Human Nature in its Fourfold State
Thomas Boston (1676 - 1732)
I. The State of INNOCENCE
II. The State of NATURE
1. The SINFULNESS of man's natural state
2. The MISERY of man's natural state
3. The INABILITY of man's natural state
III. The State of GRACE
1. REGENERATION
"Being born again, not of corruptible seed—but of
incorruptible, by the word of God, which lives and abides forever." 1 Peter
1:23
We proceed now to the state of grace, the state of begun
recovery of human nature, into which all who shall partake of eternal
happiness are translated, sooner or later, while in this world. It is the
result of a gracious change made upon those who shall inherit eternal life:
which change may be taken up in these two particulars:
1. In opposition to their natural real state, the state
of corruption, there is a change made upon them in regeneration;
whereby their nature is changed.
2. In opposition to their natural relative state, the
state of wrath, there is a change made upon them in their union with
the Lord Jesus Christ; by which they are placed beyond the reach of
condemnation.
These, therefore, regeneration and union with Christ, I
desire to treat on as the great and comprehensive changes on a sinner,
bringing him into the state of grace.
The first of these we have in the text; together with the
outward and ordinary means by which it is brought about. The apostle here,
to excite the saints to the study of holiness, and particularly of brotherly
love, puts them in mind of their spiritual original. He tells them that they
were born again; and that of incorruptible seed, the word of God. This shows
them to be brethren, partakers of the same new nature: which is the root
from which holiness, and particularly brotherly love, springs. We have
been once born sinners: we must be born again, that we may be saints.
The simple word signifies "to be begotten;" and so it may
be read, Matt. 11:11; "to be conceived," Matt. 1:20; and "to be born," Matt.
2:1. Accordingly, the compound word, used in the text, may be taken in its
full latitude, the last idea presupposing the two former: so regeneration
is a supernatural real change on the whole man, fitly compared to the
natural birth, as will afterwards appear. The ordinary means of
regeneration, called the "seed," whereof the new creature is formed, is not
corruptible seed. Of such, indeed, our bodies are generated: but the
spiritual seed of which the new creature is generated, is incorruptible;
namely, "the word of God, which lives and abides forever." The sound of the
word of God passes, even as other sounds do; but the word lasts, lives,
and abides, in respect of its everlasting effects, on all upon whom it
operates. This "word, which by the gospel is preached unto you," ver.
25, impregnated by the Spirit of God, is the means of regeneration: and by
it dead sinners are raised to life.
Doctrine. All men in the state of grace, are born
again.
All gracious people, namely, such as are in a state of
favor with God, and endowed with gracious qualities and dispositions, are
regenerate people. In discoursing on this subject, I shall show,
1. What regeneration is.
2. Why it is so called.
3. Apply the doctrine.
I. Of the Nature of regeneration.
For the better understanding of the nature of
regeneration, take this along with you, that as there are
false conceptions in nature, so there
are also in grace: by these many are deluded, mistaking some partial changes
made upon them, for this great and thorough change. To remove such mistakes,
let these few things be considered:
(1.) Many call the church their mother, whom God will not
own to be his children, Cant. 1:6, "My mother's children," that is,
false brethren, "were angry with me." All that are baptized, are not born
again. Simon was baptized—yet still "in the gall of bitterness, and in the
bond of iniquity," Acts 8:13, 23. Where Christianity is the religion of the
country, many are called by the name of Christ, who have no more of him than
the name: and no wonder, for the devil had his goats among Christ's sheep,
in those places where but few professed the Christian religion, 1 John 2:19,
"They went out from us—but they were not of us."
(2.) Good education is not regeneration. Education
may chain up men's lusts—but cannot change their hearts. A wolf is still a
ravenous beast, though it be in chains. Joash was very devout during the
life of his good tutor Jehoiada; but afterwards he quickly showed what
spirit he was of, by his sudden apostasy, 2 Chron. 24:2-18. Good example is
of mighty influence to change the outward man: but that change often goes
off, when a man changes his company; of which the world affords many sad
instances.
(3.) A turning from open profanity, to civility and
sobriety, falls short of this saving change. Some are, for a while, very
loose, especially in their younger years; but at length they reform, and
leave their profane courses. Here is a change—yet only such as may be found
in men utterly void of the grace of God, and whose righteousness is so far
from exceeding, that it does not come up to the righteousness of the Scribes
and Pharisees.
(4.) One may engage in all the outward duties of
religion, and yet not be born again. Though lead be cast into various
shapes, it remains still but a base metal. Men may escape the pollutions of
the world, and yet be but dogs and swine, 2 Pet. 2:20-22. All the external
acts of religion are within the compass of natural abilities. Yes,
hypocrites may have the counterfeit of all the graces of the Spirit: for we
read of "true holiness," Eph. 4:24, and "sincere faith," 1
Tim. 1:5; which shows us that there is counterfeit holiness, and a feigned
faith.
(5.) Men may advance to a great deal of strictness in
their own way of religion, and yet be strangers to the new birth, Acts
26:5, "After the most straitest sect of our religion, I lived a Pharisee."
Nature has its own unsanctified strictness in religion. The Pharisees had so
much of it, that they looked on Christ as little better than a mere
libertine. A man whose conscience has been awakened, and who lives under the
felt influence of the covenant of works, what will he not do that is within
the compass of natural abilities? It is a truth, though it came out of a
hellish mouth, that "skin for skin, yes all that a man has will he give for
his life," Job 2:4.
(6.) A person may have sharp soul-exercises and pangs,
and yet die in the birth. Many "have been in pain," that have but, "as
it were, brought forth wind." There may be sore pangs of conscience, which
turn to nothing at last. Pharaoh and Simon Magus had such convictions, as
made them to desire the prayers of others for them. Judas repented: and,
under terrors of conscience, gave back his ill-gotten pieces of silver. All
is not gold that glitters. Trees may blossom fairly in the spring, on which
no fruit is to be found in the harvest: and some have sharp
soul-exercises, which are nothing but foretastes of hell.
The new birth, however in appearance hopefully begun, may
be MARRED two ways.
(1.) Some have sharp convictions
for a while: but these go off, and they become as careless about their
salvation, and as profane as ever, and usually worse than ever;
"their last state is worse than their first," Matt. 12:45. They get
awakening grace—but not converting grace; and that goes off by
degrees, as the light of the declining day, until it issues in midnight
darkness.
Others come forth too soon; they are born, like Ishmael,
before the time of the promise, Gen. 16:2; compare Gal. 4:22, etc. They take
up with a mere law work, and stay not until the time of the promise of the
gospel. They snatch at consolation, not waiting until it be given them; and
foolishly draw their comfort from the law which wounded them. They apply the
healing plaster to themselves, before their wound is sufficiently searched.
The law, that rigorous husband, severely beats them, and throws in curses
and vengeance upon their souls; then they fall to reforming, praying,
mourning, promising, and vowing; which done, they fall asleep again in the
arms of the law: but they are never shaken out of themselves and their own
righteousness, nor brought forward to Jesus Christ.
(2.) There may be a wonderful moving of the affections in
souls that are not at all touched with regenerating grace.
When
there is no grace, there may, notwithstanding, be a flood of tears, as in
Esau, who "found no place of repentance, though he sought it carefully with
tears," Heb. 12:17. There may be great flashes of joy; as in the hearers of
the word, represented in the parable of the stony ground, who "with joy
receive it," Matt. 13:20. There may be also great desires after good things,
and great delight in them too; as in those hypocrites described in Isa.
58:2, "Yet they seek me daily, and delight to know my ways – they take
delight in approaching to God." See how high they may sometimes stand—who
yet fall away, Heb. 6:4-6. They may be "enlightened, taste of the heavenly
gift," "be partakers of the Holy Spirit, taste the good word of God, and the
powers of the world to come." Common operations of the divine Spirit,
like a land-flood, make a strange turning of things upside down: but when
they are over, all runs again in the ordinary channel. All these things may
be, where the sanctifying Spirit of Christ never rests upon the soul—but
the stony heart still remains; and in that case these affections cannot but
wither, because they have no root.
But regeneration is a real, thorough change, whereby
the man is made a new creature, 2 Cor. 5:17. The Lord God makes the
creature a new creature, as the goldsmith melts down a vessel of dishonor,
and makes it a vessel of honor. Man is, in respect of his spiritual state,
altogether disjointed by the fall; every faculty of the soul is, as it were,
dislocated. In regeneration, the Lord loosens every joint, and sets it right
again. Now this change made in regeneration, is,
1. A change of qualities or DISPOSITIONS.
It
is not a change of the substance—but of the qualities of the soul. Vicious
qualities are removed, and the contrary dispositions are brought in, in
their place. "The old man is put off," Eph. 4:22; "the new man is put on,"
ver. 24. Man lost none of the rational faculties of his soul by sin. He had
an understanding still—but it was darkened; he had still a will—but it was
contrary to the will of God. So in regeneration, there is not a new
substance created—but new qualities or dispositions are infused; light
instead of darkness, righteousness instead of unrighteousness.
2. It is a SUPERNATURAL change.
He who is born
again, is born of the Spirit, John 3:5. Great changes may be made by
the power of nature, especially when assisted by external revelation.
Nature may be so elevated by the common influences of the Spirit, that a
person may thereby be turned into another man, as Saul was, 1 Sam.
10:6, who yet never becomes a new man. But in regeneration, nature itself is
changed, and we become partakers of the divine nature; and this must needs
be a supernatural change. How can we, who are dead in trespasses and sins,
renew ourselves, any more than a dead man can raise himself out of his
grave? Who but the sanctifying Spirit of Christ can form Christ in a soul,
changing it into his same image? Who but the Spirit of sanctification can
give the new heart? Well may we say, when we see a man thus changed, "This
is the finger of God!"
3. It is a change into the LIKENESS OF GOD.
2
Cor. 3:18, "We beholding, as in a mirror, the glory of the Lord—are
changed into the same image." Everything generates its like: the child
bears the image of the parent; and they who are born of God, bear God's
image. Man aspiring to be as God, made himself like the devil. In his
natural state he resembles the devil, as a child does his father, John 8:44,
"You are of your father the devil." But when this happy change comes, that
image of Satan is defaced, and the image of God is restored. Christ himself,
who is the brightness of his Father's glory, is the pattern after which the
new creature is made, Rom. 8:29, "For whom he did foreknow, he also did
predestinate to be conformed to the image of his Son." Hence Christ is said
to be formed in the regenerate, Gal. 4:19.
4. It is a UNIVERSAL change.
"All things
become new," 2 Cor. 5:17. It is a blessed leaven—which leavens the whole
lump—the whole spirit, and soul, and body. Original sin infects the whole
man; and regenerating grace, which is the cure, goes as far as the disease.
This fruit of the Spirit is in all goodness; goodness of the mind, goodness
of the will, goodness of the affections, goodness of the whole man. He gets
not only a new head, to know and understand true religion; or a new
tongue, to talk of it; but a new heart, to love and embrace
it, in the whole of his life. When the Lord opens the sluice of grace, on
the soul's new-birth day, the waters run through the whole man, to purify
and make him fruitful. In those natural changes spoken of before, there are,
as it were, pieces of new cloth put into an old garment; new life to an old
heart: but the gracious change is a thorough change; a change both of heart
and life.
5. Yet, though every part of the man is renewed, there is
no part of him which is perfectly renewed.
