and the males only were circumcised,
what warrant is there for baptising females? Gen
17: 10.
Females
were included, and were virtually circumcised in the males. What is done
to the head is done to the body; the man being the head of the woman. 1
Cor 11: 3. What was done to the male sex was interpretatively
done to the female.
[2] Having
answered these objections, I come now to prove by argument, infant baptism.
(1) If
children during their infancy are capable of grace, they are capable of
baptism; but children in their infancy are capable of grace, therefore
they are capable of baptism. I prove the minor, that they are capable of
grace, thus: if children in their infancy may be saved, then they are capable
of grace; but children in their infancy may be saved; which is thus proved:
that if the kingdom of heaven belongs to them, they may be saved; but the
kingdom of heaven may belong to them, as it is clear from, ‘Of such is
the kingdom of God’ (Mark
10: 14); who then can forbid that the seal of baptism should
be applied to them?
(2) If
infants may be among the number of God’s servants, there is no reason why
they should be shut out of God’s family; but infants may be in the number
of God’s servants, because God calls them his servants. ‘He shall depart
from thee, and his children with him, for they are my servants.’ Lev
25: 41. Therefore children in their infancy, being God’s servants,
why should they not have baptism, which is the tessera,
the mark or seal which God sets upon his servants?
(3) ‘But
now are they (your children) holy.’ 1
Cor 7: 14. Children are not called holy, as if they were free
from original sin; but in the judgement of charity they are to be esteemed
holy, and true members of the church of God, because their parents are
believers. Hence that excellent divine, Mr Hildersam, says, ‘that the children
of the faithful as soon as they are born, have a covenant holiness, and
so a right and title to baptism, which is the token of the covenant.’
(4) From
the opinion of the fathers and the practice of the church. The ancient
fathers were strong asserters of infant baptism, as Irenaeus, Basil, Lactantius,
Cyprian, and Augustine. It was the practice of the Greek church to baptise
her infants. Erasmus says that infant baptism has been used in the church
of God for above fourteen hundred years. And Augustine, in his book against
Pelagius, affirms that it has been the custom of the church in all ages
to baptise infants. Yea, it was an apostolic practice. Paul affirms that
he baptised the whole house of Stephanus. 1
Cor 1: 16.
Having
seen Scripture arguments for infant baptism, let us consider whether the
practice of those who delay the baptising of children till riper years,
be warrantable. For my part, I cannot gather it from Scripture. Though
we read of adult persons, and grown up to years of discretion, in the apostles’
times, being baptised, yet they were such as were converted from heathenish
idolatry to the true orthodox faith; but that in a Christian church the
children of believers should be kept unbaptised for several years, I know
neither precept nor example for it in Scripture, but it is wholly apocryphal.
The baptising of persons, grown up to maturity, we may argue against ab
effectu, from the ill consequence
of it. They dip the persons they baptise over head and ears in cold water,
and naked; which, as it is indecent, so it is dangerous, and has often
been the occasion of chronic disease, yea, and of death itself; and so
is a plain breach of the sixth commandment. How far God has given up many
persons, who are for deferring baptism, to other vile opinions and vicious
practices, is evident, if we consult history; especially if we read the
doings of the Anabaptists in Germany.
Use one.
See the riches of God’s goodness, who will not only be the God of believers,
but takes their seed into covenant with them. ‘I will establish my covenant
between me and thee, and thy seed after thee, to be a God unto thee and
to thy seed.’ Gen
17: 7. A father counts it a great privilege, not only to have
his own name, but his child’s name put in a will.
Use two.
Those parents are to be blamed who forbid little children to be brought
to Christ; and withhold from them this ordinance. By denying their infants
baptism, they exclude them from membership in the visible church, so that
their infants are sucking pagans. Such as deny their children baptism,
make God’s institutions under the law more full of kindness and grace to
children than they are under the gospel; which, how strange a paradox it
is, I leave you to judge.
Use three.
For exhortation. (1) Let us who are baptised, labour to find the blessed
fruits of it in our own souls; not only to have the signs of the covenant,
but the grace of the covenant. Many glory in their baptism. The Jews gloried
in their circumcision, because of their royal privileges; to them belonged
the adoption, and the glory, and the covenants. Rom
9: 4. But many of them were a shame and reproach to their circumcision.
‘For the name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles through you.’ Rom
2: 24. The scandalous Jews, though circumcised, were, in God’s
account, as heathens. ‘Are ye not as children of the Ethiopians to me?
saith the Lord.’ Amos
9: 7. Alas! what is it to have the name of Christ, and want
his image? What is baptism of water without the baptism of the Spirit?
Many baptised Christians are no better than heathens. O let us labour to
find the fruits of baptism, that Christ is formed in us (Gal
4: 19); that our nature is changed; that we are made holy and
heavenly. This is to be baptised into Jesus. Rom
6: 3. Such as live unsuitable to their baptism, may go with
baptismal-water on their faces, and sacramental bread in their mouths,
to hell.
(2) Let
us labour to make a right use of our baptism. Let us use it as a shield
against temptations. Satan, I have given up myself to God by a sacred vow
in baptism; I am not my own, I am Christ’s; therefore I cannot yield to
thy temptations, for I should break my oath of allegiance which I made
to God in baptism. Luther tells us of a pious woman, who, when the devil
tempted her to sin, answered, Satan, baptizata sum, ‘I am baptised;’ and
so beat back the tempter.
Let us
use it as a spur to holiness. By remembering our baptism, let us be stirred
up to make good our baptismal engagements; renouncing the world, flesh,
and devil, let us devote ourselves to God and his service. To be baptised
into the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, implies a solemn dedication
of ourselves to the service of all the Three Persons in the Trinity. It
is not enough that our parents dedicate us to God in baptism, but we must
dedicate ourselves to him; this is called living to the Lord. Rom
14: 8. Our life should be spent in worshipping God, in loving
God, in exalting God; we should walk as becomes the gospel. Phil
1: 27. We should shine as stars in the world, and live as earthly
angels.
Let us
use it as an argument to courage. We should be ready to confess that Holy
Trinity, into whose name we were baptised. With the conversion of the heart
must go the confession of the tongue. ‘Whosoever shall confess me before
men, him shall the Son of man also confess before the angels of God.’ Luke
12: 8. Peter openly confessed Christ crucified. Acts
4: 10. Cyprian, a man of a brave spirit, was like a rock, whom
no waves could shake; like an adamant, whom no sword could cut. He confessed
Christ before the pro-consul, and suffered himself to be proscribed; yea,
chose death rather than betray the truths of Christ. He that dare not confess
the Holy Trinity, shames his baptism, and God will be ashamed to own him
at the day of judgement.
Use four.
See the fearfulness of the sin of apostasy! It is renouncing our baptism.
It is damnable perjury to go away from God after a solemn vow. ‘Demas has
forsaken me.’ 2
Tim 4: 10. He turned renegado, and afterwards became a priest
in an idol-temple, says Dorotheus. Julia the apostate, Gregory Nazianzen
observes, bathed himself in the blood of beasts offered in sacrifice to
heathen gods; and so, as much as in him lay, washed off his former baptism.
The case of such as fall away after baptism is dreadful. ‘If any man draw
back.’ Heb
10: 38. The Greek word to draw back, alludes to a soldier that
steals away from his colours; so, if any man steal away from Christ, and
run over to the devil’s side, ‘my soul shall have no pleasure in him;’
that is, I will be severely avenged on him; I will make my arrows drunk
with his blood. If all the plagues in the Bible can make that man miserable,
he shall be so.
4.5 The Lord’s Supper
‘And
as they did eat, Jesus took bread,’ &c. Mark
14: 22.
Having
spoken to the sacrament of baptism, I come now to the sacrament of the
Lord’s Supper. The Lord’s Supper is the most spiritual and sweetest ordinance
that ever was instituted. Here we have to do more immediately with the
person of Christ. In prayer, we draw nigh to God; in the sacrament, we
become one with him. In prayer, we look up to Christ; in the sacrament,
by faith, we touch him. In the word preached, we hear Christ’s voice; in
the sacrament, we feed on him.
