THE ACCEPTABLE SACRIFICE;
OR,
THE EXCELLENCY OF A BROKEN
HEART:
SHOWING THE NATURE, SIGNS, AND PROPER
EFFECTS OF A CONTRITE SPIRIT.
BEING THE LAST WORKS OF THAT EMINENT
PREACHER AND FAITHFUL MINISTER OF JESUS CHRIST, MR. JOHN
BUNYAN, OF BEDFORD.
WITH A PREFACE PREFIXED THEREUNTO BY AN
EMINENT MINISTER OF THE GOSPEL IN LONDON.
London: Sold by George Larkin, at the Two
Swans without Bishopgates, 1692.
ADVERTISEMENT BY THE EDITOR.
The very excellent preface to this treatise,
written by George Cokayn, will inform the reader of the
melancholy circumstances under which it was published, and
of the author’s intention, and mode of treatment.
Very little more need be said, by way of introducing to our
readers this new edition of Bunyan’s Excellency of
a Broken Heart. George Cokayn was a gospel minister in
London, who became eventually connected with the
Independent denomination. He was a learned
man—brought up at the university—had preached
before the House of Commons—was chaplain to that
eminent statesman and historian, Whitelocke—was
rector of St. Pancras, Soper Lane—remarkable for the
consistency of his conduct and piety of his life—but
as he dared not to violate his conscience, by conformity to
ceremonies or creeds which he deemed antichristian, he
suffered under persecution, and, with upwards of two
thousand godly ministers, was ejected from his living, and
thrown upon the care of Divine Providence for daily food.
The law ordered him to be silent, and not to set forth the
glories of his Saviour; but his heavenly Father had
ordained him to preach. There was no hesitation as to whom
he would obey. At the risk of imprisonment, transportation,
and death, he preached; and God honoured his ministry, and
he became the founder of a flourishing church in Hare
Court, London. His preface bears the date of September,
1688; and, at a good old age, he followed Bunyan to the
celestial city, in 1689. It is painful to find the
author’s Baptist friends keeping aloof because of his
liberal sentiments; but it is delightful to witness the
hearty affection with which an Independent minister
recommends the work of a Baptist; and truly refreshing to
hear so learned a man commending most earnestly the work of
a poor, unlettered, but gigantic brother in the ministry.
Surely there is water enough connected with that
controversy to quench any unholy fire that differences of
opinion might ignite. George Cokayn appears to have
possessed much a kindred spirit with John Bunyan. Some of
his expressions are remarkably Bunyanish. Thus, when
speaking of the jailor, ‘who was a most barbarous,
hard-hearted wretch; yet, when God came to deal with him,
he was soon tamed, and his heart became exceeding soft and
tender.’ And when alluding to the Lord’s voice,
in softening the sinner’s heart, he says: ‘This
is a glorious work indeed, that hearts of stone should be
dissolved and melted into waters of godly sorrow, working
repentance.’
The subject of a broken heart is one of
vital importance, because it is essential to salvation. The
heart, by nature, is hard, and cannot, and will not break
itself. Angels have no power to perform this miracle of
mercy and of justice. It is the work of the Holy Spirit in
the NEW BIRTH. Some have supposed that God always prepares
the heart for this solemn, this important change, by a
stroke of his providence; but it is not so. Who dares limit
the Almighty? He takes his own way with the
sinner—one by a whisper, another by a hurricane. Some
are first alarmed by the preaching of the Word—many
by conversation with a pious friend or neighbour; some by
strokes of Providence—but all are led to a prayerful
searching of the holy oracles, until there, by the
enlightening influence of the Spirit, they find
consolation. The great question is, not as to the means,
but the fact—Have I been born again? Have I been
grafted into Christ? Do I bring forth the fruits of
godliness in mourning over my sins, and, in good words and
works, am I a living epistle known and read of
all—men, angels, devils—and of the Omniscient
God? These are the all-important inquiries which, I trust,
will deeply influence every reader. Let two of
Bunyan’s remarks make an indelible impression on
every mind: ‘God will break ALL hearts for sin,
either here to repentance and happiness, or in the world to
come to condemnation and misery.’ ‘Consider
thou must die but once; I mean but once as to this world,
for if thou, when thou goest hence, dost not die well, thou
canst not come back again and die better.’ May our
spirits be baptized into these solemn truths, and our
broken hearts be an acceptable sacrifice to God.
GEO. OFFOR.
A PREFACE TO THE READER.
The author of the ensuing
discourse—now with God, reaping the fruit of all his
labour, diligence, and success, in his Master’s
service—did experience in himself, through the grace
of God, the nature, excellency, and comfort of a truly
broken and contrite spirit. So that what is here written is
but a transcript out of his own heart: for God—who
had much work for him to do—was still hewing and
hammering him by his Word, and sometimes also by more than
ordinary temptations and desertions. The design, and also
the issue thereof, through God’s goodness, was the
humbling and keeping of him low in his own eyes. The truth
is, as himself sometimes acknowledged, he always needed the
thorn in the flesh, and God in mercy sent it him, lest,
under his extraordinary circumstances, he should be exalted
about measure; which perhaps was the evil that did more
easily beset him than any other. But the Lord was pleased
to overrule it, to work for his good, and to keep him in
that broken frame which is so acceptable unto him, and
concerning which it is said, that ‘He healeth the
broken in heart, and bindeth up their wounds’ (Psa
147:3). And, indeed, it is a most necessary qualification
that should always be found in the disciples of Christ, who
are most eminent, and as stars of the first magnitude in
the firmament of the church. Disciples, in the highest form
of profession, need to be thus qualified in the exercise of
every grace, and the performance of every duty. It is that
which God doth principally and more especially look after,
in all our approaches and accesses to him. It is to him
that God will look, and with him God will dwell, who is
poor, and of a contrite spirit (Isa 57:15, 66:2). And the
reason why God will manifest so much respect to one so
qualified, is because he carries it so becomingly towards
him. He comes and lies at his feet, and discovers a
quickness of sense, and apprehensiveness of whatever may be
dishonourable and distasteful to God (Psa 38:4). And if the
Lord doth at any time but shake his rod over him, he comes
trembling, and kisses the rod, and says, ‘It
is the Lord; let him do what seemeth him good’ (1
Sam 3:18). He is sensible he hath sinned and gone astray
like a lost sheep, and, therefore, will justify God in his
severest proceedings against him. This broken heart is also
a pliable and flexible heart, and prepared to receive
whatsoever impressions God shall make upon it, and is ready
to be moulded into any frame that shall best please the
Lord. He says, with Samuel, ‘Speak, Lord, for thy
servant heareth’ (1 Sam 3:10). And with David,
‘When thou saidst, Seek ye my face; my heart
said unto thee, Thy face, Lord, will I seek’ (Psa
27:8). And so with Paul, who tremblingly said, ‘Lord,
what wilt thou have me to do?’ (Acts 9:6).
Now, therefore, surely such a heart as this
is must needs be very delightful to God. He says to us,
‘My son, give me thine heart’ (Prov 23:26).
But, doubtless, he means there a broken heart: an unbroken
heart we may keep to ourselves; it is the broken heart
which God will have us to give to him; for, indeed, it is
all the amends that the best of us are capable of making,
for all the injury we have done to God in sinning against
him. We are not able to give better satisfaction for
breaking God’s laws, than by breaking our own hearts;
this is all that we can do of that kind; for the blood of
Christ only must give the due and full satisfaction to the
justice of God for what provocations we are at any time
guilty of; but all that we can do is to accompany the
acknowledgments we make of miscarriages with a broken and
contrite spirit. Therefore we find, that when David had
committed those two foul sins of adultery and murder,
against God, he saw that all his sacrifices signified
nothing to the expiating of his guilt; therefore he brings
to God a broken heart, which carried in it the best
expression of indignation against himself, as of the
highest respect he could show to God (2 Cor
7:11).
The day in which we live, and the present
circumstances which the people of God and these nations are
under, do loudly proclaim a very great necessity of being
in this broken and tender frame; for who can foresee what
will be the issue of these violent fermentations that are
amongst us? Who knows what will become of the ark of God?
Therefore it is a seasonable duty with old Eli to sit
trembling for it. Do we not also hear the sound of the
trumpet, the alarm of wars; and ought we not, with the
prophet, to cry out, ‘My bowels, my bowels! I am
pained at my very heart; my heart maketh a noise in me, I
cannot hold my peace,’ &c. (Jer 4:19). Thus was
that holy man affected with the consideration of what might
befall Jerusalem, the temple and ordinances of God,
&c., as the consequence of the present dark
dispensations they were under. Will not a humble posture
best become us when we have humbling providences in
prospect? Mercy and judgment seem to be struggling in the
same womb of providence; and which will come first out we
know not; but neither of them can we comfortably meet, but
with a broken and a contrite spirit. If judgment comes,
Josiah’s posture of tenderness will be the best we
can be found in; and also to say, with David, ‘My
flesh trembleth for fear of thee, and I am afraid of thy
judgments’ (Psa 119:120). It is very sad when God
smites, and we are not grieved; which the prophet complains
of, ‘Thou hast stricken them, but they have not
grieved,’ &c. ‘They have made their faces
harder than a rock, they have refused to return’ (Jer
5:3).
But such as know the power of his anger will
have a deep awe of God upon their hearts, and, observing
him in all his motions, will have the greatest
apprehensions of his displeasure. So that when he is coming
forth in any terrible dispensation, they will, according to
their duty, prepare to meet him with a humble and broken
heart. But if he should appear to us in his goodness, and
farther lengthen out the day of our peace and liberty, yet
still the contrite frame will be most seasonable; then will
be a proper time, with Job, to abhor ourselves in dust and
ashes, and to say, with David, ‘Who am I that
thou hast brought me hitherto’! (Job 42:6; 2 Sam
7:18).
But we must still know that this broken
tender heart is not a plant that rows in our own soil, but
is the peculiar gift of God himself. He that made the heart
must break the heart. We may be under heart-breaking
providences, and yet the heart remain altogether unbroken;
as it was with Pharaoh, whose heart, though it was under
the hammers of ten terrible judgments, immediately
succeeding one another, yet continued hardened against God.
The heart of man is harder than hardness itself, till God
softeneth and breaks it. Men move not, they relent not, let
God thunder never so terribly; let God, in the greatest
earnest, cast abroad his firebrands, arrows, and death, in
the most dreadful representations of wrath and judgment,
yet still man trembles not, nor is any more astonished than
if in all this God were but in jest, till he comes and
falls to work with him, and forces him to cry out, What
have I done? What shall I do?
Therefore let us have recourse to him, who,
as he gives the new heart, so also therewith the broken
heart. And let men’s hearts be never so hard, if God
comes once to deal effectually with them, they shall become
mollified and tender; as it was with those hardened Jews
who, by wicked and cruel hands, murdered the Lord of life:
though they stouted it out a great while, yet how suddenly,
when God brought them under the hammer of his Word and
Spirit, in Peter’s powerful ministry, were they
broken, and, being pricked in their hearts, cried out,
‘Men and brethren, what shall we do?’
(Acts 2:37).
And the like instance we have in the jailor,
who was a most barbarous, hard-hearted wretch; yet, when
God came to deal with him, he was soon tamed, and his heart
became exceeding soft and tender (Acts
16:29,30).
Men may speak long enough, and the heart not
at all be moved; but ‘The voice of the Lord is
powerful, the voice of the Lord is full of
majesty,’ and breaketh the rocks and cedars (Psa
29:4). He turns ‘the rock into a standing
water, the flint into a fountain of waters’ (Psa
114:8). And this is a glorious work indeed, that hearts of
stone should be dissolved and melted into waters of godly
sorrow, working repentance not to be repented of (2 Cor
7:10).
When God speaks effectually the stoutest
heart must melt and yield. Wait upon God, then, for the
softening thy heart, and avoid whatsoever may be a means of
hardening it; as the apostle cautions the Hebrews,
‘Take heed, - lest any of you be hardened through the
deceitfulness of sin’ (Heb 3:13).
Sin is deceitful, and will harden all those
that indulge it. The more tender any man is to his lust,
the more will he be hardened by it. There is a native
hardness in every man’s heart; and though it may be
softened by gospel means, yet if those means be afterwards
neglected, the heart will fall to its native hardness
again: as it is with the wax and the clay. Therefore, how
much doth it behove us to keep close to God, in the use of
all gospel-means, whereby our hearts being once softened,
may be always kept so; which is best done by repeating the
use of those means which were at first blessed for the
softening of them.
The following treatise may be of great use
to the people of God—through his blessing
accompanying it—to keep their hearts tender and
broken, when so many, after their hardness and impenitent
heart, are treasuring up wrath against the day of wrath
(Rom 2:5).
O let none who peruse this book herd with
that generation of hardened ones, but be a companion of all
those that mourn in Zion and whose hearts are broken for
their own, the church’s, and the nation’s
provocations; who, indeed, are the only likely ones that
will stand in the gap to divert judgments. When Shishak,
king of Egypt, with a great host, came up against Judah,
and having taken their frontier fenced cities, they sat
down before Jerusalem, which put them all under a great
consternation; but the king and princes upon this humbled
themselves; the Lord sends a gracious message to them by
Shemaiah the prophet, the import whereof was, That because
they humbled themselves, the Lord would not destroy them,
nor pour out his wrath upon them, by the hand of Shishak (2
Chron 12:5-7).
The greater the party is of mourning
Christians, the more hope we have that the storm impending
may be blown over, and the blessings enjoyed may yet be
continued. As long as there is a sighing party we may hope
to be yet preserved; at least, such will have the mark set
upon themselves which shall distinguish them from those
whom the slaughtermen shall receive commission to destroy
(Eze 9:4-6).
But I shall not further enlarge the porch,
as designing to make way for the reader’s entrance
into the house, where I doubt not but he will be pleased
with the furniture and provision he finds in it. And I
shall only further assure him, that this whole book was not
only prepared for, but also put into, the press by the
author himself, whom the Lord was pleased to
remove—to the great loss and unexpressible grief of
many precious souls—before the sheets could be all
wrought off.
And now, as I hinted in the beginning, that
what was transcribed out of the author’s heart into
the book, may be transcribed out of the book into the
hearts of all who shall peruse it, is the desire and prayer
of
A lover and honourer of all saints as
such,
George Cokayn
September 21, 1688
THE ACCEPTABLE SACRIFICE;
OR,
THE EXCELLENCY OF A BROKEN
HEART.
‘THE SACRIFICES OF GOD ARE A
BROKEN SPIRIT: A BROKEN AND A CONTRITE HEART, O GOD, THOU
WILT NOT DESPISE.’—Psalm 51:17
This psalm is David’s penitential
psalm. It may be fitly so called, because it is a psalm by
which is manifest the unfeigned sorrow which he had for his
horrible sin, in defiling of Bathsheba, and slaying Uriah
her husband; a relation at large of which you have in the
11th and 12th of the Second of Samuel. Many workings of
heart, as this psalm showeth, this poor man had, so soon as
conviction did fall upon his spirit. One while he cries for
mercy, then he confesses his heinous offences, then he
bewails the depravity of his nature; sometimes he cries out
to be washed and sanctified, and then again he is afraid
that God will cast him away from his presence, and take his
Holy Spirit utterly from him. And thus he goes on till he
comes to the text, and there he stayeth his mind, finding
in himself that heart and spirit which God did not dislike;
‘The sacrifices of God,’ says he,
‘are a broken spirit’; as if he should
say, I thank God I have that. ‘A broken and a
contrite heart,’ says he, ‘O God, thou wilt not
despise’; as if he should say, I thank God I have
that.
[I. THE TEXT OPENED IN THE MANY WORKINGS OF
THE HEART.]
The words consist of two parts. FIRST. An
assertion. SECOND. A demonstration of that assertion. The
assertion is this, ‘The sacrifices of God are a
broken spirit.’ The demonstration is this,
‘Because a broken and a contrite heart God will not
despise.’
In the assertion we have two things present
themselves to our consideration. First. That a
broken spirit is to God a sacrifice. Second. That it
is to God, as that which answereth to, or goeth beyond, all
sacrifices. ‘The sacrifices of God are a broken
spirit.’
The demonstration of this is plain: for that
heart God will not despise it. ‘A broken and a
contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not despise.’ Whence
I draw this conclusion: That a spirit rightly broken, a
heart truly contrite, is to God an excellent thing. That
is, a thing that goeth beyond all external duties whatever;
for that is intended by this saying, The sacrifices,
because it answereth to all sacrifices which we can offer
to God; yea it serveth in the room of all: all our
sacrifices without this are nothing; this alone is
all.
There are four things that are very
acceptable to God. The
First is The sacrifice of the body of
Christ for our sins. Of this you read (Heb 10) for there
you have it preferred to all burnt-offerings and
sacrifices; it is this that pleaseth God; it is this that
sanctifieth, and so setteth the people acceptable in the
sight of God.
Second. Unfeigned love to God is
counted better than all sacrifices, or external parts of
worship. ‘And to love him [the Lord thy God] with all
the heart, and with all the understanding, and with all the
soul, and with all the strength, and to love his
neighbour as himself, is more than all whole
burnt-offerings and sacrifices’ (Mark
12:33).
Third. To walk holily and humbly, and
obediently, towards and before God, is another. Hath the
Lord as great delight in burnt-offerings and sacrifices, as
in obeying the voice of the Lord?— ‘Behold, to
obey is better than sacrifice; and to hearken
than the fat of rams’ (Micah 6:6-8; 1 Sam
15:22).
Fourth. And this in our text is the
fourth: ‘The sacrifices of God are a broken
spirit: a broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not
despise.’
But note by the way, that this broken, this
broken and contrite heart, is thus excellent only to God:
‘O God,’ saith he, ‘THOU wilt not despise
it.’ By which is implied, the world have not this
esteem or respect for such a heart, or for one that is of a
broken and a contrite spirit. No, no, a man, a woman, that
is blessed with a broken heart, is so far off from getting
by that esteem with the world, that they are but burdens
and trouble houses wherever they are or go. Such people
carry with them molestation and disquietment: they are in
carnal families as David was to the king of Gath, troublers
of the house (1 Sam 21).
Their sighs, their tears, their day and
night groans, their cries and prayers, and solitary
carriages, put all the carnal family out of
order.[1] Hence you have them brow-beaten by
some, contemned by others, yea, and their company fled from
and deserted by others. But mark the text, ‘A broken
and a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not despise,’
but rather accept; for not to despise is with God to esteem
and set a high price upon.
[II. THE DOCTRINE, ASSERTION, DEMONSTRATION,
AND CONCLUSION, THAT A BROKEN AND TRULY CONTRITE HEART IS
AN EXCELLENT HEART.]
But we will demonstrate by several
particulars, that a broken spirit, a spirit RIGHTLY broken,
an heart TRULY contrite, is to God an excellent
thing.
First. This is evident from the
comparison, ‘Thou desirest not sacrifice, else would
I give it, thou delightest not in burnt-offering.
The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit,’
&c. Mark, he rejecteth sacrifices, offerings and
sacrifices: that is, all Levitical ceremonies under the
law, and all external performances under the gospel; but
accepteth a broken heart. It is therefore manifest by this,
were there nothing else to be said, that proves, that a
heart rightly broken, a heart truly contrite, is to God an
excellent thing; for as you see such a heart is set before
all sacrifice; and yet they were the ordinances of God, and
things that he commanded; but lo, a broken spirit is above
them all, a contrite heart goes beyond them, yea, beyond
them when put all together. Thou wilt not have the one,
thou wilt not despise the other. O brethren, a broken and a
contrite heart is an excellent thing. Have I said a broken
heart, a broken and a contrite heart is esteemed above all
sacrifices; I will add,
Second. It is of greater esteem with
God than is either heaven or earth; and that is more than
to be set before external duties. ‘Thus saith the
Lord, The heaven is my throne, and the earth
is my footstool, where is the house that ye
build unto me? and where is the place of my rest?
For all those things hath mine hand made, and all
those things have been, saith the Lord: but to this
man will I look, even to him that is poor
and of a contrite spirit, and trembleth at my word’
(Isa 66:1,2). Mark, God saith, he hath made all these
things, but he doth not say, that he will look to them,
that is, take complacency and delight in them; no, there is
that wanting in all that he hath made that should take up
and delight his heart. But now, let a broken-hearted sinner
come before him; yea, he ranges the world throughout to
find out such an one, and having found him, ‘To this
man,’ saith he, ‘will I look.’ I
say again, that such a man to him is of more value than is
either heaven or earth; ‘They,’ saith he,
‘shall wax old’; ‘they shall
perish’ and vanish away; but this man he continues:
he, as is presented to us in another place, under another
character, ‘he shall abide for ever’ (Heb
1:10-12; 1 John 2:17).
‘To this man will I
look,’ with this man will I be delighted; for so to
look doth sometimes signify. ‘Thou hast ravished my
heart, my sister, my spouse,’ saith Christ to
his humble-hearted, ‘thou hast ravished my heart with
one of thine eyes’ (Cant 4:9). While it is as a
conduit to let the rivers out of thy broken heart. I am
taken, saith he, ‘with one chain of thy neck’
(Can 4:9). Here you see he looks and is ravished, he looks
and is taken, as it saith in another place, ‘The king
is held in the galleries’; that is, is taken
with his beloved, with the dove’s eyes of his
beloved, with the contrite spirit of his people (Cant 7:5,
1:15). But it is not thus reported of him with respect to
heaven or earth: them he sets more lightly by, them he
‘reserves unto fire against the day of judgment and
perdition of ungodly men’ (2 Peter 3:7), but the
broken in heart are his beloved, his jewels.
