A HOLY LIFE THE BEAUTY OF
CHRISTIANITY:
or,
AN EXHORTATION TO CHRISTIANS TO BE
HOLY.
BY JOHN BUNYAN.
Holiness becometh thine house, O Lord,
for ever.'—[Psalm 93:5]
London, by B. W., for Benj. Alsop, at the
Angel and Bible, in the Poultrey. 1684.
THE EDITOR'S
ADVERTISEMENT.
This is the most searching treatise that has
ever fallen under our notice. It is an invaluable guide to
those sincere Christians, who, under a sense of the
infinite importance of the salvation of an immortal soul,
and of the deceitfulness of their hearts, sigh and cry,
"O Lord of hosts, that judgest righteously, that
triest the reins (most secret thoughts) and the heart.'
"Try MY reins and my heart.' for it is
deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked:
who can know it? I the Lord search the heart, I try the
reins, even to give every man according to his ways,
and according to the fruit of his doings.' He, in
whose heart the Holy Spirit has raised the solemn inquiry,
What must I do to be saved?' flies from his own
estimate of himself, with distrust and fear, and appeals to
an infallible and unerring scrutiny. Search me , O God, and
know my heart: try me, and know my thoughts: And see if
there be any wicked way in me, and lead me in the way
everlasting.' Reader, are you desirous of having
your hopes of pardon, and of heaven, weighed in the
unerring balances of the sanctuary; while you are yet in a
state of probation? Meditate and ponder over this faithful
little work. If accompanied by the Divine blessing, it will
test your faith and practice in the crucible and by the
fire of God's word. It is intended to turn your spirit
inside out—to lay bare every insidious enemy that may
have crept in and lie lurking in the walls of Mansoul. It
exhibits sin in all its hideous deformity, stript of its
masquerade and disguises; so that it appears, what it
really is, the great enemy to human happiness. It is
calculated to stir up our pure minds to incessant
vigilance, lest we should wander upon tempting, but
forbidden paths; and be caught by Giant Despair, to become
the object of his cruelty in Doubting Castle.
This work was first published in 1684, in a
pocket volume, comprising nine sheets duodecimo; but became
so rare, as to have escaped the researches of Wilson,
Whitefield, and other editors of the collected works of Mr.
Bunyan,—until about the year 1780, when it was first
re-published in an edition of his works, with notes, by
Mason and Ryland. The evident object of this treatise was
to aid Christian efforts, under the Divine blessing, in
stemming the torrent of iniquity, which, like an awful
flood, was overspreading this country. The moral and
religious restraints, which the government under the
Commonwealth had imposed, were dissolved by the accession
of a debauched prince to the throne of England; a prince
who was bribed, to injure or destroy the best interests of
the country, by the voluptuous court of France. He had
taken refuge there from the storm; and had been defiled and
corrupted beyond ordinary conception. The king and his
court were surrounded by pimps, panders, courtesans, and
flatterers. The example of the court spread throughout the
country—religion became a jest and laughing-stock;
and those who were not to be cajoled out of their
soul's eternal happiness—whose vital godliness
preserved them in the midst of such evil examples and
allurements, were persecuted with unrelenting rigour. The
virtuous Lord William Russel, and the illustrious Sydney,
fell by the hands of the executioner: John Hampden was
fined forty thousand pounds. The hand of God was stretched
out. An awful pestilence carried off nearly seventy
thousand of the inhabitants of London. In the following
year, that rich and glorious city, with the
cathedral—the churches—public buildings-and
warehouses, replenished with merchandise—were reduced
to ashes. The Dutch fleet sailed up the Thames and
threatened destruction to our navy, and even to the
government,—filling the court and country with
terror. Still profligacy reigned in the court and
country—a fearful persecution raged against all who
refused to attend the church service. Thousands perished in
prison, and multitudes were condemned to expatriate
themselves. The timid and irresolute abandoned the
faith,—desolation spread over the church of God. At
this time, at imminent risk, John Bunyan not only
fearlessly preached, but published his faithful Advice to
Sufferers;' which was immediately followed by this
important work, calling upon every one who named the name
of Christ, 'at all hazards, to depart from
iniquity.' They were words in season,' and were
good,' like apples of gold in pictures of silver.'
(Prov. 25:11)
The contrast in public manners must have
been painfully felt by one, who had seen and enjoyed the
general appearances, and doubtless many real proofs of
piety, which prevailed under the protectorate of Cromwell.
He was now called to witness the effects of open and avowed
wickedness among governors and nobles, by which the
fountains of iniquity were opened up, and a flood of
immorality let loose upon all classes; demoralizing the
nation, and distressing the church. It must have been
difficult to form any thing like an accurate estimate of
the number of those who abandoned their Christian
profession. The immoral conduct of one bad man is more
conspicuous than the unobtrusive holiness of ninety-nine
good men; more especially, when a professor becomes
profane. Thus Bunyan argues, `One black sheep is quickly
espied among five hundred white ones, and one mangey one
will soon infect many. One also, among the saints, that is
not clean, is a blemish to the rest, and as Solomon says,
`One sinner destroyeth much good." ' p. 527. It is
more congenial to our fallen nature to notice, and be
grieved with, evil conduct, than it is to rejoice over that
excellence which may cast the observer into the shade;
besides the jaundiced fear that good works may arise
from improper motives. These principles equally applied to
the state of society under the Presbyterian government: but
when the restoration to the old system took place, so vast
a change passed over society, like a pestilence, `that sin,
through custom, became no sin. The superfluity of
naughtiness,' says Bunyan, `is at this day become no
sin with many.' p. 509. 'There are a good many
professors now in England that have nothing to
distinguish them from the worst of men,' but their
praying, reading, hearing of sermons, baptism, church
fellowship, and breaking of bread. Separate them but from
these, and every where else they are as black as others,
even in their whole life and conversation.' p. 508.
'It is marvellous to me to see sin so high amidst the
swarms of professors that are found in every corner of this
land.' If the conduct of many professors were so vile,
as there can be no doubt but that it was, how gross must
have been that of the openly profane? It accounts
for the wicked wit and raillery of Hudibras, when so many
professors threw off the mask and gloried in their
hypocrisy—Butler shut his eyes to the cruel
sufferings of thousands who perished in jails, the martyrs
to the sincerity of their faith and conduct. The falling
away was indeed great; and Bunyan, with all earnestness,
warns his readers that, 'To depart from iniquity is to
shun those examples, those beastly examples to
drunkenness—to whoredom—to swearing—to
lying—to stealing—to sabbath-breaking—to
pride—to covetousness—to deceit—to
hypocrisy, that in every corner of the country present
themselves to men.' p. 517. `O the fruits of repentance
thick sown by preachers, come up but thinly! Where are they
found? Confession of sin, shame for sin, amendment of life,
restitution for cozening, cheating, defrauding, beguiling
thy neighbour,—where shall these fruits of repentance
be found? Repentance is the bitter pill, without the sound
working of which, base and sinful humour rest unstirred,
unpurged, undriven out of the soul.' p. 519.
'I would not be austere,' said
Bunyan, 'but were wearing of gold, putting on of
apparel, dressing up houses, decking of children, learning
of compliments, boldness in women, lechery in men, wanton
behaviour, lascivious words, and tempting carriages, signs
of repentance; then I must say, the fruits of repentance
swarm in our land.' 'The tables of God's book
are turned upside down. Love, to their doctrine, is gone
out of the country.' 'Love is gone, and now
coveting, pinching, griping, and such things, are in
fashion; now iniquity abounds instead of grace, in many
that name the name of Christ.' p. 529, 520. `Alas!
alas! there is a company of half priests in the world; they
dare not teach the people the whole counsel of God, because
they would condemn themselves, and their manner of living
in the world: where is that minister now to be found, that
dare say to his people, walk as you have me for an example,
or that dare say, what ,you see and hear to be in me, do,
and the God of peace shall be with you.' p. 520. Such
was the general character of the parish priests, after the
black Bartholomew Act had driven the pious and godly
ministers from the parish churches. It is almost a miracle
that Bunyan escaped persecution for his plain dealing. We
cannot wonder, that under such teachers, 'Christians
learned to be proud one of another, to be covetous, to be
treacherous, and false, to be cowardly in God's
matters, to be remiss and negligent in christian duties,
one of another.' p. 525. A scandal was thus brought
upon religion. 'Upon this I write with a sigh; for
never more than now. There is no place where the professors
of religion are, that is free from offence and scandal.
Iniquity is so entailed to religion, and baseness of life
to the naming the name of Christ, that 'All places are
full of vomit and filthiness.' 'Ah! Lord God, this
is a lamentation, that a sore disease is got into the
church of God.' p. 529. It was a period when a more
awful plague raged as to morals and religion, than that
which, about the same time, had ravaged London with
temporal death—the plague of hypocrisy—of
naming the name of Christ, and still living in sin.
'Hypocrisies are of that nature, that they spread
themselves over the mind as the leprosy does over the body.
It gets in the pulpit, in conference, in closets, in
communion of saints, in faith, in love, in repentance, in
zeal, in humility, in alms, in the prison, and in all
duties, and makes the whole a loathsome stink in the
nostrils of God.' p. 538 These licentious times, in
which we live, are full of iniquity.' p. 539. 'They
change one bad way for another, hopping, as the squirrel,
from bough to bough, but not willing to forsake the
tree,—from drunkards to be covetous, and from that to
pride and lasciviousness—this is a grand deceit,
common, and almost a disease epidemical among
professors.' p. 532. 'The sins of our day are
conspicuous and open as Sodom's were; pride and
covetousness, loathing of the gospel, and contemning
holiness, have covered the face of the nation.' p. 534.
The infection had spread into the households of professors.
'Bless me, saith a servant, are those the religious
people! Are these the servants of God, where iniquity is
made so much of, and is so highly entertained! And now is
his heart filled with prejudice against all religion, or
else he turns hypocrite like his master and his mistress,
wearing, as they, a cloak of religion to cover all abroad,
while all naked and shameful at home.' p. 536. 'He
looked for a house full of virtue, and behold nothing but
spider-webs; fair and plausible abroad, but like the sow in
the mire at home.' The immoral taint infected the
young. '0! it is horrible to behold how irreverently,
how easily, and malapertly, children, yea, professing
children, at this day, carry it to their parents; snapping
and checking, curbing and rebuking of them, as if they had
received a dispensation from God to dishonour and disobey
parents.' p. 535. 'This day, a sea and deluge of
iniquity has drowned those that have a form of godliness.
Now immorality shall, with professors, be in fashion, be
pleaded for, be loved and more esteemed than holiness ;
even those that have a form of godliness, hate the life and
power thereof, yea, they despise them that are good.'
p. 543.
This melancholy picture of vice and
profligacy was drawn by one whose love of truth rendered
him incapable of deceit or of exaggeration. It was
published at the time, and was unanswered, because
unanswerable. It was not painted from imagination by an
ascetic; but from life by an enlightened observer—not
by the poor preaching mechanic when incarcerated in a jail
for his godliness; but when his painful sufferings were
past—when his Pilgrim, produced by the folly of
persecutors, had rendered him famous through
Europe—when his extraordinary pulpit talents were
matured and extensively known, so that thousands crowded to
hear him preach—when his labours were sought in
London and in the country—when his opportunities of
observation had become extended far beyond most of his
fellow-ministers. The tale is as true as it is full of
painful interest. The causes of all this vice are perfectly
apparent. Whenever a government abuses its powers by
interfering with divine worship—by preferring one
sect above all others; whether it be Presbyterian,
Independent, or Episcopalian—such a requiring the
things that are God's to be rendered unto Caesar, must
be the prolific source of persecution, hypocrisy, and
consequent immorality and profaneness. The impure process
of immorality as checked by the rival labours of all the
sects to promote vital godliness. Can we wonder that such a
state of society was not long permitted to exist? In three
troublous years from the publication of this book, the
licentious monarch was swept away by death, not without
suspicion of violence, and his besotted popish successor
fled to die in exile. An enlightened monarch was placed
upon the vacant throne, and persecution was deprived of its
tiger claws and teeth by the act of toleration.
