The Christian's Great Interest
The Christian's Great Interest
by the late Rev. William Guthrie,
Minister of the Gospel, Fenwick
with a Memoir of the Author
Contents
Preface
To the Reader
Memoir of the Author
PART I. The Trial of a Saving Interest in Christ
Quest. I.--How shall a man know if he has a true and special interest in
Christ, and whether he has, or may lay claim justly to, God's favour and
salvation?
Chapter I.--Things premised for the better understanding of the trial
itself
I.--A man's interest in Christ may be known
II.--Importance of having an interest in Christ
III.--We must allow our condition to be determined by Scripture
IV.--Causes why so few attain to a distinct knowledge of their state
V.--Some mistakes concerning an interest in Christ removed
Chapter II.--Marks of a Saving Change A preparatory law work
I.--Some called from the womb
II.--Some called in a sovereign gospel-way
III.--Some graciously called at the hour of death
IV.--God's more ordinary way of calling sinners to Himself
V.--Objections and difficulties considered
Chapter III.--Evidences of a Believing State
I.--Mistakes as to what faith is
II.--True saving faith described
III.--Farther explanatory remarks concerning saving faith
IV.--Difficulties as to what seems to be faith removed
Chapter IV.--Evidences of a Renewed State
I.--The whole man must be to some extend renewed
II.--He must be, to some extent, renewed in all his ways
III.--The supposed unattainableness of such evidences considered
IV.--The special attainments of hypocrites considered
V.--Doubts because of prevailing sin considered
VI.--Doubts arising out of a want of Christian experience considered
PART II.--How to Attain a Saving Interest in Christ
Quest. II. What shall they do who want the marks of a true and saving
interest in Christ, already spoken of, and neither can nor dare pretend unto
them?
Chapter I.--Some Things Premised for the Information of the Ignorant
Chapter II.--The Duty of Closing with God's Plan of Saving Sinners by
Christ Jesus
I.--What it is to accept of, and close with, the gospel offer
II.--This the duty of those who would be saved
III.--What is required of those who would believe on Christ Jesus and be
saved
IV.--Some of the properties and native consequences of true believing
V.--Some of the effects of saving faith
Chapter III.--Objections and Difficulties Answered and Explained
I.--The sinner's baseness rendering it presumption to come to Christ
II.--The singularity of his sin barring the way
III.--Special aggravations a hindrance
IV.--Sins not named a barrier
V.--The sin against the Holy Ghost alleged
I.--What it is not
II.--What the sin against the Holy Ghost is
III.--Conclusions bearing on the objections
VI.--Objections from the want of power to believe answered
VII.--Objection arising from the complaints of believers as to unfruitfulness
VIII.--Objection from ignorance regarding covenanting with God,--The nature of
that duty unfolded
IX.--Doubts as to the inquirer's being savingly in covenant with God answered
Certain things premised concerning personal covenanting
I.--The thing itself is warrantable
II.--The preparation needed
III.--How the duty of covenanting is to be performed
IV.--What should follow this solemn act
X.--A want of proper feeling considered as an obstacle in the way of
covenanting
XI.--The fear of backsliding a hindrance
XII.--Objection arising from past fruitlessness considered
Conclusion--The whole Treatise resumed in a Few Questions and Answers
The Christian's Great Interest was fist published in 1668, and many editions
have appeared since. As it is now almost unobtainable, it is reprinted by the
Publications Committee of the Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland, with the
fervent hope that it will have a further wide circulation, and prove a
continued blessing to many. Dr. Owen said, "I have written several folios,
but there is more divinity in it (The Christian's Great Interest) than in them
all." William Guthrie, of Fenwick, was a cousin of the eminent martyr, James
Guthrie, who refused a bishopric and died on the scaffold at the Cross of
Edinburgh in 1661. William desired to go to the execution of his valued cousin,
but was prevented by friends who feared for his life. It was while a student
under Samuel Rutherford, and through his instrumentality, that he received a
calling to the ministry. He was accounted one of the greatest preaches of his
day. His labours were abundantly blessed. He was banished from his church,
amidst bitter persecution, and died a few years later in 1665, at the age of
forty-five, sweetly assured of the crown that awaited him in glory.
W. Grant,
Convener Halkirk,
1951 Caithness
Christian Reader,
While the generality of men, especially in these days, by their eager pursuit
after low and base interests, have proclaimed, as upon the house tops, how much
they have forgotten to make choice of that better part, which, if chosen,
should never be taken from them; I have made an essay, such as it is, in the
following Treatise, to take thee off from this unprofitable, though painful
pursuit, by proposing the chiefest of interest, even the Christian's Great
Interest, to be seriously pondered and constantly pursued by thee. Thou mayst
think it strange to see anything in print from my pen, as it is indeed a
surprise to myself; but necessity has made me, for this once, to offer so much
violence to my own inclination, in regard that some, without my knowledge, have
lately published some imperfect note of a few of my sermons, most confusedly
cast together, prefixing withal this vain title, as displeasing to myself as
the publishing of the thing, 'A Clear Attractive Warming Beam,' &c. Upon
this occasion was I prevailed with to publish this late piece, wherein I have
purposely used a homely and plain style, lest otherwise-- though, when I have
stretched myself to the utmost, I am below the judicious and more
understanding--I should be above the reach of the rude and ignorant, whose
advantage I have mainly, if not only, consulted. I have, likewise, studied
brevity in everything, so far as I conceived it to be consistent with plainness
and perspicuity; knowing that the persons to whom I address myself herein, have
neither much money to spend upon books, nor much time to spare in reading. If
thou be a rigid critic, I know thou mayst meet with several things to carp at;
yet assure thyself, that I had no design to offend thee, neither will thy
simple approbation satisfy me. It is thy edification I intend, together with
the incitements of some others, more expert and experienced in this excellent
subject, to handle the same to greater length, which I have more briefly hinted
at,-- who am thy servant in the work of the gospel, William Guthrie
William Guthrie, one of the holiest and ablest of the experimental divines of
Scotland, was born at Pitforthy, the seat of his ancestors, in the shire of
Angus, in the year 1620. The branch of the house of Guthrie from which he
sprang was ancient and honorable; and its interest in the cause of truth and
godliness was proved by the fact, that four of the children had early been
devoted to the ministry of the gospel. The only one of these who did not obtain
a fixed charge was Robert, who soon lost health and life by his abundant
labours in the cause of Christ; Alexander was settled at Strickathrow, within
his native shire, in 1645, and continued there till his death, in 1661; while
John, the youngest of the family, became minister of Tarbolton, Ayrshire, from
which he was ejected, for adherence to Presbyters, after the restoration of
Charles II to the throne of Britain, and speedily sank under the hardships to
which he was exposed, dying in the year 1669. The superior genius of
William, the eldest of this excellent band of brothers, was displayed in his
early and successful attention to learning; but he did not, till his entrance
into college life, obtain that intimate and saving acquaintance with Divine
truth which enabled him at once to stay his own soul upon God as the God of his
salvation, and to prescribe most skilfully for the cases of spiritual disease
that came under his notice. He felt himself greatly indebted for acquaintance
with the way of holiness to the instructions of a near kinsman. This was Mr.
James Guthrie, then holding one of the chairs in the New College of St.
Andrews, and afterwards highly esteemed as the faithful minister of Stirling
during the period of the Covenant; for his faithful adherence to which he
obtained a martyr's crown. Samuel Rutherford, who became Professor of Divinity
at St. Andrews in 1639, took the guidance of William Guthrie's theological
studies, confirmed and cherished the principles of piety already implanted, and
brought him, with his whole soul, to devote himself to the service of Christ.
That he might not be entangles in the network of earthly concerns, he resigned
his estate at Pitforthy to a younger brother, not engaged at that time in the
prosecution of sacred studies. Thus trained in the schools of literature, and
rendered familiar with religion both in theory and practice, William Guthrie
was well fitted for usefulness as a preacher of the gospel; and received
license, with the high approbation of the Presbytery, in August 1642. It was
fully two years later that he obtained a church in the newly erected parish of
Fenwick; and was ordained minister, in compliance with the harmonious call of
the people, in November 1644. His success and popularity were soon found to be
great; and extended far beyond the Ayrshire district in which his parish
lays--to Clydesdale, Stirling, and the Lothians. Several calls were addressed
to him, but ineffectually, to quit his beloved people, till, about a year after
his settlement, and very soon after his marriage to an excellent lady of the
noble family of London, he left them for a season, by appointment of the
General Assembly, to attend the Scottish army as chaplain during the civil war
that ended in the execution of Charles I, and the subjection of Scotland to the
Protectorate of Cromwell. While the Protector's troops kept possession of
Glasgow about that time, Mr. Guthrie's Christian heroism was called into
exercise on a communion Sabbath in Mr. Andrew Gray's church. 'Several of the
English officers had formed a design to put in execution the disorderly
principle of a promiscuous admission to the Lord's table, by coming to it
themselves without acquainting the minister, or being in a due manner found
worthy of that privilege. Mr. Guthrie, to whose share it fell to dispense the
sacrament at that table, spoke to them, when they were leaving their pews in
order to make their attempt, with such gravity, resolution, and zeal, that they
were quite confounded, and sat down again without occasioning any further
disturbance.' The arrangements then made by the Church Courts regarding
chaplains in the army, render it probable that he had been relieved by his
brethren at several intervals, and thus enjoyed occasionally the endearments of
his home, and opportunities of pastoral and public usefulness. He was
providentially preserved throughout the war, and returned to his flock with
increased ardour and devotion. They needed his care; for at the commencement of
his ministry, profanation of the Sabbath, desertion of the house of God,
neglect of family religion, and gross ignorance, with a train of attending
evils, were prevalent among his parishioners. His talents, natural and
acquired, were dexterously applied to check abounding iniquity. Let one
instance suffice for illustration--that of a fowler in his parish engaging in
his sport and deserting public worship on the Lord's day,--a practice in which
he had long indulged. "Mr. Guthrie asked him what was the reason he had for so
doing? He told him that the Sabbath-day was the most fortunate day in all the
week. Mr. Guthrie asked him what he could make by that day's exercise? He
replied that he could make half-a-crown. Mr. Guthrie told him if he would go to
church on Sabbath, he would give him as much; and by that means got his
promise; after sermon was over, Mr. Guthrie asked if he would come back the
next Sabbath-day, and he would give him the same? which he did, and from that
time afterwards never failed to keep the church. He afterwards became a member
of his session.' The stated calls made by him at the houses of his people
were very acceptable and profitable. The visitation of the sick and the dying,
whom he never neglected; the instruction of the young in the doctrine that is
accenting to godliness, and the ministrations of the pulpit, declared him a
workman who needed not to be ashamed. As a consistent office-bearer, he duly
attended to the government and discipline of the Church, in the session and
superior judicatories. He seems to have been a member of the general Assembly
of 1649, and stands in the lists of its Commission, along with such illustrious
names as James Guthrie, the Marquis of Argyle, Dickson, Durham, and Samuel
Rutherford. During the unhappy division of the Church of Scotland into the
parties of Resolutioners and Protesters or Remonstrants, the two Guthries,
Samuel Rutherford, and several of the most pious and zealous Presbyterians,
adhered to the latter; and Baillie mentions in his Letters, that at the meeting
of their western synod, in 1654, 'the Remonstrants chose Mr. William Guthrie
for their Moderator.' His forbearance towards brethren taking the opposite side
in that fatal schism has been acknowledged by his biographers; and his pastoral
care was fully exercised. Ere long he published 'The Christian's Great
Interest.' This work had gone through numerous editions, been translated into
various languages, and continues to embalm his memory in the estimation of
intelligent Christians of every name. The first edition of it appeared shortly
before the restoration of Charles II. Not long after the commencement of the
persecution, Mr Guthrie made one of his last efforts for the preservation of
ecclesiastical freedom in the courts of the Church. This stand he took at a
meeting of the Synod of Glasgow and Aye, in April 1661, when he framed an
address, designed for presentation to Parliament had the troubles of the time
permitted, which the Synod approved of, as 'contain faithful testimony of the
purity of our reformation in worship, doctrine, discipline, and government, in
terms equally remarkable for their prudence and their courage. Two months later
his zeal for the same cause was manifested by his earnest desire to attend, on
the scaffold, his illustrious kinsman, Mr. James Guthrie, who sealed his
testimony with his blood, in June 1661, at the cross of Edinburgh. His
deference to the warm entreaties of his session alone prevented him from
engaging in so perilous a service. The respect which his affable deportment and
able performance of pastoral duty gained for him from high and low, screened
him from persecution, and he persevered in preaching to his flock the truth as
it is in Jesus. His intellectual powers and Christian experience were
conspicuous in his discourses, and many, we believe, were the imperishable
seals of his ministry, for it is averred by one of his contemporaries, Mr.
Matthew Crawford, minister at Eastwood, that 'he converted and confirmed many
thousand souls, and was esteemed the greatest practical preacher in Scotland.'
Another of them declares his diligence and success among the people of Fenwick
to have been so great, that almost all of them 'were brought to make a fair
profession of godliness, and had the worship of God in their families. And it
was well known that many of them were sincere, and not a few of them eminent
Christians.' His own words to the person who ejected him, thus humbly, yet
boldly, ascribed his great success to God: 'I thank him for it; yea, I look
upon it as a door which God opened to me for preaching this gospel, which
neither you nor any man else was able to shut, till it was given you of God.'
He was now called to experience those trials, which had been delayed longer in
his case than in that of most of his faithful brethren, through the influence
of the Earl of Glencairn, then Chancellor of Scotland, who both respected him
as a man of worth, and recollected with gratitude Mr. Guthrie's kindness to him
during an imprisonment to which the Earl had been subjected for his loyalty to
the King during the sway of Cromwell. Sabbath, the 24th of July, was fixed
as the day for enforcing the decree. The people of Fenwick, greatly grieved at
the prospect of losing so faithful a minister, observed the Wednesday preceding
as a day of humiliation and prayer. Mr. Guthrie found an appropriate text for
the occasion in these words of Hosea 13: 9, 'O Israel, thou hast destroyed
thyself;' solemnly inculcated on his flock patience and perseverance in the way
of holiness, and appointed an early meeting of the congregation for the
following Sabbath. The light of that day of the Son of Man ushered in a
sorrowful morning for the people who then met to listen for the last time to
the welcome voice of their beloved pastor. His theme, most suitable for the
day, was the latter clause of his Wednesday's text, "but in Me is thine help,'
and at the close of his sermon every countenance was suffused with tears, while
he directed his hearers to the 'Fountain of help, when the gospel and ministers
were taken from them; and took his leave of them, commending them to this great
God, who was able to build them up, and help them in the time of their need.'
Before nine o'clock the congregation had dispersed, sorrowing exceedingly that
they should listen to his persuasive discourses no more. No sound occurred to
disturb the quiet of the hallowed day, till the tramp of horses was heard in
the distance, and the troop soon appeared headed by a rider in black, the
curate of Calder, whom a fee of five pounds had induced to give formal notice
of the sentence of suspension. He observed the ceremony of preaching the church
vacant in presence of a congregation of soldiers and children. In the manse he
was courteously received by Mr. Guthrie, who declared, in presence of the
officers of the party, his reason for submission to the sentence as not arising
from respect to the prelate's authority, which had no weight with him, adding,
'were it not for the reverence I owe to the civil magistrate, I would not cease
from the exercise of my ministry for all that sentence.' The following passage
formed part of his solemn reply to the Archbishop's message: 'I here declare, I
think myself called by the Lord to the work of the ministry, and did forsake my
nearest relations in the world, and give up myself to the service of the gospel
in this place, having received a unanimous call from this parish, and being
tried and ordained by the Presbyters; and I bless the Lord He has given me some
success, and a seal of my ministry upon the souls and consciences of not a few
that are gone to heaven, and of some that are yet in the way to it.' His bodily
health, but indifferent before, suffered a severe shock on this occasion; he
preached no more in the parish; and about two months after retired to his
paternal estate at Pitforthy, now become his possession in consequence of the
decease of a surviving brother. It was his but for a year of pain and sorrow,
caused by a complication of diseases, and by the calamities that were befalling
the Church and nation. He was attended during his last illness by visitors
belonging to all parties, received kindly but faithfully the Episcopalian
clergy who came to converse with him, and died full of faith in the glorious
gospel he had preached, with the confident hope of complete redemption. His
death occurred on the afternoon of Wednesday, the 10th of October 1665. Two
daughters of a family of six children survived him, one of whom became the wife
of the Rev. Patrick Warner, of Irvine, and mother of Margaret Warner, who was
afterwards married to the Rev. Robert Wodrow, of Eastwood, the faithful
chronicler of the sufferings of the Church of Scotland. None of his sermons
appear to have been published during his lifetime. As a specimen of the
faithful and practical character of his preaching, we give an extract from a
discourse long preserved among the Wodrow MSS., and recently printed, entitled,
'A Sermon on Sympathie.' The text is Matthew 15: 23, 'Send her away, for she
cryeth after us.'--'Is it so that sympathy is so cold and weak among God's
people at this time, when so much of it is called for? Then I would have yow
drawing these three conclusions from it:--1. When any thing ails yow, pray much
for yourself; I assure yow ye will get little help of others. 2. As yow would
lippen little to other folk's prayers, so ye would make meikle use of Christ's
intercession. These prayers are little worth that flow not from sympathy; and,
3. Reckon all your receipts to be free favour, and neither the return of your
own or other folks' prayers. I do not forbid yow to pray yourself;-nor to seek
the help of other folks' prayers, nor do I judge yow or them void of sympathy;
but I would have yow lippening less to them, and making more use of Christ and
His intercession.' His theological tutor and bosom friend, Samuel
Rutherford, thus expresses his regard for Mr. Guthrie and his flock, during a
season of public agitation:--'Dear Brother, help me, and get me the help of
their prayers who are with you in whom is my delight.' The author of 'The
Christian's Great Interest' was also very highly esteemed by another of his
illustrious contemporaries, Dr. Owen, who, on one occasion, drawing a little
gilded copy of Mr. Guthrie's treatise from his pocket, said to a minister of
the Church of Scotland, 'That author I take to have been one of the greatest
divines that ever wrote; it is my Vademecum, and I carry it and the Sedan New
Testament, still about with me. I have written several folios, but there is
more divinity in it than in them all.' Many years after the author's death,
this work, with others of a similar nature, was instrumental in arousing to
deeper concern for his soul's salvation, John Brow then a shepherd boy in the
neighbourhood of Abernethy, and afterwards highly distinguished as a minister
of the gospel, and Professor of Divinity for nearly twenty years in one of the
branches of the Secession Church. How more may be the cases in which it has
been blessed to the conviction, conversion, and edification of those whom it
might enable to teach others also, the great day alone shall declare. The
following references to it, in the interesting Memoirs of Dr. Chalmers, prove
the high opinion he had formed of the genius it displays:--'Would you inquire
for 'Guthrie's Trial of a Saving Interest in Christ?' It is a small duodecimo;
and has been long the favourite author of our peasantry in Scotland. He wrote
about a hundred and fifty years ago; and one admirable property of his work is,
that while it guides it purifies. It males known all our defects, but ministers
the highest comfort in the presence of a feeling of our defects. To find mercy
we need only to feel misery. ... I am on the eve of finishing Guthrie, which I
think is the best book I ever read. I shall leave it as a present to the Anster
folks, and pass from it to 'Brook on Religious Experience, ... I should like to
know how the little book I left was relished among you. I still think it the
best composition I ever read relating to a subject in which we are all deeply
interested, and about which it is my earnest prayer, that we may all be found
on the right side of the question.' Having given the opinions of these
eminent divines regarding the 'Christian's Great Interest', we presume not to
attempt a delineation of the merits of its excellent Author. The wise and the
good of his own day, as well as of subsequent times, have held him in grateful
remembrance, and his works continue to praise him in the gates.
Since
there are so many people living under the ordinances, pretending, without
ground, to a special interest in Christ, and to His favour and salvation, as is
clear from the words of our Lord--'Many will say to Me in that day, Lord, Lord,
have we not prophesied in Thy name, and in Thy name have cast out devils, and
in Thy name done many wonderful works? And then will I profess unto them, I
never knew you: depart from Me, ye that work iniquity.' (Matt. 7: 22, 23).
'Afterwards came also the other virgins, saying, Lord, Lord, open to us. But He
answered and said, Verily I say unto you, I know you not.' (Matt. 25: 11,12.)
'Strive to enter in at the strait gate; for many I say unto you, will seek to
enter in, and shall not be able.' (Luke 13: 24.) And since many who have good
ground of claim to Christ, are not established in the confidence of this
favour, but remain in the dark, without comfort, hesitating concerning the
reality of godliness in themselves, and speaking little in the commendation of
religion to others, especially in the time of their straits:--I shall speak a
little respecting two things of the greatest concern: The one is, How a person
may know if he has a true and special interest in Christ, and whether he does
lay just claim to God's favour and salvation. The other is, In case a person
fall short of assurance in this trial, what course he should take for making
sure of God's friendship and salvation to himself.
Quest. I.--How shall a man know if he has a true and special interest in
Christ, and whether he has, or may lay claim justly to, God's favour and
salvation?
First, That a man's interest in Christ, or his gracious state, may be known,
and that with more certainty than people conjecture; yea, and the knowledge of
it may be more easily attained unto than many imagine; for not only has the
Lord commanded men to know their interest in Him, as a thing
attainable--'Examine yourselves, whether ye be in the faith' (2 Cor. 13: 5);
'Give diligence to make your calling and election sure' (2 Peter 1: 10)--but
many of the saints have attained unto the clear persuasion of their interest in
Christ, and in God as their own God. How often do they call Him their God and
their portion? and how persuaded is Paul 'that nothing can separate him from
the love of God?' (Rom. 8: 38, 39.) Therefore the knowledge of a man's gracious
state is attainable. And this knowledge of it, which may be attained, is no
fancy and mere conceit, but it is most sure: 'Doubtless Thou are our Father,'
saith the prophet (Isa. 43: 16), in name of the Church. It is clear from
this:--1. That can be no fancy, but a very sure knowledge, which does yield to
a rational man comfort in most real straits; but so does this--'When the people
spoke of stoning David, he encouraged himself in the Lord his God.' (1 Sam. 30:
6.) He saith, 'He will not be afraid though ten thousands rise up against him.'
(Psa. 3: 6.) Compare these words with the following: 'But Thou, O Lord, art a
shield for me; my glory, and the lifter up of mine head.' (Psa. 3: 3.) 'The
Lord is my light, and my salvation, whom shall I fear? The Lord is the strength
of my life, of whom shall I be afraid? Though an host should encamp against me,
my heart shall not fear; though war should rise against me, in this will I be
confident.' (Psa. 27: 3.) 2. That is a sure knowledge of a thing which maketh a
wise merchant sell all he has, that he may keep it sure; that maketh a man
forego children, lands, life, and suffer the spoiling of all joyfully; but so
does this--Matt. 13: 44; Mark 10: 28, 29; Heb. 10: 34; Rom. 5: 3; Acts 5: 41.
3. That must be a sure and certain knowledge, and no fancy, upon which a man
voluntarily and freely does adventure his soul when he is stepping into
eternity, with this word in his mouth, 'This is all my desire' (2 Sam. 23: 5);
but such a knowledge is this. And again, not only may a godly man come to the
sure knowledge of his gracious state, but it is more easily attainable than
many apprehend: for supposing, what shall be afterwards proved, that a man may
know the gracious work of God's Spirit in himself; if he will but argue
rationally from thence, he shall be forced to conclude his interest in Christ,
unless he deny clear Scripture truths. I shall only make use of one here,
because we are to speak more directly to this afterwards. A godly man may argue
thus, Whosoever receive Christ are justly reputed the children of God--'But as
many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God' (John 1
12); but I have received Christ in all the ways which the word there can
import: for I am pleased with the device of salvation by Christ, I agree to the
terms, I welcome the offer of Christ in all His offices, as a King to rule over
me, a Priest to offer sacrifice and intercede for me, a Prophet to teach me; I
lay out my heart for Him and towards Him, resting on Him as I am able. What
else can be meant by the word "receiving"? Therefore may I say, and conclude
plainly and wsrrantably, I am justly to reckon myself God's child, according to
the aforesaid scripture, which cannot fail.
The second thing to be premised is, That a man be savingly in covenant with God
is a matter of the highest importance: 'It is his life.' (Deut. 32: 47.) And
yet very few have, or seek after a saving interest in the covenant; and many
foolishly think they have such a thing without any solid ground. (Matt. 7: 14.)
Few find, or walk in, the narrow way. This should alarm people to be serious
about the matter, since it is of so great consequence to be in Christ, and
since there be but few that may lay just claim to Him; and yet many do
foolishly fancy an interest in Him, who are deceived by a false confidence, as
the foolish virgins were. (Matt. 25.)
The third thing to be premised is, Men must resolve to be determined by
Scripture in this matter of their interest in Christ. The Spirit speaking in
the Scripture is judge of all controversies'--To the law and to the testimony;
if they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in
them' (Isa. 8: 20)--and of this also, whether a man be savingly in covenant
with God or not. Therefore do not mock God whilst you seem to search after such
a thing. If we prove from Scripture, which is the uncontroverted rule, that you
are gracious, and have made a covenant savingly with God, then resolve to grant
so much, and to acquiesce in it; and if the contrary appear, let there be a
determination of the controversy, else you do but mock the Lord, and so 'your
bands shall be made strong' (Isa. 28: 22); for 'a jot of His word cannot fail.'
(Matt. 5: 11.) Therefore, seek eye-salve from Christ to judge of things
according as the word of God shall discover them to be.
The fourth thing to be premised is, although the matter of a man's interest in
Christ be of so great importance, and the way to attain to the knowledge of it
so plainly held forth in the Scriptures, yet there be but few who reach the
distinct knowledge of it. And that this may not discourage any person from
attempting it, I shall hint some few reasons why so few come to the clear
knowledge of it; which will also prepare the way for what is to be spoken
afterwards. (1) The first thing which hinders many from the knowledge of
their interest in Christ is their ignorance of some special principles of
religion; as, 1. That it was free love in God's bosom, and nothing in man, that
moved Him to send a Saviour to perfect the work of redemption (John 3:
16)--'God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son.' Men are
still seeking some ground for that work in themselves, which leads away from
suitable and high apprehensions of the first spring and rise of God's covenant
favour to His people, which has no reason, cause, or motive in us; and so they
cannot come to the knowledge of their interest. 2. They are ignorant how
that love effectually discovers itself to a man's heart, so as he has ground to
lay claim to it, namely, That ordinarily, 1st, It discovers his fallen state in
himself, because of sin and corruption defiling the whole man, and any thing in
him that might be called a righteousness: 'All these things are loss and dung.'
(Phil. 3: 8.) 2nd1y, It discovers Christ as the full and satisfying treasure,
above all things: 'The man finds a treasure, for which with joy he selleth all
that he has.' (Matt. 13: 44, 46.) 3rdly, It determines the heart, and causes it
to approach unto a living God in the ordinances: 'Blessed is the man whom Thou
choosest, and causes to approach unto Thee, that he may dwell in Thy courts'
(Psa. 65: 4); and causes the heart to wait upon Elm, and Him alone: 'My soul,
wait thou only upon God. (Psa. 62: 5.) Thus having dropped in the seed of God
in the heart, and formed Christ there (Gal. 4: 19), the heart is changed and
made new in the work (Ezek. 36: 26); and God's law is so stamped upon the heart
in that change (Jer. 31: 33), that the whole yoke of Christ is commended to the
man without exception. (Rom. 7: 12, 16.) The law is acknowledged good, holy,
just, and spiritual. Upon all which, from that new principle of life, there
flow out acts of a new life (Gal. 5: 6), 'Faith worketh by love;' (Rom. 6: 18,
22), and the man becometh a servant of righteousness unto God, which especially
appears in the spirituality of worship: men then 'serve God in spirit and in
truth, in the newness of the spirit, and not in the oldness of the letter'
(John 4: 24; Rom. 7: 6)--and tenderness in all manner of Conversation. The man
then 'exerciseth himself how to keep a conscience void of offense towards God
and towards men.' (Acts 24: 16.) Now in this way does the love of God discover
itself unto man, and acteth on him, so as he has ground of laying some good
claim to it; and so as he may justly think that the love which sent a Saviour
had respect to such a man as has had these things made out unto him. Surely
ignorance in this does hinder many from the knowledge of their interest in
Christ; for if a man know not how God worketh with a person, so as he may
justly lay claim to His love, which was from eternity, he will wander in the
dark, and not come to the knowledge of an interest in Him. 3. Many are also
ignorant of this, that God alone is the hope of His people; He is called 'the
hope of Israel.' (Jer. 14: 8.) Although inherent qualifications are evidences
of it, yet the staying of the heart upon Him, as a full blessing and satisfying
portion, is faith--'The faith and hope must be in God' (1 Peter 1: 21)--and the
only proper condition which giveth right to the saving blessings of the
covenant: 'To him that worketh not but believeth, faith is counted for
righteousness.' (Rom. 4: 5.) Indeed, if any person take liberty here, and turn
grace unto licentiousness, there is, without doubt, in so far a delusion: since
there is mercy with Him upon condition that it conciliate fear to him. (Psa.
130: 4.) Yea, hardly can any man who has found the former-mentioned expressions
of God's love made out in him, make a cloak of the covenant for sinful liberty,
without some measure of a spiritual conflict. In this respect, 'he that is born
of God does not sin,' and 'he who does so sin has not seen God.' (1 John 3: 6,
9.) I say God is the hope of His people, and not their own holiness. they
intend honestly and long seriously to be like unto Him, many failings should
not weaken their hope and confidence, for it is in Him 'who changeth not' (Gal.
3: 6); 'and if any man sin, we have an advocate.' (1 John 2: 1.) Now, when men
place their hope in any other thing besides the Lord, it is no wonder they are
kept in a staggering condition, according to the changes of the thing which
they make the ground of their hope; since they give not to God the glory due to
His name, and which He will not give to another. 'They who know Thy name will
put their trust in Thee.' (Psa. 9: 10.) 'My glory will I not give to another: I
am the Lord, that is my name.' (Isa. 42: 8.) 4. Many are ignorant of the
different ways and degrees of God's working with His people, and this does much
darken their knowledge and reflex acts of their interest in Him. This ignorance
consists mainly of three things:--1. They are ignorant of the different degrees
and ways of that work of the law, by which God ordinarily dealeth with men, and
of the different ways in which the Lord bringeth people at first to Christ.
They consider not that the jailer is not kept an hour in bondage (Acts 16);
Paul is kept in suspense three days (Acts 9); Zaccheus not one moment (Luke
19). 2. They are ignorant of, at least they do not consider, how different are
the degrees of sanctification in the saints, and the honorable appearances
thereof before men in some, and the sad blemishes thereof in others. Some are
very blameless, and more free of gross outbreakings, adorning their profession
much, as Job and Zacharias. These are said to be 'perfect and upright, fearing
God, and eschewing evil' (Job 1: 8); 'righteous before God, walking in all the
commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless.' (Luke 1: 6.) Others were
subject to very gross and sad evils, as Solomon, Asa, etc. 3. They are ignorant
of the different communications of God's face and expressions of His presence.
Some walk much in the light of God's countenance, and are much in sensible
fellowship with Him, as David was; others are 'all their days kept in bondage,
through fear of death.' (Heb. 2: 15.) Surely the ignorance of the different
ways of God's working and dealing with His people does very much darken the
knowledge of their interest in Him, whilst they usually limit the Lord to one
way of working, which He does not keep, as we have shown in the former
examples. (2) The second thing which darkens men about their interest in
Christ is, There is one thing or other wherein their heart, in some respect,
does condemn them, as dealing deceitfully and guilefully with God. It is not to
be expected that those can come to clearness about their interest, whose heart
does condemn them for keeping up some known transgressions against the Lord,
which they will not let go, neither are using the means which they know to be
appointed by God for delivering them from it: Neither can those come to
clearness who know some positive duty commanded them in their stations, which
they deceitfully shift and shun, not closing cheerfully with it, or not willing
to be led into it. These are also, in some respects, condemned of their own
heart, as the former sort are; and in that case it is difficult to come to a
distinct knowledge of their state: 'If our heart condemn us not, then have we
confidence towards God.' (1 John 3: 21.) It is supposed here, that a
selfcondemning heart maketh void a man's confidence proportionally before God.
I do not deny but that men may on good grounds plead an interest in Christ in
the case of prevailing iniquity: 'Iniquities prevail against me; as for our
transgressions, Thou shalt purge them away.' (Psa. 65: 3.) 'I see another law
in my members warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me into
captivity to the law of sin which is in my members. O wretched man that I am,
who shall deliver me from the body of this death? I thank God through Jesus
Christ our Lord. So then, with the mind I myself serve the law of God, but with
the flesh the law of sin.' (Rom. 7: 23, 24.) But it is hard to be attained, if
at all attainable, when the heart is dealing deceitfully, and entertaining
known guile in any particular: therefore, let people clear themselves of the
particular, which they know too well. It is the thing which hinders them,
marring their confidence and access in all their approaches unto God. 'Yet ye
have forsaken Me, and served other gods: wherefore I will deliver you no more.'