As an infant has all
the parts of a man—but none of them come to a perfect growth; so
regeneration brings a perfection of parts, to be brought forward in the
gradual advances of sanctification, 1 Pet. 2:2, "As newborn babes, desire
the sincere milk of the word, that you may grow thereby." Although, in
regeneration, there is heavenly light let into the mind; yet there is
still some darkness there. Though the will is renewed, it is not
perfectly renewed; there is still some of the old inclination to sin
remaining: and thus it will be, until that which is in part is done away,
and the light of glory come. Adam was created at his full stature; but those
who are born, must have their time to grow up; so those who are born again,
come forth into the new world of grace as new-born babes: Adam being created
upright, was at the same time perfectly righteous, without the least mixture
of sinful imperfection.
6. Nevertheless, it is a LASTING change, which never
entirely dies off.
The seed is incorruptible, says the text; and
so is the creature who is formed of it. The life given in regeneration,
whatever decays it may fall under, can never be utterly lost. "His seed
remains in him" who "is born of God," 1 John 3:9. Though the branches should
be cut down, the root abides in the earth; and being watered with the dew of
heaven, shall spout again: for "the root of the righteous shall not be
moved," Prov. 12:3.
But to come to particulars.
1. In regeneration the MIND is savingly enlightened.
There is a light let into the understanding; so that those who were "once
darkness, are now light in the Lord," Eph. 5:8. The beams of the light of
life make their way into the dark dungeon of the heart: then the night is
over, and the morning light is come, which will shine more and more unto the
perfect day.
(1.) Now the man is illuminated, in the knowledge of GOD.
He has far other thoughts of God, than ever he had before, Hos. 2:20, "I
will even betrothe you unto me in faithfulness, and you shall know the
Lord." The Spirit of the Lord brings him back to this question, "What is
God?" and catechises him anew upon that grand point, so that he is made to
say, "I have heard of you by the hearing of the ear; but now my eye sees
you," Job 42:5. The spotless purity of God, his exact justice, his
all-sufficiency, and other glorious perfections revealed in his word, are by
this new light discovered to the soul, with a plainness and certainty, which
as far exceed the knowledge it had of these things before, as ocular viewing
exceeds common report. For now he sees, what he only heard of before.
(2.) He is enlightened in the knowledge of SIN.
He has different thoughts of it than he used to have. Formerly his
sight could not pierce through the cover Satan laid over it: but now the
Spirit of God removes it, wipes off the paint and varnish: and so he sees it
in its natural colors, as the worst of evils, exceedingly sinful, Rom. 7:13.
O, what deformed monsters—do formerly beloved lusts appear! Were they right
eyes, he would pluck them out; were they right hands, he would consent to
their being cut off. He sees how offensive sin is to God, how destructive it
is to the soul; and calls himself a fool, for fighting so long against the
Lord, and harboring that destroyer as a bosom friend!
(3.) He is instructed in the knowledge of HIMSELF.
Regenerating grace brings the prodigal to himself, Luke 15:17, and
makes men full of eyes within, knowing the plague of his own heart. The mind
being savingly enlightened, the man sees how desperately corrupt his nature
is; what enmity against God, and his holy law, has long lodged there: so
that his soul loathes itself. No open sepulcher so vile and loathsome, in
his eyes—as himself, Ezek. 36:31, "Then shall you remember your own evil
ways, and your doings that were not good, and shall loathe yourselves in
your own sight." He is no worse than he was before—but the sun is now
shining; and so those pollutions are seen, which he could not discern
before—when there was no dawning in him, as the word is, Isa. 8:20, while as
yet there was no breaking of the day of grace with him.
(4.) He is enlightened in the knowledge of JESUS CHRIST.
1 Cor. 1: 23, 24, "But we preach Christ crucified, unto the Jews a
stumbling-block, and unto the Greeks foolishness: but unto those who are
called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God, and the wisdom of
God." The truth is, unregenerate men, though capable of preaching Christ,
have not, properly speaking, the knowledge of him—but only an opinion, a
good opinion, of him; as one has of many controverted points of doctrine,
wherein he is far from certainty. As when you meet with a stranger on the
road, who behaves himself discretely, you conceive a good opinion of him,
and therefore willingly converse with him: but yet you will not commit your
money to him; because, though you have a good opinion of the man, he is a
stranger to you, you do not know him. So may they think well of Christ; but
they will never commit themselves to him, seeing they know him not.
But saving illumination carries the soul beyond
opinion, to the certain knowledge of Christ and his excellency, 1 Thess.
1:5, "For our Gospel came not unto you in word only—but also in power, and
in the Holy Spirit, and in much assurance." The light of grace thus
discovers the suitableness of the mystery of Christ to the divine
perfections, and to the sinner's case. Hence the regenerate admire the
glorious plan of salvation, through Christ crucified; rest their whole
dependence upon it, heartily acquiesce therein; for whatever he is to
others, he is to them, "Christ the power of God, and the wisdom of God." But
unrenewed men, not seeing this, are offended in him: they will not venture
their souls in that vessel—but betake themselves to the broken boards of
their own righteousness.
The same light convincingly discovers a superlative
worth, a transcendent glory and excellence in Christ, which darkens all
created excellencies—as the rising sun makes the stars hide their heads. It
engages the "merchantman to sell all that he has, to buy the one pearl of
great price," Matt. 12:45, 46; makes the soul heartily content to take
Christ for all, and instead of all. An unskillful merchant, to whom one
offers a pearl of great price, for all his petty wares, dares not venture on
the bargain; for though he thinks that one pearl may be worth more than all
he has—yet he is not sure of it: but when a jeweler comes to him and assures
him it is worth double all his wares, he then eagerly makes the bargain, and
cheerfully parts with all he has, for that pearl.
Finally, this illumination in the knowledge of Christ,
convincingly discovers to men a fullness in him, sufficient for the supply
of all their needs, enough to satisfy the boundless desires of an immortal
soul. And they are persuaded that such fullness is in him, and that in
order to be communicated: they depend upon it as a certain truth; and
therefore, their souls take up their eternal rest in him.
(5.) The man is instructed in the knowledge of the vanity
of the WORLD.
Psalm 119:96, "I have seen an end of all
perfection." Regenerating grace elevates the soul, translates it into the
spiritual world, from whence this earth cannot but appear a little, yes, a
very little thing; even as heaven appeared before, while the soul was
groveling in the earth. Grace brings a man into a new world: where this
earthly world is reputed but a stage of vanity, a howling wilderness, a
valley of tears.
God has hung the sign of vanity at the door of all
created enjoyments: yet how do men throng into the house, calling and
looking for something that is satisfying; even after it has been a thousand
times told them, that there is no such thing in it, it is not to be found
there, Isa. 57:10, "You are wearied in the greatness of your way: yet said
you not, There is no hope." Why are men so foolish? The truth of the matter
lies here—they do not see by the light of grace, they do not spiritually
discern that sign of vanity. They have often, indeed, made a rational
discovery of it: but can that truly wean the heart from the world? Nay, no
more than painted fire can burn off the prisoner's bands. But the light of
grace, is the light of life, powerful and efficacious.
(6.) To sum up all. In regeneration, the mind is
enlightened in the knowledge of spiritual things.
1 John 2:20,
"You have an unction from the Holy One," that is, from Jesus Christ, Rev.
3:18. It is an allusion to the sanctuary, whence the holy oil was brought to
anoint the priest, "and you know all things" necessary to salvation. Though
men be not book-learned, if they are born again, they are Spirit-learned;
for all such are taught of God, John 6:45. The Spirit of regeneration
teaches them what they did not know before. And what they knew by the ear
only, he teaches them over again as by the eye.
The light of grace is an overcoming light, determining
men to assent to divine truths on the mere testimony of God. It is no easy
thing for the mind of man to acquiesce in divine revelation. Many pretend
great respect to the Scriptures; whom, nevertheless, the clear Scripture
testimony will not divorce from their preconceived opinions. But this
illumination will make men's minds run, as willing captives, after Christ's
chariot wheels, which they are ready to allow to drive over, and "cast down"
their "imaginations, and every high thing which exalts itself against the
knowledge of God," 2 Cor. 10:5. It will bring them to "receive the kingdom
of God as a little child," Mark 10:15, who thinks he has sufficient ground
to believe anything—if his father do but say it is so.
2. The WILL is renewed.
The Lord takes away
the stony heart, and gives a heart of flesh, Ezek. 36:26, and so from
stones—he raises up children to Abraham. Regenerating grace is powerful
and efficacious, and gives the will a new turn. It does not indeed force
it—but sweetly, yet powerfully draws it, so that his people are willing
in the day of his power, Psalm 110:3. There is heavenly oratory in the
Mediators lips to persuade sinners, Psalm 45:2, "Grace is poured into your
liPsalm" There are cords of a man, and bands of love in his hands, to draw
them after him, Hos. 11:4. Love makes a net for elect souls, which will
infallibly catch them, and bring them to land. The cords of Christ's love
are strong cords: and they need to be so, for every sinner is heavier than a
mountain of brass; and Satan, together with the heart itself, draws the
contrary way. But love is strong as death; and the Lord's love to the soul
he died for, is the strongest love; which acts so powerfully, that it must
come off victorious.
(1.) The will is cured of its utter inability to will
what is good.
While the opening of the prison to those who are
bound, is proclaimed in the gospel, the Spirit of God comes and opens the
prison door, goes to the prisoner, and, by the power of his grace, makes his
chains fall off; breaks the bonds of iniquity, with which he was held in
sin, so as he could neither will nor do anything truly good; and brings him
forth into a large place, "working in him both to will and to do of his good
pleasure," Phil. 2:13. Then it is that the soul, that was fixed to the
earth, can move heavenward; the withered hand is restored, and can be
stretched out.
(2.) There is wrought in the will a fixed aversion to
evil.
In regeneration, a man gets a new spirit put within him,
Ezek. 36:26; and that spirit strives against the flesh, Gal. 5:17. The sweet
morsel of sin, so greedily swallowed down—he now loathes, and would
sincerely be rid of it, even as willingly as one who had drunk a cup of
poison would vomit it up again. When the spring is stopped, the mud lies in
the well unmoved; but when once the spring is cleared, the waters, springing
up, will work the mud away by degrees. Even so, while a man continues in an
unregenerate state, sin lies at ease in the heart; but as soon as the Lord
strikes the rocky heart with the rod of his strength, in the day of
conversion, grace is "in him a well of water, springing up into everlasting
life," John 4:14, working away natural corruption, and gradually purifying
the heart, Acts 15:9. The renewed will rises up against sin, strikes at the
root thereof, and the branches too. Lusts are now grievous, and the soul
endeavors to starve them; the corrupt nature is the source of all evil, and
therefore the soul will be often laying it before the great Physician. O,
what sorrow, shame, and self-loathing fill the heart, in the day that grace
makes its triumphant entrance into it! For now the madman has come to
himself, and the remembrance of his follies cannot but cut him to the heart.
(3.) The will is endowed with an inclination, bent, and
propensity to good.
In its depraved state, it lay quite another
way, being prone and bent to evil only: but now, by the operation of the
omnipotent, all-conquering arm, it is drawn from evil to good, and gets
another turn. As the former was natural, so this is natural too, in regard
to the new nature given in regeneration, which has its holy strivings, as
well as the corrupt nature has its sinful lustings, Gal. 5:17. The will, as
renewed, points towards God and godliness.
When God made man, his will, in respect of its
intention, was directed towards God, as his chief end. In respect of its
choice, it pointed towards that which God willed.
When man unmade himself, his will was framed to the very
reverse hereof: he made himself his chief end, and his own will his law.