Wherefore, what I have said as to this must
go for the truth of God, to wit, That a broken-hearted
sinner, a sinner with a contrite spirit, is of more esteem
with God than is either heaven or earth. He saith he hath
made them, but he doth not say he will look to them. He
saith they are his throne and footstool, but he doth not
say they have taken or ravished his heart. No, it is those
that are of a contrite spirit do this. But there is yet
more in the words, ‘To this man will I
look’: that is, For this man will I care, about this
man will I camp, I will put this man under my protection;
for so to look to one doth sometimes signify; and I take
the meaning in this place to be such (Prov 27:23; Jer
39:12, 40:4). ‘The Lord upholdeth all that fall, and
raiseth up all those that be bowed down’ (Psa
145:14). And the broken-hearted are of this number;
wherefore he careth for, campeth about, and hath set his
eyes upon such an one for good. This, therefore, is a
second demonstration to prove, that the man that hath his
spirit rightly broken, his heart truly contrite, is of
great esteem with God.
Third. Yet further, God doth not only
prefer such an one, as has been said, before heaven and
earth, but he loveth, he desireth to have that man for an
intimate, for a companion; he must dwell; he must cohabit
with him that is of a broken heart, with such as are of a
contrite spirit. ‘For thus saith the high and lofty
One that inhabiteth eternity, whose name is Holy, I will
dwell in the high and holy place, with him also
that is of a contrite and humble spirit’ &c.
(Isa 57:15).
Behold here both the majesty and
condescension of the high and lofty One; his majesty, in
that he is high, and the inhabiter of eternity; ‘I am
the high and lofty One,’ saith he, ‘I inhabit
eternity.’ Verily this consideration is enough to
make the broken-hearted man creep into a mouse-hole to hide
himself from such a majesty! But behold his heart, his
condescending mind; I am for dwelling also with him that
hath a broken heart, with him that is of a contrite spirit;
that is the man that I would converse with, that is the man
with whom I will cohabit; that is, he, saith God, I will
choose for my companion. For to desire to dwell with one
supposeth all these things; and verily, of all the men in
the world, none have acquaintance with God, none understand
what communion with him, and what his teachings mean, but
such as are of a broken and contrite heart. ‘He is
nigh unto them that are of a broken spirit’ (Psa
34:18). These are they intended in the 14th Psalm, where it
is said, ‘The Lord looked down from heaven, - to see
if any did understand and seek God’; that he
might find some body in the world with whom he might
converse; for indeed there is none else that either
understand, or that can tend to hearken to him. God, as I
may say, is forced to break men’s hearts, before he
can make them willing to cry to him, or be willing that he
should have any concerns with them; the rest shut their
eyes, stop their ears, withdraw their hearts, or say unto
God, Be gone (Job 21:14). But now the broken in heart can
tend it; he has leisure, yea, leisure, and will, and
understanding, and all; and therefore is a fit man to have
to do with God. There is room also in this man’s
house, in this man’s heart, in this man’s
spirit, for God to dwell, for God to walk, for God to set
up a kingdom.
Here, therefore, is suitableness. ‘Can
two walk together,’ saith God, ‘except they be
agreed?’ (Amos 3:3). The broken-hearted desireth
God’s company; when wilt thou come unto me? saith he.
The broken-hearted loveth to hear God speak and talk to
him. Here is a suitableness. ‘Make me,’ saith
he, ‘to hear joy and gladness, that the bones
which thou hast broken may rejoice’ (Psa
51:8). But here lies the glory, in that the high and lofty
One, the God that inhabiteth eternity, and that was a high
and holy place for his habitation, should choose to dwell
with, and to be a companion of the broken in heart, and of
them that are of a contrite spirit. Yea, and here also is
great comfort for such.
Fourth. God doth not only prefer such
a heart before all sacrifices, nor esteems such a man above
heaven and earth; nor yet only desire to be of his
acquaintance, but he reserveth for him his chief comforts,
his heart-reviving and soul-cherishing cordials. ‘I
dwell,’ saith he, with such to revive them, and to
support and comfort them, ‘to revive the spirit of
the humble, and to revive the heart of the contrite
ones’ (Isa 57:15). The broken-hearted man is a
fainting man; he has his qualms, his sinking fits; he
ofttimes dies away with pain and fear; he must be stayed
with flagons, and comforted with apples, or else he cannot
tell what to do: he pines, he pines away in his iniquity;
nor can any thing keep him alive and make him well but the
comforts and cordials of Almighty God (Exo 33:10,11).
Wherefore with such an one God will dwell, to revive the
heart, to revive the spirit. ‘To revive the spirit of
the humble, and to revive the heart of the contrite
ones.’
God has cordials, but they are to comfort
them that are cast down (2 Cor 7:6); and such are the
broken-hearted; as for them that are whole, they need not
the physician (Mark 2:17). They are the broken in spirit
that stand in need of cordials; physicians are men of no
esteem but with them that feel their sickness; and this is
one reason why God is so little accounted of in the world,
even because they have not been made sick by the wounding
stroke of God. But now when a man is wounded, has his bones
broken, or is made sick, and laid at the grave’s
mouth, who is of that esteem with him as is an able
physician? What is so much desired as are the cordials,
comforts, and suitable supplies of the skilful physician in
those matters. And thus it is with the broken-hearted; he
needs, and God has prepared for him plenty of the comforts
and cordials of heaven, to succour and relieve his sinking
soul.
Wherefore such a one lieth under all the
promises that have succour in them, and consolation for
men, sick and desponding under the sense of sin and the
heavy wrath of God; and they, says God, shall be refreshed
and revived with them. Yea, they are designed for them; he
hath therefore broken their hearts, he hath therefore
wounded their spirits, that he might make them apt to
relish his reviving cordials, that he might minister to
them his reviving comforts. For indeed, so soon as he hath
broken them, his bowels yearn, and his compassions roll up
and down within him, and will not suffer him to abide
afflicting. Ephraim was one of these; but so soon as God
had smitten him, behold his heart, how it works towards
him. ‘Is Ephraim,’ saith he, ‘my dear
son?’ that is, he is so; ‘is he a
pleasant child?’ that is, he is so; ‘for since
I spake against him, I do earnestly remember him still;
therefore my bowels are troubled for him; I will surely
have mercy upon him, saith the Lord’ (Jer 31:18-20).
This therefore is another demonstration.
Fifth. As God prefers such a heart,
and esteems the man that has it above heaven and earth; as
he covets intimacy with such an one, and prepares for him
his cordials; so when he sent his Son Jesus into the world
to be a Saviour, he gave him in special a charge to take
care of such; yea, that was one of the main reasons he sent
him down from heaven, anointed for his work on earth.
‘The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me,’
saith he; ‘because he hath anointed me to preach the
gospel to the poor; he hath sent me to bind up the
broken-hearted,’ &c. (Luke 4:18; Isa 61:1). Now
that this is meant of Christ, is confirmed by his own lips;
for in the days of his flesh he takes this book in his
hand, when he was in the synagogue at Nazareth, and read
this very place unto the people; and then tells them that
that very day that Scripture was fulfilled in their ears
(Luke 6:16-18).
But see, these are the souls whose welfare
is contrived in the heavens. God consulted their salvation,
their deliverance, their health, before his Son came down
from thence. Doth not therefore this demonstrate, that a
broken-hearted man, that a man of a contrite spirit, is of
great esteem with God. I have often wondered at David that
he should give Joab and the men of war a charge, that they
take heed that they carry it tenderly to that young rebel
Absalom his son (2 Sam 18:5). But that God, the high God,
the God against whom we have sinned, should, so soon as he
has smitten, give his Son a command, a charge, a commission
to take care of, to bind up and heal the broken in heart;
this is that which can never be sufficiently admired or
wondered at by men or angels.
And as this was his commission, so he acted;
as is evidently set forth by the parable of the man who
fell among thieves. He went to him, poured into his wounds
wine and oil; he bound him up, took him, set him upon his
own beast, had him to an inn, gave the host a charge to
look well to him, with money in hand, and a promise at his
return to recompence him in what farther he should be
expensive while he was under his care (Luke 10:30-35).
Behold, therefore, the care of God which he has for the
broken in heart; he has given a charge to Christ his Son,
to look well to them, and to bind up and heal their wounds.
Behold also the faithfulness of Christ, who doth not hide,
but read this commission as soon as he entereth upon his
ministry, and also falls into the practical part thereof.
‘He healeth the broken in heart, and bindeth up their
wounds’ (Psa 147:3).
And behold again into whose care a broken
heart and a contrite spirit hath put this poor creature; he
is under the care of God, the care and cure of Christ. If a
man was sure that his disease had put him under the special
care of the king and the queen, yet could he not be sure of
life, he might die under their sovereign hands. Ay, but
here is a man in the favour of God, and under the hand of
Christ to be healed; under whose hand none yet ever died
for want of skill and power in him to save their life;
wherefore this man must live; Christ has in commission not
only to bind up his wounds, but to heal him. He has of
himself so expounded it in reading his commission;
wherefore he that has his heart broken, and that is of a
contrite spirit, must not only be taken in hand, but
healed; healed of his pain, grief, sorrow, sin, and fears
of death and hell-fire; wherefore he adds, that he must
give unto such ‘beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for
mourning, the garment of praise for the spirit of
heaviness,’ and must ‘comfort all that
mourn’ (Isa 61:2,3). This, I say, he has in the
commission, the broken-hearted are put into his hand, and
he has said himself he will heal him. Hence he says of that
same man, ‘I have seen his ways, and will heal him; I
will lead him also, and restore comforts unto him, and to
his mourners; - and I will heal him’ (Isa 57:18,19).
And this is a fifth demonstration.
Sixth. As God prefers such a heart,
and so esteems the man that has it; as he desires his
company, has provided for him his cordials, and given a
charge to Christ to heal him, so he has promised in
conclusion to save him. ‘He saveth such as be of a
contrite spirit,’ or, as the margin has it, that be
‘contrite of spirit’ (Psa 34:18).
And this is the conclusion of all; for to
save a man is the end of all special mercy. ‘He
saveth such as be of a contrite spirit.’ To save, is
to forgive; for without forgiveness of sins we cannot be
saved. To save, is to preserve one in this miserable world,
and to deliver one from all those devils, temptations,
snares, and destructions that would, were we not kept, were
we not preserved of God, destroy us body and soul for ever.
To save, is to bring a man body and soul to glory, and to
give him an eternal mansion house in heaven, that he may
dwell in the presence of this good God, and the Lord Jesus,
and to sing to them the songs of his redemption for ever
and ever. This it is to be saved; nor can any thing less
than this complete the salvation of the sinner. Now, this
is to be the lot of him that is of a broken heart, and the
end that God will make with him that is of a contrite
spirit. ‘He saveth such as be contrite of
spirit.’ He saveth such! This is
excellent!
But, do the broken in spirit believe this?
Can they imagine that this is to be the end that God has
designed them to, and that he intended to make with them in
the day in which he began to break their hearts? No, no;
they, alas! think quite the contrary. They are afraid that
this is but the beginning of death, and a token that they
shall never see the face of God with comfort, either in
this world or that which is to come. Hence they cry,
‘Cast me not away from thy presence’; or, Now I
am ‘free among the dead whom God remembers no
more’ (Psa 51:11, 88:4,5). For indeed there goes to
the breaking of the heart a visible appearance of the wrath
of God, and a home charge from heaven of the guilt of sin
to the conscience. This to reason is very dreadful; for it
cuts the soul down to the ground; ‘for a wounded
spirit who [none] can bear?’ (Prov 18:14).
It seems also now to this man, that this is
but the beginning of hell; but as it were the first step
down to the pit; when, indeed, all these are but the
beginnings of love, and but that which makes way for life.
The Lord kills before he makes alive; he wounds before his
hands make whole. Yea, he does the one in order to, or
because he would do the other; he wounds, because his
purpose is to heal; ‘he maketh sore, and bindeth up;
he woundeth, and his hands make whole’ (Deut 32:39; 1
Sam 2:6; Job 5:18). His design, I say, is the salvation of
the soul. He scourgeth, he breaketh the heart of every son
whom he receiveth, and woe be to him whose heart God
breaketh not.
And thus have I proved what at first I
asserted, namely, that a spirit rightly broken, an heart
truly contrite, is to God an excellent thing. ‘A
broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not
despise.’ For this say I, First. This is
evident; for that it is better than sacrifices, than all
sacrifice. Second. The man that has it is of more
esteem with God than heaven or earth. Third. God
coveteth such a man for his intimate and house companion.
Fourth. He reserveth for them his cordials and
spiritual comforts. Fifth. He has given his Son a
Charge, a commandment to take care that the broken-hearted
be healed; and he is resolved to heal them. Sixth.
And concluded, that the broken-hearted, and they that are
of a contrite spirit, shall be saved, that is, possessed of
the heavens.
[III. WHAT A BROKEN HEART, AND WHAT A
CONTRITE SPIRIT IS.]
I come now in order to show you what a
broken heart and what a contrite spirit is. This must be
done, because in the discovery of this lies both the
comfort of them that have it, and the conviction of them
that have it not. Now, that I may do this the better, I
must propound and speak to these four things. FIRST. I must
show you what an one that heart is that is not broken, that
is not contrite. SECOND. I must show you how, or with what
the heart is broken and made contrite. THIRD. Show you how,
and what it is, when broken and made contrite. And, FOURTH.
I shall, last of all, give you some signs of a broken and
contrite heart.
FIRST. For the first of these, to wit, What
an one that heart is, that is not a broken, that is not a
contrite heart.
First. The heart, before it is
broken, is hard and stubborn, and obstinate against God,
and the salvation of the soul (Zech 7:12; Deut 2:30,
9:27).
Second. It is a heart full of evil
imaginations and darkness (Gen 18:12; Rom 1:21).
Third. It is a heart deceitful and
subject to be deceived, especially about the things of an
eternal concernment (Isa 44:20; Deut 11:16).
Fourth. It is a heart that rather
gathereth iniquity and vanity to itself than anything that
is good for the soul (Psa 41:6, 94:11).
Fifth. It is an unbelieving heart,
and one that will turn away from God to sin (Heb 3:12; Deut
17:17).
Sixth. It is a heart not prepared for
God, being uncircumcised, nor for the reception of his holy
word (2 Chron 12:14; Psa 78:8; Acts 7:51).
Seventh. It is a heart not single,
but double; it will pretend to serve God, but will withal
lean to the devil and sin (Psa 12:2; Eze 33:31).
Eighth. It is a heart proud and
stout: it loves not to be controlled, though the controller
be God himself (Psa 101:5; Prov 16:5; Mal 3:13).
Ninth. It is a heart that will give
place to Satan, but will resist the Holy Ghost (Acts 5:3,
7:51).
Tenth. In a word, ‘It is
deceitful above all things, and desperately
wicked’; so wicked that none can know it (Jer
17:9).
That the heart before it is broken is such,
and worse than I have described it to be, is sufficiently
seen by the whole course of the world. Where is the man
whose heart has not been broken, and whose spirit is not
contrite, that according to the Word of God deals honestly
with his own soul? It is one character of a right heart,
that it is sound in God’s statutes, and honest (Psa
119:18; Luke 8:15). Now, an honest heart will not put off
itself, nor be put off with that which will not go for
current money with the merchant; I mean, with that which
will not go for saving grace at the day of judgment. But
alas! alas! but few men, how honest soever they are to
others, have honesty towards themselves; though he is the
worst of deceivers who deceiveth his own soul, as James has
it, about the things of his own soul (1:22,26).
But,
SECOND. I now come to show you with what and
how the heart is broken, and the spirit made
contrite.
[First. With what the heart is broken,
and the spirit made contrite.]
The instrument with which the heart is
broken, and with which the spirit is made contrite, is the
Word. ‘Is not my word like as a fire, saith
the Lord; and like a hammer, that breaketh the rock
in pieces?’ (Jer 23:29). The rock, in this text, is
the heart, which in another place is compared to an
adamant, which adamant is harder than flint (Zech 7:11,12;
Eze 3:9). This rock, this adamant, this stony heart, is
broken and made contrite by the Word. But it only is so,
when the Word is as a fire, and as a hammer to break and
melt it. And then, and then only, it is as a fire, and a
hammer to the heart to break it, when it is managed by the
arm of God. No man can break the heart with the Word; no
angel can break the heart with the Word; that is, if God
forbears to second it by mighty power from heaven. This
made Balaam go without a heart rightly broken, and truly
contrite, though he was rebuked by an angel; and the
Pharisees die in their sins, though rebuked for them, and
admonished to turn from them, by the Saviour of the world.
Wherefore, though the Word is the instrument with which the
heart is broken, yet it is not broken with the Word, till
that Word is managed by the might and power of
God.
This made the prophet Isaiah, after long
preaching, cry out, that he had laboured for nought, and in
vain; and this made him cry to God, ‘to rend the
heavens and come down,’ that the mountains, or rocky
hills, or hearts, might be broken, and melt at his presence
(Isa 44:4, 64:1,2). For he found by experience, that as to
this no effectual work could be done, unless the Lord put
to his hand. This also is often intimated in the
Scriptures, where it saith, when the preachers preached
effectually to the breaking of men’s hearts,
‘the Lord wrought with them;[2]
the hand of the Lord was with them,’ and the like
(Mark 16:20; Acts 11:21).
Now when the hand of the Lord is with the
Word, then it is mighty: it is ‘mighty through God to
the pulling down of strong holds’ (2 Cor 10:4). It is
sharp, then, as a sword in the soul and spirit; it sticks
like an arrow in the hearts of sinners, to the causing of
the people to fall at his foot for mercy (Heb 4:12). Then
it is, as was said afore, as a fire and as a hammer to
break this rock in pieces (Psa 110:3). And hence the Word
is made mention of under a double consideration. 1. As it
stands by itself. 2. As attended with power from
heaven.
1. As it stands by itself, and is not
seconded with saving operation from heaven, it is called
the Word only, the Word barely, or as if it was only the
word of men (1 Thess 1:5-7; 1 Cor 4:19,20; 1 Thess 2:13).
Because, then, it is only as managed by men, who are not
able to make it accomplish that work. The Word of God, when
in a man’s hand only, is like the father’s
sword in the hand of the sucking child; which sword, though
never so well pointed, and though never so sharp on the
edges, is not now able to conquer a foe, and to make an
enemy fall and cry out for mercy, because it is but in the
hand of the child. But now, let the same sword be put into
the hand of a skilful father—and God is both skilful
and able to manage his Word—and then the sinner, and
then the proud helpers too, are both made to stoop, and
submit themselves; wherefore, I say, though the Word be the
instrument, yet of itself doth do no saving good to the
soul; the heart is not broken, nor the spirit made contrite
thereby; it only worketh death, and leaveth men in the
chains of their sins, still faster bound over to eternal
condemnation (2 Cor 2:15,16).
2. But when seconded by mighty power, then
the same Word is as the roaring of a lion, as the piercing
of a sword, as a burning fire in the bones, as thunder and
as a hammer that dashes all to pieces (Jer 25:30; Amos 1:2,
3:8; Acts 2:37; Jer 20:9; Psa 29:3-9). Wherefore, from
hence it is to be concluded, that whoever has heard the
Word preached, and has not heard the voice of the living
God therein, has not as yet had their hearts broken, nor
their spirits made contrite for their sins.
[Second. How the heart is broken, and the
spirit made contrite.]
And this leads me to the second thing, to
wit, To show how the heart is broken and the spirit made
contrite by the Word, and verily it is when the Word comes
home with power. But yet this is but general; wherefore,
more particularly,
1. Then the Word works effectually to this
purpose, when it findeth out the sinner and his sin, and
shall convince him that it has found him out. Thus it was
with our first father; when he had sinned, he sought to
hide himself from God; he gets among the trees of the
garden, and there he shrouds himself; but yet, not thinking
himself secure, he covers himself with fig-leaves; and now
he lieth quiet. Now God shall not find me, thinks he, nor
know what I have done. But lo! by and by, he ‘hears
the voice of the Lord God walking in the garden.’ And
now, Adam, what do you mean to do? Why, as yet, he
skulketh, and hides his head, and seeks yet to lie
undiscovered; but behold, the voice cries out, ADAM! and
now he begins to tremble. ‘Adam, where art
thou?’ says God; and now Adam is made to answer (Gen
3:7-11). But the voice of the Lord God doth not leave him
here: no, it now begins to search, and to inquire after his
doings, and to unravel what he had wrapt together and
covered, until it made him bare and naked in his own sight
before the face of God. Thus, therefore, doth the Word,
when managed by the arm of God. It findeth out, it singleth
out the sinner; the sinner finds it so; it finds out the
sins of the sinner; it unravels his whole life, it strips
him and lays him naked in his own sight before the face of
God; neither can the sinner nor his wickedness be longer
hid and covered; and now begins the sinner to see what he
never saw before.