What names
and titles in Scripture are given to the sacrament?
It is called, Mensa
Domini, ‘The Lord’s table.’ 1
Cor 10: 21. The Papists call it an altar, not a table. The reason
is, because they turn the sacrament into a sacrifice, and pretend to offer
up Christ corporally in the mass. It being the Lord’s table, shows with
what reverence and solemn devotion we should approach these holy mysteries.
The Lord takes notice of the frame of our hearts when we come to his table.
‘The king came in to see the guests.’ Matt
22: 11. We dress ourselves when we come to the table of some
great monarch; so, when we are going to the table of the Lord, we should
dress ourselves by holy meditation and heart consideration. Many think
it is enough to come to the sacrament, but mind not whether they come in
‘due order.’ 1
Chron 15: 13. Perhaps they had scarce a serious thought before
where they were going: all their dressing was by the glass, not by the
Bible. Chrysostom calls it, ‘The dreadful table of the Lord:’ and so it
is to such as come unworthily. The sacrament is called Coena
Domini, the Lord’s supper — to
import, it is a spiritual feast. 1
Cor 11: 20. It is a royal feast. God is in this cheer: Christ,
in both natures, God and man, is the matter of this supper. It is called
a ‘communion.’ ‘The bread which we break, is it not the communion of the
body of Christ?’ 1
Cor 10: 16. The sacrament being called a communion, shows: —
(1) That
this ordinance is for believers only, because none else can have communion
with Christ in these holy mysteries. Communio
fundatur in unione [Communion is
based upon union]. Faith only gives us union with Christ, and by virtue
of this we have communion with him in his body and blood. None but the
spouse communicates with her husband; a stranger may drink of his cup,
but she only has his heart, and communicates with him in a conjugal manner;
so strangers may drink of the cup, but believers only drink of Christ’s
blood, and have communion with him.
(2) The
sacrament being a communion, shows that it is symbolum
amoris [a symbol of love], a bond
of that unity and charity which should be among Christians. ‘We being many
are one body.’ 1
Cor 10: 17. As many grains make one bread, so many Christians
are one body. A sacrament is a love-feast. The primitive Christians, as
Justin Martyr notes, had their holy salutations at the blessed supper,
in token of that dearness of affection which they had to each other. It
is a communion, therefore — there must be love and union. The Israelites
did eat the Passover with bitter herbs; so must we eat the sacrament with
bitter herbs of repentance, but not with bitter hearts of wrath and malice.
The hearts of the communicants should be knit together with the bond of
love. ‘Thou braggest of thy faith’ says Augustine, ‘but show me thy faith
by thy love to the saints.’ For, as in the sun, light and heat are inseparable,
so faith and love are twisted together inseparably. Where there are divisions,
the Lord’s supper is not properly a communion but a disunion.
What is
the Lord’s supper?
It is a
visible sermon, wherein Christ crucified is set before us; or, it is a
sacrament of the New Testament, wherein by receiving the holy elements
of bread and wine, our communion with Christ is signified and sealed up
to us; or it is a sacrament divinely instituted, wherein by giving and
receiving bread and wine, Christ’s death is showed forth, and the worthy
receivers by faith are made partakers of his body and blood, and all the
benefits flowing from thence.
For further
explaining the nature of the Lord’s supper, I shall refer to its institution.
‘Jesus
took bread.’ Here is the master of the feast, or the institutor of the
sacrament. The Lord Jesus took bread. He only is fit to institute a sacrament
who is able to give virtue and blessing to it.
‘He took
bread.’ His taking the bread was one part of his consecration of the elements,
and setting them apart for a holy use. As Christ consecrated the elements,
so we must labour to have our hearts consecrated before we receive these
holy mysteries in the Lord’s supper. How unseemly is it to see any come
to these holy elements, having hearts leavened with pride, covetousness,
or envy? These, with Judas, receive the devil in the sop, and are no better
than crucifiers of the Lord of glory.
‘And blessed
it.’ This is another part of the consecration of the element. Christ blessed
it. He blesseth and it shall be blessed. He looked up to heaven for a benediction
upon this newly-founded ordinance.
‘And brake
it.’ The bread broken, and the wine poured out, signify to us the agony
and ignominy of Christ’s sufferings, the rending of Christ’s body on the
cross, and the effusion of blood which was distilled from his blessed side.
‘And gave
it to them.’ Christ’s giving the bread, denotes giving himself and all
his benefits to us freely. Though he was sold, yet he was given. Judas
sold Christ, but Christ gave himself to us.
‘He gave
it to them;’ that is, to the disciples. This is children’s bread. Christ
does not cast these pearls before swine. Whether Judas was present at the
supper is controverted. I incline to think he was not, for Christ said
to the disciples, ‘This is my blood, which is shed for you.’ Luke
22: 20. He knew his blood was never shed effectually and intentionally
for Judas. In eating the passover, he gave Judas a sop, which was a bit
of unleavened bread dipped in a sauce made with bitter herbs; Judas having
received the sop, went out immediately. John
13: 30. Suppose Judas was there, he received the elements, but
not the blessing.
‘Take,
eat.’ This expression of eating denotes four things; (1) The near mystic
union between Christ and his saints. As the meat which is eaten incorporates
with the body, and becomes one with it, so, by eating Christ’s flesh, and
drinking his blood spiritually, we partake of his merits and graces, and
are mystically ‘one with them.’ ‘I in them.’ John
17: 23. (2) ‘Take, eat.’ Eating shows the infinite delight the
believing soul has in Christ. Eating is grateful and pleasing to the palate;
so feeding on Christ by a lively faith is delicious. Nullus
animae suavior cibus [The soul
knows no sweeter food]. Lactantius. No such sweet feeding as on Christ
crucified. This is a ‘feast of fat things, and wines on the lees well refined.’
(3) ‘Take, eat.’ Eating denotes nourishment. As meat is delicious to the
palate, so it is nourishing to the body; so eating Christ’s flesh and drinking
his blood, is nutritive to the soul. The new creature is nourished at the
table of the Lord to everlasting life. ‘Whose eateth my flesh, and drinketh
my blood, has eternal life.’ John
6: 54. (4) ‘Take, eat,’ shows the wisdom of God, who restores
us by the same means by which we fell. We fell by taking and eating the
forbidden fruit, and we are recovering again by taking and eating Christ’s
flesh. We died by eating the tree of knowledge, and we live by eating the
tree of life.
‘This
is my body.’ These words, Hoc
est corpus meum, have been much
controverted between us and the Papists. ‘This is my body;’ that is, by
a metonymy; it is a sign and figure of my body. The Papists hold transsubstantiation
— that the bread, after consecration, is turned into the very substance
of Christ’s body. We say, we receive Christ’s body spiritually; they say,
they receive Christ’s body carnally; which is contrary to Scripture. Scripture
affirms, that the heavens must receive Christ’s body ‘until the times of
the restitution of all things.’ Acts
3: 21. Christ’s body cannot be at the same time in heaven and
in the host. Aquinas says, ‘It is not possible by any miracle, that a body
should be locally in two places at once.’ Besides, it is absurd to imagine
that the bread in the sacrament should be turned into Christ’s flesh, and
that his body which was hung before, should be made again of bread. So
that, ‘This is my body,’ is, as if Christ had said, ‘This is a sign and
representation of my body.’
‘And he
took the cup.’ The cup is put by a metonymy of the subject for the adjunct,
for the wine in the cup. It signifies the blood of Christ shed for our
sins. The taking of the cup denotes the redundancy of merit in Christ,
and the fulness of our redemption by him. He not only took the bread, but
the cup.
‘And when
he had given thanks.’ Christ gave thanks that God had given these elements
of bread and wine to be signs and seals of man’s redemption by Christ.
Christ’s giving thanks shows his philanthropy, or love to mankind, who
did so rejoice and bless God that lost man was now in a way of recovery,
and that he should be raised higher in Christ than ever he was in innocence.
