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Showing posts with label INSTANCES WHEREIN the Christian is to Express the Power of Holiness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label INSTANCES WHEREIN the Christian is to Express the Power of Holiness. Show all posts

23 December, 2018

INSTANCES WHEREIN the Christian is to Express the Power of Holiness 3/3


           Fourth Particular.  He must, as endeavour to mortify corruption, so to grow and advance in the contrary grace.  Every sin hath its opposite grace, as every poison hath its antidote.  He that will walk in the power of holiness, must not only labour to make avoidance of sin, but to get possession of the contrary grace.  We read of a house that stood ‘empty,’ Matt. 12:44.  ‘The unclean spirit went out,’ but the Holy Spirit came not in—that is, when a man is a mere negative Christian, he ceaseth to do evil in some ways he hath formerly walked in, but he learns not to do good.  This is to lose heaven with short-shooting.  God will not ask us what we were not, but what we were.  Not to swear and curse will not serve our turn; but thou wilt be asked, ‘Didst thou bless and sanctify God’s name?’  It will not suffice that thou didst not persecute Christ, but ‘Didst thou receive him?’  Thou didst not hate his saints, but didst thou love them?  Thou didst not drink and swill, but wert thou filled with the Spirit?  He is the skilful physician who, at the same time he evacuates the disease, doth also comfort and strengthen nature; and he the true Chris­tian, that doth not content himself with a bare laying aside of evil customs and practices, but labours to walk in that exercise of the corresponding graces.  Art thou discomposed with impatience?—haunted with a discontented spirit, under any affliction?  

Think it not enough to silence thy heart from quarreling with God; but leave not till thou canst bring it sweetly to rely on God.  Holy David drove it thus far—he did not only chide his soul for being disquieted, but he charges it to trust in God, Ps. 43:5. Hast thou any grudgings in thy heart against thy brother?  Think it not enough to quench these sparks of hell-fire; but labour to kindle a heavenly fire of love to him, so as to set thee a praying heartily for him.  I have known one who, when he had some envious, unkind thoughts stirring in him, against any one—as who so holy may not find such vermin sometimes creeping about him?—would not stay long from the throne of grace; but going there, that he might enter the stronger pro­test against them, would most earnestly pray for the increase of those good things in them, which he be­fore had seemed to grudge, [i.e. desiderate], and so revenged himself of those envious lustings which at any time rose in his heart against others.

           Fifth Particular.  He must have a public spirit against the sins of others.  A good subject doth not only labour to live quietly under his prince’s govern­ment himself, but is ready to serve his prince against those that will not.  True holiness, as true charity, be­gins at home, but it doth not confine itself within its own doors.  It hath a zeal against sin abroad.  He that is of a neutral spirit, and, Gallio-like, cares not what dishonour God hath from others, calls in question the zeal he expresseth against sin in his own bosom.  When David would know the temper of his own heart, the furthest discovery by all search that he could make of the sincerity of it, is his zeal against the sins of others.  ‘Do I not hate them, O Lord, that hate thee? and am I not grieved with those that rise up against thee?  I hate them with a perfect hatred; I count them mine enemies,’ Ps. 139:21, 22.  Having done this, he entreats God himself to ransack his heart; ‘Search me, O God, and know my heart: try me, and know my thoughts; and see if there be any wicked way in me,’ &c., ver. 23, 24; as if he had said, Lord, my line will not reach to fathom my heart any further, and therefore if it be possible that yet any evil may shroud itself under this, tell me, and ‘lead me in the way everlasting.’

           Sixth Particular.  The Christian, when he shows most zeal against sin, and hath greatest victory over it, even then must he renounce all fiduciary glorying in this.  The excellency of gospel holiness consists in self-denial.  ‘Though I wee perfect,’ saith Job, ‘yet would I not know my soul,’ Job 9:21; that is, I would not be conceited and proud of my innocence.  When a man is lift up with any excellency he hath, we say, ‘He knows it;’ ‘He hath excellent parts, but he knows it;’ that is, he reflects too much on himself, and sees his own face too oft in the glass of his own perfec­tions.  They who climb lofty mountains find it safest, the higher they ascend, the more to bow and stoop with their bodies; and so does the Spirit of Christ teach the saints, as they get higher in their victories over corruption, to bow lowest in self-denial.  The saints are bid to, ‘keep themselves in the love of God,’ and then to wait, ‘looking for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life,’ Jude 21.  And, ‘Sow to yourselves in righteousness, reap in mercy,’ Hosea 10:12.  We sow on earth, we reap in heaven.  The seed we are to sow is righteousness and holiness, which when we have done, with greatest care and cost, we must not expect our reward from the hand of our righteousness, but from God’s mercy