However interesting to the christian
historian, and humbling to human pride, the facts may be
which are here disclosed; it was not the author's
intention thus to entertain his readers. No; this
invaluable tract has an object in view of far greater
importance. It is an earnest, affectionate, but pungent
appeal to all professors of every age, and nation, and
sect, to the end of time. The admonition of the text is to
you, my reader, and to me; whether we be rich or poor,
ministers or ministered unto, it comes home equally to
every heart, from the mightiest potentate through every
grade of society to the poorest peasant. May the sound ever
reverberate in our ears and be engraven upon our hearts,
'Let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart
from iniquity.'
The analysis of this book exhibits—How
solemn a thing it is to name the name of Christ, as the
author and finisher of our faith—God manifest in the
flesh, to bear the curse for us, and to work out our
everlasting salvation. The hosts of heaven rejoice over the
penitent sinner ransomed from the pit of wrath. Is it
possible for the soul that has escaped eternal
burnings—that has experienced the bitterness and
exceeding sinfulness of sin—that has felt the misery
of transgression—that has been brought up out of that
deep and horrible pit—to backslide and plunge again
into misery, with his eyes open to see the smoke of their
torments ascending up before him? Is it possible that he
should heedlessly enter the vortex, and be again drawn into
wretchedness? Yes; it is alas too true. Well may the Lord,
by his prophet, use these striking words, 'Be
astonished, O ye heavens, at this, and be horribly afraid,
be ye very desolate, saith the Lord. For my people have
committed two evils; they have forsaken me, the fountain of
living waters, and hewed out broken cisterns, that can hold
no water.' (Jer. 2:12,13)
The extreme folly of such conduct would
render the fact almost incredible, did we not too
frequently witness it in others, and feel it in our own
hearts. This volume places these facts plainly before us,
and affectionately exhorts us to be watchful, and
diligently to inquire into the causes of such evil, and the
remedies which ought to be applied. It shews us the great
varieties that are found in the tempers and qualities of
God's children, in words calculated to make an
indelible impression.
'But in this great house of God there
will not only be golden and silver Christians, but wooden
and earthly ones. And if any man purge himself from these
[earthly ones], from their companies and vices, he shall be
a vessel to honour, sanctified, and meet for the masters
use, and prepared for every good work.' p. 518 Bunyan
earnestly cautions his readers to constant watchfulness,
'for sin is one of the most quick and brisk things that
are.' p. 515. And jealousy over ourselves, lest our
hearts should deceive us. 'The young man in the gospel
that cried to Christ to shew him the way to life, had some
love to his salvation; but it was not a love that was
strong as death, cruel as the grave, and hotter than coals
of juniper.' (Song 8:6) It cost nothing—no
self denial, no sacrifice. 'Such will love as long as
mouth and tongue can wag' will pray and hear sermons,
but will not cut off a darling lust; such deceive their own
souls. Some are allured but not changed: 'There is some
kind of musicalness in the word; when well handled and
fingered by a skilful preacher,' it has a momentary
influence; 'they hear thy words, but do them not.'
(Eze. 33:30) Above all things, beware of hypocrisy, for
when it once enters, it spreads over the soul, as the
leprosy does over the body. p. 521. 'He is the same
man, though he has got a new mouth. p. 532. 'Many that
shew like saints abroad, yet act the part of devils when
they are at home. Wicked professors are practical atheists.
'The dirty life of a professor lays stumbling blocks in
the way of the blind.' p. 545. 'A professor that
hath not forsaken his iniquity, is like one that comes out
of the pest-house, among the whole, with his plaguey sores
running upon him. This is the man that hath the breath of a
dragon; he poisons the air round about him. This is the man
that slays his children, his kinsmen, his friend, and
himself. They are the devil's most stinking tail, with
which he casts many a professor into carnal delights, with
their filthy conversations.' p. 530. 'Oh! the
millstone that God will shortly hang about your necks, when
the time is come that you must be drowned in the sea and
deluge of God's wrath.' p. 530. Rather than thus
rush upon Jehovah's fiercest anger, 'Tell the
world, if you will not depart from iniquity, that Christ
and you are parted, and that you have left him to be
embraced by them to whom iniquity is an abomination.'
p. 530. Thus faithfully and affectionately did Bunyan deal
with his hearers and readers. And he takes an occasion, now
in his maturer years, to confirm the sentiments which he
had formerly published in his 'Differences in Judgment
about Water Baptism no Bar to Communion.' 'It is
strange to see at this day how, notwithstanding, all the
threatenings of God, men are wedded to their own opinions,
beyond what the law of grace and love will admit. Here is a
Presbyterian, here an Independent, here a Baptist, so
joined each man to his own opinion, that they cannot have
that communion one with another, as by the testament of the
Lord Jesus they are commanded and enjoined.' 'To
help thee in this, keep thine eye much upon thine own base
self, be clothed with humility, and prefer thy brother
before thyself; and know that Christianity lieth not in
small matters, neither before God nor understanding
men.' I have often said in my heart, what is the reason
that some of the brethren should be so shy of holding
communion with those, every whit as good, if not better
than themselves? Is it because they think themselves
unworthy of their holy fellowship? No, verily; it is
because they exalt themselves.' p.538. He goes on to
declare that the difficulties which sin and Satan place in
the way of the Christian pilgrim ought never to be
concealed. Salvation is to be worked out with fear and
trembling. It is only by divine aid, by dependence upon our
heavenly Father, that it can be accomplished. 'To
depart from iniquity to the utmost degree of requirement,
is a copy too fair for mortal flesh exactly to imitate,
while we are in this world. But with good paper, good ink,
and a good pen, a skilful and willing man may go far.'
p. 546, 547. Mr. Ryland's note on the Christian's
trials is, 'when the love of sin is subdued in the
conscience, then peace will flow in like a river, God will
be glorified, Christ exalted; and the happy soul, under the
teachings and influence of the all-wise, omnipotent Spirit,
will experience sweet peace and joy in believing.'
Millions of pilgrims have entered the celestial city,
having fought their way to glory; and then, while singing
the conqueror's song, all their troubles by the way
must have appeared as sufferings but for a moment, which
worked out for them an eternal and exceeding weight of
glory, And then how blessed the song to him that hath loved
us, and washed us from our sins in his own blood, and made
us kings and priests unto our God. To him be glory and
dominion for ever and ever. Amen.—Geo.
Offor.
AN INTRODUCTION TO THE FOLLOWING
DISCOURSE
When I write of justification before God
from the dreadful curse of the law; then I must speak of
nothing but grace, Christ, the promise, and faith. But when
I speak of our justification before men then I must join to
these good works. For grace, Christ, and faith, are things
invisible, and so not to be seen by another, otherwise than
through a life that becomes so blessed a gospel as has
declared unto us the remission of our sins for the sake of
Jesus Christ. He then that would have forgiveness of sins,
and so be delivered from the curse of God, must believe in
the righteousness and blood of Christ: but he that would
shew to his neighbours that he hath truly received this
mercy of God, must do it by good works ; for all things
else to them is but talk: as for example, a tree is known
to be what it is, to wit, whether of this or that kind, by
its fruit. A tree it is, without fruit, but as long as it
so abideth, there is ministered occasion to doubt what
manner of tree it is.
A professor is a professor, though he hath
no good works; but that, as such, he is truly godly, he is
foolish that so concludeth. (Matt. 7:17,18; James 2:18) Not
that works makes a man good; for the fruit maketh
not a good tree, it is the principle, to wit, Faith, that
makes a man good, and his works that shew him to be so.
(Matt. 7:16; Luke 6:44)
What then? why all professors that have not
good works flowing from their faith are naught; are bramble
bushes; are 'nigh unto cursing, whose end is to be
burned.' (Heb. 6:8) For professors by their
fruitlessness declare that they are not of the planting of
God, nor the wheat, 'but tares and children of the
wicked one.' (Matt. 13:37, 38)
Not that faith needeth good works as an help
to justification before God. For in this matter faith will
be ignorant of all good works, except those done by the
person of Christ. Here, then, the good man 'worketh
not, but believeth.' (Rom. 4:5). For he is not now to
carry to God, but to receive at his hand the matter
of his justification by faith; nor is the matter of his
justification before God ought else but the good deeds of
another man, to wit, Christ Jesus.
But is there, therefore, no need at all of
good works, because a man is justified before God without
them? or can that be called a justifying faith, that has
not for its fruit good works? (Job 22:3; James 2:20, 26)
Verily good works are necessary, though God need them not;
nor is that faith, as to justification with God, worth a
rush, that abideth alone, or without them.
There is, therefore, a twofold faith
of Christ in the world, and as to the notion of ,justifying
righteousness, they both concur and agree, but as to the
manner of application, there they vastly differ. The one,
to wit, the non-saving faith, standeth in speculation and
naked knowledge of Christ, and so abideth idle: but the
other truly seeth and receives him, and so becometh
fruitful. (John 1:12; Heb. 11:13; Rom. 10:16) And hence the
true justifying faith is said to receive, to embrace, to
obey the Son of God, as tendered in the gospel: by which
expression is shewed both the nature of justifying faith,
in its actings in point of justification, and also the
cause of its being full of good works in the world. A gift
is not made mine by my seeing of it, or because I know the
nature of the thing so given; but then it is mine if I
receive and embrace it, yea, and as to the point in hand,
if I yield myself up to stand and fall by it. Now, he that
shall not only see, but receive, not only know, but embrace
the Son of God, to be justified by him, cannot but bring
forth good works, because Christ who is now received and
embraced by faith, leavens and seasons the spirit of this
sinner, through his faith, to the making of him capable so
to be [justified].(Acts 15:9; Gen. 18:19; Heb. 11:11) Faith
made Sarah receive strength to conceive seed, and we are
sanctified through faith, which is in Christ. For faith
hath joined Christ and the soul together, and being so
joined, the soul is one spirit with him; not essentially,
but in agreement and oneness of design. Besides, when
Christ is truly received and embraced to the justifying of
the sinner, in that man's heart he dwells by his word
and Spirit, through the same faith also. Now Christ by his
Spirit and word must needs season the soul he thus
dwells in: so then the soul being seasoned, it seasoneth
the body; and body and soul, the life and
conversation.
We know it is not the seeing, but taking of
a potion, that maketh it work as it should, nor is the
blood of Christ a purge to this or that conscience, except
received by faith. (Heb. 9:14)
Shall that then be counted right believing
in Christ unto justification, that amounts to no more than
to an idle speculation, or naked knowledge of him? shall
that knowledge of him, I say, be counted such, as only
causes the soul to behold, but moveth it not to good works?
