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14 November, 2019

SIN'S DEFORMITY - Four particulars concerning sin, taken from the word of God 1/4


   DIRECTION FIRST.  Take some pains to collect out of the word the several lineaments with which the Spirit of God doth paint out the deformity of sin, that so thou mayest make it the more odious and hateful to thy thoughts, when, by laying them together, thou shalt see in its true picture and portraiture—drawn by so skilful and faithful a hand—the fair face of this goodly lady, whose beauty Satan doth so highly commend to thy wanton embraces.  Poor man sins upon Satan’s credit, and receives it into his bosom, as Jacob did his wife into his bed—before he sees its face, or knows well what it is—and therefore, as he in the morning found her to be, not that beautiful Rachel as was promised, but a blear eyed Leah; so the sinner, too late—when his conscience awakes—sees himself miserably cheated, and disappointed of what he looked for, and finds a purgatory where he expected a paradise.  Now, that thou mayest, Christian, the better see the ugly shape of this monster sin, observe from the word of God these four particulars concerning it.  First. The birth and extraction of it. Second. The names given it. Third. Its nature.  And, Fourth. Its properties.
Four particulars concerning sin, taken from the word of God.
           First Particular.  The birth and extraction of sin. Who is its father, and from whom is it descended? The holy God disowns it.  The sun can as soon beget darkness, as God, who is ‘the Father of lights,’ be the author of sin.  From him comes ‘every good and perfect gift,’ James 1:17.  But, O sin, whence art thou? Thou art not his creature; he neither made thee, nor ever moved any to thy production.  Certainly if it were from him he would like and love it.  Every one loves his own child, though never so black.  Much more doth God like what is his.  We find him looking back upon every day's work of the creation, and upon all at last, pleased with what he had done, all ‘was very good,’ Gen. 1:31.  But of sin what he thinks, see Deut. 7:25, 26; Prov. 6:16; Rev. 2:6, 15, where he ex-presseth his detestation and hatred of it, from which hatred proceed all those direful plagues and judgments thundered from the fiery mouth of his most holy law against it.  Nay, not only the work, but the worker also, of iniquity, becomes the object of his hatred, Ps. 5:5.  So that if God were the author of sin, he would be a hater of himself.  Well, at whose door then doth God lay this brat to find a father?  Surely at the devil’s: ‘Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father ye will do,’ John 8:44.  And again in the same place, ‘When he speaketh a lie, he speaketh of his own: for he is a liar, and the father of it.’  Sin is a brat which calls the devil both father and mother. For of himself, even of his own free will—the womb wherein it was conceived—did he beget it; and having begot it, put it out to nurse to man.  And is not man, who was made to serve and enjoy the great God his Maker, highly set up, to suckle and carry this his infernal child about in his arms?  Ah, poor man, whence art thou fallen?  It is strange that the very remembering whose offspring thyself wert doth not strike thee into a horror, to see thy precious soul debased unto such servitude as to fulfil the lusts of that cursed spirit.  Never let us spit at the witch for suffering the devil’s imps to suck on her body, while we can prostitute our souls to any of his lusts.

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