(Judges 10: 13.) The idolatries of the people are cast up to them by the Lord,
and their suit rejected thereupon. That which draweth away the heart first in
the morning, and last at night, like 'an oven heated at night, and it burns as
a flaming fire in the morning' (Hos. 7: 6), spoken of the wicked; and taketh up
their thoughts often on their bed: as it is said of some, 'He deviseth mischief
upon his bed' (Psa. 36: 4):-- That which does ordinarily lead away the heart in
time of religious duty, and the remembrance of which has power to enliven and
quicken the spirits more than the remembrance of God, so as 'their heart is
after the heart of some detestable thing' (Ezek. 11: 21):--That which
withstandeth men when they would lay hold on the promise, as God casteth up
men's sins to them who are meddling with His covenant, 'What hast thou to do to
declare My statutes, or that thou shouldst take My covenant in thy mouth?'
(Psa. 50: 16):--that is the thing which does prevent the knowledge of a
gracious state. Let it go, and it will be more easy to reach the knowledge of
an interest in Christ. (3) The third thing which hindereth in many the
knowledge of an interest in Christ is, A spirit of sloth and careless
negligence. They complain that they know not whether they be in Christ or not;
but as few take pains to be in Him, so few take pains to try if they be in Him.
It is a work and business which cannot be done sleeping: 'Examine yourselves
whether ye be in the faith; prove your own selves: know ye not your own
selves.' (2 Cor. 13: 5.) The several words used here, namely, Examine, prove,
know--intimate that there is a labour in it: Diligence must be used to make our
'calling and election sure.' (2 Peter 1: 10.) It is a business above flesh and
blood: the holy 'anointing which teacheth all things,' must make us 'know the
things freely given to us of God.' (1 John 2: 27.) Shall the Lord impart a
business of so great concernment, and not so much as 'be inquired after to do
it for men?' (Ezek. 36: 37.) Be ashamed, you who spend so much time in reading
of romances, in adorning your persons, in hawking and hunting, in consulting
the law concerning your outward state in the world, and it may, be in worse
things than these;--Be ashamed, you that spend so little time in the search of
this, whether ye be an heir of glory or note whether you be in the way that
leadeth to heaven, or that way which will land you in darkness for ever? You
who judge this below you, and unworthy of your pains, any part or minute of
your time, it is probable, in God's account, you have judged yourselves
unworthy of everlasting life, so that you shall have no lot with God's people
in this matter. (4) The fourth thing that darkens the knowledge of an
interest in Christ is, Men do not condescend upon what would satisfy them. They
complain that God will not show unto them what He is about to do with them, but
yet cannot say they know what would satisfy them concerning His purpose. This
is a sad thing. Shall we think those are serious who have never as yet pitched
on what would satisfy them, nor are making earnest inquiry after what should
satisfy? If the Lord had left us in the dark in that matter, we were less
inexcusable; but since the grounds of satisfaction, and the true marks of an
interest in Christ, are so clear and frequent in Scripture, and so 'many things
written, that our joy may be full' (1 John 1: 4); and, 'that those who
believe,' may 'know that they have eternal life' (1 John 5: 13); and since 'he
that believeth has the witness of it in himself ' (1 John 5: 10), none can
pretend excuse here. We shall not here insist to show what may and should
satisfy concerning our interest, since we are to speak directly of it
afterwards. (5) The fifth thing that helps much to keep men in the dark with
respect to their interest in Christ is, Their pitch upon some mutable grounds,
which are not so apposite proofs of the truth of an interest in Christ as of
the comfortable state of a triumphing soul sailing before the wind; and marks
which I grant are precious in themselves, and do make out an interest clearly
where they are; yet they are such as without which an interest in Christ may
be, and be known also in a good measure. We shall touch on a few of them.
1st, Some think that all who have a true interest in Him are above the
prevailing power of every sin; but this is contrary to that of Psa. 65: 3,
'Iniquities prevail against me; as for our transgressions Thou shalt purge them
away;' where we find that holy man laying just claim to pardon, in the case of
prevailing iniquity; and that of Rom. 7: 23, 24, 25, where Paul thanketh God
through Christ, as freed from the condemnation of the law, even whilst a law in
his members leadeth captive unto sin. 2nd1y, Some think that all true saints
have constantly access unto God in prayer, and sensible returns of prayer at
all times; but this is contrary to the many sad exercises of His people,
complaining often that they are not heard nor regarded of God: 'How long wilt
Thou forget me, O Lord? for ever? how long wilt Thou hide Thy face from me?'
(Psa. 13: 1); 'My God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken me? why art Thou so far
from helping me, and from the words of my roaring? O my God, I cry in the day
time, but Thou hearest not; and in the night season, and am not silent.' (Psa.
22: 1, 2.) 3rdly, Some think that all who have any true interest in Him have
God witnessing the same unto them, by a high operation of that witnessing
Spirit of His, spoken of: 'The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit
that we are the children of God' (Rom. 8: 16, whereof afterwards); and so they
still suspect their own interest in Christ, because of the want of this. But
they do not remember that they must first believe and give credit to that
record which God has given of the Son, that there is life enough in Him for men
(1 John 5: 10,11), and then look for the seal and witness of the Spirit: 'In
whom, after ye believed, ye were sealed with that Holy Spirit of promise.' (Eph
1: 13.) As long as people hold fast these principles, and the like, they can
hardly come to the knowledge of their gracious state, which God has warranted
people to prove and clear up to themselves, otherwise than by these aforesaid
things.
The fifth thing to be premised is, The removal of some mistakes into which
people may readily run themselves when they are about to prove their interest
in Christ; as-- 1. It is a mistake to think that every one who is in Christ
does know that he is in Him; for many are truly gracious, and have a good title
to eternal life, who do not know so much, until it be made out afterwards:
'These things are written to them that believe, that they may know they have a
title to eternal life' (1 John 5: 13); that is, that they may know they are
believers, and so it is supposed they knew it not before. 2. It is a mistake
to think that all who come to the knowledge of their interest in Christ do
attain an equal certainty about it. One may say, 'He is persuaded nothing
present, or to come, can separate him from the love of God' (Rom. 8: 18);
another comets but this length, 'Lord, I believe, help my unbelief.' (Mark 9:
24.) 3. It is a mistake to think that every one who attains a strong
persuasion of his interest does always hold there; for he who today may say of
the Lord, 'He is his refuge' (Psa. 91: 2), and 'his portion' (Psa. 11: 57),
will at another time say, 'He is cut off' (Psa. 31: 22), and will ask, 'if the
truth of God's promise does fail for evermore' (Psa. 77: 7, 8, 9.) 4. It is
also a mistake to think that every one who attains a good knowledge of their
gracious state can formally answer all objection made to the contrary; but yet
they may hold fast the conclusion, and say, 'I know whom I have believed.' (2
Tim. 1: 12.) There are few grounds of the Christian religion, whereof many
people are so persuaded, as that they are able to maintain them formally
against all arguments brought to the contrary; and yet they may and will hold
the conclusion steadfastly and justly; so it is in the case in hand. 5. It
is no less a mistake to imagine, that the vain groundless confidence, which
many profane ignorant atheists do maintain, is this knowledge of an interest in
Christ which we plead for. Many do falsely avow Him 'to be their Father' (John
8: 14); and many look for heaven, who are beguiled, like the 'foolish virgins.'
(Matt. 25: 12.) Yet we must not think because of this, that all knowledge of an
interest is a delusion and fancy, although these fools be deceived; for, whilst
thousands are deluded, some can say on good and solid grounds, 'We know that we
are of God, and that the whole world lieth in wickedness.' (1 John 5: 19.)
Having premised these things, it now follows that we give some marks by which a
man may know if he be savingly in covenant with God, and has a special interest
in Christ, so that he may warrantable lay claim to God's favour and salvation.
We shall only pitch upon two great and principal marks, not willing to trouble
people with many.
But before we begin to these, we will speak of a preparatory work of the law,
of which the Lord does ordinarily make use, to prepare His own way in men's
souls. This may have its own weight as a mark, with some persons. It is called
the Work of the Law, or the Work of Humiliation. It has some relation to that
'spirit of bondage,' and does now under the New Testament answer unto it, and
usually leadeth on to the 'Spirit of adoption.' (Rom. 3: 15.) Only here, let
it be remembered--1. That we are not to speak of this preparatory work of the
law as a negative mark of a true interest in Christ, as if none might lay claim
to God's favour who have not had this preparatory work, in its several steps,
as we are to speak of it; for, as we shall see, the Lord does not always
observe the same plan with men. 2. The great reason why we speak of it is,
because the Lord deals with many, whom He effectually calls by some such
preparatory work; and to those, who have been so dealt with, it may prove
strengthening, and will confirm them in laying more weight on the marks which
follow. 3. It may help to encourage others, who are under such bondage of
spirit, as a good indication of a gracious work to follow; for, as we shall
point out, it will be rarely found to miscarry and fail of a gracious issue. 4.
Where God uses such a preparatory work, He does not keep one way or measure in
it, as we shall see. For the more distinct handling of this preparatory
work, we shall shortly hint the most ordinary ways by which the Lord leads
people savingly into His covenant, and draws them unto Christ.
There are some called from the womb, as John the Baptist was (Luke 1); or in
very early years, before they >an be actively engaged in Satan's ways, as
Timothy. (2 Tim. 3: 15.) It cannot be supposed that these have such a
preparatory work as we are to speak of. And because some persons may pretend to
this way of effectual calling, we offer these marks of it whereby those who
have been so called may be confirmed. 1. Such are usually from their
childhood kept free from ordinary pollutions, as swearing, lying, mocking of
religion and religious persons, etc., with which children are often defiled.
Those whom God calleth effectually, He sanctifieth from the time of that
effectual calling: 'Sin cannot have dominion over them,' as over others,
'Because they are under grace.' (Rom. 6: 14.) 2. Religion is, as it were,
natural to them; I mean, they need not to be much pressed to religious duties
even when they are but children; they run willingly that way, because there is
an inward principle of 'love constraining them' (2 Cor. 5: 14), so that they
yield themselves servants of righteousness, without outward constraint. (Rom.
6: 16.) 3. Although such know not when they were first acquainted with God,
yet they have afterwards such exercises of spirit befalling them as the saints
in Scripture, of whose first conversion we are not told. They are, upon some
occasions, shut out from God, and are again admitted, in their apprehension, to
come near; their heart is also further broken up by the ordinances, as is said
of Lydia. (Acts 16: 14.) And ordinarily they remember when some special subject
of religion and duty, or when some sin, of which they were not taking notice
before, was discovered to them. They who can apply these things to themselves,
have much to say for their effectual calling from their youth.
Some are brought to Christ in a sovereign gospel-way, when the Lord, by some
few words of love swallowing up any work of the law, quickly taketh a person
prisoner at the first, as He did Zaccheus (Luke 19), and others, who, upon a
word spoken by Christ, did leave all and follow Him; and we hear nothing of a
law-work dealing with them before they close with Christ Jesus. And because
some may pretend to this way of calling, we shall touch on some things most
remarkable in that transaction with Zaccheus, for their clearing and
confirmation. 1. He had some desire to see Christ, and such a desire as made
him waive that which some would have judged prudence and discretion, whilst he
climbeth up a tree that he might see Him. 2. Christ spoke to his heart, and
that word took such hold upon him, that presently with joy he accepted Christ's
offer, and closed with Christ as Lord, whilst few of any note were following
Him. 3. Upon this his heart was opened to the poor, although it seems he was a
covetous man before. 4. He had a due impression of his former ways, evidencing
his respect to the law of Moses, and this he signifies before all the company
then present, not shrinking from taking shame to himself in such things as
probably were notorious to the world. 5. Upon all these things, Christ confirms
and ratifies the contract by His word; recommending to him that oneness of
interest which behaved to be between him and the saints, and the thoughts of
his own lost condition, if Christ had not come and sought him; all which is
clear from Luke 19: 3-10. We grant the Lord calleth some so; and if any can
lay claim to the special things we have now hinted, they have a good
confirmation of God's dealing with them from Scripture; neither are they to vex
themselves because of the want of a distinct preparatory law work, if their
heart has yielded unto Christ; for a work of the law is not desirable, except
for this end. Therefore Christ offers Himself directly in the Scripture, and
people are invited to come to Him; and although many will not come to Him who
is the Surety, until the spirit of bondage distress them for their debt, yet if
any, upon the knowledge of their lost estate, would flee and yield to Christ,
none might warrantable press a work of the law upon them. As for others,
whom Christ persuaded by a word to follow Him, whatsoever He did, or howsoever
He spoke to them, at His first meeting with them, we must rationally suppose
that then He discovered to them so much of their necessity, and His own fulness
and excellency, as made them quit all, and run after Him; and if He do so to
any, we crave no more, since there is room enough there for the Physician.
So that from all this, as some may be confirmed and strengthened, with whom God
has so dealt, so there is no ground for deluded souls to flatter themselves in
their condition, who remain ignorant and senseless of their own miseries, and
Christ's all-sufficiency, and hold fast deceit.
There are some brought in to Christ in a way yet more declarative of His free
grace; and this is, when He effectually calls men at the hour of death. We find
somewhat recorded of this way in that pregnant example of the 'thief on the
cross.' (Luke 23: 39-45.) Although this seems not very pertinent for the
purpose in hand, yet we shall speak a little of it, that, on the one hand, men
may be sparing to judge and pass sentence on either themselves or others before
the last breath; and we shall, on the other hand, speak so particularly, that
none may dare to delay so great a business to the last hour of their life.
We find these remarkable circumstances in the conversation between Christ and
the thief. 1. The man falls out with his former companion. 2. He dares not
speak a wrong word of God, whose hand is on him, but justifies Him in all that
has befallen him. 3. He now sees Jesus Christ persecuted by the world without a
cause, and most injuriously. 4. He discovers Christ to be a Lord and a King,
whilst His enemies seem to have Him under. 5. He believes a state of glory
after death so really, that he prefers a portion of it to the present safety of
his bodily life, which he knew Christ was able to grant him at that time, and
he might have chosen that with the other thief. 6. Although he was much abased
in himself, and so humbled that he pleaded but that Christ would remember him,
yet he was nobly daring to throw himself upon the covenant, on life and death;
and he had so much faith of Christ's all-sufficiency, that he judged a simple
remembrance from Christ would supply all his need. 7. He acquiesced sweetly in
the word which Christ spoke to him for the ground of his comfort. All which are
very clear in the case of that poor dying man, and prove a real work of God
upon his heart. As this example may encourage some to wait for good from
God, who cannot as yet lay clear claim to any gracious work of His Spirit; so
we entreat all, as they love their souls, not to delay their soul's salvation,
hoping for such assistance from Christ in the end, as too many do,--this being
a rare miracle of mercy, in which Christ honorably triumphed over the ignominy
of His cross; a parallel to which we shall hardly find in all the Scripture
besides. Yea, as there be but few at all saved: 'many be called, but few are
chosen' (Matt. 20: 16); and fewest saved this way; so the Lord has peremptorily
threatened to laugh at the calamity, and not to hear the cry of such as mocked
formerly at His reproof, and would not hear when He called to them: 'Because I
have called, and ye refused, I have stretched out my hand, and no man regarded;
but ye have set at nought all my counsel, and would none of my reproof; I also
will laugh at your calamity, I will mock when your fear comes' (Prov. 1:
24-26): which scripture, although it does not shut mercy's door upon any, who
at the hour of death do sincerely judge themselves and flee to Christ, as this
penitent thief did; yet it certainly implieth that very few, who reject the
offer until then, are honoured with repentance as He was; and so their cry, as
not being sincere, and of the right stamp, shall not be heard.
The fourth and most ordinary way by which many are brought to Christ, is by a
clear and discernible work of the law, and humiliation; which we generally call
the spirit of bondage as was hinted before. We do not mean that every one,
whose conscience is awakened with sin and fear of wrath, does really close with
Christ; the contrary appears in Cain, Saul, Judas, eta. But there is a
conviction of sin, an awakening of conscience, and work of humiliation, which,
as we shall point out, rarely miscarries, or fails of a gracious issue, but
ordinarily does resolve into the Spirit of adoption, and a gracious work of
God's Spirit. And because the Lord deals with many sinners this way, and we
find that many are much puzzled about giving judgment of this law-work, we
shall speak of it particularly. This work is either more violent and sudden,
or it is more quiet and gradual, so as to be protracted through a greater
length of time, by which means the steps of it are very discernible. It is more
violent in some, as in the jailer, Paul, and some other converts in the book of
the Acts of the Apostles, on whom Christ did break in at an instant, and fell
on them as with fire and sword, and led them captive terribly. And because some
great legal shakings are deceitful, and turn to nothing, if not worse, we shall
point at some things remarkable in these converts spoken of before, which
proves the work of the law on them to have had a gracious issue and result. 1.
Some word of truth or dispensation puts the person to a dreadful stand, with a
great stir in the soul; some 'are pricked in heart' (Acts 2: 37); some fall a
'trembling' (Acts 16: 29.) And thus it is, that the person is brought to his
wits' end: 'What wilt Thou have me to do?' saith Paul (Act: 9: 6.) 'What must I
do to be saved' saith the jailer. (Acts 16: 32.) 2. The person is content to
have salvation and God's friendship on any terms, as the question implies,
'What shall I do?' As if he had said, What would I not dot what would I not
foregu? what would I not undergo? 3. The person accepts the condition offered
by Christ and His servants, as is clear in the fore-cited Scriptures. 4. The
person presently becomes of one interest with the saints, joins himself with
that persecuted society, puts respect on those whom he had formerly persecuted,
joining and continuing with them in the profession of Christ at all hazards.
Those with whom the Lord has so dealt, have much to say for a gracious work of
God's Spirit in them: and it is probable many of them can date their work from
such a particular time and word, or dispensation, and can give some account of
what passed between God and them, and of a sensible change following in them
from that time forward, as Paul giveth a good account of the work and way of
God with him afterwards. (Acts 22) Again, the Lord sometimes carries on this
work more calmly, softly, and gradually, protracting it so that the several
steps of men's exercise under it are very discernible. It would lead us to a
great length to enlarge upon every step of it. We shall touch on the most
observable things in it. 1. The Lord lays siege to men, who, it may be, have
often refused to yield to Him, when offering Himself in the ordinances; and by
some word preached, read, or borne in on the mind, or by some providence
leading on unto the word, He does assault the house kept peaceably by the
strong man, the devil; and thus Christ, who is the stronger man, comes upon him
(Luke 22: 11); and by the Spirit of truth, fastens the word on the man, in
which God's curse is denounced against such and such sins, of which the man
knoweth himself guilty. The Spirit convinces the man, and binds it upon him,
that he is the same person against whom the word of God speaks, because he is
guilty of sins; and from some sins the man is led on to see more, until usually
he comes to see the sins of his youth, sins of omission, etc.! yea, he is led
on, until he sees himself guilty almost of the breach of the whole law: he sees
'innumerable evils compassing him,' as David speaks. (Psa. 40: 12.) A man
sometimes will entertain alarming views of sin in this case, and is
sharp-sighted to perceive himself guilty of almost every sin. Thus the Spirit
comes and convinces of sin. (John 16: 8.) 2. The Lord overcomes a special
stronghold in the garrison, a refuge of lies, to which the man betaketh himself
when his sins are thus discovered to him. The poor man pretends to faith in
Christ, whereby he thinks his burden is taken off him, as the Pharisees said,
'We have one Father, even God.' (John 8: 41.) They pretend to a special
relation to God as a common Lord. The Spirit of God drives the man from this by
the truth of the Scriptures, proving that he has no true faith, and so no
interest in Christ, nor any true saving grace, showing clearly the difference
between true grace and the counterfeit fancies which the man has in him; and
between him and the truly godly: as Christ laboureth to do with the Jews in
John 8: 42, 44 'If God were your father, ye would love Me. Ye are of the devil,
for ye do the lusts of your father.' So, 'fear surpriseth the hypocrite in
heart' (Isa. 33: 14); especially when the Lord discovereth to him conditions,
in many of those promises in which he trusted most, not easily attainable. He
now sees grace and faith to be another thing than once he judged them. We may
in some respect apply that word here, The Spirit 'convinceth him of sin,
because he has not believed on the Son.' (John 16: 9.) He is particularly
convinced of unbelief: he now sees a vast difference between himself and the
godly, who, he thought before, outstripped him only in some unnecessary, proud,
hateful preciseness: he now sees himself deluded, and in the broad way with the
perishing multitude: and so, in this sight of his misery coucheth down under
his own burden, which before this time he thought Christ did bear for him: he
now begins to be alarmed as to the promises, because of such passages of
Scripture as, 'What hast thou to do to take my covenant in thy mouth?' etc.
(Psa. 50: 16.) 3. The man becomes careful about his salvation, and begins to
take it to heart as the one thing necessary. He is brought to say with the
jailer, 'What shall I do to be saved?' (Acts 16) His salvation becomes the
leading thing with him. It was least in his thoughts before, but now it
prevails, and other things are much disregarded by him. Since his soul is ready
to perish, 'what shall it profit him to gain the world, if he lose his soul?'
(Matt. 9: 26.) Some here are much puzzled with the thoughts of an irrevocable
decree to their prejudice, and with the fears of uncertain death, which may
attack them before their great concern is secured; and some are vexed with
apprehensions that they are guilty of the sin against the Holy Ghost, which is
unpardonable, and so are driven a dangerous length--Satan still reminding them
of many sad examples of people who have miserably put an end to their own
lives: but they are in the hand of one who 'knoweth how to succour them that
are tempted.' (Heb. 2: 18.) 4. When a man is thus in hazard of miscarrying,
the Lord uses a work of preventing mercy towards him, quietly and underhand
supporting him; and this is by infusing into his mind the possibility of his
salvation, leading him to the remembrance of numerous proofs of God's free and
rich grace, in pardoning gross transgressors, such as Manasseh, who was a
bloody idolatrous man, and had correspondence with the devil, and yet obtained
mercy (2 Chron. 33: 11, 13); and other scriptures bearing offers of grace and
favour indifferently to all who will yield to Christ, whatsoever they have been
formerly; so that the man is brought again to this,--'What shall I do to be
saved' which supposes that he apprehends a possibility of being saved, else he
would not propound the question. He applies that or the like word to himself,
'It may be ye shall be hid in the day of the Lord's anger.' (Zeph. 2: 3.) He
finds nothing excluding him from mercy now, if he have a heart for the thing.
The man does not, it may be, here perceive that it is the Lord who upholdeth
him, yet afterwards he can say that, 'when his foot was slipping, God's mercy
held him up,' as the Psalmist speaks in another case. (Psa. 94: 17, 18.) And he
will afterwards say, when he 'was as a beast, and a fool, in many respects, God
held him by the hand.' (Psa. 73: 22, 23.) 5. After this discovery of a
possibility to be saved, there is a work of desire quickened in the soul; which
is clear from that same expression, 'What shall I do to be saved?' But
sometimes this desire is expressed amiss, whilst it goes out thus, 'What shall
I do that I may work the works of God?' (John 6: 28.) In this case the man,
formerly perplexed with fear and care about his salvation, would be at some
work of his own to extricate himself; and here he suddenly resolves to do all
is commanded, and to forego every evil way (yet much misunderstanding Christ
Jesus), and so begins to take some courage to himself, 'going about to
establish his own righteousness, but not submitting unto the righteousness of
God.' (Rom. 10: 3.) Whereupon the Lord makes a new assault upon him, intending
the discovery of his absolutely fallen state in himself, that so room may be
made for the Surety: as Joshua did to the people, when he found them so bold in
their undertakings: 'Ye cannot serve the Lord,' saith he, 'for He is a holy
God, a jealous God.' (Josh. 24) In this new assault the Lord--1. Shows the man
the spirituality of the law; the commandment cometh with a new charge in the
spiritual meaning of it. (Rom. 7: 9.) The law came, saith Paul, that is, in the
spiritual meaning of it. Paul had never entertained such a view of the law
before. 2. God most holily looseth the restraining bonds which he had laid upon
the man's corruption, and suffereth it not only to boil and swell within, but
to threaten to break out in all the outward members. Thus sin grows bold, and
spurns at the law, becoming exceedingly sinful. 'But sin taking occasion by the
commandment, wrought in me all manner of concupiscence. For without the law,
sin was dead. For I was alive without the law once; but when the commandment
came, sin revived, and I died. Was then that which is good made death into me?
God forbid. But sin, that it might appear sin, working death in me by that
which is good; that sin by the commandment might become exceeding sinful.'
(Rom. 7:8-13) 3. The Lord discovers to the man, more than ever, the uncleanness
of his righteousness, and the spots of his best things. These things kill the
man, and he dies in his own conceit (Rom.7:0), and despairs of relief in
himself, if it come not from another source. 6. After many ups and downs,
here ordinarily the man resolves on retirement; he desires to like those in a
besieged city, who, when they see they cannot hold out, and would be glad of
any good condition from the besieging enemy, go to a council, that they may
resolve on something; so the man here retires that he may speak with himself.
This is like that 'communing with our own heart.' (Psa. 4: 4.) Thus God leadeth
into the wilderness, that He may speak to the heart. (Hos. 2: 14.) When the
person is retired, the thoughts of his heart, which were scattered in former
steps of the exercise, do more observably throng in here. We shall reduce them
to this method:--1. The man thinks of his unhappy folly in bearing arms against
God; and here he dwells at large on his former ways, with a blushing
countenance and self-loathing: 'Then shall ye remember your own evil ways, and
your doings that were not good, and shall loathe yourselves in your own sight'
(Ezek. 36: 31); like that of Psalm 51: 3, 'His sin is ever before him.' 2. Then
he remembers how many fair opportunities of yielding to God he has basely lost;
his spirit is like to faint when he remembereth that, as is said in another
case 'When I remember these things, I pour out my soul in me. O my God, my soul
is cast down within me. Deep calleth unto deep, all thy waves are gone over
me.' (Psa. 42: 1-7.) 3. He now thinks of many Christians whom he mocked and
despised in his heart, persuading himself now that they are happy, as having
chosen the better part; he thinks of the condition of those who wait on Christ,
as the queen of Sheba did of Solomon's servants: 'Happy are thy servants,'
saith she, 'who stand continually before thee, and that hear thy wisdom.' (1
Kings 10: 8.) 'Blessed are they that dwell in Thy house.' (Psa. 94: 4.) He
wishes to be one of the meanest who have any relation to God; as the prodigal
son speaks, he would be as 'one of his father's hired servants.' (Luke 15: 7,
19.) 4. Then he calls to mind the good report that is going abroad of God,
according to that testimony of the prophet, who knew that God was a 'gracious
God, and merciful, slow to anger, and of great kindness. (Jonah 4: 2.) The free
and large promises and offers of grace come in here; and the gracious dealings
of God with sinners of all sorts, as recorded in Scripture. 5. He thinks with
himself, 'Why has God spared me so longs and why have I got such a sight of my
sin? And why has He kept me from breaking prison at my own hand? Why has He
made this strange change in me? It may be it is in His heart to do me good; O
that it may be so!' Although all these thoughts be not in the preparatory work
of every one, yet they are with many, and very promising where they are. 7.
Upon all these thoughts and meditations the man, more seriously than ever
before, resolveth to pray, and to make some attempt with God, upon life and
death; he concludes, 'It can be no worse with him; for if he sit still he
perisheth;' as the lepers speak. (2 Kings 7: 3, 4.) He considers, with the
perishing prodigal son, 'that there is bread enough in his father's house and
to spare, whilst he perisheth for want;' so he goes to God, for he knows not
what else to make of his condition, as the prodigal son does. And it may be,
here he resolves what to speak; but things soon vary when he is present before
God, as the prodigal son forgot some of his premeditated prayers. 'I will
arise, and go to my Father, and will say unto him, Father, I have sinned
against Heaven and before thee, and am no more worthy to be called thy son;
make me as one of thy hired servants. And he arose and came unto his father,
and said unto him, Father, I have sinned against Heaven, and in thy sight, and
am no more worthy to be called thy son.' (Luke 15: 17-21.) And now, when he
comets before God, more observable than ever before-- 1. He beginneth, with the
publican, afar of, with many thorough confessions and self-condemnings, in
which he is very liberal, as (Luke 15: 21)--'I have sinned against Heaven and
before thee, and am no more worthy,' etc. 2. Now his thoughts are occupied as
to the hearing of his prayers, which he was not wont to question much: he now
knows what those expressions of the saints concerning the hearing of their
prayers do import. 3. It is observable in this address, that there are many
broken sentences, like that of Psa. 6: 3--'But Thou, O Lord, how long?'
supplied with sighs and 'groanings which cannot be uttered,' and anxiously
looking upward, thereby speaking more than can be well expressed by words. 4.
There are ordinarily some interruptions, and, as it were, diversions; the man
speaking sometimes to the enemy, sometimes to his own heart, sometimes to the
multitudes in the world, as David does in other cases'-- O thou enemy,
destructions are come to a perpetual end.' (Psa. 9: 6.) 'Why art thou cast
down, O my souls and why art thou disquieted in me? Hope thou in God, for I
shall yet praise Him, who is the help of my countenance.' (Psa. 42: 6.) 'O ye
sons of men, how long will ye turn my glory into shame?' (Psa. 4: 2.) 5. It is
observable here that sometimes the man will halt, and be silent, to hear some
indistinct whisperings of a joyful sound glancing on the mind, or some news in
some broken word of Scripture, which, it may be, the man scarcely knoweth to be
Scripture, or whether it is come from God, or whether an insinuation from Satan
to delude him; yet this he has resolved, only to 'hear what God the Lord will
speak,' as upon another occasion. (Psa. 85: 8.) 6. More distinct promises come
into the man's mind, on which he attempts to lay hold, but is beaten off with
objections, as in another case the Psalmist is--'But thou art holy--But I am a
worm.' (Psa. 22 3, 6.) Now it is about the dawning of the day with the man, and
faith will stir as soon as the Lord imparteth 'the joyful sound.' (Psa. 84:
15.) This is the substance of the covenant, which may be shortly summed up in
these words, 'Christ Jesus is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased; hear
ye him.' (Matt. 17: 5.) We can speak no further of the man's exercise as a
preparatory work; for what followeth is more than preparatory; yet that the
exercise may appear complete and full, we shall add here, that after all these
things, the Lord, it may be, after many answers of divers sorts, mightily
conveyeth the knowledge of His covenant into the heart, and determines the
heart to close with it; and God now draweth his soul so to Christ (John 6: 44),
and so layeth out the heart for Him, that the work cannot miscarry; for now the
heart is so enlarged for Him, as that less cannot satisfy, and more is not
desired; like that of Psa. 73: 25--'Whom have I in heaven but Thee? Or whom
have I desired on earth beside Thee?' The soul now resolves to die if He shall
so command, yet at His door, and looking towards Him. We have stated this
preparatory work at some length, not tying any man to such particular
circumstances: only we say, the Lord dealeth so with some; and where He so
convinceth of sin, corruption, and self-emptiness, and makes a man take
salvation to beset as the one thing necessary, and sets him to work in the use
of the means which God has appointed for relief; I say, such a work rarely
shall be found to fail of a good issue and gracious result.
(1) Object. Hypocrites and reprobates have great stirrings of conscience, and
deep convictions about sin, setting them to work sometimes; and I do suspect
any preparatory work of the law I ever had, to be but such as they have.