But when man is new made, in regeneration, grace
rectifies this disorder in some measure, though not perfectly. because we
are but renewed in part, while in this world. It brings back the sinner out
of himself, to God, as his chief end, Psalm 73:25, "Whom have I in heaven
but you? and there is none upon earth that I desire besides you." Phil.
1:21, "For me to live is Christ." It makes him to deny himself, and whatever
way he turns, to point habitually towards God, who is the center of the
gracious soul, its home, its "dwelling place in all generations," Psalm
90:1.
By regenerating grace, the will is brought into a
conformity to the will of God. It is conformed to his preceptive
will, being endowed with holy inclinations, agreeable to every one of his
commands. The whole law is impressed on the gracious soul: every part of it
is written on the renewed heart. Although remaining corruption makes such
blots in the writing, that oft-times the man himself cannot read it—yet he
who wrote it can read it at all times; it is never quite blotted out, nor
can be. What he has written, he has written; and it shall stand: "For this
is the covenant – I will put my laws into their mind, and write them in
their hearts," Heb. 8:10. It is a covenant of salt, a perpetual covenant.
By regenerating grace, the will is also conformed to his
providential will; so that the man would no more be master of his own
direction, nor carve out his lot for himself. He learns to say, from his
heart, "The will of the Lord be done." "He shall choose our inheritance for
us," Psalm 47:4. Thus the will is disposed to fall in with those things
which, in its depraved state, it could never be reconciled to. Particularly,
[1.] The soul is reconciled to the covenant of peace.
The Lord God proposes a covenant of peace to sinners, a covenant which he
himself has framed, and registered in the Bible: but they are not pleased
with it. Nay, unregenerate hearts cannot be pleased with it. Were it put
into their hands to frame it according to their minds, they would blot many
things out of it which God has put in, and put in many things which God has
kept out. But the renewed heart is entirely satisfied with the covenant, 2
Sam. 23:5, "He has made with me an everlasting covenant, ordered in all
things and sure; this is all my salvation, and all my desire." Though the
covenant could not be brought down to their depraved will, their will is, by
grace, brought up to the covenant: they are well pleased with it; there is
nothing in it which they would have out, nor is anything left out of it
which they would have in.
[2.] The will is disposed to receive Christ Jesus the
Lord. The soul is content to submit to him. Regenerating grace
undermines, and brings down the towering imaginations of the heart, raised
up against its rightful Lord; it breaks the iron sinew, which kept the
sinner from bowing to him; and disposes him to be no more stiff-necked—but
to yield. He is willing to have on the yoke of Christ's commands, to take
up the cross, and to follow him. He is content to take Christ on any terms,
Psalm 110:3, "Your people shall be willing in the day of your power."
The mind being savingly enlightened, and the will
renewed, the sinner is thereby determined and enabled to answer the gospel
call. So the chief work in regeneration is done; the fort of the heart is
taken; there is room made for the Lord Jesus Christ in the inmost parts of
the soul; the inner door of the will being now opened to him, as well as the
outer door of the understanding.
In one word, Christ is passively received into the heart;
he is come into the soul, by his quickening Spirit, whereby spiritual life
is given to the man, who in himself was dead in sin. His first vital act we
may conceive to be an active receiving of Jesus Christ, discerned in his
glorious excellencies; that is a believing on him, a closing with him, as
discerned, offered and exhibited in the word of his grace, the glorious
Gospel: the immediate effect of which is union with him, John 1:12, 13, "To
as many as received him to them gave he power," or privilege, "to become the
sons of God, even to those who believe on his name: which were born not of
blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man—but of God."
Eph. 3:17, "That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith."
Christ having taken the heart by storm, and triumphantly
entered into it, in regeneration, the soul by faith yields itself to him, as
it is expressed, 2 Chron. 30:8. Thus, this glorious King who came into the
heart, by his Spirit, dwells in it by faith. The soul, being drawn, runs;
and being effectually called, comes.
3. In regeneration there is a happy change made on the
AFFECTIONS; they are both rectified and regulated.
(1.) Regeneration rectifies the affections, placing them
on suitable objects.
2 Thess. 3:5, "The Lord direct your hearts
into the love of God." The regenerate man's desires are rectified; they are
set on God himself, and the things above. He, who before cried with
the world, "Who will show us any good?" has changed his note, and says,
"Lord, lift up the light of your countenance upon us," Psalm 4:6. Before, he
saw no beauty in Christ, for which he was to be desired; but now
Christ is all he desires, he is altogether lovely, Cant. 5:16. The main
stream of his desires is turned to run towards God; for there is the one
thing he desires, Psalm 27:4.
He desires to be holy as well as happy; and rather
to be gracious than great.
His hopes, which before were low, and fastened
down to things on earth—are now raised, and set on the glory which is to be
revealed. He entertains the hope of eternal life, grounded on the word of
promise, Tit. 1:2. Which hope he has, as an anchor of the soul, fixing the
heart under trials, Heb 6:19. It puts him upon purifying himself, even as
God is pure, 1 John 3:3. For he is begotten again unto a lively hope, 1 Pet.
1:3.
His love is raised, and set on God himself, Psalm
18:1; on his holy law, Psalm 119:97. Though it strikes against his most
beloved lust, he says, "The law is holy, and the commandment holy, and just,
and good," Rom. 7:12. He loves the ordinances of God," Psalm 84:1, "How
amiable are your tabernacles, O Lord Almighty!" Being passed from death unto
life, he loves the brethren, 1 John 3:14, the people of God, as they are
called, 1 Pet. 2:10. He loves God for himself; and what is God's, for his
sake. Yes, as being a child of God, he loves his own enemies. His heavenly
Father is compassionate and benevolent; "He makes his sun to rise on the
evil and on the good; and sends rain on the justand on the unjust:"
therefore, he is in like manner disposed, Matt. 5:44, 45.
His hatred is turned against sin—both in himself
and others, Psalm 101:3, "I hate the work of those who turn aside, it shall
not cleave to me." He groans under the body of it, and longs for
deliverance, Rom. 7:24, "O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from
the body of this death?"
His joys and delights are in God the Lord, in the
light of his countenance, in his law, and in his people, because they are
like him.
Sin is what he chiefly fears: it is a fountain of
sorrow to him now, though formerly a spring of pleasure.
(2.) Regeneration regulates the affections, which are
placed on SUITABLE objects.
Our affections, when placed on the
creature, are naturally exorbitant. When we joy in it, we are apt to overjoy;
and when we sorrow, we are ready to sorrow overmuch: but grace bridles these
affections, clips their wings, and keeps them within bounds, that they don't
overflow all their banks. It makes a man "hate his father, and mother, and
wife, and children; yes, and his own life also," comparatively; that is, to
love them less than he loves God, Luke 14:26.
Grace also rectifies LAWFUL affections; bringing them
forth from right principles, and directing them to right ends. There may be
unholy desires after Christ and his grace; as when men desire Christ, not
from any love to him—but merely out of love to themselves. "Give us of your
oil," said the foolish virgins, "for our lamps are gone out," Matt. 25:8.
There may be an unsanctified sorrow for sin; as when one sorrows for it, not
because it is displeasing to God—but only because of the wrath annexed to
it, as did Pharaoh, Judas, and others. So a man may love his father and
mother from mere natural principles, without any respect to the command of
God binding him thereto. But grace sanctifies the affections, in such cases,
making them to run in a new channel of love to God, respect to his commands,
and regard to his glory.
Again, grace raises the affections where they are too
low. It gives the chief seat in them to God, and pulls down all other
rivals, whether people or things, making them lie at his feet. Psalm 73:25,
"Whom have I in heaven but you? and there is none upon earth that I desire
besides you." He is loved for himself, and other people or things for his
sake. What is lovely in them, to the renewed heart, is some ray of the
divine goodness appearing in them: for unto gracious souls they shine only
by borrowed light. This accounts for the saints loving all men; and yet
hating those who hate God, and despising the wicked as vile people. They
hate and despise them for their wickedness; there is nothing of God in that,
and therefore nothing lovely nor honorable in it: but they love them for
their commendable qualities or perfections, whether natural or moral;
because, in whomever these things are, they are from God, and can be traced
to him as their fountain.
Finally, regenerating grace sets the affections so firmly
on God, that the man is disposed, at God's command, to leave his hold of
everything else, in order to keep his hold of Christ; to hate father and
mother, in comparison with Christ, Luke 14:26. It makes even lawful
enjoyments, like Joseph's mantle to hang loose about a man, that he may
leave them, when he is in danger of being ensnared by holding them.
If the stream of our affections has never been turned, we
are, doubtless, going down the stream into the pit. If "the lust of the eye,
the lust of the flesh, and the pride of life," have the throne in our
hearts, which should be possessed by the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit; if we
never had so much love to God, as to ourselves; if sin has been somewhat
bitter to us—but never so bitter as suffering, never so bitter as the pain
of being weaned from it: truly we are strangers to this saving change of
regeneration. For grace turns the affections upside down, whenever it comes
into the heart.
4. The CONSCIENCE is renewed.
As a new light
is set up in the soul, in regeneration, conscience is enlightened,
instructed and informed. That candle of the Lord, Prov. 20:27, is now
snuffed and brightened; so that it shines, and sends forth its light into
the most retired corners of the heart: discovering sins which the soul was
not aware of before; and, in a special manner, discovering the corruption or
depravity of nature—that seed and spawn whence all actual sins proceed. This
produces the new complaint, Rom. 7:24, "O wretched man that I am! who shall
deliver me from the body of this death?"
Conscience, which lay sleeping in the man's bosom before,
is now awakened, and makes its voice to be heard through the whole soul;
therefore, there is no more rest for him in the sluggard's bed; he must get
up and be doing, arise, "haste, and escape for his life." It powerfully
incites to obedience, even in the most spiritual acts, which lie not within
the view of the natural conscience; and powerfully restrains from sin, even
from those sins which do not lie open to the observation of the world. It
urges the sovereign authority of God, to which the heart is now reconciled,
and which it willingly acknowledges. And so it engages the man to his duty,
whatever be the hazard from the world; for it fills the heart so with the
fear of God—that the force of the fear of man is broken. This has engaged
many to put their life in their hand, and follow the cause of Christ, which
they once despised, and resolutely walk in the path they formerly abhorred,
Gal. 1:23, "He who persecuted us in times past, now preaches the faith which
once he destroyed."
Guilt now makes the conscience smart. It has bitter
remorse for sins past—which fills the soul with anxiety, sorrow, and
self-loathing. And every new reflection on these sins is apt to affect,
and make its wounds bleed afresh with regret. It is made tender, in point of
sin and duty, for the time to come: being once burnt, it dreads the fire,
and fears to break the hedge where it was formerly bitten by the serpent.
Finally, the renewed conscience drives the sinner to
Jesus Christ, as the only Physician who can draw out the sting of guilt; and
whose blood alone can purge the conscience from dead works, Heb. 9:14,
refusing all ease offered to it from any other hand. This is an evidence
that the conscience is not only awakened—as it may be in an unregenerate
state; but oiled also, with regenerating grace.
5. As the MEMORY
lacked not its share of
depravity, it is also bettered by regenerating grace. The memory is
weakened, with respect to those things that are not worth their room
therein; and men are taught to forget injuries, and drop their resentments,
Matt. 5:44, 45, "Do good to those who hate you, and pray for those who
despitefully use you – that you may be," that is, appear to be, "the
children of your Father who is in heaven."