2. Another instance for this is David, the
man of our text. He sins, he sins grossly, he sins and
hides it; yea, and seeks to hide it from the face of God
and man. Well, Nathan is sent to preach a preaching to him,
and that in common, and that in special: in common, by a
parable; in special, by a particular application of it to
him. While Nathan only preached in common, or in general,
David was fish-whole,[3] and stood as
right in his own eyes as if he had been as innocent and as
harmless as any man alive. But God had a love for David;
and therefore commands his servant Nathan to go home, not
only to David’s ears, but to David’s
conscience. Well, David now must fall. Says Nathan,
‘Thou art the man’; says David, ‘I have
sinned,’ and then his heart was broken, and his
spirit made contrite; as this psalm and our text doth show
(2 Sam 12:1-13).
3. A third instance is that of Saul; he had
heard many a sermon, and was become a great professor, yea,
he was more zealous than were many of his equals; but his
heart was never broken, nor his spirit ever made contrite,
till he heard one preach from heaven, till he heard God, in
the Word of God, making inquiry after his sins:
‘Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me?’ says
Jesus; and then he can stand no longer: for then his heart
brake, then he falls to the ground, then he trembles, then
he cries out, ‘Who art thou, Lord?’ and,
‘Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?’ (Acts 9).
Wherefore, as I said, Then the word works effectually to
this purpose, when it findeth out the sinner and his sin,
and also when it shall convince him that it has found him
out. Only I must join here a caution, for every operation
of the Word upon the conscience is not saving; nor doth all
conviction end in the saving conversion of the sinner. It
is then only such an operation of the Word that is
intended, namely, that shows the sinner not only the evil
of his ways, but brings the heart unfeignedly over to God
by Christ. And this brings me to the third
thing.
THIRD. I am therefore come to show you how
and what the heart is when broken and made contrite. And
this I must do, by opening unto you the two chief
expressions in the text. First. What is meant by
this word broken. Second. What is meant by this word
contrite.
First. For this word broken,
Tindal renders it a troubled heart;[4] but I
think there is more in it. I take it, therefore, to be a
heart disabled, as to former actions, even as a man whose
bones are broken is disabled, as to his way of running,
leaping, wrestling, or ought else, which vainly he was wont
to do; wherefore, that which was called a broken heart in
the text, he calls his broken bones, in verse the eighth:
‘Cause me,’ saith he, ‘to hear joy and
gladness, that the bones which thou hast
broken may rejoice’ (Psa 51:8). And why is the
breaking of the heart compared to the breaking of the
bones? but because as when the bones are broken, the
outward man is disabled as to what it was wont to do; so
when the spirit is broken, the inward man is disabled as to
what vanity and folly it before delighted in; hence,
feebleness is joined with this brokenness of heart.
‘I am feeble,’ saith he, ‘and sore
broken’ (Psa 38:8). I have lost my strength and
former vigour, as to vain and sinful courses.
This, then, it is to have the heart broken;
namely, to have it lamed, disabled, and taken off by sense
of God’s wrath due to sin, from that course of life
it formerly was conversant in; and to show that this work
is no fancy, nor done but with great trouble to the soul,
it is compared to the putting the bones out of joint, the
breaking of the bones, the burning of the bones with fire,
or as the taking the natural moisture from the bones, the
vexing of the bones, &c. (Psa 23:14; Jer 20:9; Lam
1:13; Psa 6:2; Prov 17:22). All which are expressions
adorned with such similitudes, as do undeniably declare
that to sense and feeling a broken heart is a grievous
thing.
Second. What is meant by the word
contrite. A contrite spirit is a penitent one; one
sorely grieved, and deeply sorrowful, for the sins it has
committed against God, and to the damage of the soul; and
so it is to be taken in all those places where a contrite
spirit is made mention of; as in Psalm 34:18; Isaiah 57:15,
66:2.
As a man that has by his folly procured a
broken leg or arm, is heartily sorry that ever he was so
foolish as to be engaged in such foolish ways of idleness
and vanity; so he whose heart is broken with a sense of
God’s wrath due to his sin, hath deep sorrow in his
soul, and is greatly repentant that ever he should be such
a fool, as by rebellious doings to bring himself and his
soul to so much sharp affliction. Hence, while others are
sporting themselves in vanity, such a one doth call his sin
his greatest folly. ‘My wounds stink, and are
corrupt,’ saith David, ‘because of my
foolishness.’ And again, ‘O God, thou knowest
my foolishness, and my sins are not hid from thee’
(Psa 38:5, 69:5).
Men, whatever they say with their lips,
cannot conclude, if yet their hearts want breaking, that
sin is a foolish thing. Hence it says, ‘The
foolishness of fools is folly’ (Prov 14:24).
That is, the foolishness of some men, is that they take
pleasure in their sins; for their sins are their
foolishness, and the folly of their soul lies in their
countenancing of this foolishness. But the man whose heart
is broken, he is none of these, he cannot be one of these,
no more than he that has his bones broken can rejoice that
he is desired to play a match at football. Hence, to hear
others talk foolishly, is to the grief of those whom God
has wounded: or, as it is in another place, their words are
‘like the piercings of a sword’ (Psa 69:26;
Prov 12:18). This, therefore, I take to be the meaning of
these two words, a broken and a contrite
spirit.
FOURTH. Lastly, As to this, I now come more
particularly to give you some signs of a broken heart, of a
broken and a contrite spirit.
First. A broken-hearted man, such as
is intended in the text, is a sensible man; he is brought
to the exercise of all the senses of his soul. All others
are dead, senseless, and without true feeling of what the
broken-hearted man is sensible of.
1. He sees himself to be what others are
ignorant of; that is, he sees himself to be not only a
sinful man, but a man by nature in the gall and bond of
sin. In the gall of sin: it is Peter’s expression to
Simon, and it is a saying common to all men: for every man
in a state of nature is in the gall of sin; he was shapen
in it, conceived in it; it has also possession of, and by
that possession infected the whole of his soul and body
(Psa 51:5; Acts 8:23). This he sees, this he understands;
every professor sees not this, because the blessing of a
broken heart is not bestowed on every one. David says,
‘There is no soundness in my flesh’; and
Solomon suggest that a plague or running sore is in the
very heart. But every one perceives not this (Psa 38:3; 1
Kings 8:38). He saith again, that his ‘wounds stank,
and were corrupted’: that his ‘sore ran, and
ceased not’ (Psa 38:5, 77:2). But these things the
brutish man, the man whose heart was never broken, has no
understanding of. But the broken-hearted, the man that has
a broken spirit, he sees, as the prophet has it, he sees
his sickness, he sees his wound: ‘When Ephraim saw
his sickness, and Judah saw his wound’; he
sees it to his grief, he sees it to his sorrow (Hosea
5:13).
2. He feels what others have no sense of; he
feels the arrows of the Almighty, and that they stick fast
in him (Psa 38:2). He feels how sore and sick, by the
smiting of God’s hammer upon his heart to break it,
his poor soul is made. He feels a burden intolerably lying
upon his spirit (Hosea 5:13). ‘Mine
iniquities,’ saith he, ‘are gone over mine
head; as a heavy burden they are too heavy for me’
(Psa 38:4). He feels also the heavy hand of God upon his
soul, a thing unknown to carnal men. He feels pain, being
wounded, even such pain as others cannot understand,
because they are not broken. ‘My heart,’ saith
David, ‘is sore pained within me.’ Why so? Why!
‘The terrors of death are fallen upon me’ (Psa
55:4). The terrors of death cause pain, yea, pain of the
highest nature; hence that which is here called
pains, is in another place called pangs (Isa
21:3).
You know broken bones occasion pain, strong
pain, yea, pain that will make a man or woman groan
‘with the groanings of a deadly wounded
man’ (Eze 30:24). Soul pain is the sorest pain,
in comparison to which the pain of the body is a very
tolerable thing (Prov 18:14). Now here is soul pain, here
is heart pain; here we are discoursing of a wounded, of a
broken spirit; wherefore this is pain to be felt to the
sinking of the whole man, neither can any support this but
God. Here is death in this pain, death for ever, without
God’s special mercy. This pain will bring the soul
to, and this the broken-hearted man doth feel. ‘The
sorrows of death,’ saith David, ‘compassed me,
and the pains of hell gat hold upon me, I found trouble and
sorrow’ (Psa 116:3). Ay, I’ll warrant thee,
poor man, thou foundest trouble and sorrow indeed; for the
pains of hell and sorrows of death are pains and sorrow the
most intolerable. But this the man is acquainted with that
has his heart broken.[5]
3. As he sees and feels, so he hears that
which augments his woe and sorrow. You know, if a man has
his bones broken, he does not only see and feel, but
oft-times also hears what increases his grief; as, that his
wounds are incurable; that his bone is not rightly set;
that there is danger of a gangrene; that he may be lost for
want of looking to. These are the voices, the sayings, that
haunt the house of one that has his bones broken. And a
broken-hearted man knows what I mean by this; he hears that
which makes his lips quiver, and at the noise of which he
seems to feel rottenness enter into his bones; he trembleth
in himself, and wishes that he may hear joy and gladness,
that the bones, the heart, and spirit, which God has
broken, may rejoice (Habb 3:16; Psa 51:8). He thinks he
hears God say, the devil say, his conscience say, and all
good men to whisper among themselves, saying, there is no
help for him from God. Job heard this, David heard this,
Heman heard this; and this is the common sound in the ears
of the broken-hearted.
4. The broken-hearted smell what others
cannot scent. Alas! sin never smelled so to any man alive
as it smells to the broken-hearted. You know wounds will
stink: but [there is] no stink like that of sin to the
broken-hearted man. His own sins stink, and so doth the
sins of all the world to him. Sin is like carrion; it is of
a stinking nature; yea, it has the worst of smells;
however, some men like it (Psa 38:5). But none are offended
with the scent thereof but God and the broken-hearted
sinner. ‘My wounds stink, and are
corrupt,’ saith he, both in God’s nostrils and
mine own. But, alas! who smells the stink of sin? None of
the carnal world; they, like carrion-crows, seek it, love
it, and eat it as the child eats bread. ‘They eat up
the sin of my people,’ saith God, ‘and they set
their heart on their iniquity’ (Hosea 4:8). This, I
say, they do, because they do not smell the nauseous scent
of sin. You know, that what is nauseous to the smell cannot
be palatable to the taste. The broken-hearted man doth find
that sin is nauseous, and therefore cries out it stinketh.
They also think at times the smell of fire, of fire and
brimstone, is upon them, they are so sensible of the wages
due to sin.
5. The broken-hearted is also a tasting man.
Wounds, if sore, and full of pains, of great pains, do
sometimes alter the taste of a man; they make him think his
meat, his drink, yea, that cordials have a bitter taste in
them. How many times doth the poor people of God, that are
the only men that know what a broken-heart doth mean, cry
out that gravel, wormwood, gall, and vinegar, was made
their meat (Lam 3:15,16,19). This gravel, gall, and
wormwood, is the true temporal taste of sin; and God, to
make them loathe it for ever, doth feed them with it till
their hearts both ache and break therewith. Wickedness is
pleasant of taste to the world; hence it is said they feed
on ashes, they feed on the wind (Isa 44:20; Hosea 12:1).
Lusts, or any thing that is vile and refuse, the carnal
world think relishes well; as is set out most notably in
the parable of the prodigal son. ‘He would fain have
filled his belly,’ saith our Lord, ‘with the
husks that the swine did eat’ (Luke 15:16). But the
broken-hearted man has a relish that is true as to these
things, though, by reason of the anguish of his soul, it
abhors all manner of dainty meat (Job 33:19,20; Psa
107:17-19). Thus I have showed you one sign of a
broken-hearted man; he is a sensible man, he has all the
senses of his soul awakened, he can see, hear, feel, taste,
smell, and that as none but himself can do. I come now to
another sign of a broken and contrite man.
Second. And that is, he is a very
sorrowful man. This, as the other, is natural; it is
natural to one that is in pain, and that has his bones
broken, to be a grieved and sorrowful man. He is none of
the jolly ones of the times; nor can he, for his bones, his
heart, his heart is broken.
1. He is sorry for that he feels and finds
in himself a pravity of nature; I told you before he is
sensible of it, he sees it, he feels it; and here I say he
is sorry for it. It is this that makes him call himself a
wretched man; it is this that makes him loathe and abhor
himself; it is this that makes him blush, blush before God
and be ashamed (Rom 7:24; Job 42:5,6; Eze 36:31). He finds
by nature no form nor comeliness in himself, but the more
he looks in the glass of the Word, the more unhandsome, the
more deformed he perceiveth sin has made him. Every body
sees not this, therefore every body is not sorry for it;
but the broken in heart sees that he is by sin corrupted,
marred, full of lewdness and naughtiness; he sees that in
him, that is, in his flesh, dwells no good thing; and this
makes him sorry, yea, it makes him sorry at heart. A man
that has his bones broken finds he is spoiled, marred,
disabled from doing as he would and should, at which he is
grieved and made sorry.
Many are sorry for actual transgressions,
because they do oft bring them to shame before men; but few
are sorry for the defects that sin has made in nature,
because they see not those defects themselves. A man cannot
be sorry for the sinful defects of nature, till he sees
they have rendered him contemptible to God; nor is it any
thing but a sight of God that can make him truly see what
he is, and so be heartily sorry for being so. Now
‘mine eye seeth thee,’ saith Job, now ‘I
abhor myself.’ ‘Woe is me, for I
am undone,’ saith the prophet, ‘for mine eyes
have seen the King the Lord.’ And it was this that
made Daniel say his ‘comeliness was turned in him
into corruption’; for he had now the vision of the
Holy One (Job 42:6; Isa 6:1-5; Dan 10:8). Visions of God
break the heart, because, by the sight the soul then has of
his perfections, it sees its own infinite and unspeakable
disproportion, because of the vileness of its
nature.
Suppose a company of ugly, uncomely,
deformed persons dwelt together in one house; and suppose
that they never yet saw any man or woman more than
themselves, or that were arrayed with the splendours and
perfections of nature; these would not be capable of
comparing themselves with any but themselves, and
consequently would not be affected and made sorry for their
uncomely natural defections. But now bring them out of
their cells and holes of darkness, where they have been
shut up by themselves, and let them take a view of the
splendour and perfections of beauty that are in others, and
then, if at all, they will be sorry and dejected at the
view of their own defects. This is the case; men by sin are
marred, spoiled, corrupted, depraved, but they may dwell by
themselves in the dark; they see neither God, nor angels,
nor saints, in their excellent nature and beauty: and
therefore they are apt to count their own uncomely parts
their ornaments and their glory. But now let such, as I
said, see God, see saints, or the ornaments of the Holy
Ghost, and themselves as they are without them, and then
they cannot but must be affected with and sorry for their
own deformity. When the Lord Christ put forth but little of
his excellency before his servant Peter’s face, it
raised up the depravity of Peter’s nature before him
to his great confusion and shame; and made him cry out to
him in the midst of all his fellows, ‘Depart from me,
for I am a sinful man, O Lord’ (Luke
5:4-8).
This therefore is the cause of a broken
heart, even a sight of divine excellencies, and a sense
that I am a poor, depraved, spoiled defiled wretch; and
this sight having broken the heart, begets sorrow in the
broken-hearted.
2. The broken-hearted is a sorrowful man;
for that he finds his depravity of nature strong in him, to
the putting forth itself to oppose and overthrow what his
changed mind doth prompt him to; ‘When I would do
good,’ saith Paul, ‘evil is present with
me’ (Rom 7:21). Evil is present to oppose, to resist,
and make head against the desires of my soul. The man that
has his bones broken, may have yet a mind to be
industriously occupied in a lawful and honest calling; but
he finds, by experience, that an infirmity attends his
present condition that strongly resists his good
endeavours; and at this he shakes his head, makes
complaints, and with sorrow of heart he sighs and says, I
‘cannot do the thing that I would’ (Rom 7:15;
Gal 5:17). I am weak, I am feeble; I am not only depraved,
but by that depravity deprived of ability to put good
motions,[6] good intentions and desires into
execution, to completeness; O says he, I am ready to halt,
my sorrow is continually before me!
You must know that the broken-hearted loves
God, loves his soul, loves good, and hates evil. Now, for
such an one to find in himself an opposition and continual
contradiction to this holy passion, it must needs cause
sorrow, godly sorrow, as the apostle Paul calls it. For
such are made sorrow after a godly sort. To be sorry for
that thy nature is with sin depraved, and that through this
depravity thou art deprived of ability to do what the Word
and thy holy mind doth prompt thee to, is to be sorry after
a godly sort. For this sorrow worketh that in thee of which
thou wilt never have cause to repent; no, not to eternity
(2 Cor 7:9-11).
3. The broken-hearted man is sorry for those
breaches that, by reason of the depravity of his nature,
are made in his life and conversation. And this was the
case of the man in our text. The vileness of his nature had
broken out to the defiling of his life, and to the making
of him, at this time, base in conversation. This, this was
it, that all to[7] brake his heart. He saw in
this he had dishonoured God, and that cut him,
‘Against thee, thee only, have I sinned, and done
this evil in thy sight’ (Psa 51:4). He saw in
this he had caused the enemies of God to open their mouths
and blaspheme; and this cut him to the heart. This made him
cry, I have sinned against thee, Lord. This made him say,
‘I will declare mine iniquity, I will be sorry for my
sin’ (Psa 38:18).
When a man is designed to do a matter, when
his heart is set upon it, and the broken-hearted doth
design to glorify God, an obstruction to that design, the
spoiling of this work, makes him sorrowful. Hannah coveted
children, but could not have them, and this made her
‘a woman of a sorrowful spirit’ (1 Sam 1:15). A
broken-hearted man would be well inwardly, and do that
which is well outwardly; but he feels, he finds, he sees he
is prevented, prevented at least in part. This makes him
sorrowful; in this he groans, groans earnestly, being
burdened with his imperfections (2 Cor 5:1-3). You know one
with broken bones has imperfections many, and is more
sensible of them, too, as was said afore, than any other
man; and this makes him sorrowful, yea, and makes him
conclude that he shall go softly all his days in the
bitterness of his soul (Isa 38:15).
Third. The man with a broken heart is
a very humble man; or, true humility is a sign of a broken
heart. Hence, brokenness of heart, contrition of spirit,
and humbleness of mind, are put together. ‘To revive
the spirit of the humble, and to revive the heart of the
contrite ones’ (Isa 57:15).
To follow our similitude. Suppose a man,
while in bodily health, stout and strong, and one that
fears and cares for no man; yet let this man have but a leg
or an arm broken, and his courage is quelled; he is now so
far off from hectoring of it with a man, that he is afraid
of every little child that doth but offer to touch him. Now
he will court the most feeble that has ought to do with
him, to use him and handle him gently. Now he is become a
child in courage, a child in fear, and humbleth himself as
a little child.
Why, thus it is with that man that is of a
broken and contrite spirit. Time was, indeed, he could
hector, even hector it with God himself, saying,
‘What is the Almighty, that we should serve
him?’ or what profit shall I have if I keep his
commandments? (Job 21:15; Mal 3:13,14). Ay! But now his
heart is broken; God has wrestled with him, and given him a
fall, to the breaking of his bones, his heart; and now he
crouches, now he cringes, now he begs of God that he will
not only do him good, but do it with tender hands.
‘Have mercy upon me, O God,’ said David; yea,
‘according unto the multitude of thy tender mercies,
blot out my transgressions’ (Psa 51:1).
He stands, as he sees, not only in need of
mercy, but of the tenderest mercies. God has several sorts
of mercies, some more rough, some more tender. God can save
a man, and yet have him a dreadful way to heaven! This the
broken-hearted sees, and this the broken-hearted dreads,
and therefore pleads for the tenderest sort of mercies; and
here we read of his gentle dealing, and that he is very
pitiful, and that he deals tenderly with his. But the
reason of such expressions no man knows but he that is
broken-hearted; he has his sores, his running sores, his
stinking sores; wherefore he is pained, and therefore
covets to be handled tenderly. Thus God has broken the
pride of his spirit, and humbled the loftiness of man. And
his humility yet appears,
1. In his thankfulness for natural life. He
reckoneth at night, when he goes to bed, that like as a
lion, so God will tear him to pieces before the morning
light (Isa 38:13). There is no judgment that has fallen
upon others, but he counts of right he should be swallowed
up by it. ‘My flesh trembleth for fear of thee, and I
am afraid of thy judgments’ (Psa 119:120). But
perceiving a day added to his life, and that he in the
morning is still on this side hell, he cannot choose but
take notice of it, and acknowledge it as a special favour,
saying, God be thanked for holding my soul in life till
now, and for keeping my life back from the destroyer (Job
33:22; Psa 56:13, 86:13).
Man, before his heart is broken, counts time
his own, and therefore he spends it lavishly upon every
idle thing. His soul is far from fear, because the rod of
God is not upon him; but when he sees himself under the
wounding hand of God, or when God, like a lion, is breaking
all his bones, then he humbleth himself before him, and
falleth at his foot. Now he has learned to count every
moment a mercy, and every small morsel a mercy.
2. Now also the least hopes of mercy for his
soul, O how precious is it! He that was wont to make
orts[8] of the gospel, and that valued
promises but as stubble, and the words of God but as rotten
wood; now, with what an eye doth he look on the promise?
Yea, he counted a peradventure of mercy more rich, more
worth, than the whole world. Now, as we say, he is glad to
leap at a crust; now, to be a dog in God’s house is
counted better by him than to ‘dwell in the tents of
the wicked’ (Matt 15:16,27; Luke
15:17-19).
3. Now he that was wont to look scornfully
upon the people of God, yea, that used to scorn to show
them a gentle cast of his countenance; now he admires and
bows before them, and is ready to lick the dust of their
feet, and would count it his greatest, the highest honour,
to be as one of the least of them. ‘Make me as one of
thy hired servants,’ says he (Luke 15:19).