Ans. It will be hard to give sure essential differences between the preparatory
work in those in whom afterwards Christ is formed, and those legal stirrings
which are sometimes in reprobates. If there were not some gracious result of
these convictions and awakenings of conscience in the Lord's people, and other
marks, of which we shall speak afterwards, it were hard to adventure upon any
difference that is clear in these legal stirrings. Yet, for answer to the
objection, I shall offer some things, which rarely will be found in the
stirrings of reprobates, and which are ordinarily found in that law-work which
has a gracious issue. 1. The convictions of hypocrites and reprobates are
usually confined to some few very gross transgressions. Saul grants no more but
the persecuting of David. (1 Sam. 26: 21.) Judas grants only the betraying of
innocent blood (Matt. 7: 4); but usually those convictions by which the Lord
prepareth His own way in the soul, although they may begin at one or more gross
particular transgression, yet they stop not; but man is led on to see many
breaches of the law, and 'innumerable evils compassing Him' (Psa. 40: 12), as
David speaketh in the sight of his sin. And withal, that universal conviction,
if I may call it so, is not general, as usually we hear senseless men saying,
'that in all things they sin;' but it is particular and condescending, as Paul
afterwards spoke of himself: He not only is the chief of sinners, but
particularly, he was a blasphemer, a persecutor. (1 Tim. 1: 13.) 2. The
convictions which hypocrites have, do seldom reach their corruption, and that
body of death which works an aversion to what is good, and strongly inclines to
what is evil. Ordinarily where we find hypocrites speaking of themselves in
Scripture, they speak loftily, and with some self-conceit, as to their freedom
from corruption. The Pharisees say to the poor man, 'Thou west altogether born
in sin, and dost thou teach us?' (John 9: 34); as if they themselves were not
as corrupt by nature as he. They speak of great sins, as Hazael did--'Am I a
dog, that I should do this great thing?' (2 Kings 8: 13); and also in their
undertakings of duty, as that scribe spoke, 'Master, I will follow Thee
whithersoever Thou goest.' (Matt. 8: 19.) See how the people speak: 'Then they
said to Jeremiah, The Lord be a true and faithful witness between us, if we do
not even according to all things for the which the Lord thy God shall send thee
to us. Whether it be good, or whether it be evil, we will obey the voice of the
Lord our God, to whom we send thee; that it may be well with us when we obey
the voice of the Lord our God.' (Jer. 42: 5, 6.) They undertake to do all that
God will command them: so that they still 'go about,' in any case, 'to
establish their own righteousness, not submitting unto the righteousness of
God.' (Rom. 10: 3.) But I may say, that convictions and exercise about
corruption, and that body of death, inclining them to evil, and disabling for
good, is not the least part of the work where the Lord is preparing His own
way. They judge themselves very wretched because of the body of sin, and are at
their wits' end how to be delivered as Paul speaks when he is under the
exercise of it afterwards--'O wretched man that I am, who shall deliver me from
the body of this death.' (Rom. 7: 24.) 3. It will generally be found, that
the convictions which are in hypocrites either are not so serious, as that some
other business will not put them out of mind before any satisfaction is gotten;
as in Cain, who went and built a city, and we hear no more of his conviction
(Gen. 4); Felix went away until a more convenient time, and we hear no more of
his trembling (Acts 14: 25); or, if that work becomes very serious, then it
runneth to the other extremity, even despair of relief, leaving no room for
escape. So we find Judas very serious in his convictions, yet he grew
desperate, and hanged himself. (Matt. 27: 4, 5.) But where the Lord prepares
His own way, the work is both so serious, that the person cannot be put off it,
until he find some satisfaction, and yet under that very seriousness he lies
open for relief; both which are clear from the jailer's words, 'What must I do
to be saved' (Acts 16: 30.) This serious inquiry after relief is a very
observable thing in the preparatory work which leadeth on to Christ. Yet we
desire none to lay too much weight on these things, since God has allowed clear
differences between the precious and the vile. (2) Object. I still fear I
have not had so thorough a sight of my sin and misery as the Lord giveth to
many whom He effectually calleth, especially to great transgressors such as I
am. Ans. It is true, the Lord discovereth to some clear views of their sin
and misery, and they are thereby put under great legal terrors; but as all are
not brought in by that sensible preparatory work of the law, as we showed
before, so even those who are dealt with after that way are very differently
and variously exercised in regard of the degrees of terror, and of the
continuance of that work. The jailer had a violent work of very short
continuance; Paul had a work continuing three days; some persons are 'in
bondage through fear of death all their lives.' (Heb. 2: 15.) So that we must
not limit the Lord to one way of working here. The main thing we are to look
unto in these legal awakenings and convictions of sin and misery is, if the
Lord reach those ends in us for which usually these stirrings and convictions
are sent into the soul; and if those ends be reached, it is well; we are not to
vex ourselves about any preparatory work further. Now, those ends which God
seeks to accomplish with sinners by these legal terrors and awakenings of
conscience are four. First, The Lord discovers a sight of men's sin and
misery to them, to chase them out of themselves, and to put them out of conceit
of their own righteousness. Men naturally have high thoughts of themselves, and
incline much to the covenant of works; the Lord therefore discovers to them so
much of their sin and corruption, even in their best things, that they are made
to loathe themselves, and despair of relief in themselves; and so they are
forced to flee out of themselves, and from the covenant of works, to seek
refuge elsewhere. (Heb. 6: 18.) 'They become dead to themselves, and the law,'
as to the point of justification. (Rom. 7: 4.) Then 'have they no more
confidence in the flesh' (Phil. 3: 3.) This is supposed in the offers of Christ
'coming to seek and save that which is lost' (Luke 19: 10); and 'to be a
physician to those who are sick.' (Matt. 9: 12.) The second great end is, to
commend Christ Jesus to men's hearts above all things, that so they may fall in
love with Him, and betake themselves to that treasure and jewel which only
enricheth (Matt. 13: 14); and by so doing may serve the Lord's design in the
contrivance of the gospel, which was the manifestation of His free grace
through Christ Jesus in the salvation of men. The sight of a man's own misery
and lost estate by nature is a ready way to make him prize Christ highly, who
alone can set such a wretch at liberty; yea, it not only leadeth a man to a
high esteem of Christ, but also of all things that relate to that way of
salvation, as grace, the new covenant, faith, etc., and maketh him carefully
gather and treasure up his Michtams, or golden scriptures, for the confirmation
of his interest in these things. The third great end is, to deter and
frighten people from sin, and make them quarrel with it, and consent to put
their neck under Christ's yoke. God kindles some sparks of hell in men's bosoms
by the discovery of their sin, as a ready means to make them henceforth stand
in awe, knowing 'how bitter a thing it is to depart from the Lord.' (Jer. 2:
19.) So we find rest offered to the weary, upon condition they will take
Christ's yoke: 'Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me, for I am meek and lowly
in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls.' (Matt. 11: 29.) And God
offereth to own men as their God and Father, upon condition they will allow no
peaceable abode to Belial: 'What fellowship has righteousness with
unrighteousness and what communion has light with darkness and what concord has
Christ with Belial? Or what part has he that believeth with an infidel?
Wherefore come out from among them, and be ye separate, saith the Lord, and
touch not the unclean thing, and I will receive you, and will be a Father unto
you, and ye shall be my sons and daughters, saith the Lord almighty.' (2 Cor.
6: 14-18.) The fourth great end is, to work in men a patient and thankful
submission to all the Master's pleasure. This is a singular piece of work:
'Then shalt thou remember, and be confounded, and never open thy mouth anymore,
because of thy shame, when I am pacified towards thee, for all that thou hast
done, saith the Lord.' (Ezek. 16: 63.) The sight of a man's own vileness and
deserving makes him silent, and constrains him to lay his hand on his mouth,
whatsoever God does unto him: 'I was dumb and opened not my mouth, because Thou
didst it.' (Psa. 39: 9.) 'God has punished us less than our iniquities.' (Ezra
9: 13.) 'I will bear the indignation of the Lord, because I have sinned.' (Mic.
7: 9.) The man carets not what God does to him, or how He deal with him, if
only He save him from the deserved wrath to come: also any mercy is great mercy
to him who has seen such a sight of himself; 'he is less than the least of
mercies.' (Gen. 32: 10.) 'Any crumb falling from the Master's table' is
welcome. (Matt. 15: 27.) He thinks it 'rich mercy that he is not consumed.'
(Lam. 3: 22.) This is the thing that marvelously maketh God's poor afflicted
people so silent under and satisfied with their lot; nay, they think he
deserveth hell who openeth his mouth at anything God does to him, since he has
pardoned his transgressions. So then, for satisfying the objection, I say,
if the Lord have driven thee out of thyself, and commended Christ to thy heart
above all things, and made thee resolve, in His strength, to wage war with
every known transgression, and thou art in some measure as a weaned child,
acquiescing in what He does unto thee, desiring to lay thy hand on thy mouth
thankfully; then thy convictions of sin and misery, and whatsoever thou dost
plead as a preparatory work, is sufficient, and thou art to debate no more
concerning it. Only be advised so to study new discoveries of the sense of thy
lost condition every day, because of thy old and new sins; and also to seek
fresh help in Christ, who is a priest forever to male intercession; and to have
the work of sanctification and patience with thankfulness renewed and quickened
often: for somewhat of that work, which abaseth thee, exalteth Christ, and
renders thee conformed to His will, must accompany thee throughout all thy
lifetime in this world.
We come now to speak of some more clear and sure marks by which men may
discover their gracious state and interest in Christ. The first thing whereby
men may know it is, their closing with Christ in the gospel wherein He is held
forth. This is believing, or faith, which is the condition of the covenant: 'It
is of faith, that it might be by grace.' (Rom. 4: 19.) Believe on the Lord
Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved.' (Acts 26: 31.) Now, although, in
propriety of speech, it is hard to prove an interest by faith, it being one
very interest in Him; yet the heart's closing with Christ Jesus is so
discernible in itself, that we may well place it amongst the marks of a
gracious state: and if a man can make out this, that he believeth on and in
Christ Jesus, he thereby proves a very true interest in Him.
Many object to this as a mark, upon one of these three grounds:-- 1. Some
conceive faith to be a difficult, mysterious thing, hardly attainable. To these
I say, Do not mistake: faith is not so difficult as many apprehend it to be. I
grant true faith in the lowest degree is the gift of God, and above the power
of flesh and blood; for God must draw men to Christ. 'No man can come to me,
except the Father which has sent me draw him.' (John 6: 44.) 'Unto you it is
given in the behalf of Christ to believe on Him.' (Phil. 1: 29.) Yet it were a
reflection upon Christ, and all He has done, to say it were a matter of
insuperable difficulty; as is clear: 'The righteousness which is of faith
speaketh on this wise, Say not in thine heart, Who shall ascend into heaven?
that is, to bring Christ down from above; or, Who shall descend into the deep?
that is, to bring up Christ again from the dead. But what saith it? The word is
nigh thee, even in thy mouth, and in thy heart; that is, the word of faith
which we preach, That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and
shalt believe in thine heart that God has raised Him from the dead, thou shalt
be saved: for with the heart man believeth unto righteousness, and with the
mouth confession is made unto salvation. For the Scripture saith, Whosoever
believeth on Him shall not be ashamed.' (Rom. 10: 6-11.) It were, according to
that Scriptures as much upon the matter as to say, Christ came not from heaven,
is not risen from the dead, nor ascended victorious to heaven. I say, He has
made the way to heaven most easy; and faith, which is the condition required on
our part, more easy than men do imagine. For the better understanding of this,
consider that justifying faith is not to believe that I am elected, or to
believe that God loveth me, or that Christ died for me, or the like: these
things are indeed very difficult, and almost impossible to be attained at the
first by those who are serious; whilst natural atheists and deluded hypocrites
find no difficulty in asserting all those things: I say, true justifying faith
is not any of the aforesaid things; neither is it simply the believing of any
sentence that is written, or that can be thought upon. I grant, he that
believeth on Christ Jesus, believeth what God has said concerning man's sinful,
miserable condition by nature; and he believeth that to be true, that 'there is
life in the Son, who was slain, and is risen again from the dead,' etc.: but
none of these, nor the believing of many such truths, evinces justifying faith,
or that believing on the Son of God spoken of in Scripture; for then it were
simply an act of the understanding; but true justifying faith, which we now
seek after, as a good mark of an interest in Christ, is chiefly and principally
an act or work of the heart and will; having presupposed sundry things about
truth in the understanding--'With the heart man believeth unto righteousness.'
(Rom. 10: 10.) And although it seem (verse 9), that a man is saved upon
condition that he believes this truth, namely, that 'God raised Christ from the
dead,' yet we must understand another thing there, and verse 10, than the
believing the truth of that proposition; for besides that all devils have that
faith, whereby they believe that God raised Christ from the dead; so the
Scripture has clearly resolved justifying faith into a receiving of Christ: 'as
many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God, even to
them that believe on His name.' (John 1: 12.) The receiving of Christ is there
explained to be the believing on His name. It is also called a staying on the
Lord (Isa. 26: 3); a trusting in God, often mentioned in the Psalms, and the
word is a leaning on Him. It is a believing on Christ: 'This is the work of
God, that ye believe on Him whom He has sent' (John 6: 29), and often so
expressed in the New Testament. When God maketh men believe savingly, He is
said to draw them unto Christ; and when the Lord inviteth them to believe, He
calleth them to come to Him. 'All that the Father giveth me, shall come to me;
and him that comes to me, I will in no wise cast out. No man can come to me,
except the Father which has sent me draw him.' (John 6: 37, 44.) The kingdom of
heaven is like a man finding a jewel, with which he falleth in love: 'The
kingdom of heaven is like unto a treasure hid in a field; the which when a man
has found, he hideth, and for joy thereof, goes and sells all that he has, and
buys that field. Again, the kingdom of heaven is like unto a merchantman
seeking goodly pearls; who, when he had found one pearl of great price, went
and sold all that he had, and bought it.' (Matt. 13: 44-46.) Now, I say, this
acting of the heart on Christ Jesus is not so difficult a thing as is
conceived. Shall that be judged a mysterious difficult thing which does consist
much in desire? If men have but an appetite, they have it; for they are
'blessed that hunger after righteousness.' (Matt. 5: 6.) 'If you will,' you are
welcome. (Rev. 22: 17.) Is it a matter of such intricacy and insuperable
difficulty, earnestly to look to that exalted Saviour: 'Look unto me and be ye
saved, all the ends of the earth.' (Isa. 45: 22.) And to receive a thing that
is offered, held forth, and declared to be mine, if I will but accept and take
it, and in a manner 'open my mouth,' and give way to it? 'Open thy mouth wide
and I will fill it.' (Psa. 81: 10.) Such a thing is faith, if not less. Oh, if
I could persuade people what justifying faith is, which appropriateth Christ to
me! We often drive people from their just rest and quiet, by making them
apprehend faith to be some deep, mysterious thing, and by exciting unnecessary
doubts about it, whereby it is needlessly darkened. 2. Some make no use of
this mark, as judging it a high presumptuous crime to pretend to so excellent a
thing as is the very condition of the new covenant. To these I say, you need
not startle so much at it, as if it were high pride to pretend to it; for
whatsoever true faith be, men must resolve to have it, or nothing at all: all
other marks are in vain without it: a thousand things besides will not do the
business: unless a man believe, he abideth in the state of condemnation. 'He
that believeth not is condemned already because he has not believed in the name
of the only begotten Son of God. He that believeth not the Son shall not see
life, but the wrath of God abideth on him.' (John 3: 18, 36.) 3. Others do
not meddle with this noble mark of faith, because they judge it a work of the
greatest difficulty to find out where faith is. To these I say, it is not so
difficult to find it out, since 'he that believeth, has the witness in
himself.' (1 John 5: 10.) It is a thing which by some serious search may be
known. Not only may we do much to find it out by the preparatory work going
before it in many, as the apprehending and believing of a man's lost estate,
and that he cannot work out his own salvation, and that there is a satisfying
fulness in Christ, very desirable if he could obtain it;--a serious minding of
this, with a heart laid open for relief; as also by the ordinary companions and
concomitants of it, namely, the liking of Christ's dominion, His kingly and
prophetical office, a desire to resign myself wholly up to Him, to be as His
disposing; as also by the native consequences of it, namely, the acquitting of
the word, the acquitting of my own conscience according to the word, a heart
purifying work, a working by love, etc.; I say, not only may we know faith by
these things, but it is discernible by itself and of its own nature. Although I
deny not but there must be some help of God's Spirit, 'by which we know what is
freely given unto us of God' (1 Cor. 2: 12); as also, that God has allowed many
evidences and marks as precious helps, whereby men may clear up faith more
fully to themselves-- 'These things have I written unto you that believe on the
name of the Son of God that ye may know that ye have eternal life; (1 John 5:
13); yet I still say that faith, or believing, which is some acting of the
heart upon Christ in the gospel, and the transacting with Him there, is
discernible of itself, and by itself, to a judicious understanding person, with
an ordinary influence of the Spirit: unless the Lord, for reasons known to
Himself, overcloud a man's reflex light, by which he should perceive what is in
him.
This justifying faith, which we assert to be so discernible, is, in the Lord's
deep wisdom and gracious condescension, variously expressed in Scripture,
according to the different actings of it upon God, and outgoings after Him; so
that every one who has it may find and take it up in his own mould. It
sometimes acts by a desire of union with Him in Christ; this is that looking to
Him in Isaiah--'Look unto Me and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth.' (Isa.
45: 22.) This seems to be a weak act of faith, and far below other acting of it
at other times perhaps in that same person. Men will look to what they dare not
approach (in their apprehension), which they dare not touch or embrace; they
may look to one to whom they dare not speak: yet God has made the promise to
faith in that acting, as the fore-cited Scripture shows: and this He has done
mercifully and wisely; for this is the only discernible way of the acting of
faith in some. Such are the actings or outgoings of faith expressed in
Scripture by 'hungering and thirsting after righteousness' (Matt. 5: 6), and
that expressed by willing--'And whosoever will, let him take the water of life
freely.' (Rev. 22: 17.) Again, this faith goes out sometimes in the act of
recumbency, or leaning on the Lord, the soul taking up Christ then as a resting
stone, and God has so held him out, although he be a stumbling-stone to others.
(Rom. 9: 33.) This acting of it is hinted in the expressions of trusting and
staying on God, so often mentioned in Scripture; and precious promises are made
to this acting of faith--'God will keep them in perfect peace whose minds are
stayed on Him; because such do trust in Him. Trust in the Lord: for with Him is
everlasting strength.' (Isa. 26: 3, 4.) 'They that trust in the lord shall be
as Mount Zion, which abideth for ever.' (Psa. 125: 1.) I say, the Lord has made
promises to this way of faith's acting, as knowing it will often go out after
Him in this way with many persons; and this way of its acting will be most
discernible to them. It goes out after God sometimes by an act of waiting.
When the soul has somewhat depending before God, and has not clearly discovered
his mind concerning it, then faith does wait; and so it has the promise-- 'They
shall not be ashamed that wait for me.' (Isa. 49: 23.) Sometimes it acteth in a
wilful way upon the Lord, when the soul apprehendeth God thrusting it away, and
threatening its ruin --'Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him.' (Job 13:
15.) The faith of that poor woman of Canaan (Matt. 15.), so highly commended by
Christ, went out in this way of wilful acting over difficulties: and the Lord
speaketh much good of it, and to it, because some will be at times called upon
to exercise faith in that way, and so they have that for their encouragement.
It were tedious to instance all the several ways of the acting of faith upon,
and its exercise about, and outgoings after Christ,--I may say, according to
the various conditions of man. And accordingly faith, which God has appointed
to traffic and travel between Christ and man, as the instrument of conveyance
of His fulness unto man, and of maintaining union and communion with Him,
acteth variously and differently upon God in Christ: for faith is the very
shaping out of a man's heart according to God's device of salvation by Christ
Jesus, in whom it pleased the Father that all fulness should dwell' (Col. 1:
16); so that, let Christ turn what way He will, faith turneth and pointeth that
way. Now He turns all ways in which He can be useful to poor man; and therefore
faith acts accordingly on Him for drawing out of that fulness, according to a
man's case and condition. As for example, The soul is naked, destitute of a
covering to keep it from the storm of God's wrath; Christ is fine raiment (Rev.
3: 17, 18); then accordingly faith's work here is to 'put on the Lord Jesus.'
(Rom. 13: 14.) The soul is hungry and thirsty after somewhat that may
everlastingly satisfy; Christ Jesus is 'milk, wine, water, the bread of life,
and the true manna.' (Isa. 40: 1, 2; John 6: 48, 51.) He is 'the feast of fat
things, and of wines on the lees well refined' (Isa. 25: 6): then the work and
exercise of faith is to 'go, buy, eat, and drink abundantly.' (John 6: 53, 57;
Isa. 40: 1.) The soul is pursued for guilt more or less, and is not able to
withstand the charge: Christ Jesus is the city of refuge, and the high-priest
there, during whose priesthood, that is, forever, the poor man who escapes
thither is safe; then the work and exercise of faith is 'to flee thither for
refuge, to lay hold on the hope set before us.' (Heb. 6: 18.) In a word,
whatsoever way He may benefit poor man, He declares Himself able to do. And as
He holdeth out Himself in the Scriptures, so faith does point towards Him. If
He be a Bridegroom, faith will go out in a marriage relation; if He be a
Father, faith pleadeth the man to be a child; if He be a Shepherd, faith pleads
the man may be one of His sheep; if He be a Lord, faith calleth Him so, which
none can do but by the Spirit of Jesus; if He be dead, and risen again for our
justification, faith 'believeth God has raised Him' on that account. (Rom. 10:
9.) Wheresoever He be, there would faith be; and whatsoever He is, faith would
be somewhat like Him; for by faith the heart is laid out in breadth and length
for Him; yea, when the fame and report of Him goes abroad in His truth,
although faith sees not much, yet it 'believeth on His name,' upon the very
fame He has sent abroad of Himself. (John 1: 12.)
But here, for avoiding mistakes, considers--1. That although justifying faith
acts so variously, yet every believer who has a good title to Christ Jesus has
not all these various actings and exercises of faith; for his condition
requires them not; and also the faster is sometimes pleased not to lead out the
faith of some persons, in all these particular ways, for reasons known to
Himself, even when their necessity (to their apprehension) calleth for such an
acting of faith. Surely, every one dare not say, 'Though He slay me, yet will I
trust in Him.' (Job 13: 15.) Many would not have gone up with the woman of
Canaan, spoken of in Matt. 15:, but would have been discouraged, and have given
up the pursuit. It is on this account that Christ highly commends the faith of
some beyond the faith of others; as of the centurion, and the woman of Canaan.
(Matt. 8: 10.) Many good people are much disquieted about their faith, because
it goes not out in all those ways we find recorded in Scripture; but there is
hardly any one to be found whose faith has acted all these ways. 2. Many of
these actings of faith are much intended and remitted. They are sometimes
strong and vigorous, and discernible; and sometime they fail, and unbelief
prevails, so it were an uncertain thing to judge of a man's state by these. We
find the saints at times very different from themselves in regard of the acting
of faith, as we showed before. 3. Each one of these actings of faith speaks
good to the person in whom it is, and has promises annexed unto it, as we have
said. Yet-- 4. Although these acting of faith have promises annexed to them,
they are not, on that account, the condition of the new covenant; for then
every one behaved to have each one of them, which is not true, as we said
before. A promise is made to him who overcometh: but perseverance is not the
condition of the new covenant, though it supposeth it. There are promises made
to the exercise of all graces in Scripture; but faith only is the condition of
the covenant. I say, then, these promises are made to these workings of faith,
not as such, but as they imply justifying faith, which is the condition of the
covenant. All these are acting of faith, but not as it is justifying.
Therefore-- 5. There is something common to all gracious persons, which may
be supposed by all the aforesaid acting of faith, wherein the nature and
essence of justifying faith consist: and this is the heart's satisfaction with
God's plan of salvation by Christ. When man is pleased with God's method of
satisfaction to justice, through Christ Jesus, in whom all fulness now dwells,
by the Father's pleasure; when the soul and heart of man acquiesce in that,
then it believeth unto salvation. As at first the Lord made man suitable to the
covenant of works, by creating him perfect, and so putting him in a capacity to
perform his will in that covenant: so, under the new covenant, when God giveth
the new heart to man, He puts the idea and stamp of all His device in the new
covenant upon the man, so as there is a consonance to God's will there: thus he
bears the image of the second Adam, Christ Jesus, on him. This is a great part
of the new heart, and is most opposed to works: since now the man absolutely
falls from works, 'becoming dead to the law,' as to the point of justification,
'by the body of Christ.' (Rom. 7: 4.) Man perceiving that God has devised a way
of satisfying Divine justice, and recovering lost man by the incarnation of
Christ, he thinks this so good and sure a way, that he absolutely gives up with
the law, as I said before, and closes with this device; and this is believing
or faith, very opposite to works, and all resting thereupon. This cannot fail
to be in all gracious persons, in whom many of the acting of faith are not to
be found. This does clearly suppose known distress in a man, without any relief
in himself: this supposes known fulness in Christ, as the alone sufficient
relief: this imports a sort of appropriation; for the heart, being pleased with
that device, in so far swayeth towards it. This is a thing clearly supposed in
all the acting of faith spoken of before. He that greedily hungereth, has this;
and he that leaneth has this, etc. This is to esteem 'Christ the wisdom and
power of God' to salvation, as He is said to be to all that believe. (1 Cor. 1:
24.) They esteem that device wise and sure, becoming God; and that is to
believe. On this account, Christ, who is the stone rejected by many, is
'precious to them who believe;' a fit stone to recover, fortify, and beautify
the tottering building and fabric of lost man--'To whom coming, as unto a
living stone, disallowed indeed of men, but chosen of God and precious; ye
also, as lively stones, are built up a spiritual house, a holy priesthood, to
offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ. Wherefore it
is also contained in the Scripture, Behold, I lay in Zion a chief cornerstone,
elect, precious; and he that believeth on Him shall not be confounded. Unto
you, therefore, which believe He is precious; but unto them which be
disobedient, the stone which the builders disallowed, the same is made the head
of the corner; and a stone of stumbling, and a rock of offense, even to them
which stumble at the word, being disobedient, whereunto also they were
appointed.' (1 Peter 2: 4-8.) 'The kingdom of God is like a man finding a
treasure, for which with joy he selleth all.' (Matt. 13: 44.) These words hold
out the very way of believing, namely, salvation is discovered in the gospel to
be by Christ; the heart valueth that method as satisfying. This is to believe
on the Son of God lifted up; which is compared with looking to the brazen
serpent. (John 3: 14.) It was man's approbation of that device which made it
effectual for his healing; so is it here, 'He that so believeth, setteth to his
seal that God is true.' (John 3: 33.) True! Wherein? In that record He has
borne, that God has provided life for men, and placed it all in Christ. 'He
that believeth not maketh God a liar.' (1 John 5: 10.) Wherein? In His saying
that Christ is a safe and sure way to heaven. This is being pleased and
acquiescing in that device; and it is consonant to all I know spoken of
justifying faith in Scripture. This is the believing on Christ and on His name,
the receiving of Him, and resting on Him for salvation, in our Catechism; the
believing that Jesus is the Christ, that is, the anointed one, whom the Father
has sealed and set apart, and qualified for the work of reconciling man unto
God; and 'he that believeth that Jesus is the Christ, is born of God.' (1 John
5: 1.) This is to 'believe with the heart that God has raised Christ from the
dead.' (Acts 8: 37.) The man believeth Christ died and rose on the account of
satisfaction for man's transgression. Devils may believe that: nay, but the man
I speak of, 'believeth it with the heart' (which no natural man does, until a
new heart be given unto him); that is, he is cordially pleased, and satisfied
with, and acquiesceth in, this glorious method. And thus faith layeth out
itself now and then in its acting, outgoings, and exercise, according to all
the covenant relations under which Christ is held forth in the Scripture.
Now, I say, this faith is discernible, not only in these actings;-- many times
a man may know if his heart does hunger after Christ, and flee for refuge to
Him when pursued, and if he does commit himself unto God, etc.--but also in its
very nature; as it is justifying, it is discernible, and may be known. A man
may clearly know, if from known distress in himself, upon the report and fame
of Christ's fulness, his heart is pleased with God's device in the new
covenant; if it goes after Christ in that discovery, and approveth Him as Lord
of the life of men, terminating and resting there, and nowhere else,
acquiescing in that contrivance with desire and complacency. This is a
discernible thing; therefore I call upon men impartially to examine themselves,
and if they find that their heart has closed so with that device of salvation,
and is gone out after Him as precious, that thereupon they conclude a sure and
true interest in Jesus Christ, and a good claim and title to the crown, since
'he that believeth shall never perish, but have everlasting life.' (John 3: 16,
36.)
IV.--Difficulties as to what seems to be faith removed
Object. Hypocrites and reprobates have a sort of faith, and are said to
believe; and cannot choose but go out after Christ, and that device of
salvation, when they hear of it; and they profess they do so, yet are deluded,
and so may I. 'Many believed in His name, when they saw the miracles which He
did. But Jesus did not commit Himself unto them, because He knew all men.'
(John 2: 23, 24.) 'Then Simon the sorcerer himself believed also.' (Acts 8:
13.) Ans. To say nothing of that thought of your heart, whereby you wonder
that any man should not approve of the device of salvation by Christ, and be
led out towards Him, as a very promising thing, and implying that justifying
faith is in your bosom; and, to say nothing in contradiction to that which you
think, that a natural man, whilst such, and before he gets a new heart, can be
pleased with that device, and affectionately believe with his heart, and that
which perfectly overthrows the covenant of works, and abaseth man in the point
of self righteousness already attained, or that can be attained by him, which
is inconsistent with many scriptural truths; I shall notice the following
differences between the faith of all hypocrites or reprobates, and that true
saving justifying faith, whereof we have spoken. 1. They never close with
Christ Jesus in that device, and Him alone, as a sufficient severing of the
eyes, as is said of Abraham to Sarah (Gen. 20: 16); they still hold fast
somewhat of their own, at least to help to procure God's favour and salvation;
their heart does still speak, as that young man in Luke insinuates, 'What shall
I do to inherit eternal life?' (Luke 10: 25; 18: 18.) Besides that, they still
retain their former lovers, and will not break their covenants with hell and
death, imagining they may have Christ with these things equally sharing in
their heart; contrary to that, 'A man cannot serve two masters.' (Matt. 6: 24.)
Either Christ must be judged absolute Lord, and worthy to be so, or nothing at
all; and so it is clear their heart is not prepared for that device of
salvation by Christ, whom God has alone made Lord here, in whom all fulness
shall dwell. But where justifying faith is, the soul of a man and his heart
does close with Christ, and Him alone, 'having no confidence in the flesh,' and
trusting only in God. (Phil. 3: 3; Psa. 62: 5.) Also the man here giveth up all
other lovers; as they compete with Christ, he resolves 'not to be for another.'
(Hos. 3: 3.) He calls Him Lord, which a man can only do by the Spirit of
Christ. 2. As hypocrites and reprobates never close with Christ alone, so
they never fully close with Christ as anointed to be a King, to rule over a man
in all things; a Priest, to procure pardon and to make peace for man upon all
occasions; a Prophet, to be wisdom, and a teacher and counsellor in all cases
to man: so they do not receive Christ, especially in the first and third
offices. But where true justifying faith is, a man closeth wholly with Christ
in all His offices, judging all His will 'good, holy, just, and spiritual (Rom.
7: 12); and right concerning all things' (Psa. 119: 128); 'making mention of
His righteousness only.' (Psa. 71: 16.) The man also giveth up himself to be
taught of Him--'Learn of me.' (Matt. 11: 29.) So that 'Christ is made,' to the
true believer, with His own consent, 'wisdom, righteousness, sanctification,
and redemption.' (1 Cor. 1: 30.) And although he has not all these things
formally in exercise when his heart goes out after Christ, yet, upon search and
trial, it will be found with him as I have said. 3. Hypocrites and
reprobates never close with Christ, and all the inconveniences that may follow
Him; they stick at that, with the scribe-- 'And a certain scribe came and said
unto Him, Master, I will follow Thee whithersoever Thou goes. And Jesus saith
unto him, The foxes have holes, and the birds of the air have nests; but the
Son of Man has not where to lay His head.' (Matt. 8: 19, 20.) But where true
justifying faith is, a man closes with Him at all hazards; he resolves to
forego all rather than forego Christ. 'We have left all and followed Thee'
(Mark 10: 28); 'he reckoned all to be loss and dung for the excellency of
Christ Jesus, as his Lord, and to be found in Him.' (Phil. 3: 8.) We might
point out other differences also, as that true faith is operative, 'purifying
the heart' (Acts 15: 9); 'working by love' (Gal. 5: 6); whilst hypocrites do
only cleanse the 'outside of the platter' (Matt. 23: 5); and 'do all to be seen
of men' (Matt. 6: 5); 'not seeking the honour that is of God only' (John 5:
44), and so cannot believe. We might also show, that true faith is never alone
in a man, but attended with other saving graces. But because these things will
coincide with what follows, and as we are showing here that a man may determine
his gracious state by his faith, and the acting thereof on Christ, we pass
these things for the present.
The second great mark of a gracious state, and true saving interest in Jesus
Christ, is the new creature--'If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature.'
(2 Cor. 5: 17.) This new creation or renovation of man, is a very sensible
change; although not in those who are effectually called from the womb, or in
their younger years; because those have had this new creature from that time in
them, so that this change in after-periods of time is not so discernible as in
those who have been regenerated and brought unto Christ after they were come to
greater age, and so have more palpably been under the 'power of darkness,'
before they were 'translated into the kingdom of Christ.' (Col. 1: 13.) But in
all who do warrantable pretend to Christ, this new creature must be; although
some do not know experimentally the contraries of every part of it as others
do; because they have not been equally, in regard of practice, under the power
of darkness. This new creature is called the 'new man' (Gal. 3: 10), which
points out the extent of it. It is not simply a new tongue or new hand, but a
new man. There is a principle of new life and motion put in the man, which is
the new heart; which new principle of life sendeth forth acts of life, or of
'conformity to the image' of Him who created it, so that the party is renewed
in some measure every way. (Col. 3: 10.) This renovation of the man who is in
Christ may be reduced into these two great heads:--
There is a renovation of the man's person,soul and body, in some measure. 1.
His understanding is renewed, so that he judgeth 'Christ preached' in the
gospel to be 'the wisdom and power of God,' a wise and strong device beseeming
God. (1 Cor. 1: 23, 24.) He knoweth the things of God really and solidly, not
to be yea and nay, and uncertain fancies; but all to be yea and amen, solid,
certain, substantial things, having a desirable accomplishment in Christ, and
resolving much in Him. 'The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit
of God; for they are foolishness unto him; neither can he know them, because
they are spiritually discerned: but he that is spiritual judgeth all things.'
(1 Cor. 2: 14,15.) 'As God is true, our word towards you was not yea and nay.