It is strengthened for spiritual things. We have
Solomon's receipt for an ill memory, Prov. 3:1, "My son," says he, "forget
not my law." But how shall it be kept in mind? "Let your heart keep my
commandments." Grace makes a heart-memory, even where there is no good
head-memory, Psalm 119:11, "Your word have I hid in my heart." The
heart, truly touched with the powerful sweetness of truth, will help the
memory to retain what is so relished. If divine truths made deeper
impressions on our hearts, they would impress themselves with more force on
our memories, Psalm 119:93, "I will never forget your precepts, for with
them you have quickened me."
Grace sanctifies the memory. Many have large—but
unsanctified memories, which serve only to gather knowledge, whereby to
aggravate their condemnation: but the renewed memory serves to "remember his
commandments—to do them," Psalm 103:18. It is a sacred storehouse,
from whence a Christian is furnished in his way to Zion; for faith and hope
are often supplied out of it, in a dark hour. It is the storehouse of former
experiences; and these are the believer's way-marks, by noticing of which he
comes to know where he is, even in a dark time. Psalm 42:6, "O my God, my
soul is cast down within me: therefore will I remember you from the land of
Jordan," etc. It also helps the soul to godly sorrow and self-loathing,
presenting old guilt anew before the conscience, and making it bleed afresh,
though the sin be already pardoned; Psalm 25:7, "Remember not the sins of my
youth." Where unpardoned guilt is lying on the sleeping conscience, it is
often employed to bring in a word, which in a moment sets the whole soul on
the stir; as when "Peter remembered the words of Jesus – he went out and
wept bitterly," Matt. 26:75. The word of God laid up in a sanctified memory,
serves a man to resist temptations, puts the sword in his hand against his
spiritual enemies, and is a light to direct his steps in the way of true
religion and righteousness.
6. There is a change made on the BODY
, and the
members thereof, in respect of their use; they are consecrated to the Lord.
Even "the body is – for the Lord," 1 Cor. 6:13. It is "the temple of the
Holy Spirit," ver. 19. The members thereof, which were formerly "instruments
of unrighteousness unto sin," become "instruments of righteousness unto
God," Rom. 6:13, "servants to righteousness unto holiness," ver. 19. The
eye, that conveyed sinful imaginations into the heart, is under a
covenant, Job 31:1, to do so no more; but to serve the soul, in viewing the
works of God, and reading the word of God. The ear, that had often
been death's porter, to let in sin, is turned to be the gate of life, by
which the word of life enters the soul. The tongue, that set on fire
the whole course of nature, is restored to the office it was designed for by
the Creator; namely, to be an instrument of glorifying him, and setting
forth his praise. In a word, the whole man is for God, in soul and body,
which by this blessed change are made his.
7. This gracious change shines forth in the LIFE.
Even the outward man is renewed. A new heart makes newness of life. When
"the king's daughter is all glorious within, her clothing is of wrought
gold," Psalm 45:13. "The single eye" makes "the whole body full of light,"
Matt. 6:22. This change will appear in every part of a man's life;
particularly in the following things.
(1.) In the change of his COMPANY.
Formerly,
he despised the company of the saints—but now they are "the excellent, in
whom is all his delight," Psalm 16:3. "I am a companion of all who fear
you," says the royal psalmist, Psalm 119:63. A renewed man joins himself
with the saints; for he and they are like-minded, in that which is their
main work and business; they have all one new nature: they are all traveling
to Immanuel's land, and converse together in the language of Canaan. In vain
do men pretend to true religion, while ungodly company is their choice; for
"a companion of fools shall be destroyed," Prov. 13:20. Religion will make a
man shy of throwing himself into an ungodly family, or any unnecessary
familiarity with wicked men; as one who is healthy will beware of going into
an infected house.
(2.) In his RELATIVE capacity, he will be a new man.
Grace makes men gracious in their several relations, and naturally leads
them to the conscientious performance of relative duties. It does not only
make good men and good women—but makes good subjects, good husbands, good
wives, children, servants, and, in a word, good relatives in the church,
commonwealth, and family. It is a just exception made against the religion
of many, namely, that they are bad relatives, they are bad husbands, wives,
masters, servants, etc. How can we prove ourselves to be new creatures, if
we be just such as we were before, in our different relations? 2 Cor. 5:17,
"Therefore, if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are
passed away; behold, all things are become new."
Real godliness will gain a testimony to a man, from the
consciences of his nearest relations; though they know more of his sinful
infirmities than others do, as we see in the case, 2 Kings 4:1, "Your
servant my husband is dead, and you know that he did fear the Lord."
(3.) In the way of his following his worldly BUSINESS,
there is a great change.
It appears to be no more his all, as it
was before. Though saints apply themselves to worldly business, as well as
others—yet their hearts are not swallowed up in it. It is evident that they
are carrying on a trade with heaven, as well as a trade with earth, Phil.
3:20, "For our conversation is in heaven." They go about their employment in
the world, as a duty laid upon them by the Lord of all, doing their lawful
business as the will of God, Eph. 6:7, working, because he has said, "You
shall not steal."
(4.) Such have a special concern for the advancement of
the kingdom of Christ in the world
: they espouse the interests of
religion, and "prefer Jerusalem above their chief joy," Psalm 137:6. However
privately they live, grace gives them a public spirit, will concern itself
in the ark and work of God, in the Gospel of God, and in the people of God,
even in those of them whom they never saw. As children of God, they
naturally care for these things. They have a new concern for the spiritual
good of others: no sooner do they taste of the power of grace themselves—but
they are inclined to set up to be agents for Christ and holiness in the
world; as appears in the case of the woman of Samaria, who when Christ had
manifested himself to her, "went her way into the city, and said unto the
men, Come, see a man which told me all things that ever I did: is not this
the Christ?" John 4:28, 29.
They have seen and felt the evil of sin, and therefore
pity the world lying in wickedness. They would gladly pluck the brands
out of the fire, remembering that they themselves were plucked out of it.
They labor to commend religion to others, both by word and example; and
rather deny themselves the liberty in indifferent things, than, by the
uncharitable use of it, destroy others; 1 Cor. 8:13, "Therefore, if meat
make my brother to sin, I will eat no flesh while the world stands, lest I
make my brother to sin."
(5.) In their use of LAWFUL COMFORTS, there is a great
change.
They rest not in them, as their end; but use them as
means to help them in their way. They draw their satisfaction from the
higher springs—even while lower springs are running. Thus Hannah, having
obtained a son, rejoiced not so much in the gift, as in the giver, 1 Sam.
2:1, "And Hannah prayed and said, My heart rejoices in the Lord." Yes, when
the comforts of life are gone, they can exist without them, and "rejoice in
the Lord although the fig-tree do not blossom," Hab. 3:17, 18.
Grace teaches to use the conveniences of the present life
as pilgrims; and to show a holy moderation in all things. The heart,
which formally reveled in these things without fear, is now shy of being
over much pleased with them. Being apprehensive of danger, it uses them
warily; as the dogs of Egypt run, while they lap their water out of the
river Nile, for fear of the crocodiles that are in it.
(6.) This change shines forth in the man's performance of
PIOUS DUTIES.
He who lived in the neglect of them will do so no
more, if once the grace of God enter into his heart. If a man be new-born,
he will desire the sincere milk of the word 1 Pet. 2:2, 3. Whenever the
prayerless person gets the Spirit of grace, he will be in him a Spirit of
supplication, Zech. 12:10. It is as natural for one that is born again to
pray, as for the new-born babe to cry. Acts 9:11, "Behold, he prays!"
His heart will be a temple for God, and his house a church. His devotion,
which before was superficial and formal, is now spiritual and lively; for as
much as heart and tongue are touched with a live coal from heaven: and he
rests not in the mere performance of duties, as careful only to get his task
done—but in every duty seeks communion with God in Christ; justly
considering them as means appointed of God for that end, and reckoning
himself disappointed if he miss of it.
Thus far of the NATURE of regeneration.
II. I come to show WHY this change is called
regeneration, a being born again.
It is so called, because of the
resemblance between natural and spiritual birth, which lies in the following
particulars.
1. Natural birth is a MYSTERIOUS thing: and so is
spiritual birth.
John 3:8, "The wind blows where it wills, and
you hear the sound thereof—but can not tell whence it comes and where it
goes: so is every one that is born of the Spirit." The work of the Spirit
is felt; but his way of working is a mystery we cannot comprehend. A new
light is let into the mind, and the will is renewed; but how that light is
conveyed there, how the will is fettered with cords of love, and how the
rebel is made a willing captive—we can no more tell, than we can tell "how
the bones grow in the womb of her that is with child," Eccl. 11:5. As a man
hears the sound of the wind, and finds it stirring—but knows not where it
begins, and where it ends, "so is every one that is born of the Spirit."
He finds the change that is made upon him; but how it is produced he knows
not. One thing he may know, that whereas he was blind, now he sees. But
"the seed of grace" "springs and grows up—he knows not how," Mark 4:26, 27.
2. In both, the creature comes to a being it had not
before.
The child is not, until it be born; and a man has no
gracious being, no being in grace, until he is re-born. Regeneration is not
so much the curing of a sick man, as "the quickening of a dead man," Eph.
2:1-5. Man in his depraved state, is a mere nonentity in grace, and is
brought into a new being by the power of Him "who calls things that are, not
as though they were;" being "created in Jesus Christ unto good works," Eph.
2:10. Therefore, our Lord Jesus, to give ground of hope to the Laodiceans,
in their wretched and miserable state, proposes himself as "the beginning of
the creation of God," Rev. 3:14, namely, the active beginning of it; "for
all things were made by him" at first, John 1:3. From whence they might
gather, that as he made them when they were nothing, he could make them over
again, when worse than nothing; the same hand that made them his creatures,
could make them new creatures.
3. As the child is PASSIVE in
birth, so is the child of God in regeneration. The one
contributes nothing to its own birth; neither does the other contribute
anything, by way of efficiency, to its own regeneration: for though a man
may lay himself down at the pool—yet he has no hand in moving the water, no
power in performing the cure. One is born the child of a king, another the
child of a beggar: the child has no hand at all in this difference. God
leaves some in their depraved state; others he brings into a state of grace,
or regeneracy. If you be thus honored, no thanks to you; for "who makes you
to differ from another? and what have you that you did not receive?" 1 Cor.
4:7.
4. There is a wonderful
combination of parts in both births. Admirable is the structure
of man's body, in which there is such a variety of organs; nothing lacking,
nothing superfluous. The psalmist, considering his own body, looks on it as
a piece of marvelous work; "I am fearfully and wonderfully made," says he,
Psalm 139:14, "and marvelously wrought in the womb," ver. 15; where I know
not how the bones grow, any more than I know what is doing in the lowest
parts of the earth. In natural birth we are marvelously wrought, like a
piece of needle-work; as the word imports: even so it is in regeneration.
Psalm 45:14, "She shall be brought unto the King in raiment of needle-work,"
raiment marvelously wrought. It is the same word in both texts. What that
raiment is, the apostle tells us, Eph. 4:24. It is "the new man, which after
God is created in righteousness and true holiness." This is the raiment
which he says, in the same place, we must put on; not excluding the imputed
righteousness of Christ. Both are marvelously wrought, as masterpieces of
the manifold wisdom of God. O the wonderful combination of graces in the new
creature! O glorious creature, new-made after the image of God! It is grace
for grace in Christ, which makes up this new man, John 1:16; even as in
bodily birth, the child has member for member in the parent; has every
member which the parent has in a certain proportion.
5. All this, in both cases, has its rise from that which
is in itself very small and inconsiderable.