4. Now he is, in his own eyes, the greatest
fool in nature; for that he sees he has been so mistaken in
his ways, and has not yet but little, if any true knowledge
of God. Every one now, says he, have more knowledge of God
than I; every one serves him better than I (Psa 73:21,22;
Prov 30:2,3).
5. Now may he be but one, though the least
in the kingdom of heaven! Now may he be but one, though the
least in the church on earth! Now may he be but loved,
though the least beloved of saints! How high an account
doth he set thereon!
6. Now, when he talketh with God or men, how
doth he debase himself before them! If with God, how does
he accuse himself, and load himself with the
acknowledgments of his own villanies, which he committed in
the days wherein he was the enemy of God!
‘Lord,’ said Paul, that contrite one, ‘I
imprisoned and beat in every synagogue them that believed
on thee. And when the blood of thy martyr Stephen was shed,
I also was standing by, and consenting unto his death, and
kept the raiment of them that slew him’ (Acts
22:19,20). Yea, I punished thy saints ‘oft in every
synagogue, and compelled them to blaspheme; and
being exceedingly mad against them, I persecuted
them even unto strange cities’ (Acts
26:9-11).
Also, when he comes to speak to saints, how
doth he make himself vile before them! ‘I am,’
saith he, ‘the least of the apostles; that am not
meet to be called an apostle’; I am ‘less than
the least of all saints’; I was a blasphemer; I was a
persecutor, and injurious, &c. (1 Cor 15:9; Eph 3:8; 1
Tim 1:13). What humility, what self-abasing thoughts, doth
a broken heart produce! When David danced before the ark of
God, also how did he discover his nakedness to the
disliking of his wife; and when she taunted him for his
doings, says he, ‘It was before the
Lord,’ &c., ‘and I will yet be more vile
than thus, and will be base in mine own sight’ (2 Sam
6:20-22). O, the man that is, or that has been kindly
broken in his spirit, and that is of a contrite heart, is a
lowly, humble man.
Fourth. The broken-hearted man is a
man that sees himself in spirituals to be poor. Therefore,
as humble and contrite, so poor and contrite are put
together in the Word. ‘But to this man will I
look, even to him that is poor, and of a
contrite spirit’ (Isa 66:1,2). And here we still
pursue our metaphor. A wounded man, a man with broken
bones, concludes his condition to be but poor, very poor.
Ask him how he does, and he answers, ‘Truly,
neighbours, in a very poor condition!’ Also you have
the spiritual poverty of such as have, or have had their
hearts broken, and that have been of contrite spirits, much
made mention of in the Word. And they go by two names to
distinguish them from others. They are called THY poor,
that is, God’s poor; they are also called ‘the
poor in spirit’ (Psa 72:2, 74:19; Matt 5:3). Now, the
man that is poor in his own eyes, for of him we now
discourse, and the broken-hearted is such an one, is
sensible of his wants. He knows he cannot help himself, and
therefore is forced to be content to live by the charity of
others. Thus it is in nature, thus it is in
grace.
1. The broken-hearted now knows his wants,
and he knew it not till now. As he that has a broken bone,
knew no want of a bone-setter till he knew his bone was
broken. His broken bone makes him know it; his pain and
anguish makes him know it; and thus it is in spirituals.
Now he sees to be poor indeed is to want the sense of the
favour of God; for his great pain is a sense of wrath, as
hath been shown before. And the voice of joy would heal his
broken bones (Psa 51:8). Two things he thinks would make
him rich. (1) A right and title to Jesus Christ, and all
his benefits. (2) And saving faith therein. They that are
spiritually rich are rich in him, and in the faith of him
(2 Cor 8:9; James 2:5).
The first of these giveth us a right to the
kingdom of heaven; and the second yields the soul the
comfort of it; and the broken-hearted man wants the sense
and knowledge of his interest in these. That he knows he
wants them is plain; but that he knows he has them is what,
as yet, he wants the attainment of. Hence he says—
‘The poor and needy seek water, and there is
none, and their tongue faileth for thirst’
(Isa 41:17). There is none in their view; none in their
view for them. Hence David, when he had his broken heart,
felt he wanted washing, he wanted purging, he wanted to be
made white. He knew that spiritual riches lay there but he
did not so well perceive that God had washed and purged
him. Yea, he rather was afraid that all was going, that he
was in danger of being cast out of God’s presence,
and that the Spirit of grace would be utterly taken from
him (Psa 51). That is the first thing. The broken-hearted
is poor, because he knows his wants.
2. The broken-hearted is poor, because he
knows he cannot help himself to what he knows he wants. The
man that has a broken arm, as he knows it, so he knows of
himself he cannot set it. This therefore is a second thing
that declares a man is poor, otherwise he is not so. For
suppose a man wants never so much, yet if he can but help
himself, if he can furnish himself, if he can supply his
own wants out of what he has, he cannot be a poor man. Yea,
the more he wants, the greater are his riches, if he can
supply his own wants out of his own purse.
He then is the poor man, that knows his
spiritual want, and also knows he cannot supply or help
himself. But this the broken-hearted knows, therefore he in
his own eyes is the only poor man. True, he may have
something of his own, but that will not supply his want,
and therefore he is a poor man still. I have sacrifices,
says David, but thou dosts not desire them, therefore my
poverty remains (Psa 51:16). Lead is not gold, lead is not
current money with the merchants. There is none has
spiritual gold to sell but Christ (Rev 3:18). What can a
man do to procure Christ, or procure faith, or love? Yea,
had he never so much of his own carnal excellencies, no,
not one penny of it will go for pay in that market where
grace is to be hand. ‘If a man would give all the
substance of his house for love, it would utterly be
contemned’ (Can 8:7).
This the broken-hearted man perceives, and
therefore he sees himself to be spiritually poor. True he
has a broken heart, and that is of great esteem with God;
but that is not of nature’s goodness, that is a gift,
a work of God; and that is the sacrifices of God. Besides,
a man cannot remain content and at rest with that; for
that, in the nature of it, does but show him he is poor,
and that his wants are such as himself cannot supply.
Besides, there is but little ease in a broken
heart.
3. The broken-hearted man is poor, and sees
it; because he finds he is now disabled to live any way
else but by begging. This David betook himself to, though
he was a king; for he knew, as to his soul’s health,
he could live no way else. ‘This poor man
cried,’ saith he, ‘and the Lord heard
him, and saved him out of all his troubles’ (Psa
34:6). And this leads me to the fifth sign.
Fifth. Another sign of a broken heart
is a crying, a crying out. Pain, you know, will make one
cry. Go to them that have upon them the anguish of broken
bones, and see if they do not cry; anguish makes them cry.
This, this is that which quickly follows, if once thy heart
be broken, and thy spirit indeed made contrite.
1. I say, anguish will make thee cry.
‘Trouble and anguish,’ saith David, ‘have
taken hold on me’ (Psa 119:143). Anguish, you know,
doth naturally provoke to crying; now, as a broken bone has
anguish, a broken heart has anguish. Hence the pains of one
that has a broken heart are compared to the pangs of a
woman in travail (John 16:20-22).
Anguish will make one cry alone, cry to
one’s self; and this is called a bemoaning of
one’s self. ‘I have surely heard Ephraim
bemoaning himself,’ saith God (Jer 31:18). That is,
being at present under the breaking, chastising hand of
God. ‘Thou hast chastised me,’ saith he,
‘and I was chastised, as a bullock unaccustomed to
the yoke.’ This is his meaning also who said,
‘I mourn in my complaint, and make a noise.’
And why? Why, ‘My heart is sore pained within
me’ (Psa 4:2-4).
This is a self-bemoaning, a bemoaning
themselves in secret and retired places. You know it is
common with them who are distressed with anguish, though
all alone, to cry out to themselves of their present pains,
saying, O my leg! O my arm! O my bowels! Or, as the son of
the Shunammite, ‘My head! my head!’ (2 Kings
4:19). O the groans, the sighs, the cries, that the
broken-hearted have, when by themselves, or alone! O, say
they, my sins! my sins! my soul! my soul! How am I loaden
with guilt! How am I surrounded with fear! O this hard,
this desperate, this unbelieving heart! O how sin defileth
my will, my mind, my conscience! ‘I am
afflicted and ready to die’ (Psa
88:15).[9]
Could some of you carnal people but get
behind the chamber-door, to hear Ephraim when he is at the
work of self-bemoaning, it would make you stand amazed to
hear him bewail that sin in himself in which you take
delight; and to hear him bemoan his misspending of time,
while you spend all in pursuing your filthy lusts; and to
hear him offended with his heart, because it will not
better comply with God’s holy will, while you are
afraid of his Word and ways, and never think yourselves
better than when farthest off from God. The unruliness of
the passions and lusts of the broken-hearted make them
often get into a corner, and thus bemoan
themselves.
2. As they thus cry out in a bemoaning
manner of and to themselves, so they have their outcries of
and against themselves to others; as she said in another
case, ‘Behold and see, if there be any sorrow like
unto my sorrow’ (Lam 1:12). O the bitter cries and
complaints that the broken-hearted have, and make to one
another! Still every one imagining that his own wounds are
deepest, and his own sores fullest of anguish, and hardest
to be cured. Say they, if our iniquities be upon us, and we
pine away in them, how can we then live? (Eze
33:10).
Once being at an honest woman’s house,
I, after some pause, asked her how she did? She said, Very
badly. I asked her if she was sick? she answered, No. What
then, said I, are any of your children ill? She told me,
No. What, said I, is your husband amiss, or do you go back
in the world? No, no, said she, but I am afraid I shall not
be saved. And broke out with heavy heart, saying,
‘Ah, Goodman Bunyan! Christ and a pitcher; if I had
Christ, though I went and begged my bread with a pitcher,
it would be better with me than I think it is now!’
This woman had her heart broken, this woman wanted Christ,
this woman was concerned for her soul. There are but few
women, rich women, that count Christ and a pitcher better
than the world, their pride, and pleasures. This
woman’s cries are worthy to be recorded; it was a cry
that carried in it, not only a sense of the want, but also
of the worth of Christ. This cry, ‘Christ and a
pitcher,’ made a melodious noise in the ears of the
very angels![10]
But, I say, few women cry out thus; few
women are so in love with their own eternal salvation, as
to be willing to part with all their lusts and vanities for
Jesus Christ and a pitcher. Good Jacob also was thus:
‘If the Lord,’ said he, ‘will give me
bread to eat, and raiment to put on, then he shall be my
God.’ Yea, he vowed it should be so. ‘And Jacob
vowed a vow, saying, If God will be with me, and will keep
me in this way that I go, and will give me bread to eat,
and raiment to put on; so that I come again to my
father’s house in peace: then shall the Lord be my
God’ (Gen 28:20).
3. As they bemoan themselves, and make their
complaints to one and another, so they cry to God. ‘O
God,’ said Heman, ‘I have cried day and
night before thee.’ But when? Why, when his soul was
full of trouble, and his life drew near to the grave (Psa
88:1-3). Or, as it says in another place, out of the deep,
‘out of the belly of hell cried I’ (Psa 130:1;
Jonah 2:2). By such words expressing what painful condition
they were in when they cried.
See how God himself words it. ‘My
pleasant portion,’ says he, is become ‘a
desolate wilderness, and being desolate, it mourneth
unto me’ (Jer 12:11). And this also is natural to
those whose hearts are broken. Whether goes the child, when
it catcheth harm, but to its father, to its mother? Where
doth it lay its head, but in their laps? Into whose bosom
doth it pour out its complaint, more especially, but into
the bosom of the father, of a mother, because there are
bowels, there is pity, there is relief and succour? And
thus it is with them whose bones, whose hearts are broken.
It is natural to them; they must cry; they cannot but cry
to him. ‘Lord, heal me,’ said David, ‘for
my bones are vexed; Lord, heal me, for my soul is also sore
vexed’ (Psa 6:1-3). He that cannot cry feels no pain,
sees no want, fears no danger, or else is dead.
Sixth. Another sign of a broken
heart, and of a contrite spirit is, it trembleth at
God’s Word. ‘To him that is poor, and of
a contrite spirit, and trembleth at my Word’ (Isa
66:2).
The Word of God is an awful Word to a
broken-hearted man. Solomon says, ‘The word of a king
is as the roaring of a lion’; and if so, what is the
Word of God? for by the wrath and fear is meant the
authoritative word of a king. We have a proverb, ‘The
burnt child dreads the fire, the whipped child fears the
rod’; even so the broken-hearted fears the Word of
God. Hence you have a remark set upon them that tremble at
God’s Word, to wit, they are they that keep among the
godly; they are they that keep within compass; they are
they that are aptest to mourn, and to stand in the gap,
when God is angry; and to turn away his wrath from a
people.
It is a sign the Word of God has had place,
and wrought powerfully, when the heart trembleth at it, is
afraid, and stands in awe of it. When Joseph’s
mistress tempted him to lie with her, he was afraid of the
Word of God. ‘How then can I do this great
wickedness,’ said he, ‘and sin against
God?’ He stood in awe of God’s Word, durst not
do it, because he kept in remembrance what a dreadful thing
it was to rebel against God’s Word. When old Eli
heard that the ark was taken, his very heart trembled
within him; for he read by that sad loss that God was angry
with Israel, and he knew the anger of God was a great and
terrible thing. When Samuel went to Bethlehem, the elders
of the town trembled; for they feared that he came to them
with some sad message from God, and they had had experience
of the dread of such things before (Gen 39:7-9; 1 Sam 4:13,
16:1-4). When Ezra would have a mourning in Israel for the
sins of the land, he sent, and there came to him
‘every one that trembled at the words of the God of
Israel, because of the transgressions of those that had
been carried away’ (Ezra 9:4).
There are, I say, a sort of people that
tremble at the words of God, and that are afraid of doing
ought that is contrary to them; but they are only such with
whose souls and spirits the Word has had to do. For the
rest, they are resolved to go on their course, let God say
what he will. ‘As for the word’ of the
Lord, said rebellious Israel to Jeremiah, ‘that thou
hast spoken unto us in the name of the Lord, we will not
hearken unto thee. But we will certainly do whatsoever
thing goeth forth out of our own mouth’ (Jer 44:16).
But do you think that these people did ever feel the power
and majesty of the Word of God to break their hearts? No,
verily; had that been so, they would have trembled at the
words of God; they would have been afraid of the words of
God. God may command some people what he will, they will do
what they list. What care they for God? what care they for
his Word? Neither threats nor promises, neither punishments
or favours will make them obedient to the Word of God; and
all because they have not felt the power of it, their
hearts have not been broken with it. When king Josias did
but read in God’s Book what punishment God had
threatened against rebellious Israel, though he himself was
a holy and good man, he humbled himself, ‘he rent his
clothes,’ and wept before the Lord, and was afraid of
the judgment threatened (2 Kings 22; 2 Chron 34). For he
knew what a dreadful thing the Word of God is. Some men, as
I said before, dare do anything, let the Word of God be
never so much against it; but they that tremble at the Word
dare not do so. No, they must make the Word their rule for
all they do; they must go to the Holy Bible, and there
inquire what may or may not be done; for they tremble at
the Word. This then is another sign, a true sign, that the
heart has been broken, namely, ‘When the heart is
made afraid of, and trembleth at the Word’ (Acts
9:4-6, 16:29,30). Trembling at the Word is caused by a
belief of what is deserved, threatened, and of what will
come, if not prevented by repentance; and therefore the
heart melts, and breaks before the Lord.
[IV. THE NECESSITY THERE IS THAT THE HEART
MUST BE BROKEN.]
I come, in the next place, to speak to this
question.
But what necessity is there that the heart
must be broken? Cannot a man be saved unless his heart be
broken? I answer, Avoiding secret things, which only belong
to God, there is a necessity of breaking the heart, in
order to salvation; because a man will not sincerely comply
with the means conducing thereunto until his heart is
broken. For,
First. Man, take him as he comes into
the world, as to spirituals, as to evangelical things, in
which mainly lies man’s eternal felicity, and there
he is as one dead, and so stupefied, and wholly in himself,
as unconcerned with it. Nor can any call or admonition,
that has not a heart-breaking power attending of it, bring
him to a due consideration of his present state, and so
unto an effectual desire to be saved.
Many ways God has manifested this. He has
threatened men with temporal judgments; yea, sent such
judgments upon them, once and again, over and over, but
they will not do. What! says he, ‘I have given you
cleanness of teeth in all your cities; I have withholden
the rain from you; I have smitten you with blasting and
mildew; I have sent among you the pestilence; I have
overthrown some of you, as God overthrew Sodom and
Gomorrah. Yet have ye not returned unto me, saith the
Lord’ (Amos 4:6-11). See here! Here is judgment upon
judgment, stroke after stroke, punishment after punishment,
but all will not do, unless the heart is broken. Yea,
another prophet seems to say that such things, instead of
converting the soul, sets it further off. If heart-breaking
work attend such strokes, ‘Why should ye be stricken
any more?’ says he, ‘ye will revolt more and
more’ (Isa 1:5).
Man’s heart is fenced, it is grown
gross; there is a skin that, like a coat of mail, has
wrapped it up, and inclosed it in on every side. This skin,
this coat of mail, unless it be cut off and taken away, the
heart remains untouched, whole; and so as unconcerned,
whatever judgments or afflictions light upon the body (Matt
13:15; Acts 28:27). This which I call the coat of mail, the
fence of the heart, has two great names in Scripture. It is
called, ‘the foreskin of the heart,’ and the
armour in which the devil trusteth (Deut 10:16; Luke
11:22).
Because these shield and fence the heart
from all gospel doctrine, and from all legal punishments,
nothing can come at it till these are removed. Therefore,
in order unto conversion, the heart is said to be
circumcised; that is, this foreskin is taken away, and this
coat of mail is spoiled. ‘I will circumcise thy
heart,’ saith he, ‘to love the Lord thy God
with all thine heart’—and then the
devil’s goods are spoiled— ‘that thou
mayst live’ (Deut 30:6; Luke 11:22).
And now the heart lies open, now the Word
will prick, cut, and pierce it; and it being cut, pricked,
and pierced, it bleeds, it faints, it falls, and dies at
the foot of God, unless it is supported by the grace and
love of God in Jesus Christ. Conversion, you know, begins
at the heart; but if the heart be so secured by sin and
Satan, as I have said, all judgments are, while that is so,
in vain. Hence Moses, after he had made a long relation of
mercy and judgment unto the children of Israel, suggests
that yet the great thing was wanting to them, and that
thing was, an heart to perceive, and eyes to see, and ears
to hear unto that day (Deut 29:2,3). Their hearts were as
yet not touched to the quick, were not awakened, and
wounded by the holy Word of God, and made tremble at its
truth and terror.
But I say, before the heart be touched,
pricked, made smart, &c., how can it be thought, be the
danger never so great, that it should repent, cry, bow, and
break at the foot of God, and supplicate there for mercy!
and yet thus it must do; for thus God has ordained, and
thus God has appointed it; nor can men be saved without it.
But, I say, can a man spiritually dead, a stupid man, whose
heart is past feeling, do this; before he has his dead and
stupid heart awakened, to see and feel its state and misery
without it? But,
Second. Man, take him as he comes
into the world—and how wise soever he is in worldly
and temporal things—he is yet a fool as to that which
is spiritual and heavenly. Hence Paul says, ‘the
natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God;
for they are foolishness unto him,’ because he is
indeed a fool to them; ‘neither,’ says the
text, ‘can he know them, because they are
spiritually discerned’ (1 Cor 2:14). But how now must
this fool be made wise? Why, wisdom must be put into his
heart (Job 38:36). Now, none can put it there but God; and
how doth he put it there, but by making room there for it,
by taking away the thing which hinders, which is that folly
and madness which naturally dwelleth there? But how doth he
take that away but by a severe chastising of his soul for
it, until he has made him weary of it? The whip and stripes
are provided for the natural fool, and so it is for him
that is spiritually so (Prov 19:29).
Solomon intimates, that it is a hard thing
to make a fool become wise. ‘Though thou shouldest
bray a fool in a mortar among wheat with a pestle,
yet will not his foolishness depart from him’
(Prov 27:22). By this it appears that it is a hard thing to
make a fool a wise man. To bray one in a mortar is a
dreadful thing, to bray one there with a pestle; and yet it
seems a whip, a mortar, and a pestle is the way. And if
this is the way to make one wise in this world, and if all
this will hardly do, how must the fool that is so in
spirituals be whipped and beaten, and stripped before he is
made wise therein? Yea, his heart must be put into
God’s mortar, and must be beaten; yea, brayed there
with the pestle of the law, before it loves to hearken unto
heavenly things. It is a great word in Jeremiah,
‘Through deceit,’ that is, folly, ‘they
refuse to know me, saith the Lord.’ And what follows?
Why, ‘Therefore, thus saith the Lord of hosts, behold
I will melt them, and try them,’ that is, with fire,
‘for how shall I do for the daughter of my
people’ (Jer 9:6,7). I will melt them: I will put
them into my furnace, and there I will try them; and there
will I make them know me, saith the Lord. When David was
under spiritual chastisement for his sin, and had his heart
under the breaking hand of God, then he said, God should
make him know wisdom (Psa 51:6). Now he was in the mortar,
now he was in the furnace, now he was bruised and melted;
yea, now his bones, his heart, was breaking, and now his
folly was departing. Now, says he, thou shalt make me to
know wisdom. If I know anything of the way of God with us
fools, there is nothing else will make us wise men; yea, a
thousand breakings will not make us so wise as we should
be.