‘He gave
the cup to them.’ Why then dare any withhold the cup? This is to pollute
and curtail the ordinance, and alter it from its primitive institution.
Christ and his apostles administered the sacrament in both kinds, the bread
and the cup. 1
Cor 11: 24, 25. The cup was received in the ancient church for
the space of 1400 years, as is confessed by two Popish councils. Christ
says expressly, ‘Drink ye all of this.’ He does not say, ‘Eat ye all of
this;’ but ‘Drink ye all;’ as foreseeing the sacrilegious impiety of the
church of Rome, in keeping back the cup from the people. The Popish council
of Constance speaks plainly but impudently, ‘That although Christ instituted
and administered the sacrament in both kinds, the bread and the wine, yet
the authority of the holy canons, and the customs of the mother church,
think good to deny the cup to the laity.’ Thus, as the Popish priests make
Christ but half a Saviour, so they administer to the people but half a
sacrament. The sacrament is Christ’s last will and testament ‘This is my
blood of the New Testament.’ Now, to alter or take away any thing from
a man’s will and testament, is great impiety. What is it to alter and mangle
Christ’s last will and testament? Sure it is a high affront to Christ.
What are
the ends of the Lord’s supper?
(1) It
is an ordinance appointed to confirm our faith. ‘Except ye see signs ye
will not believe.’ John
4: 48. Christ sets the elements before us, that by these signs
our faith may be strengthened. As faith comes by hearing, so it is confirmed
by seeing Christ crucified. The sacrament is not only a sign to represent
Christ, but a seal to confirm our interest in him.
But the
Spirit confirms faith, therefore not the sacrament.
This is
not good logic. The Spirit confirms faith, therefore not the sacrament,
is, as if one should say, ‘God feeds our bodies, therefore bread does not
feed us;’ whereas, God feeds us by bread, so the Spirit confirms our faith
by the use of the sacrament.
(2) The
end of the sacrament is to keep up the ‘memory of Christ’s death.’ ‘This
do ye in remembrance of me.’ 1
Cor 11: 25. If a friend gives us a ring at his death, we wear
it to keep up the memory of our friend; much more ought we to keep the
memorial of Christ’s death in the sacrament. His death lays a foundation
for all the magnificent blessings which we receive from him. The covenant
of grace was agreed on in heaven, but sealed upon the cross. Christ has
sealed all the articles of peace in his blood. Remission of sin flows from
Christ’s death. ‘This is my blood of the New Testament, which is shed for
many, for the remission of sins.’ Matt
26: 28. Consecration, or making us holy, is the fruit of Christ’s
death. ‘How much more shall the blood of Christ purge your conscience?’ Heb
9: 14. Christ’s intercession is made available to us by virtue
of his death. He could not have been admitted an advocate if he had not
been first a sacrifice. Our entering into heaven is the fruit of his blood. Heb
10: 19. He could not have prepared mansions for us, if he had
not first purchased them by his death: so that we have great cause to commemorate
his death in the sacrament.
In what
manner are we to remember the Lord’s death in the sacrament?
It is
not only an historical remembrance of Christ’s death and passion. Judas
remembered his death and betrayed him; and Pilate remembered his death
and crucified him: but our remembering his death in the sacrament must
be, [1] A mournful remembrance. We should not be able to look on Christ
crucified with dry eyes. ‘They shall look on him whom they have pierced,
and mourn over him.’ Zech
12: 10. O Christian, when thou lookest on Christ in the sacrament,
remember how often thou hast crucified him! The Jews did it but once, thou
often. Every oath is a nail with which thou piercest his hands; every unjust
sinful action is a spear with which thou woundest his heart. Oh, remember
Christ with sorrow, to think thou shouldst make his wounds bleed afresh!
[2] It must be a joyful remembrance. ‘Abraham rejoiced to see my day.’ John
8: 56. When a Christian sees a sacrament-day approaching, he
should rejoice. This ordinance of the supper is an earnest of heaven; it
is the glass in which we see him whom our souls love, it is the chariot
by which we are carried up to Christ. When Jacob saw the wagons and the
chariots which were to carry him to his son Joseph, his spirit revived. Gen
45: 27. God has appointed the sacrament on purpose to cheer
and revive a sad heart. When we look on our sins we have cause to mourn;
but when we see Christ’s blood shed for our sins we rejoice. In the sacrament
our wants are supplied, our strength is renewed; there we meet with Christ,
and does not this call for joy? A woman that has been long debarred from
the society of her husband is glad of his presence. At the sacrament the
believing spouse meets with Christ; he saith to her, ‘All I have is thine;
my love is thine, to pity thee; my mercy is thine, to save thee.’ How can
we think in the sacrament on Christ’s blood shed, and not rejoice? Sanguis
Christi clavis paradisi; ‘Christ’s
blood is the key which opens heaven,’ else we had been all shut out.
(3) The
end of the sacrament is to work in us an endeared love to Christ. When
Christ bleeds for us, well may we say, ‘Behold how he loved us!’ Who can
see Christ die and not be ‘sick of love?’ That is a heart of stone which
Christ’s love will not melt.
(4) The
end of the sacrament is the mortifying of corruption. To see Christ crucified
for us is a means to crucify sin in us. His death, like the water of jealousy,
makes the thigh of sin to rot. Numb
5: 27. How can a wife endure to see the spear which killed her
husband? How can we endure those sins which made Christ veil his glory
and lose his blood? When the people of Rome saw Caesar’s bloody robe, they
were incensed against them that slew him. Sin has rent the white robe of
Christ’s flesh and dyed it of a crimson colour. The thoughts of this should
make us seek to be avenged on our sins.
(5) Another
end is the augmentation and increase of all the graces, hope, zeal, and
patience. The word preached begets grace, the Lord’s supper nourishes it.
The body by feeding increases strength, so the soul by feeding on Christ
sacramentally. Cum
defecerit virtus mea calicem salutarem accipiam.
Bernard. ‘When my spiritual strength begins to fail, I know a remedy,’
says Bernard, ‘I will go to the table of the Lord; there will I drink and
recover my decayed strength.’ There is a difference between dead stones
and living plants. The wicked, who are stones, receive no spiritual increase;
but the godly, who are plants of righteousness, being watered with Christ’s
blood, grow more fruitful in grace.
Why are
we to receive this holy supper?
(1) Because
it is an incumbent duty. ‘Take, eat.’ And observe, it is a command of love.
If Christ had commanded us some great matter, would we not have done it?
‘If the prophet had bid thee do some great thing, wouldest thou not have
done it?’ 2
Kings 5: 13. If Christ had enjoined us to have given him thousands
of rams, or to have parted with the fruit of our bodies, would we not have
done it? Much more when he only says, ‘Take,’ and ‘Eat.’ Let my broken
body feed you, let my blood poured out save you. ‘Take,’ and ‘Eat.’ This
is a command of love, and shall we not readily obey?
(2) We
are to celebrate the Lord’s supper, because it is provoking Christ to stay
away. ‘Wisdom has furnished her table.’ Prov
9: 2. So Christ has furnished his table, set bread and wine
(representing his body and blood) before his guests, and when they wilfully
turn their backs upon the ordinance, he looks upon it as slighting his
love, and it makes the fury rise up in his face. ‘For I say unto you, that
none of those men which were bidden shall taste of my supper.’ Luke
14: 24. I will shut them out of my kingdom, I will provide them
a black banquet, where weeping shall be the first course, and gnashing
of teeth the second.
Should
the Lord’s supper be often administered?
Yes. ‘As
often as ye eat this bread.’ 1
Cor 11: 26. The ordinance is not to be celebrated once in a
year, or once only in our lives, but often. A Christian’s own necessities
may make him come often hither. His corruptions are strong, therefore he
had need come often hither for an antidote to expel the poison of sin.
His graces are weak. Grace is like a lamp, which if it be not often fed
with oil is apt to go out. Rev
3: 2. How then do they sin against God who come but very seldom
to this ordinance! Can they thrive who for a long time forbear their food?