O the power of God,
in making such a creature of the corruptible seed, and much more in bringing
forth the new creature from such small beginnings! It is as "the little
cloud, like a man's hand," which spread, until "heaven was black with clouds
and wind, and there was a great rain," 1 Kings 18:44, 45. A man gets a word
from God at a sermon, which hundreds besides him hear, and let slip: but it
remains with him, works in him, and never leaves him, until the little world
is turned upside down by it; that is, until he becomes a new man. It is like
the dream which got up into Ahasuerus's head, and cut off sleep from his
eyes, Esther 6:1, which proved a spring of such motions as never ceased,
until Mordecai, in royal pomp, was brought on horseback through the streets,
proud Haman trudging at his foot; the same Haman afterwards hanged, Mordecai
advanced, and the church delivered from Haman's hellish plot. "The grain of
mustard seed becomes a tree," Matt. 13:31, 32. God loves to bring great
things out of small beginnings.
6. Natural birth is carried on by degrees.
So
is regeneration. It is with the soul, ordinarily, in regeneration, as with
the blind man cured by our Lord, who first "saw men as trees walking,"
afterward "saw every man clearly," Mark 8:23-25. It is true, regeneration
being, strictly speaking, a passage from death to life, the soul is
quickened in a moment; like as when the embryo is brought to perfection in
the womb, the soul is infused into the lifeless lump. Nevertheless, we may
imagine somewhat like conception in spiritual regeneration, whereby the soul
is prepared for quickening; and the new creature is capable of growth, 1
Peter 2:2, and of having life more abundantly, John 10:10.
7. In both there are new relations.
The
regenerate may call God, Father; for they are his children, John 1:12, 13,
"begotten of him," 1 Pet. 1:3. The bride, the Lamb's wife, that is, the
church, is their mother, Gal. 4:26. They are related, as brethren and
sisters, to angels and glorified saints; "the family of heaven." They are of
the heavenly stock: the lowest of them, "the base things of the world," 1
Cor. 1:28, the kinless things, as the word imports, who cannot boast of the
blood that runs in their veins, are yet, by their new birth, near of kin
with the excellent in the earth.
8. There is a likeness between the parent and the child.
Everything that generates, generates its like; and the regenerate
are "partakers of the divine nature," 2 Peter 1:4. The moral perfections of
the divine nature are, in measure and degree, communicated to the renewed
soul: thus the divine image is restored; so that, as the child resembles the
father, the new creature resembles God himself, being holy as he is holy.
9. As there is no birth without pain, both to the mother
and to the child, so there is great pain in bringing forth the new creature.
The children have more or less of these birth-pains, whereby they
are "pricked in their heart," Acts 2:37. The soul has sore pains when under
conviction and humiliation. "A wounded spirit who can bear?" The mother is
pained; "Zion travails," Isaiah 66:8. She sighs, groans, cries, and has hard
labor, in her ministers and members—to bring forth children to her Lord,
Gal. 4:19, "My little children, of whom I travail in birth again, until
Christ be formed in you." Never was a mother more feelingly touched with
"joy, that a child is born into the world," than she is upon the new birth
of her children.
But, what is more remarkable than all this, we read not
only of our Lord Jesus Christ's "travail," or toil "of soul," Isaiah
53:11—but, what is more directly to our purpose, of his "pains," or pangs,
as of one travailing in childbirth; so the word used, Acts 2:24, properly
signifies. Well might he call the new creature, as Rachel called her
dear-bought son, Benoni, that is, the son of my sorrow; and as she
called another, Naphtali, that is, my wrestling: for the pangs of
that travail put him to "strong crying and tears," Heb. 5:7; yes, into an
"agony and bloody sweat," Luke 22:44. And in the end he died of these pangs;
they became to him "the pains of death," Acts 2:24.
III. I shall now APPLY this doctrine.
Use 1. By what is said, you may try whether you are in
the state of grace or not.
If you are brought out of the state of
wrath or ruin, into the state of grace or salvation, you are new creatures,
you are born again.
Objection. But you will say, How shall we know whether we
are born again, or not?
Answer. Were you to ask me, if the sun were risen, and
how you should know whether it were risen or not? I would bid you look up to
the heavens, and see it with your eyes. And, would you know if the light be
risen in your heart? Look in, and see. Grace is light, and discovers
itself.
Look into your mind, see if it has been
illuminated in the knowledge of God. Have you been inwardly taught what God
is? Were your eyes ever turned inward to see yourself; the sinfulness of
your depraved state, the corruption of your nature; the sins of your heart
and life? Were you ever led into a view of the exceeding sinfulness of sin?
Have your eyes seen King Jesus in his beauty; the manifold wisdom of God in
him, his transcendent excellence, and absolute fullness and sufficiency,
with the vanity and emptiness of all things else?
Next, What change is there on your will? Are the
fetters taken off, wherewith it was formerly bound up from moving
heavenward? Has your will got a new turn? Do you find an aversion to sin,
and an inclination to good, wrought in your heart? Is your soul turned
towards God, as your chief end? Is your will new-molded into some measure of
conformity to the preceptive and providential will of God? Are you heartily
reconciled to the covenant of peace, and fixedly disposed to the receiving
of Christ, as he is offered in the gospel?
And as to a change on your affections, are they
rectified, and placed on right objects? Are your desires going out after
God? Are they to his name, and the remembrance of him? Isaiah 26:8.
Are your hopes in him? Is your love set upon him,
and your hatred set against sin? Does your offending a good God affect your
heart with sorrow, and do you fear sin more than suffering? Are your
affections regulated? Are they, with respect to created comforts, brought
down, as being too high; and with respect to God in Christ, raised up, as
being too low? Has he the chief seat in your heart? And are all your lawful
worldly comforts and enjoyments laid at his feet?
Has your conscience been enlightened and awakened,
refusing all ease—but from the application of the blood of a Redeemer? Is
your memory sanctified, your body consecrated to the service
of God? And are you now walking in newness of life? Thus you may
discover whether you are born again or not.
But, for your farther help in this matter, I will
discourse a little of another sign of regeneration, namely, the
love of the brethren; an evidence
whereby the weakest and most timorous saints have often had comfort, when
they could have little or no consolation from other marks proposed to them.
This the apostle lays down, 1 John 3:14, "We know that we have passed from
death unto life, because we love the brethren." It is not to be thought that
the apostle, by the brethren in this place means brethren by a common
relation to the first Adam—but to the second Adam, Christ Jesus; because,
however true it is, that universal benevolence, a good will to the whole
race of mankind, takes place in the renewed soul, as being a lively
lineament of the divine image—yet the whole context speaks of those that are
"the sons of God," ver. 1, 2; "children of God," ver. 10; "born of God," ver.
9; distinguishing between "the children of God," and "the children of the
devil," ver. 10; between those that are "of the devil," ver. 8, 12, and
those that are "of God," ver. 10.
The text itself comes in as a reason why we should not
marvel that the world hates the brethren, the children of God, ver. 13. How
can we marvel at it, seeing the love of the brethren is an evidence of one's
having passed from death to life? Therefore, it were absurd to look for that
love among the men of the world, who are dead in trespasses and sins. They
cannot love the brethren; no wonder, then, that they hate them. Wherefore it
is plain, that by brethren here, are meant brethren by regeneration.
Now, in order to set this mark of regeneration in a true
light, consider these three things.
1. This love to the brethren, is a love to them as such.
Then do we love them in the sense of the text, when the grace, or image of
God in them, is the chief motive of our love to them. When we love the
godly for their godliness, the saints for their sanctity or holiness, then
we love God in them, and so may conclude were born of God; for "every one
that loves him that begat, loves him also that is begotten of him," 1 John
5:1. Hypocrites may love saints, on account of civil relations to them;
because of their obliging conversation; for their being of the same opinion
as to outward religious matters; and on many other such like accounts,
whereby wicked men may be induced to love the godly. But happy they who love
them merely for grace in them; for their heaven-born temper and disposition;
who can pick this pearl even out of infirmities in and about them; lay hold
of it, and love them for it.
2. It is a love that will be given to all in whom the
grace of God appears. Those who love one saint, because he is a saint,
will have "love to all the saints," Eph. 1:15. They will love all, who, in
their view, bear the image of God. Those who cannot love a gracious person
in rags—but confine their love to those who wear rich clothing, have not
this love to the brethren in them. Those who confine their love to a church
party, to whom God has not confined his grace, are souls too narrow to be
put among the children. In whatever points men differ from us, in their
judgment or way; yet if they appear to agree with us, in love to God, and
our Savior Jesus Christ, and in bearing his image, we shall love them as
brethren, if we are of the heavenly family.
3. If this love be in us, the more grace any person
appears to be possessed of, he will be the more beloved by us. The more
vehemently the holy fire of grace does flame in any, the hearts of true
Christians will be the more warmed in love to them. It is not with the
saints as with many other men, who make themselves the standards for others;
and love them so far as they think they are like themselves. But, if they
seem to outshine and darken them, their love is turned to hatred and envy,
and they endeavor to detract from the due praise of their exemplary piety;
because nothing is liked with them, in the practice of religion, that goes
beyond their own measure; what of the life and power of religion appears in
others, serves only to raise the serpentine grudge and envy in their
pharisaical hearts.
But as for those who are born again, their love and
affection to the brethren bears proportion to the degrees of the divine
image they discern in them.
Now, if you would improve these
to the knowledge of your state, I would advise you,
1. To set apart some time, when
you are at home, for a review of your case, to try your state by what has
been said. Many have comfort and clearness as to their state, at
a sermon, who in a little time lose it again; because while they hear the
word preached, they make application of it; but do not consider these things
more deliberately and leisurely when alone. The impression is too sudden and
short to give lasting comfort; and it is often so inconsiderate, that it has
bad consequences. Therefore, set about this work at home, after earnest and
serious prayer to God for his help in it. Complain not of your lack of time
while the night follows the busy day; nor of place, while fields and houses
are to be got.
2. Renew your repentance before the Lord.
Guilt lying on the conscience, unrepented of, may darken all your evidences
and marks of grace. It provokes the Spirit of grace to withdraw; and when he
goes, our light ceases. It is not a fit time for a saint to read his
evidences, when the candle is blown out by some conscience-wounding guilt.
3. Exert the powers of the new nature; let the graces of
the divine Spirit discover themselves in you by action.
If you
would know whether there is sacred fire in your bosom, or not, you must blow
the coal; for although it exist, and be a live coal—yet if it be under the
ashes, it will give you no light. Settle in your hearts a firm purpose,
through the grace that is in Christ Jesus, to comply with every known duty,
and watch against every known sin, having readiness of mind to be instructed
in what you know not.
If gracious souls would thus manage their inquiries into
their state, it is likely that they would have a comfortable outcome. And if
others would take such a solemn review, and make trial of their state,
impartially examining themselves before the tribunal of their consciences,
they might have a timely discovery of their own sinfulness; but the neglect
of self-examination leaves most men under sad delusions as to their state,
and deprives many saints of the comfortable sight of the grace of God in
them.
But that I may afford some farther help to true
Christians in their inquiries into their state, I
shall propose and briefly answer some cases or doubts, which may
possibly hinder some people from the comfortable view of their happy state.
The children's bread must not be withheld; though, while it is held forth to
them, the dogs should snatch at it.
Case 1. "I doubt if I be regenerate, because I know not
the precise time of my conversion; nor can I trace the particular steps of
the way in which it was brought to pass."