No, verily. For the true beholding of Jesus to
justification and life, changes from glory to glory. (2
Cor. 3:18)
Nor can that man that hath so believed, as
that by his faith he hath received and embraced Christ for
life before God, be destitute of good works: for, as I
said, the word and Spirit comes also by this faith, and
dwells in the heart and conscience. Now, shall a soul where
the word and Spirit of Christ dwells, be a soul without
good works? Yea, shall a soul that has received the love,
the mercy, the kindness, grace and salvation of God through
the sorrows, tears, groans, cross, and cruel death of
Christ, be yet a fruitless tree! God forbid. This faith is
as the salt which the prophet cast into the spring of
bitter water, it makes the soul good and serviceable for
ever. (2 Kings 2:19-22)
If the receiving of a temporal gift
naturally tends to the making of us to move our cap and
knee, and binds us to be the servant of the giver, shall we
think that faith will leave him who by it has received
Christ, to be as unconcerned as a stock or stone, or that
its utmost excellency is to provoke the soul to a
lip-labour, and to give Christ a few fair words for his
pains and grace, and so wrap up the business? No, no;
'the love of Christ constraineth us' thus to judge
that it is but reasonable, since he gave his all for us,
that we should give our some for him. (2 Cor.
5:14,15)
Let no man, then, deceive himself, as he may
and will if he takes not heed with true notions, but
examine himself concerning his faith, to wit; Whether he
hath any? and if some, Whether of that kind that will turn
to account in the day when God shall judge the
world.
I told you before that there is a twofold
faith, and now I will tell you that there are two sorts
of good works; and a man may be shrewdly guessed at
with reference to his faith, even by the works that he
chooseth to be conversant in.
There are works that cost nothing, and works
that are chargeable. And observe it, the unsound faith will
choose to itself the most easy works it can find. For
example, there is reading, praying, hearing of sermons,
baptism, breaking of bread, church fellowship, preaching,
and the like; and there is mortification of lusts, charity,
simplicity, open-heartedness, with a liberal hand to the
poor, and their like also. Now the unsound faith picks and
chooses, and takes and leaves, but the true faith does not
so.
There are a great many professors now in
England that have nothing to distinguish them from the
worst of men, but their praying, reading, hearing of
sermons, baptism, church-fellowship, and breaking of bread.
Separate them but from these, and everywhere else they are
as black as others, even in their whole life and
conversation. Thus they have chosen to them the most easy
things to do them, but love not to be conscionably found in
the practice of the other; a certain sign their faith is
nought, and that these things, even the things they are
conversant in, are things attended to of them, not for the
ends for which God has appointed them, but to beguile and
undo themselves withal.
Praying, hearing, reading; for what are
these things ordained, but that we might by the godly use
of them attain to more of the knowledge of God, and be
strengthened by his grace to serve him better according to
his moral law? Baptism, fellowship, and the Lord's
supper, are ordained for these ends also. But there is a
vast difference between using of these things, and a using
of them for these ends. A man may pray, yea pray for such
things, had he them, as would make him better in morals,
without desire to be better in morals, or love to the
things he prays for. A man may read and hear, not to learn
to do, though to know; yea he may be dead to doing moral
goodness, and yet be great for reading and hearing all his
days. The people then among all professors that are zealous
of good works are the peculiar ones to Christ. (Titus 2:14)
What has a man done that is baptized, if he pursues not the
ends for which that appointment was ordained. The like I
say of fellowship, of breaking of bread, etc.. For all
these things we should use to support our faith, to mortify
the flesh, and strengthen us to walk in newness of life by
the rule of the moral law. Nor can that man be esteemed
holy whose life is tainted with immoralities, let him be
what he can in all things else. I am of that man's mind
as to practical righteousness, who said to Christ upon this
very question, "Well, master, thou hast said the
truth;—for to love the Lord our 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 12:28-33) To love my neighbour as
myself, to do as I would be done unto, this is the law and
the prophets. And he that is altogether a stranger to these
things, how dwelleth the love of God in him ; or how will
he manifest to another that his faith will save
him?
Satan is afraid that men should hear of
justification by Christ, lest they should embrace it. But
yet, if he can prevail with them to keep fingers off,
though they do hear and look on, and practise lesser
things, he can the better bear it; yea, he will labour to
make such professors bold to conclude they shall by that
kind of faith enjoy him, though by that they cannot embrace
him, nor lay hold of him. For he knows that how far soever
a man engages in a profession of Christ with a faith that
looks on, but cannot receive nor embrace him, that faith
will leave him to nothing but mistaken and disappointments
at last.
The gospel comes to some in word only, and
the faith of such stands but in a verbal sound; but the
apostle was resolved not to know or take notice of such a
faith. (1 Thess. 1:4, 5) 'For the kingdom of God, saith
he, 'is not in word, but in power.' (1 Cor.
1:18-20)' He whose faith stands only in a saying, I
believe, has his works in bare words also, and as virtual
is the one as the other, and both insignificant enough.
'If a brother or sister be naked, and destitute of
daily food, and one of you say unto them, Depart in peace,
be ye warmed and filled ; notwithstanding ye give
them not those things which are needful to the body; what
doth it profit? Even so faith, if it hath not works
is dead, being alone.' (James 2:15-17) This faith,
therefore, Satan can allow, because it is somewhat of kin
to his own. (vs. 10)
Besides, what greater contempt can be cast
upon Christ than by such wordy professors is cast upon him?
These are the men that by practice say, the gospel is but
an empty sound. Yet , the more they profess, the louder
they proclaim it thus to be, to his disgrace, while they,
not withstanding their profession of faith, hold and
maintain their league with the devil and sin. The Son of
God was manifest that he might destroy the works of the
devil, but these men profess his faith and keep these works
alive in the world. (1 John 3) Shall these pass for such as
believe to the saving of the soul? For a man to be content
with this kind of faith, and to look to go to salvation by
it, what to God is a greater provocation?
The devil laugheth here, for he knows he has
not lost his vassal by such a faith as this, but that
rather he hath made use of the gospel, that glorious word
of life, to secure his captive, through, his presumption of
the right faith, the faster in his shackles.
It is marvellous to me to see sin so high
amidst the swarms of professors that are found in every
corner of this land. Nor can any other reason be given for
it, but because the gospel has lost its wonted virtue, or
because professors want faith therein. But do you think it
is because of the first? no, the word of our God shall
stand in its strength for ever; the faith of such therefore
is not right; they have for shields of gold, made
themselves shields of brass; or instead of the primitive
faith, which was of the operation of God, they have got to
themselves a faith that stands by the power, and in the
wisdom of man. (2 Chron. 12:9, 10; Col. 2:12; 1 Cor. 2:4,
5) And, to say no more to this, for what is God so angry
with this land, but for the sin of the professors that
dwell therein, while they have polluted his name with their
gifts, and with their idols? God, I say, has been provoked
most bitterly by us, while we have profaned his name,
making use of his name, his word, and ordinances, to serve
ourselves, '0 Lord, what wilt thou do to this
land.' We are every one looking for something; even for
something that carrieth terror and dread in the sound of
its wings as it comes, though we know not the form nor
visage thereof.[1] One cries out, another has his hands
upon his loins, and a third is made mad with the sight of
his eyes, and with what his ears do hear. And as their
faith hath served them about justification, so it now
serves them about repentance and reformation: it can do
nothing here neither; for though, as was said, men cry out,
and are with their hands upon their loins for fear; yet,
where is the church, the house, the man that stands in the
gap for the land, to turn away this wrath by repentance,
and amendment of life ? Behold the Lord cometh forth out of
his place, and will come down and tread upon the places of
the earth, and the mountains shall be molten under him, and
the valleys shall be cleft, as wax before the fire, and as
the waters that are poured down a steep place. But what is
the cause of all this?—For the transgression of Jacob
is all this, and for the sins of the house of Israel.
(Micah 1:5)
It is that that is observed by them that can
make observation, that all that God has done to us already
has been ineffectual as to cause that humility and
reformation, by which his judgments must be turned away.
Repentance is rare this day, and yet without doubt, that
without which, things will grow worse and worse. As for
them that hope that God will save his people, though but
from temporal judgments, whether they repent and reform, or
do otherwise, I must leave them and their opinions
together: this I have found, that sometimes the repentance,
even of the godly, has come too late to divert such
judgments. And, how some of the godly should be so indulged
as to be saved from punishment without repentance, when the
true and unfeigned repentance of others will not deliver
them, leaves me, I confess, in a wilderness! But that which
is most of all to be lamented is, that sin, through custom,
is become no sin. The superfluity of naughtiness is at this
day become no sin with many. Surely this was the case with
Israel, else how could they say when the prophets so
bitterly denounced God's judgments against them,
'Because we are innocent, surely his anger shall turn
from us.' (Jer. 2:35) When custom or bad example has
taken away the conscience of sin, it is a sign that [that]
soul is in a dangerous lethargy; and yet this is the
condition of the most that profess amongst us this day. But
to leave this and to proceed.
As there is a twofold faith, two sorts of
good works, and the like, so there is also a twofold
love to Christ; the one standing, or stopping, in some
passions of the mind and affections; the other is that
which breaks through all difficulties to the holy
commandment to do it. Of both these there is mention made
in the scripture; and though all true love begins at the
heart, yet that love is but little set by that breaks not
through to practice. How many are there in the world that
seem to have the first, but how few shew the second. The
young man in the gospel, (Mark 10:17) did by his running,
kneeling, crying, inquiring, and entreating of Christ, to
shew him the way to life, shew that he had inward love to
Christ and his own salvation; but yet it was not a love
that was 'strong as death,' 'cruel as the
grave,' and hotter than the coals of juniper. (Song
8:6) It was a love that stopped in mind and affection, but
could not break out into practice. This kind of love, if it
be let alone, and not pressed to proceed till it comes into
a labouring practising of the commandment, will love as
long as you will, to wit, as long as mouth and tongue can
wag; but yet you shall not, by all your skill drive this
love farther than the mouth; 'for with their mouth they
shew much love, but their heart goeth after their
covetousness.' (Ezek. 33:31)
Nor may this love be counted for that of the
right kind, because it is in the heart, for the heart knows
how to dissemble about love, as much as about other
matters. This is feigned love, or love that pretends to
dear affections for Christ, but can bestow no cost upon
him. Of this kind of love the world is full at this day,
especially the professors of this age; but as I said, of
this the Lord Jesus makes little or no account, for that it
hath in it an essential defectiveness. Thus, therefore,
Christ and his servants describe the love that is true and
of the right kind, and that with reference to himself and
church.
First, with reference to himself.
'If a man love me,' saith he, 'he will keep my
words.' (John 14:23) And again, 'He that hath my
commandments, and keepeth them, he it is that loveth
me.' And, 'He that loveth me not, keepeth not my
sayings.' 'And the word which ye hear is not mine,
but the Father's which sent me.' Behold you now
where Christ placeth a sign of love, it is not in word nor
in tongue, not in great and seemingly affectionate
gestures, but in a practical walking in the law of the
Lord. Hence such, and such only, are called the undefiled
in the way. You know who says, 'I am the way.'
'Blessed,' saith David, 'are the undefiled in
the way, who walk in the law of the Lord.' (Ps.