For the Son of God, Jesus Christ, who was preached among you by us, even by me,
and Silvanus, and Timotheus, was not yea and nay, but in Him was yea. For all
the promises of God in Him are yea, and in Him amen, unto the glory of God by
us.' (2 Cor. 1: 19, 20.) Natural men, educated under gospel ordinances,
although they have some notional knowledge of God, Christ, the promises, the
motions of the Holy Spirit, etc., so that they may confer, preach, and dispute
about these things; yet they look on them as common received maxims of
Christianity, from which to recede were a singularity and disgrace; but not as
real, solid, substantial truths, so as to venture their souls and everlasting
being on them. The understanding is renewed also, to understand somewhat of God
in the creatures, as bearing marks of His glorious attributes (Psa. 19: 1);
they see the heavens declaring His glory and power; and somewhat of God in the
providence, and the dispensations that fall out: His wondrous works declare
that His name is near. (Psa. 75: 1.) The understanding also perceives the
conditions and cases of the soul otherwise than it was wont to do; as we find
the saints usually speaking in Scripture --'O my soul, thou hast said unto the
lord, Thou art my Lord.' (Psa. 16: 2.) 'My soul said, Thy face will I seek.'
(Psa. 27: 8.) 'Why art thou cast down, O my soul' 'Return unto thy rest, O my
soul.' (Psa. 42: 5; 116: 7.) 2. The heart and affections are renewed. The
heart is made a new heart, a heart of flesh, capable of impressions, having a
copy of His law stamped on it, and the fear of God put into it, whereby the
man's duty becomes in a manner native and kindly to the man--'A new heart also
will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you; and I will take away
the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you an heart of flesh. And I
will put my Spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes, and ye
shall keep my judgments and do them.' (Ezek. 36: 26, 27.) It was before a heart
of stone, void of the fear of God. The affections are now renewed: the love is
renewed in a good measure; it goes out after God, after His law, and after
those who have God's image in them, 'I will love the Lord' (Psa. 18: 1);--after
His law, 'O how love I thy law!' (Psa. 119: 97);--after those who have had
God's image in them, 'By this shall all men knave that ye are my disciples, if
ye have love one to another.' (John 13: 35.) 'We know that we have passed from
death unto life, because we love the brethren.' (1 John 3: 14.) This love to
God's people is purely on the account that they are the children of God, and
keep His statutes: it is with a 'pure heart fervently' (1 Peter 1: 22); and
therefore it goes towards all those whom the man knows or apprehends to be
such. 'I am a companion of all them that fear thee, and of them that keep thy
precepts' (Psa. ~119: 63);--in all cases and conditions, even where there is
nothing to beautify or commend but the image of God. And this love is so
fervent many times, that it putteth itself out in all relations; so that a man
seeks a godly wife, a godly master, a godly servant, a godly counsellor, in
preference to all others- -'Mine eyes shall be upon the faithful of the land,
that they may dwell with me: he that walketh in a perfect way, he shall serve
me.' (Psa. 101: 6.) And 'it is not quenched by many waters.' (Cant. 8: 7.) Many
imperfections and infirmities, differences in opinion, wrongs received, will
not altogether quench love. Also it is communicative of good according to its
measure, and as the case of the godly poor requires-- 'Thou art my Lord, my
goodness extendeth not to thee, but to the saints,' etc. (Psa. 16: 2.) 'But
whose has this world's good, and sees his brother have need, and shutteth up
his bowels of compassion from him, how dwelleth the love of God in him? My
little children, let us not love in word, neither in tongue, but in deed and in
truth. And hereby we know that we are of the truth, and shall assure our hearts
before Him.' (1 John 3: 18,19.) The man's hatred is also renewed, and is now
directed against sin, 'I hate vain thoughts' (Psa. 119: 113); against God's
enemies, as such, 'Do not I hate them that hate Thee?' (Psa. 139: 21, 22.) The
joy or delight is renewed, for it runneth towards God, 'Whom have I in heaven
but thee? And there is none upon earth that I desire besides thee (Psa. 73:
25);--towards His law and will, 'His delight is in the law of the Lord' (Psa.
1: 2);-- and towards the godly and their fellowship, 'To the saints in whom is
all my delight.' (Psa. 16: 3.) The sorrow is turned against sin which has
wronged Christ--'Looking to Him whom they have pierced, they mourn.' (Zech. 12:
10.) The sorrow is godly there, and against what encroacheth upon God's
honour--'They are sorrowful for the solemn assembly, and the reproach of that
is their burden.' (Zeph. 3: 18.) There is some renovation in all the
affections, as in every other part of the soul, pointing now towards God. 3.
The very outward members of the man are renewed, as the Scripture speaks--the
tongue, the eye, the ear, the hand, and the foot, so that those members which
once were abused as weapons of unrighteousness unto sin, are now improved as
weapons of righteousness unto holiness. (Rom. 6: 19.)
A man who is in Christ is renewed in some measure in all his ways-- 'Behold all
things are become new.' (2 Cor. 5: 17.) The man becometh new. 1. In the way
of his interest. He was set upon any good before, though but apparent and at
best but external. 'Many say, who will show us any good?' (Psa. 4: 6); but now
his interest and business is, how to 'be found in Christ, in that day' (Phil.
3: 9); or how to be obedient to Him, and 'walk before Him in the light of the
living' (Psa. 56: 13); which He would choose among all the mercies that fill
this earth--'The earth, O Lord, is full of Thy mercy, teach me Thy statutes.'
(Psa. 119: 64.) The interest of Christ also becomes the man's interest, as
appears in the song of Hannah and of Mary. (1 Sam. 2:; Luke 1). It is strange
to see people newly converted, and having reached but the beginnings of
knowledge, concern and interest themselves in the public matters of Christ's
kingdom, so desirous to have Him riding prosperously and subduing the people
under Him. 2. The man that is in Christ is renewed in the way of his
worship. He was wont to 'serve God in the oldness of the letter' (Rom. 7: 6);
according to custom, answering the letter of the command in outward duty which
one in whom the old man has absolute dominion can do; but now he worshippeth
God in newness of spirit, in a new way, wherein He is 'helped by the Spirit of
God' (Rom. 8: 26); beyond the reach of flesh and blood. He 'serveth now the
true and living God' (1 Thess. 1: 9); 'in spirit and in truth.' (John 4: 23.)
Having spiritual apprehensions of God, and engaged in his very soul in that
work, doing and saying truly and not feignedly when he worshippeth; still
desiring to approach unto Him as a living God, who hearth and seeth Him, and
can accept His service. (Psa. 62: 1, 2.) I grant he fails of this many times;
yet I may say, such worship he intends, and sometimes overtakes, and does not
much reckon that worship which is not so performed unto God; and the iniquity
of his holy things is not the least part of His burden and exercise. To such a
worship natural men are strangers, whilst they babble out their vainglorious
boastings, like the Pharisee--'Lord, I thank Thee that I am not as other men'
(Luke 18: 11, 12); or the Athenians, who worshipped an 'unknown God.' (Acts 17:
23.) 3. The man that is in Christ is renewed in the way of his outward
calling and employments in the world; he now resolves to be diligent in it,
because God has so commanded--Not slothful in business; fervent in spirit;
serving the Lord' (Rom. 12: 11); and to reward God in it as the last end, doing
it to 'His glory' (1 Cor. 10: 31); and studying to keep some intercourse with
God in the exercise of his outward employments, as Jacob on his dying bed--'I
have waited for Thy salvation, O Lord' (Gen. 49: 18); and as Nehemiah did 'Then
the king 8aid unto me, For what dost thou male request? So I prayed to the God
of heaven' (Neh. 2: 4); so that the man resolves to walk with God, and 'set Him
always before him' (Psa. 16: 8); wherein I deny not that he often faileth.
4. He becomes new in the way of his relations;--he becomes a more dutiful
husband, father, brother, master, servant, neighbour, etc. Herein does he
exercise himself to keep a conscience void of offense towards men as well as
towards God, 'becoming all things to all men.' (Acts 24: 16; 1 Cor. 9: 22.)
5. He becomes new in the way of lawful liberties. He studies to make use of
meat, drink, sleep, recreations, apparel, with an eye to God, labouring not to
come under the power of any lawful thing--'All things are lawful unto me, but
all things are not expedient; all things are lawful for me, but I will not be
brought under the power of any' (1 Cor. 6: 12); nor to give offense to others
in the use of these things--'For meat destroy not the work of God. All things
indeed are pure; but it is evil for that man who eateth with offense. It is
good neither to eat flesh, nor to drink wine, nor any thing whereby thy brother
stumbleth, or is offended, or is made weak.' (Rom. 14: 20, 21.) 'Let every one
of us please his neighbour for his good to edification' (Rom. 15: 2),--not
using 'liberty as an occasion to the flesh.' (Gal. 5: 13.) Yea, he laboureth to
use all these things as a stranger on earth, so that his moderation may appear:
'Let your moderation be known unto all men.' (Phil. 4: 5.) And he regards God
as the last end in these things, 'doing all to the glory of God;' so that we
may say of that man, 'Old things are' much 'passed away, all things are' in
some measure 'become new.' (2 Cor. 5: 17.) He that is so a new creature is
undoubtedly in Christ. This renovation of a man in all manner of
conversation, and this being under the law to God in all things, is that
'holiness without which no man shall see the Lord. ' (Heb. 12: 14.) Men may
fancy things to themselves, but unless they study to approve themselves unto
God in all well-pleasing, and attain some inward testimony of sincerity that
way, they shall not assure their hearts before Him. The testimony of men's
conscience is their rejoicing (2 Cor. 1: 12.) 'By this we know that we know
Him, if we keep His commandments.' (1 John 2: 3.) 'And hereby we know that we
are of the truth, and shall assure our hearts before Him. For if our heart
condemn us, God is greater than our heart, and knoweth all things. Beloved, if
one heart condemn us not, then have we confidence towards God. ' (1 John 3:
19-21.) No confidence if the heart condemn. This is the new creature, having a
principle of new spiritual life infused by God into the heart, whereby it
becometh new, and putteth forth acts of new life throughout the whole man, as
we have said, so that he pointeth towards the whole law--1. Towards those
commands which forbid sin; so he resolves to contend against secret sins, 'not
to lay a stumbling-block before the blind' (Lev. 19: 14),--little sins, which
are judged so by many, the least things of the law--'Whosoever shall break one
of these least commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be called the
least in the kingdom of heaven' (Matt. 5: 19),--spiritual sins, filthiness of
the spirit--'Having therefore these promises, dearly beloved, let us cleanse
ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in
the fear of God' (2 Cor. 7: 1);--sins of omission as well as of commission,
since men are to be judged by these-- 'Then shall He say unto them on the left
hand, Depart from Me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil
and his angels: for I was an hungered and ye gave me no meat, I was thirsty,
and ye gave me no drink.' (Matt. 25: 42, 44.) Yea, sins that are wrought into
his natural humour and constitution, and thus are as a right eye or hand to
him'--If thy right eye offend thee, pluck it out, and cast it from thee.'
(Matt. 5: 29.) This new principle of life, by the good hand of God, makes the
man set himself against every known sin, so far as not to allow peaceful abode
to any known darkness--'What fellowship has righteousness with unrighteousness?
And what communion has light with darkness?' (2 Cor. 6: 14.) 2. As also he
pointeth towards those commands which relate to duty, and the quickening of
grace in man. It maketh a man respect all God's known commands (Psa. 119: 6);
to 'live godly, righteously, and soberly' (Tit. 2: 12); yea, and to study a
right and sincere way and manner of doing things, resolving not to give over
this study of conformity to God's will whilst he liveth on earth, but still to
'press forward toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in
Christ Jesus.' (Phil. 3: 13,14.) This is true holiness, every way becoming all
those who pretend to be heirs of that holy habitation, in the immediate company
and fellowship of a holy God--'We know that when He shall appear we shall be
like Him.' (1 John 3: 2.)
Some may think these things high attainments, and very hard to be got at. I
grant it is true. But-- First, Remember that there is a very large allowance
in the covenant, promised to His people, which maketh things more easy. The
Lord has engaged 'to take away the stony heart, to give a heart of flesh, a new
heart, a heart to fear Him for ever;' He has engaged to 'put His law in men's
heart; to put His fear in their heart, to make them keep that law; to put His
Spirit in them, to cause them to keep it.' He has promised 'to satisfy the
priests with fatness,' that the souls of 'the people may be satisfied with His
goodness: and to keep and water them continually every moment.' (Ezek. 36: 26,
Z7; Jer. 31: 12, 13, 14, 33; 31: 32, 36, 40; Isa. 27: 3.) And if He must be
'inquired of to do all these things unto men,' He engageth to pour out the
Spirit of grace and supplication on them, and so to teach them how to seek
these things, and how to put Him to it, to do all for them. (Zech. 12: 10.)
Secondly, For the satisfaction of weaker Christians, I grant this new creature,
as we have circumscribed and enlarged it, will not be found in all the degrees
of it in every gracious person. But it is well if-- 1. There be a new man.
We cannot grant less--'If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature;' and that
is the new man which all must put on who are savingly taught of Christ--'If so
be that ye have heard Him, and have been taught by Him, as the truth is in
Jesus: that ye put off concerning the former conversation the old man, which is
corrupt according to the deceitful lusts, and be renewed in the spirit of your
mind: and that ye put on the new man, which after God is created in
righteousness and true holiness.' (Ephes. 5: 21-24.) There must be some
renewing after the image of God in a man's soul and body; there must be
somewhat of every part of the man pointing towards God. Although I grant every
one cannot instruct this to others, neither discern it in himself, because many
know not the distinct parts of the soul, nor the reformation competent to every
part of the soul and body; yet it will be found there is some such thing in
them, yea, they have a witness of it within them, if you make the thing plain
and clear to them what it is. 2. There must be such a respect unto God's
known commands, that a man do not allow peaceably any known iniquity to dwell
in him; for 'what fellowship has righteousness with unrighteousness? and what
communion has light with darkness?' He must not regard iniquity--'Then shall I
not be ashamed when I have respect unto all Thy commandments.' 'If I regard
iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear me.' (2 Cor. 6: 14-16; Psa. 119:
6; 66: 18.) I grant men may be ignorant of many commands and many sins, and may
imagine, in some cases, that some sins are not hateful to God; but supposing
that they are instructed in these things, there can be no agreement between
righteousness and unrighteousness. 3. Men must point towards all the law of
God in their honest resolutions; for this is nothing else than to give up the
heart unto God, to put His law in it without exception, which is a part of the
covenant we are to make with God--'This is the covenant that I will make with
the house of Israel--I will put My laws into their mind, and write them in
their hearts.' (Heb. 8: 10.) I grant many know not how to have respect to God's
law in all their ways; but if it be made manifest to them how that should be
done, they will point at it. And it is true, they will many times fail of their
resolutions in their practice; yet when they have failed, they can say they did
resolve otherwise; and will again honestly, and without guile, resolve to do
otherwise; and it will prove their affliction to have failed of their
resolution, when the Lord discovers it to them, which He will do in due time.
4. When we are to judge of our state by the new creature, we must do it at a
convenient time, when we are in good case; at least, not when we are in the
worst case; for 'the flesh and spirit do lust and fight against each other'
(Gal. 5: 17); and sometimes the one, and sometimes the other does prevail. Now,
I say, we must choose a convenient time when the spiritual part is not by some
temptation worsted and overpowered by the flesh; for in that case the new
creature is driven back in its streams, and much returned to the fountain and
the habits, except in some small things not easily discernible, whereby it
maketh opposition to the flesh, according to the foresaid scripture. For now it
is the time of winter in the soul, and we may not expect fruit; yea, not
leaves, as in some other seasons. Only here, lest profane atheists should take
advantage of this, we will say, that the spirit does often prevail over the
flesh in a godly man, and that the scope, aim, tenor, and main drift of his way
is in the law of the Lord; that is his walk (Psa. 119: 1); whereas the pathway
and ordinary course of the wicked is sin, as is often hinted in the book of the
Proverbs of Solomon. And if it happen that a godly man be overcome by any
transgression, ordinarily it is his sad vexation: and we suppose he keeps it
still in dependency before God to have it rectified, as David speaketh, 'Wilt
thou not deliver my feet from falling?' (Psa. 56: 13.)
Object. Atheists and hypocrites may have great changes and renovations wrought
upon them, and in them, and I fear such may be the case with me. Ans. I
grant that atheists and hypocrites have many things in them which look like the
new creature. First, in regard of the parts of the man, they may--1. Come to
much knowledge, as (Heb. 6: 4) 'They are enlightened.' 2. There may be an
exciting of their affections, as 'They receive the word with joy,' as he that
received the seed into stony places. (Matt. 13: 20.) 3. They may effect a great
deal of reformation in the outward man, both as to freedom from sin, and
engagement to positive duty, as the Pharisee did 'God, I thank Thee that I am
not as other men are, extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even as this
publican; I fast twice in the week, I give tithes of all that I possess.' (Luke
18: 11, 12.) Yea 1. In regard of their practical understanding, they may judge
some things of God to be excellent: the officers said that 'never man spoke as
Christ.' (John 7: 46.) Secondly, Hypocrites may have a great deal of
profession. 1. They may talk of the law and gospel, and of the covenant: as the
wicked do--'What hast thou to do to declare my statutes, or that thou should'st
take my covenant in thy mouth?' (Psa. 50: 16.) 2. They may confess sin openly
to their own shame, as King Saul did--'Then said Saul, I have sinned: return,
my son David; for I will no more do thee harm, because my soul was precious in
thine eyes this day: behold, I have played the fool, and have erred
exceedingly.' (1 Sam. 26: 21.) 3. They may humble themselves in sackcloth, with
Ahab--'And it came to pass, when Ahab heard these words, that he rent his
clothes, and put sackcloth upon his flesh, and fasted, and lay in sackcloth,
and went softly.' (1 Kings 21: 27.) 4. They may inquire busily after duty, and
come cheerfully to receive it--'Yet they seek me daily, and delight to know my
ways, as a nation that did righteousness, and forsook not the ordinance of
their God; they ask of me the ordinances of justice, they take delight in
approaching to God.' (Isa. 58: 2.) 5. They may join with God's interest in a
hard and difficult time, as Demas and other hypocrites, who afterwards fell
away. 6. They may give much of their goods to God and to the saints, as
Ananias, if not all their goods--'Though I bestow all my goods to feed the
poor, and have not charity, it profiteth me nothing.' (Acts 5: 1, 2; 1 Cor. 13:
3.) Yea--7. It is not impossible for some such, being straitly engaged in their
credit, to 'give their bodies to be burned,' as in the last cited place.
Thirdly, Hypocrites may advance far in the common and ordinary steps of a
Christian work; such as the elect have when God leads them captive. As 1. They
may be under great convictions of sin, as Judas was--'Then Judas, which had
betrayed Him, when he saw that He was condemned, repented himself, and brought
again the thirty pieces of silver to the chief priests and elders saying, I
have sinned in that I have betrayed the innocent blood. And they said, What is
that to us? see thou to that. And he cast down the pieces of silver in the
temple, and departed, and went and hanged himself.' (Matt. 27: 3-5.) So was
King Saul often. 2. They may tremble at the word of God, and be under much
terror, as Felix was--'And as he reasoned of righteousness, temperance, and
judgment to come, Felix trembled, and answered, Go thy way for this time, when
I have a convenient season I will call for thee.' (Acts 24: 5.) 3. They may
rejoice in 'receiving of the truth, as he that received the seed into stony
places.' (Matt. 13: 20.) 4. They may be in some peace and quiet, in expectation
of salvation by Christ, as the foolish virgins were. (Matt. 24.) 5. All this
may be backed and followed with some good measure of reformation, as the
Pharisee--'The Pharisee stood and prayed thus with himself, God, I thank thee
that I am not as other men are, extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even as
this publican. I fast twice in the week, I give tithes of all that I possess.'
'The unclean spirit may go out of them.' (Matt. 12: 43; Luke 18: 11, 12.) 6.
This work may seem to be confirmed by some special experiences and 'tastings of
the good word of God.' (Heb. 6: 4.) Fourthly, Hypocrites may have some
things very like the saving graces of the Spirit; as-- 1. They may have a
sort of faith, like Simon Magus--'Then Simon himself believed also: and when he
was baptized, he continued with Philip, and wondered, beholding the miracles
and signs which were done.' (Acts 8: 13.) 2. They may have a sort of
repentance, and may walk mournfully--'What profit is it that we have walked
mournfully before the Lord of hosts?' (Mal. 3: 14.) 3. They may have a great
fear of God, such as Baalam had, who, for a house full of gold, would not go
with the messengers of Balak, without leave asked of God and given. (Num. 22:
18.) 4. They have a sort of hope--'The hypocrite's hope shall perish.' (Job.
13: 13.) 5. They may have some love, as had Herod to John--'And the king was
exceeding sorry; yet for his oath's sake, and for their sakes which sat with
him, he would not reject her.' (Mark 6: 26.) I need not insist, as it is out of
all question, they have counterfeits of all saving graces. Fifthly, They
have somewhat like the special communications of God, and the witnessing of His
Spirit, and somewhat like 'the powers of the world to come, working powerfully
on them, with some flashes of joy arising thence,' as Heb. 6: 4, 5--'For it is
impossible for those who were once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly
gift, and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost, and have tasted the good word
of God, and the powers of the world to come; if they shall fall away, to renew
them again unto repentance.' Notwithstanding of all which, they are but 'almost
persuaded,' with Agrippa, to 'become Christians.' (Acts 26: 28.) It were
tedious to speak particularly to each of these things, and to clear it up, that
they are all unsound; I shall point out some few things, wherein a truly
renewed man, who is in Christ, does differ from hypocrites and reprobates.
1. Whatever changes be in hypocrites, yet their heart is not changed, and made
new. The new heart is only given to the elect, when they are converted and
brought under the bond of the covenant--'I will give them one heart, and one
way, that they may fear me for ever.' 'A new heart will I give you, and a new
spirit will I put within you; and I will take away the stony heart out of your
flesh, and I will give you an heart of flesh.' (Jer. 32: 39; Ezek. 36: 26.)
Hypocrites never apprehend Christ as the only satisfying good in all the world,
for which with joy they would quit all; for then the kingdom of God were
entered into them. 'The kingdom of heaven is like unto a treasure hid in a
field; the which when a man has found, he hideth, and for joy thereof goes and
selleth all that he has, and buyeth that field.' (Matt. 13: 44.) The truly
renewed man dare, and can upon good ground say, and has a testimony of it from
on high, that his heart has been changed in taking up with Christ, and has been
led out after Him, as the only enriching treasure, in whom 'to be found he
accounteth all things else loss and dung.' (Phil. 3: 8, 9.) 2. Whatever
reformation or profession hypocrites attain unto, as it comes not from a new
heart, and pure principle of zeal for God, so it is always for some wicked or
base end; as, 'to be seen of men' (Matt. 6: 5), or to evade and shun some
outward strait, to be freed from God's wrath, and the trouble of their own
conscience--'Wherefore have we fasted, say they, and Thou sees not? Wherefore
have we afflicted our soul, and Thou takest no knowledge?' (Isa. 58: 3.) 'What
profit is it that we have kept His ordinances, and that we have walked
mournfully before the Lord of Hosts?' (Mal. 3: 14.) In testimony of this, they
never have respect to all known commands, else they should 'never be ashamed'
(Psa. 119: 6); nor do they, without guile in their own heart, resolve against
every known iniquity, else they were free of heart-condemning, and so might
justly 'have confidence before God.' (1 John 3: 21.) If from a principle of
love unto, and of zeal for Christ, and for a right end, they did, in ever so
small a degree, confess and profess Him, Christ were obliged by His own word to
confess them before His Father. (Matt. 10: 32.) 3. Whatever length
hypocrites advance in that work, by which people are led on unto Christ, yet
they never 'seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness.' (Matt. 6:
33.) 'The one thing that is necessary,' namely, Christ's friendship and
fellowship, is never their one thing and heart-satisfying choice, else that
'better part would never be taken from them.' (Luke 10: 42.) 4. Whatever
counterfeits of grace are in hypocrites, yet they are all produced without any
saving work of the Spirit of Christ; and it is enough to exclude them from the
benefit of this mark, that they are never denied to these things, nor emptied
of them, but still do rest on them as their Saviour, so that they 'submit not
unto the righteousness of God' (Rom. 10: 3); and that is enough to keep them at
a distance from Christ, who will never mend that old garment of hypocrites with
His fine new linen, nor 'put His new wine in these old bottles.' (Matt. 9:
16,17.) 5. We may say, Let hypocrites, reprobates, or atheists, have what
they can, they want the three great essentials of religion and true
Christianity--1. They are not broken in heart, and emptied of their own
righteousness, so as to loathe themselves. Such 'lost ones Christ came to seek
and save.' (Luke 19: 10.) 2. They never took up Christ Jesus as the only
treasure and jewel that can enrich and satisfy; and therefore, have never
cordially agreed unto God's device in the covenant, and so are not worthy of
Him: neither has the kingdom of God savingly entered into their heart--'The
kingdom of heaven is like unto a treasure hid in a field; the which when a man
has found, he hideth, and for joy thereof selleth all that he has, and buyeth
that field.' (Matt. 13: 44) 3. They never in earnest close with Christ's whole
yoke without exception, judging all His 'will just and good, holy and
spiritual' (Rom. 7: 12); and therefore no rest is given to them by
Christ--'Take my yoke upon you, and ye shall find rest unto your souls.' (Matt.
11: 29.) Therefore, whosoever thou art, who can lay clear and just claim to
these three aforesaid things, Thou art beyond the reach of all atheists,
hypocrites, and reprobates in the world, as having answered the great ends and
intents of the law and gospel.
Object. I am clear sometimes, I think, to lay claim to that mark of the new
creature; yet at other times sin does so prevail over me, that I am made to
question all the work within me. Ans. It is much to be lamented, that people
professing the name of Christ should be so abused and enslaved by
transgression, as many are. Yet, in answer to the objection, if it be seriously
proposed, we say, The saints are found in Scripture justly laying claim to God
and His covenant, when iniquity did prevail over them, as we find--'Iniquities
prevail against me; as for our transgressions, Thou shalt purge them away.'
(Psa. 65: 3.) Thus Paul thanks God through Christ, even while lamenting that a
law in his members leads him captive unto sin. (Rom. 7: 25.) But for the right
understanding, and safe application of such truths, we must make a difference
betwixt gross outbreakings and ordinary infirmities or heart-evils, or sins
that come unawares upon a man, without forethought or any deliberation. As for
the former sort, it is hard for a man, whilst he is under the power of them, to
see his gracious change, although it be in him: and very hard to draw any
comfort from it, until the man be in some measure recovered, and begin
seriously to resent such sins, and to resolve against them. We find David
calling himself God's servant, quickly after his numbering of God's people; but
he was then under the serious resentment of his sin--'And David's heart smote
him after he had numbered the people. David said unto the Lord, I have sinned
greatly in that I have done: and now I beseech Thee, O Lord, take away the
iniquity of Thy servant, for I have done foolishly.' (2 Sam. 24: 10.) Jonah
layeth claim to God as his Master under his rebellion; but he is then repenting
it, and in a spirit of revenge against himself for his sin.' (Jonah 1: 9-12.)
Next, as for those sins of infirmity, and daily incursions of heart-evils, such
as those whereof (it is like) Paul does complain; we shall draw out some things
from the seventh chapter to the Romans, upon which Paul maintains his interest
in Christ, and if you can apply them it is well. 1. When Paul finds that he
does much fail, and cannot reach conformity to God's law, he does not blame the
law, as being too strict, so that men cannot keep it, as hypocrites use to
speak; but he blames himself as being carnal; and he saith of the law, 'that it
is good, holy, and spiritual.' (Rom. 7: 12,14.) 2. He can say, he failed of a
good which he intended, and did outshoot himself, and he had often honestly
resolved against the sin into which he fell--'For that which I do I allow not;
for what I would, that do I not; but what I hate, that do I. For I know that in
me (that is, in my flesh) dwelleth no good thing: for to will is present with
me; but how to perform that which is good I find not. For the good that I would
I do not; but the evil which I would not, that I do.' (Rom. 7: 15,18,19.) 3. He
saith that the prevailing of sin over him is his burden, so that he judgeth
himself wretched because of such a body of death, from which he longeth to be
delivered. (Rom. 7: 24.) 4. He saith, that whilst he is under the power and law
of sin, there is somewhat in the bottom of his heart opposing it, although
overcome by it, which would be another way, and when that gets the upper hand
it is a delightsome thing. (Rom. 7: 22-25.) Upon these things he 'thanks God in
Christ that there is no condemnation to them who are in Christ Jesus, who walk
not after the flesh, but after the Spirit.' (Rom. 8: 1.) Now, then, see if you
can lay claim to these things. 1. If you blame yourself, and approve the law,
whilst you fail. 2. If you can say that you often resolve against sin honestly,
and without known guile; and do so resolve the contrary good before the evil
break in upon you. 3. If you can say, that you are so far exercised with your
failings, as to judge yourself wretched because of such things, and a body of
death, which is the root and fountain of such things. 4. If you can say, that
there is a party within you opposing these evils, which would be at the right
way, and, as it were, is in its element when it is in God's way, it is well:
only be advised not to take rest, until, in some good measure, you be rid of
the ground of this objection, or, at least, until you can very clearly say, you
are waging war with these things. Now, a good help against the prevailing power
of sin is to cleave close to Christ Jesus by faith, which, as it is a desirable
part of sanctification, and a high degree of conformity to God's will, and most
subservient unto His design in the gospel, should be much endeavoured by
people, as a world pleasing unto God--'The life which I now live in the flesh,
I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave Himself for me. I
do not frustrate the grace of God.' (Gal. 2: 21.) 'This is the work of God,
that ye believe on Him whom He has sent.' (John 6: 29.) This is the ready way
to draw life and sap from Christ, the blessed root, for fruitfulness in all
cases, as in John 15: 4, 5--'Abide in Me, and I in you; as the branch cannot
bear fruit of itself, except it abide in the vine; no more can ye, except ye
abide in Me. I am the vine, ye are the branches: he that abideth in Me, and I
in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit: for without Me ye can do nothing.'
Object. I do not partake of those special communications of God mentioned in
the Scripture, and of those actings and outgoings of His Spirit, of which
gracious people are often speaking, and whereunto they attain. The want of
these things maketh me much suspect my state. Ans. I shall shortly point out
some of these excellent communications, and I hope, upon a right discovery of
them, there will be but small ground left for the jealous complaints of many
gracious people. 1. Besides those convictions of the Spirit of God, which
usually usher Christ's way into the souls of men, and those also which
afterwards do ordinarily attend them, there is a seal of the Spirit of God
spoken of in Scripture, the principal thing whereof is the sanctifying world
work the Holy Ghost, imprinting the draughts and lineaments of God's image and
revealed will upon a man, as a seal or signet does leave the impression and
stamp of its likeness upon the thing sealed. So it is--'The foundation of God
standeth sure, having this seal, The Lord knoweth them that are His; and, Let
every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity.' (2 Tim. 2: 19.)