Answer. Though it is very desirable to be able to give an
account of the beginning, and the gradual advances, of the Lord's work upon
our souls, as some saints can distinctly do, the manner of the Spirit's
working being still a mystery—yet this is not necessary to prove the truth
of grace. Happy he who can say, in this case, as the blind man in the
Gospel, "One thing I know, that whereas I was blind, now I see." As, when we
see flame, we know there is fire, though we know not how or when it began;
so the truth of grace may be discerned in us, though we know not how or
when it was dropped into our hearts. If you can perceive the happy
change which is wrought on your soul; if you find your mind is enlightened,
your will inclined to comply with the will of God in all things; especially
to fall in with the divine plan of salvation, through a crucified Redeemer;
in vain do you trouble yourself, and refuse comfort, because you know not
how and what way it was brought about.
Case 2. "If I were a new creature, sin could not prevail
against me as it does."
Answer. Though we must not lay pillows for hypocrites to
rest their heads upon, who indulge themselves in their sins, and make the
doctrine of God's grace subservient to their lusts, lying down contentedly
in the bond of iniquity like men that are fond of golden chains; yet it must
be owned, "the just man falls seven times a day;" and iniquity may prevail
against the children of God.
But if you are groaning under the weight of the body of
death, the corruption of your nature; loathing yourself for the sins of your
heart and life; striving to mortify your lusts; fleeing daily to the blood
of Christ for pardon; and looking to his Spirit for sanctification: though
you may be obliged to say with the Psalmist, "Iniquities prevail against
me;" yet you may add with him, "As for our transgressions you shall purge
them away," Psalm 65:3. The new creature does not yet possess the house
alone: it dwells by the side of an ill neighbor, namely, remaining
corruption, the relics of depraved nature. They struggle together for the
mastery. "The flesh lusts against the spirit, and the spirit against the
flesh," Gal. 5:17. And sometimes corruption prevails, bringing the child of
God into captivity to the law of sin, Rom. 7:23. Let not therefore the
prevailing of corruption make you, in this case, conclude you are none of
God's children: but let it humble you, to be the more watchful, and to
thirst the more intensely after Jesus Christ, his blood and Spirit; and that
very disposition will evidence a principle of grace in you, which seeks the
destruction of sin that prevails so often against you.
Case 3. "I find the motions of sin in my heart more
violent since the Lord began his work on my soul, than they were before that
time. Can this consist with a change of my nature?"
Answer. Dreadful is the case of many, who, after God has
had a remarkable dealing with their souls, tending to their reformation,
have thrown off all bonds, and have become grossly and openly immoral and
profane; as if the devil had returned into their hearts with seven spirits
worse than himself. All I shall say to such people is, that their state is
exceedingly dangerous; they are in danger of sinning against the Holy
Spirit: therefore, let them repent, before it be too late.
But if it be not thus with you; though corruption is
stirring itself more violently than formerly, as if all the forces of hell
were raised, to hold fast, or bring back, a fugitive; yet these stirrings
may consist with a change of your nature. When the restraint of grace is
newly laid upon corruption, it is no wonder if it acts more vigorously than
before, "warring against the law of the mind," Rom. 7:23. The motions of
sin may really be most violent, when the new principle is brought in to cast
it out. The sun sending its beams through the window, discovers the motes in
the house, and their motions, which were not seen before; so the light of
grace may discover the risings and actings of corruption, in another manner
than ever the man saw them before, though they really do not rise nor act
more vigorously.
Sin is not quite dead in the regenerate soul; it is but
dying, and dying a lingering death, being crucified: no wonder there are
great fightings, when it is sick at the heart, and death is at the door.
Besides, temptations may be more in number, and stronger, while Satan is
striving to bring you back, who are escaped, than while he only endeavored
to retain you: "After you were illuminated, you endured a great fight of
affliction," says the apostle to the Hebrews, chap. 10:32. But "cast not
away your confidence," ver. 35. Remember his "grace is sufficient for you,"
and "the God of peace shall bruise Satan under your feet shortly."
Pharaoh and his Egyptians never made such a formidable
appearance against the Israelites, as at the Red Sea, after they were
brought out of Egypt: but then were the pursuers nearest to a total
overthrow, Exod., chap. 14. Let not this case, therefore, make you raze the
foundations of your trust; but be you emptied of self, and strong in the
Lord, and in the power of his might, and you shall come off victorious.
Case 4. "But when I compare my love to God with my love
to some created enjoyments, I find the pulse of my affections beat stronger
to the creature than to the Creator.
How then can I call him
Father? Nay, alas! those turnings of heart within me, and glowings of
affection to him, which I had, are gone; so that I fear all the love which I
ever had to the Lord has been but a fit and flash of affection, such as
hypocrites often have.
Answer. It cannot be denied, that the predominant love
of the world is a certain mark of an unregenerate state, 1 John 2:15,
"If any man loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him."
Nevertheless, those are not always the strongest affections which are most
violent. A man's affections may be more moved, on some occasions, by an
object that is little regarded, than by another that is exceedingly beloved;
even as a little brook sometimes makes more noise than a great river. The
strength of our affections is to be measured by the firmness and fixedness
of the root, not by the violence of their actings.
Suppose a person meeting with a friend, who has been long
abroad, finds his affections more vehemently acting towards his friend on
that occasion, than towards his own wife and children; will he therefore
say, that he loves his friend more than them? Surely not. Even so, although
the Christian may find himself more moved in his love to the creature, than
in his love to God; yet it is not therefore to be said, that he loves the
creature more than God, seeing love to God is always more firmly rooted in a
gracious heart, than love to any created enjoyment whatever: as appears when
competition arises in such a manner, that the one or other is to be
foregone.
Would you, then, know your case? Retire into your own
hearts, and there lay the two in the balance, and try which of them weighs
down the other. Ask yourself, as in the sight of God, whether you would part
with Christ for the creature, or part with the creature for Christ, if you
were left to your choice in the matter? If you find your heart disposed to
part with what is dearest to you in the world for Christ at his call, you
have no reason to conclude you love the creature more than God; but, on the
contrary, that you love God more than the creature, although you do not feel
such violent motions in the love of God, as in the love of some created
thing, Matt. 10:37, "He who loves father or mother more than me, is not
worthy of me." Luke 14:26, "If any man comes to me, and hates not his father
and mother – he cannot be my disciple." From which texts compared, we may
infer, that he who hates, that is, is ready to part with, father and mother
for Christ, is, in our Lord's account, one that loves them less than him,
and not one who loves father and mother more than him.
Moreover, you are to consider that there is a twofold
love to Christ.
1. There is a SENSIBLE love to him, which is felt as
a dart in the heart, and makes a holy love-sickness in the soul, arising
from lack of enjoyment, as in that case of the spouse, Cant. 5:8, "I charge
you, O daughters of Jerusalem, if you find my beloved, that you tell him
that I am sick of love:" or else from the fullness of it, as in Cant. 2:5,
"Stay me with flagons, comfort me with apples; for I am sick of love." These
glowings of affection are usually wrought in young converts, who are
ordinarily made "to sing in the days of their youth," Hos. 2:15.
While the fire-edge is upon the young convert, he looks
upon others, reputed to be godly, and not finding them in such a temper or
disposition as himself, he is ready to censure them; and to think there is
far less religion in the world than indeed there is. But when his own cup
comes to settle below the brim, and he finds that in himself which made him
question the state of others, he is more humbled, and feels more and more
the necessity of daily recourse to the blood of Christ for pardon, and to
the Spirit of Christ for sanctification; and thus grows downwards in
humiliation, self-loathing, and self-denial.
2. There is a RATIONAL love to Christ, which, without
these sensible emotions felt in the former case, evidences itself by a
dutiful regard to the divine authority and command. When one bears such a
love to Christ, though the vehement stirrings of affection be lacking—yet he
is truly tender of offending a gracious God; endeavors to walk before him
unto all well pleasing; and is grieved at the heart for what is displeasing
unto him, 1 John 5:3, "For this is the love of God, that we keep his
commandments."
Now, although that sensible love does not always continue
with you, you have no reason to deem it a hypocritical fit, while the
rational love remains with you; any more than a loving and faithful wife
needs question her love to her husband, when her fondness is abated.
Case 5. "The attainments of hypocrites and apostates are
a terror to me, and come like a shaking storm on me, when I am about to
conclude, from the marks of grace, which I seem to find in myself, that I am
in the state of grace."
Answer. These things should, indeed, stir us up to a most
serious and impartial examination of ourselves; but ought not to keep us in
a continued suspense as to our state. Sirs, you see the outside of
hypocrites, their duties, their gifts, their tears, and so on—but you see
not their inside; you do not discern their hearts, the bias of their
spirits. Upon what you see of them, you found a judgment of charity as to
their state; and you do well to judge charitably in such a case, because you
cannot know the secret springs of their actions: but you are seeking, and
ought to have, a judgment of certainty as to your own state; and therefore
are to look into that part of religion, which none in the world but
yourselves can discern in you, and which you can as little see in others.
A hypocrite's region may appear far greater than that of
a sincere soul: but that which makes the greatest figure in the eyes of men,
is often of least worth before God. I would rather utter one of those
groans which the apostle speaks of, Rom. 8:26, than shed Esau's tears, have
Balaam's prophetic spirit, or the joy of the stony-ground hearer. "The fire
that shall try every man's work," will try, not of what bulk it is—but "of
what kind it is," 1 Cor. 3:13. Though you may know what bulk of religion
another has, and that it is more bulky than your own—yet God does not regard
that; why, then, do you make such a matter of it? It is impossible for you,
without divine revelation, certainly to know of what sort another man's
religion is: but you may certainly know what sort your own is of, without
extraordinary revelation; otherwise the apostle would not exhort the saints
to "give diligence to make their calling and election sure," 2 Peter 1:10.
Therefore, the attainments of hypocrites and apostates should not disturb
you, in your serious inquiry into your own state.
I will tell you two things, wherein the lowest saints go
beyond the most refined hypocrites:
1. In denying themselves; renouncing all confidence in
themselves, and their own works; acquiescing in, being well pleased with,
and venturing their souls upon, God's plan of salvation through Jesus
Christ, Matt. 5:3, "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the
kingdom of heaven." And, chap. 11:6, "Blessed is he who shall not be
offended in me." Phil. 3:3, "We are the true circumcision, who worship God
in the spirit, and rejoice in Jesus Christ, and have no confidence in the
flesh."
2. In a real hatred of all sin; being willing to part
with every lust, without exception, and to comply with every duty which the
Lord makes, or shall make known to them, Psalm 119:6, "Then shall I not
be ashamed, when I have respect unto all your commandments." Try yourselves
by these.
Case 6. "I see myself fall so far short of the saints
mentioned in the Scriptures, and of several excellent people of my own
acquaintance, that, when I look on them, I can hardly look on myself as one
of the same family with them."
Answer. It is, indeed, matter of humiliation, that we do
not get forward to that measure of grace and holiness which we see is
attainable in this life. This should make us more vigorously press towards
the mark: but surely it is from the devil, that weak Christians make a rack
for themselves, of the attainments of the strong. To yield to the
temptation, is as unreasonable as for a child to dispute away his relation
to his father, because he is not of the same stature with his elder
brethren. There are saints of several sizes in Christ's family; some
fathers, some young men, and some little children, 1 John 2:13, 14.
Case 7. "I never read in the word of God, nor did I ever
know of a child of God, so TEMPTED, and so left of God, as I am; and
therefore, no saint's case being like mine, I can only conclude that I am
none of their number.