Others there are who wholly forbear, which is a great contempt offered
to Christ’s ordinance. They tacitly say, Let Christ keep his feast to himself.
What a cross-grained piece is a man! He will eat when he should not, and
he will not eat when he should. When God says, ‘Eat not of this forbidden
fruit;’ then he will be sure to eat: when God says, ‘Eat of this bread,
and drink of this cup;’ then he refuses to eat.
Are all
to come promiscuously to this holy ordinance?
No; for
that were to make the Lord’s table an ordinary. Christ forbids to ‘cast
pearls before swine.’ Matt
7: 6. The sacramental bread is children’s bread, and it is not
to be cast to the profane. As, at the giving of the law God set bounds
about the mount that none might touch it, so God’s table should be guarded,
that the profane should not come near. Exod
19: 12. In primitive times, after sermon was done, and the Lord’s
supper was about to be celebrated, an officer stood up and cried, ‘Holy
things for holy men;’ and then several of the congregation departed. ‘I
would have my hand cut off,’ says Chrysostom, ‘rather than I would give
Christ’s body and blood to the profane.’ The wicked do not eat Christ’s
flesh, but tear it; they do not drink his blood, but spill it. These holy
mysteries in the sacraments are tremenda
hysteria, mysteries that the soul
is to tremble at. Sinners defile the holy things of God, they poison the
sacramental cup. We read that the wicked are to be set at Christ’s feet,
not at his table. Psa
110: 1.
That we
may receive the supper of the Lord worthily, and that it may become efficacious:
—
I. We
must solemnly prepare ourselves before we come. We must not rush upon the
ordinance rudely and irreverently, but come in due order. There was a great
deal of preparation for the passover, and the sacrament comes in the room
of it. 2
Chron 30: 18, 19. This solemn preparation for the ordinance
consists: —
[1] In
examining ourselves. [2] In dressing our souls before we come, which is
by washing in the water of repentance and by exciting the habit of grace
into exercise. [3] In begging a blessing upon the ordinance.
[1] Solemn
preparation for the sacrament consists in self-examination. ‘But let a
man examine himself, and so let him eat.’ 1
Cor 11: 28. It is not only a counsel, but a charge: ‘Let him
examine himself. ‘ As if a king should say, ‘Let it be enacted.’ These
elements in the supper having been consecrated by Jesus Christ to a high
mystery, represent his body and blood; therefore there must be preparation;
and if preparation, there must be first self-examination. Let us be serious
in examining ourselves, as our salvation depends upon it. We are curious
in examining other things; we will not take gold till we examine it by
the touchstone; we will not take land before we examine the title; and
shall we not be as exact and curious in examining the state of our souls?
What is
required for this self-examination?
There
must be a solemn retirement of the soul. We must set ourselves apart, and
retire for some time from all secular employment, that we may be more serious
in the work. There is no casting up accounts in a crowd; nor can we examine
ourselves when we are in a crowd of worldly business. We read, that a man
who was in a journey might not come to the Passover, because his mind was
full of secular cares, and his thoughts were taken up about his journey. Num
9: 13. When we are upon self-examining work, we had not need
to be in a hurry, or have any distracting thoughts, but to retire and lock
ourselves up in our closets, that we may be more intent upon the work.
What is
self-examination?
It is
the setting up a court of conscience and keeping a register there that
by a strict scrutiny a man may see how matters stand between Got and his
soul. It is a spiritual inquisition, a heart-anatomy, whereby a man takes
his heart in pieces, as a watch, and sees what is defective therein. It
is a dialogue with one’s self ‘I commune with my own heart.’ Psa
77: 6. David called himself to account, and put interrogatories
to his own heart. Self-examination is a critical enquiry or search. As
the woman in the parable lighted a candle and searched for her lost groat,
so conscience is the candle of the Lord. Luke
15: 8. Search with this candle what thou can’t find wrought
by the Spirit in thee.
What is
the rule by which we are to examine ourselves?
The rule
or measure by which we must examine ourselves is the Holy Scripture. We
must not make fancy, or the good opinion which others have of us, a rule
to judge of ourselves. As the goldsmith brings his gold to the touchstone,
so we must bring our hearts to a Scripture touchstone. ‘To the law and
to the testimony.’ Isa
8: 20. What says the word? Are we divorced from sin? Are we
renewed by the Spirit? Let the word decide whether we are fit communicants
or not. We judge of colours by the sun, so we must judge of the state of
our souls by the sunlight of Scripture.
What are
the principal reasons for self-examination before we approach the Lord’s
supper?
(1) It
is a duty imposed: ‘Let him examine himself.’ The passover was not to be
eaten raw. Exod
12: 9. To come to such an ordinance slightly, without examination,
is to come in an undue manner, and is like eating the passover raw.
(2) We
must examine ourselves before we come, because it is not only a duty imposed,
but opposed. There is nothing to which the heart is naturally more averse
than self-examination. We may know that duty to be good which the heart
opposes. But why does the heart so oppose it? Because it crosses the tide
of corrupt nature, and is contrary to flesh and blood. The heart is guilty;
and does a guilty person love to be examined? The heart opposes it; therefore
the rather set upon it; for that duty is good which the heart opposes.
(3) Because
self-examination is a needful work. Without it, a man can never tell how
it is with him, whether he has grace or not; and this must needs be very
uncomfortable. He knows not, if he should die presently what will become
of him, to what coast he shall sail, whether to hell or heaven; as Socrates
said, ‘I am about to die, and the gods know whether I shall be happy or
miserable.’ How needful, therefore, is self-examination; that a man by
search may know the true state of his soul, and how it will go with him
to eternity!
Self-examination
is needful, with respect to the excellence of the sacrament. Let him eat de
illo pane, ‘of that bread,’ that
excellent bread, that consecrated bread, that bread which is not only the
bread of the Lord, but the bread the Lord. 1
Cor 11: 28. Let him drink de
illo poculo, ‘of that cup;’ that
precious cup, which is perfumed and spiced with Christ’s love; that cup
which holds the blood of God sacramentally. Cleopatra put a jewel in a
cup which contained the price of a kingdom: this sacred cup we are to drink
of, enriched with the blood of God, is above the price of a kingdom; it
is more worth than heaven. Therefore, coming to such a royal feast, having
a whole Christ, both his divine and human nature to feed on, how should
we examine ourselves beforehand, that we may be fit guests for such a magnificent
banquet!
Self-examination
is needful, because God will examine us. That was a sad question, ‘Friend,
how camest thou in hither, not having a wedding garment?’ Matt
22: 12. Men are loath to ask themselves the question, ‘O my
soul! art thou a fit guest for the Lord’s table?’ Are there not some sins
thou hast to bewail? Are there not some evidences for heaven that thou
hast to get?’ Now, when persons will not ask themselves the question, then
God will bring the question to them, How came you in hither to my table,
not prepared? How came you in hither, with an unbelieving or profane heart?
Such a question will cause a heart-trembling. God will examine a man, as
the chief captain would Paul, with scourging. Acts
22: 24. It is true that the best saint, if God should weigh
him in the balance, would be found wanting: but, when a Christian has made
an impartial search, and has laboured to deal uprightly between God and
his own soul, Christ’s merits will cast in some grains of allowance into
the scales.
Self-examination
is needful, because of secret corruption in the heart, which will not be
found out without searching. There are in the heart plangendae
tenebrae, Augustine, ‘hidden pollutions.’
It is with a Christian, as with Joseph’s brethren, who, when the steward
accused them of having the cup, were ready to swear they had it not; but
upon search it was found in one of their sacks. Little does a Christian
think what pride, atheism, uncleanness is in his heart till he searches
it. If there be therefore such hidden wickedness, like a spring running
under ground, we had need examine ourselves, that finding out our secret
sin, we may be humbled and repent. Hidden sins, if not searched out, defile
the soul. If corn lie long in the chaff, the chaff defiles the corn; so
sins long hidden defile our duties. Needful therefore it is, before we
come to the holy supper, to search out these hidden sins, as Israel searched
for leaven before they came to the passover.