And thus I conceive the seal to be called a witness--'He that believeth has the
witness in himself' (1 John 5: 10); that is, the grounds upon which an interest
in Christ is to be made out and proved, are in every believer; for he has
somewhat of the sanctifying work of God's Spirit in him, which is a sure,
although not always a clear and manifest witness. 3. There is communion with
God much talked of among Christians, whereby they understand the sensible
presence of God refreshing the soul exceedingly. But if we speak properly,
communion with God is a mutual interest between God and a man, who has closed
with him in Christ. It is a commonness, or a common interest between God and a
man: not only as a man interested in God Himself, but in all that is the
Lord's; so the Lord has a special interest in the man, and also all that
belongs to him. There is a communion between husband and wife, whereby they
have a special interest in each other's persons, goods, and concerns: so it is
here. There is such a communion with God; He is our God, and all things are
ours, because He is ours. This communion with God all true believers have at
all times, as we shall show afterwards. I grant there is an actual improvement
of that communion, whereby men do boldly approach unto God and converse with
Him as their God with holy familiarity; especially in worship, when the soul
does converse with a living God, partaking of the divine nature, growing like
unto Him, and sweetly travelling through His attributes, and, with some
confidence of interest, viewing these things as the man's own goods and
property: this we call communion with God in ordinances. This indeed is not so
ordinarily nor frequently made out to men, and all His people do not equally
partake of it: and it is true that what is in God, goes not out for the benefit
of the man to his apprehension equally at all times: yet certainly communion
with God, properly so called, namely, that commonness of interest between God
and a man who is savingly in covenant with Him, does always stand firm and
sure; and so much of communion with God in ordinances have all believers, as
that their heart converseth with a living God there, now and then, and is, in
some measure, changed into that same image; and there needeth not be any
further doubt about it. 3. There is also fellowship with God, which is often
mistaken amongst believers. If by fellowship be meant the walking in our duty,
as in the sight of a living God, who sees and hears us, and is witness to all
our carriage, it is a thing common unto all gracious men; they all have it
habitually, and in design--'I have set the Lord always before me.' (Psa. 16:
8.) Yea, and often they have it actually in exercise, when their spirit is in
any good frame: they walk as if they saw God standing by them, and have some
thought of His favour through Christ--'Truly our fellowship is with the Father,
and with His Son Jesus Christ.' (1 John 1: 3.) If by fellowship we mean a
sweet, refreshing, familiar, sensible, conversing with God, which does delight
and refresh the soul (besides what the conscience of duty doth); it is then a
walking in the light of His countenance, and a good part of sensible presence:
and although it seemeth Enoch had much of it, whilst it is said, 'He walked
with God' (Gen. 5: 24); yet it is not so ordinary as the former, nor so common
to all Christians; for here the soul is filled as with marrow and fatness,
following hard after its guide, and singularly upheld by His right hand-- 'My
soul shall be satisfied as with marrow and fatness: and my mouth shall praise
Thee with joyful lips. My soul followeth hard after Thee, Thy right hand
upholdeth me.' (Psa. 63: 5, 8.) 4. There is also access unto God; and this I
take to be the removing of obstructions out of the way between a man and God,
so that the man is admitted to come near. We are said to have access to a great
person when the doors are cast open, the guards removed from about him, and we
admitted to come close to him: so it is here. Now this access, in Scripture, is
sometimes taken for Christ's preparing of the way, the removing of enmity
between God and sinners, so as men now have an open way to come unto God
through Christ--'For through Him we both have an access by one Spirit unto the
Father.' (Eph. 2: 18.) Sometimes it is taken for the actual improvement of that
access purchased by Christ, when a man finds all obstructions and differences
which do ordinarily fall in between him and God removed: God does not act
towards him as a stranger, keeping up Himself from him, or frowning on him, but
the man is admitted to 'come even to His seat.' (Job 23: 3.) Of the want of
which he complains, whilst he saith, 'Behold, I go forward, but He is not
there; and backwards, but I cannot perceive Him; on the left hand, where He
does work, but I cannot behold Him; He hideth Himself on the right hand, that I
cannot see Him.' (Job 23: 8, 9.) The first sort of access is common to all
believers: they are brought near by the blood of the covenant, and are no more
afar off, as the deadly enmity between God and them is removed; but access in
the other sense is dispensed more according to the Lord's absolute sovereignty
and pleasure, and it is left in the power of believers to obstruct it to
themselves, until it please the Lord mercifully and freely to grant it unto
them again; so it is up and down; and there needs be no question as to a man's
state about it. 5. There is also liberty before God; and this properly is
freedom, or free speaking unto God. Many do much question their state, because
of the want of this now and then, since the Scripture has said, 'where the
Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty,' (2 Cor. 3: 17); but they do unjustly
confine that liberty spoken of there unto this free speaking before God. I
grant, where the Spirit of the Lord savingly discovers God's will in the
Scriptures to a man, there is liberty from any obligation to the ceremonial
law, and from the condemning power of the moral law, and from much of that
gross darkness and ignorance which is naturally on men's hearts as a veil
hiding Christ in the gospel from them. I grant also, that sometimes even this
liberty, which is a free communing with God, and 'ordering of our cause before
Him, and filling of our mouths with arguments' (Job 23: 4), is granted to the
godly, but not as liberty taken in the former senses. Although the Lord has
obliged Himself to 'pour out the spirit of prayer upon all the house of David'
(Zech. 12: 10), in some measure, yet this communication of the Spirit, which we
call liberty or free speaking unto God, dependeth much on the Lord's absolute
pleasure, when, and in what measure to allow it. This liberty, which we call
freedom or free speaking with God in prayer, is sometimes much withdrawn as to
any great confidence in the time of prayer, at least until it draw towards the
close of it. It standeth much in a vivacity of the understanding to take up the
case which a man is to speak before God, so that he can order his cause; and
next there be words, or verbal expressions, elegant, suitable, and very
emphatical, or powerful and pithy. There is also joined a fervency of spirit in
prayer, of which the Scripture speaks; the soul is warm and bended, and very
intent. There is also ordinarily in this liberty a special melting of the heart
often joined with a great measure of the 'spirit of grace and supplication.'
(Zech. 12: 10.) So the soul is poured out before God as for a firstborn. Such
is the liberty which many saints get before God, whilst, in much brokenness of
heart and fervency of spirit, they are admitted to speak their mind fully to
God, as a living God, noticing (at least) their prayer. Sometimes this liberty
is joined with confidence: and then it is not only a free, but also a bold
speaking before God. It is that 'boldness with confidence' (Eph. 3: 12)--'In
whom we have boldness and access with confidence, by the faith of Him.' This is
more rarely imparted unto men than the former, yet it is ordinary: it has in
it, besides what we mentioned before, some influence of the Spirit upon faith,
making it put forth some vigorous acting in prayer. There is a sweet mournful
frame of spirit, by which a man poureth out his heart in God's bosom, and with
some confidence of His favour and goodwill, pleadeth his cause before Him as a
living God; and this is all the sensible presence that many saints do attain
unto. There is no ground of doubt concerning a man's state in the point of
liberty before God, in this last sense, because there is nothing essential to
the making up of a gracious state here: some have it, some want it; some have
it at sometimes, and not at others; so that it is much up and down; yet I may
say gracious men may do much, by a very ordinary influence, in contributing
towards the attaining and retaining, or keeping of such a frame of spirit.
6. There is also an influence, or breathing of the Spirit. This gracious
influence (for of such only do I now speak) is either ordinary: and this is the
operation of the Holy Spirit on the soul, and the habits of grace there,
whereby they are still kept alive, and in some exercise and acting, although
not very discernible. This influence, I concede, does always attend believers,
and is that 'keeping and watering night and day, and every moment,' promised
Isaiah 27: 3. Or, this influence is more singular and special, and is the same
to a gracious, although a withered soul, as the 'wind and breath to the dry
bones' (Ezek. 37: 9, 10); putting them in good case, and 'as the dew or rain to
the grass,' or newly-mown field and parched ground. (Psa. 77: 6.) Such
influence is meant by the 'blowing of the south-wind, making the spices to flow
out.' (Cant. 4: 16.) When the Spirit moveth thus, there is an edge put upon the
graces of God in the soul, and they are made to act more vigorously. This is
the 'enlarging of the heart,' by which 'a man does run in the ways of God.'
(Psa. 119: 32.) This influence is more discernible than the former, and not so
ordinarily communicated. Also here sometimes the wind bloweth more upon one
grace, and sometimes more discernible upon another, and often upon many of the
graces together; and, according to the lesser or greater measure of this
influence, the soul acteth more or less vigorously towards God; and since faith
is a created grace in the soul, this influence of the Spirit is upon it,
sometimes less, sometimes more, and accordingly is the assurance of faith small
or great. 7. There is the hearing of prayer, often spoken of in Scripture;
and many vex themselves about it, alleging that they know nothing of it
experimentally. I grant there is a favourable hearing of prayer; but we must
remember it is twofold. Either, 1. It is such as a man is simply to believe by
way of argument on scriptural grounds; as if I had fled unto Christ; and
approached unto God in Him, praying according to His will, not regarding
iniquity in my heart, exercising faith about the thing I pray for absolutely or
conditionally, according to the nature of the thing and promises concerning it;
I am obliged to believe that God heareth my prayer, and will give what is good,
according to these scriptures--'Whatsoever ye shall ask in my name, I will do
it.' (John 14: 13.) 'This is our confidence, that whatsoever we ask according
to His will He heareth us.' (1 John 5: 14.) 'Believe that ye receive them, and
ye shall have them.' (Mark 11: 24.) 'If I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord
will not hear me.' (Psa. 66: 18.) Then, if I regard not iniquity, I may believe
that He does hear me.' Or, 2. A man does sensibly perceive that God hearth his
prayer; it is made out to his heart, without any syllogistical deduction. Such
a hearing of prayer Hannah obtained-- 'Her countenance was no more sad.' (1
Sam. 1: 18.) Surely the Lord did breathe upon her faith, and made her believe
she was heard: she could not make it out by any argument; for she had not
grounds whereupon to build the premises of the argument, according to
Scripture, in that particular: God did stamp it some way upon her heart
sensibly, and so made her believe it. This is but rarely granted, especially in
cases clearly deducible in Scripture; therefore people ought to be much
occupied in exercising their faith about the other, and ought to leave it to
God to give of this latter what He pleaseth. A man's gracious state should not
be brought into debate upon the account of such hearing of prayer. 8. There
is assurance of God's favour by the witnessing of our own spirits; which
assurance is adduced by way of argument syllogistically, thus--Whosoever
believeth on Christ shall never perish: but I do believe on Christ; therefore I
shall never perish. Whose has respect unto all God's commandments shall never
be ashamed; but I have respect unto all His commandments; therefore I shall
never be ashamed. I say, by reasoning thus, and comparing spiritual things with
spiritual things, a man may attain unto a good certainty of his gracious state.
It is supposed (1 John 3: 18, 19) that by loving the brethren in deed and in
truth, we may 'assure our hearts before God;' and that a man may rejoice upon
the testimony of a good conscience. (2 Cor. 1: 12.) A man may have 'confidence
towards God, if his heart do not condemn him.' (1 John 3: 21.) We may then
attain unto some assurance, although not full assurance, by the witness of our
own spirits. I do not deny, that in this witnessing of our spirits concerning
assurance, there is some concurrence of the Spirit of God: but, I conceive,
there needeth but a very ordinary influence, without which we can do nothing.
Now this assurance, such as it is, may be reached by intelligent believers, who
keep a good conscience in their walk. So, I hope, there needs by no debate
about it, as to a man's gracious state; for if a man will clear himself of
heart-condemnings, he will speedily reach this assurance. 9. There is a
witnessing of God's Spirit, mentioned as 'bearing witness with our spirit that
we are the children of God.' (Rom. 8: 16.) This operation of the Spirit is best
understood, if we produce any syllogism by which our spirit does witness our
sonship; as for example, Whosoever loveth the brethren is passed from death to
life, and consequently is in Christ: but I love the brethren; therefore I am
passed from death to life. Here there is a threefold operation of the Spirit,
or three operations rather. The first is a beam of divine light upon the first
proposition, evincing the divine authority of it, as the word of God. The
Spirit of the Lord must witness the divinity of the Scriptures, and that it is
the infallible word of God, far beyond all other arguments that can be used for
it. The second operation is a glorious beam of light from the Spirit, shining
upon the second proposition, and so upon His own graces in the soul,
discovering them to be true graces, and such as the Scripture calleth so. Thus
we are said to 'know by His Spirit the things that are freely given unto us of
God.' (1 Cor. 2: 13.) The third operation is connected with the third
proposition of the argument, or the conclusion, and this I conceive to be
nothing else but an influence upon faith, strengthening it to draw a conclusion
of full assurance upon the foresaid premises. Now, with submission to
others, who have greater light in the Scripture, and more experience of these
precious communications, I do conceive the witness of the Spirit, or witnessing
of it, which is mentioned, 'The Spirit itself beareth witness with our spirit
that we are the children of God' (Rom. 8: 16), is not that first operation upon
the first proposition; for that operation is that testimony of the Spirit by
which He beareth witness to the divinity of the whole Scripture, and asserts
the divine authority of it unto the souls of gracious men; and such an
operation may be upon a truth of Scripture, which does not relate to a man's
sonship or interest in Christ at all. The Spirit may so shine upon any truth,
relating to duty, or any other fundamental truth, impressing the divinity of it
upon and unto the soul, and speak nothing relating to a man's interest in
Christ. Neither is the third operation of the Spirit, by which He makes faith
boldly draw the conclusion, this witnessing of the Spirit; for that operation
is nothing else but an influence upon faith, bringing it out to full assurance;
but that upon which this full assurance is drawn or put out, is somewhat
confirmed and witnessed already. Therefore I conceive the second operation of
the Spirit, upon the second proposition, and so upon the graces in the man, is
that witness of God's Spirit, that beam of divine light shining upon those
graces, whereby they are made very conspicuous to the understanding. That is
the witness, the shining so on them is His witnessing: for, only here, in this
proposition, and in this operation, does the Spirit of God prove a co-witness
with our spirit: for the main thing wherein lies the witness of our spirit is
in the second proposition, and so the Spirit of God witnessing with our spirits
is also in that same proposition. So these two witnesses having confirmed and
witnessed one and the same thing, namely, the truth and reality of such and
such graces in the man, which our own spirit or conscience does depone
according to its knowledge, and the Spirit of the Lord does certainly affirm
and witness to be so, there is a sentence drawn forth, and a conclusion of the
man's sonship by the man's faith, breathed upon by the Spirit for that purpose;
and this conclusion beareth the full assurance of a man's sonship. It may be
presumed that some true saints do not partake of this all their days--'And
deliver them, who through fear of death were all their lifetime subject to
bondage.' (Heb. 1: 15.) 10. I speak with the experience of many saints, and,
I hope, according to Scripture, if I say there is a communication of the Spirit
of God which is sometimes vouchsafed to some of His people that is somewhat
besides, if not beyond, that witnessing of a sonship spoken of before. It is a
glorious divine manifestation of God unto the soul, shedding abroad God's love
in the heart; it is a thing better felt than spoken of: it is no audible voice,
but it is a ray of glory filling the soul with God, as He is life, light, love,
and liberty, corresponding to that audible voice, 'O man, greatly beloved'
(Dan. 9: 23); putting a man in a transport with this on his heart, 'It is good
to be here.' (Matt. 17: 4.) It is that which went out from Christ to Mary, when
He but mentioned her name-- 'Jesus saith unto her, Mary. She turned herself,
and saith unto Him, Rabboni, which is to say, Master.' (John 20: 16.) He had
spoken some words to her before, and she understood not that it was He: but
when He uttereth this one word "Mary", there was some admirable divine
conveyance and manifestation made out unto her heart, by which she was so
satisfyingly filled, that there was no place for arguing and disputing whether
or no that was Christ, and if she had any interest in Him. That manifestation
wrought faith to itself, and did purchase credit and trust to itself, and was
equivalent with, 'Thus saith the Lord.' This is such a glance of glory, that it
may in the highest sense be called 'the earnest,' or first-fruits 'of the
inheritance' (Eph. 1: 14); for it is a present, and, as it were, sensible
discovery of the holy God, almost wholly conforming the man unto His likeness;
so swallowing him up, that he forgetteth all things except the present
manifestation. O how glorious is this manifestation of the Spirit! Faith here
riseth to so full an assurance, that it resolveth wholly into the sensible
presence of God. This is the thing which does best deserve the title of
sensible presence; and is not given unto all believers, some whereof 'are all
their days under bondage, and in fear' (Heb. 2: 15); but here 'love, almost
perfect, casteth out fear.' (1 John 4: 18.) This is so absolutely let out upon
the Master's pleasure, and so transient or passing, or quickly gone when it is,
that no man may bring his gracious state into debate for want of it. 11.
There is what we call peace, about which many do vex themselves. This peace is
either concerning a man's state, that he is reconciled unto God by Jesus
Christ; or it is relating to his present case and condition, that he is walking
so as approved of God, at least so far as there is no quarrel or controversy
between God and him threatening a stroke. Both of these are either such in the
court of Scripture, and consequently in God's account, or in the court of a
man's own conscience. Peace with respect to a man's state, as being in Christ,
is sure in the court of Scripture and of heaven, when a man does by faith close
with Christ and the new covenant. 'Being justified by faith, we have peace with
God.' (Rom. 5: 1.) It being sure and solid in the court of Scripture, it should
hold sure in the court of a man's conscience, if it be rightly informed; for,
in that case, it still speaks according to Scripture. But because often the
conscience is misinformed and in the dark, therefore there is often peace as to
a man's state according to Scripture, whilst his conscience threatens the
contrary, and does still condemn, and refuseth to acquit the man, as being
reconciled unto God through Christ. In this case, the conscience must be
informed, and the man's gracious state made out by the marks of grace, as we
showed before; and here the witness of my own spirit will do much to allay the
cry of the conscience; and if the Spirit of the Lord join His witness and
testimony, the conscience is perfectly satisfied, and proclaimeth peace to the
man. The other peace, as to a man's present case or condition, namely, that
it is approved of God in a gospel sense, may be awaiting, and justly wanting,
although the peace concerning a man's state be sure. This peace as to a man's
case and condition, is either such in the court of Scripture, and this is when
a man is not regarding iniquity, and respecting the commands of God without
exception: then the Scripture saith, he stands in an even place, and he need
fear no stated quarrel between God and him in order to a temporary stroke: and
when it is thus, his conscience should also acquit him that same way, and would
do so if it were rightly informed. But because the conscience is often in the
dark, therefore a man may be alarmed with evil in the court of conscience, as
if he were justly to expect a stroke from God because of his sin, and some
quarrel God has at him, although He intend salvation for him. This is enough to
keep a man in disquiet, and to prohibit him from the rejoicing allowed him
whilst he is walking in his integrity; therefore a man must here also inform
his conscience, and receive no accusations nor condemnings from it, unless it
make them clear by Scripture. At that by let every man stand, both as to his
state, and his condition or case; and let him appeal from all other courts to
that, and not receive any indictment, unless conformed to the truth of God, by
which the conscience is to be regulated in all things. And if this were well
looked unto, there would not be so many groundless suspicions amongst the
Lord's people, either as to their state or their condition, upon every thought
which entereth their mind. 12. There is the joy of the Holy Ghost; and this
is when the Spirit breathes upon our rejoicing in God, which is a grace very
little in exercise with many, and maketh it set out sensibly and vigorously;
and when He excites and stirs the passion of joy and of delight in the soul, so
that there is an unspeakable and glorious joy in the soul, in the apprehension
of God's friendship and nearness unto him--'In whom though now ye see Him not,
yet believing, ye rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of glory.' (1 Peter 1:
8.) This joy followeth upon peace, and peace followeth upon righteousness--'The
kingdom of God--is righteousness and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost.' (Rom.
14: 17.) This joy will in general not fail to be according to the measure of
the assurance of faith, as 1 Peter 1: 8--'In whom believing ye rejoice.' So
that the removal of mistakes about other things will allay doubts as to this.
Now, because some of these excellent communications of the Spirit, after they
are gone, are brought into question as delusions of Satan: for vindication of
them, we say that the special operations of God's Spirit in any high degree,
usually are communicated to people after much brokenness of spirit--'Make me to
hear joy and gladness, that the bones which Thou hast broken may rejoice' (Psa.
51: 8),--after singular pains in religious duty--'And I set my face unto the
Lord God to seek by prayer and supplication, with fasting, and sackcloth, and
ashes: and whiles I was speaking and praying, and confessing my sin, the man
Gabriel whom I had seen in the vision at the beginning, being caused to fly
swiftly, touched me' (Dan. 9: 3, 21),--or in time of great suffering for
righteousness--'Rejoice, inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christ's sufferings,
that when His glory shall be revealed, ye may be glad also with exceeding joy.
If ye be reproached for the name of Christ, happy are ye, for the Spirit of
glory and of God resteth upon you' (1 Peter 4: 14);--or if they break in as the
rain that waiteth not for man, then they do so humble and abase the
person--'Woe is me, for I am undone, because I am a man of unclean lips; for
mine eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts' (Isa. 6: 5),--and there are
found so many evidences of grace in the man--'The Spirit itself beareth witness
with our spirit, that we are the children of God' (Rom. 8: 16),--or these
things do so provoke unto holiness, and to have every thing answerable and
conformable to these manifestations of God--'Let every one that nameth the name
of Christ, depart from iniquity.' (2 Tim. 2: 19.) The person under them loathes
all things besides God's friendship and fellowship--'Peter said unto Jesus,
Lord, it is good for us to be here.' (Matt. 17: 4.) And these things carry on
them and with them so much authority and divine superscription, whilst they are
in the soul, that afterwards they do appear sufficiently to be special
communications of God, and singular gracious operations of His Spirit, and no
delusion of 'Satan transforming himself into an angel of light' (2 Cor. 11:
14); nor such common flashes of the Spirit as may afterwards admit of
irrecoverable apostasy from God-- 'For it is impossible for those who were once
enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were made partakers of
the Holy Ghost, and have tasted the good word of God, and the powers of the
world to come, if they shall fall away, to renew them again unto repentance.'
(Heb. 6: 4, 5, 6.) Now, then, to conclude this part of the work that relates
to the trial: I say to all those who complain of the want of the precious
outpourings of the Spirit,--1. Bless God if you want nothing essential for the
making out of a saving interest in Christ. God has given unto you Christ Jesus,
the greatest gift He had; and since your heart is laid out for Him, He will,
with Him, give you all things that are good for you in their season. 2. I do
believe, upon a strict search and trial, after you have understood the
communications of the Spirit, you are not so great a stranger to many things as
you suspected yourselves to be. But, 3. Remember, the promises of life and of
peace with God, are nowhere in Scripture made unto those special things whereof
you allege the want: the promises are made unto faith, followed with holiness;
and it may be presumed, that many heirs of glory do not in this life partake of
some of these things, but 'are in bondage all their days through fear of death'
(Heb. 2: 15); so that there shall be no mistake about these things; we may seek
after them, but God is free to give or withhold them. 4. Many do seek after
such manifestations before they give credit by faith unto God's word. He has
borne record that there is life enough for men in Christ Jesus; and if men
would by believing, set to their seal that God is true, they should partake of
more of these excellent things. 5. I may say many have not honorable
apprehensions and thoughts of the Spirit of God, whose proper work it is to put
forth the aforesaid noble operations. They do not adore Him as God, but vex,
grieve, quench, and resist Him: and many people, complaining of the want of
these things, are not at the pains to seek the Spirit in His outgoings, and few
do set themselves apart for such precious receptions: therefore be at more
pains in religion, give more credit to His word, and esteem more highly the
grace of the Spirit of God, and so you may find more of these excellent things.
The Christian's Great Interest
Having, in the former part of this Treatise, put every man's state to the
trial, it now remains that, in this following part, we give advice to those who
neither can nor dare lay claim to the marks formerly mentioned.
Quest. II. What shall they do who want the marks of a true and saving interest
in Christ, already spoken of, and neither can nor dare pretend unto them?
Ans. If men do not discover in themselves the marks of a saving interest in
Christ, spoken of before, then it is their duty, and the duty of all that hear
the gospel, personally and heartily to close with God's device of saving
sinners by Christ Jesus, and thus to secure their state.
For the better understanding of this, we shall premise some things for the
information of those who are more ignorant, and then speak more directly to the
thing. As for the things to be premised:-- 1. The Lord did, at the
beginning, out of His bounty, make a covenant with man in Adam--'And the Lord
God commanded the man, saying, Of every tree in the garden thou mayst freely
eat; but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of
it; for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die.' (Gen. 2:
16, 17.) And He gave the man ability to abide in that covenant--'God has made
man upright' (Eccl. 7: 29); but man, by eating of that forbidden fruit, did
break that covenant--'They, like Adam, have transgressed the covenant' (Hos. 6:
7); and made it void forever, and involved himself in misery thereby--'By the
deeds of the law, there shall no flesh be justified in His sight' (Rom. 3: 20);
'As by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death
passed upon all men, for that all have sinned.' (Rom. 5: 12.) 2. The Lord
did most freely, from everlasting, purpose and intend to save men another way,
namely, by Christ Jesus, and the covenant of grace, in which He intended
reconciliation with the elect through Christ Jesus, God and man, born of a
woman, in due time to make this agreement effectual. And this device of
satisfying His own justice, and saving of the elect by Christ, He did at first
intimate to our parents in paradise, saying, 'That the seed of the woman shall
bruise the serpent's head.' (Gen. 3: 15.) And the Lord has in all generations
made this known to His church. 3. The Lord has in all ages covenanted to be
the reconciled God of all those who, by their subjection to His ordinances, did
profess their satisfaction with this device, and oblige themselves to acquiesce
in the same, and to seek salvation by Christ Jesus, as God does offer Him in
the gospel; so all the people of Israel are called the Lord's people, and are
said to avouch Him to be their God, and He does avouch them to be His people
'Thou hast avouched the Lord this day to be thy God, and to walk in His ways,
and to keep His statutes, and His commandments, and His judgments, and to
hearken unto His voice; and the Lord has avouched thee this day to be His
peculiar people, as He has promised thee, and that thou shouldst keep all His
commandments.' (Deut. 26: 17, 18.) Yea, the Lord does also engage Himself to be
the God of the seed and children of those who do so subject themselves to His
ordinances. The covenant is said to be made between God and all the people,
young and old, present and not present that day (Deut. 29: 10-15); and all are
appointed to come under some seal of that covenant, as was enjoined to Abraham.
(Gen. 22: 10.) Not only was it so in the Old Testament, but it is so in the New
Testament also. The Lord makes offer of Himself to be our God in Christ Jesus;
and the people professing their satisfaction in that offer, and in testimony
thereof subjecting themselves unto the ordinances, they are reckoned a
covenanted people, and are joined unto His church in thousands, receiving a
seal of the covenant, without any further particular previous trial--'Then
Peter said unto them, Repent, and be baptized, every one of you, in the name of
Jesus Christ, for the remission of sins. Then they that gladly received the
word were baptized; and the same day there were added unto them about three
thousand souls.' (Acts 2: 38, 41.) 4. Many deal treacherously with God in
this covenant--'Nevertheless, they did flatter Him with their mouth, and they
lied unto Him with their tongues; for their heart was not right with Him,
neither were they steadfast in His covenant.' (Psa. 78: 36, 37.) And although
they profess their estimation of Christ the Saviour, and their
heart-satisfaction with that device of saving sinners by Him, and having the
image of God restored by Him in them; yet their heart is not right with God,
and they do content themselves with an empty title of being in a sealed
covenant with God: 'Abraham is our Father,' say they. (John 8: 3.) For although
the Lord obligeth every man, who professeth his satisfaction with Christ Jesus,
the devised ransom, to be cordial and sincere herein; and only to those who are
so does He make out the spiritual promises of the covenant, they only being
privileged to be the sons of God who do really receive Christ (John 1: 12); yet
the Lord does permit many to profess their closing with Him in Christ, both in
the Old and New Testament, whilst their heart is not engaged; and He does admit
them to be members of His church, granting unto them the use of ordinances, and
many other external mercies and privileges denied unto the heathen, who are not
in covenant with Him. 5. Although the greater part of people do foolishly
fancy that they have closed with God in Christ Jesus sincerely and heartily;
or, at least, they do, without any ground or warrant, promise a new heart to
themselves before they depart this life; yet there be but very few who do
really and cordially close with God in Christ Jesus as He is offered in the
gospel: and so there be but very few saved, as is clear--'Strait is the gate
and narrow is the way which leadeth unto life, and few there be who find it'
(Matt. 7: 14); 'Many are called, but few are chosen.' (Matt. 20: 16.) If people
would believe this, it might help to alarm them. 6. Although none at all do
cordially close with God in Christ Jesus, and acquiesce in that ransom found
out by God, except only such as are elected--'But the election has obtained it,
and the rest were blinded' (Rom. 11: 7)--and whose hearts the Lord does
sovereignly determine to that blessed choice--'No man can come to Me, except
the Father, which has sent Me, draw him' (John 6: 44); yet the Lord has left it
as a duty upon people who hear this gospel, to close with His offer of
salvation through Christ Jesus, as if it were in their power to do it; and the
Lord, through these commands and exhortations, wherein He obligeth men to the
thing, does convey life and strength to the elect, and does therein convey the
new heart unto them, which pointeth kindly towards this new device of saving
sinners, and towards Christ in His covenant relations; for it is the Lord's
mind, in these commands and invitations, to put people on some duty, with which
He uses to concur for accomplishing that business between Him and them: so
then, it is a coming on our part, and yet a drawing on His part; 'No man can
come to Me, except the Father, which has sent Me, draw him.' (John 6: 44.) It
is a drawing on His heart, and a running on our part--'Draw me, we will run
after Thee.' (Cant. 1: 4.) It is an approaching on our part, and yet a
'choosing and causing to approach' on His part. (Psa. 65: 4.) It is a believing
or receiving on our part--'But as many as received Him, to them gave He power
to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on His name;' and yet 'it
is given us to believe.' (John 1: 12; Phil. 1: 29.)
Having premised these things, I say, if men do not find in themselves the marks
of a saving interest in Christ, spoken of in the former part of the treatise;
then, for securing their state, they ought forthwith, with all diligence,
personally and heartily to accept of and close with God's device of saving
sinners by Christ Jesus, held out in the gospel. In handling of this we
shall show-- 1. What it is to accept of and close with that noble device.
2. That it is the necessary duty of those who would be in favour with God and
secure their souls. 3. What is previously required of those who perform this
duty. 4. What are the qualifications and properties of this duty, if rightly
managed. 5. What are the native consequences of it, if it be performed
aright.
1. As for the first, What it is to close with God's device of saving sinners by
Christ Jesus, held out in the gospel. Here we must remember, as we showed
before, that at first God willed man to abide in His favour, by holding fast
his first integrity in which he was created; but man by his transgression lost
God's favour, made void that covenant of works, and put himself in to an utter
incapacity to regain the Lord's friendship, which he had lost by his sin, and
to rescue himself from the curse and wrath now due to him for sin, or any way
to procure his own salvation: but the Lord has freely manifested another way of
repairing man's lost estate, namely, by sending His Son Christ Jesus in the
flesh, to satisfy His justice for the sins of the elect, and to restore in them
His image, now defaced, and to bring them unto glory; and He has made open
proclamation in the church, that whosoever will lay aside all thoughts of
saving themselves by the covenant of works, or inherent righteousness, and will
agree heartily to be saved by Christ Jesus, they shall be restored to a better
condition than formerly man was in, and shall be saved. So then, to close with
God's device of saving sinners by Christ Jesus, is to quit and renounce all
thoughts of help or salvation by our own righteousness, and to agree unto this
way which God has found out: it is to value and highly esteem Christ Jesus as
the treasure sufficient to enrich poor sinners; and with the heart to believe
this record, that there is life enough in Him for men: it is to approve this
plan and acquiesce in it, as the only way to true happiness: it is to point
towards this mediator, as God holdeth Him out in the gospel, with a desire to
lay the stress of our whole state on Him. This is that which is called faith or
believing, the 'receiving of Christ,' or 'believing on His name.' (John 1: 12.)
This is that 'believing on the Lord Jesus Christ,' commanded to the jailer for
his safety. (Acts 16: 31.) This agreeth to all the descriptions of justifying
faith in the Scripture. This answers to the type of looking to the 'brazen
serpent lifted up in the wilderness' (John 3: 14, 15); and this is supposed in
all those ordinary acting of faith to which promises are annexed in the
Scripture; and will be found in all who have got the new heart from God, and it
will be found in none else.
As to the second thing, namely, That this is the necessary duty of all such
as would be in favour with God and secure their souls; it appeareth thus:--
1. This closing with God's device or believing in Christ, is commanded
everywhere in Scripture by the Lord as the condition of the new covenant,
giving right and title unto all the spiritual blessings of the same; for it is,
upon the matter, the receiving of Christ. This is commanded, when God bids 'men
come and buy,' that is, appropriate all, by closing with that device. (Isa. 55:
1) 'Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you
rest.' (Matt. 11: 28.) The weary are commanded to come unto Him thus, for their
rest--'This is His commandment, that we should believe on the name of His Son
Jesus Christ.' (1 John 3: 23.) This is enough to prove it a duty incumbent. But
further, it is such a duty as only gives right and title to a sonship; for only
they who receive Him are privileged to be sons--'But as many as received Him,
to them gave He power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on
His name.' (John 1: l2.) 2. It appears to be the necessary duty of all,
thus: No less than this does give an opportunity for God, offering Himself to
be our God in Christ; and no less than this does answer our profession, as we
are in covenant with Him, as members of His visible church. The Lord offereth
to be our God in Christ; if we do not close with the offer, laying aside all
thoughts of other ways by which we may attain to happiness, we give no
opportunity to him. He saith--'This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well
pleased, hear ye Him. (Matt. 17: 5.) If we close not with the offer, we give no
answer unto God. Moreover, we are all 'baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus
Christ, for the remission of sins.' (Acts 2: 38.) Now, unless we close with
Christ, as aforesaid, we falsify that profession: therefore, since this is the
thing which does answer God's offer in the gospel, and maketh good our
profession, as members of His church, it is a necessary duty lying upon us.
3. Whatsoever a man has else, if he do not thus close with God's device
concerning Christ Jesus, and do not receive Him, it does not avail, either as
to the accepting of His person, or of His performances, or as to the saving of
His soul. Men are accepted only in Christ the beloved--'To the praise of the
glory of His grace, wherein He has made us accepted in the Beloved.' (Eph. 1:
6.) Abel and his offering are accepted by faith. 'Without faith;t is impossible
to please God' (Heb. 11: 4, 6); and 'He that believeth not is condemned
already, and shall not see life, but the wrath of God abideth on him.' (John 3:
18, 36.) For want of this, no external title does avail; the children of the
kingdom are 'cast out,' if this be wanting. (Matt. 8: 10-12.) The people of
Israel are like other heathens, in regard of a graceless state, lying open to
the wrath of God- -'Behold, the days come, saith the Lord, that I will punish
all them which are circumcised with the uncircumcised, Egypt and Judas, and
Edom; for all these nations are uncircumcised, and all the house of Israel are
uncircumcised in the heart.' (Jer. 9: 25, 26.) If men do not believe that He
who was slain at Jerusalem, who was called Christ Jesus, and witnessed unto by
the prophets, and declared to be the Son of God by many mighty works--I say, if
men do not believe that He is the way, and close not with Him as the only way,
they shall die in their sins--'I said therefore unto you, that ye shall die in
your sins; for if ye believe not that I am He, ye shall die in your sins.'