Answer. This objection arises to some from their
ignorance of the Scriptures, and the experience of Christians. It is
profitable, in this case, to impart the matter to some experienced Christian
friend, or to some godly minister. This has been a blessed means of peace to
some people; while their case, which appeared to them to be singular, has
been proved to have been the case of other saints. The Scriptures give
instances of very horrid temptations, wherewith the saints have been
assaulted. Job was tempted to blaspheme; this was the great thing the
devil aimed at in the case of that great saint, Job 1:11, "He will curse you
to your face." Chap. 2:9, "Curse God and die." Asaph was tempted to
think it was in vain to be pious, which was in effect to throw off all
religion, Psalm 73:13, "Verily I have cleansed my heart in vain." Yes,
Christ himself was tempted to "cast himself down from a pinnacle of the
temple," and to "worship the devil," Matt. 4:6-9. And many of the children
of God have not only been attacked with—but have actually yielded to very
gross temptation for a time. Peter denied Christ, and cursed and
swore that he knew him not, Mark 14:71. Paul, when a persecutor,
compelled even saints to blaspheme, Acts 26:10, 11.
Many of the saints can, from their sad experience, bear
witness to very gross temptations, which have astonished their spirits, made
their very flesh to tremble, and sickened their bodies. Satan's fiery darts
make terrible work; and will cost some pains to quench them, by a vigorous
managing of the shield of faith, Eph. 6:16. Sometimes he makes such
desperate attacks, that never was one more put to it, in running to and fro;
without intermission, to quench the fire-balls incessantly thrown into his
house by an enemy, designing to burn the house about him, than the poor
tempted saint is, to repel Satanical injections. But these injections, these
horrid temptations, though they are a dreadful affliction, they are not the
sins of the tempted, unless they make them theirs by consenting to
them. They will be charged upon the tempter alone, if they be not consented
to; and will no more be laid to the charge of the tempted party, than a
bastard's being laid down at a chaste man's door will fix guilt upon him.
But suppose neither minister nor private Christian, to
whom you go, can tell you of any who has been in your case; yet you ought
not thence to infer that your case is singular, far less to give up hope:
for it is not to be thought, that every godly minister, or private
Christian, has had experience of all the cases which a child of God may be
in. We need not doubt that some have had distresses known only to God and
their own consciences; and so to others these distresses are as if they had
never been. Yes, and though the Scriptures contain suitable directions for
every case which a child of God can be in, and these illustrated with a
sufficient number of examples; yet it is not to be imagined that there are
in the Scriptures perfect instances of every particular case incident to the
saints. Therefore, though you cannot find an instance of your case in the
Scripture—yet bring your case to it, and you shall find suitable remedies
prescribed there for it.
Study rather to make use of Christ for your case, who has
a remedy for all diseases, than to know if ever any was in your case. Though
one should show you an instance of your case, in an undoubted saint; yet
none could promise that it would certainly give you ease: for a scrupulous
conscience would readily find out some difference. And if nothing but a
perfect conformity of another's case to yours will satisfy, it will be hard,
if not impossible, to satisfy you; for it is with people's cases, as with
their natural faces: though the faces of all men are of one make, and some
are so very like others, that, at first view, we are ready to take them for
the same; yet if you view them more accurately, you will see something in
every face, distinguishing it from all others; though possibly you cannot
tell what it is. Therefore I conclude, that if you can find in yourselves
the marks of regeneration, proposed to you from the word, you ought to
conclude you are in the state of grace, though your case were singular,
which is indeed unlikely.
Case 8. "The AFFLICTIONS I meet with are strange and
unusual. I doubt if ever a child of God was tried with such dispensations of
providence as I am."
Answer. Much of what was said on the preceding case, may
be helpful in this. Holy Job was assaulted with this temptation, Job 5:1,
"To which of the saints will you turn?" But he rejected it, and held fast
his integrity. The apostle supposes that Christians may be tempted to "think
it strange concerning the fiery trial," 1 Pet. 4:12. But they have need of
larger experience than Solomon's, who will venture to say, "See this is
new," Eccl. 1:10. What though, in respect of the outward dispensations of
providence, "it happen to you according to the work of the wicked?" yet you
may be just notwithstanding; according to Solomon's observation, Eccl. 8:14.
Sometimes we travel in ways where we can neither perceive the prints of the
foot of man or beast; yet we cannot from thence conclude that there was
never any there before us: so, though you can not perceive the footsteps of
the flock, in the way of your affliction, you must not therefore conclude
that you are the first that ever traveled that road.
But what if it were so? Some one saint or other must be
first, in drinking of each bitter cup the rest have drunk of. What warrant
have you or I to limit the Holy One of Israel to one trodden path, in his
dispensations towards us? "Your way is in the sea, and your path in the
great waters; and your footsteps are not known," Psalm 77:19. If the Lord
should carry you to heaven by some retired road, so to speak, you would have
no ground of complaint. Learn to allow sovereignty a latitude; be at your
duty; and let no affliction cast a veil over any evidences you otherwise
have for your being in the state of grace: for "no man knows either love or
hatred by all that is before him," Eccl. 9:1.
Use 2.
You who are strangers to this new
birth, be convinced of the absolute necessity of it. Are all who are in the
state of grace born again? then you have neither part nor lot in it, who are
not born again. I must tell you in the words of our Lord and Savior, and O
that he would speak them to your hearts! "You must be born again," John 3:7.
For your conviction, consider these few things.
1. Regeneration is absolutely necessary to qualify you to
do anything really good and acceptable to God.
While you are not born
again, your best works are but glittering sins; for though the matter of
them is good, they are quite marred in the performance. Consider,
(1.) That without regeneration there is no faith, and
"without faith it is impossible to please God," Heb. 11:6. Faith is a
vital act of the new-born soul. The evangelist, showing the different
treatment which our Lord Jesus had from different people, some receiving
him, some rejecting him, points at regenerating grace as the true cause of
that difference, without which, never any one would have received him. He
tells us, that "as many as received him," were those "who were born – of
God," John 1:11-13. Unregenerate men may presume; but true faith they cannot
have. Faith is a flower that grows not in the field of nature. As the
tree cannot grow without a root, neither can a man believe without the new
nature, whereof the principle of believing is a part.
(2.) Without regeneration a man's works are dead works.
As is the principle, so must the effects be: if the lungs are rotten,
the breath will be unsavoury; and he who at best is dead in sin, his works
at best will be but dead works. "Unto those who are defiled and unbelieving,
is nothing pure – being abominable, and disobedient, and unto every good
work reprobate," Tit. 1:15, 16. Could we say of a man, that he is more
blameless in his life than any other in the world; that he reduces his body
with fasting; and has made his knees as hard as horns with continual
praying; but he is not born again: that exception would mar all. As if one
should say, There is a well proportioned body—but the soul is gone; it is
but a dead lump. This is a melting consideration. You do many things
materially good; but God says, All these things avail not—as long as I see
the old nature reigning in the man. Gal. 6:15, "For in Jesus Christ neither
circumcision avails anything, nor uncircumcision—but a new creature."
If you are not born again,
(1.) All your REFORMATION is nothing in the sight of God.
You have shut the door—but the thief is still in the house. It may be you
are not what once you were; yet you are not what you must be, if ever you
would see heaven; for "except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom
of God," John 3:3.
(2.) Your PRAYERS are an "abomination to the Lord," Prov.
15:8. It may be, others admire your seriousness; you cry as for your life;
but God accounts of the opening of your mouth, as one would account of the
opening of a grave full of rottenness, Rom. 3:13, "Their throat is an open
sepulcher." Others are affected with your prayers; which seem to them, as if
they would rend the heavens; but God accounts them but as the howling of a
dog: "They have not cried unto me with their hearts, when they howled upon
their beds," Hos. 7:14. Others take you for a wrestler and prevailer with
God; but he can take no delight in you nor your prayers, Isaiah 66:3, "Their
offerings will not be accepted. When such people sacrifice an ox, it is no
more acceptable than a human sacrifice. When they sacrifice a lamb or bring
an offering of grain, it is as bad as putting a dog or the blood of a pig on
the altar! When they burn incense, it is as if they had blessed an idol."
Why, because you are yet "in the gall of bitterness, and bond of iniquity!"
(3.) All you have DONE for God, and his cause in the
world, though it may be followed with temporal rewards—yet it is lost as to
divine acceptance. This is clear from the case of Jehu, who was indeed
rewarded with a kingdom, for his executing due vengeance upon the house of
Ahab; as being a work good for the matter of it, because it was commanded of
God, as you may see, 2 Kings 9:7; yet was he punished for it in his
posterity, because he did it not in a right manner, Hos. 1:4, "I will avenge
the blood of Jezreel upon the house of Jehu." God looks chiefly to the
heart: and if so, truly, though the outward appearance be fairer than that
of many others—yet the hidden man of your heart is loathsome; you look well
before men—but are not, as Moses was, fair to God, as the margin has it,
Acts 7:20. O, what a difference is there between the characters of Asa and
Amaziah! "The high places were not removed; nevertheless, Asa's heart was
perfect with the Lord all his days," 1 Kings 15:14. "Amaziah did that which
was right in the sight of the Lord—but not with a perfect heart," 2 Chron.
25:2. It may be you are zealous against sin in others, and do admonish them
of their duty, and reprove them for their sin; and they hate you, because
you do your duty: but I must tell you, God hates you too, because you do it
not in a right manner; and that you can never do, while you are not born
again.
(4.) All your STRUGGLES AGAINST SIN in your own heart and
life, are nothing. The proud Pharisee afflicted his body with fasting, and
God struck his soul, in the mean time, with a sentence of condemnation, Luke
18. Balaam struggled with his covetous temper, to that degree, that though
he loved the wages of unrighteousness—yet he would not win them by cursing
Israel: but he died the death of the wicked, Numb. 31:8. All you do,
while in an unregenerate state, is for yourself: therefore, it will fare
with you as with a subject, who having reduced the rebels, puts the crown on
his own head, and loses all his good service and his head too.
Objection. "If it be thus with us, then we need never
perform any religious duty at all."
Answer. The conclusion is not just. No inability of yours
can excuse from the duty which God's law lays on you: and there is less evil
in doing your duty, than there is in the omission of it. But there is a
difference between omitting a duty, and doing it as you do it. A man orders
the masons to build him a house. If they quite neglect the work, that will
not be accepted; if they build on the old rotten foundation, neither will
that please: but they must raze the foundation, and build on firm ground.
"Go and do likewise." In the mean time, it is not in vain even for you to
seek the Lord: for though he regards you not—yet he may have respect to his
own ordinances, and do you good thereby, as was said before.
2. Without regeneration there is no communion with God.
There is a society on earth, whose "fellowship is with the Father, and with
his Son Jesus Christ," 1 John 1:3. But out of that society, all the
unregenerate are excluded; for they are all enemies to God, as you heard
before at large. Now, "can two walk together, except they be agreed?" Amos
3:3. They are all unholy: and "what communion has light with darkness –
Christ with Belial?" 2 Cor. 6:14, 15. They may have a show and semblance of
holiness; but they are strangers to true holiness, and therefore "without
God in the world." How sad is it, to be employed in religious duties—yet to
have no fellowship with God in them! You would not be content with your
food, unless it nourished you; nor with your clothes, unless they kept you
warm: and how can you satisfy yourselves with your duties, while you have no
communion with God in them?