Self-examination
is needful, because without it we may easily have a cheat put upon us.
‘The heart is deceitful above all things.’ Jer
17: 9. Many a man’s heart will tell him he is fit for the Lord’s
table. As when Christ asked the sons of Zebedee, ‘Are ye able to drink
of the cup that I shall drink of?’ Matt
20: 22. Can ye drink such a bloody cup of suffering? ‘They say
unto him, We are able.’ So the heart will suggest to a man, he is fit to
drink of the sacramental cup, he has on the wedding-garment. Grande
profundum est homo. Augustine.
‘The heart is a grand impostor.’ As a cheating tradesmen will put one off
with bad wares, so the heart will put a man off with seeming grace, instead
of saving. A tear or two shed is repentance, a few lazy desires are faith,
just as blue and red flowers growing among corn, look like good flowers,
but are beautiful weeds only. The foolish virgins’ vessels looked as if
they had oil in them, but they had none. Therefore, to prevent a cheat,
that we may not take false grace instead of true, we had need make a thorough
search of our hearts before we come to the Lord’s table.
Self-examination
is needful, because of the false fears which the godly are apt to nourish
in their hearts, which make them go sad to the sacrament. As they who have
no grace, for want of examining, presume, so they who have grace, for want
of examining, are ready to despair. Many of God’s children look upon themselves
through the black spectacles of fear. They fear Christ is not formed in
them, they fear they have no right to the promise; and these fears in the
heart cause tears in the eye; whereas, would they but search and examine,
they might find they had grace. Are not their hearts humbled for sin? What
is this but the bruised reed? Do not they weep after the Lord? What are
these tears but seeds of faith? Do they not thirst after Christ in an ordinance?
What is this but the new creature crying for the breast? Here are, you
see, seeds of grace; and, would Christians examine their hearts, they might
see there is something of God in them, and so their false fears would be
prevented, and they might approach with comfort to the holy mysteries in
the Eucharist.
Self-examination
is needful with respect to the danger of coming unworthily without it.
He ‘shall be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord.’ 1
Cor 11: 27. Par
facit quasi Christum trucidaret[It
is as if he were butchering Christ]. Grotius. God reckons with him as with
a crucifier of the Lord Jesus. He does not drink Christ’s blood, but sheds
it; and so brings that curse upon him, as when the Jews said, ‘His blood
be upon us and our children.’ Than the virtue of Christ’s blood, nothing
is more comfortable; than the guilt of it, nothing is more formidable.
(4) We
must examine ourselves before the sacrament, on account of the difficulty
of the work. Difficulty raises a noble spirit. Self-examination is difficult,
because it is an inward work, it lies with the heart. External acts of
devotion are easy; to lift up the eye, to bow the knee, to read over a
few prayers, is as easy as for the Papists to tell over a few beads; but
to examine a man’s self, to take the heart in pieces, to make a Scripture-trial
of our fitness for the Lord’s supper, is not easy. Reflexive acts are hardest.
The eye cannot see itself but by a glass; so we must have the glass of
the word and conscience to see our own hearts. It is easy to spy the faults
of others; but it is hard to find out our owns. Self-examination is difficult,
with regard to self-love. As ignorance blinds, so self-love flatters. What
Solomon says of love, ‘Love covereth all sins,’ is most true of self-love. Prov
10: 12. A man looking upon himself in the flattering glass of
self-love, his virtues appear greater than they are, and his sins less.
Self-love makes a man rather excuse himself, than examine himself; self-love
makes one think the best of himself; and he who has a good opinion of himself,
does not suspect himself; and not suspecting himself, he is not forward
to examine himself. The work, therefore, of self-examination being so difficult,
requires the more impartiality and industry. Difficulty should be a spur
to diligence.
(5) We
must examine ourselves before we come, because of the benefit of self-examination.
The benefit is great whatever way it terminates. If, upon examination,
we find that we have no grace in truth, the mistake is discovered, and
the danger prevented; if we find that we have grace, we may take the comfort
of it. He who, upon search, finds that he has the minimum
quod sit, the least degree of grace,
he is like one that has found his box of evidences; he is a happy man;
he is a fit guest at the Lord’s table; he is heir to all the promises;
he is as sure to go to heaven as if he were in heaven already.
What must
we examine?
(1) Our
sins. Search if any dead fly spoils sweet ointment. When we come to the
sacrament, as the Jews did before the passover, we should search for leaven,
and having found it we should burn it. Let us search for the leaven of
pride. This sours our holy things. Will a humble Christ be received into
a proud heart? Pride keeps Christ out. Intus
existens prohibet alienum [Its
presence within blocks the entrance of any other]. To a proud man Christ’s
blood has no virtue; it is like a cordial put into a dead man’s mouth,
which loses its virtue. Let us search for the leaven of pride, and cast
it away. Let us search for the leaven of avarice. The Lord’s supper is
a spiritual mystery, to represent Christ’s body and blood; what should
an earthly heart do here? The earth puts out the fire; so earthliness quencheth
the fire of holy love. The earth is elementum
gravissimum [the heaviest of the
elements], it cannot ascend. A soul belimed with earth cannot ascend to
heavenly cogitations. ‘Covetousness, which is idolatry.’ Col
3: 5. Will Christ come into the heart where there is an idol?
Search for this leaven before you come to this ordinance. How can an earthly
heart converse with that God which is a spirit? Can a clod of earth kiss
the sun? Search for the leaven of hypocrisy. ‘Beware ye of the leaven of
the Pharisees, which is hypocrisy.’ Luke
12: 1. Aquinas describes it as simulatio
virtutis: hypocrisy is ‘the counterfeiting
of virtue.’ The hypocrite is a living pageant, he only makes a show of
religion; he gives God his knee, but no heart; and God gives him bread
and wine in the sacrament, but no Christ. Oh, let us search for this leaven
of hypocrisy and burn it!
(2) We
must examine our graces. I shall instance one only — our knowledge.
We are
to examine whether we have knowledge, or we cannot give God a reasonable
service. Rom
12: 1. Knowledge is a necessary requisite in a communicant;
without it there can be no fitness for the sacrament. A person cannot be
fit to come to the Lord’s table who has no goodness; but without knowledge
the mind is not good. Prov
19: 2. Some say they have good hearts, though they want knowledge;
as if one should say, his eye is good, but it wants sight. Under the law,
when the plague of leprosy was in a man’s head, the priest was to pronounce
him unclean. The ignorant person has the plague in his head, he is unclean;
ignorance is the womb of lust. 1
Pet 1: 14. Therefore it is requisite, before we come, to examine
what knowledge we have in the main fundamentals of religion. Let it not
be said of us, that ‘unto this day the vail is upon their heart.’ 2
Cor 3: 15. In this intelligent age, we cannot but have some
insight into the mysteries of the gospel. I rather fear, we are like Rachel,
who was fair and well-sighted, but barren: therefore,
Let us
examine whether our knowledge be rightly qualified. Is it influential.
Does our knowledge warm our heart? Claritas
intellectu parit ardorem in effectu
[Clearness in the understanding breeds zeal in the doing]. Saving knowledge
not only directs but quickens; it is the light of life. John
8: 12. Is our knowledge practical? We hear much; do we love
the truths we know? That is the right knowledge which not only adorns the
mind, but reforms the life.