119:1)
But here again the hypocrite will give us
the slip by betaking himself to exterior matters, as to his
'mint and anise and cummin.' (Matt. 23:23) Still
neglecting the more weighty matters of the law, to wit,
judgment, mercy, faith; or else to the significative
ordinances, still neglecting to do to all men as he would
they should do to him. But let such know that God never
ordained significative ordinances, such as baptism, the
Lord's supper, or the like, for the sake of water, or
of bread and wine; nor yet because he takes any delight
that we are dipped in water, or eat that bread; but they
were ordained to minister to us by the aptness of the
elements, through our sincere partaking of them, further
knowledge of the death, burial, and resurrection of Christ,
and of our death and resurrection by him to newness of
life. Wherefore, he that eateth and believeth not, and he
that is baptized, and is not dead to sin, and walketh not
in newness of life, neither keepeth these ordinances nor
pleaseth God. Now to be dead to sin, is to be dead to those
things forbidden in the moral law. For sin is the
transgression of that, and it availeth not to vaunt that I
am a saint and under this or that significative ordinance,
if I live in' the transgression of the law.'(1 John
3:4) For I am convicted of the law as a transgressor, and
so concluded to be one that loveth not Christ, though I
make a noise of my obedience to Christ, and of my partaking
of his significative ordinances. The Jews of old made a
great noise with their significative ordinances, while they
lived in the breach of the moral law, but their practice of
significative ordinances could not save them from the
judgment and displeasure of their God. They could frequent
the temple, keep their feasts, slay their sacrifices, and
be mighty apt about all their significative things. But
they loved idols, and lived in the breach of the second
table of the law: wherefore God cast them out of his
presence: hark what the prophet saith of them, (Amos 4:4)
'Come to Bethel, and transgress; at Gilgal multiply
transgression; and bring your sacrifices every morning, and
your tithes after three years: and offer a sacrifice of
thanksgiving with leaven, and proclaim and publish
the free-will offerings: for this liketh you, 0 ye children
of Israel, saith the Lord God.' Thus, as I said, the
hypocrite gives us the slip; for when he heareth that love
is in the keeping of the commandments of God, then he
betakes him to the more external parts of worship, and
neglecteth the more weighty matters to the provoking of the
God of Israel.
Second, As love to God is shewed by
keeping of his commandments; so love to my neighbour, is
the keeping of the commandments of God likewise. 'By
this we know that we love the children of God, when we love
God, and keep his commandments. For this is the love of
God,'—in us, both to God and man, 'that we
keep his commandments: and his commandments are not
grievous.' (1 John 5:2, 3) He that keepeth not
God's commandments, loves neither God nor
men.
Thus then we must learn to love one another.
He that keepeth God's commandment, doth to his brother
what is right, for that is God's commandment. He that
keeps God's commandment, doth to his brother even as he
would be done unto himself, for that is God's
commandment. He that keeps God's commandment, shutteth
not up his bowels of compassion from him, for the contrary
is his commandment. Further, he that keepeth God's
commandment sheweth his brother what he must do to honour
the Christ that he professeth, aright: therefore, he that
keeps the commandment, loves his brother. Yea, the keeping
of the commandment is loving the brethren.
But if all love, which we pretend to have
one to another, were tried by this one text, how much of
that that we call so, would be found to be nothing less?
Preposterous are our spirits in all things, nor can they be
guided right, but by the word and Spirit of God; the which,
the good Lord grant unto us plentifully, that we may do
that which is well pleasing in his sight, through Jesus
Christ our Lord. Yea, and that there may, by them, be
wrought sound repentance in us for all that hath been done
by us amiss, lest he give 'Jacob to the spoil, and
Israel to the robbers;' for that they have sinned
against him by not walking in his ways, and by not being
obedient to his law. (Isa. 42:24)
Let me add, lest God doth not only punish us
in the sight, and by the hand of the wicked; but embolden
them to say, it was God that set them on; yea, lest they
make those sins of ours, which we have not repented of, not
only their bye-word against us to after generations, but
the argument, one to another, of their justification for
all the evil that they shall be suffered to do unto us:
saying, when men shall ask them, 'Wherefore hath the
Lord done thus unto this land? what meaneth the heat
of this great anger?' (Deut. 29:24; 1 Kings 9:8; Jer.
22:8) 'Even because they have forsaken the covenant of
the Lord God of their fathers, and walked not in his
ways.'
JOHN BUNYAN
A HOLY LIFE THE BEAUTY OF
CHRISTIANITY
'AND, LET EVERY ONE THAT NAMETH THE NAME
OF CHRIST DEPART FROM INIQUITY,—2 TIM.
2:19
TIMOTHY, unto whom this epistle was writ,
was an evangelist, that is, inferior to apostles and
extra-ordinary prophets, and above ordinary pastors and
teachers. (2 Tim. 4:5; Eph. 4:11) And he with the rest of
those under his circumstances was to go with the apostles
hither and thither, to be disposed of by them as they saw
need, for the further edification of those who by the
apostolical ministry were converted to the faith: and hence
it is, that Titus was left at Crete, and that this Timothy
was left at Ephesus. (1 Tim. 1:3) For they were to do a
work for Christ in the world, which the apostles were to
begin, and leave upon their hands to finish. Now when the
apostles departed from places, and had left these
evangelists in their stead, usually there did arise some
bad spirits among those people, where these were left for
the furtherance of the faith. This is manifest by both the
epistles to Timothy, and also by that to Titus: wherefore
Paul, upon whom these two evangelists waited for the
fulfilling of their ministry, writeth unto them while they
abode where he left them, concerning those turbulent
spirits which they met with, and to teach them how yet
further they ought to behave themselves in the house of
God, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and
ground of truth. And to this purpose he gives them,
severally, divers instructions, as the judicious reader may
easily understand, by which he encourageth them to the
prosecution of that service which for Christ they had to do
for those people where he had left them, and also
instructeth them how to carry it towards their disturbers,
which last he doth, not only doctrinally, but also by
shewing them, by his example and practice, what he would
have them do.
This done, he laboureth to comfort Timothy
with the remembrance of the steadfastness of God's
eternal decree of election, because grounded on his
foreknowledge; saying, though Hymeneus and Philetus have
erred from the faith, and, by their fall, have overthrown
the faith of some, 'Yet the foundation of God standeth
sure, having this seal, The Lord knoweth them that are
his.' Now lest this last hint should still encourage
some to be remiss and carnally secure, and foolish, as I
suppose this doctrine abused, had encouraged them to be
before; therefore the apostle immediately conjoineth to it
this exhortation; 'And, let every one that nameth; the
name of Christ depart from iniquity.' Two truths
strangely, but necessarily joined together, because so apt
to be severed by the children of men; for many, under the
pretence of their being elected, neglect to pursue
holiness; and many of them again that pretend to be for
holiness, quite exclude the doctrine and motives that
election gives thereto. Wherefore the apostle, that he
might set men's notions as to these things right, he
joins these two together, signifying thereby, that as
electing love doth instate a man in the blessing of eternal
life; so holiness is the path thereto; and, that he that
refuseth to depart from iniquity shall be dammed;
notwithstanding he may think himself secured from hell by
the act of God's electing love. For election designeth
men not only to eternal glory, but to holiness of life, a
means, thereto. (Eph. 1:4, 5) And the manner of this
connection of truth is the more to be noted by us, because
the apostle seems to conjoin[2] them, in an holy heat of
spirit, saying, 'The foundation of God standeth sure,
having this seal, The Lord knoweth them that are his.'
And, 'let every one that shall but so much as name the
name of Christ, depart from iniquity;' or, as who
should say, God will be revenged upon them for all, or,
notwithstanding, they appropriate unto themselves the
benefits of election.
In the text we have, FIRST, An exhortation.
SECOND, The extension of that exhortation. The exhortation
is, That men depart from iniquity. The extension of it is,
to them, all of them, every one of them that name the name
of Christ. 'And let every one that nameth the name of
Christ, depart from iniquity.'
[FIRST, THE EXHORTATION—THAT MEN
DEPART FROM INIQUITY]
In the exhortation there are several things
to be taken notice of, because insinuated by the apostle.
The first is, that iniquity is a very dangerous and hurtful
thing, as to the souls of sinners in general; so to them
that name the name of Christ.
First, Iniquity is a very dangerous
and hurtful thing to men in general; for it is that
which did captivate the world at the beginning, and that
made it a bond-slave to the devil. It has also done great
hurt to mankind ever since. To instance a few
things:
l. It is that which hath stupefied and
besotted the powers of men's souls, and made them even
next to a beast and brute in all matters supernatural
heavenly. (2 Peter 2:12) For as the beast minds nothing but
his lusts and his belly, by nature, so man minds nothing
but things earthly, sensual, and devilish, by reason of
iniquity.
2. It has blinded and darkened the powers of
the soul, so that it can neither see where it is, nor which
is the way out of this besotted condition. (Eph.
4:18)
3. It has hardened the heart against God,
and against all admonition and counsel in the things of the
gospel of Christ. (Rom. 2:5)
4. It has alienated the will, the mind, and
affections, from the choice of the things that should save
it, and wrought them over to an hearty delight in those
things that naturally tend to drown it in perdition and
destruction. (Col. 1:21)
5. It has made man odious in God's eyes,
it has provoked the justice of God against him, and made
him obnoxious to hell-fire. (Ezek. 16:5)
6. Yea, it so holds him, so binds him, so
reserves him to this, that not he himself, nor yet all the
angels of heaven, can deliver him from this deplorable
condition. (Prov. 5:22)
7. To say nothing of their pleasure and
delight that it makes him take in that way to hell in which
he walketh. (Isa. 66:3; Prov. 7:22, 23) Never went fat ox
so gamesomely to the shambles, nor fool so merrily to the
correction of the stocks, nor silly bird so wantonly to the
hidden net, as iniquity makes men go down her steps to the
pit of hell and damnation.
O it is amazing, it is astonishing to
consider what hurt sin hath done to man, and into how many
dangers it has brought him; but let these few hints at this
time suffice as to this. I will now speak a word to the
other particular, namely,
Second, That as iniquity is dangerous
and hurtful to the souls of men in general, so it is to
them that name the name of Christ. As to the so and so
naming of him, to that I shall speak by and by, but at this
time take it thus: That religiously name his name. And I
say iniquity is hurtful to them.
1. It plucks many a one of them from Christ
and the religious profession of him. I have even seen, that
men who have devoutly and religiously professed Jesus
Christ, have been prevailed withal, by iniquity, to cast
him and the profession of his name quite off, and to turn
their backs upon him. 'Israel,' saith the prophet,
'hath cast off the thing that is good.'
(Hosea 8:3) But why? 'Of their silver and their gold
have they made them idols.' The sin of idolatry threw
their hearts from God; their love to that iniquity made
them turn their backs upon him. Wherefore God complains,
that of forwardness to their iniquity, and through the
prevalence thereof, they had cast him behind their back.
(Ezek. 23:35)
2. As it plucks many a professor from
Christ, so it keeps many a one from an effectual closing
with him. How many are there that religiously profess and
make mention of the name of Christ, that yet of love to,
and by the interest that iniquity hath in their affections,
never close with him unto salvation, but are like to them,
of whom you read in Paul to Timothy, that they are ever
learning and never able to come to the knowledge of the
truth. (2 Tim. 3:1-7)
3. And concerning those that have indeed
come to him, and that have effectually closed with him, and
that name his name to good purpose; yet how hath iniquity
hurt and abused many of them. (1.) It has prevailed with
God to hide his face from them, a thing more bitter than
death. (2.) It has prevailed with God to chastise, and to
afflict them sorely, a thing in which he taketh no
pleasure. (Lam 3:33) (3.) It has provoked God to give them
over to the hand of the enemy, and to deliver them to the
tormentors. (Jer. 12:7; Matt. 18:34) (4.) It hath brought
them to question their interest in Christ, and whether they
ever had grace in their souls. (Psa. 31:22) (5.) And for
those that have yet believed they were in his favour, this
iniquity hath driven them to fear that God would cast them
away, and take all his good things from them. (Psa.
