John Newton's Letters
The heavenly Builder
November 11, 1775.
My dear Miss M,
Our last visit was very pleasant to myself; if anything that passed was of
service to you, we know to whom the thanks are due; for we can neither
communicate nor receive anything—but so far as he is pleased to enable us.
One reason why he often disappoints us—is that we may learn to depend on him
alone. We are prone, as you observe, to rest too much upon sensible
comforts—yet they are very desirable, only as to the measure and seasons. It
is well to be submissive to his will; to be thankful for them when we have
them, and humbly waiting for them when we have them not. They are not,
however, the proper ground of our hope; a good hope springs from such a
sense of our needs, and such a persuasion of his power and grace—as engages
the heart to venture, upon the warrant of his promises, to trust in him for
salvation.
In a sense, we are often hindering him by our impatience
and unbelief. But, strictly speaking, when he really begins the good work,
and gives us a desire which will be satisfied with nothing short of
himself—he will not be hindered from carrying it on; for he has said, I will
work, and none shall hinder it. Ah! had it depended upon myself, upon my
wisdom or faithfulness, I would have hindered him, and ruined myself long
ago! How often have I grieved and resisted his Spirit! But hereby I have
learned more of his patience and tenderness, than I could otherwise have
known.
He knows our frame, and what effects our evil nature,
fermented by the artifices of Satan, will have; he sees us from first to
last. A thousand evils arise in our hearts, a thousand wrongnesses in our
conduct, which, as they do arise, are new to ourselves, and perhaps at some
times we are ready to think we were incapable of such things; but none of
them are new to him, to whom past, present, and future are the same. The
foresight of them did not prevent his calling us by his grace. Though he
knew we were vile, and would prove ungrateful and unfaithful—yet he would be
found of us; he would knock at the door of our hearts, and gain himself an
entrance. Nor shall they prevent his accomplishing his gracious purpose. It
is our part to be abased before him, and quietly to hope and wait for his
salvation in the use of his appointed means. The power, success, and
blessing—are wholly from himself.
To make us more sensible of this, he often withdraws from
our perceptions; and as, in the absence of the sun, the wild beasts of the
forest roam abroad; so, when Jesus hides himself, we presently perceive what
is in our hearts, and what a poor shift we can make without him. When he
returns, his light chases the evils away, and we are well again.
It is your great and singular mercy, my dear Miss, that
he has taught you to seek him so early in life. You have entered in the way
of salvation—but you must not expect all at once. The work of grace is
compared to the corn, and to a building; the growth of the one, and
the carrying forward of the other, are gradual. In a building,
for instance, if it is large, there is much to be done in preparing and
laying the foundation, before the walls appear above ground; much is doing
within, when the work does not seem perhaps to advance without; and when it
is considerably forward—yet, being encumbered with scaffolds and rubbish—a
bystander sees it at a great disadvantage, and can form but an imperfect
judgment of it. But all this while the architect himself, even from the
laying of the first stone, conceives of it according to the plan and design
he has formed; he prepares and adjusts the materials, disposing each in its
proper time and place—and views it, in idea, as already finished. In due
season it is completed—but not in a day. The top-stone is fixed, and then,
the scaffolds and rubbish being removed—it appears to others as he intended
it should be.
Men, indeed, often plan what, for want of skill or
ability, or from unforeseen disappointments, they are unable to execute. But
nothing can disappoint the heavenly Builder; nor will he ever be
reproached with forsaking the work of his own hands, or beginning that which
he could not or would not accomplish; Phi. 1:6. Let us therefore be thankful
for beginnings, and patiently wait the outcome. His enemies strive to
retard the work, as they did when the Jews, by his order, set about
rebuilding the Temple. Yet it was finished, in defiance of them all.