22 December, 2018

INSTANCES WHEREIN the Christian is to Express the Power of Holiness 2/3

 

Second Particular.  Thou must not only endeav­our against all sin, but that, on noble principles.  Here lies the power of holiness.  Many forbear to sin upon such an unworthy account, that God will not thank them for it another day.  As it is in actions of piety and charity, God makes no account of them, except he be interested in them.  When we fast or pray, God asks, ‘Do you fast and pray to me, even to me?’ Zech. 7:5.  When we give alms, ‘a cup of cold water’ for his sake, given ‘in the name of a disciple,’ is more valued by him, Matt. 10:42, than a cup of gold, for private and low ends.  As in these, so it is in sin, God looks that his authority should conclude, and his love constrain us to renounce it; before the com­mandments—as princes, before their proclamations, prefix their arms and royal names—God sets his glor­ious name.  ‘God spake all these words,’ saying, &c., Ex. 20:1.  And why this, but that we should sanctify his name in all that we do?  A master may well think himself despised by that servant that still goes on, when he bids him leave off such a work, but has done presently at the entreaty of another.  O how many are there that go on to sin, for all that God says to the contrary!  But when their credit bids, for shame of the world, to give over such a practice, they can knock off presently.  

When their profit speaks, it is heard and obeyed.  O sirs! take heed of this; God expects his servants should not only do what he commands, but this, at his command, and his only.  And as in abstaining from evil, so in mourning for sins commit­ted by us, if we will be Christians indeed, we must take in, yea prefer, God’s concernments before our own.  Indeed, it were to be wished that some were kind to their own souls, as to mourn for themselves when they have sinned—that they would cry out with Lamech, ‘I have slain a man to my wounding, and a young man to my hurt.’ Gen. 4:23.  Many have such brawny consciences, that they do not so much as com­plain they have hurt themselves by their sins.  But, little of the power of holiness appears in all this. There may be a great cry in the conscience, ‘I am damned! I have undone myself!’ and the dishonour that is cast upon God by him, not laid to heart.  You remember what Joab said to David, taking on heavily for Absalom’s death, ‘I perceive,’ said he, ‘if Absalom had lived, and all we had died this day, then it had pleased thee well,’ II Sam. 19:6.  Thus we might say to such selfish mourners, ‘We perceive that if thou couldst but save the life of thy soul from eternal death and damnation, though the glory of God miscarried, thou couldst be pleased well enough.’ 

But know, that a gracious soul’s mourning runs in another channel.  ‘Against thee, thee only have I sinned,’ is holy David’s moan.  There is a great difference between a servant that works for another, and one that is his own man.  As we say, the latter puts all his losses upon his own head: ‘So much,’ saith he, ‘I have lost by such a ship—so much by such a bargain.’  But the servant that trades with his master’s stock—he, when any loss comes, he puts it on his master’s account: ‘So much have I lost of my master’s goods.’  O Chris­tian! think of this.  Thou art but a servant.  All the stock thou tradest with is not thine, but thy God’s; and therefore, when thou fallest into any sin, bewail it as a wrong to him.  ‘So much, alas! I have dishon­oured my God; his talents I have wasted; his name I have wounded; his Spirit I have grieved.’

           Third Particular.  He must not only abstain from acting a sin, but also labour to mortify it.  A wound may be hid when it is not healed—covered, and yet not cured.  Some men, they are like unskilful physi­cians, who rather drive in the disease, than drive out the cause of the disease.  Corruption thus left in the bosom, like lime unslaked, or a humour unpurged, is sure at one time or other to take fire and break out, though now it lies peaceably, as powder in the barrel, and makes no noise.  I have read that the opening of a chest where some cloths were laid up—not very well aired and cleared from the infection that had been in the house—was the cause of a great plague in Venice, after they had lain many years there, without doing any hurt.  I am sure we see, for want of true mortifica­tion, many who, after they have walked so long unblameably as to gain the reputation of being saints in the opinion of others, upon some occasion, like the opening of the chest, have fallen sadly into abomin­able practices; and therefore it behoves us not to satisfy ourselves with anything less than a work of mortification, and that followed on from day to day.  ‘I protest,’ saith Paul, ‘by my rejoicing in Christ, I die daily.’  Here was a man who walked in the power of holiness.  Sin is like the beast, Rev. 13:3, which seemed at one time as if it would presently die of its wounds, but by and by it was strangely healed so as to recover again. 