51)
Yea, he that would know the hurt that
iniquity hath done to them that name the name of Christ,
let him consider the cries, the sighs, the tears, the
bemoanings, the bewailings, the lamentations, the sorrows,
the confessions, the repentings and griefs wherewith they
have been attended, while they have complained that they
have been put in the stocks, laid in the dungeon, had their
bones broken, suffered the terrors of God, been distressed
almost to distraction, and have been fed with gravel, gall,
wormwood, and with the water of astonishment, for days,
yea, years together. (Job 13:27; Psa. 6:6; Psa. 31:9, 10;
Psa. 38:8; Psa. 60:3; Psa. 88; Psa. 116:3; Jer. 8:14; Jer.
23:15; Jer. 31:18; Lam. 3:4, 16; Ezek. 4:16; 2 Cor. 12:21)
By all which, and many more which might be mentioned, it
appears that iniquity is a dangerous and hurtful
thing.
[SECOND, THE EXTENSION OF THE
EXHORTATION—TO EVERY ONE THAT NAMETH THE NAME OF
CHRIST.]
But I proceed, and come in the next place to
the extension of the exhortation, namely, that it reacheth
to all those that name the name of Christ. 'And let
every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from
iniquity.'
To handle this a little, and to shew you
what the apostle here means by naming of the name of
Christ: he meaneth not an irreligious naming of that worthy
name, nor those that name it irreligiously. This is
evident, because he passeth by their manner of naming of it
without the least reproof, the which he would not have done
had the fault been in their manner of naming of the name of
Christ. Now I say, if he intendeth not those that name the
name of Christ irreligiously, then, though the exhortation,
'let every one,' seems to extend itself to all, and
all manner of persons, that any ways name the name of
Christ, yet it is limited by this, to wit, that rightly,
religiously, or according to the way of the professors of
Christ, name his worthy name. And it must needs be so
taken, and that for these reasons:
First, For that, as I said before,
the apostle taketh no notice of their manner of naming of
his name, so as to reprove any indecency or unseemliness in
their naming of him; wherefore he alloweth of the manner of
their naming of him.
Secondly, because the apostle's
design in this exhortation was, and is, that the naming of
the name of Christ might be accompanied with such a life of
holiness as might put an additional lustre upon that name
whenever named in a religious way; but this cannot be
applied to every manner of naming the name of our Lord
Jesus Christ. For if a man shall name the name of Christ
unduly, or irreligiously, though he shall never so much
therewithal depart from iniquity, and be circumspect to the
utmost in all civility and morality, yet he answers not the
apostle's end, which he seeks by this his exhortation.
For,
l. Suppose a man should name the name of
Christ vainly, idly, in vain mirth, wantonness, false or
vain swearing, or the like, and shall back this, his manner
of naming the name of Christ, with all manner of justness
and uprightness of life, would this answer the
apostle's end in this his exhortation? Verily no; for
this manner of naming the name is worthy reprehension;
'Thou shalt not take my name in vain,' or vainly
make use thereof: and moral goodness attending the
so-naming of the name of Christ will do more hurt than
good. (Ex. 20)
2. There is a reproachful and scandalous
naming of the name of Christ, such as the Jews and
Pharisees did accustom themselves unto, as to call him
Jesus, the deceiver; and Christ, in a way of scorn and
contempt. Nor were these men quite destitute of that which
put a lustre upon their opinions; for, said the Lord Christ
himself unto them, 'Ye indeed appear beautiful
outward.' (Matt. 23:27)
3. There is such a naming of the name of
Christ as to make it a cloak for false and dangerous
errors: that men, by the use of that name, and the putting
of it upon such errors and delusions, may put off their
errors to others the better. 'Many shall come in my
name, to wit, with their delusions, presenting them, in my
name, to the world, and shall put them off, in my name, to
the destruction of the soul. (Matt. 24:5) Now, can any
imagine that the apostle should extend his exhortation to
such, that they, thus continuing to name the name of
Christ, should depart from iniquity. To what end should
such be comprehended in this of exhortation of his? to no
purpose at all: for the more an erroneous person, or a
deceiver of souls, shall back his errors with a life that
is morally good, the more mischievous, dangerous, and
damnable is that man and his delusions; wherefore such a
one is not concerned in this exhortation.
4. There is a naming of the name of Christ
magically, and after the manner of exorcism, or,
conjuration; as we read in the Acts of the apostles.
vagabond Jews, the exorcists, there say, 'We adjure you
by Jesus, whom Paul preacheth.' (Acts 19:13-15) Thus
they called over them that had evil spirits, the name of
the Lord Jesus. But what if these should clothe this, their
devilish art, and devilish way, of using or naming of the
name of the Lord Jesus, with departing from iniquity, so as
to commend their whole life to by-standers, for such: as is
morally good: what advantage would Christ, or Paul, or the
gospel, get thereby? verily none at all; but rather damage
and reproach, as will soon appear to any man's reason,
if it be considered that goodness of life, joined to
badness of principles is like the devil clothed in white,
or Satan transformed into an angel of light. And Paul was
grieved in his spirit, when the wench that had a spirit of
divination did acknowledge him to be the servant of the
most high God, for he knew it would nothing further, or
help forward, the Lord's design, but be rather an
hinderance thereto. For when witches and devils come once
to commend, or make use of the name of Christ, Christ and
Paul like it not; therefore Paul's exhortation, which
here are presented with by the text, is not extended to any
of the four sorts aforenamed, but,
Third, To those upon whom his name is
called, they should depart from iniquity. I say those whom
God has so far dignified, as to put the name of Christ upon
them. (Acts 15:17) And I will add, that apply that name to
themselves. And the reason is, because God is now
concerned. (ch. 11:26) God has changed thy name from Pagan
to Christian, and thou choosest to call thyself by that
name, saying, 'I belong to Christ.' Now thou must
depart from iniquity, for that notice is taken of thee,
both by heaven and earth, that thou art become a disciple,
and 'let every one that' so 'nameth the name of
Christ,' or that nameth it, being himself by God and
himself put under such circumstances as these, 'depart
from iniquity.' (1 Peter 4:16)
Fourthly, It is spoken to those that
name the name of Christ either in the public or private
worship of God, being themselves professed worshippers of
him; and the reason is, for that the ordinances, as well as
the name of God, is holy, and 'he will be sanctified in
them that come nigh him.' (Lev. 10:3) He therefore that
approacheth the presence of Christ in prayer, or any other
divine appointment, must take heed of regarding
'iniquity in his heart.' (Psa. 66:18) Else the Lord
will stop his ears to his prayers, and will shut his eyes,
and not take notice of such kind of worship or
worshippers.
Fifthly, Those that the apostle in
this place exhorts to depart from iniquity are such as have
taken unto themselves the boldness to say, that they are in
him, abide in him, and consequently are made partakers of
the benefits that are in him. 'He that saith he abideth
in him, ought himself also to walk, even as he walked.'
(1 John 2:6) And the reason is, because Christ is a
fruitful root, and a free conveyer of sap into the
branches; hence it is written, that 'the trees of the
Lord are full of sap.' (Psa. 104:16) So then, he
that nameth the name of Christ by way of applying to
himself his benefits, and as counting that he is found of
God in him, and so abideth, ought himself to walk even as
he walked, that he may give proof of what he saith to be
true, by bearing forth before men that similitude of
righteousness that is in his root and stem: for such as the
stock or tree is, such let the branches be, but that cannot
be known but by the fruit: 'ye shall know them by their
fruit.' (Matt. 7:16) So then, he that thus shall name
the name of Christ, let him depart from iniquity: yea, let
every such man do so.
Sixthly, This exhortation is spoken
to them that name Christ as their Sovereign Lord and King:
let them 'depart from iniquity.' 'The Lord is
our judge, the Lord is our Lawgiver, the Lord is our King;
he will save us.' (Isa. 33:22) [These] are great words;
and as they cannot be spoken by every one, so they ought
not to be spoken lightly by them that can. Nor may he that
claims so high a privilege be but obedient, submissive, apt
to learn, conscientiously to put in practice what he hath
learnt of his Judge, his Lawgiver, and his King. Lest when
some shall hear him say that Christ, by name, is his
Lawgiver and his King, and shall yet observe him to do
things evil, and to walk in ways that are not good, they
shall think evil, and speak so of his King; saying, Learnt
you this of Christ your King? or doth your King countenance
you in ways that are so bad? or, do you by thus and thus
doing submit to the laws of your king? yea, your King, his
name and gospel shall bear the burden of the evil, together
with the shame thereof, if thou that namest the name of
Christ shalt not depart from iniquity.
Lastly, Whatever man he be that by
his naming of the name of Christ shall intimate that he
hath any reverence of love to, or delight in that Christ,
whose name he nameth, that man should depart from iniquity,
not only for the reasons that are above mentioned, but for
those that may be named afterwards.
But having thus far opened the word, and
shewed who and what manner of man the apostle had in his
eye, in this his exhortation, I shall come, in the next
place, to make some observations upon the text.
As,
[OBSERVATION FIRST.]
That it is incident to men to name the
name of Christ religiously, that is, rightly as to words
and nations, and not to 'depart from
iniquity.' This was the occasion of this
exhortation, for Paul saw that there were some that did so;
to wit, that named the name of Christ well, as to words,
but did not depart from iniquity. Some such he also I found
among them at Corinth, which made him say, 'Awake to
righteousness, and sin not.' (1 Cor. 15:34) He found
such at Ephesus, and cries out to them most earnestly,
saying, 'Awake thou that sleepest, and arise from the
dead.' (Eph. 5:14) For albeit they were professors of
Christ, yet they lived too much like those that were dead
in trespasses and sins, This he also found among the
Hebrews, wherefore he saith to them, 'Let us lay aside
every weight, and the sin which doth so easily beset us,
and let us run with patience the race that is set before
us.' (Heb. 12:1) These professors are easily beset with
sin, yea, it did hang upon them as weights to hinder them
from making of that profession of Christ, whose name they
named, as beautiful as did become both him and
them.
In my discourse upon this subject, I must
endeavour to shew you two things. FIRST, What Paul means
when he saith, 'depart from iniquity.' SECONDLY,
Why some, that as to words, rightly name the name of
Christ, do not 'depart from iniquity.'
The first of those doth need some
explanation, because in some sense even the best of saints
cannot depart from sin, or iniquity.
l. Because as to the being of it, it is
seated and rooted in their flesh, and hath its dwelling
there. Yea, it hath, and so will have an abiding there, so
long as man is on this side that state of perfection, which
is not to be enjoyed while we are in the flesh: 'for in
me, that is, in my flesh,' sin dwells, (Rom. 7:18) nor
doth any thing else but sin dwell there: 'for in me,
that is, in my flesh, said Paul, 'dwelleth no good
thing:' therefore the apostle must not be understood as
if he intended to insinuate that there was a possibility
that the nature and being of sin could be plucked up by the
roots, and so cast clean away from us, as to the very
nature thereof. No, that will abide with us, for it hath
its dwelling in us.
2. And as they cannot depart from the
nature, of it as such, that is, as they cannot be rid of
the being of sin, so neither can they depart from the
motions and stirrings of sin, no more than they can stir
from the motions or stirrings of their natural senses, or
of their natural reason: the motions of sin, which Paul
also calls the lusts thereof, will be where the nature and
being of sin is, because it is not dead; for that which
liveth, what manner of life soever it hath, will have
motion according to the manner of life which it hath; and
sin being one of the most quick and brisk things that are,
it will also have its motions and lusts accordingly. Hence
Paul says, it lusts, and will lust, where it is and dwells;
though the very Spirit of God and the utmost diligence of a
Christian be also there to oppose it. (Rom. 6:12; Gal.