[2] This
solemn preparation for the sacrament consists in dressing our souls before
we come. This soul-dress is in two things:
(1) Washing
in the lever of repenting tears. To come to this ordinance with the guilt
of any sin unrepented of makes way for further hardening of the heart,
and gives Satan fuller possession of it. ‘They shall look on me whom they
have pierced, and they shall mourn for him.’ Zech
12: 10. The cloud of sorrow must drop into tears. We must grieve
as for the pollution, so for the unkindness in every sin which is against
Christ’s love who died for us. When Peter thought of Christ’s love in calling
him out of his unregeneracy to make him an apostle, and to carry him up
to the mount of transfiguration, where he saw the glory of heaven in a
vision, and then of his denying Christ, it broke his heart: ‘he wept bitterly.’ Matt
26: 75. To think, before we come to a sacrament, of sins against
the bowel-mercies of God the Father, the bleeding wounds of God the Son,
the blessed inspirations of God the Holy Ghost, is enough to fill our eyes
with tears, and put us into a holy agony of grief and compunction. We must
be distressed for sin, be divorced from it. Before the serpent drinks it
casts up its poison; in this we must be wise as serpents. Before we drink
of the sacramental cup we must cast up the poison of sin by repentance. Ille
vere plangit commissa, qui non committit plangenda.
Augustine. ‘He truly bewails the sins he has committed who does not commit
the sins he has bewailed.’
(2) The
soul-dress is the exciting and stirring up the habit of grace into a lively
exercise. ‘I put thee in remembrance, that thou stir up the gift of God
which is in thee,’ that is, the gifts and graces of the Spirit. 2
Tim 1: 6. The Greek word to stir up, signifies to blow up grace
into a flame. Grace is often like fire in the embers, which needs blowing
up. It is possible that even a good man may not come so well disposed to
this ordinance, because he has not before taken pains with his heart to
come in due order, to stir up grace into vigorous exercise; and though
he does not eat and drink damnation, yet he does not receive consolation
in the sacrament.
[3] A
solemn preparation for the sacrament consists in begging a blessing upon
the ordinance. The efficacy of the sacrament depends upon the co-operation
of the Spirit, and a word of blessing. In the institution, Christ blessed
the elements: ‘Jesus took bread and blessed it.’ The sacrament will do
us good no farther than it is blessed to us. We ought, before we come,
to pray for a blessing, that it may not only be a sign to represent, but
a seal to conform, and an instrument to convey Christ and all his benefits
to us. We are to pray that this great ordinance may be poison to our sins,
and food to our graces. As with Jonathan, when he tasted the honeycomb,
‘and his eyes were enlightened;’ so by receiving this holy Eucharist, our
eyes may be enlightened to ‘discern the Lord’s body.’ 1
Sam 14: 27. Thus should we implore a blessing upon the ordinance
before we come. The sacrament is like a tree hung full of fruit, but none
of this fruit will fall unless shaken by the hand of prayer.
II. That
the sacrament may be effectual to us, there must be a right participation
of it, which consists in four things.
[1] When
we draw nigh to God’s table in a humble sense of our unworthiness. We do
not deserve one crumb of the bread of life; we are poor indigent creatures,
who have lost our glory, and are like a vessel that is shipwrecked; we
smite on our breasts, as the publican, ‘God be merciful to us sinners.’
This is partaking of the ordinance aright. It is part of our worthiness
to see our unworthiness.
[2] We
rightly partake when at the Lord’s table we are filled with breathing of
soul and inflamed desires after Christ, which nothing can quench but his
blood. ‘Blessed are they which thirst.’ Matt
5: 6. They are blessed not only when they are filled, but while
they are thirsting.
[3] A
right participation of the supper is, when we receive it in faith. Without
faith we get no good. What is said of the word preached, it ‘did not profit
them, not being mixed with faith,’ is true of the sacrament. Heb
4: 2. Christ turned stones into bread: unbelief turns the bread
into stones, that do not nourish. We partake aright when we come in faith.
Faith has a twofold act, an adhering, and an applying. By the first we
go over to Christ, by the second we bring Christ over to us. Gal
2: 20. This is the grace we must set to work. Acts
10: 43. Philo calls it, fides
oculata [the eye of faith]: it
is the eagle-eye that discerns the Lord’s body; it causes a virtual contact,
it touches Christ. Christ said to Mary, ‘Touch me not,’ &c. John
20: 17. She was not to touch him with the hands of her body;
but he says to us, ‘Touch me,’ touch me with the hand of your faith. Faith
makes Christ present to the soul. The believer has a real presence in the
sacrament. The body of the sun is in the firmament, but the light of the
sun is in the eye. Christ’s essence is in heaven, but he is in a believer’s
heart by his light and influence. ‘That Christ may dwell in your hearts
by faith.’ Eph
3: 17. Faith is the palate which tastes Christ. 1
Pet 2: 3. It causes the bread of life to nourish. Crede
et manducasti [Believe and thou
hast fed]. Augustine. Faith makes us one with Christ. Eph
1: 23. Other graces make us like Christ, faith makes us members
of Christ.
[4] We
partake aright of the sacrament when we receive it in love.
(1) Love
to Christ. Who can see Christ pierced with a crown of thorns, sweating
in his agony, bleeding on the cross, but his heart must needs be endeared
in love to him? How can we but love him who has given his life a ransom
for us? Love is the spiced wine and juice of the pomegranate which we must
give to Christ. Cant
8: 2. Our love to this superior and blessed Jesus must exceed
our love to other things; as the oil runs above the water. Though we cannot,
with Mary, bring our body ointment to anoint his body, we do more than
this, whence bring him our love, which is sweeter to him than all ointments
and perfumes.
(2) Love
to the saints. This is a love-feast. Though we must eat it with the bitter
herbs of repentance, yet not with the bitter herbs of malice. Were it not
sad if all the meat we eat should turn to bad humours? He who comes in
malice to the Lord’s table turns all he eats to his hurt. ‘He eateth and
drinketh damnation to himself.’ 1
Cor 11: 29. ‘Come in love.’ It is with love as with fire which
you keep all the day upon the hearth, but upon special occasions make larger.
We must have love to all; but to the saints, who are our fellow-members
here, we must draw out the fire of our love larger; and must show the largeness
of our affections to them, by prizing their persons, by choosing their
company, by doing all offices of love to them, by counselling them in their
doubts, comforting them in their fears, and supplying them in their wants.
Thus one Christian may be an Ebenezer to another, and as an angel of God
to him. The sacrament cannot be effectual to him who does not receive it
in love. If a man drinks poison and then takes a cordial, the cordial will
do him little good, so he who has the poison of malice in his soul, the
cordial of Christ’s blood will do him no good; come therefore in love and
charity.
Use one.
From the whole doctrine of this sacrament learn how precious should a sacrament
be to us. It is a sealed deed to make over the blessings of the new covenant
to us. A small piece of wax put to a parchment is made the instrument to
confirm a rich conveyance or lordship to another; so these elements in
the sacrament of bread and wine, though in themselves of no great value,
yet being consecrated to be seals to confirm the covenant of grace to us,
are of more value than all the riches of the Indies.
Use two.
The sacrament being such a holy mystery, let us come to it with holy hearts.
There is no receiving a crucified Christ but into a consecrated heart.
Christ in his conception lay in a pure virgin’s womb, and, at his death,
his body was wrapped in clean linen, and put into a new virgin tomb, never
yet defiled. If Christ would not lie in an unclean grave, surely he will
not be received into an unclean heart. ‘Be ye clean that bear the vessels
of the Lord.’ Isa
52: 11. If they who carried the vessels of the Lord were to
be holy, they who are to be the vessels of the Lord, and are to hold Christ’s
blood and body, ought to be holy.
Use three.
Christ’s body and blood in the sacrament are a most sovereign elixir or
comfort to a distressed soul. Having poured out his blood, God’s justice
is fully satisfied. There is in the death of Christ enough to answer all
doubts. What if sin is the poison, the flesh of Christ is an antidote against
it! What if sin be red as scarlet, is not Christ’s blood of a deeper colour,
and can wash away sin? If Satan strikes us with his darts of temptation,
here is a precious balm out of Christ’s wounds to heal us. Isa
53: 5. What though we feed upon the bread of affliction, so
long as in the sacrament we feed upon the bread of life? Christ received
aright sacramentally, is a universal medicine for healing, and a universal
cordial for cheering our distressed souls.
4.6 Prayer
‘But
I give myself unto prayer.’ Psa
109: 4.