(John 8: 24.) We say, then, it is a most necessary duty thus to close with
Christ Jesus, as the blessed relief appointed for sinners. Every one who is
come to years of understanding, and hearth this gospel, is obliged to take to
heart his own lost condition, and God's gracious offer of peace and salvation
through Christ Jesus, and speedily to flee from the wrath to come, by accepting
and closing with this offer, heartily acquiescing therein as a satisfying way
for the salvation of perishing sinners. And, that all may be the more
encouraged to set about this duty, when they hear Him praying them to be
reconciled unto Him, let them remember that peace and salvation are offered in
universal terms to all without exception: 'If any man will,' he shall be
welcome. (Rev. 22: 17.) If any thirst, although after that which will never
profit, yet they shall be welcome here, on the condition aforesaid--'Ho, every
one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters, and he that has no money: come ye,
buy and eat; yea, come, buy wine and milk, without money and without price.
Wherefore do ye spend money for that which is not breads and your labour for
that which satisfieth not? Hearken diligently unto me, and eat ye that which is
good, and let your soul delight itself in fatness. Incline your ear, and come
unto me: hear, and your soul shall live: and I will make an everlasting
covenant with you, even the sure mercies of David.' (Isa. 55: 1-3.) All are
'commanded to believe.' This is His commandment, 'that we should believe on the
name of His Son Jesus Christ.' (1 John 3: 23.) The promises are to all who are
externally called by the gospel. God excludes none, if they do not exclude
themselves--'The promise is unto you, and to your children, and to all that are
afar off, even as many as the Lord our God shall call.' (Acts 2: 39.) So that
if any desire salvation, they may come forward, 'He will in no wise cast them
out' (John 6: 37), being 'able to save to the uttermost them that come unto God
through Him.' (Heb. 7: 25.) And those who have long delayed to take this matter
to heart, have now the more need to look to it, lest what belongs to their
peace be hid from their eyes. But all these words will not take effect with
people, until 'God pour out His Spirit from on high' (Isa. 32: 15); to cause
them to approach unto God in Christ; yet we must still press men's duty upon
them, and entreat and charge them, by the appearing of the Lord Jesus Christ,
and their reckoning to Him in that day, that they give the Lord no rest until
He send out that 'Spirit, which He will gee to them who ask it' (Luke 11: 13),
and cause them to know what belongs unto their peace, and bring them to their
duty.
We come now to speak of the third thing which is previously required of those
who are to perform this duty. Men must not rashly, inconsiderately, and
ignorantly, rush in upon this matter, saying, they approve of the device of
saving sinners by Christ, and will acquiesce and rest on Him for safety. Often
men do deceive themselves here, and do imagine that they have done the thing.
We shall, therefore, notice some things pre-required in a person who is to
close with Christ Jesus; which, although we offer not as positive
qualifications, fitting a man for Christ that way: 'Come--without money, and
without price' (Isa. 55: 1); vet they are such things as without them a man
cannot knowingly and cordially perform the duty of believing on Christ Jesus.
Besides the common principles which are to be supposed in those who live under
gospel-ordinances; as the knowledge that men have immortal souls; that soul and
body will be united again at the last day; that there is a heaven and hell, one
of which will be the everlasting portion of all men; that the Old and New
Testaments are the true word of God and the rule of faith and manners; that
every man is by nature void of the grace of God, and is an enemy unto God, and
an heir of condemnation; that reconciliation is only by the Mediator Christ
Jesus; that faith unites unto Him, and is the condition of the new covenant;
that holiness is the fruit of true faith, and is to be followed as that without
which no man shall see God: I say, besides these things, the knowledge of which
is necessary, it is required of him who would believe on Christ Jesus--
First, That he take to heart his natural condition; and here he must know some
things, and be very serious about them; I say, he must know some things; as
1. That as he was born a rebel and an outlaw unto God, so he has by many actual
transgressions disobeyed God, and ratified the forfeiture of His favour: yea, a
man should know many particular instances of his rebellion on all hands; as
that he is a liar, Sabbathbreaker, blasphemer, or the like; as Paul speaketh
very particularly of himself afterwards-- 'Who was before a blasphemer, and a
persecutor, and injurious.' (1 Tim. 1: 13.) 2. The man must know that the
wrath of God denounced in Scripture is standing in force against those very
sins whereof he is guilty, and so, consequently, he is the party undoubtedly
against whom God, who cannot lie, has denounced war. A man must know, that when
the Scripture saith, 'Cursed is he that offereth a corrupt thing unto God'
(Mal. 1: 14); it speaketh against him for his superficial service performed
unto God with the outward man, when his heart was far off. When the word saith,
'The Lord will not hold him guiltless that taketh His name in vain' (Exod. 20:
7), the man must know it speaketh against himself, who has often carelessly
profaned that dreadful name, before which all knees shall bow (Phil. 2: 10);
and which His enemies do take in vain. (Psa. 139: 20.) When the word saith,
'Cursed is he that does the work of the Lord negligently' (Jer. 48: 10), the
man must know that it speaks against himself, who has irreverently, with much
wandering of heart, and drowsiness, heard the word preached; and without sense,
faith, or understanding, has often prayed before him. When the word saith, 'Woe
be unto him that giveth his neighbour drink, and putteth his bottle to him, to
make him drunk also' (Hab. 2: 15,16), the man must know that it is spoken
against himself, who has gloried in making his neighbour drunk, and that
dreadful wrath is determined by the Lord against him according to that
scripture. When the word saith, 'God will judge unclean persons' (Heb. 13: 4),
and will exclude them from the 'New Jerusalem, and they shall have their part
in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone' (Rev. 21: 8); the man must
know that the Scripture speaketh these very words against him, he being an
unclean person; so that he is the person against whom the curses of the law do
directly strike. 3. A man must know that he has nothing of his own to
procure his peace, and to set him free from the hazard under which he lieth;
because 'all his righteousness is as an unclean thing.' (Isa. 64: 6.) His
prayers, his other services done to God, his alms-deeds, etc., are not
acceptable unto God, since they came not from a right principle in his heart,
and were not performed in a right way, nor upon a right account, nor for a
right end; his 'sacrifices have been an abomination unto God.' (Prov. 21: 27.)
4. He must know, that as he is void of all the saving graces of the Spirit, as
the true love of God, the true fear of his name, godly sorrow for sin, etc., so
particularly, that he wants faith in Christ, who taketh away the sins of all
them who believe on Him. Until a man know this, he will still leave all his
debt and burden, without care or regard anywhere else, before he bring it to
the Surety. Now, not only must a man know these things, as I said before,
but he must also very seriously take them to heart; that is to say, he must be
affected with these things, and must be in earnest about them, as he used to be
in other cases in which he is most serious; yea, he should be more in earnest
here than in other cases, because it is of greater concernment unto him. This
seriousness produceth-- 1. A taking of salvation to heart more than anything
else. Shall men be obliged to 'seek first the kingdom of God?' (Matt. 6: 33);
is there but 'one thing necessary?' (Luke 10: 42); shall Paul 'count all things
loss and dung' for this matter (Phil. 3: 8); is a man a loser, if he gain 'the
whole world and lose his own soul?' (Mark 8: 36); shall this be the only ground
of joy, 'that men's names are written in the book of life?' (Luke 10: 26); and
shall not men, who would be reckoned serious, take their soul and salvation
more to heart than anything else? Surely it cannot fail. Let none deceive
themselves. If the hazard of their soul, and the salvation thereof, and how to
be in favour with God, have not gone nearer to their heart than anything in the
world beside, it cannot be presumed, upon just grounds, that they have known
sin, or God, or the eternity of His wrath, aright. 2. This seriousness
breaks the man's heart, and causeth the stoutness of it to faint, and leadeth
it out to sorrow as for a firstborn. (Zech. 12: 10.) I grant their sorrow will
better suit that scripture afterwards, when they apprehend Christ pierced by
their sins. 3. It leads the man to a self-loathing. A man taking up himself
so, cannot but loathe himself for his abominations, whereby he has destroyed
himself. There is somewhat of that spirit of revenge, which is mentioned as a
fruit of true repentance 'This selfsame thing that ye sorrowed after a godly
sort, what carefulness it wrought in you; yea, what revenge?' (2 Cor. 7: 11.)
4. This seriousness makes the man peremptory to find relief; since it is not in
himself. He dare not put off and delay his business as before; and this is
indeed required, that he finds himself so pursued and urged to it, that he
flees for refuge somewhere. I grant some have a higher and some a lesser degree
of this seriousness, as we showed in the former part of this treatise: but if
we speak of the Lord's ordinary way of working with those who are come to age,
we say, they must very seriously take their soul's estate to heart, despairing
of help in themselves, since 'the whole need not a physician, but those who are
sick.' (Matt. 9: 12.) As for the measure, we plead only that which probably
supposes that a man will be induced thereby to treat cordially with Christ, on
any terms he does offer himself to be closed with. The second thing
pre-required of him who would believe on Christ Jesus is, He must know and take
to heart the way of escape from God's wrath; the Spirit must convince him of
that righteousness. Here a man must understand somewhat distinctly, that God
has devised a way to save poor lost man by Jesus Christ, whose perfect
righteousness has satisfied offended justice, and procured pardon and
everlasting favour to all those whom he persuadeth, by this gospel, to accept
of God's offer--'Be it known unto you, therefore, that through this man is
preached unto you the forgiveness of sins; and by Him all that believe are
justified from all things.' (Acts 13: 38, 39.) 'As many as received Him, to
them gave He power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on His
name.' (John 1: 12.) So that no person is excluded, of whatsoever rank or
condition, whatsoever has been his former way, unless he be guilty of the sin
against the Holy Ghost, which is a malicious hatred and rejection of the remedy
appointed for sinners, as we shall hear; for 'all manner of sins' are forgiven
unto those who accept of the offer in God's way. (Matt. 12: 31.) 'He is able to
save to the uttermost them that come unto God through Him.' (Heb. 7: 25.)
The third thing pre-required is, A man must know, that as God has not excluded
him from the relief appointed, so He is willing to be reconciled unto men
through Christ, and has obliged men to close with Him through Christ Jesus, and
so to appropriate that salvation to themselves. He not only invites all to
come--'Ho every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters, and he that has no
money: come ye, buy and eat; yea, come, buy wine and milk, without money and
without price' (Isa. 55: 1, 2); and welcometh all that come, as we find in the
gospel, and commendeth those who come, as the centurion and the woman of Canaan
(Matt. 8: 10; 15: 28); and chideth for not coming and closing with Him, 'Ye
will not come to Me, that ye might have life' (John 5: 40); and condemneth for
not closing so with Him: 'He that believeth not is condemned already' (John 3:
18);--but He also commandeth all to believe on Christ: 'This is His
commandment, that we should believe on the name of His Son Jesus Christ.' (1
John 3: 23.) So that a man is not to question the Lord's willingness to receive
men who go to Christ honestly, for God has abundantly cleared that in
Scripture. Unless a man know so much, he will scarcely dare to lay his heart
open for that noble device of saving sinners, or adventure the whole weight of
his salvation upon Christ Jesus. The fourth thing pre-required is, The man
who would close with Christ Jesus, must resolve to break all covenants with
hell and death--'Because ye have said, we have made a covenant with death, and
with hell are we at agreement; when the overflowing scourge shall pass through,
it shall not come unto us; for we have made lies our refuge, and under
falsehood have we hid ourselves.' (Isa. 28: 15.) Whatsoever known evil men are
engaged in, they must resolve to forego it; for there is no concord between
Christ and Belial. (2 Cor. 6: 14-18.) The Lord requireth that they who would
expect 'Him to be for them, should not be for another.' (Hos. 3: 3.) This is
far from evangelical repentance, which I grant does not precede a man's closing
with Christ by faith: there is little here beyond a disregard of those things
into which a man was formerly devoted, and a slighting what he was mad upon,
because he sees himself destroyed thereby, and relief now offered; upon which
his heart beginneth to be more intent that formerly it was. After this when
Christ is looked upon alone, His worth and beauty do appear, so as among all
the gods there is none like unto Him, and He appeareth as a sufficient covering
of the eyes to all who obtain Him: upon which the heart loves God's device in
the new covenant, and desires to lay its weight upon Christ rather than any
other way, bending towards Him; and so the man becomes a believer. Now, I
will not say that all these things, whereof we have spoken, are formally,
orderly, and distinctly found in every person before he close with God in
Christ; for the way of the heart with Christ may be added to 'the four
wonderful things.' (Prov. 30: 18.) It is hard to trace the heart in its
translation from darkness to light; yet we hold out the most ordinary and
likely way to him who does ask the way; debarring thereby ignorant and
senseless persons from meddling, and discharging them from pretending to any
interest in Him whilst they remain such.
IV.--Some of the properties and native consequences of true believing
The fourth thing we proposed to speak to is, The properties of this duty, when
rightly gone about. I shall only mention a few. 1. Believing on Christ must
be personal; a man himself and in his own proper person must close with Christ
Jesus--'The just shall live by his faith.' (Hab. 2: 4.) This saith, that it
will not suffice for a man's safety and relief, that he is in covenant with God
as a born member of the visible church, by virtue of the parent's subjection to
God's ordinances: neither will it suffice that the person had the initiating
seal of baptism added, and that he then virtually engaged to seek salvation by
Christ's blood, as all infants do: neither does it suffice that men are come of
believing parents; their faith will not instate their children into a right to
the spiritual blessings of the covenant; neither will it suffice that parents
did, in some respects, engage for their children, and give them away unto God:
all these things do not avail. The children of the kingdom and of godly
predecessors are cast out. Unless a man in his own person have faith in Christ
Jesus, and with his own heart approve and acquiesce in that device of saving
sinners, he cannot be saved. I grant, this faith is given unto him by Christ;
but certain it is, that it must be personal. 2ndly, This duty must be
cordial and hearty--'With the heart man believeth unto righteousness.' (Rom.
10: 10.) A man must be sincere, and without guile, in closing with Christ,
judging Him the only covering of the eyes, not hankering after another way. The
matter must not swim only in the head or understanding, but it must be in the
heart: the man must not only be persuaded that Christ is the way, but
affectionately persuaded of it, loving and liking the thing, having complacency
in it; so that 'it is all a man's desire,' as David speaketh of the covenant.
(2 Sam. 23: 5.) If a man be cordial and affectionate in anything, surely he
must be so here in this 'one thing that is necessary.' It must not be simply a
fancy in the head, it must be a heart-business, a soul business; yea, not a
business in the outer court of the affections, but in the flower of the
affections, and in the innermost cabinet of the soul, where Christ is formed.
Shall a man be cordial in anything, and not in this, which comprises all his
chief interests and his everlasting state within it? Shall 'the Lord be said to
rejoice over a man as a bridegroom rejoiceth over his bride?' (Isa. 62: 5); and
'to rest in His love with joy?' (Zeph. 3: 17); and shall not the heart of man
go out and meet Him here? The heart or nothing; love or nothing; marriage-love,
which goes from heart to heart; love of espousals, or nothing--'My son, give me
thine heart.' (Prov. 23: 26.) 'Though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor
and though I give my body to be burned, and have not charity, it profiteth me
nothing.' (1 Cor. 13: 2.) I will not say that there is in all, as soon as they
believe, a prevailing sensible love, which maketh sick; but there must be in
believing, a rational and kindly love, so well grounded and deeply engaged,
that 'many waters cannot quench it. It is strong as death, and jealousy in it
burneth as fire. ' (Cant. 8: 6, 7.) 3. The third property or qualification
of believing, as it goes out after Christ, is that it must be rational. By this
I mean that the man should move towards God in Christ, in knowledge and
understanding, taking up God's device of saving sinners by Christ as the
Scripture holds it out; not fancying a Christ to himself otherwise than the
gospel speaketh of Him, nor another way of relief by Him than the word of God
holdeth out. Therefore we find knowledge joined to the covenant between God and
man as a requisite--'And I will give them a heart to know Me, that I am the
Lord; and they shall be my people, and I will be their God.' 'And they shall
teach no more every man his neighbour, and every man his brother, saying, Know
the Lord: for they shall all know Me, from the least of them unto the greatest
of them, saith the Lord.' (Jer. 24: 7; 31: 34.) I mean also, that a man must be
in calmness of spirit, and as it were in his cold blood, in closing with Christ
Jesus; not in a simple fit of affection, which soon vanisheth--'He that
received the seed into stony places, the same is he that heareth the word, and
anon with joy receiveth it' (Matt. 13: 20); nor in a distemper through some
outward distress, as the people were, 'when He slew them, then they sought Him;
and proved not steadfast in the covenant' (Psa. 78: 34); nor under a temptation
of some outward temporary interest, as Simon Magus was when he believed. A man
must act here rationally, as being master of himself, in some measure able to
judge of the good or evil of the thing as it stands before him. 4. The
fourth is faith; as it goes out rationally, so it goes out resolutely. The poor
distressed people in the gospel did most resolutely cast themselves upon
Christ. This resoluteness of spirit is in respect to all difficulties that lie
in the way; violence is altered to these. The man whose heart is a laying out
for Christ Jesus, cannot say, 'There is a lion in the street.' (Prov. 26: 13.)
If he cannot have access by the door, he will break through the roof of the
house. (Luke 5: 19.) He often does not regard that which the world calls
discretion or prudence, like Zaccheus, climbing up on a tree to see Christ,
when faith was forming in his bosom. (Luke 19.) This resoluteness of spirit
foresees what inconveniences may follow, and disregards all these; at least
resolving over all these, like a wise builder who reckoneth the expense
beforehand. (Luke 14: 28.) This resoluteness is also in regard to all a man's
idols, and such weights as would easily beset him, if he did not follow after
Christ over them all, like that blind man who did cast his garment from him
when Christ called him. (Matt. 10: 50.) This resoluteness in the soul
proceedeth from desperate self-necessity within the man, as it was with the
jailer (Acts 16: 30); and from the sovereign command of God, obliging the man
to move towards Christ--'This is His commandment, that we should believe on the
name of His Son Jesus Christ' (1 John 3: 23); and from the good report gone
abroad of God, that 'He putteth none away that come unto Him through Christ'
(John 6: 37); but commends such as do adventure over the greatest difficulties,
as the woman of Canaan. (Matt. 15: 28.) But, above all, this resoluteness does
proceed from the arm of JEHOVAH, secretly and strongly drawing the sinner
towards Christ--'No man can come to Me, except the Father, which has sent Me,
draw him.' (John 6: 4.) I will not say that every one, closing with Christ
in the offers of the gospel, has all the above thoughts formally in his mind;
yet, upon search, it will be found, if he be put to it, or put in mind of these
things, they are then uppermost in the soul. By what is said, it manifestly
appears that many in the visible church had need to do somewhat further for
securing of their soul, when they come to years of discretion, than is found to
have been done by them before, in the covenant between God and the church,
sealed to them in baptism. From what is said also, there is a competent
guard upon the free grace of God in the gospel, held out through Christ Jesus;
so that ignorant, senseless, profane men, cannot with any shadow of reason,
pretend to an interest in it. It is true, believing in Christ, and closing with
Him as a perfect Saviour, seemeth easy, and every godless man saith that he
believes on Him: but they deceive themselves, since their soul has never
cordially, rationally, and resolutely gone out after Christ Jesus, as we have
said. It may be, some wicked men have been enlightened (Heb. 6: 4); and have
found some reality in their fear--'Felix trembled' (Acts 24: 25);--or in their
joy--'He that received the seed into stony places, the same is he that hearth
the word, and anon with joy receiveth it' (Matt. 13: 20); and Herod heard John
'gladly' (Mark 6: 20);--but not having engaged their heart in approaching to
God (Jer. 30: 21), have either sat down in that common work, as their
sanctuary, until the trial came--'When tribulation or persecution ariseth
because of the word, by and by he is offended' (Matt. 13: 21);--or, 'they
return back with the dog to their vomit,' from which they had in some measure
'escaped by the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour' (2 Peter 2: 20-22); or they
utterly fall away to the hatred and malicious despising and persecuting of
Christ and His interests, from whence hardly can they be recovered--'For it is
impossible for those who were once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly
gift, and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost, and have tasted the good word
of God, and the powers of the world to come, if they shall fall away, to renew
them again unto repentance; seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God
afresh, and put Him to an open shame.' 'For if we sin wilfully after that we
have received the knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no more sacrifice for
sins.' 'Of how much sorer punishment, suppose ye, shall he be thought worthy,
who has trodden under foot, the Son of God, and has counted the blood of the
covenant, wherewith he was sanctified, an unholy thing, and has done despite
unto the Spirit of grace?' (Heb. 6: 4-6; 10: 26-29.) Which things should
provoke men to be serious in this great business.
"We come now to speak to the fifth thing proposed, and that is, What are the
native consequences of true believing? I shall reduce what I have to speak of
them to these two, namely, Union with God, and communion. First, then, I say,
When a sinner closets with Christ Jesus, there is presently an admirable union,
a strange oneness between God and the man. As the husband and wife, head and
body, root and branches, are not to be reckoned two but one; so Christ, or God
in Christ, and the sinner closing with Him by faith, are one--'We are members
of His body, of His flesh, and of His bones.' (Ephes. 5: 30.) He that is so
'joined unto the Lord is one spirit' (1 Cor. 6: 17); as the Father is in the
Son, and Christ in the Father, so believers are one in the Father and the Son;
they are one, as the Father and Son are one. The Father in Christ, and Christ
in believers, that they may be 'made perfect in one.' O what a strange
interweaving and indissoluble union here! (John 7: 21-26.) Because of this
union betwixt God and the believer, 1. They can never hate one another.
Henceforth the Lord will never hate the believer--'As no man hateth his own
flesh at any time, but cherisheth and nourisheth it,' so does Christ His
people. (Eph. 5: 29.) He may be angry, so as to correct and chastise the man
that is a believer; but all He does to him is for his good and advantage--'All
the Lord's paths must be mercy and truth to him.' (Psa. 25: 10.) 'All things
work together for good to him.' (Rom. 8: 28.) On the other side, the believer
can never hate God maliciously; for--'He that is born of God sinneth not.' (1
John 3: 9.) For the Lord has resolved and ordained things so, that His hand
shall undoubtedly so be upon all believers for good, that they shall never be
permitted to hate Him, and so be plucked out of His hand. 2. Because of this
union there is a strange sympathy and fellow-feeling between God and the
believer: the Lord is afflicted with the man's affliction. (Isa. 63: 9.) He
does tenderly, carefully, and seasonably resent it, as if He were afflicted
with it. He who toucheth the believer, toucheth the apple of the Lord's eye
(Zech. 2: 8)--'He is touched with the feeling of their infirmities' (Heb. 4:
15); and 'precious in His sight is their death.' (Psa. 116: 15.) In a word,
what is done to them, is done unto Him; and what is not done unto them, is not
done unto Him--'He that receiveth you, receiveth Me.' (Matt. 10: 40.) 'Inasmuch
as ye have done it unto one of the least of these My brethren, ye have done it
unto Me: inasmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of these, ye did it not
to Me.' (Matt. 25: 40, 45.) On the other part, the 'zeal of His house'
occupieth the heart of the believer. (Psa. 69: 9.) 'The Lord's reproach'
lighteth on the believer. If it go well with His affairs, that is the business
of His people. So there is a strange sympathy between God and believers, all by
virtue of the union between them; because of which, men should hate everything
which would compete with Him in their love or affections, and should disdain to
be slaves to the creatures, since these are the servants of their Lord and
husband, and their servants through Him. What a hateful thing for a queen to
disgrace herself with the servants of her prince and husband! It is also a
shame for a believer to be 'afraid of evil tidings,' since the Lord, with whom
he is one, alone ruleth all things, 'and does whatsoever pleaseth Him in heaven
and earth.' 'All things are yours, and ye are Christ's, and Christ is God's.'
'Surely he shall not be moved for ever, he shall not be afraid of evil tidings;
his heart is fixed, trusting in the Lord; his heart is established, he shall
not be afraid.' 'Our God is in the heavens, He has done whatsoever He pleased.'
(1 Cor. 3: 21, 23; Psa. 112: 6, 7; 115: 3.) The other great consequence of
believing, is an admirable unparalleled communion, by virtue whereof, 1. The
parties themselves do belong each to the other. The Lord is the God of His
people; He Himself, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, is their God, in all His
glorious attributes; His justice as well as His mercy; His wisdom, power,
holiness, etc., for He becomes the God of His people, as He often speaks in the
covenant. On the other part, believers are His people. In their very persons
they are His, as the covenant does speak; they shall be His people; their head,
their heart, their hand, etc.; whatsoever they are, they are His. 2. By
virtue of this communion they have a mutual interest in one another's whole
goods and property, so far as can be useful. All the Lord's word belongs to the
believer; threatening as well as promises are for his good; all His ways, all
His works of all sorts, special communications, death, devils, even all things
so far as can be useful-- 'All things are yours; whether Paul, or Apollos, or
Cephas, or the world, or life, or death, or things present, or things to come;
all are yours, and ye are Christ's, and Christ is God's.' (1 Cor. 3: 21-23.) On
the other side, all that belongs to the believer is the Lord's; heritage,
children, life, wife, credit, etc., all is at His disposing; if any of these
can be useful to Him, the believer is to forego them, else he falsifies that
communion, and declares himself in so far unworthy of Christ. 'If any man come
to me, and hate not his father; yea, and his own life also, he cannot be my
disciple.' (Luke 14: 26.) 3. By virtue of this communion, there should be
much intimacy and familiarity between God and the believer. The Lord may
interfere with any thing which belongs to the believer, and do unto him what
seemeth good to Him; and the man is not to mistake, or say unto God, 'What does
Thou' except in so far as concerns His duty: yea, He is still to say, in every
case, 'Good is the word and will of the Lord.' (Isa. 38: 8; 2 Kings 4: 23, 26.)
On the other part, the believer may, in a humble way, be homely and familiar
with God in Christ; He may come with 'boldness to the throne of grace' (Heb. 4:
16); and present his addresses unto God. He is no more a stranger unto God, so
that he needs not speak unto God as one who has acquaintances to make every
hour, as many professors do; which makes a great inconsistency in their
religion. The believer also may lay open all his heart unto God--'I have
poured out my soul before the Lord' (1 Sam. 1: 15); and impart all his secrets
unto Him, and all his temptations, without fear of a mistake. The believer also
may inquire into what God does, in so far as may concern his own duty, or in so
far as may ward off mistakes respecting the Lord's way, and reconcile it with
His words: so Job says, 'Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him; but I will
maintain mine own ways before Him.' (Job 13: 15.) The believer is a friend in
this respect, as 'knowing what the Master does;' see Gen. 18: 23; Jer. 12: 1;
Isa. 63: 17. The believer also may draw near daily unto God with all his
failings, and seek repentance, pardon, and peace, through the advocacy of
Christ-- 'Him has God exalted with His right hand, to be a Prince and a
Saviour, to give repentance to Israel and forgiveness of sins.' (Acts 5: 31.)
'If any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the
righteous.' (1 John 2: 1.) O how often in one day may the believer plead
pardon, if he intend not to mock God, nor turn His grace into licentiousness!
The Lord has commanded men to forgive seventy times seven in one day; and has
intimated there, in a parable of a king who took account of his servants, how
much more the Master will forgive. (Matt. 18: 22-28.) The believer also may
intrust God with all His outward concerns, for He cares for these things 'If
God so clothe the grass of the field, shall He not much more clothe you, O ye
of little faith? Therefore, take no thought, saying, what shall we eat, or what
shall we drink, or wherewithal shall we be clothed? For your heavenly Father
knoweth that ye have need of all these things.' (Matt. 6: 30-32.) 'Casting all
your care upon Him, for He cares for you.' (1 Peter 5: 7.) Yea, the believer
may humbly put God to it to make Him forthcoming to him in all such cases as
beseemeth, and to help him to suitable fruit in every season, 'even grace in
time of need.' (Heb. 4: 16.) Yea, how great things may believers seek from him
in Christ Jesus, both for themselves and others! 'If we ask anything according
to His will, He heareth us.' (1 John 5: 14, 15.) 'Whatsoever ye shall ask in my
name, that will I do.' (John 14: 13.) 'Ask of me things to come concerning my
sons: and concerning the work of my hands, command ye me.' (Isa. 45: 11.) It is
the shame and great prejudice of His people that they do not improve that
communion with God more than they do: Christ may justly upbraid them, 'that
they ask nothing in His name.' (John 16: 24.) By what is said, it appears of
how great consequence this duty of believing is, by which a man closes with
Christ Jesus, whom the father has sealed and given for a covenant to the
people. It is so honorable to God, answering His very design, and serving His
interest in the whole contrivance and manifestation of the gospel; and it is so
advantageous to men, that Satan and an evil heart of unbelief do mightily
oppose it, by moving objections against it, of which I shall notice the most
ordinary.
Object. I am so base, worthless, and weak of myself that I think it were high
presumption for me to meddle with Christ Jesus, or the salvation purchased at
the price of His blood. Ans. It is true, all the children of Adam are base
and wicked before Him, 'who chargeth His angels with folly.' (Job 4: 18.) 'All
nations are less than nothing and vanity before him.' (Isa. 40: 17.) There is
such a disproportion between God and man, that unless He Himself had devised
that covenant, and of His own free will had offered so to transact with men, it
had been high treason for men or angels to have imagined that God should have
humbled himself, and become a servant, and have taken on Him our nature, and
have united it by a personal union to the blessed Godhead; and that He should
have subjected Himself to the shameful death of the cross; and all this, that
men, who were rebels, should be reconciled unto God, and be made eternally
happy, by being in His holy company for ever. But I say, all this was His
own device and free choice; yea, moreover, if God had not sovereignly commanded
men so to close with Him in and through Christ, no man durst have made use of
that device of His--'Ho, every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters, and
he that has no money: come ye, buy and eat; yea, come, buy wine and milk
without money and without price.' (Isa. 40: 1-3.) 'And this is His commandment,
that we should believe on the name of His son Jesus Christ.' (1 John 3: 23.) So
then, although with Abigail I may say, 'Let me be but a servant, to wash the
feet of the servants of my Lord' (1 Sam. 25: 41); yet, since He has in His holy
wisdom devised that way, and knows how to be richly glorified in it--'The eyes
of your understanding being enlightened, that ye may know, what is the riches
of the glory of His inheritance in the saints' (Eph. 1: 18); 'All Mine are
Thine, and Thine are Mine, and I am glorified in them' (John 17: 10); and has
commanded me, as I shall be answerable at the great day, to close with Him in
Christ, I dare not disobey, nor inquire into the reasons of His contrivance and
commands, but must comply with the command, as I would not be found to
'frustrate the grace of God' (Gal. 2: 21); and in a manner disappoint the
gospel, and falsify the record which God has borne of His Son, 'that there is
life enough in Him for men' (1 John 5: 10,11), and so 'make God a liar,' and
add that rebellion to all my former transgressions.
Object. I am a person singularly sinful, beyond any I know: therefore I dare
not presume to go near to Christ Jesus, or look after that salvation which is
through His righteousness. Ans. Is your sin beyond the drunkenness and
incest of Lot; adultery covered with murder in David; idolatry and horrid
apostasy in Solomon; idolatry, murder, and witchcraft in Manasseh; anger
against God and His way in Jonah; forswearing of Christ in Peter, after he was
forewarned, and had vowed the contrary; bloody persecution in Paul, making the
saints to blaspheme? etc. But woe to him who is emboldened to sin by these
instances recorded in Scripture, and adduced here to the commendation of the
free and rich grace of God, and to encourage poor penitent sinners to flee unto
Christ; I say, are your sins beyond these? Yet all these obtained pardon
through Christ, as the Scripture showeth. Know, therefore, that all sins are
equal before the free grace of God, 'who loveth freely' (Hos. 14: 4); and
looketh not to less or more sin. If the person have a heart to 'come unto Him
through Christ, then He is able to save to the uttermost.' (Heb. 7: 25.) Yea,
it is more provoking before God, not to close with Christ, when the offer comes
to a man, than all the rest of his transgressions are; for 'he that believeth
not has made God a liar,' in that record He has borne of life in the Son. (1
John 5: 10,11.) 'And he who does not believe, shall be condemned for not
believing on the Son of God.' (John 3: 18.) That shall be the main thing in his
indictment; so that much sin cannot excuse a man, if he reject Christ, and
refuse His offer; since God has openly declared, that 'this is a faithful
saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came to save sinners,
whereof I am chief.' Even he who is chief of sinners in his own apprehension,
is bound to believe and 'accept this saying.' (1 Tim. 1: 15.)
Object. My sins have some aggravating circumstances beyond the same sins in
other persons, which does much terrify me. Ans. What can the aggravations of
thy sins be, which are not parallelled in the foregoing examples? Is thy sin
against great light? So were many of those of whom we spoke before. Was it
against singular mercies and deliverances? So was that of Lot's and Noah's
drunkenness. Was thy sin done with much deliberation? So was David's, when he
wrote the letter against Uriah. Was it against or after any singular
manifestation of God? So was Solomon's. Was it by a small and despicable
temptation? So was that of Jonah and of Peter, if we consider the heinousness
of their transgressions. Hast thou reiterated the sin, and committed it over
again? So did Lot, so did Peter, so did Jehoshaphat, in joining with Ahab and
Jehoram. (1 Kings 22:; 2 Kings 3.) Are there many gross sins concurring
together in thee? So were there in Manasseh. Hast thou stood long out in
rebellion? That, as all the former, is thy shame; but so did the thief on the
cross; he stood it out to the last gasp. (Luke 23: 42, 43.) If yet 'thou hast
an ear to hear,' thou art commanded 'to hear.' (Matt. 13: 9.) Although thou
hast long 'spent thy money for that which is not bread' (Isa. 55: 1, 3), thou
hast the greater need now to make haste and to flee for refuge; and if thou do
so, He shall welcome thee, and 'in no wise cast thee out' (John 6: 37);
especially, since He has used no prescription of time in Scripture. So that all
those aggravations of thy sin, will not excuse thy refusing the Lord's offer.