We say, Wisdom is not good till it is
bought; and he that buys it, according to the intention of
that proverb, usually smarts for it. The fool is wise in
his own conceit; wherefore there is a double difficulty
attends him before he can be wise indeed. Not only his
folly, but his wisdom, must be removed from him; and how
shall that be, but by ripping up of his heart by some sore
conviction, that may show him plainly that his wisdom is
his folly, and that which will undo him. A fool loves his
folly; that is, as treasure, so much is he in love with it.
Now then, it must be a great thing that must make a fool
forsake his folly. The foolish will not weigh, nor
consider, nor compare wisdom with their folly. ‘Folly
is joy to him that is destitute of wisdom.’ ‘As
a dog returneth to his vomit, so a fool returneth to his
folly’ (Prov 15:21, 26:11). So loth are they when
driven from it to let it go, to let it depart from them.
Wherefore there must go a great deal to the making of a man
a Christian; for as to that, every man is a fool, yea, the
greatest fool, the most unconcerned fool, the most
self-willed fool of all fools; yea, one that will not be
turned from his folly but by the breaking of his heart.
David was one of these fools; Manasseh was one of these
fools; Saul, otherwise called Paul, was one of these fools;
and so was I—and that the biggest of
all.[11]
Third. Man, take him as he comes into
the world, and he is not only a dead man, and a fool, but a
proud man also. Pride is one of those sins that first
showeth itself to children, yea, and it grows up with them,
and mixeth itself with all they do: but it lies most hid,
most deep in man as to his soul-concerns. For the nature of
sin, as sin, is not only to be vile, but to hide its
vileness from the soul. Hence many think they do well when
they sin. Jonah thought he did well to be angry with God
(Jonah 4:9). The Pharisees thought they did well when they
said, Christ had a devil (John 8:48). And Paul thought
verily, that he ought to do many things against, or
contrary to, the name of Jesus; which he also did with
great madness (Acts 26:9,10). And thus sin puffs up men
with pride, and a conceit of themselves, that they are a
thousand times better than they are. Hence they think they
are the children of God, when they are the children of the
devil; and that they are something as to Christianity, when
they neither are such, nor know what it is that they must
have to make them such (John 8:41-44; Gal 6:3).
Now, whence flows this but from pride, and a
self-conceit of themselves, and that their state is good
for another world, when they are yet in their sins, and
under the curse of God? Yea, and this pride is so strong
and high, and yet so hid in them, that all the ministers in
the world cannot persuade them that this is pride, not
grace, in which they are so confident. Hence they slight
all reproofs, rebukes, threatenings, or admonitions that
are pressed upon them, to prevail with them to take heed,
that they be not herein deceived. ‘Hear ye,’
saith the prophet, ‘and give ear: be not proud, for
the Lord hath spoken.’ ‘But if ye will not hear
it, my soul shall weep in secret places for your
pride’ (Jer 13:15-17). And what was the conclusion?
Why, all the proud men stood out still, and maintained
their resistance of God and his holy prophet (Jer
43:2).
Nor is there any thing that will prevail
with these to the saving of their souls, until their hearts
are broken. David, after he had defiled Bathsheba, and
slain her husband, yet boasted himself in his justice and
holiness, and would by all means have the man put to death
that had but taken the poor man’s lamb, when, alas!
poor soul, himself was the great transgressor. But would he
believe it? No, no; he stood upon the vindicating of
himself to be a just doer; nor would he be made to fall
until Nathan, by authority from God, did tell him that he
was the man whom himself had condemned; ‘Thou art the
man,’ said he: at which word his conscience was
awakened, his heart wounded, and so his soul made to fall
under the burden of his guilt, at the feet of the God of
heaven for mercy (2 Sam 12:1-13).
Ah! pride, pride! thou art that which holds
many a man in the chains of his sins; thou art it, thou
cursed self-conceit, and keepest them from believing that
their state is damnable. ‘The wicked, through the
pride of his countenance, will not seek after
God’ (Psa 10:4). And if there is so much in the
pride of his countenance, what is there, think you, in the
pride of his heart? Therefore Job says it is to hide pride
from man, and so to save his soul from hell, that God
chasteneth him with pain upon his bed, until the multitude
of his bones stick out, and until his life draws nigh to
the destroyer (Job 33:17-22).
It is a hard thing to take a man off his
pride, and make him, instead of trusting in, and boasting
of his goodness, wisdom, honesty, and the like, to see
himself a sinner, a fool, yea, a man that is cruel, as to
his own immortal soul. Pride of heart has a power in it,
and is therefore compared to an iron sinew, and an iron
chain, by which they are made stout, and with which they
are held in that stoutness, to oppose the Lord, and drive
his Word from their hearts (Lev 26:19; Psa
73:6).
This was the sin of devils, and it is the
sin of man, and the sin, I say, from which no man can be
delivered until his heart is broken; and then his pride is
spoiled, then he will be glad to yield. If a man be proud
of his strength or manhood, a broken leg will maul him; and
if a man be proud of his goodness, a broken heart will maul
him; because, as has been said, a broken heart comes by the
discovery and charge of sin, by the power of God upon the
conscience.
Fourth. Man, take him as he comes
into the world, and he is not only a dead man, a fool, and
proud, but also self-willed and headstrong (2 Peter 2:10).
A stubborn ungain creature is man before his heart is
broken. Hence they are so often called rebels, rebellious,
and disobedient: they will only do what they list.
‘All day long,’ says God, ‘have I
stretched out my hand to a disobedient and gainsaying
people.’ And hence, again, they are compared to a
self-willed or headstrong horse, that will, in spite of his
rider, rush into the battle. ‘Every one,’ says
God, ‘turneth to his course, as the horse rusheth
into battle’ (Jer 8:6). They say, ‘With our
tongue will we prevail, our lips are our own; who
is lord over us’ (Psa 12:4).
Hence they are said to stop their ears, to
pull away their shoulder, to shut their eyes, and harden
their hearts, ‘against the words of God, and
contemned the counsel of the Most High’ (Psa 107:11;
Zech 7:10,12). They are fitly compared to the rebellious
son who would not be ruled by his parents, or to the
prodigal, who would have all in his own hand, and remove
himself far away from father and father’s house (Deut
21:20; Luke 15:13). Now for such creatures, nothing will do
but violence. The stubborn son must be stoned till he dies;
and the prodigal must be famished out of all; nothing else,
I say, will do. Their self-willed stubborn heart will not
comply with the will of God before it is broken (Deut
21:21; Luke 15:14-17). These are they that are called the
stout-hearted; these are said to be far from righteousness,
and so will remain until their hearts are broken; for so
they must be made to know themselves (Isa
9:9-11).
Fifth. Man, as he comes into the
world, is not only a dead man, a fool, proud, and
self-willed, but also a fearless creature. ‘There
is,’ saith the text, ‘no fear of God before
their eyes’ (Rom 3:18). No fear of God! There is fear
of man, fear of losing his favour, his love, his good-will,
his help, his friendship; this is seen everywhere. How do
the poor fear the rich, the weak fear the strong, and those
that are threatened, them that threaten! But come now to
God; why, none fear him; that is, by nature, none reverence
him; they neither fear his frowns, nor seek his favour, nor
inquire how they may escape his revenging hand that is
lifted up against their sins and their souls because of
sin. Little things they fear the losing of them; but the
soul they are not afraid to lose. ‘They fear not me,
saith the Lord’ (Mal 3:5).
How many times are some men put in mind of
death by sickness upon themselves, by graves, by the death
of others? How many times are they put in mind of hell by
reading the Word, by lashes of conscience, and by some that
go roaring in despair out of this world? How many times are
they put in mind of the day of judgment. As, 1. By
God’s binding the fallen angels over to judgment. 2.
By the drowning of the old world (2 Peter 2:4,5; Jude 6,7).
3. By the burning of Sodom and Gomorrah with fire from
heaven (2 Peter 2:6; Jude 7). 4. By appointing a day (Acts
17:29-31). 5. By appointing a judge (Acts 10:40-42). 6 By
reserving their crimes in records (Isa 30:8; Rev 20:12). 7.
By appointing and preparing of witnesses (Rom 2:15). 8. And
by promising, yea, threatening, yea, resolving, to call the
whole world to his bar, there to be judged for all which
they have done and said, and for every secret thing (Matt
25:31-33, 12:36; Eccl 11:9, 12:14).
And yet they fear not God: alas! they
believe not these things. These things, to carnal men, are
like Lot’s preaching to his sons and daughters that
were in Sodom. When he told them that God would destroy
that place, he seemed unto them as one that mocked; and his
words to them were as idle tales (Gen 19:14). Fearless men
are not won by words; blows, wounds, and killings, are the
things that must bring them under fear. How many struggling
fits had Israel with God in the wilderness? How many times
did they declare that there they feared him not? And
observe, they were seldom, if ever, brought to fear and
dread his glorious name, unless he beset them round with
death and the grave. Nothing, nothing but a severe hand,
will make the fearless fear. Hence, to speak after the
manner of man, God is put upon it to go this way with
sinners when he would save their souls; even bring them,
and lay them at the mouth, and within sight of hell and
everlasting damnation: and there also charge them with sin
and guilt, to the breaking of their hearts, before they
will fear his name.
Sixth. Man, as he comes into the
world, is not only a dead man, a fool, proud, self-willed,
and fearless, but he is a false believer concerning God.
Let God report of himself never so plainly, man by nature
will not believe this report of him. No, they are become
vain in their imaginations, and their foolish heart is
darkened; wherefore they turn the glory of God, which is
his truth, into a lie (Rom 1:21-25). God says, He sees;
they say, He seeth not; God saith, He knows; they say, He
doth not know: God saith, None is like himself; yet they
say, He is altogether like to them: God saith, None shall
keep his door for naught; they say, It is in vain, and to
no profit to serve him: he saith, He will do good; they
say, He will neither do good nor evil (Job 22:13,14; Psa
50:21; Job 21:14,15; Mal 3:14; Zeph 1:12). Thus they
falsely believe concerning God; yea, as to the word of his
grace, and the revelation of his mercy in Christ, they
stick not to say by their practice—for a wicked man
speaketh with his feet (Prov 6:13)—that that is a
stark lie, and not to be trusted to (1 John
5:10).
Now, what shall God do to save these men? If
he hides himself and conceals his glory, they perish. If he
sends to them by his messengers, and forbears to come to
them himself, they perish. If he comes to them and forbears
to work upon them by his word, they perish: if he worketh
on them, but not effectually, they perish. If he works
effectually he must break their hearts, and make them, as
men wounded to death, fall at his feet for mercy, or there
can be no good done on them; they will not rightly believe
until he fires them out of their misbelief, and makes them
to know, by the breaking of their bones for their false
faith, that he is, and will be, what he has said of himself
in his holy Word.[12] The heart, therefore, must
be broken before the man can come to good.
Seventh. Man, as he comes into the
world, is not only a dead man, a fool, proud, self-willed,
fearless, and a false believer, but a great lover of sin;
he is captivated, ravished, drowned in the delights of it.
Hence it [the Word] says, they love sin, delight in lies,
do take pleasure in iniquity, and in them that do it; that
they sport themselves in their own deceivings, and glory in
their shame (John 3:19; Psa 62:4; Rom 1:32; 2 Peter 2:13;
Phil 3:19).
This is the temper of man by nature; for sin
is mixed with and has the mastery of all the powers of his
soul. Hence they are said to be captives to it, and to be
led captive into the pleasures of it, at the will of the
devil (2 Tim 2:26). And you know it is not an easy thing to
break love, or to take the affections off that object on
which they are so deeply set, in which they are so deeply
rooted, as man’s heart is in his sins. Alas! how many
are there that contemn all the allurements of heaven, and
that trample upon all the threatenings of God, and that
say, ‘Tush,’ at all the flames of hell,
whenever these are propounded as motives to work them off
their sinful delights! so fixed are they, so mad are they,
upon these beastly idols. Yea, he that shall take in hand
to stop their course in this their way, is as he that shall
attempt to prevent the raging waves of the sea from their
course, when driven by the mighty winds.
When men are somewhat put to it, when reason
and conscience shall begin a little to hearken to a
preacher, or a judgment that shall begin to hunt for
iniquity, how many tricks, evasions, excuses, demurs,
delays, and hiding-holes will they make, invent, and find,
to hide and preserve their sweet sins with themselves and
their souls, in the delights of them, to their own eternal
perdition? Hence they endeavour to stifle conscience, to
choke convictions, to forget God, to make themselves
atheists, to contradict preachers that are plain and
honest, and to heap to themselves such of them only as are
like themselves, that speak unto them smooth things, and
prophesy deceits; yea, they say themselves to such
preachers, ‘Get you out of the way; turn aside out of
the path; cause the Holy One of Israel to cease from before
us’ (Isa 30:8-11). If they be followed still, and
conscience and guilt shall, like blood-hounds, find them
out in their secret places, and roar against them for their
wicked lives, then they will flatter, cogg, dissemble, and
lie against their soul, promising to mend, to turn, to
repent, and grow better shortly; and all to
daff[13] off convictions and molestations in
their wicked ways, that they may yet pursue their lusts,
their pleasures, and sinful delights, in quiet, and without
control.
Yea, further, I have known some that have
been made to roar like bears, to yell like dragons, and to
howl like dogs, by reason of the weight of guilt, and the
lashes of hell upon their conscience for their evil deeds;
who have, so soon as their present torments and fears were
gone, returned again with the ‘dog to his vomit; and
as the sow that was washed, to her wallowing in the
mire’ (Hosea 7:14; 2 Peter 2:20-22).
Once again, some have been made taste of the
good Word of God, of the joy of heaven, and of the powers
of the world to come, and yet could not by any one, nay, by
all of these, be made to break their league for ever with
their lusts and sins (Heb 6:4,5; Luke 8:13; John 5:33-35).
O Lord! what is man, that thou art mindful of him? Wherein
is he to be accounted of? He has sinned against thee; he
loves his sins more than thee. He is a lover of pleasures
more than he is a lover of God!
But now, how shall this man be reclaimed
from this sin? How shall he be brought, wrought, and made,
to be out of love with it? Doubtless it can be by no other
means, by what we can see in the Word, but by the wounding,
breaking, and disabling of the heart that loves it, and by
that means making it a plague and gall unto it. Sin may be
made an affliction, and as gall and wormwood to them that
love it; but the making of it so bitter a thing to such a
man, will not be done but by great and sore means. I
remember we had in our town some time since, a little girl
that loved to eat the heads of foul tobacco-pipes, and
neither rod nor good words could reclaim her, and make her
leave them. So her father takes advice of a doctor, to wean
her from them, and it was this: Take, saith he, a great
many of the foulest tobacco-pipe heads you can get, and
boil them in milk, and make a posset of that milk, and make
your daughter drink the posset-drink up. He did so, and
gave his girl it, and made her drink it up; the which
became so irksome and nauseous to her stomach, and made her
so sick, that she could never abide to meddle with
tobacco-pipe heads any more, and so was cured of that
disease. Thou lovest thy sin, and neither rod nor good
words will as yet reclaim thee. Well, take heed; if thou
wilt not be reclaimed, God will make thee a posset of them,
which shall be so bitter to thy soul, so irksome to thy
taste, so loathsome to thy mind, and so afflicting to thy
heart, that it shall break it with sickness and grief, till
it be loathsome to thee. I say, thus he will do if he loves
thee; if not, he will suffer thee to take thy course, and
will let thee go on with thy tobacco-pipe heads!
The children of Israel will have flesh, must
have flesh; they weep, cry, and murmur, because they have
not flesh; the bread of heaven, that is but light and sorry
stuff in their esteem (Num 11:1-6). Moses goes and tells
God how the people despised his heavenly bread, and how
they longed, lusted, and desired to be fed with flesh.
Well, says God, they shall have flesh, they shall have
their fill of flesh; I will feed them with it; they shall
have to the full; and that ‘ye shall not eat one day,
nor two days, nor five days, neither ten days, nor twenty
days; but even a whole month, until it come out at
your nostrils, and it be loathsome unto you; because ye
have despised the Lord’ (Num 11:11-20). He can tell
how to make that loathsome to thee on which thou most dost
set thine evil heart. And he will do so, if he loves thee;
else, as I said, he will not make thee sick by smiting of
thee nor punish thee for or when thou committest whoredom,
but will let thee alone till the judgment-day, and call
thee to a reckoning for all thy sins then. But to pass
this.
Eighth. Man, as he comes into the
world, is not only a dead man, a fool, proud, self-willed,
fearless, a false believer, and a lover of sin, but a wild
man. He is of the wild olive tree, of that which is wild by
nature (Rom 11:17,24). So, in another place, man by nature
is compared to the ass, to a wild ass. ‘For vain or
empty man would be wise, though man be born like a wild
ass’s colt’ (Job 11:12). Isaac was a figure of
Christ, and of all converted men (Gen 4:28). But Ishmael
was a figure of man by nature; and the Holy Ghost, as to
that, saith this of him, ‘And he will be a wild
man’ (Gen 16:12). This man, I say, was a figure of
all carnal men, in their wildness or estrangedness from
God. Hence it is said of the prodigal, at his conversion,
that he came to himself then; implying that he was mad,
wild, or out of his wits before (Luke 15:17). I know there
is a difference sometimes betwixt one’s being wild
and mad; yet sometimes wildness arriveth to that degree as
to give one rightly the denomination of being mad. And it
is always true in spirituals; namely, that he that is wild,
as to God, is mad, or besides himself, and so not capable,
before he is tamed, of minding his own eternal good as he
should. There are these several things that are tokens of
one wild or mad; and they all meet in a carnal
man.
1. A wild or mad man gives no heed to good
counsel; the frenzy of his head shuts all out, and by its
force leads him away from men that are wise and sober. And
thus it is with carnal men; good counsel is to them as
pearls are that are cast afore swine; it is trampled under
foot of them, and the man is despised that brings it (Matt
7:6). ‘The poor man’s wisdom is
despised, and his words are not heard’ (Eccl
9:16).
2. A wild or mad man, let him alone, and he
will greatly busy himself all his life to accomplish that
which, when it is completed, amounts to nothing. The work,
the toil, the travel of such a one comes to nothing, save
to declare that he was out of his wits that did it. David,
imitating of such a one, scrabbled upon the gate of the
king, as fools do with chalk; and like to this is all the
work of all carnal men in the world (1 Sam 21:12,13).
Hence, such a one is said to labour for the wind, or for
what will amount to no more than if he filled his belly
with the east wind (Eccl 5:16; Job 15:2).
3. A wild or mad man, if you set him to do
anything, and he does it, he will yet do it, not by or
according to your bidding, but after the folly of his own
wild fancy; even as Jehu executed the commandment of the
Lord; he did it in his own madness, taking no heed to the
commandment of the Lord (2 Kings 9:20, 10:31). And thus do
carnal men do, when they meddle with any of God’s
matters, as hearing, praying, reading, professing; they do
all according to their own wild fancy; they take no heed to
do these after the commandment of the Lord.
4. Wild or mad men, if they deck or array
themselves with ought, as many times they do, why, the
spirit of their wildness or frenzy appears even in the mode
and way in which they do it. Either the things themselves
which they make use of for that purpose are very toys and
trifles; or if they seem to be better, they are put on
after an antic manner, rather to the rendering of them
ridiculous, than to bespeak them sober, judicious, or wise;
and so do natural men array themselves with what they would
be accepted in with God. Would one in his wits think to
make himself fine or acceptable to men by arraying himself
in menstruous cloths, or by painting his face with dross
and dung? And yet this is the finery of carnal men, when
they approach for acceptance into the presence of God (Isa
64:6; Phil 3:7,8).
O the wildness, the frenzy, the madness,
that possesses the heart and mind of carnal men! they walk
according to the course of this world, according to or
after that spirit which is in truth the spirit of the
devil, which worketh in the children of disobedience (Eph
2:1-3). But do they believe that thus it is with them? No,
they are, in their own account, as other madmen are, the
only ones in the world. Hence they are so taken and tickled
with their own frantic notions, and deride all else that
dwell in the world. But which is the way to make one that
is wild, or a madman, sober? To let him alone will not do
it; to give him good words only will not do it; no, he must
be tamed; means must be used to tame him. ‘He brought
down their hearts with labour,’ or by continual
molestation; as you have it (Psa 107:10-12). He speaketh
there of madmen that are kept up in darkness, and bound in
afflictions and irons, because they rebelled against the
words of God, and contemned the counsel of the Most
High.
This, therefore, is the way to deal with
such, and none but God can so deal with them. They must be
taken, they must be separated from men; they must be laid
in chains, in darkness, afflictions, and irons; they must
be blooded, half-starved, whipped, purged, and be dealt
with as mad people are dealt with. And thus they must be
dealt with till they come to themselves, and cry out in
their distresses. And then they cry to the Lord in their
troubles, and he saveth them out of their distresses; then
he brings them out of darkness, and the shadow of death,
and breaks their bands in sunder (Psa 107:13-15). Thus, I
say, God tames the wild, and brings mad prodigals to
themselves, and so to him for mercy.