I shall
not here expatiate upon prayer, as it will be considered more fully in
the Lord’s prayer. It is one thing to pray, and another thing to be given
to prayer: he who prays frequently, is said to be given to prayer; as he
who often distributes alms, is said to be given to charity. Prayer is a
glorious ordinance, it is the soul’s trading with heaven. God comes down
to us by his Spirit, and we go up to him by prayer.
What is
prayer?
It is
an offering up of our desires to God for things agreeable to his will,
in the name of Christ.
‘Prayer
is offering up our desires;’ and therefore called making known our requests. Phil
4: 6. In prayer we come as humble petitioners, begging to have
our suit granted. It is ‘offering up our desires to God.’ Prayer is not
to be made to any but God. The Papists pray to saints and angels, who know
not our grievances. ‘Abraham be ignorant of us.’ Isa
63: 16. All angel-worship is forbidden. Col
2: 18, 19. We must not pray to any but whom we may believe in.
‘How shall they call on him in whom they have not believed?’ Rom
10: 14. We cannot believe in an angel, therefore we must not
pray to him.
Why must
prayer be made to God only?
(1) Because
he only hears prayer. ‘Oh thou that hearest prayer.’ Psa
65: 2. Hereby God is known to be the true God, in that he hears
prayer. ‘Hear me, O Lord, hear me, that this people may know that thou
art the Lord God.’ 1
Kings 18: 37.
(2) Because
God only can help. We may look to second causes, and cry, as the woman
did, ‘Help, my lord, O king.’ And he said, ‘If the Lord do not help thee,
whence shall I help thee?’ 2
Kings 6: 26, 27. If we are in outward distress, God must send
from heaven and save; if we are in inward agonies, he only can pour in
the oil of joy; therefore prayer is to be made to him only.
We are
to pray ‘for things agreeable to his will.’ When we pray for outward things,
for riches or children, perhaps God sees these things not to be good for
us; and our prayers should comport with his will. We may pray absolutely
for grace; ‘For this is the will of God, even your sanctification.’ 1
Thess 4: 3. There must be no strange incense offered. Exod
30: 9. When we pray for things which are not agreeable to God’s
will, it is offering strange incense.
We are
to pray ‘in the name of Christ.’ To pray in the name of Christ, is not
only to mention Christ’s name in prayer, but to pray in the hope and confidence
of his merits. ‘Samuel took a sucking lamb and offered it,’ &c. 1
Sam 7: 9. We must carry the lamb Christ in the arms of our faith,
and so shall we prevail in prayer. When Uzziah would offer incense without
a priest, God was angry, and struck him with leprosy. 2
Chron 26: 16. When we do not pray in Christ’s name, in the hope
of his mediation, we offer up incense without a priest; and what can we
expect but to meet with rebukes, and to have God answer us by terrible
things?
What
are the several parts of prayer?
(1) There
is the confessors part, which is the acknowledgement of sin. (2) The supplicatory
part, when we either deprecate and pray against some evil, or request the
obtaining of some good. (3) The congratulatory part, when we give thanks
for mercies received, which is the most excellent part of prayer. In petition,
we act like men; in giving thanks, we act like angels.
What
are the several sorts of prayer?
(1) There
is mental prayer, in the mind. 1
Sam 1: 13. (2) Vocal. Psa
77: 1. (3) Ejaculatory, which is a sudden and short elevation
of the heart to God. ‘So I prayed to the God of heaven.’ Neh
2: 4. (4) Inspired prayer, when we pray for those things which
God puts into our heart. The Spirit helps us with sighs and groans. Rom
8: 26. Both the expressions of the tongue, and the impressions
of the heart, so far as they are right, are from the Spirit. (5) Prescribed
prayer. Our Saviour has set us a pattern of prayer. God prescribed a set
form of blessing for the priests. Numb
6: 23. (6) Public prayer, when we pray in the audience of others.
Prayer is more powerful when many join and unite their forces. Vis
unita fortior [A united force is
stronger]. Matt
18: 19. (7) Private prayer; when we pray by ourselves. ‘Enter
into thy closet.’ Matt
6: 6.
That
prayer is most likely to prevail with God which is rightly qualified. That
is a good medicine which has the right ingredients; and that prayer is
good, and most likely to prevail with God, which has these seven ingredients
in it: —
[1] It
must be mixed with faith. ‘But let him ask in faith.’ James
1: 6. Believe that God hears, and will in due time grant, believe
his love and truth; believe that he is love, and therefore will not deny
you; believe that he is truth, and therefore will not deny himself. Faith
sets prayer to work. Faith is to prayer what the feather is to the arrow;
it feathers the arrow of prayer, and makes it fly swifter, and pierce the
throne of grace. The prayer that is faithless is fruitless.
[2] It
must be a melting prayer. ‘The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit.’ Psa
51: 17. The incense was to be beaten to typify the breaking
of the heart in prayer. Oh! says a Christian, I cannot pray with such gifts
and elocution as others; as Moses said, ‘I am not eloquent;’ but can’t
thou weep? Does thy heart melt in prayer? Weeping prayer prevails. Tears
drop as pearls from the eye. Jacob wept and made supplication; and ‘had
power over the angel.’Hosea
12: 4.
[3] Prayer
must be fired with zeal and fervency. ‘Effectual fervent prayer availeth
much.’ James
5: 16. Cold prayer, like cold suitors, never speed. Prayer without
fervency, is like a sacrifice without a fire. Prayer is called a ‘pouring
out of the soul,’ to signify vehemence. 1
Sam 1: 15. Formality starves prayer. Prayer is compared to incense.
‘Let my prayer be set forth as incense.’ Psa
141: 2. Hot coals were to be put to the incense, to make it
odoriferous and fragrant; so fervency of affection is like coals to the
incense; it makes prayer ascend as a sweet perfume. Christ prayed with
strong cries. Heb
5: 7. Clamor
iste penetrat nubes [Such a cry
pierces the clouds]. Luther. Fervent prayer, like a powder engine set against
heaven’s gates, makes them fly open. To cause holy fervour and ardour of
soul in prayer, consider, (1) Prayer without fervency is no prayer; it
is speaking, not praying. Lifeless prayer is no more prayer than the picture
of a man is a man. One may say as Pharaoh, ‘I have dreamed a dream.’ Gen
41: 15. It is dreaming, not praying. Life and fervency baptise
a duty, and give it a name. (2) Consider in what need we stand of those
things which we ask in prayer. We come to ask the favour of God; and if
we have not his love all we enjoy is cursed to us. We pray that our souls
may be washed in Christ’s blood; if he wash us not we have no part in him. John
13: 8. When will we be in earnest, if not when we are praying
for the life of our souls? (3) It is only fervent prayer that has the promise
of mercy affixed to it. ‘Ye shall find me, when ye shall search for me
with all your heart.’ Jer
29: 13. It is dead praying without a promise; and the promise
is made only to ardency. The a tiles among the Romans, had their doors
always standing open, that all who had petitions might have free access
to them; so God’s heart is ever open to fervent prayer.
[4] Prayer
must be sincere. Sincerity is the silver thread which must run through
the whole duties of religion. Sincerity in prayer is when we have gracious
holy ends; when our prayer is not so much for temporal mercies as for spiritual.
We send out prayer as our merchant ship, that we may have large returns
of spiritual blessings. Our aim in it is, that our hearts may be more holy,
that we may have more communion with God and that we may increase our stock
of grace. The prayer which wants a good aim, wants a good issue.
[5] The
prayer that will prevail with God must have a fixedness of mind. ‘My heart
is fixed, O God.’ Psa
57: 7. Since the fall the mind is like quicksilver, which will
not fix; it has principium
motus, but non
quietus [a principle of restlessness,
not of peace]. The thoughts will be roving and dancing up and down in prayer,
just as if a man who is travelling to a certain place should run out of
the road, and wander he knows not whither. In prayer we are travelling
to the throne of grace, but how often do we, by vain cogitations, turn
out of the road! This is rather wandering than praying.