3. Regeneration is absolutely
necessary to qualify you for heaven. None go to heaven but those
who are made meet for it, Col. 1:12. As it was with Solomon's temple, 1
Kings 6:7, so is it with the temple above. It is "built of stone made ready
before it is brought there;" namely, of "living stones," 1 Pet. 2:5,
"wrought for the selfsame thing," 2 Cor. 5:5; for they cannot be laid in
that glorious building just as they come out of the quarry of depraved
nature. Jewels of gold are not fit for swine, and far less jewels of glory
for unrenewed sinners. Beggars, in their rags, are not fit for kings'
houses; nor sinners to enter into the King's palace, without the raiment of
needlework, Psalm 45:14, 15. What wise man would bring fish out of the water
to feed in his meadows? or send his oxen to feed in the sea? Just as little
are the unregenerate fit for heaven, or heaven fit for them. It would
never be relished by them.
The unregenerate would find fault with heaven on several
accounts. As,
(1.) That it is a strange country. Heaven is the renewed
man's native country: his Father is in heaven; his mother is Jerusalem,
which is above, Gal. 4:26. He is born from above, John 3:3. Heaven is his
home, 2 Cor. 5:1; therefore, he looks on himself as a stranger on this
earth, and his heart is homeward, Heb. 11:16, "They desire a better country,
that is, a heavenly country." But the unregenerate man is the man of the
earth, Psalm 10:18; written in the earth, Jer. 17:13. Now, "Home is home, be
it ever so homely:" therefore, he minds earthly things, Phil. 3:19. There is
a peculiar sweetness in our native soil; and with difficulty are men drawn
to leave it, and dwell in a strange country. In no case does that prevail
more than in this; for unrenewed men would forfeit their pretensions to
heaven, were it not that they see they cannot make a better bargain.
(2.) There is nothing in heaven that they delight in, as
agreeable to the carnal heart, Rev. 21:27, "For there shall never enter into
it anything that defiles." When Mahomet explained his paradise to be a place
of sensual delights, his religion was greedily embraced; for that is the
heaven men naturally choose. If the covetous man could get bags full of gold
there, and the voluptuous man could promise himself his sensual delights,
they might be reconciled to heaven, and fitted for it too; but since it is
not so, though they may utter fair words about it, truly it has little of
their hearts.
(3.) Every corner there is filled with that which of all
things they have the least liking for; and that is holiness, true holiness,
perfect holiness. Were one who abhors swine's flesh, bidden to a feast where
all the dishes were of that sort of meat—but variously prepared, he would
find fault with every dish at the table, notwithstanding all the art used to
make them palatable. It is true, there is joy in heaven—but it is holy joy;
there are pleasures in heaven—but they are holy pleasures; there are places
in heaven—but it is holy ground: that holiness which in every place, and in
everything there—would mar all to the unregenerate.
(4.) Were they carried there, they would not only change
their place, which would be a great heart-break—but they would change their
company too. Truly, they would never like the company there, who care not
for communion with God here; nor value the fellowship of his people, at
least in the vitals of practical godliness. Many, indeed, mix themselves
with the godly on earth, to procure a name to themselves, and to cover the
sinfulness of their hearts; but that trade cannot be managed there.
(5.) They would never like the employment of heaven, they
care so little for it now. The business of the saints there would be an
intolerable burden to them, seeing it is not agreeable to their nature. To
be taken up in beholding, admiring, and praising him that sits on the
throne, and the Lamb, would be work unsuitable, and therefore unsavoury to
an unrenewed soul.
(6.) They would find this fault with it, that the whole
is of everlasting continuance. This would be a killing ingredient in it to
them. How would such as now account the Sabbath day a burden, brook the
celebration of an everlasting Sabbath in the heavens!
4. Regeneration is absolutely
necessary to your being admitted into heaven, John 3:3. No heaven
without it. Though carnal men could digest all those things which make
heaven so unsuitable for them—yet God will never bring them there.
Therefore, born again you must be, else you shall never see heaven; you
shall perish eternally. For,
(1.) There is a bill of exclusion against you in the
court of heaven, and against all of your sort; "Except a man be born again,
he cannot see the kingdom of God," John 3:3. Here is a bar before you, that
men and angels cannot remove. To hope for heaven, in the face of this
peremptory sentence, is to hope that God will recall his word, and sacrifice
his truth and faithfulness to your safety; which is infinitely more than to
hope that "the earth shall be forsaken for you, and the rock removed out of
its place."
(2.) There is no holiness without regeneration. It is
"the new man which is created in true holiness," Eph. 4:24. And no heaven
without holiness; for "without holiness no man shall see the Lord," Heb.
12:14. Will the gates of pearl be opened, to let in dogs and swine?
No; their place is outside, Rev. 22:15. God will not admit such into the
holy place of communion with him here; and will he admit them into the
holiest of all hereafter? Will he take the children of the devil, and permit
them to sit with him in his throne? Or, will he bring the unclean into the
city, whose street is pure gold? Be not deceived; grace and glory are but
two links of one chain, which God has joined, and no man shall put asunder.
None are transplanted into the paradise above—but out of the nursery of
grace below. If you are unholy while in this world, you will be forever
miserable in the world to come.
(3.) All the unregenerate are without Christ, and
therefore have no hope while in that case, Eph. 2:12. Will Christ prepare
mansions of glory for those who refuse to receive him into their hearts?
Nay, "Since you neglected all my counsel and did not accept my correction,
I, in turn, will laugh at your calamity. I will mock when terror strikes
you, when terror strikes you like a storm and your calamity comes like a
whirlwind, when trouble and stress overcome you. Proverbs 1:25-27
(4.) There is an infallible connection between a finally
unregenerate state and damnation, arising from the nature of the things
themselves; and from the decree of heaven which is fixed and immovable, as
mountains of brass, John 3:3; Rom. 8:6, "To be carnally minded is death."
An unregenerate state is hell in the bud. It is eternal destruction in
embryo, growing daily, though you do not discern it. Death is painted on
many a fair face, in this life. Depraved nature makes men fit to be
partakers of the inheritance of the damned, in utter darkness.
[1.] The heart of stone within you, is a sinking
weight. As a stone naturally goes downward, so the hard stony heart tends
downward to the bottomless pit. You are hardened against reproof; though
you are told your danger—yet you will not see it, you will not believe it.
But remember that the conscience being now seared with a hot iron, is a sad
presage of everlasting burnings.
[2.] Your unfruitfulness under the means of grace,
fits you for the axe of God's judgments, Matt. 3:10, "Every tree that brings
not forth good fruit, is hewn down, and cast into the fire." The withered
branch is fuel for the fire, John 15:6. Tremble at this, you despisers of
the Gospel: if you be not thereby made fit for heaven, you will be like the
barren ground, bearing briers and thorns, "near unto cursing, whose end is
to be burned," Heb. 6:8.
[3.] The hellish dispositions of mind, which
discover themselves in profanity of life, fit the guilty for the regions of
horror. A profane life will have a miserable end. "Those who do such
things, shall not inherit the kingdom of God," Gal. 5:19-21. Think on this,
you prayerless people, you mockers of religion, you cursers and swearers,
you unclean and unjust people, who have not so much as moral honesty to keep
you from lying, cheating, and stealing. What sort of a tree do you think it
is, upon which these fruits grow? Is it a tree of righteousness, which the
Lord has planted? Or is it not such a one as cumbers the ground, which God
will pluck up for fuel to the fire of his wrath?
[4.] Your being dead in sin, makes you fit to be
wrapped in flames of brimstone, as a winding-sheet; and to be buried in the
bottomless pit, as in a grave. Great was the cry in Egypt, when the
first-born in each family was dead; but are there not many families, where
all are spiritually dead together? Nay, many there are who are twice
dead, plucked up by the root. Sometimes in their life they have been roused
by apprehensions of death, and its consequences; but now they are so far on
in their way to the land of darkness, that they hardly ever have the least
glimmering of light from heaven.
[5.] The darkness of your minds presages eternal
darkness. O, the horrid ignorance with which some are plagued; while others,
who have got some rays of the light of reason in their heads, are utterly
void of spiritual light in their hearts! If you knew your case, you would
cry out, Oh! darkness! darkness! darkness! making way for the blackness of
darkness forever! The face-covering is upon you already, as condemned
people; so near are you to everlasting darkness. It is only Jesus Christ who
can stop the execution, pull the napkin off the face of the condemned
malefactor, and put a pardon in his hand; Isa. 25:7, "He will destroy, in
this mountain, the face of covering cast over all people," that is, the
face-covering cast over the condemned, as in Haman's case, Esther. 7:8, "As
the word went out of the king's mouth, they covered Haman's face."
[6.] The chains of darkness you are bound with in the
prison of your depraved state, Isa. 61:1, fits you to be cast into the
burning fiery furnace. Ah, miserable men! Sometimes their consciences stir
within them, and they begin to think of amending their ways. But alas! they
are in chains, they cannot do it. They are chained by the heart: their lusts
cleave so fast to them, that they cannot, nay, they will not shake them off.
Thus you see what affinity there is between an unregenerate state, and
the state of the damned, the state of absolute and irretrievable misery.
Be convinced, then, that you must be born again; put a high value on the new
birth, and eagerly desire it.
The text tells you, that the word is the seed, whereof
the new creature is formed: therefore, take heed to it, and entertain it, as
it is your life. Apply yourself to the reading of the Scriptures. You who
cannot read, get others to read it to you. Wait diligently on the preaching
of the word, as by divine appointment the special mean of conversion; "for –
it pleased God, by the foolishness of preaching, to save those who believe,"
1 Cor. 1:21. Therefore cast yourselves in Christ's way; reject not the means
of grace, lest you be found to judge yourselves unworthy of eternal life.
Attend carefully to the word preached. Hear every sermon, as if you were
hearing for eternity; take heed that the fowls of the air steal away this
seed from you, as it is sown. "Give yourself wholly to it," 1 Tim. 4:15.
"Receive it not as the word of men—but, as it is in truth, the word of God,"
1 Thess. 2:13. Hear it with application, looking on it as a message sent
from heaven, to you in particular; though not to you only, Rev. 3:22, "He
who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says unto the churches." Lay it
up in your hearts; meditate upon it; and be not as the unclean beasts, which
chew not the cud. But by earnest prayer, beg that the dew of Heaven may fall
on your heart, that the seed may spring up there.
More particularly,
(1.) Receive the testimony of the word of God, concerning
the misery of an unregenerate state, the sinfulness thereof, and the
absolute necessity of regeneration.
(2.) Receive its testimony concerning God, what a holy
and just One he is.
(3.) Examine your ways by it; namely, the thoughts of
your heart, the expressions of your lips, and the tenor of your life. Look
back through the several periods of your life; and see your sins from the
precepts of the word, and learn, from its threatening, what you are liable
to on account of these sins.
(4.) By the help of the same word of God, view the
corruption of your nature, as in a mirror which manifests our ugly face in a
clear manner. Were these things deeply rooted in the heart, they might be
the seed of that fear and sorrow, on account of your soul's state, which are
necessary to prepare and stir you up to look after a Savior. Fix your
thoughts upon him offered to you in the Gospel, as fully suited to your
case; having, by his obedience unto death, perfectly satisfied the justice
of God, and brought in everlasting righteousness. This may prove the seed of
humiliation, desire, hope and faith; and move you to stretch out the
withered hand unto him, at his own command.
Let these things sink deeply into your hearts, and
improve them diligently. Remember, whatever you are, you must be born again;
else it had been better for you, that you had never been born. Therefore, if
any of you shall live and die in an unregenerate state, you will be
inexcusable, having been fairly warned of your danger.