5:17)
3. Again, as the being and motions of sin
will be with us, so also will it in its endeavours. It will
endeavour to overcome us, and to make us captives to itself
and to Satan; and these endeavours will be with us. (Eph.
6:11, 12; 2 Cor. 10:5; Heb. 12:4) Nor can we so depart from
iniquity, as to be utterly rid of all sense and feeling of
what endeavours there are in sin and iniquity to be master
and lord, and reign. Sin will endeavour to defile the mind,
to defile the conscience, to defile the life and
conversation; and this endeavour, as endeavour, we cannot
depart from; that is, cause that it should not be in our
flesh; for there it will be, since sin in its being is
there.
4. As the being, motions, and endeavours of
sin will still abide in our flesh, so consequently will its
polluting fumes be upon us; nor doth the apostle mean, when
he bids us depart from iniquity, that
we should think that we can so be, or so do,
in this life, as that our being or doing should not smell
of the strong scent of sin. 'Who can bring a clean
thing out of an unclean? not one.'( Job 14:4)
'We are all as an unclean thing, and'
therefore 'all our righteousnesses are as filthy
rags.' (Isa. 64:6) The scent, the smell, the rank and
odious stink of sins abide upon, yea, and will abide upon
us, when most spiritual here, and upon our most spiritual
actions too, until they be taken away by Christ. Thus far,
therefore, we cannot be concerned in the exhortation. For
should Paul exhort us to depart from the being, motion,
endeavour, and polluting fumes and scent of sin—I
mean so to depart from them, as that there shall no such
thing have place, or motion, or striving, or scent in, or
upon us—he would exhort us to that which is
altogether impossible for us to perform, yea, to perform
through that working of the Spirit of God, which is to be
with us and in us here. Yea, he must exhort us to that
which be could not perform himself. But such exhortations
did not stand with the wisdom of an apostle. Wherefore
there is a certain meaning in this exhortation, from the
which if we swerve, we shall both wrong the apostle and
ourselves.
FIRST—Let us inquire then what Paul
should mean, where he bids them 'that name the name of
Christ depart from iniquity.' And for our better
understanding of him, we must consider that there is an
iniquity that is inherent in us, and an iniquity that is
apart, and at a distance from us. Now if he means, as
certainly he doth, that they that name the name of Christ
should depart from that sin and iniquity that is in
themselves; then, though he cannot mean that we should
separate that from our persons, for that is impossible, yet
he would have us,
First, Take off and withdraw
our MINDS and AFFECTIONS therefrom. And
he tells us that they that are Christ's do so. 'And
they that are Christ's have crucified the flesh with
the affections and lusts.' (Gal. 5:24) Sinful lusts and
sinful motions our minds and affections should depart from
them. There are the affections and lusts of sin; and there
are the affections and lusts, or desires of the soul; and
again, there are the affections and lusts of the new man in
saints. Now this is that that the apostle would have, to
wit, that the affections and passions of our souls should
not choose but depart from the affections and lusts of our
old man, and should be renewed and made willing to be led
by the Holy Ghost from them. 'This I say,' says he,
'Walk in the Spirit, and ye shall not fulfil the lust
of the flesh.' (ver. 16)
Wherefore, when he saith, depart from
iniquity, if he means from our own inherent iniquity, then
he must mean thus, take your mind and your affections off,
carry your minds away from them, set your minds and
affections upon other objects, and let your minds and
affections be yielded up to the conduct of the word and
Spirit of God, 'Let not sin therefore reign in your
mortal body, that ye should obey it in the lusts
thereof.' (Rom. 6:12) Now a man, in mind and
affections, may depart from that which yet will not depart
from him; yea, a man in mind may depart from that which yet
will dwell in him as long as he lives.
For instance, there are many diseases that
cleave to men, from which, in their minds, they willingly
depart. Yea, their greatest disquietment is, that so bad a
distemper will abide by them, and might they but have their
desire accomplished, they would be as far therefrom as the
ends of the earth are asunder, and while they are found to
continue together, the mind departs therefrom, and is gone
either to God or to physicians for help and deliverance
from it.
And thus it is with the saint, and should be
with every one that by way of profession nameth the name of
Christ, he should depart from his indwelling sin, with his
mind. 'With his mind he should serve the law of
God.' (Rom. 7:25) And this is an excellent thing to do,
and can be done by none but such as are possessed with an
excellent spirit. Ah! to find a man that really departs
from himself, and that draweth the affections of the
soul, from the affections and lusts of his flesh is rare
thing. (Ezek. 11:19-21) The heart of the most of professors
goeth after their detestable lusts, and after their inward
abominations. But such shall of the flesh reap
corruption,' notwithstanding they name the name of
Christ. (Gal. 6:8)
Sin is sweet to him that is nothing but
flesh, or that can savour nothing but what is of the flesh.
(Job 20:12) Nor can it be that be that is such should
depart from himself, his sweet self. (Rom. 8:5-8) No, they
that are after the flesh do mind the things of the flesh;
wherefore they that are in the flesh, though they profess
religion and name the name of Christ, cannot please God ;
for such, instead of walking in and after the Spirit, have
put the stumbling-block of their iniquity before their
faces, to hinder their departing therefrom. (Ezek. 14:7, 8)
nor will all their inquiring of God, nor their seeking and
praying to him, keep them from stumbling and falling, and
splitting themselves in sunder upon the rocks and ruins
that are provided for them, as a reward of the evil of
their doings. (Job 14:16) Yea, they shall suck the poison
of asps, and the viper's tongue shall slay them,
notwithstanding all their profession.
Question. But some may say, how shall
I know that I do depart from the iniquity of my flesh, from
the iniquity that is in me.
Answer. I shall answer this question
briefly thus:
(l.) How is iniquity in thine eye, when
severed from the guilt and punishment that attends it ? Is
it as separate from these, beauteous, or ill-favoured? I
ask thee how it looks, and how thou likest it, suppose
there were no guilt or punishment to attend thy love to, or
commission of it ? For if in its own nature it be desirable
to thy mind, and only therefore shunned for fear of the
punishment that attends the commission of it, without doubt
thou art none of them that do depart from it; all that thou
dost is, thou shunnest the sin, not of abhorrence of the
sin, but for fear of the punishment that attends it. Like
the thief that yet refuseth to take away his
neighbour's horse, not of hatred of theft, but for fear
of the gallows.
(2.) How dost thou like thyself, as
considered possessed with a body of sin, and as feeling and
finding that sin worketh in thy members? doth this yield
thee inward pleasedness of mind, and a kind of secret
sweetness, or bow? for to be sure, where a sanctified mind
is, there is nothing more; odious in itself, nor that makes
a man so in his own eyes, as doth this sight, the sight of
sin in him, of the working of lust in him. (Job 42:6; Ezek.
16:63; Rom. 6:12) It is this that makes the good man
ashamed, that makes him blush, and that makes him abhor
himself.
(3.) How look thy duties in thine eyes, I
mean thy duties which thou doest in the service of God? I
say, how look the best of these, the most warm and
spiritual of these, since not one of them can be performed,
but they do catch the stain of sin, as coming from thee? or
art thou through the ignorance that is in thee as [one]
unacquainted with these things?
(4.) Why wouldst thou go to heaven? Is it
because thou wouldst be saved from hell, or because thou
wouldst be freed from sin? I say, wouldst thou go to
heaven, because it is a place that is holy, or because it
is a place remote from the pains of hell? I ask again,
wherein dost thou think the blessedness of heaven consists?
is it in the holiness that is there, or in the freedom that
is there from hell? There is not a man alive but would go
to heaven, that he may be saved from hell: but how many
would go thither that they might be saved from the
pleasures of sin, from the inward pleasure of sin; of that
I will be silent, though surely they are those that are out
of love with sin, and that do depart from
iniquity.
Verily, my brethren, it is a great thing to
depart from iniquity; it is a great thing to have my will,
my mind, and my affections departing from it.
But,
Second, As they that depart from
iniquity withdraw their minds and affections from the lusts
and motions of it, so they depart also from the
OCCASIONS of it; there are occasions by which sin
worketh to bring forth the fruits thereof, and some seek
those occasions. (Rom. 14:13; 1 Tim. 5:4; Ex. 23:7; Prov.
5:8; 2 Tim. 2:16) But he that hath set himself to depart
from sin in himself, will not seek occasions from abroad to
do it. Such a man as will keep far from an evil matter will
not company with a person that pollutes and defiles, nor
will he come near the door of the adulteress's house;
he will shun profane and vain babbling, for fear of the
ungodliness that attends it; he will walk with wise men
that he may be wise, knowing that 'a companion of fools
shall be destroyed.' (Prov. 13:20)
Now there are occasions given and occasions
taken to sin against the Lord Jesus; but he that departeth
from iniquity departeth from them both. He is not for
giving any occasion to others to sin; he had rather wrong
himself and put up with injuries done, than give occasion
to others to do iniquity; and as he is for giving none, so
neither is he for taking any: he is for partaking of no
man's sins, but for keeping of himself pure. (1 Tim.
5:22)
Third, To depart from iniquity, is to
depart from it in those EXAMPLES that are set before us
thereto: occasions and examples are sometimes the same,
but there may be occasions to sin where there are no
examples thereto, and therefore in that they differ. And to
depart from iniquity is to shun and depart from those
examples, those beastly examples, that in every corner of
the country present themselves to men.
Examples to drunkenness; examples to
whoredom; examples to swearing, to lying, to stealing, to
sabbath-breaking, to pride, to covetousness, to deceit, to
hypocrisy, and to what not, are now-a-days common among
men, and he that is to seek in this matter, and that know
not how to be expertly base, may have patterns and examples
thereto in every hole. But to depart from iniquity is to
depart from sinful examples, to shut the eyes at them, to
turn the back upon them, and to cry out to heaven for grace
to be kept in the path of life. And, 'Let every one
that nameth the name of Christ depart from
iniquity.'
Fourth, To depart from iniquity is
to depart from the ENTICINGS of iniquity. There is
that in iniquity that is of an enticing nature. Its
pleasures, profits, honours, delights, and sweetnesses are
enticing, and he that hankers after these is not departed
nor departing from iniquity. A man must be weaned from
these things, and must find some things somewhere else that
are better than these, else he cannot depart from
iniquity.
Question. But some may say, I go from
it and it follows me; I reject it and it returns upon me; I
have said it nay, a thousand times, and yet it offereth
itself and its deceits to me again, what would you have me
do?
Answer. I would answer thus;
Departing from iniquity is not a work of an hour, or a day,
or a week, or a month, or a year; but it is a work that
will last thee thy lifetime, and there is the greatness and
difficulty of it: were it to be done presently, or were the
work to be quickly over, how many are there that would be
found to have departed from iniquity; but for that it is a
work of continuance, and not worth anything, unless men
hold out to the end, therefore it is that so few are found
actors or overcomers therein. Departing from iniquity, with
many, is but like the falling out of two neighbours, they
hate one another for a while, and then renew their old
friendship again.