Object. In all those instances given, you have not named the particulars of
which I am guilty; nor know I any who ever obtained mercy before God, being
guilty of such things as are in me. Ans. It is difficult to notice every
particular transgression which may vex the conscience; yea, lesser sins than
some of those I have mentioned may very much disquiet, if the Lord awaken the
conscience. But, for thy satisfaction, I shall refer to some truths of
Scripture, which do reach sins and cases more universally than any man can do
particularly: Exod. 34: 7--'God pardoneth iniquity, transgression, and sin;'
that is, all manner of sin. If a man turn from all his wickedness, it shall no
more be remembered, or prove his ruin. (Ezek. 18: 21, 22, 30.) 'Him that comets
He will in nowise cast out' (John 6: 37); that is, whatsoever be his sins, or
the aggravations of them. 'Whosoever believeth shall have everlasting life'
(John 3: 16); that is, without exception of any sin or any case. 'He is able to
save to the uttermost those who come to God through Him' (Heb. 7: 25); no man
can sufficiently declare what is God's uttermost. 'All manner of sin and
blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men' (Matt. 12: 31); that is, there is no sort
of sin, whereof one instance shall not be forgiven in one person or other,
'except the sin against the Holy Ghost.' These and the like scriptures carry
all sorts of sin before them: so that let thy sins be what they will, or can
be, they may be sunk in one of these truths; so that thy sin can be no excuse
to thee for refusing the offers of peace and salvation through Christ, since
'any man who will,; is allowed to 'come and take.' We will not multiply
words: the great God of heaven and earth has sovereignly commanded all who see
their need of relief to retake themselves unto Christ Jesus, and to close
cordially with God's device of saving sinners by Him, laying aside all
objections and excuses, as they shall be answerable unto Him in the day when He
shall judge the quick and the dead; and shall drive away from His presence all
those who would dare to say, their sins and condition were such as that they
durst not adventure upon Christ's perfect righteousness for their relief,
notwithstanding of the Lord's own command often interposed, and, in a manner,
His credit engaged.
Object. I suspect I am guilty of the 'sin against the Holy Ghost,' and so am
incapable of pardon; and therefore I need not think of believing on Christ
Jesus for the saving of my soul. Ans. Although none should charge this sin
on themselves, or on others, unless they can prove and establish the charge
according to Christ's example 'And whosoever speaketh a word against the Son of
man, it shall be forgiven him: but whosoever speaketh against the Holy Ghost,
it shall not be forgiven him, neither in this world, neither in the world to
come' (Matt. 12: 5, 26, 32): yet for satisfying of the doubt, I shall, 1. Show
what is not the sin against the Holy Ghost, properly so called, because there
be some gross sins which people do unwarrantable judge to be this unpardonable
sin. 2. I shall show what is the sin against the Holy Ghost. 3. I shall draw
some conclusions in answer directly to the objection.
As for the first, There be many gross sins, which although, as all other sins,
they be sins against the Holy Ghost, who is God equal and one with the Father
and the Son, and are done against some of His operations and motions; yet are
they not that sin against the Holy Ghost which is the unpardonable sin. As, 1.
Blaspheming of God under bodily tortures is not that sin; for some saints fell
into this sin--'And I punished them oft in every synagogue, and compelled them
to blaspheme' (Acts 26: 11); much less blaspheming of God in a fit of
distraction or frenzy; for a man is not a free rational agent at that time; and
'He that spareth His people, as a father does the son that serveth him, and
pitieth them that fear Him, as a father pitieth his children' (Mal. 3: 17; Psa.
103: 13); so does He spare and pity in these rovings; for so would our fathers
according to the flesh do, if we blasphemed them in a fit of distraction. Much
less are horrid blasphemies against God darted in upon the soul, and not
allowed there, this unpardonable sin; for such things were offered to Christ,
and are often cast in upon the saints. (Matt. 4: 1-11.) 2. The hating of
good in others, whilst I am not convinced that it is good, but according to my
light, judge it to be evil; yea, the speaking against it, yea, the persecuting
of it in that case, is not the sin against the Holy Ghost; for all these will
be found in Paul before he was converted; and he obtained mercy because he did
these things ignorantly. 3. Heart-rising at the thriving of others the work
and way of God, whilst I love it myself; yea, the rising of the heart against
Providence, which often expresses itself against the creatures nearest our
hand; yea, this rising of heart entertained and maintained (although they be
horrid things leading towards that unpardonable sin, yet) are not that sin; for
these may be in the saints proceeding from self-love, which cannot endure to be
darkened by another, and proceeding from some cross in their idol under a fit
of temptation: the most part of all this was in Jonah, chap. 4. 4. Not only
are not decays in what once was in the man, and falling into gross sins against
light after the receiving of the truth, this unpardonable sin; for then many of
the saints in Scripture were undone; but further, apostasy from much of the
truth is not that sin; for that was in Solomon, and in the church of Corinth
and Galatia; yea, denying, yea, forswearing of the most fundamental truth,
under a great temptation, is not this sin: for then Peter had been undone.
5. As resisting, quenching, grieving, and vexing of the Spirit of God by many
sinful ways, are not this unpardonable sin; for they are charged with these who
are called to repentance in Scripture, and not shut out as guilty of this sin:
so neither reiterated sin against light is the sin against the Holy Ghost,
although it leads towards it, for such was Peter's sin in denying Christ; so
was Jehoshaphat's sin in joining with Ahab and Jehoram. 6. Purposes and
attempts of self-murder, and even purposes of murdering godly men, the party
being under a sad fit of temptation; yea, actual self-murder (although probably
it is often joined in the issue with this unpardonable sin, which ought to make
every soul look upon the very temptation to it with horror and abhorrence, yet)
is not the sin against the Holy Ghost. The jailer intended to kill himself upon
a worse account than many poor people do, in the sight and sense of God's
wrath, and of their own sin and corruption; yet that jailer obtained pardon
(Acts 16: 27, 34); and Paul, before his effectual calling, was accessory unto
the murder of many saints, and intended to kill more, as himself granteth--'I
verily thought with myself that I ought to do many things contrary to the name
of Jesus of Nazareth. Which thing I also did in Jerusalem: and many of the
saints did I shut up in prison, having received authority from the chief
priests; and when they were put to death, I gave my voice against them. And I
punished them oft in every synagogue, and compelled them to blaspheme: and,
being exceedingly mad against them, I persecuted them even unto strange
cities.' (Acts 26: 9-12.) Although all these are dreadful sins, each of them
deserving wrath everlasting, and, not being repented of, bringing endless
vengeance; especially the last cuts off hope of relief, for anything that can
be expected in an ordinary way; yet none of these is the unpardonable sin
against the Holy Ghost: and so under any of these there is hope to him that has
an ear to hear the joyful sound of the covenant. All manner of such sin and
blasphemy may be forgiven, as is clear in the Scripture, where these things are
mentioned.
As for the second thing: Let us see what the sin against the Holy Ghost is. It
is not a simple act of transgression, but a combination of many mischievous
things, involving soul and body ordinarily in guilt. We thus describe it--'It
is a rejecting and opposing of the chief gospel truth, and way of salvation,
made out particularly to a man by the Spirit of God, in the truth and good
thereof; and that avowedly, freely, wilfully, maliciously, and despitefully,
working hopeless fear.' There be three places of Scripture which do speak most
of this sin, and thence we will prove every part of this description, in so far
as may be useful to our present purpose; by which it will appear, that none who
have a mind for Christ need stumble at what is spoken of this sin in
Scripture-- 'Wherefore I say unto you, All manner of sin and blasphemy shall be
forgiven unto men: but the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost shall not be
forgiven unto men. And whosoever speaketh a word against the Son of man, it
shall be forgiven him: but whosoever speaketh against the Holy Ghost, it shall
not be forgiven him, neither in this world, neither in the world to come.' 'For
it is impossible for those who were once enlightened, and have tasted of the
heavenly gift, and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost, and have tasted the
good word of God, and the powers of the world to come, if they shall fall away,
to renew them again unto repentance: seeing they crucify to themselves the Son
of God afresh, and put Him to an open shame.' 'For if we sin wilfully after
that we have received the knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no more
sacrifice for sins, but a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery
indignation, which shall devour the adversaries. He that despised Moses' law
died without mercy under two or three witnesses: of how much sorer punishment,
suppose ye, shall he be thought worthy, who has trodden under foot the Son of
God, and has counted the blood of the covenant wherewith He was sanctified, an
unholy thing, and has done despite unto the Spirit of grace?' (Matt. 12: 23-32;
Heb. 6: 4-6; 10: 25-29.) 1. Then let us consider the object about which this
sin, or sinful acting of the man guilty thereof, is conversant, and that is the
chief gospel-truth and way of salvation; both which come to one thing. It is
the way which God has contrived for saving of sinners by Jesus Christ, the
promised Messiah and Saviour, by whose death and righteousness men are to be
saved, as He has held Him forth in the ordinances, confirming the same by many
mighty works in Scripture tending thereto. This way of salvation is the object.
The Pharisees oppose this that Christ was the Messiah--'And all the people
said, Is not this the son of David? But when the Pharisees heard it, they said,
This fellow does not cast out devils, but by Beelzebub the prince of the
devils' (Matt. 12: 23, 24.) The wrong is done against the Son of God--'It is
impossible to renew them again unto repentance, seeing they crucify to
themselves the Son of God afresh, and put Him to an open shame' (Heb. 6: 6);
and against the blood of the covenant, and the Spirit graciously offering to
apply these things--'Of how much sorer punishment, suppose ye, shall he be
thought worthy, who has trodden under foot the Son of God, and has counted the
blood of the covenant, wherewith he was sanctified, an unholy thing, and has
done despite unto the Spirit of grace?' (Heb. 10: 29.) 2. In the
description, consider the qualifications of this object. It is singularly made
out to the party by the Spirit of God, both in the truth and good thereof. This
faith, 1. That there must be knowledge of the truth and way of salvation. The
Pharisees knew that Christ was the heir--'But when they saw the Son, they said
among themselves, This is the heir, come let us kill Him.' (Matt. 21: 38.) The
party hath knowledge-- 'But if we sin wilfully after that we have received the
knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins' (Heb. 10:
26.) 2. That knowledge of the thing must not swim only in the head, but there
must be some half-heart persuasion of it: Christ knew the Pharisees' thoughts
(Matt. 12: 25); and so did judge them, and that the contrary of what they spoke
was made out upon their heart. There is a tasting, which is beyond simple
enlightening--'For it is impossible for those who were once enlightened, and
have tasted of the heavenly gift, and have tasted of the good word of God, and
of the powers of the world to come,' etc. (Heb. 6: 4, 5.) Yea, there is such a
persuasion ordinarily as leadeth to a deal of outward sanctification--'Who has
counted the blood of the covenant, wherewith he was sanctified, an unholy
thing.' (Heb. 10: 29.) 3. This persuasion must not only be of the verity of the
thing, but of the good of it: the party 'tasteth the good word of God, and the
powers of the world to come' (Heb. 6: 5); and he apprehendeth the thing as
eligible. 4. This persuasion is not made out only by strength of argument, but
also by an enlightening work of God's Spirit, shining on the truth, and making
it conspicuous; therefore is that sin called, 'The sin against the Holy Ghost.'
(Matt. 12: 31; Mark 3: 29.) The persons are said 'to have been made partakers
of the Holy Ghost' (Heb. 6: 4); and 'to do despite unto the Spirit of grace,'
who was in the nearest step of a gracious operation with them. (Heb. 10: 29.)
3. In this description, consider the acting of the party against the object so
qualified. It is a rejecting and opposing of it; which importeth, 1. That men
have once, some way at least, been in hands with it, or had the offer of it, as
is true of the Pharisees. 2. That they do reject, even with contempt, what they
had of it, or in their offer. The Pharisees deny it, and speak disdainfully of
Christ--'This fellow does not cast out devils, but by Beelzebub, the prince of
the devils.' (Matt. 12: 24.) They fall away, intending to put Christ to 'an
open shame.' (Heb. 6: 6.) 3. The men set themselves against it by the spirit of
persecution, as the Pharisees did still. They rail against it; therefore it is
called 'blasphemy against the Holy Ghost.' (Matt. 12: 24, 31.) They would
'crucify Christ again' if they could. (Heb. 6: 6.) They are adversaries. (Heb.
10: 17.) 4. Consider the properties of this acting. 1. It is avowed, that
is, not seeking to shelter or to hide itself. The Pharisees speak against
Christ publicly--'But when the Pharisees heard it, they said, This fellow does
not cast out devils, but by Beelzebub the prince of the devils.' (Matt. 12:
24.) They would have 'Christ brought to an open shame.' (Heb. 6: 6.) They
forsake the ordinances which savour that way--'Not forsaking the assembling of
ourselves together, as the manner of some is'--and despise the danger; for,
looking for indignation, they trample that blood still. (Heb. 10: 25, 27, 29.)
2. The party acteth freely. It is not from unadvisedness, nor from force or
constraint, but an acting of free choice; nothing does force the Pharisees to
speak against and persecute Christ. They 'crucify to themselves,' they redact
the murder of their own free accord, and in their own bosom, none constraining
them. They sin of free choice, or, as the word may be rendered,
spontaneously--'For if we sin wilfully, after that we have received the
knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins.' (Heb. 6:
6; 10: 26.) 3. It is acted wilfully. They are so resolute, they will not be
dissuaded by any offer, or take most precious means, as is clear in the
aforesaid scriptures. 4. It is done maliciously, so that it proceeds not so
much, if at all, from a temptation to pleasure, profit, or honour. It
proceedeth not from fear, or force, or from any good end proposed, but out of
heart-malice against God and Christ, and the advancement of His glory and
kingdom: so that it is of the very nature of Satan's sin, who has an
irreconcilable hatred against God, and the remedy of sin, because His glory is
thereby advanced. This is a special ingredient in this sin. The Pharisees are
found guilty of heart-malice against Christ, since they spake so against Him,
and not against their own children's casting out devils: and this is the force
of Christ's argument--'If I, by Beelzebub, cast out devils, by whom do your
children cast them out?' (Matt. 12: 27.) They do their utmost 'to crucify
Christ again, and to bring Him to an open shame.' (Heb. 6: 6.) They are
adversaries, like the devil. 5. It is done despitefully: the malice must betray
itself. The Pharisees must proclaim that Christ has correspondence with devils:
He must 'be put to open shame, and crucified again:' they must 'tread under
foot that blood, and do despite to the Spirit:' so that the party had rather
perish a thousand times than be in Christ's debt for salvation. 5. The last
thing in the description is, the ordinary attendant or consequence of this sin;
it induceth desperate and hopeless fear. They fear Him, whom they hate with a
slavish, hopeless fear, such as devils have--'A certain fearful looking for of
judgment, and fiery indignation, which shall devour the adversaries.' (Heb. 10:
27.) They know that God will put out His power against them; they tremble in
the remembrance of it; and if they could be above Him, and destroy Him, they
would: and since they cannot reach that, they hate with the utmost of
heart-malice, and do persecute Him, and all that is His, with despite.
As for the third thing proposed, viz., the conclusions to be drawn from what is
said, whereby we will speak directly to the objection. 1. As I hinted before,
since the sin against the Holy Ghost is so remarkable, and may be well known
where it is, none should charge themselves with it, unless they can prove and
establish the charge; for it is a great wrong done unto God to labour to
persuade my soul that He will never pardon me: it is the very way to make me
desperate, and to lead me into the unpardonable sin; therefore, unless thou
can't and dare say that thou dost hate the way which God has devised for the
saving of sinners, and dost resolve to oppose the thriving of His kingdom, both
with Himself and others, out of malice and despite against God, thou oughtest
not to suspect thyself guilty of this sin. 2. Whatsoever thou hast done against
God, if thou dost repent of it, and wish it were undone, thou can't not be
guilty of this sin; for in it heart-malice and despite against God do still
prevail. 3. If thou art content to be His debtor for pardon, and world be
infinitely obliged unto Him for it, then thou can't not, in this case, be
guilty of the sin against the Holy Ghost; for, as we showed before, they who
are guilty of it do so despite God that they would not be His debtors for
salvation. 4. Whatsoever thou hast done, if thou hast a desire after Jesus
Christ, and dost look with a sore heart after Him, and cannot think of parting
with His blessed company forever, or, if they must part with Him, yet dost wish
well to Him, and all His, thou needs not suspect thyself to be guilty of this
unpardonable sin; for there can be no such hatred of Him in thy bosom as is
necessarily required to make up that sin. 5. If thou would be above the reach
of that sin, and secure against it forever, then go work up thy heart to
approve of salvation by Christ Jesus, and so close with God in Him, acquiescing
in Him as the sufficient ransom and rest, as we have been pressing before, and
yield to Him to be saved in His way. Do this in good earnest, and thou shalt
for ever be put out of the reach of that awful thing wherewith Satan does
affright so many poor seekers of God.
Object. Although I be not excluded from the benefit of the new covenant, yet it
is not in my power to believe on Christ; for faith is the gift of God, and
above the strength of flesh and blood. Ans. It is true that saving faith, by
which alone a man can heartily close with God in Christ, is above our power and
is the gift of God, as we said before in the premises; yet remember, 1. The
Lord has left it as a duty upon all who hear this gospel cordially by faith to
close with His offer of salvation through Christ, as is clear from Scripture.
And you must know, that although it be not in our power to perform that duty of
ourselves, yet the Lord may justly condemn us for not performing it, and we are
inexcusable; because at first he made man perfectly able to do whatsoever He
should command. 2. The Lord commanding this thing, which is above our power,
willeth us to be sensible of our inability to do the thing, and would have us
to put it on Him to work it in us. He has promised to give the new heart, and
He has not excluded any from the benefit of that promise. 3. The Lord uses, by
these commands and invitations, and men's meditation on the same, and their
supplication about the thing, to convey power unto the soul to perform the
duty. Therefore, for answer to the objection, I do entreat thee, in the Lord
's name, to lay to heart these His commandments and promises, and meditate on
them, and upon that blessed business of the new covenant, and pray unto God, as
you can, over them, 'for He will be inquired of to do these things ' (Ezek. 36:
37); and lay thy cold heart to that device of God expressed in the Scripture,
and unto Christ Jesus, who is given for a covenant to the people, and look to
Him for life and quickening. Go and endeavour to approve of that salvation in
the way God does offer it, and so close with, and rest on Christ for it, as if
all were in thy power; yet, looking to Him for the thing, as knowing that it
must come from Him; and if thou do so, He who meets those who remember Him in
His ways (Isa. 64: 5), will not be wanting on His part; and thou shalt not have
ground to say, that thou movedst toward the thing until thou couldst do no more
for want of strength, and so left it at God's door. It shall not fail on His
part, if thou have a mind for the business; yea, I may say, if by all thou hast
ever heard of that matter, thy heart loveth it, and desireth to be engaged with
it, thou hast it already performed within thee; so that difficulty is past
before thou wast aware of it.
Object. Many who have closed with Christ Jesus, as aforesaid, are still
complaining of their leanness and fruitlessness, which makes my heart lay the
less weight on that duty of believing. Ans. If thou be convinced that it is
a duty to believe on Christ, you may not neglect it under any pretence. As for
the complaints of some who have looked after Him, not admitting every one to be
judge of his own fruit, I say-- 1. Many, by their jealousies of God's love,
and by their unbelief, after they have so closed with God, do obstruct many
precious communications, which otherwise would be let out to them--'And he did
not many mighty works there because of their unbelief.' (Matt. 13: 58.) 2.
It cannot be that any whose heart is gone out after Christ 'have found Him a
wilderness.' (Jer. 2: 31.) Surely they find somewhat in their spirit swaying
them towards God in whose two great things, namely, how to be found in Him in
that day--'Yea, doubtless, and I count all things but loss for the excellency
of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord; for whom I have suffered the loss of
all things, and do count them but dung, that I may win Christ and be found in
Him; not having mine own righteousness, which is of the law, but that which is
through the faith of Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith' (Phil.
3: 8, 9);-- and how to show forth His praise in the land of the living, 'Deal
bountifully with thy servant, that I may live and keep Thy word.' (Psa. 119:
17.) 'Wilt Thou not deliver my feet from falling, that I may walk before God in
the land of the living.' (Psa. 56: 13.) They find these two things existing in
the soul, and that is much. Moreover, they shall, on due inquiry, ever find
such an emptiness in the creatures, that the utmost abundance of the creature
cannot satisfy their souls--all is vanity, only God can fill the empty room in
their heart; and when He breathes but a little, there is no room for additional
comfort from creatures. This shows that God has captivated the man, and has
fixed that saving principle in the understanding and heart--'Who is God but the
Lord? Worship Him all ye gods.' (Psa. 97: 7.) Yea, further, those whose hearts
have closed with God in Christ as aforesaid, will not deny that there has been
seasonable preventing and quickening now and then when the soul was like to
fail--'For Thou preventest me with the blessings of Thy goodness.' (Psa. 21:
3.) 'When I said, my foot slippeth, Thy mercy, O Lord, held me up. In the
multitude of my thoughts within me, Thy comforts delight my soul.' (Psa. 94:
18, 19.) Therefore, let none say that there is no fruit following, and let none
neglect their duty upon the unjust and groundless complaints of others.
Object. Although I judge it my duty to close with God's device in the covenant,
I am in the dark how to manage that duty; for sometimes God offers to be our
God without any mention of Christ, and sometimes saith, that He will betroth us
unto Him: and in other places of Scripture we are called to come to Christ, and
He is the bridegroom. Again, God sometimes speaketh of Himself as a Father to
men, sometimes as a Husband; Christ is sometimes called the Husband, and
sometimes a Brother; which relations seem inconsistent, and do much put me in
the dark how to apprehend God, when my heart would agree with Him and close
with Him. Ans. It may be very well said, that men do come to God, or close
with Him, and yet they come to Christ, and close with Him. They may be said to
come under a marriage-relation unto God, and unto Christ also, who is husband,
father, brother, etc., to them; and there is no such mystery here as some do
conceive. For the better understanding of it, consider these few things--1.
Although God made man perfect at the beginning, and put him in some capacity of
transacting with Him immediately--'God has made man upright' (Eccl. 7: 29);
'And the Lord God commanded the man, saying, Of every tree of the garden thou
mast freely eat,' etc. (Gen. 2: 16, 17); yet man by his fall did put himself at
such a distance from God, as to be in an utter incapacity to bargain or deal
any more with him immediately. 2. The Lord did, after Adam's fall, make
manifest the new covenant, in which he did signify he was content to transact
with man again, in and through a mediator; and so did appoint men to come to
Him through Christ- -'He is able to save them to the uttermost that come unto
God by Him' (Heb. 7: 25); and to look for acceptance only in Him--'To the
praise of the glory of His grace, wherein he has made us accepted in the
Beloved' (Eph. 1: 6); ordaining men to hear Christ, He being the only party in
whom God was well pleased--'This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased,
hear ye Him.' (Matt. 16: 5.) 3. This matter is so clear, and supposed to be
so evident in the Scripture, and so manifest to all who are under the
ordinances, that the Lord often speaks of transacting with Himself, not making
mention of the mediator, because it is supposed that every one in the church
knows that now there is no dealing with God, except by and through Christ Jesus
the mediator. 4. Consider that Christ Jesus, God-man, is not only a fit
place of meeting for God and men to meet in, and a fit spokesman to treat
between the parties now at variance--'God was in Christ reconciling the world
to himself' (2 Cor. 5: 19); but we may say also, He is an immediate bridegroom;
and so our closing or transacting with God may be justly called the marriage of
the King's son, and the elect may be called the Lamb's wife; Christ Jesus
being, as it were, the hand which God holdeth out to men, and on which they lay
hold when they deal with God. And so through and by Christ we close with God,
as our God, on whom our soul does terminate lastly and ultimately through
Christ 'Who by Him do believe in God that raised Him from the dead, and gave
Him glory, that your faith and hope might be in God.' (1 Peter 1: 21.) 5.
Consider that the various relations mentioned in Scripture are set down to
signify the sure and indissoluble union and communion between God and His
people. Whatsoever connexion is between head and members, root and branches,
king and subjects, shepherd and flock, father and children, brother and
brother, husband and wife, etc., all is here--'And they all shall be one, as
Thou, Father, art in me, and I in Thee; that they also may be one in us; that
the world may believe that Thou hast sent me. And the glory which Thou gavest
me I have given them: that they may be one, even as we are one. I in them, and
Thou in me, that they may be perfect in one, and that the world may know that
Thou hast sent me, and hast loved them, as Thou hast loved me. And I have
declared unto them Thy name, and will declare it: that the love wherewith Thou
hast loved me may be in them, and I in them.' (John 17: 21-26.) So that
whatsoever is spoken in Scripture, people may be sure, that God calleth them to
be reconciled unto Him through Christ, and does offer Himself to be their God
and husband in Him alone: and men are to accept God to be their God in Christ,
approving of that way of relief for poor man, and to give up themselves unto
God in Christ, in whom alone they can be accepted. And they who close with
Christ, they do close with God and Him, who is in Christ, 'reconciling the
world to Himself.' (2 Cor. 5: 19; John 14: 8-11.) And we are not to dip further
into the different relations mentioned in Scripture between God or Christ and
men, than as they may point out union and communion, or nearness with God
through Christ Jesus, and our advantage thereby. These things being clear,
we will not multiply words: but since to believe on Christ is the great duty
required of all that hear this gospel, we entreat every one, in the Lord's
name, to whom the report of this shall come, that without delay they take to
heart their lost condition in themselves, and that they lay to heart the remedy
which God has provided by Jesus Christ, whereof He has made a free offer unto
all who will be content with the same, and to be saved that way; and that they
lay to heart, that there is no other way of escape from the wrath that is to
come, because of which men would be glad, at the last day, to run into a lake
of melted lead, to be hid from the face of the Lamb, whom they do here
despise;--we say, we entreat all, in the consideration of these things, to work
up their hearts to this business, and to lay themselves open for God, and to
receive Him through Christ in the offers of the gospel, acquiescing in Him as
the only desirable and satisfying good, that so they may secure themselves. Go
speedily and search for His offers of peace and salvation in the Scripture, and
work up your heart and soul to close with them, and with Christ in them, and
with God in Christ; and do it so, as you may have this to say, that you were
serious, and in earnest, and cordial here, as ever you were in any thing to
your apprehension; and, for aught you know, Christ is the choice of your heart,
at least you neither know nor allow anything to the contrary; whereupon your
heart does appeal unto God, to search and try if there be aught amiss, to
rectify it, and lead you into the right way. Now, this cleaving of the heart
unto Him, and casting itself upon Him to be saved in His way, is believing;
which does, indeed, secure a man from the wrath that is to come, because now he
has received Christ, and believeth on Him, and so shall not enter into
condemnation, as saith the Scripture.
Object. When I hear what it is to believe on Christ Jesus, I think sometimes I
have faith; for I dare say, to my apprehension, I approve of the plan of saving
sinners by Christ Jesus; my heart goes out after Him, and does terminate upon
Him as a satisfying treasure; and I am glad to accept God to be my God in Him:
but I often question if ever I have done so, and so am, for the most part, kept
hesitating and doubting if I do believe, or am savingly in covenant with God.
Ans. It is not unusual for many, whose hearts are gone out after Christ in the
gospel, and have received Him, to bring the same in question again: therefore I
shall advise one thing, as a notable help to fix the soul in the maintaining of
faith and an interest in God, and that is, that men not only close heartily
with God in Christ, as aforesaid, but also that they 'expressly, explicitly, by
word of mouth, and viva voce, and formally close with Christ Jesus, and accept
God's offer of salvation through Him, and so make a covenant with God.' And
this, by God's blessing, may contribute not a little for establishing them
concerning their save interest in God.
Certain things premised concerning personal covenanting
Before I speak directly to this express covenanting with God, I premise these
few things:--
1. I do not here intend a covenanting with God essentially differing from the
covenant between God and the visible church, as the Lord does hold it out in
His revealed will; neither do I intend a covenant differing essentially from
the transacting of the heart with God in Christ, formerly spoken unto: it is
that same covenant; only it differeth by a singular circumstance, namely, the
formal expression of the thing which the heart did before practice.
2. I grant this express covenanting and transacting with God is not absolutely
necessary for a man's salvation; for if any person close heartily and sincerely
with God, offering Himself in Christ in the gospel, his soul and state are
thereby secured, according to the Scripture, although he utter not words with
his mouth; but this express verbal with God is very expedient, for the better
well-being of a man's state, and for his more comfortable maintaining of an
interest in Christ Jesus.
3. This express covenanting with God by word of mouth is of no worth without
sincere heart closing with God in Christ joined with it; for, without that, it
is but a profaning of the Lord's name, and a mocking of Him to His face, so 'to
draw near unto Him with the lips, whilst the heart is far from Him.'
4. I grant both cordial and verbal transacting with God will not make out a
man's gracious state unto him, so as to put and keep it above controversy,
without the joint witness of the Spirit, by which we know what is freely given
to us of God; yet this explicit way of transacting with God, joined with that
heart-closing with Him in Christ, contributes much for clearing up to a man
that there is a fixed bargain between God and him, and will do much to ward off
from him many groundless jealousies and objections of an unstable mind and
heart, which uses with shame to deny this hour what it did really act and
perform the former hour. This explicit covenanting is as an instrument taken of
what passed between God and the soul, and so has its own advantage for
strengthening of faith.
As for this express covenanting, we shall
1. Show that it is a very warrantable practice.
2.. We shall show shortly what is previously required of those who do so
transact with God.
3.. How men should go about that duty. 4. What should follow thereupon.
As to the first, I say, it is a warrantable practice and an incumbent duty,
expressly and by word to covenant with God; which appeareth thus: 1. In many
places of Scripture, if we look to what they may bear, according to their scope
and the analogy of faith, God has commanded it, and left it on people as a
duty--'One shall say, I am the Lord's.' 'Surely shall one say, In the Lord have
I righteousness and strength.' (Isa. 44: 5; 45: 24.) 'Wilt thou not from this
time cry unto Me, My Father, Thou are the guide of my youth.' (Jer. 3: 4.)
'They shall say, the Lord is my God' (Zech. 13: 9); 'Thou shalt call Me Ishi'
(Hos. 2: 16); and in many places elsewhere. Now, since God has so clearly left
it on men in the letter of the word, they may be persuaded that it is a
practice warranted and allowed by Him, and well pleasing unto Him. 2. It is
the approved practice of the saints in Scripture thus expressly to covenant
with God, and they have found much comfort in that duty afterwards. David did
often expressly say unto God, that He was his God, his portion, and that
himself was His servant. Thomas will put his interest out of question with
it--'And Thomas answered and said unto Him, My Lord, and my God.' (John 20:
28.) Yea, I say, the saints are much quieted in remembrance of what has passed
that way between God and them - -'Whom have I in heaven but Thee? and there is
none upon earth that I desire besides Thee.' 'I cried unto Thee, O Lord, I
said, Thou art my refuge, and my portion in the land of the living.' (Psa. 73:
25; 142: 5.) We find it often so in the book of the Canticles. Now, shall the
chief worthies of God abound so much in a duty, which produces so much peace
and satisfaction to them in many cases, and shall we, under the New Testament,
unto whom access is ministered abundantly, and who partake of the sap of the
olive; shall we, I say, fall behind in this approved method of communion with
God? Since we study to imitate that cloud of witnesses in other things, as
faith, zeal, patience, etc., let us also imitate them in this. 3. The thing
about which we here speak is a matter of the greatest concernment in all the
world. 'It is the life of our soul' (Deut. 32: 47.) Oh! shall men study to be
express, explicit, plain, and peremptory, in all their other great businesses,
because they are such: and shall they not much more be peremptory and express
in this, which does most concern them? I wonder that many not only do not speak
it with their mouth, but that they do not swear and subscribe it with their
hand, and do not everything for securing of God to themselves in Christ, and
themselves unto God, which the Scriptures does warrant--'One shall say, I am
the Lord's; and another shall call himself by the name of Jacob; and another
shall subscribe with his hand unto the Lord, and surname himself by the name of
Israel.' (Isa. 44: 5.) This also may have its own weight, as an argument to
press this way of covenanting with God, that the business of an interest in
Christ, and of real and honest transacting with Him, is a thing which, in the
experience of saint, is most frequently brought into debate and in question;
therefore, men had need all the ways they can, even by thought, word, and deed,
to put it to a point. This also may be urged here for pressing this as a
duty, that God is so formal, express, distinct, and legal, to say so, in all
the business of man's salvation, namely, Christ must be a near kinsman to whom
the right of redemption does belong; He must be chosen, called authorized, and
sent; covenants formally drawn between the Father and Him, the Father accepting
payment and satisfaction, giving formal discharges, all done clearly and
expressly. Shall the Lord be so express, plain, and peremptory in every part of
the business, and shall our part of it rest in a confused thought, and we be as
dumb beasts before Him? If it were a marriage between man and wife, it would
not be judged enough, although there were consent in heart given by the woman,
and known to the man, if she did never express so much by word, being in a
capacity to do so. Now, this covenant between God and man is held out in
Scripture as a marriage between man and wife--'And I will betroth thee unto Me
for ever; yea, I will betroth thee unto Me in righteousness, and in judgment,
and in loving kindness, and in mercies: I will even betroth thee unto Me in
faithfulness; and thou shalt know the Lord.' (Hos. 2: 19, 20.) 'For I am
jealous over you with godly jealousy; for I have espoused you to one husband,
that I may present you as a chaste virgin to Christ.' (2 Cor. 11: 2.) The whole
song of Solomon speaketh it. The Lord uses similitudes, to signify unto us what
He intends; and surely this is a special requisite in marriage, that the wife
give an express and explicit consent unto the business: the man saith--'So I
take thee to be my lawful wife and do oblige myself to be a dutiful husband.'