Ninth. Man, as he comes into the
world, is not only a dead man, a fool, proud, self-willed,
fearless, a false believer, a lover of sin, and a wild man;
but a man that disrelishes the things of the kingdom of
God. I told you before, that unconverted man is such as did
not taste things; but now I add, that he disrelishes
things; he calls bitter things sweet, and sweet bitter; he
judges quite amiss. These are they that God threateneth
with a woe. ‘Woe unto them that call evil good, and
good evil; that put darkness for light, and light for
darkness; that put bitter for sweet, and sweet for
bitter’ (Isa 5:20).
This latter part of this text shows us
evidently that the things of God are disrelished by some.
They call his sweet things bitter, and the devil’s
bitter things sweet; and all this is for want of a broken
heart. A broken heart relishes otherwise than a whole or
unbroken one doth. A man that has no pain, or bodily
distress, cannot find or feel virtue or good in the most
sovereign plaister, were it applied to arm or leg; no, he
rather says, Away with these stinking daubing things. O!
but lay the same plaisters where there is need, and the
patient will relish, and taste, and savour the goodness of
them; yea, will prize and commend them to
others.
Thus it is in spirituals. The world, they
know not what the anguish or pain of a broken heart means;
they say, ‘Who will show us any good,’
that is, better than we find in our sports, pleasures,
estates, and preferments. ‘There be
many,’ says the Psalmist, speak after this sort. But
what says the distressed man? Why, ‘Lord, lift thou
up the light of thy countenance upon us’; and then
adds, ‘Thou hast put gladness in my heart’;
namely, by the light of thy countenance, for that is the
plaister for a broken heart. ‘Thou hast put gladness
in my heart, more than in the time that their corn
and their wine increaseth’ (Psa 4:1-7). O! a broken
heart can savour pardon, can savour the consolations of the
Holy Ghost. Yea, as a hungry or thirsty man prizes bread
and water in the want thereof, so do the broken in heart
prize and set a high esteem on the things of the Lord
Jesus. His flesh, his blood, his promise, and the light of
his countenance, are the only sweet things both to scent
and taste, to those that are of a wounded spirit. The full
soul loatheth the honey-comb; the whole despise the gospel,
they savour not the things that are of God.
If twenty men were to hear a pardon read,
and but one of those twenty were condemned to die, and the
pardon was for none but such; which of these men, think
you, would taste the sweetness of that pardon, they who are
not, or he that was condemned? The condemned man,
doubtless. This is the case in hand. The broken in heart is
a condemned man; yea, it is a sense of condemnation, with
other things, that has indeed broken his heart; nor is
there anything but sense of forgiveness that can bind it
up, or heal it. But could that heal it, could he not taste,
truly taste, or rightly relish this forgiveness? no;
forgiveness would be to him as it is to him that has not
sense of want of it.
But, I say, what is the reason some so prize
what others so despise, since they both stand in need of
the same grace and mercy of God in Christ? Why, the one
sees, and the other sees nothing, of this woeful miserable
state. And thus have I showed you the necessity of a broken
heart. 1. Man is dead, and must be quickened. 2. Man is a
fool, and must be made wise. 3. Man is proud, and must be
humbled. 4. Man is self-willed, and must be broken. 5. Man
is fearless, and must be made to consider. 6. Man is a
false believer, and must be rectified. 7. Man is a lover of
sin, and must be weaned from it. 8. Man is wild, and must
be tamed. 9. Man disrelishes the things of God, and can
take no savour in them, until his heart is
broken.
[V. THE REASONS WHY A BROKEN HEART IS
ESTEEMED BY GOD SUCH AN EXCELLENT THING.]
And thus have I done with this, and shall
come next to the reasons of the point, namely, to show you,
why or how it comes to pass, that a broken heart, a heart
truly contrite, is to God such an excellent thing. That to
him it is so, we have proved by six demonstrations; what it
is, we have showed by the six signs thereof; that it must
be, is manifest by those nine reasons but now urged; and
why it is with God or in his esteem an excellent thing,
that is shown by that which follows.
First. A broken heart is the
handiwork of God; an heart of his own preparing, for his
own service; it is a sacrifice of his own providing, of his
providing for himself; as Abraham said in another case,
‘God will provide himself a lamb’ (Gen
22:8).
Hence it is said, ‘The preparations of
the heart in man, &c., is from the Lord.’
And again, ‘God maketh my heart soft, and the
Almighty troubleth me’ (Job 23:16). The heart, as it
is by nature hard, stupid, and impenetrable, so it remains,
and so will remain, until God, as was said, bruiseth it
with his hammer, and melts it with his fire. The stony
nature of it is therefore said to be taken away of God.
‘I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh,
and I will give you,’ saith he, ‘an heart of
flesh’ (Eze 36:26). I will take away the stony heart,
or the stoniness, or the hardness of your heart, and I will
give you a heart of flesh; that is, I will make your heart
sensible, soft, wieldable, governable, and penitent.
Sometimes he bids men rend their hearts, not because they
can, but to convince them rather, that though it must be
so, they cannot do it; so he bids them make themselves a
new heart, and a new spirit, for the same purpose also; for
if God doth not rend it, it remains unrent; if God makes it
not new, it abides an old one still.
This is that that is meant by his bending of
men for himself, and of his working in them that which is
pleasing in his sight (Zech 9:13). The heart, soul, or
spirit, as in itself, as it came from God’s fingers,
a precious thing, a thing in God’s account worth more
than all the world. This heart, soul, or spirit, sin has
hardened, the devil has bewitched, the world has deceived.
This heart, thus beguiled, God coveteth and desireth:
‘My son,’ saith he, ‘give me thine heart,
and let thine eyes observe my ways’ (Prov
23:26).
This man cannot do this thing: for that his
heart has the mastery of him, and will not but carry him
after all manner of vanity. What now must be done? Why, God
must take the heart by storm, by power, and bring it to a
compliance with the Word; but the heart of itself will not;
it is deluded, carried away to another than God. Wherefore
God now betakes him to his sword, and bring down the heart
with labour, opens it, and drives out the strong man armed
that did keep it; wounds it; and makes it smart for its
rebellion, that it may cry; so he rectifies it for himself.
‘He maketh sore, and bindeth up; he woundeth, and his
hands make whole’ (Job 5:18). Thus having wrought it
for himself, it becomes his habitation, his dwelling-place:
‘That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith’
(Eph 3:17).
But I would not swerve from the thing in
hand. I have told you a broken heart is the handiwork of
God, a sacrifice of his own preparing; a material fitted
for himself.
1. By breaking of the heart he openeth it,
and makes it a receptacle for the graces of his Spirit;
that is the cabinet, when unlocked, where God lays up the
jewels of the gospel; there he puts his fear; ‘I will
put my fear in their hearts’; there he writes his
law; ‘I will write my law in their heart’;
there he puts his Spirit: ‘I will put my Spirit
within you’ (Jer 31:31-33, 32:39-41; Eze 36:26,27).
The heart, I say, God chooses for his cabinet: there he
hides his treasure; there is the seat of justice, mercy,
and of every grace of God; I mean, when it is broken, made
contrite; and so regulated by the holy Word.
2. The heart, when broken, is like sweet
gums and spices when beaten; for as such cast their
fragrant scent into the nostrils of men, so the heart when
broken casts its sweet smells in the nostrils of God. The
incense, which was a type of prayer of old, was to be
beaten or bruised, and so to be burned in the censer. The
heart must be beaten or bruised, and then the sweet scent
will come out: even groans, and cries, and sighs, for the
mercy of God; which cries, &c. to him, are a very
excellent thing, and pleasing in his nostrils.
Second. A broken heart is in the
sight of God an excellent thing; because a broken heart is
submissive; it falleth before God, and giveth to him his
glory. All this is true from a multitude of scriptures,
which I need not here mention. Hence such a heart is called
an honest heart, a good heart, a perfect heart, a heart
fearing God, and such as is sound in God’s
statutes.
Now, this cannot but be an excellent thing,
if we consider, that by such a heart, unfeigned obedience
is yielded unto him that calleth for it. ‘Ye have
obeyed from the heart,’ says Paul to them at Rome,
‘that form of doctrine which was delivered you’
(Rom 6:17). Alas! the heart, before it is broken and made
contrite, is quite of another temper: ‘It is not
subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be.’
The great stir before the heart is broken, is about who
shall be Lord, God or the sinner. True, the right of
dominion is the Lord’s; but the sinner will not
suffer it, but will be all himself; saying ‘Who
is Lord over us?’ and again, say they to God,
‘We are lords, we will come no more unto thee’
(Psa 12:4; Jer 2:31).
This also is evident by their practice; God
may say what he will, but they will do what they list. Keep
my sabbath, says God; I will not, says the sinner. Leave
your whoring, says God; I will not, says the sinner. Do not
tell lies, nor swear, nor curse, nor blaspheme my holy
name, says God; O but I will, says the sinner. Turn to me,
says God; I will not, says the sinner. The right of
dominion is mine, says God; but, like that young rebel (1
Kings 1:5), I will be king, says the sinner. Now, this is
intolerable, this is unsufferable, and yet every sinner by
practice says thus; for they have not submitted themselves
unto the righteousness of God.
Here can be no concord, no communion, no
agreement, no fellowship. Here, here is enmity on the one
side, and flaming justice on the other (2 Cor 6:14-16; Zech
11:8). And what delight, what content, what pleasure, can
God take in such men. None at all; no, though they should
be mingled with the best of the saints of God; yea, though
the best of saints should supplicate for them. Thus, says
Jeremiah, ‘Then said the Lord unto me, Though Moses
and Samuel stood before me,’ that is, to pray for
them, ‘yet my mind could not be
toward this people; cast them out of my sight, and
let them go forth’ (Jer 15:1).
Here is nought but open war, acts of
hostility, and shameful rebellion, on the sinner’s
side; and what delight can God take in that? Wherefore, if
God will bend and buckle the spirit of such an one, he must
shoot an arrow at him, a bearded arrow, such as may not be
plucked out of the wound: an arrow that will stick fast,
and cause that the sinner falls down as dead at God’s
foot (Psa 33:1,2). Then will the sinner deliver up his
arms, and surrender up himself as one conquered, into the
hand of, and beg for the Lord’s pardon, and not till
then; I mean not sincerely.
And now God has overcome, and his right hand
and his holy arm has gotten him the victory. Now he rides
in triumph with his captive at his chariot wheel; now he
glories; now the bells in heaven do ring; now the angels
shout for joy, yea, are bid to do so, ‘Rejoice with
me, for I have found my sheep which was lost’ (Luke
15:1-10). Now also the sinner, as a token of being
overcome, lies grovelling at his foot, saying, ‘Thine
arrows are sharp in the heart of the king’s enemies,
whereby the people fall under thee’ (Psa
45:3-5).
Now the sinner submits, now he follows his
conqueror in chains, now he seeks peace, and would give all
the world, were it his own, to be in the favour of God, and
to have hopes by Christ of being saved. Now this must be
pleasing, this cannot but be a thing acceptable in
God’s sight: ‘A broken and a contrite heart, O
God, thou wilt not despise.’ For it is the desire of
his own heart, the work of his own hands.
Third. Another reason why a broken
heart is to God such an excellent thing is this, a broken
heart prizes Christ, and has a high esteem for him. The
whole have no need of a physician, but the sick; this sick
man is the broken-hearted in the text; for God makes men
sick by smiting of them, by breaking of their hearts. Hence
sickness and wounds are put together; for that the one is a
true effect of the other (Mark 2:17; Micah 6:13; Hosea
5:13). Can any think that God should be pleased, when men
despise his Son, saying, He hath no form nor comeliness,
and when we shall see him, there is no beauty that we
should desire him? And yet so say they of him whose hearts
God has not mollified; yea, the elect themselves confess,
that before their hearts were broken, they set light by him
also. He is, say they, ‘despised and rejected of men,
- and we hid as it were our faces from him; he was
despised, and we esteemed him not’ (Isa
53:2,3).
He is indeed the great deliverer; but what
is a deliverer to them that never saw themselves in
bondage, as was said before? Hence it is said of him that
delivered the city, ‘No man remembered that same poor
man’ (Eccl 9:15). He has sorely suffered, and been
bruised for the transgression of man, that they might not
receive the smart, and hell, which by their sins they have
procured to themselves. But what is that to them that never
saw ought but beauty, and that never tasted anything but
sweetness in sin? It is he that holdeth by his intercession
the hands of God, and that causes him to forbear to cut off
the drunkard, the liar, and unclean person, even when they
are in the very act and work of their abomination; but
their hard heart, their stupefied heart, has no sense of
such kindness as this, and therefore they take no notice of
it. How many times has God said to this dresser of his
vineyard, ‘Cut down the barren fig-tree,’ while
he yet, by his intercession, has prevailed for a reprieve
for another year! But no notice is taken of this, no thanks
is from them returned to him for such kindness of Christ.
Wherefore such ungrateful, unthankful, inconsiderate
wretches as these must needs be a continual eye-sore, as I
may say, and great provocation to God; and yet thus men
will do before their hearts are broken (Luke
13:6-9).
Christ, as I said, is called a physician;
yea, he is the only soul-physician. He heals, how desperate
soever the disease be; yea, and heals who he undertakes for
ever. ‘I give unto them eternal life,’ and doth
all of free cost, of mere mercy and compassion (John
10:28). But what is all this to one that neither sees his
sickness, that sees nothing of a wound? What is the best
physician alive, or all the physicians in the world, put
all together, to him that knows no sickness, that is
sensible of no disease? Physicians, as was said, may go
a-begging for all the healthful. Physicians are of no
esteem, save only to the sick, or upon a supposition of
being so now, or at any other time.
Why, this is the cause Christ is so little
set by in the world. God has not made them sick by smiting
of them; his sword has not given them the wound, his dart
has not been struck through their liver; they have not been
broken with his hammer, nor melted with his fire. So they
have no regard to his physician; so they slight all the
provision which God has made for the salvation of the soul.
But now, let such a soul be wounded; let such a man’s
heart be broken; let such a man be made sick through the
sting of guilt, and be made to wallow himself in ashes
under the burden of his transgressions; and then, who but
Christ, as has been showed afore, then the physician; then,
wash me, Lord, then supple my wounds, then pour thy wine
and oil into my sore; then Lord Jesus cause me to hear the
voice of joy and gladness, that the bones which thou hast
broken may rejoice. Nothing now so welcome as healing; and
so nothing, no man, so desirable now as Christ. His name to
such is the best of names; his love to such is the best of
love; himself being now not only in himself, but also to
such a soul, the chiefest of ten thousand (Can
5:10).
As bread to the hungry, as water to the
thirsty, as light to the blind, and liberty to the
imprisoned; so, and a thousand times more, is Jesus Christ
to the wounded, and to them that are broken-hearted. Now,
as was said, this must needs be excellent in God’s
eyes, since Christ Jesus is so glorious in his eyes. To
contemn what a man counts excellent, is an offence to him;
but to value, esteem, or think highly of that which is of
esteem with me, this is pleasing to me, such an opinion is
excellent in my sight. What says Christ? ‘My Father
loveth you, because ye loved me’ (John 16:27). Who
hath an high esteem for Christ, the Father hath an high
esteem for them. Hence it is said, ‘He that hath the
Son, hath the Father’; the Father will be his, and
will do for him as a Father, who receiveth and sets an
honourable esteem on his Son.
But none will, none can do this, but the
broken-hearted; because they, and they only, are sensible
of the want and worth of an interest in him.
I dare appeal to all the world as to the
truth of this; and do say again, that these, and none but
these, have hearts of esteem in the sight of God. Alas!
‘the heart of the wicked is little
worth,’ for it is destitute of a precious esteem of
Christ, and cannot but be destitute, because it is not
wounded, broken, and made sensible of the want of mercy by
him (Prov 10:20).
Fourth. A broken heart is of great
esteem with God, because it is a thankful heart for that
sense of sin and of grace it has received. The broken heart
is a sensible heart. This we touched upon before. It is
sensible of the dangers which sin leadeth to; yea, and has
cause to be sensible thereof, because it has seen and felt
what sin is, both in the guilt and punishment that by law
is due thereto. As a broken heart is sensible of sin, in
the evil nature and consequences of it; so it is also
sensible of the way of God’s delivering the soul from
the day of judgment; consequently it must be a thankful
heart. Now he that praises me, glorifies me, saith God; and
God loves to be glorified. God’s glory is dear unto
him; he will not part with that (Psa 50:23; Isa
42:8).
The broken-hearted, say I, forasmuch as he
is the sensible soul, it follows that he is the thankful
soul. ‘Bless the Lord, O my soul,’ said David,
‘and all that is within me bless his holy
name.’ Behold what blessing of God is here! and yet
not content herewith, he goes on with it again, saying,
‘Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all his
benefits.’ But what is the matter? O! he has
‘forgiven all thine iniquities, and healed all thy
diseases. He has redeemed thy life from destruction, and
crowneth thee with loving kindnesses and tender
mercies’ (Psa 103:1-4). But how came he to be
affected with this? Why, he knew what it was to hang over
the mouth of hell for sin; yea, he knew what it was for
death and hell to beset and compass him about; yea, they
took hold of him, as we have said, and were pulling of him
down into the deep; this he saw to the breaking of his
heart. He saw also the way of life, and had his soul
relieved with faith and sense of that, and that made him a
thankful man. If a man who has had a broken leg, is but
made to understand, that by the breaking of that he kept
from breaking of his neck, he will be thankful to God for a
broken leg. ‘It is good for me,’ said
David, ‘that I have been afflicted.’ I was by
that preserved from a great danger; for before that I went
astray (Psa 119:67,71).
And who can be thankful for a mercy that is
not sensible that they want it, have it, and have it of
mercy? Now, this the broken-hearted, this the man that is
of a contrite spirit, is sensible of; and that with
reference to mercies of the best sort, and therefore must
needs be a thankful man, and so have a heart of esteem with
God, because it is a thankful heart.
Fifth. A broken heart is of great
esteem with, or an excellent thing in, the sight of God,
because it is a heart that desires now to become a
receptacle or habitation for the spirit and graces of the
Spirit of God. It was the devil’s hold before, and
was contented so to be. But now it is for entertaining of,
for being possessed with, the Holy Spirit of God.
‘Create in me a clean heart,’ said David,
‘and renew a right spirit within me. Take not thy
Holy Spirit from me, uphold me with thy free
Spirit’ (Psa 51:10-12). Now he was for a clean heart
and a right spirit; now he was for the sanctifying of the
blessed spirit of grace; a thing which the uncircumcised in
heart resist, and do despite unto (Acts 7:51; Heb
10:29).
A broken heart, therefore, suiteth with the
heart of God; a contrite spirit is one spirit with him.
God, as I told you before, covets to dwell with the broken
in heart, and the broken in heart desire communion with
him. Now here is an agreement, a oneness of mind; now the
same mind is in thee which was also in Christ Jesus. This
must needs be an excellent spirit; this must needs be
better with God, and in his sight, than thousands of rams,
or ten thousand rivers of oil. But does the carnal world
covet this, this spirit, and the blessed graces of it? No,
they despise it, as I said before; they mock at it, they
prefer and countenance any sorry, dirty lust rather; and
the reason is, because they want a broken heart, that heart
so highly in esteem with God, and remain for want thereof
in their enmity to God.
The broken-hearted know, that the
sanctifying of the Spirit is a good means to keep from that
relapse, out of which a man cannot come unless his heart be
wounded a second time. Doubtless David had a broken heart
at first conversion, and if that brokenness had remained,
that is, had he not given way to hardness of heart again,
he had never fallen into that sin out of which he could not
be recovered, but by the breaking of his bones a second
time. Therefore, I say, a broken heart is of great esteem
with God; for it—and I will add, so long as it
retains its tenderness—covets none but God, and the
things of his Holy Spirit; sin is an abomination to
it.
[VI. ADVANTAGES THAT A CHRISTIAN GETS BY
KEEPING HIS HEART TENDER.]
And here, as in a fit place, before I go any
further, I will show you some of the advantages that a
Christian gets by keeping of his heart tender. For, as to
have a broken heart, is to have an excellent thing, so to
keep this broken heart tender, is also very
advantageous.
First. This is the way to maintain in
thy soul always a fear of sinning against God. Christians
do not wink at, or give way to sin, until their hearts
begin to lose their tenderness. A tender heart will be
affected at the sin of another, much more it will be afraid
of committing of sin itself (2 Kings 22:19).
Second. A tender heart quickly
yieldeth to prayer, yea, prompteth to it, puts an edge and
fire into it. We never are backward to prayer until our
heart has lost its tenderness; though then it grows cold,
flat, and formal, and so carnal to and in that holy
duty.
Third. A tender hearts has always
repentance at hand for the least fault or slip, or sinful
thought that the soul is guilty of. In many things the best
offend; but if a Christian loseth his tenderness, if he
says he has his repentance to seek, his heart is grown
hard—has lost that spirit, that kind spirit of
repentance, it was wont to have. Thus it was with the
Corinthians; they were decayed, and lost their tenderness;
wherefore their sin—yea, great sins—remained
unrepented of (2 Cor 12:20).
Fourth. A tender heart is for
receiving often its communion with God, when he that is
hardened, though the seed of grace is in him, will be
content to eat, drink, sleep, wake, and go days without
number without him (Isa 17:10; Jer 2:32).