But again, since to depart from iniquity is
a work of time—of all thy time, no wonder if it dogs
thee, and offereth to return upon thee again and again; for
THAT is mischievous, and seeks nothing less than thy ruin:
wherefore thou must, in the first place, take it for
granted that thus it will be and so cry the harder to God
for the continuing of his presence and grace upon thee in
this blessed work, that as thou hast begun to call upon the
name of the Lord Jesus, and begun to depart from iniquity,
so thou mayest have strength to do it to the last gasp of
thy life.
And further, for that departing from
iniquity is a kind of a warfare with it, for iniquity will
hang in thy flesh what it can, and will not be easily kept
under; therefore no marvel if thou find it wearisome work,
and that the thing that thou wouldest be rid of, is so
unwilling to let thee depart from it.
And since the work is so weighty, and that
it makes thee to go groaning on, I will for thy help give
thee here a few things to consider of: and
[remember],
1. Remember that God sees thee, and
has his eyes open upon thee, even then when sin and
temptation is lying at thee to give it some entertainment.
This was that that made Joseph depart from it, when
solicited to embrace it by a very powerful argument. (Gen.
34:6-7)
2. Remember that God's wrath
burns against it, and that he will surely be revenged on
it, and on all that give it entertainment. This made Job
afraid to countenance it, and put him upon departing from
it; 'For destruction from God was a
terror to me, and by reason of his highness I could not
endure.' (Job 31:23)
3. Remember the mischiefs that it has
done to those that have embraced it, and what distress it
has brought upon others. This made the whole congregation
of Israel tremble to think that any of their brethren
should give countenance to it. (Josh. 22:16-18)
4. Remember what Christ hath suffered
by it, that he might deliver us from the power of it. This
made Paul so heartily to depart from it, and wish all
Christians to do so as well as he. (2 Cor. 5:14)
5. Remember that those that are now
in hell-fire went thither for that they loved iniquity, and
would not depart from it. (Psa. 9:17; 11:6)
6. Remember that a profession is not
worth a pin, if they that make it do not depart from
iniquity. (James 2:16, 17)
7. Remember that thy death-bed will
be very uneasy to thee, if thy conscience at that day shall
be clogged with the guilt of thy iniquity. (Hosea 7:13,
14)
8. Remember that at the judgment-day
Christ will say to those, Depart from me, that have not
here departed from their sin and iniquity. (Luke 13:27;
Matt. 25:41)
Lastly, Remember well, and think much
upon what a blessed reward the Son of God will give unto
them at that day that have joined to their profession of
faith in him a holy and blessed conversation.
Having thus briefly showed you these things,
I shall come in the next place,
SECOND, To show you, why some, that as to
words rightly name the name of Christ, do not depart from
iniquity. That it is incident to men to name the name
of Christ religiously, and not to depart from iniquity, I
have proved already, and now I must show you why it is so,
and the reasons are of three sorts:
First, Some profess him, yet have
not saving faith in him, nor yet received grace from
him. That some profess him that have not faith in him,
nor received grace from him, I will make appear first; and
then that they do not depart from iniquity, shall be shown
afterwards.
That the first is true consider, Christ says
to his disciples, 'There are some of you that believe
not.' And again, 'For Jesus knew from the beginning
who they were that believed not, and who should betray
him.' (John 4:64) Now if they believe not, they have
none of his grace in them; for faith is the first and head
grace, the beginning and leading grace; he, therefore, that
is destitute of that is empty of all the rest. Besides,
other scriptures also confirm this truth. James calls I
some of the professors of Christ that were in his day vain
or empty men. (James 2:20) That is, men void of grace. And
the apostle suggesteth in the very words below the text,
that as in God's house there are golden and silver
saints, so there are also earthy and wooden ones. For
'in a great house' as God's is, 'are not
only vessels of gold and silver, but also of wood and of
earth, and some to honour, and some to dishonour.' (2
Tim 2:20) That is, some for heaven and some for hell. (Rom
9: 20-23)
Now they are these wooden and earthy
professors that he aimeth at in the text; to wit, that they
should depart from iniquity, or else their profession would
do them no good, and these also that he despaireth of in
the next words, saying, But in this great house of God
there will not only be golden and silver Christians, but
wooden and earthly ones : And if any man purge himself from
these, from these men's companies, and from these
men’s vices, he shall be a vessel to honour,
sanctified, and meet for the master's use, and prepared
to every good work. From all which it is gathered that
there are some that name the name of Christ in a way of
profession, that have neither faith nor grace in them, and
so, consequently, that do not depart from iniquity.
For,
These want that principle, that holy and
blessed principle, that should induce them thereunto; to
wit, the great and principal graces of the Spirit, and they
are four.
1. As I have said, they want FAITH,
that heart-purifying grace, for the heart is purified by
faith. (Acts 15:9) I have showed you already that departing
from iniquity must be with the mind and affections, or with
the heart. But how can that be, where the heart is not
sanctified and made holy? For, an unsanctified mind cannot
depart from iniquity, no more than the Ethiopian can change
his skin. (Jer. 13:3) But nothing can purify the heart but
faith. Therefore nothing can make a professor depart from
iniquity where faith is wanting. So then, when men
professedly name the name of Christ without having holy
faith in him, they still abide by their iniquity; they
depart not from their iniquity, but rather make of their
profession a cloak for their iniquity, for their malice,
and for their covetousness, and the like. (1 Thess 2:15; 1
Peter 2:16) It is not profession, but faith, that bringeth
God and the soul together; and as long as God and the soul
are at a distance, whatever profession is made, there is
not a departing, not an heart-departing from iniquity.
Wherefore to these professors James writeth thus, '
Draw nigh to God, and he will draw nigh to you. Cleanse
your hands, ye sinners: and purify your
hearts, ye double-minded.' (James 4:8) Men, far
from God, cannot think reverently of him, nor so speak and
profess him, as standeth with the nature of gospel
religion; wherefore God saith, draw near hither, that is by
faith; and again , 'let them come near, then let them
speak,' then let them profess. (Isa 41:1) Without faith
a man cannot please God, because he cannot without it stand
before him in the spotless righteousness of Christ, nor yet
depart from iniquity, and live a holy life. (Heb
11:6)
There are three things in faith, that
directly tend to make a man depart from iniquity. (l.) It
apprehendeth the truth of the being and greatness of God,
and so it aweth the spirit of a man. (2.) It apprehendeth
the love of this God in Christ, and so it conquereth and
overcometh the spirit of a man. (3.) It apprehendeth the
sweetness and blessedness of the nature of the Godhead, and
thence persuadeth the soul to desire here, communion with
him, that it may be holy, and the enjoyment of him, when
this world is ended, that it may be happy in, and by him,
for ever.
But without faith these things cannot be
apprehended, and therefore those that want it, whatever;
their profession is, they will not depart from
iniquity.
2. [They want REPENTANCE.] Repentance
is another of the great and principal graces which the Holy
Ghost worketh in the heart. Wherefore, without this also
there can be no departing from iniquity. It is in vain to
expect it of any man, let his profession be never so
stately and great, if he is a stranger to sound repentance.
How many are there in our day, since the gospel is grown so
common, that catch up a notion of good things and from that
notion make a profession of the name of Christ, get into
churches, and obtain the title of a brother, a saint, a
member of a gospel congregation, that have clean escaped
repentance. I say, they have catched up a notion of good
things, and have through that adventured to name the name
of Christ, quite forgetting to take repentance with them.
Repentance should be, and is one of the first steps into
the true gospel profession. (Mark 1:15; Prov 3:7; 16:6) But
some know nothing of it, until they come to the end of all,
and their repentance will do them no good. Repentance is
not but where the true fear of God is; yea, the fear of God
is one ground of repentance. Repentance is the scouring
grace, it is that which purges. Repentance is, as I may
call it, that bitter pill without the taking, and sound
working of which, base and sinful humours will rest
unstirred, unpurged, undriven out of the soul. Can
repentance be where godly sorrow is not? or can repentance
be where the fruits of repentance are not? O the fruits of
repentance, thick sown by preachers, but it comes up but
thinly! (Mark 1:4,5; Rom 6:21; Jer 7:3,5) Where shall the
fruits of repentance be found? Confession of sin is one
fruit of repentance; shame for sin is another fruit of
repentance; amendment of life is another fruit of
repentance; restitution for couzening, cheating,
defrauding, beguiling thy neighbour, is another fruit of
repentance. (Luke 19:5-8) Yea, if you would see the fruits
of repentance as described by the Holy Ghost, and put
together for the further conviction and shame of the
impenitent professor, look into the second epistle to the
Corinthians, 12:9-11.
But this is a day that was never read of, a
day wherein conversion is frequent without repentance; such
a conversion as it is, and therefore doth the church of God
now swarm with them that religiously name the name of
Christ, and yet depart not from iniquity. Alas! all houses,
all tables, all shops, have hanging up in them the sign of
the want of repentance. (Eccl 7:27,28) To say nothing of
the talk, of the beds and the backs of most that profess,
by which of these is it that one of a thousand for men; and
for women, one of ten thousand, do show that they have
repentance? No marvel then that the name of Christ is so
frequently mentioned there, where iniquity dwells, yea,
reigns, and that with the consent of the mind.
I would not be austere, but were wearing of
gold, putting on of apparel, dressing up houses, decking of
children, learning of compliments, boldness in women,
lechery in men, wanton behaviour, lascivious words, and
tempting carriages, signs of repentance; then I must say,
the fruits of repentance swarm in our land ; but if these
be none of the fruits of repentance then, O, the multitude
of professors, that religiously name the name of Christ,
and do not depart from iniquity.[3] But,
3. [They want LOVE.] Love is another
of those great and principal graces which the Holy Ghost
worketh in the heart; wherefore let profession be never so
high, yet if love be wanting there, to be sure such
professors 'depart not from iniquity,' (1 Cor 13)
Hence all profession, and subjecting to profession, are
counted nothing, where love is not. Love is counted a most
infallible sign that a man is in a state of salvation.
'He that loveth dwells in God, is born of God, and
knoweth him.' (1 John 4:7,16,21) Love divideth itself,
to God, and to my neighbour. Love to God is, that we keep
his sayings, his commandments, his laws. 'If a man love
me,' saith Christ,' he will keep my words; -and he
that loveth me not, keepeth not my sayings.' (John
14:23,24) For this is the love of God, that we keep his
commandments: and his commandments are not grievous.'
(1 John 5:3) So then, that professor that hath not love,
cannot depart from iniquity. (l.) Where no love is, men
cannot be tender of the name of God, they are not afflicted
because men keep not God's law. (Psa 119:136; 1 Col
13:5) (2.) Where no love is, men cannot deny themselves of
that which otherwise they might lawfully do, lest the weak
should fall, and the world be destroyed. (Rom 14:15) (3.)
Where love to God is, there is hatred against iniquity;
'ye that love the Lord, hate evil.' (Psa.
97:10)
A man cannot love God that loves not
holiness; he loves not holiness that loves not God's
word; he loves not God's word that doth not do it. It
is a common thing to find men partial in God's law,
setting much by small things, and neglecting the weightier
matters, paying tithe of mint, and anise, and cummin, and
neglecting the weightier matters. These turn the tables of
God's book upside down; making little laws of great
ones; and great ones of little ones; counting half an
hour's bodily service better than a moral life. Love!
love is gone out of the country; love to the doctrine of
the first table, love to the doctrine of the second table.