Many a saint, for want of keeping a tight rein, and that constantly, over some corruption which they have thought they had got the mastery of, have been thrown out the saddle, and by it dragged dangerously into temptation, unable to resist the fury of lust, when it has got head, till they have broken their bones with some sad fall into sin.  If thou wouldst, Chris­tian, show the power of holiness, never give over mortifying-work, no, not when thy corruptions play least in thy sight.  He that is inclined to a disease—gout, stone, or the like—must not only take physic when he hath a fit actually upon him, but ever and anon should be taking something good against it.  So should the Christian, not only when he finds his corruption stirring, but every day keep his soul in a course of spiritual physic, against the growing of it.  This is holiness in its power.  Many professors do with their souls in this respect, as deceitful chirur­geons with their patients—lay on a healing plaster one day, and a contrary the next day, that sets the cure more back than the other set it forward.  Take heed of this, except thou meanest not only to bring the power of holiness into danger, but the very life and truth of it into question in thy soul

21 December, 2018

INSTANCES WHEREIN the Christian is to Express the Power of Holiness 1/3


 The second particular, into which the point was branched, comes now to be taken into hand; and that was to mention several instances wherein especially every Christian is to express the power of a holy and righteous life.  Now this I shall do under several heads.

           First. The Christian must maintain the power of holiness in his contest with sin.  Second. The Christian must express the power of holiness in the duties of God’s worship.  Third. The Christian must express the power of holiness in his particular calling and worldly employments.

[The power of holiness is expressed in the saint’s behaviour towards sin.]
           First Instance. The Christian must maintain the power of holiness in his contest with sin; and that in the particulars following.

           Thou must not only refuse to commit broad sins, but shun the appearance of sin also; this is to walk in the power of holiness.  The dove doth not only fly from the hawk, but will not so much as smell a single feather that falls from it.  It should be enough to scare the holy soul from any enterprise, if it be but male coloratum—badly coloured.  We are command­ed to ‘hate even the garment spotted by the flesh,’ Jude 23.  A cleanly person will not only refuse to swallow the dung-hill (he [who would] is a beast indeed), but he is careful also that he doth not get so much as a spot on his clothes as he is eating his meat.  The Christian’s care should be to keep, as his conscience is pure, so his name pure; which is done by avoiding all appearance of evil.  Bernard’s three questions are worth the asking ourselves in any enterprise.  An liceat? an deceat? an expediat?—Is it lawful? may I do it and not sin?  Is it becoming me a Christian? may I do it, and not wrong my profession?  That work which would suit a mean man, would it become a prince?  ‘Should such a man as I flee?’ Neh. 6:11, said Nehemiah nobly.  Lastly, Is it expedient? may I do it, and not offend my weak brother?  There are some things we must deny ourselves of for the sake of others.  Though a man could sit his horse, and run him full speed without danger to himself; yet he should do very ill to come scouring through a town where children are in the way, that may be, before he is aware, rid over by him, and spoiled.  Thus some things thou mayest do, and without sin to thee, if there were no weak Christians in thy way to ride over, and so bruise their tender consciences and grieve their spirits. 

But alas! this is too narrow a path for many shaleing professors to walk in now-a-days; they must have more room and scope for their loose hearts, or else they and their profession must part.  Liberty is the Diana of our times.  O what apologies are made for some suspicious practices!—long hair, gaudy garish apparel, spotted faces, naked breasts.  These have been called to the bar in former times, and censured by sober and solid Christians, as things at least suspicious, and of no ‘good report;’ but now they have hit upon a more favourable jury, that find them ‘not guilty.’  Yea, many are so fond of them, that they think Christian liberty is wronged in their censure.  Professors are so far from a holy jealousy, that should make them watch their hearts, lest they go too far, that they stretch their consciences to come up to the full length of their tedder; as if he were the brave Christian that could come nearest the pit of sin, and not fall in; as in the Olympian games, he wore the garland away, that could drive his chariot nearest the mark, and not knock on it.  If this were so, Paul mistook when he bade Christians ‘abstain from all ap­pearance of evil,’ I Thes. 5:22.  He should rather, by these men’s divinity, have said ‘abstain’ not from ‘the appearance,’ only take heed of what is in itself grossly ‘evil.’  But he that can venture on ‘the appearance of evil,’ under the pretence of liberty, may, for aught I know, commit that which is more grossly evil, under some appearance of good.  It is not hard, if a man will be at the cost, to put a good colour on a rotten stuff, and practice also.