Fifth. A tender heart is a wakeful,
watchful heart. It watches against sin in the soul, sin in
the family, sin in the calling, sin in spiritual duties and
performances, &c. It watches against Satan, against the
world, against the flesh, &c. But now, when the heart
is not tender, there is sleepiness, unwatchfulness,
idleness, a suffering the heart, the family, and calling to
be much defiled, spotted, and blemished with sin; for a
hard heart departs from God, and turns aside in all these
things.
Sixth. A tender heart will deny
itself, and that in lawful things, and will forbear even
that which may be done—for some Jew, or Gentile, or
the church of God, or any member of it, should be offended,
or made weak thereby; whereas the Christian that is not
tender, that has lost his tenderness, is so far off of
denying himself in lawful things, that he will even
adventure to meddle in things utterly forbidden, whoever is
offended, grieved, or made weak thereby. For an instance of
this, we need go no further than to the man in the text,
who, while he was tender, trembled at little things; but
when his heart was hardened, he could take Bathsheba to
satisfy his lust, and kill her husband to cover his
wickedness.
Seventh. A tender heart—I mean,
the heart kept tender—preserves from many a blow,
lash, and fatherly chastisement; because it shuns the
causes, which is sin, of the scourging hand of God.
‘With the pure thou wilt show thyself pure, but with
the froward thou wilt shew thyself unsavoury’ (2 Sam
22:27; Psa 18:25-27).
Many a needless rebuke and wound doth happen
to the saints of God through their unwise behaviour. When I
say needless, I mean they are not necessary, but to reclaim
us from our vanities; for we should not feel the smart of
them, were it not for our follies. Hence the afflicted is
called a fool, because his folly brings his affliction upon
him. ‘Fools,’ says David, ‘because of
their transgression, and because of their iniquities, are
afflicted’ (Psa 107:17). And therefore it is, as was
said before, that he call his sin his foolishness. And
again, ‘God will speak peace unto his people, and to
his saints; but let them not turn again to folly’
(Psa 38:5, 85:8). ‘If his children transgress my
laws, then will I visit their transgression with the rod,
and their iniquity with stripes’ (Psa
89:30-32).
[How to keep the heart
tender.]
QUEST. But what should a Christian do, when
God has broke his heart, to keep it tender?
ANSW. To this I will speak briefly. And,
first, give you several cautions; secondly,
several directions.
[First—Several
cautions.]
1. Take heed that you choke not those
convictions that at present do break your hearts, by
labouring to put those things out of your minds which were
the cause of such convictions; but rather nourish and
cherish those things in a deep and sober remembrance of
them. Think, therefore, with thyself thus, What was it that
at first did wound my heart? And let that still be there,
until, by the grace of God, and the redeeming blood of
Christ, it is removed.
2. Shun vain company. The keeping of vain
company has stifled many a conviction, killed many a
desire, and made many a soul fall into hell, that once was
hot in looking after heaven. A companion that is not
profitable to the soul, is hurtful. ‘He that walketh
with wise men shall be wise, but a companion of
fools shall be destroyed’ (Prov 13:20).
3. Take heed of idle talk, that thou neither
hear nor join with it. ‘Go from the presence of a
foolish man, when thou perceivest not in him the
lips of knowledge’ (Prov 14:7). ‘Evil
communications corrupt good manners. And a fool’s
lips are the snare of his soul.’ Wherefore
take heed of these things (Prov 18:7; 1 Cor
15:33).
4. Beware of the least motion to sin, that
it be not countenanced, lest the countenancing of that
makes way for a bigger.[14] David’s eye
took his heart, and so his heart nourishing the thought,
made way for the woman’s company, the act of
adultery, and bloody murder. Take heed, therefore,
brethren, ‘lest any of you be hardened through the
deceitfulness of sin’ (Heb 3:12,13). And remember,
that he that will rend the block, puts the thin end of the
wedge first thereto, and so, by driving, does his
work.
5. Take heed of evil examples among the
godly; learn of no man to do that which the word of God
forbids. Sometimes Satan makes use of a good man’s
bad ways, to spoil and harden the heart of them that come
after. Peter’s false doing had like to have spoiled
Barnabas, yea, and several others more. Wherefore take heed
of men, of good men’s ways, and measure both theirs
and thine own by no other rule but the holy Word of God
(Gal 2:11-13).
6. Take heed of unbelief, or atheistical
thoughts; make no question of the truth and reality of
heavenly things: for know unbelief is the worst of evils;
nor can the heart be tender that nourisheth or gives place
unto it. ‘Take heed, therefore, lest there be in any
of you an evil heart of unbelief, in departing from the
living God’ (Heb 3:12). These cautions are necessary
to be observed with all diligence, of all them that would,
when their heart is made tender, keep it so. And now to
come,
[Second]—to the
Directions.
1. Labour after a deep knowledge of God to
keep it warm upon thy heart; knowledge of his presence,
that is everywhere. ‘Do not I fill heaven and earth,
saith the Lord?’ (Jer 23:24). (1.) Knowledge of his
piercing eye, that it runneth to and fro through the earth,
beholding in every place the evil and the good; that his
eyes behold, and his eyelids try the children of men (Prov
15:3). (2.) The knowledge of his power, that he is able to
turn and dissolve heaven and earth into dust and ashes; and
that they are in his hand but as a scroll or vesture (Heb
1:11,12). (3.) The knowledge of his justice, that the
rebukes of it are as devouring fire (Heb 12:19). (4.) The
knowledge of his faithfulness, in fulfilling promises to
them to whom they are made, and of his threatenings on the
impenitent (Matt 5:18, 24:35; Mark 13:31).
2. Labour to get and keep a deep sense of
sin in its evil nature, and in its soul-destroying effects
upon thy heart; be persuaded, that it is the only enemy of
God, and that none hate, or are hated of God, but through
that. (1.) Remember it turned angels into devils, thrust
them down from heaven to hell. (2.) That it is the chain in
which they are held and bound over to judgment (2 Peter
2:4; Jude 6). (3.) That it was for that that Adam was
turned out of paradise; that for which the old world was
drowned; that for which Sodom and Gomorrah was burned with
fire from heaven; and that which cost Christ his blood to
redeem thee from the curse it has brought upon thee; and
that, if anything, will keep thee out of heaven for ever
and ever. (4.) Consider the pains of hell. Christ makes use
of that as an argument to keep the heart tender; yea, to
that end repeats and repeats, and repeats, both the nature
and durableness of the burning flame thereof, and of the
gnawing of the neverdying worm that dwells there (Mark
9:43-48).
3. Consider of death, both as to the
certainty of thy dying, and uncertainty of the time when.
We must die, we must needs die; our days are
determined—the number of our months are with God,
though not with us; nor can we pass them, would we, had we
them, give a thousand worlds to do it (2 Sam 14:14; Job
7:1, 14:1-5). Consider thou must die but once—I mean
but once as to this world; for if thou, when thou goest
hence, dost not die well, thou canst not come back again
and die better. ‘It is appointed unto men once to
die, but after this the judgment’ (Heb
9;27).
4. Consider also of the certainty and
terribleness of the day of judgment, when Christ shall sit
upon his great white throne, when the dead shall, by the
sound of the trump of God, be raised up; when the elements,
with heaven and earth, shall be on a burning flame; when
Christ shall separate men one from another, as a shepherd
divideth his sheep from the goats; when the books shall be
opened, the witnesses produced, and every man be judged
according to his works; when heaven’s gate shall
stand open to them that shall be saved, and the jaws of
hell stand gaping for them that shall be damned (Acts
5:30-31, 10:42; Matt 25:31,32,34,4; Rev 2:11; 1 Cor 15:51;
Rev 20:12,15; 2 Peter 3:7,10,12; Rom 2:2,15,16; Rev
22:12).
5. Consider, Christ Jesus did use no means
to harden his heart against doing and suffering those
sorrows which were necessary for the redemption of thy
soul. No; though he could have hardened his heart against
thee in the way of justice and righteousness, because thou
hadst sinned against him, he rather awakened himself, and
put on all pity, bowels, and compassion; yea, tender
mercies, and did it. In his love and in his pity he saved
us. His tender mercies from on high hath visited us. He
loved us, and gave himself for us. Learn, then, of Christ,
to be tender of thyself, and to endeavour to keep thy heart
tender to God-ward, and to the salvation of thy soul. But
to draw to a conclusion.
VII. THE USE.
Let us now, then, make some use of this
doctrine. As,
FIRST USE. From the truth of the matter,
namely, that the man who is truly come to God has had his
heart broken—his heart broken in order to his coming
to him. And this shows us what to judge of the league that
is between sin and the soul, to wit, that it is so firm, so
strong, so inviolable, as that nothing can break, disannul,
or make it void, unless the heart be broken for it. It was
so with David, yea, his new league with it could not be
broken until his heart was broken.
It is amazing to consider what hold sin has
on some men’s souls, spirits, will, and affections.
It is to them better than heaven, better than
God—than the soul, ay, than salvation; as is evident,
because, though all these are offered them upon this
condition, if they will but leave their sins, yet they will
choose rather to abide in them, to stand and fall by them.
How sayest thou, sinner? Is not this a truth? How many
times hast thou had heaven and salvation offered to thee
freely, wouldst thou but break thy league with this great
enemy of God? Of God, do I say; if thou wouldst but break
this league with this great enemy of thy soul? but couldst
never yet be brought unto it; no, neither by threatening
nor by promise couldst thou ever yet be brought unto
it.
It is said of Ahab he sold himself to work
wickedness: and in another place, yea, ‘for your
iniquities have ye sold yourselves’ (1 Kings 21:25;
Isa 50:1). But what is this iniquity? Why, a thing of
nought; nay, worse than nought a thousand times; but
because nought is as we say nought, therefore it goes under
that term, where God saith again to the people, ‘Ye
have sold yourselves for nought’ (Isa 52:3). But, I
say, what an amazing thing is this, that a rational
creature should make no better a bargain; that one that is
so wise in all terrene things, should be such a fool in the
thing that is most weighty? And yet such a fool he is, and
he tells every one that goes by the way that he is such an
one, because he will not break his league with sin until
his heart is broken for it. Men love darkness rather than
light. Ay, they make it manifest they love it, since so
great a proffer will not prevail with them to leave
it.
SECOND USE. Is this a truth, that the man
that truly comes to God in order thereto has had his heart
broken? then this shows us a reason why some men’s
hearts are broken; even a reason why God breaks some
men’s hearts for sin; namely, because he would not
have them die in it, but rather come to God that they might
be saved? Behold, therefore, in this how God resolved as to
the saving of some men’s souls! He will have them, he
will save them, he will break their hearts, but he will
save them; he will kill them, that they may live; he will
wound them, that he may heal them. And it seems by our
discourse that now there is no way left but this; fair
means, as we say, will not do; good words, a glorious
gospel, entreatings, beseeching with blood and tears, will
not do. Men are resolved to put God to the utmost of it; if
he will have them he must fetch them, follow them, catch
them, lame them; yea, break their bones, or else he shall
not save them.
Some men think an invitation, an outward
call, a rational discourse, will do; but they are much
deceived, there must a power, an exceeding great and mighty
power, attend the Word, or it worketh not effectually to
the salvation of the soul. I know these things are enough
to leave men without excuse, but yet they are not enough to
bring men home to God. Sin has hold of them, they have sold
themselves to it; the power of the devil has hold of them,
they are his captives at his will; yea, and more than all
this, their will is one with sin, and with the devil, to be
held captive thereby: and if God gives not contrition,
repentance, or a broken heart, for sin, there will not be
no not so much as a mind in man to forsake this so horrible
a confederacy and plot against his soul (2 Tim
2:24,25).
Hence men are said to be drawn from these
breasts, that come, or that are brought to him (Isa 26:9;
John 6:44). Wherefore John might well say, ‘Behold
what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon
us!’ Here is cost bestowed, pains bestowed, labour
bestowed, repentance bestowed; yea, and an heart made sore,
wounded, broken, and filled with pain and sorrow, in order
to the salvation of the soul.
THIRD USE. This then may teach us what
estimation to set upon a broken heart. A broken heart is
such as God esteems, yea, as God counts better than all
external service: a broken heart is that which is in order
to salvation, in order to thy coming to Christ for life.
The world know not what to make of it, nor what to say to
one that has a broken heart, and therefore do despise it,
and count that man that carries it in his bosom a moping
fool, a miserable wretch, an undone soul: ‘But a
broken and a contrite spirit, O God, thou wilt not
despise’; a broken heart takes thine eye, thy heart:
thou choosest it for thy companion, yea, has given thy Son
a charge to look well to such a man, and has promised him
thy salvation, as has afore been proved.
Sinner, hast thou obtained a broken heart?
has God bestowed a contrite spirit upon thee? He has given
thee what himself is pleased with; he has given thee a
cabinet to hold his grace in; he has given thee a heart
that can heartily desire his salvation, an heart after his
own heart, that is, such as suits his mind. True, it is
painful now, sorrowful now, penitent now, grieved now; now
it is broken, now it bleeds, now, now it sobs, now it
sighs, now it mourns and crieth unto God. Well, very well;
all this is because he hath a mind to make thee laugh; he
has made thee sorry on earth that thou mightest rejoice in
heaven. ‘Blessed are they that mourn, for they
shall be comforted.—Blessed are ye that weep
now, for ye shall laugh’ (Matt 5:4; Luke
6:21).
But, soul, be sure thou hast this broken
heart. All hearts are not broken hearts, nor is every heart
that seems to have a wound, a heart that is truly broken. A
man may be cut to, yet not into the heart; a man may have
another, yet not a broken heart (Acts 7:54; 1 Sam 10:9). We
know there is a difference betwixt a wound in the flesh and
a wound in the spirit; yea, a man’s sin may be
wounded, and yet his heart not broken: so was
Pharaoh’s, so was Saul’s, so was Ahab’s;
but they had none of them the mercy of a broken heart.
Therefore, I say, take heed; every scratch with a pin,
every prick with a thorn, nay, every blow that God giveth
with his Word upon the heart of sinners, doth not therefore
break them. God gave Ahab such a blow that he made him
stoop, fast, humble himself, gird himself with and lie in
sackcloth, which was a great matter for a king, and go
softly, and yet he never had a broken heart (1 Kings
21:27,29). What shall I say? Pharaoh and Saul confessed
their sins, Judas repented himself of his doings, Esau
sought the blessing, and that carefully with tears, and yet
none of these had a heart rightly broken, or a spirit truly
contrite; Pharaoh, Saul, and Judas, were Pharaoh, Saul, and
Judas still; Esau was Esau still; there was no gracious
change, no thorough turn to God, no unfeigned parting with
their sins, no hearty flight for refuge, to lay hold on the
hope of glory, though they indeed had thus been touched
(Exo 10:16; 1 Sam 26:21; Matt 27:3; Heb
12:14-17).
The consideration of these things call aloud
to us to take heed, that we take not that for a broken and
a contrite spirit that will not go for one at the day of
death and judgment. Wherefore, seeking soul, let me advise
thee, that thou mayest not be deceived as to this thing of
so great weight.
First. To go back towards the
beginning of this book, and compare thyself with those six
or seven signs of a broken and contrite heart, which there
I have, according to the Word of God, given to thee for
that end; and deal with thy soul impartially about
them.
Second. Or, which may and will be
great help to thee if thou shalt be sincere therein,
namely, to betake thyself to the search of the Word,
especially where thou readest of the conversion of men, and
try if thy conversion be like, or has a good resemblance or
oneness with theirs. But in this have a care that thou dost
not compare thyself with those good folk of whose
conversion thou readest not, or of the breaking of whose
heart there is no mention made in Scripture; for all that
are recorded in the Scripture for saints have not their
conversion, as to the manner or nature of it, recorded in
the Scripture.
Third. Or else, do thou consider
truly of the true signs of repentance which are laid down
in Scripture; for that is the true effect of a broken
heart, and of a wounded spirit. And for this see Matthew
3:5,6; Luke 18:13, 19:8; Acts 2:37-40, &c., 16:29,30,
19:18,19; 2 Corinthians 7:8-11.
Fourth. Or else, take into
consideration how God has said, they shall be in their
spirits that he intends to save. And for this read these
scriptures: (1.) That in Jeremiah 31, ‘They shall
come with weeping, and with supplications will I lead
them’ &c. (v 9). (2.) Read Jeremiah 50:4,5:
‘In those days, and in that time, the children of
Israel shall come, they and the children of Judah together,
going and weeping: they shall go, and seek the Lord their
God. They shall ask the way to Zion with their faces
thitherward, saying, Come, and let us join ourselves
to the Lord in a perpetual covenant that shall not
be forgotten.’ (3.) Read Ezekiel 6:9: ‘And they
that escape of you shall remember me among the nations
whither they shall be carried captives, because I am broken
with their whorish heart, which have departed from me, and
with their eyes, which go a-whoring after their idols: and
they shall loathe themselves for the evils which they have
committed in all their abominations.’ (4.) Read
Ezekiel 7:16: ‘But they that escape of them shall
escape, and shall be on the mountains like doves of the
valleys, all of them mourning, every one for his
iniquity.’ (5.) Read Ezekiel 20:43: ‘And there
shall ye remember your ways, and all your doings, wherein
ye have been defiled; and ye shall loathe yourselves in
your own sight for all your evils that ye have
committed.’ (6.) Read Ezekiel 37:31: ‘Then
shall ye remember your own evil ways, and your doings that
were not good, and shall loathe yourselves in your
own sight for your iniquities and for your
abominations.’ (7.) Read Zechariah 12:10: ‘And
I will pour upon the house of David, and upon the
inhabitants of Jerusalem, the spirit of grace and of
supplications: and they shall look upon me whom they have
pierced, and they shall mourn for him, as one mourneth for
his only son, and shall be in bitterness for
him, as one that is in bitterness for his
first-born.’
Now all these are the fruits of the Spirit
of God, and of the heart, when it is broken: wherefore,
soul, take notice of them, and because these are texts by
which God promiseth that those whom he saveth shall have
this heart, this spirit, and these holy effects in them;
therefore consider again, and examine thyself, whether this
is the state and condition of thy soul. And that thou
mayest do it fully, consider again, and do thou,
1. Remember that here is such a sense of
sin, and of the irksomeness thereof, as maketh the man not
only to abhor that, but himself, because of that; this is
worth the noting by thee.
2. Remember again that here is not only a
self-abhorrence, but a sorrowful kind mourning unto God, at
the consideration that the soul by sin has affronted,
contemned, disregarded, and set at nought, both God and his
holy Word.
3. Remember also that here are prayers and
tears for mercy, with desires to be now out of love with
sin for ever, and to be in heart and soul firmly joined and
knit unto God.
4. Remember also that this people here
spoken of have all the way from Satan to God, from sin to
grace, from death to life, scattered with tears and
prayers, with weeping and supplication; they shall go
weeping, and seeking the Lord their God.
5. Remember that these people, as strangers
and pilgrims do, are not ashamed to ask the way of those
they meet with to Zion, or the heavenly country; whereby
they confess their ignorance, as became them, and their
desire to know the way to life: yea, thereby they declare
that there is nothing in this world, under the sun, or this
side heaven, that can satisfy the longings, the desire, and
cravings of a broken and a contrite spirit. Reader, be
advised, and consider of these things seriously, and
compare thy soul with them, and with what else thou shalt
find here written for thy conviction and
instruction.
FOURTH USE. If a broken heart and a contrite
spirit be of such esteem with God, then this should
encourage them that have it to come to God with it. I know
the great encouragement for men to come to God is, for that
there ‘is a mediator between God and men, the man
Christ Jesus’ (1 Tim 2:5). This, I say, is the great
encouragement, and in its place there is none but that; but
there are other encouragements subordinate to that, and a
broken and a contrite spirit is one of them: this is
evident from several places of Scripture.
Wherefore, thou that canst carry a broken
heart and a sorrowful spirit with thee, when thou goest to
God, tell him thy heart is wounded within thee, that thou
hast sorrow in thy heart, and art sorry for thy sins; but
take heed of lying.[15] Confess also thy sins
unto him, and tell him they are continually before thee.
David made an argument of these things, when he went to God
by prayer. ‘O Lord,’ saith he, ‘rebuke me
not in thy wrath: neither chasten me in thy hot
displeasure.’ But why so? O! says he, ‘Thine
arrows stick fast in me, and thy hand presseth me sore.
There is no soundness in my flesh, because of thine anger:
neither is there any rest in my bones, because of my sin.
For mine iniquities are gone over mine head: as a heavy
burden they are too heavy for me. My wounds stink, and are
corrupt, because of my foolishness. I am troubled; I am
bowed down greatly; I go mourning all the day long. For my
loins are filled with a loathsome disease: and there is no
soundness in my flesh. I am feeble and sore broken; I have
roared by reason of the disquietness of my heart. Lord, all
my desire is before thee; and my groaning is not hid from
thee. My heart panteth, my strength faileth me: as for the
light for mine eyes, it also is gone from me. My lovers and
my friends stand aloof from my sore’: and so he goes
on (Psa 38:1-4, &c.).
These are the words, sighs, complaints,
prayers, and arguments of a broken heart to God for mercy;
and so are they— ‘Have mercy upon me, O God,
according to thy loving kindness; according unto the
multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions.
Wash me thoroughly from mine iniquity, and cleanse me from
my sin. For I acknowledge my transgressions; and my sin is
ever before me’ (Psa 51:1-3).