How shall
we cure these vain impertinent thoughts, which distract us in prayer, and,
we fear, hinder its acceptance?
(1) Be
very apprehensive in prayer of the infiniteness of God’s majesty and purity.
His eye is upon us in prayer, and we may say as David, ‘Thou tellest my
wanderings.’ Psa
56: 8. The thoughts of this would make us hoc
agere, mind the duty we are about.
If a man were to deliver a petition to an earthly prince, would he at the
same time be playing with a feather? Set yourselves, when you pray, as
in God’s presence. Could you but look through the keyhole of heaven, and
see how devout and intent the angels are in their worshipping God, surely
you would be ready to blush at your vain thoughts and vile impertinences
in prayer.
(2) If
you would keep your mind fixed in prayer, keep your eye fixed. ‘Unto thee
lift I up mine eyes, O thou that dwellest in the heavens.’ Psa
123: 1. Much vanity comes in at the eye. When the eye wanders
in prayer, the heart wanders. To think to keep the heart fixed in prayer,
and yet let the eye gaze, is as if one should think to keep his house safe,
and yet let the windows be open.
(3) If
you would have your thoughts fixed in prayer, get more love to God. Love
is a great fixer of the thoughts. He who is in love cannot keep his thoughts
off the object. He who loves the world has his thoughts upon the world.
Did we love God more, our minds would be more intent upon him in prayer.
Were there more delight in duty, there would be less distraction.
(4) Implore
the help of God’s Spirit to fix your minds, and make them intent and serious
in prayer. The ship without a pilot rather floats than sails. That our
thoughts do not float up and down in prayer, we need the blessed Spirit
to be our pilot to steer us. Only God’s Spirit can bound the thoughts.
A shaking hand may as well write a line steadily, as we can keep our hearts
fixed in prayer without the Spirit of God.
(5) Make
holy thoughts familiar to you in your ordinary course of life. David was
often musing on God. ‘When I am awake, I am still with thee.’ Psa
139: 18. He who gives himself liberty to have vain thoughts
out of prayer, will scarcely have other thoughts in prayer.
(6) If
you would keep your mind fixed on God, watch your hearts, not only after
prayer, but in prayer. The heart will be apt to give you the slip, and
have a thousand vagaries in prayer. We read of angels ascending and descending
on Jacob’s ladder; so in prayer you shall find your hearts ascending to
heaven, and in a moment descending upon earthly objects. O Christians,
watch your hearts in prayer. What a shame is it to think, that when we
are speaking to God our hearts should be in the fields, or in our counting-houses,
or one way or other, running upon the devil’s errand!
(7) Labour
for larger degrees of grace. The more ballast the ship has the better it
sails; so the more the heart is ballasted with grace, the steadier it will
sail to heaven in prayer.
[6] Prayer
that is likely to prevail with God must be argumentative. God loves to
have us plead with him, and use arguments in prayer. See how many arguments
Jacob used in prayer. ‘Deliver me, I pray thee, from the hand of my brother.’ Gen
32: 11. The arguments he used are from God’s command ‘Thou saidst
to me, Return to thy country;’ ver
9; as if he had said, I did not take this journey of my own
head, but by thy direction; therefore thou canst not but in honour protect
me. And he uses another argument. ‘Thou saidst, I will surely do thee good;’ ver
12. Lord, wilt thou go back from thy own promise? Thus he was
argumentative in prayer; and he got not only a new blessing, but a new
name. ‘Thy name shall be called no more Jacob, but Israel: for as a prince
hast thou power with God, and hast prevailed;’ ver
28. God loves to be overcome with strength of argument. Thus,
when we come to God in prayer for grace, let us be argumentative. Lord,
thou callest thyself the God of all grace; and whither should we go with
our vessel, but to the fountain? Lord, thy grace may be imparted, yet not
impaired. Has not Christ purchased grace for poor indigent creatures? Every
drachm of grace costs a drop of blood. Shall Christ die to purchase grace
for us, and shall not we have the fruit of his purchase? Lord, it is thy
delight to milk out the breast of mercy and grace, and wilt thou abridge
thyself of thy own delight? Thou hast promised to give thy Spirit to implant
grace; can truth lie? can faithfulness deceive? God loves thus to be overcome
with arguments in prayer.
[7] Prayer
that would prevail with God, must be joined with reformation. ‘If thou
stretch out thy hands toward him; if iniquity be in thy hand, put it far
away.’ Job
11: 13, 14. Sin, lived in, makes the heart hard, and God’s ear
deaf. It is foolish to pray against sin, and then sin against prayer. ‘If
I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear me.’ Psa
66: 18. The loadstone loses its virtue when bespread with garlic;
so does prayer when polluted with sin. The incense of prayer must be offered
upon the altar of a holy heart.
Thus
you see what is the prayer which is most likely to prevail with God.
Use one.
It reproves (1) Such as pray not at all. It is made the note of a reprobate,
that he calls not upon God. Psa
14: 4. Does he think to have an alms who never asks it? Do they
think to have mercy from Cod who never seek it? Then God would befriend
them more than he did his own Son. Christ offered up prayers with strong
cries. Heb
5: 7. None of God’s children are born dumb. Gal
4: 6.
(2) It
reproves such as have left off prayer, which is a sign that they never
felt the fruit and comfort of it. He that leaves off prayer leaves off
to fear God. ‘Thou castest off fear, and restrainest prayer before God.’ Job
15: 4. A man that has left off prayer, is fit for any wickedness.
When Saul had given over inquiring after God he went to the witch of Endor.
Use two.
Be persons given to prayer. ‘I give myself,’ says David, ‘to prayer.’ Pray
for pardon and purity. Prayer is the golden key that opens heaven. The
tree of the promise will not drop its fruit unless shaken by the hand of
prayer. All the benefits of Christ’s redemption are handed over to us by
prayer.
I have
prayed a long time for mercy, and have no answer. ‘I am weary of crying.’ Ps
69: 3.
(1) God
may hear us when we do not hear from him; as soon as prayer is made, God
hears it, though he does not presently answer. A friend may receive our
letter, though he does not presently send us an answer. (2) God may delay
prayer, yet he will not deny it.
Why does
God delay an answer to prayer?
(1) Because
he loves to hear the voice of prayer. ‘The prayer of the upright is his
delight.’ Prov
15: 8. You let the musician play a great while ere you throw
him down money, because you love to hear his music. Cant
2: 14.
(2) God
may delay prayer when he will not deny it, that he may humble us. He has
spoken to us long in his word to leave our sins, but we would not hear
him; therefore he lets us speak to him in prayer and seems not to hear
us.
(3) He
may delay to answer prayer when he will not deny it, because he sees we
are not yet fit for the mercy we ask. Perhaps we pray for deliverance when
we are not fit for it; our scum is not yet boiled away. We would have God
swift to deliver, and we are slow to repent.
(4) God
may delay to answer prayer, that the mercy we pray for may be more prized,
and may be sweeter when it comes. The longer the merchant’s ships stay
abroad, the more he rejoices when they come home laden with spices and
jewels; therefore be not discouraged, but follow God with prayer. Though
God delays, he will not deny. Prayer vincit
invincibilem [conquers the invincible],
it overcomes the Omnipotent. Hos
12: 4. The Syrians tied their god Hercules fast with a golden
chain, that he should not remove. The Lord was held by Moses’ prayer as
with a golden chain. ‘Let me alone;’ why, what did Moses? he only prayed. Exod
32: 10. Prayer ushers in mercy. Be thy case never so sad, if
thou canst but pray thou needest not fear. Psa
10: 17. Therefore give thyself to prayer.
Added to Bible Bulletin Board's - Thomas Watson Collection"
by:
Tony Capoccia
Bible Bulletin Board
Box 119
Columbus, New Jersey, USA, 08022
Websites: www.biblebb.com
and www.gospelgems.com
Email: tony@biblebb.com
Online since 1986
Added To jcmsoh.org By
James C Morgan
You May Contract James C Morgan at jcmsoh.org