The woman is obliged, on the other part, to express her consent, and to
say--'Even so I take thee to be my lawful husband, and do promise duty and
subjection.' It is so here; the Lord saith, 'I do betroth thee unto me in
faithfulness, and thou shalt call me Ishi,' that is, my husband. (Hos. 2: 16.)
I will be for thee as a head and husband, if 'thou wilt not be for another.'
(Hos. 3: 3.) The man ought to answer, and say, Amen, so be it; Thou shalt be my
God, my Head, and Lord, and I shall and will be Thine, and not for another--'I
am my beloved's, and my beloved is mine.' (Cant. 6: 3.) And so this making of
the covenant with God is called 'a giving of the hand to Him,' as the word
is--'Now be ye not stiff-necked, as your fathers were, but yield yourselves
unto the Lord, and enter into His sanctuary, which He has sanctified for ever;
and serve the Lord your God, that the fierceness of His wrath may turn away
from you' (2 Chron. 30: 8); which does intimate a very express, formal,
explicit, and positive bargaining with God. So then, we conclude it to be an
incumbent duty, and an approved practice necessary for the quieting of a man's
mind, and his more comfortable being in covenant with God, and more fully
answering God's condescension and offer in that great and primary promise--'I
will be your God, and ye shall be my people.' Not only may and should people
thus expressly close with God in Christ for fixing their heart; but they may
upon some occasions renew this verbal transaction with God, especially when,
through temptations, they are made to question if they have really and
sincerely closed covenant with God. As they are then to put out new acts of
faith, embracing Christ as the desirable portion and treasure, and also upon
other occasions, so it were expedient, especially if there remain any doubt as
to the thing, that by viva voce and express words they determine that
controversy, and 'say of the Lord, and to Him, that He is their refuge and
portion' (Psa. 91: 2; 142: 5.) We find the saints doing so, and we may imitate
them. Especially, 1. In the time of great backsliding, people were wont to
renew the covenant with God, and we should do so also. Our heart should go out
after Christ in the promises of reconciliation with God: for He is our peace
upon all occasions, and our Advocate; and we are bound to apprehend Him so,
when we transgress--'If any man sin, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus
Christ the righteous' (1 John 2: 1); and to express so much by word, as the
saints did in their formal renewing of the covenant. 2. When people are in
hazard, and difficulties are present or foreseen, then it were good that they
should send out their hearts after Him, and express their adherence unto Him
for securing their own hearts. We find Joshua doing so, when He was to settle
in the land of Canaan, in the midst of snares:--'Now therefore, fear the Lord,
and serve Him in sincerity and in truth, and put away the gods which your
fathers served on the other side of the flood, and in Egypt; and serve ye the
Lord. And if it seem evil unto you to serve the Lord, choose you this day whom
you will serve; whether the gods which your fathers served, that were on the
other side of the flood, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land ye dwell:
but as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord. And the people answered and
said, God forbid that we should forsake the Lord to serve other gods; for the
Lord our God, He it is that brought us up and our fathers out of the land of
Egypt, from the house of bondage, and which did those great signs in our sight,
and preserved us in all the way wherein we went, and among all the people
through whom we passed; and the Lord drave out from before us all the people,
even the Amorites which dwelt in the land: therefore will we also serve the
Lord; for He is our God. And Joshua said unto the people, Ye cannot serve the
Lord: for He is an holy God; he will not forgive your transgressions nor your
sin. If ye forsake the Lord, and serve strange gods, then He will turn and do
you hurt, and consume you, after that He has done you good. And the people said
unto Joshua, Nay; but we will serve the Lord. And Joshua said unto the people,
Ye are witnesses against yourselves, that ye have chosen you the Lord, to serve
Him. And they said, We are witnesses. Now, therefore put away (said he) the
strange gods which are among you, and incline your heart unto the Lord God of
Israel. And the people said unto Joshua, the Lord our God will we serve, and
His voice will we obey. So Joshua made a covenant with the people that day, and
set them a statute and an ordinance in Shechem.' (Josh. 24.) So did David in
his straits--'In the shadow of thy wings will I make my refuge, until these
calamities be overpast.' (Psa. 57: 1.) 3. When men apprehend God to be at a
distance from them, and their soul to be under withering and decay, then it is
safest heartily to close with Christ, and embrace Him by faith for the securing
of the soul; and it were good to put it out of question by the expression of
the thing. This is the ready way to draw sap from Christ the root, for
recovering of the soul, and for establishing the heart before Him. The spouse,
in the Song of Solomon, does so; thus asserting her interest in Him when in
such a condition, professing and avowing Him to be her beloved. (Cant. 5.)
4. At the celebration of the Lord's Supper, men should thus cordially close
with God in Christ, and speak and express so much; for 'that is a feast of
love; and then and there we come under a solemn professing of closing with God
in Christ personally and openly, and to receive the seal of it. It is,
therefore, especially proper, at that time, to bring up both heart and tongue
to second and answer our profession, apprehending God to be his, and at his
disposal. We shall not confine the Lord's people to times and seasons for
this duty; the Lord may bind it upon them at His pleasure; only there is
hazard, that by too frequent express covenanting with God, men turn too formal
in it. Therefore, it is not so fit that people should ordinarily at full length
renew that explicit transaction with God, but rather to declare unto God that
they adhere unto the covenant made with Him, and that they do maintain and will
never revoke nor recall the same; and withal, they may hint the sum of it, in
laying claim unto God in Christ as their own God; and this they may do often,
even in all their addresses to God. And probably this is the thing designed by
the saints in their so ordinary practice in Scripture, whilst they assert their
interest in God as their God and portion; and it is fit that men, in all their
walk, hold their heart to the business, by heart-cleaving to God in
Christ--'The life we live in the flesh should be by faith in the Son of God.'
(Gal. 2: 20.)
As to the second thing, namely, what preparation is required of him who is
expressly to transact with God here. Besides what we mentioned before, as
previous to a man's closing with Christ Jesus, we only add, 1. That he who
would explicitly bargain with God, must know, that to do so is warranted, and
allowed by God, as we showed before. If this be wanting, a man cannot do it in
faith, and so it will be sin unto him--'Whatsoever is not of faith is sin.'
(Rom. 14: 23.) 2. Then man must labour to bring up his heart to the thing, that
it do not belie the tongue; it will be a great mocking of God, so to 'draw near
to Him with the lips, whilst the heart is far from Him.' (Isa. 29: 13.)
The third thing to be considered in this express verbal covenanting with God
is, the way how it is to be performed and managed. And besides what was said
before in heartclosing with Christ, I add here,-- 1. The man should do it
confidently; not only believing that he is about his duty when he does it; but
also, that God in Christ Jesus will accept his poor imperfect way of doing his
duty: He does 'accept a man according to what he has, if there be a willing
mind.' (2 Cor. 8: 12.) A mite is accepted, since it is 'all the poor woman's
substance.' (Mark 12: 44.) Yea, if it can be attained, the man should believe
that the issue and consequence of this transacting shall prove comfortable, and
all shall be well; and that God, who engageth for all in the covenant (since He
has determined the man to this happy choice), will in some measure make him
forthcoming, and will perfect what concerns him--'Faithful is He that calleth
you, who also will do it.' (1 Thess. 5: 24.) If this confidence be wanting, the
matter will be done with much fear and jealousy, if not worse: and will still
prove a disquieting business to the man. 2. It should be done holily. It is
called 'the holy covenant' (Luke 1: 72); 'the sure mercies (or holy things) of
David.' (Acts 13: 34.) Here it were fitting that what is done in this express
transacting with God should not be done cursorily and by the bye, but in some
special address unto God; the thing should be spoken unto the Lord--'I cried
unto Thee, O Lord; I said; thou art my refuge and my portion.' (Psa. 142: 5.)
It is proper, in so great a business, that a portion of time were set apart for
confession and supplication before God; yea, also, the person so transacting
with God should labour to have high apprehensions of God's greatness and
sovereignty--'Thou art great, O Lord God; for there is none like unto Thee,
neither is there any God beside Thee.' (2 Sam. 7: 22.) Although He thus humble
himself to behold things in heaven and earth; and these high and holy thoughts
of Him will and should be attended with debasing and humbling thoughts of self,
although admitted to this high dignity--'Then went King David in, and sat
before the Lord: and he said, Who am I, O Lord God; and what is my house that
Thou hast brought me hitherto?' (2 Sam. 7: 18.) It is no small thing to be
allied unto, and with, the great God of heaven and His Son Christ; as David
speaketh, when King Saul did offer his daughter to him. (2 Sam. 18: 22.) Yea,
further, there should be special guarding and watching that the heart keep
spiritual in transacting with God. There is great reason for this holy way of
performing the duty, for men are ready to mistake themselves, and to think of
the Lord according to their own fancy, and to turn carnal in the business,
since it is a marriage transaction held out in all the ordinal expressions of
love, as in the Song of Solomon. (Isa. 62: 5; Zeph. 3: 17.)
The fourth thing we shall speak a word unto is, What should follow upon this
express verbal covenanting with God. I say, besides that union and communion
with God in Christ, following upon believing, if a man explicitly by word
transact with God-- 1. He should thenceforth be singularly careful to abide
close with God, in all manner of conversation; for, if a man thenceforth do
anything unsuitable, he does falsify his word before God, which will stick much
in his conscience, and prove a snare. If a man henceforth forsake God, and take
on him to dispose of himself, since he is not his own, and has opened his mouth
unto the Lord, he makes inquiry after vows, and devoureth that which is holy.
(Prov. 20: 25.) 2. He who so transacteth with God should hold steadfast that
determination and conclusion. It is a shame for a man whose heart has closed
with God, and whose mouth has ratified and confirmed it solemnly before Him, to
contradict himself again, and to admit anything to the contrary; he ought
boldly to maintain the thing against every enemy. Then, let me entreat you,
who desire to be established in the matter of your interest in God, that, with
all convenience, you set apart a portion of time for prayer before God, and
labouring to work up your heart to seriousness, affection, and the faith of the
duty to make a covenant, and to transact with God by express word, after this
manner:-- 'O Lord, I am a lost and fallen creature by nature, and by
innumerable actual transgressions, which I do confess particularly before Thee
this day: and although, being born within the visible church, I was from the
womb in covenant with Thee, and had the same sealed to me in baptism; yet, for
a long time, I have lived without God in the world, senseless and ignorant of
my obligation by virtue of that covenant. Thou hast at length discovered to me,
and impressed upon my heart, my miserable state in myself, and hast made
manifest unto my heart the satisfying remedy. Thou hast provided by Christ
Jesus, offering the same freely unto me, upon condition that I would accept of
the same, and would close with Thee as my God in Christ, warranting and
commanding me, upon my utmost peril, to accept of this offer, and to flee unto
Christ Jesus; yea, to my apprehension, now Thou hast sovereignly determined my
heart, and formed it for Christ Jesus, leading it out after Him in the offers
of the gospel, causing me to approach unto the living God, to close so with Him
and to acquiesce in His offer, without any known guile. And that I may come up
to that establishment of spirit in this matter, which should be to my comfort,
and the praise of Thy glorious grace; therefore, I am here this day to put that
matter out of question by express words before Thee, according to Thy will. And
now I, unworthy as I am, do declare, that I believe that Christ Jesus, who was
slain at Jerusalem, was the Son of God, and the Saviour of the world. I do
believe that record, that there is life eternal for men in Him, and in Him
only. I do this day in my heart approve and acquiesce in that device of saving
sinners by Him, and do intrust my soul unto Him. I do accept of reconciliation
with God through Him, and do close with Thee as my God in Him. I choose Him in
all that He is, and all that may follow Him, and do resign up myself, and what
I am, or have, unto Thee; desiring to be divorced from everything hateful unto
Thee, and that without exception, or reservation, or anything inconsistent
within my knowledge, or any intended reversion. Here I give the hand to Thee,
and do take all things about me witnesses, that I, whatever I be, or have
hitherto been, do accept of God's offer of peace through Christ; and do make a
sure covenant with Thee this day, never to be reversed, hoping that Thou wilt
make all things forthcoming, both on Thy part and mine, seriously begging, as I
desire to be saved, that my corruptions may be subdued, and my neck brought
under Thy sweet yoke in all things, and my heart made cheerfully to acquiesce
in whatsoever Thou dost unto me, or with me, in order to these ends. Now, glory
be unto Thee, O Father, who devised such a salvation, and gave the Son to
accomplish it: Glory be to Christ Jesus, who, at so dear a rate, did purchase
the outletting of that love from the Father's bosom, and through whom alone
this access is granted, and in whom I am reconciled unto God, and honorably
united unto Him, and am no more an enemy or stranger: Glory to the Holy Ghost,
who did alarm me when I was destroying myself, and who did not only convince me
of my danger, but did also open my eyes to behold the remedy provided in
Christ; yea, and did persuade and determine my wicked heart to fall in love
with Christ, as the enriching treasure; and this day does teach me how to
covenant with God, and how to appropriate to myself all the sure mercies of
David, and blessings of Abraham, and to secure to myself the favour and
friendship of God for ever. Now, with my soul, heart, head, and whole man, as I
can, I do acquiesce in my choice this day, henceforth resolving not to be my
own, but Thine; and that the care of whatsoever concerns me shall be on Thee,
as my Head and Lord, protesting humbly, that failings on my part (against which
I resolve, Thou knowest) shall not make void this covenant; for so hast Thou
said, which I intend not to abuse, but so much the more to cleave close unto
Thee, and I must have liberty to renew, ratify, and draw extracts of this
transaction, as often as shall be needful. Now, I know Thy consent to this
bargain stands recorded in Scripture, so that I need no new signification of
it; and I, having accepted of Thy offer upon Thine own terms, will henceforth
wait for what is good, and for Thy salvation in the end. As Thou art faithful,
pardon what is amiss in my way of doing the thing, and accept me in my Lord
Jesus Christ, in whom only I desire pardon. And in testimony hereof, I set to
my seal that God is true, in declaring Him a competent Savior.' Let people
covenant with God in fewer or more words, as the Lord shall dispose them--for
we intend no exact form of words for any person--only it were fitting that men
should before the Lord acknowledge their lost state in themselves, and the
relief that is by Christ; and that they do declare that they accept of the same
as it is offered in the gospel, and do thankfully rest satisfied with it,
intrusting themselves henceforth wholly unto God, to be saved in His way, for
which they wait according to His faithfulness. If men would heartily and
sincerely do this, it might, through the Lord's b1essing, help to establish
them against many fears and jealousies; and they might date some good thing
from this day and hour, which might prove comfortable unto them when they fall
in the dark afterwards, and even when many failings do stare them in the face,
perhaps at the hour of death--'These be the last words of David: although my
house be not so with God, yet He has made with me an everlasting covenant,
ordered in all things and sure; for this is all my salvation, and all my
desire.' (2 Sam. 23: 5.) It is much if a man can appeal unto God, and say, Thou
knowest there was a day and an hour when in such a place I did accept of peace
through Christ, and did deliver up my heart to Thee, to write on it Thy whole
law without exception; heaven and earth are witnesses of it--'Remember the word
unto Thy servant, upon which Thou hast caused me to hope.' (Psa. 119: 49.)
Object. I dare not venture to speak such words unto God, because I find not my
heart coming up full length in affection and seriousness; so I should but lie
unto God in transacting so with Him. Ans. It is to be regretted that men's
hearts do not, with intensity of desire and affection, embrace and welcome that
blessed offer and portion. Yet, for answer to this objection, remember, 1. That
in those to whom the Lord gives the new heart, forming Christ in them, the
whole heart is not renewed; there is 'flesh and spirit lusting against each
other, the one contrary unto the other, so that a man can neither do the good
or evil he would do,' with full strength. (Gal. 5: 17.) It is well if there be
a good part of the heart going out after Christ, desiring to close with Him on
His own terms. 2. That there is often a rational love in the heart unto
Christ Jesus, expressing itself by a respect to His commandments--'This is the
love of God, that we keep His commandments; and His commandments are not
grievous' (1 John 5: 3); when there is not a sensible prevailing love which
maketh the soul sick--'I am sick of love.' (Cant. 2: 5.) Men must not always
expect to find this. I say, then, although somewhat in your heart drawn back,
yet if you can say that you are convinced of your lost state without Him, that
you want a righteousness to cover your guilt, and that you want strength to
stand out against sin, or to do what is pleasing before God, and that you also
see fulness in Him; in both these respects, if you dare say that somewhat
within your heart would fain embrace Him upon His own terms, and would have
both righteousness for justification, and strength in order to sanctification;
and that what is within you contradicting this, is in some measure your burden
and your bondage--if it be so, your heart is brought up a tolerable length; go
on to the business, and determine the matter by covenanting with God, and say
with your mouth, 'That you have both righteousness and strength in the Lord,'
as He has sworn you shall do--'I have sworn by myself, the word is gone out of
My mouth in righteousness, and shall not return. That unto Me every knee shall
bow, every tongue shall swear. Surely, shall one say, In the Lord have I
righteousness and strength: even to Him shall men come; and all that are
incensed against Him shall be ashamed.' (Isa. 45: 23, 24.) It is according to
Scripture to say unto God, I believe, when much unbelief is in me and the heart
is divided in the case 'Lord, I believe, help Thou mine unbelief.' (Mark 9:
24.) Withal show unto God how matters are in your heart, so that you may be
without guile before Him, concealing nothing from Him; and put your heart as it
is in His hand, to write His law on it, according to the covenant: for that is
the thing He seeks of men, that they deliver up their heart to Him, that He may
stamp it with His whole will, without exception; and if you can heartily
consent unto that, judging Christ's blood a sufficient ransom and satisfaction
for man's transgression, you may go and expressly strike a covenant with God,
for your heart and affection is already engaged.
Object. I dare not so covenant with God lest I break with Him; yea, I persuade
myself, that if such a temptation did offer, so and so circumstantiated, I
should fall before it: therefore, to transact so with God whilst I foresee such
a thing, were but to aggravate my condemnation. Ans. 1. You have already
entered into covenant with God, as you are a member of His visible Church; and
what is now pressed upon you is, that you more heartily, sincerely,
particularly, and expressly covenant and transact with Him: you are already
obliged heartily to close with God in Christ: and if you do it in heart, I hope
the hazard is no greater by saying that you do so, or have done so. 2. What
will you do if you decline sincerely closing with God in Christ, and do not
accept of His peace as it is offered? You have no other way of salvation;
either you must do this or perish for ever: and if you do it with your heart,
you may also say it with your tongue. 3. If people may be afraid of
covenanting with God lest they should afterwards transgress, then not one man
should covenant with God; for surely every one will transgress afterwards, if
they live any length of time after the transaction; and we know no way like
this to secure men from falling; for if you covenant honestly with Him, He
engageth, beside the new heart, to put His fear and law therein, to give His
Spirit to cause you to walk in His way. And when you covenant with God, you
deliver up yourself unto Him to be sanctified and made conformable to His will.
It is rather a giving up of yourself to be led in His way, in all things, and
kept from every evil way, than any formal engagement on your part to keep His
way, and to hold off from evil: so that you need not be afraid of the covenant,
the language whereof is, 'Wilt thou not be made clean?' (Jer. 13: 27.) And all
that shun to join in covenant with God, do thereby declare that they desire not
to be made clean. 4. As it is hard for any to say confidently they shall
transgress, if such a temptation did offer, so and so circumstantiated, because
that men may think that either God will keep a temptation out of their way, or
will not suffer them to be tempted above what they are able to bear, or give to
them a way of escape--'God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in
trouble.' (Psa. 46: 1.) 'There has no temptation taken you, but such as is
common to man: but God is faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above
what you are able to bear; but will with the temptation also make a wsy to
escape, that ye may be able to bear it' (1 Cor. 10: 13); so the question is
not, what I may do afterwards, but what I now resolve to do. If my heart charge
me presently with any deceit or resolution to transgress, I must lay aside that
deceit before I covenant with God; but if my heart charge me with no such
purpose, yea, I dare say I resolve against every transgression; and although I
think I shall fall before such and such temptation, yet that thought floweth
not from any allowed and approved resolution to do so, but from a knowledge of
my own corruption, and of what I have done to provoke God to desert me: but the
Lord knows I resolve not to transgress, nor do I approve any secret inclination
of my heart to such a sin, but would reckon it my singular mercy to be kept
from sin in such a case; and I judge myself a wretched man, because of such a
body of death within me, which threatens to make me transgress; in that case I
say, My heart does not condemn me, therefore, I may and ought to have
confidence before God. (1 John 3: 21.) If this then be the case, I say to thee,
although thou shouldst afterwards fail many ways, and so perhaps hereby draw
upon thyself sad temporal strokes, and lose for a season many expressions of
His love, yet there is an 'Advocate with the Father' to plead thy pardon (1
John 2: 1); who has satisfied for our breaches--'He was wounded for our
transgressions, He was bruised for our iniquities; the chastisement of our
peace was upon Him, and with His stripes we are healed. All we like sheep have
gone astray, we have turned every one to his own way, and the Lord has laid on
Him the iniquity of us all' (Isa. 53: 5, 6.) And for His sake God resolves to
hold fast the covenant with men after their transgression--'If his children
forsake My law, and walk not in My judgments; if they break My statutes, and
keep not My commandments: nevertheless My loving-kindness will I not utterly
take from him, nor suffer My faithfulness to fail: my covenant will I not
break, nor alter the thing that is gone out of My lips. Once have I sworn by My
holiness.' (Psa. 89: 30-37.) Else how could He be said 'to betroth us to
Himself for ever?' (Hos. 2: 19, 20.) And how could the covenant be called
'everlasting, ordered in all things and sure,' if there were not ground of
comfort in it, 'even when our house is not so with God?' (2 Sam. 23: 5.)
Yea, it were no better than the covenant of works, if those who enter into it
with God could so depart from Him again, as to make it void unto themselves,
and to put themselves into a worse condition than they were in before they made
it--'And I will make an everlasting covenant with them, that I will not turn
away from them, to do them good' (Jer. 32: 40)--compared with Heb. 8: 6, 'But
now has He obtained a more excellent ministry, by how much also He is the
Mediator of a better covenant, which was established upon better promises.'
'The Lord hateth putting away.' (Mal. 2: 16.) No honest heart will stumble at
this, but will rather be strengthened thereby in duty--'I will heal their
backsliding, I will love them freely; for mine anger is turned away from him.
Who is wise, and he shall understand these things: prudent, and he shall know
them. For the ways of the Lord are right, and the just shall walk in them.'
(Hos. 14: 9.) For other ties and bonds, besides the fear of divorce, and
punishment by death, do oblige the ingenuous wife unto duty; so here men will
'fear the Lord and His goodness.' (Hos. 3: 5.)
Object. I have at the celebration of the Lord's Supper, and on some other
occasions, covenanted expressly and verbally with God; but my fruitlessness in
His ways, and the renewed jealousies of my gracious state, make me question, if
ever I transacted with God in sincerity, and I think I can do it no otherwise
than I have done it. Ans. 1. Men are not to expect fruitfulness according to
their desire, nor full assurance of God's favour immediately after they have
fled unto Christ, and expressly transacted with God in Him; these things will
keep a man at work all his days. The saints had their failings and
shortcomings, yea, and backsliding, with many fits of dangerous unbelief, after
they had very seriously and sincerely, and expressly closed with God, as their
God in Christ. 2. Many do look for fruitfulness in their walk, and
establishment of faith, from their own sincerity in transacting with God,
rather than from the Spirit of the Lord Jesus. They fix their hearts on their
own honesty and resolutions, and not in the blessed root, Christ Jesus, without
whom we can do nothing, and are vanity altogether in our best estate. Men
should remember, that one piece of grace cannot produce any degree of grace:
Further, nothing can work grace but the arm of JEHOVAH; and if men would lean
upon Christ, and covenant with Him as their duty absolutely, whatsoever may be
the consequence, at least looking only to Him for the suitable fruit, it would
fare better with them. God pleaseth not that men should retake themselves unto
Christ, and covenant with Him for a season until they see if such fruit and
establishment shall follow, purposing to disclaim their interest in him and the
covenant, if such and such fruit does not appear within such a length of time.
This is to put the ways of God to trial, and is very displeasing unto Him. Men
must absolutely close with Christ, and covenant with Him, resolving to maintain
these things as their duty, and a ready way to reach fruit, whatever shall
follow thereupon; they having a testimony within them, that they seriously
design conformity to His revealed will in all things; and that they have closed
covenant with Him for the same end, as well as to be saved thereby. 3. Men
should be sparing to bring in question their sincerity in transacting with God
unless they can prove the same, or have great presumptions for it. If you can
discover any deceit or guile in your transacting with Him, you are obliged to
disclaim and rectify it, and to transact with God honestly, and. without guile:
but if you know nothing of your deceit or guile in the day you did transact
with Him; yea, if you can say that you did appeal unto God in that day and that
you dealt honestly with Him, and intended not to deceive; and did entreat Him,
according to his faithfulness, to search and try if there was any crookedness
in your way, and to discover it unto you, and heal it-- 'Search me, O God, and
know my heart: try me, and know my thoughts; and see if there be any wicked way
in me, and lead me in the way everlasting' (Psa. 139: 23, 24); and that
afterwards you 'came to the light, that your deeds might be manifest' (John 3:
20, 21); and if you can say, that God's answers from His words to you, in so
far as you could understand, were answers of peace, and confirmations of your
sincerity; yea, further, if you dare say, that if, upon life and death, you
were again to transact with Him, you can do it no other way, nor intend more
sincerity and seriousness than before; then I dare say unto thee in the Lord's
name, thou ought not to question thy sincerity in transacting with God, but to
'have confidence before God, since thy heart does not condemn thee' (1 John 3:
21); and thou art bound to believe that 'God dealeth uprightly with the upright
man, and with the pure does show himself pure.' (Psa 28: 25, 26.) If a man
intend honestly, God will not suffer him to beguile himself; yea, the Lord
suffereth no man to deceive Himself, unless the man intend to deceive both God
and man. 4. Therefore impute your unfruitfulness to your unwatchfulness and
your unbelief, and impute your want of full assurance unto an evil heart of
unbelief, helped by Satan to act against the glorious free grace of God: and
charge not these things to the want of sincerity in your closing with Christ.
And resolve henceforth to abide close by the root, and you shall bring forth
much fruit; and by much fruit you lay yourselves open to the witness of God's
Spirit, which will testify with your spirit that you have sincerely and
honestly closed with God, and that the rest of your works are wrought in God,
and approved of Him; and so the witness of the Spirit and the water, joining
with the blood, whereupon you are to lay the weight of your soul and
conscience, and where alone you are to sink the curses of the law due unto you
for all your sins and failings in your best things. These three do agree in
one, namely, that this is the way of life and peace, and that you have interest
therein, and so you come to quietness and full assurance--'Abide in me, and I
in you; as the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide in the vine,
no more can ye, except ye abide in me. I am the vine, ye are the branches; he
that abideth in me, and I in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit; for
without me ye can do nothing.' (John 15: 4, 5.) 'He that has my commandments
and keepeth them, he it is that loveth me; and he that loveth me, shall be
loved of my Father, and I will love him, and will manifest myself to him. If a
man love me he will keep my words; and my Father will love him, and we will
come unto him, and make our abode with him.' (John 14: 21, 23.) 'The Spirit
itself beareth witness with our spirit that we are the children of God.' (Rom.
8: 10.) 'There are three that bear witness in earth, the spirit, and the water,
and the blood; and these three agree in one.' (1 John 5: 8.) O blessed
bargain of the new covenant, and thrice blessed Mediator of the same! Let him
ride prosperously and subdue nations and languages, and gather in all His
jewels, that honourable company of the firstborn, that stately troop of kings
and priests, whose glory it shall be to have washed their garments in the blood
of that spotless Lamb, and whose happiness shall continually flourish in
following Him whithersoever He goes, and in being in the immediate company of
the Ancient of days, one sight of whose face shall make them in a manner forget
that ever they were on the earth. Oh, if I could persuade men to believe that
these things are not yea and nay, and to make haste towards Him, who hasteth to
judge the world, and to call men to an account, especially concerning their
improvement of this gospel. 'Even so, come Lord Jesus.'
Quest. 1. What is the great business a man has to do in this world?
Ans. To make sure a saving interest in Christ Jesus, and to walk suitably
thereto.
Q. 2. Have not all the members of the visible church a saving interest in
Christ?
A. No, verily; yea, but a very few of them have it.
Q. 3. How shall I know if I have a saving interest in Him?
A. Ordinarily the Lord prepareth His own way in the soul by a work of
humiliation, and discovereth a man's sin and misery to him, and exerciseth Him
so therewith, that He longs for the physician Christ Jesus.
Q. 4. How shall I know if I have got a competent discovery of my sin and
misery?
A. A competent sight of it makes a man take salvation to heart above anything
in this world: it maketh him disclaim all relief in himself, seen in his best
things: it maketh Christ who is the Redeemer, very precious to the soul: it
makes a man stand in awe to sin afterwards, and makes him content to be saved
upon any terms God pleases.
Q. 5. By what other ways may I discern a saving interest in him?
A. By the going out of the heart seriously and affectionately towards Him, as
He is held out in the gospel; and this is faith or believing.
Q. 6. How shall I know if my heart goes out after Him aright, and that my faith
is true saving faith?
A. Where the heart goes out aright after Him in true and saving faith, the soul
is pleased with Christ alone above all things, and is pleased with Him in all
Him three offices, to rule and instruct as well as to save; and is content to
cleave unto Him, whatsoever inconveniences may follow.
Q. 7. What other mark of a saving interest in Christ can you give me?
A. He that is in Christ savingly, is a new creature; He is graciously changed
and renewed in some measure, in the whole man, and in all his ways pointing
towards all the known commands of God.
Q. 8. What if I find sin now and then prevailing over me?
A. Although every sin deserves everlasting vengeance, yet, if you be afflicted
for your failings, confess them with shame of face unto God, resolving to
strive against them honestly henceforth, and see unto Christ for pardon, you
shall obtain mercy, and your interest stands sure.
Q. 9. What shall the man do who cannot lay claim to Christ Jesus nor any of
those marks spoken of it?
A. Let him not take rest until he make sure unto himself a saving interest in
Christ.
Q. 10. What way can a man make sure an interest in Christ, who never had a
saving interest in Him hitherto?
A. He must take his sins to heart, and his great hazard thereby, and he must
take to heart God's offer of pardon and peace through Christ Jesus, and
heartily close with God's offer by retaking himself unto Christ, the blessed
refuge.
Q. 11. What if my sins be singularly heinous, and great beyond ordinary?
A. Whatsoever thy sins be, if thou wilt close with Christ Jesus by faith, thou
shalt never enter into condemnation.
Q. 12. Is faith in Christ only required of men?
A. Faith is the only condition upon which God does offer peace and pardon unto
men; but be assured, faith, if it be true and saving, will not be alone in the
soul, but will be attended with true repentance, and a thankful study of
conformity to God's image.
Q. 13 How shall I be sure that my heart does accept of God's offer, and does
close with Christ Jesus? .
A. Go make a covenant expressly, and by word speak the thing unto God.
Q. 14 What way shall I do that?
A. Set apart some portion of time, and, having considered your own lost estate,
and the remedy offered by Christ Jesus, work up your heart to be pleased and
close with that offer, and say unto God expressly that you do accept of that
offer, and of Him to be your God in Christ; and do give up yourself to Him to
be saved in His way, without reservation or exception in any case; and that you
henceforth will wait for salvation in the way He has appointed.
Q. 15 What if I break with God afterwards?
A. You must resolve in His strength not to break, and watch over your own ways,
and put your heart in His hand to keep it and if you break, you must confess it
unto God, and judge yourself for it, and flee to the Advocate for pardon, and
resolve to do so no more: and this you must do as often as you fail.
Q. 16 How shall I come to full assurance of my interest in Christ, so that it
may be beyond controversy?
A. Learn to lay your weight upon the blood of Christ, and study purity and
holiness in all manner of conversation: and pray for the witness of God's
Spirit to join with the blood and the water; and His testimony added unto these
will establish you in the faith of an interest in Christ.
Q. 17. What is the consequence of such closing with God in Christ by heart and
mouth?
A. Union and communion with God, all good here and His blessed fellowship in
heaven forever afterwards.
Q. 18. What if I slight all these things, and do not lay them to heart to put
them in practice?
A. The Lord comes with His angels, in flaming fire, to render vengeance to them
who obey not His gospel; and thy judgment shall be greater than that of Sodom
and Gomorrah; and so much the greater that thou hast read this Treatise, for it
shall be a witness against thee in that day.
The end