God alloweth poor creatures that can,
without lying, thus to plead and argue with him. ‘I
am poor and sorrowful,’ said the good man to
him, ‘let thy salvation, O God, set me up on
high’ (Psa 69:29). Wherefore thou that hast a broken
heart take courage, God bids thee take courage; say
therefore to thy soul, ‘Why are thou cast down, O my
soul?’ as usually the broken-hearted are. ‘And
why art thou disquieted within me? Hope thou in God.’
‘I had fainted,’ if I had not been of
good courage; therefore ‘be of good courage, and he
shall strengthen thine heart’ (Psa 42:11, 43:5,
27:12-14).
But alas! the broken-hearted are far off
from this; they faint; they reckon themselves among the
dead; they think God will remember them no more: the
thoughts of the greatness of God, and his holiness, and
their own sins and vilenesses, will certainly consume them.
They feel guilt and anguish of soul; they go mourning all
the day long; their mouth is full of gravel and gall, and
they are made to drink draughts of wormwood and gall; so
that he must be an artist indeed at believing, who can come
to God under his guilt and horror, and plead in faith that
the sacrifices of God are a broken heart, such as he had;
and that ‘a broken and a contrite spirit God will not
despise.’
FIFTH USE. If a broken heart, if a broken
and contrite spirit, is of such esteem with God, then why
should some be, as they are, so afraid of a broken heart,
and so shy of a contrite spirit?
I have observed that some men are as afraid
of a broken heart, or that they for their sins should have
their hearts broken, as the dog is of the whip. O! they
cannot away with such books, with such sermons, with such
preachers, or with such talk, as tends to make a man
sensible of, and to break his heart, and to make him
contrite for his sins. Hence they heap to themselves such
teachers, get such books, love such company, and delight in
such discourse, as rather tends to harden than soften; to
make desperate in, than sorrowful for their sin. They say
to such sermons, books, and preachers, as Amaziah said unto
Amos, ‘O thou seer, go, flee thee away into the land
of Judah, and there eat bread, and prophesy there, but
prophesy not again any more at Bethel; for it is the
king’s chapel, and it is the king’s
court’ (Amos 7:12,13).
But do these people know what they do? Yes,
think they, for such preachers, such books, such discourses
tend to make one melancholy or mad; they make us that we
cannot take pleasure in ourselves, in our concerns, in our
lives. But, O fool in grain![16] let me speak
unto thee. Is it a time to take pleasure, and to recreate
thyself in anything, before thou hast mourned and been
sorry for thy sins? That mirth that is before repentance
for sin will certainly end in heaviness. Wherefore the wise
man, putting both together, saith that mourning must be
first. There is ‘a time to weep, and a time to laugh;
a time to mourn, and a time to dance’ (Eccl 3:4).
What, an unconverted man, and laugh! Shouldst thou see one
singing merry songs that is riding up Holborn to
Tyburn,[17] to be hanged for felony, wouldst
thou not count him besides himself, if not worse? and yet
thus it is with him that is for mirth while he standeth
condemned by the Book of God for his trespasses. Man! man!
thou hast cause to mourn; yea, thou must mourn if ever thou
art saved. Wherefore my advice is, that instead of
shunning, thou covet both such books, such preachers, and
such discourses, as have a tendency to make a man sensible
of, and to break his heart for sin; and the reason is,
because thou wilt never be as thou shouldst, concerned
about, nor seek the salvation of thine own soul, before
thou hast a broken heart, a broken and a contrite spirit.
Wherefore be not afraid of a broken heart; be not shy of a
contrite spirit. It is one of the greatest mercies that God
bestows upon a man or a woman. The heart rightly broken at
the sense of, and made truly contrite for transgression, is
a certain forerunner of salvation. This is evident from
those six demonstrations which were laid down to prove the
point in hand, at first.
And for thy awakening in this matter, let me
tell thee, and thou wilt find it so, thou must have thy
heart broken whether thou wilt or no. God is resolved to
break ALL hearts for sin some time or other. Can it be
imagined, sin being what it is, and God what he is—to
wit, a revenger of disobedience—but that one time or
other man must smart for sin? smart, I say, either to
repentance or to condemnation. He that mourns not now,
while the door of mercy is open, must mourn for sin when
the door of mercy is shut.
Shall men despise God, break his law,
contemn his threats, abuse his grace, yea, shut their eyes
when he says, See; and stop their ears when he says, Hear;
and shall they so escape? No, no, because he called, and
they refused; he stretched out his hand, and they regarded
it not; therefore shall calamity come upon them, as upon
one in travail; and they shall cry in their destruction,
and then God will laugh at their destruction, and mock when
their fear cometh. Then, saith he, ‘they shall
cry’ (Prov 1:24-26). I have often observed that this
threatening is repeated at least seven times in the New
Testament, saying, ‘There shall be weeping and
gnashing of teeth’; ‘there shall be wailing and
gnashing of teeth’ (Matt 8:12, 13:42,50, 22:13,
24:51, 25:30; Luke 13:28). There. Where? In hell, and at
the bar of Christ’s tribunal, when he comes to judge
the world, and shall have shut to the door to keep them out
of glory, that have here despised the offer of his grace,
and overlooked the day of his patience. ‘There shall
be wailing and gnashing of teeth.’ They shall weep
and wail for this.
There are but two scriptures that I shall
use more, and then I shall draw towards a conclusion. One
is that in Proverbs, where Solomon is counselling of young
men to beware of strange, that is, of wanton, light, and
ensnaring women. Take heed of such, said he, lest
‘thou mourn at the last,’ that is, in hell,
when thou art dead, ‘when thy flesh and thy body are
consumed, and say, How have I hated instruction, and my
heart despised reproof, and have not obeyed the voice of my
teachers, nor inclined mine ears to them that instructed
me!’ (Prov 5:11-13).
The other scripture is that in Isaiah, where
he says, ‘Because when I called, ye did not answer;
when I spake, ye did not hear; but did evil before mine
eyes, and did choose that wherein I delighted not.
Therefore thus saith the Lord God, Behold, my servants
shall eat, but ye shall be hungry; behold, my servants
shall drink, but ye shall be thirsty; behold, my servants
shall rejoice, but ye shall be ashamed; behold, my servants
shall sing for joy of heart, but ye shall cry for sorrow of
heart, and shall howl for vexation of spirit’ (Isa
65:13,14).
How many beholds are here! and every
behold is not only a call to careless ones to consider, but
as a declaration from heaven that thus at last it shall be
with all impenitent sinners; that is, when others sing for
joy in the kingdom of heaven, they, they shall sorrow in
hell, and howl for vexation of spirit there.
Wherefore, let me advise that you be not
afraid of, but that you rather covet a broken heart, and
prize a contrite spirit; I say, covet it now, now the white
flag is hung out, now the golden sceptre of grace is held
forth to you. Better mourn now God inclines to mercy and
pardon, than mourn when the door is quite shut up. And take
notice, that this is not the first time that I have given
you this advice.
USE SIXTH. Lastly, If a broken heart be a
thing of so great esteem with God as has been said, and if
duties cannot be rightly performed by a heart that has not
been broken, then this shows the vanity of those
peoples’ minds, and also the invalidity of their
pretended Divine services, who worship God with a heart
that was never broken, and without a contrite spirit. There
has, indeed, at all times been great flocks of such
professors in the world in every age, but to little
purpose, unless to deceive themselves, to mock God, and lay
stumbling-blocks in the way of others; for a man whose
heart was never truly broken, and whose spirit was never
contrite, cannot profess Christ in earnest, cannot love his
own soul in earnest; I mean, he cannot do these things in
truth, and seek his own good the right way, for he wants a
bottom for it, to wit, a broken heart for sin, and a
contrite spirit.
That which makes a man a hearty, an
unfeigned, a sincere seeker after the good of his own soul,
is sense of sin, and a godly fear of being overtaken with
the danger which it brings a man into. This makes him
contrite or repentant, and puts him upon seeking of Christ
the Saviour, with heart-aching and heart-breaking
considerations. But this cannot be, where this sense, this
godly fear, and this holy contrition is wanting. Profess
men may, and make a noise, as the empty barrel maketh the
biggest sound; but prove them, and they are full of air,
full of emptiness, and that is all.
Nor are such professors tender of
God’s name, nor of the credit of that gospel which
they profess; nor can they, for they want that which should
oblige them thereunto, which is a sense of pardon and
forgiveness, by the which their broken hearts have been
replenished, succoured, and made to hope in God. Paul said,
the love of Christ constrained him. But what was Paul but a
broken-hearted and a contrite sinner? (Acts 9:3-6; 2 Cor
5:14). When God shows a man the sin he has committed, the
hell he has deserved, the heaven he has lost; and yet that
Christ, and grace, and pardon may be had; this will make
him serious, this will make him melt, this will break his
heart, this will show him that there is more than air, than
a noise, than an empty sound in religion; and this is the
man, whose heart, whose life, whose conversation and all,
will be engaged in the matters of the eternal salvation of
his precious and immortal soul.
[VIII. OBJECTIONS ANSWERED.]
Object. First. But some may object,
that in this saying I seem too rigid and censorious; and
will, if I moderate not these lines with something milder
afterward, discourage many an honest soul.
Answ. I answer, Not a jot, not an
honest soul in all the world will be offended at my words;
for not one can be an honest soul, I mean with reference to
its concerns in another world, that has not had a broken
heart, that never had a contrite spirit. This I will say,
because I would be understood aright, that all attain not
to the same degree of trouble, nor lie so long there under,
as some of their brethren do. But to go to heaven without a
broken heart, or to be forgiven sin without a contrite
spirit, is no article of my belief. We speak not now of
what is secret; revealed things belong to us and our
children; nor must we venture to go further in our faith.
Doth not Christ say, ‘The whole have no need of a
physician’; that is, they see no need, but Christ
will make them see their need before he ministers his
sovereign grace unto them; and good reason, otherwise he
will have but little thanks for his kindness.
Object. Second. But there are those
that are godly educated from their childhood, and so drink
in the principles of Christianity they know not
how.
Answ. I count it one thing to receive
the faith of Christ from men only, and another to receive
it from God by the means. If thou art taught by an angel,
yet if not taught of God, thou wilt never come to Christ; I
do not say thou wilt never profess him. But if God speaks,
and thou shalt hear and understand him, that voice will
make such work within thee as was never made before. The
voice of God is a voice by itself, and is so distinguished
by them that are taught thereby (John 6:44,45; Psa 29; Habb
3:12-16; Eph 4:20,21; 1 Peter 2:2,3).
Object. Third. But some men are not
so debauched and profane as some, and so need not to be so
hammered and fired as others; so broken and wounded as
others.
Answ. God knows best what we need.
Paul was as righteous before conversion as any that can
pretend to civility now, I suppose; and yet that
notwithstanding he was made to shake, and was astonished at
himself at his conversion. And truly I think the more
righteous any is in his own eyes before conversion, the
more need he has of heart-breaking work, in order to his
salvation; because a man is not by nature so easily
convinced that his righteousness is to God abominable, as
he is that his debauchery and profaneness is.
A man’s goodness is that which blinds
him most, is dearest to him, and hardly parted with; and
therefore when such an one is converted, that thinks he has
goodness of his own enough to commend him in whole or in
part to God, but, but few such are converted, there is
required a great deal of breaking work upon his heart, to
make him come to Paul’s conclusion, ‘What! are
we better than they? No, in no wise’ (Rom
3:9). I say, before he can be brought to see his glorious
robes are filthy rags, and his gainful things but loss and
dung (Isa 64; Phil 3).
This is also gathered from these words,
‘Publicans and harlots enter into the kingdom of God
before the Pharisees’ (Matt 21:31). Why before them?
But because they lie fairer for the Word, are easier
convinced of their need of Christ, and so are brought home
to him without, as I may say, all that ado that the Holy
Ghost doth make to bring home one of these to
him.
True; nothing is hard or difficult to God.
But I speak after the manner of men. And let who will take
to task a man debauched in this life, and one that is not
so, and he shall see, if he laboureth to convince them both
that they are in a state of condemnation by nature, that
the Pharisee will make his appeals to God, with a great
many God, I thank these; while the Publican hangs his head,
shakes at heart, and smites upon his breast, saying,
‘God be merciful to me a sinner’ (Luke
18:11-13).
Wherefore a self-righteous man is but a
painted Satan, or a devil in fine clothes; but thinks he so
of himself? No! no! he saith to others, Stand back, come
not near me, I am holier than thou. It is almost
impossible, that a self-righteous man should be saved. But
he that can drive a camel through the eye of a needle, can
cause that even such a one shall see his lost condition,
and that he needeth the righteousness of God, which is by
faith of Jesus Christ. He can make him see, I say, that his
own goodness did stand more in his way to the kingdom of
heaven than he was aware of; and can make him feel too,
that his leaning to that is as great iniquity as any
immorality that men commit. The sum then is, that men that
are converted to God by Christ, through the Word and
Spirit—for all this must go to effectual
conversion—must have their hearts broken, and spirits
made contrite; I say, it MUST be so, for the reasons showed
before. Yea, and all decayed, apostatized, and backslidden
Christians must, in order to their recovery again to God,
have their hearts broken, their souls wounded, their
spirits made contrite, and sorry for their sins.
Come, come, conversion to God is not so easy
and so smooth a thing as some would have men believe it is.
Why is man’s heart compared to fallow ground,
God’s Word to a plough, and his ministers to
ploughmen? if the heart indeed has no need of breaking, in
order to the receiving of the seed of God unto eternal life
(Jer 4:3; Luke 9:62; 1 Cor 9:10). Who knows not that the
fallow ground must be ploughed, and ploughed too before the
husbandman will venture his seed; yea, and after that oft
soundly harrowed, or else he will have but a slender
harvest?
Why is the conversion of the soul compared
to the grafting of a tree, if that be done without cutting?
The Word is the graft, the soul is the tree, and the Word,
as the scion, must be let in by a wound; for to stick on
the outside, or to be tied on with a string, will do no
good here. Heart must be set to heart, and back to back, or
your pretended ingrafting will come to nothing (Rom
11:17,24; Jer 1:21).
I say, heart must be set to heart, and back
to back, or the sap will not be conveyed from the root to
the branch; and I say, this must be done by a wound. The
Lord opened the heart of Lydia, as a man openeth the stock
to graft in the scions, and so the word was let into her
soul, and so the word and her heart cemented, and became
one (Acts 16:14).
Why is Christ bid to gird his sword upon his
thigh? and why must he make his arrows sharp, and all, that
the heart may with this sword and these arrows be shot,
wounded, and made to bleed? Yea, why is he commanded to let
it be so, if the people would bow and fall kindly under
him, and heartily implore his grace without it? (Psa 45;
55:3,4). Alas! men are too lofty, too proud, too wild, too
devilishly resolved in the ways of their own destruction;
in their occasions, they are like the wild asses upon the
wild mountains; nothing can break them of their purposes,
or hinder them from ruining of their own precious and
immortal souls, but the breaking of their
hearts.
Why is a broken heart put in the room of all
sacrifices which we can offer to God, and a contrite spirit
put in the room of all offerings, as they are, and you may
see it so, if you compare the text with that verse which
goes before it; I say, why is it counted better than all,
were they all put together, if any one part or if all
external parts of worship, were they put together, could be
able to render the man a sound and a rightly made new
creature without it? ‘A broken heart, a contrite
spirit, God will not despise’; but both thou, and all
thy service, he will certainly slight and reject, if, when
thou comest to him, a broken heart be wanting; wherefore
here is the point, Come broken, come contrite, come
sensible of, and sorry for thy sins, or thy coming will be
counted no coming to God aright; and if so, consequently
thou wilt get no benefit thereby.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] This is beautifully and most
impressively described in the Pilgrim’s
Progress, when the bitter feelings of poor Christian
under convictions of sin, alarm his family and put it quite
‘out of order.’—Ed.
[2] This quotation is from the Genevan or
Puritan version of the Bible.—Ed.
[3]. ‘Fish-whole’ is a very
striking and expressive term, highly illustrative of the
feelings and position of David when he was accosted by the
prophet. The word ‘whole’ is from the Saxon,
which language abounded in Bunyan’s native county of
Bedford—first introduced by an ancient colony of
Saxons, who had settled there. It means hale, hearty, free
from disease, as a fish is happy in its native
element— ‘They that are WHOLE, need not a
physician, but they that are sick,’ Luke 5:31. David
had no smitings of conscience for his cruelty and enormous
guilt; he was like a ‘fish whole,’ in the full
enjoyment of every providential blessing; while,
spiritually, he was dead in sin. God loved and pitied him,
and sent a cunning angler. Nathan the prophet there in the
bait, which David eagerly seized; the hook entered his
conscience, and he became as a fish wounded, and nigh unto
death.—Ed.
[4] The words of Tindal are, ‘The
sacrifice of God is a troubled sprete, a broken and a
contrite hert, O God, shalt thou not despise.’ The
same Hebrew word occurs in the original, both as to the
spirit and the heart. Bunyan is quite right in preferring
our authorised version of this verse. Coverdale, Tindal,
Taverner, and Cranmer, all agree. The Genevan uses ‘a
contrite spirit,’ and the Bishops ‘a mortified
spirit.’—Ed.
[5] No one could speak more feelingly upon
this subject than our author. He had been in deep
waters—in soul-harrowing fear, while his
heart—hard by nature—was under the hammer of
the Word.— ‘My soul was like a broken vessel.
O, the unthought of imaginations, frights, fears, and
terrors, that are affected by a thorough application of
guilt, yielded to desperation!’ Like the man that had
his dwelling among the tombs.—Grace Abounding,
No. 186.
[6] The Christian, if he thinks of
possessing good motions, joins with such thoughts his
inability to carry them into effect. ‘When I would do
good, evil is present with me.’ How different is this
to the self-righteous Ignorance, so vividly pictured in the
Pilgrim’s Progress:—
‘Ignor.—I am always full of good
motions that come into my mind, to comfort me as I
walk.
Chris.—What good motions? pray tell
us.
Ignor.—Why, I think of God and
heaven.
Chris.—So do the devils and damned
souls!’
The whole of that deeply interesting
dialogue illustrates the difficulty of self-knowledge,
which can only be acquired by the teaching of the Holy
Spirit.
[7] ‘All to brake’; an obsolete
mode of expression for ‘altogether
broke.’—Ed.
[8] ‘Orts’; an obsolete word in
England, derived from the Anglo-Saxon. Any worthless
leaving or refuse. It is thus used by Shakespeare in his
Troylus and Cresida, act 5, s.
2:—
‘The fractions of her faith, orts of
her love:
The fragments, scraps, the bits and greasy
relics
Of her ore-eaten
faith.’—Ed.
[9] This is in exact agreement with the
author’s experience, which he had published
twenty-two years before, under the title of Grace
Abounding to the Chief of Sinners,— ‘I was
more loathsome in my own eyes than was a toad, and I
thought I was so in God’s eyes too. Sin and
corruption, I said, would as naturally bubble out of my
heart as water would out of a fountain. I thought that none
but the devil himself could equal me for inward wickedness
and pollution of mind.’ A sure sign that God, as his
heavenly Father, was enlightening his memory by the Holy
Spirit.—Ed.
[10] This account of the author’s
interview with a pious, humble woman, is an agreeable
episode, which relieves the mind without diverting it from
the serious object of the treatise. It was probably an
event which took place in one of those pastoral visits
which Bunyan was in the habit of making, and which, if
wisely made, so endears a minister to the people of his
charge. Christ and a crust is the common saying to express
the sentiment that Christ is all in all. The pitcher has
reference to the custom of pilgrims in carrying at their
girdle a vessel to hold water, the staff having a crook by
which it was dipped up from a well or
river.—Ed.
[11] However hard, and even harsh, these
terms may appear, they are fully justified; and with all
the author’s great ability and renown, he has the
grace of humility to acknowledge that, by nature and
practice, he had been the biggest of
fools.—Ed.
[12] Man must be burnt out of the stronghold
in which he trusted. ‘Saved, yet so as by
fire.’ ‘Baptized with the Holy Ghost, even
fire.’ ‘His word is as a fire.’ Reader,
the work of regeneration and purification is a trying work;
may each inquire, Has this fire burnt up my wood, hay,
stubble?—Ed.
[13] To ‘daff’ or
‘doff’; to do off or throw aside—used by
Shakespeare, but now obsolete,—
Where is his son,
The nimble-footed madcap, Prince of
Wales,
And his comrades, that daft the world
aside
And let it pass?—Ed.
[14] ‘Sin will at first, just like a
beggar, crave
One penny or one halfpenny to
have;
And if you grant its first suit,
‘twill aspire
From pence to pounds, and so will still
mount higher
To the whole
soul!’—Bunyan’s Caution Against
Sin.—Ed.
[15] This is faithful dealing. How many
millions of lies are told to the All-seeing God, with
unblushing effrontery, every Lord’s day—when
the unconcerned and careless, or the saint of God, happy,
most happy in the enjoyment of Divine love, are led to say,
‘Have mercy upon us miserable
sinners.’—Ed.
[16] ‘In grain’ is a term used
in dyeing, when the raw material is dyed before being spun
or wove; the colour thus takes every grain, and becomes
indelible. So with sin and folly; it enters every grain of
human nature.—Ed.
[17] These frightful exhibitions, by drawing
a criminal from Newgate to Tyburn to be executed, were of
common occurrence until the reign of George III, when such
numbers were put to death that it was found handier for the
wholesale butchery to take place at Newgate, by a new drop,
where twenty or thirty could be hung at once!! When will
such brutalizing exhibitions cease?—Ed.