O how many professors, in God's eyes, are accounted of
no more than sounding brass, for want of this ornament,
love! (1 Cor 13)
To speak nothing of the first table, where
is he that hath his love manifested by the second? where
are they that feed the hungry and clothe the naked, and
send portions to them, for whom nothing is prepared? Where
is Paul that would not eat meat while the world standeth,
lest he made his brother offend? (1 Cor 8:13) Where is
Dorcas, with her garments she used to make for the widow,
and for the fatherless ? (Acts 9:36-39) Yea, where is that
rich man that, to his power, durst say as Job does? as
recorded in Job 30:25; 31:13,32. Love! love is gone, and
now coveting, pinching, griping, and such things are in
fashion: now iniquity abounds, instead of grace, in many
that name the name, of Christ. They want love, and
therefore cannot depart from iniquity.[4]
4. [They want HOPE.] Hope is another
of those great and principal graces, which the Holy Ghost
worketh in the heart, and without which, let a man be never
so high in profession, and so open in naming the name of
Christ, he cannot depart from iniquity. As was said before
of faith, so we say now of hope. 'And every man that
hath this hope in him purifieth himself, even as he is
pure.' (1 John 3:3) Here is that excellent office, or
rather effect of hope made manifest, it purifieth, it
cleanseth a man; it makes him make the Lord Jesus his
example, as well as his Saviour. He purifieth himself even
as he is pure; to wit, in soul, in body, in spirit, in life
and conversation. Hope of life, eternal by Christ, makes a
man purify himself in obeying the truth through the Spirit.
Hope to be with Christ hereafter, will make me strive to
believe him here. Hope of being with angels then, will make
a man strive to live like an angel here. Alas ! alas !
there is a company of half-priests in the world, and they
cannot, they dare not teach the people the whole counsel of
God, because in so doing they will condemn themselves and
their manner of living in the world; where is that minister
now to be found that dare say to his people, Look on me,
and walk as you have me for an example? or that dare say,
What you see and hear to be in me, do, 'and the God of
peace shall be with you ?' (Phil 3:17; 4:9) These men
had hope and hope purified them to an example, till they
became patterns to others. Is not this now far off from
some professors in the world? Are they purified, are they
clean that name the name of Christ? are they weaned from
that milk, and drawn from the breasts? No, nor their
profession is not attended with grace; they name the name
of Christ; well, but they do not depart from iniquity. Let
a man believe a lie, and according to the reality of his
belief, such will his obedience be; let a man hope for that
for which he hath no ground to hope, yet his hope will work
with him according to the power thereof; and yet we have a
generation of men that profess the blessed gospel, which
yieldeth the most substantial ground for faith and hope;
yea, we have a company of men that will be naming the name
of Christ, which is the sweetest, the most taking, and
desirable name that is named among the sons of men, and for
all that, this gospel, this worthy name, nor yet their
naming of it, doth make them depart from iniquity. But
what's the reason? why, they have taken up a
profession, but want the grace of Christ; the faith, the
repentance, the love and hope of the gospel. No marvel
then, if they abide among the wooden sort of professors: no
marvel then, though the iniquity of their heels still
follows them, and that it droppeth from them wherever they
go. But so much for the first reason, why men do name the
name of Christ and yet do not depart from
iniquity.
Second, The second reason, why some
that name the name of Christ, depart not from iniquity, is,
for that, though they rest not in bare notions, as those
forementioned, yet they take up as they, short of the
saving grace of God. There are bare notions, there are
common workings, and there is a work that is saving, and
that will do the soul good to eternity.
1. There are bare notions, and they that
have them are such unto whom the gospel comes IN WORD ONLY.
(1 Thess 1:5; 1 Cor 4:19,20) Such whose religion stands in
word only, and is not attended with a power suitable ; that
is, there goeth not along with the word, a power sufficient
to subdue, and work over the heart to a cordial and
gracious close with that word that comes to them. Yet such
is the noise and sound of the word, that they are willing
to become professors thereof; there is some kind of
musicalness in it, especially when well handled and
fingered by a skilful preacher. And lo, saith God unto such
preachers, when their auditory is made up of such kind of
hearers, 'And lo, thou art unto them as a very lovely
song,' or as one that sings a song of loves, 'of
one that hath a pleasant voice, and can play well on an
instrument: for they hear thy words but they do them
not.' (Eze. 33:30-32)
2. But then, besides these, there is another
sort, and they go further than these. For to them the word
came, not in word only, but also in POWER: though
not in that or in such a power as is sufficient absolutely
against all attempts whatsoever to bring the soul to glory.
Of these we read in several places; to wit, that they have
tasted of the powers of the world to come; but not so as to
bring them safe to glory. Yet thus far they go. (1.) They
attain light or illumination, to see much of their state by
nature with. (Heb 6:4) (2.) This light standeth not in bare
speculation, but lets fall upon the conscience convincing
arguments to the bowing and humbling of the spirit. (1
Kings 21:27-29) (3.) They submit to these convictions, and
reform, and may for a time not only come out from them that
live in error, but escape the pollutions of the world, by
the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. (2
Peter 2:18-20; Gal 3:4; 4:20) (4.) Yea, so powerful will
this dispensation be, that it will prevail with them to do
and suffer many things for the vindication of the truth of
that gospel which they profess. For the word will be sweet
unto them. Christ, the gift of God, will be relished by
them. (Heb 6:4,5) The powers of the world to come will be
in them. Some workings of the Holy Ghost will be in them.
And joy, which is as oil to the wheels, will be with their
souls. (Luke 8:13)
Thus, I say, it is with some professors, who
yet cannot be said to depart from iniquity, that is, for
all ado, because the things that now are upon them, abide
with them but awhile. 'For awhile they believe: they
rejoice in the light for a season.' (Luke 8:13, John
5:35, 2 Peter 2:21) So they clean escape from them, who
live in error for a little, or awhile; and after that
return to their old course, and are again entangled with
their iniquities and overcome. This is called, 'A
turning with the dog to his own vomit again, and with the
sow that was washed, to her wallowing in the mire.' And
some of these are set forth by this and such like sayings,
'When the unclean spirit is gone out of a man, he
walketh through dry places, seeking rest, and finding none.
Then he saith, I will return into my house from whence I
came out; and when he is come, he findeth it empty, swept,
and garnished. Then goeth he, and taketh with himself seven
other spirits more wicked than himself, and they enter in
and dwell there: and the last state of that man is
worse than the first.' (Matt 12:44,45)
Now the causes of this declension,
returning, or falling away again into iniquity, are
many.
First [Cause of falling away.] One is
for that this work, this work of power that they have been
made partakers of, has not been thorough enough upon all
the powers of their souls. Their understandings, their
judgments and consciences have been dealt with, but the
power of God has not been upon their wills and minds, and
affections, rightly to subdue them to the grace of the
gospel. (Psa. 110:3) Indeed there seems to be subjection of
the will, and an overruling of the mind, and affections
also, else they could not for a time lay aside their
iniquity, come off from the pollutions of the world, and
for a season rejoice in the world and be pleased with the
light thereof. But we may consider, that this may be, not
for that a sound work of God hath passed upon these powers
of the soul, but that rather this was by reason of those
reflex acts, that the understanding now enlightened, the
judgment now informed, and the conscience now convinced,
had upon these other powers of the soul. And I the rather
think it so, because willingness, mindfulness of, and
affection for, this gospel, lasted no longer than the light
shined in their understandings, or than the things were
relished by their judgment and conscience. So that when the
light of their candle went out, and when the taste of this
sugar-plum was out of their mouth, their wills and
affections, not being possessed with the fear of God, they
returned again to their course, and went away as before
with iniquity.
Nor do I by anything here discoursed, lay
blame or fault at the door of God. For,
l. He is a free agent to do what he
pleaseth, and may, if he please, refuse to give anything,
or if he gives something, why may he not give what he
pleases also? He may give special grace to one, and that
which is not so to another: he may open Balaam's eyes,
(Num. 24:3) and open Lydia'a heart; (Acts 16:14) he may
give some but a taste, and cause some to eat abundantly.
(Heb. 6; Songs 5:1) He may suffer some to fall away, and
keep others, by his power, through faith unto
salvation.
2. Besides, God's withdrawing, to wit,
of those common workings, if they were withdrawn without, a
cause given—which yet I question—yet why may
they not be withdrawn from these, as well as from his own
peculiar ones. He knows but little, that doth not know that
God ofttimes hides his face from his own, and also
withdraws from them the light and great influences of the
Holy Ghost: and turns them over, at least in their own
apprehensions, to the ungodly, and to fallen angels for
their chastisement, or trial; or instruction,
&c.
3. And why may not God, since these rebels
had such working with them, as that their minds, by their
understanding, their will and affections; by their judgment
and consciences were somewhat taken and allured, cause a
withdrawing of these for trial, and to see if they would
cry after him to return.
But we will let these things pass, and call
you again to remembrance of what is in hand: we are now
shewing that there be them that name the name of Christ,
'that yet depart not from iniquity,' and in shewing
the cause of their not so doing, one was for that the
gospel came to them in word only; and the other was, for
that though it came to others in power, yet not in power,
or in that power, that effectually keepeth some to
salvation. Upon this second reason I now am, and am shewing
how it comes to pass that they that are under the power of
the things that we have afore discoursed, should
notwithstanding that, return to their vomit again. One
cause of this declension, or going back to iniquity, I have
just now touched upon, and we have some more
behind.
Second [Cause of falling away.]
Therefore such persons upon the withdrawing of those
influences that at present are mighty upon them, do
forthwith; forget, both what they had, and what work it
made upon them. Straightway they forget what manner of men
they were. It is said of Israel, they sang his praises,
they soon forgot his word. So these they forget.
l. They forget what light and what
conviction they had.
2. They forget what sorrow for sin they
had.
3. They forget what tastes of Christ and his
word they had.
4. They forget what joy and comfort they
had.
5. They forget how fair for heaven they
were.
6. And they forget how cleansed once they
were.
'They have forgotten that they were
purged from their old sins.' (2 Peter 1:9) Now
forgetfulness makes things that are past as nothing; and if
so, then it can lay no obligations upon the mind, to engage
it to the delight of them, and to the enjoying of them, no
not in the thoughts of them, as if they were remembered by
us. Forgetfulness is a very dangerous thing: it makes
preaching vain, profession vain, faith vain, and all to no
purpose. (1 Cor. 15:1, 2) Such profession is but a dream,
and the professors but as dreamers: all vanishes in the
morning. This made Paul so caution the Corinthians, that
they forgot not the preaching ; and the author to the
Hebrews, so earnestly calls them, in their back-sliding,
back to the remembrance of former days, and to the
recollecting of what it was that then had made them so
willingly endure their great fight of affliction. (Heb.
10:32, 33)
Forgetfulness, I say, makes things nothing;
it makes us as if things had never been; and so takes away
from the soul one great means of stay, support, and
encouragement; when choice David was dejected, the
remembrance of the hill Hermon was his stay; when he was to
go out against Goliah, the remembrance of the lion and the
bear was his support: so when those that have had the power
of the things of God upon them, can think of this; when
they are withdrawn, it will, even the thinking of it, have
some kind of operation upon the soul. And therefore you
shall find, that the recovering of a backslider usually
begins at the remembrance of former things. 'Remember
therefore from whence thou art fallen, and repent, and do
the first works.' (Rev. 2:5)
It is marvellous to see how some men are
captivated with this forgetfulness. Those that sometimes
have prayed, cried, groaned, and sighed, for eternal life;
those that sometimes thought no pains too much, no way too
far, no hazards too great to run, for eternal life; those
who sometimes were captivated with the word, and with the
comforts and joy thereof, and that, had it been possible,
could have pulled out their eyes, and have given them to a
gospel minister, so dear and sweet