THE JERUSALEM SINNER SAVED;
OR,
GOOD NEWS FOR THE
VILEST OF MEN;
BEING A HELP FOR DESPAIRING SOULS, SHOWING
THAT JESUS CHRIST WOULD HAVE MERCY IN THE FIRST PLACE
OFFERED TO THE BIGGEST SINNERS.
THE THIRD EDITION,
IN WHICH IS ADDED, AN ANSWER TO THOSE GRAND
OBJECTIONS THAT LIE IN THE WAY OF THE THEM THAT WOULD
BELIEVE: FOR THE COMFORT OF THEM THAT FEAR THEY HAVE SINNED
AGAINST THE HOLY GHOST.
BY JOHN BUNYAN, OF BEDFORD.
London: Printed for Elizabeth Smith, at the
Hand and Bible,
on London Bridge, 1691.
ADVERTISEMENT BY THE EDITOR.
THAT Bunyan, who considered himself one of
the most notorious of Jerusalem sinners, should write with
the deepest earnestness upon this subject, is not
surprising. He had preached upon it with very peculiar
pleasure, and, doubtless, from many texts; and, as he says,
'through God's grace, with great success.' It
is not probable that, with his characteristic intensity of
feeling, and holy fervour in preaching, he ever delivered
the same sermon twice; but this was a subject so in unison
with his own feelings and experience, that he must have
dilated upon it with even unusual interest and earnestness.
The marrow of all these exercises he concentrated in this
treatise; and when his judgment was, by severe internal
conflicts, fully matured—upon the eve of the close of
his earthly pilgrimage, in the last year of his life,
1688—he published it in a pocket volume of eight
sheets. It was soon translated into several languages, and
became so popular as to pass through ten editions in
English by 1728. Like other favourite books, it was
ornamented with some very inferior
wood-cuts.
The object of the author is fully explained
in the title to his book. It is to display the riches of
Divine grace and mercy to the greatest sinners—even
to those whose conduct entitled them to be called
'Satan's colonels, and captains, the leaders of his
people; and to such as most stoutly make head against the
Son of God.' It is to those who feel themselves to be
such, and who make a proper estimate of their own
characters, as in the sight of God, that the gracious
proclamations of the gospel are peculiarly directed. They
to whom much is forgiven, love much; and the same native
energies which had been misdirected to promote evil, when
sanctified and divinely guided, become a great blessing to
the church, and to society at large.
Bunyan does not stoop to any attempt to
reconcile the humbling doctrines of grace to the
self-righteous pride of those who, considering themselves
but little sinners, would feel contaminated by the company
of those who had been such great sinners, although they
were pardoned and sanctified by God. His great effort was
directed to relieve the distress and despair of those who
were suffering under deep convictions; still, his whole
treatise shows that the doctrine of salvation by grace, of
free gift, is no encouragement to sin that grace may
abound, as some have blasphemously asserted. It is
degrading to the pride of those who have not drunk so
deeply of sin, to be placed upon a level with great
sinners. But the disease is the same—in breaking one
commandment, the whole law is violated; and, however in
some the moral leprosy does not make such fearful ravages
as in others, the slightest taint conveys moral, spiritual,
and eternal death. ALL, whether young or old, great or
small, must be saved by grace, or fall into perdition. The
difference between the taint of sin, and its awfully
developed leprosy, is given. Who so ready to fly to the
physician as those who feel their case to be desperate?
and, when cured, they must love the Saviour
most.
Comparatively little sins before conviction,
when seen in the glass of God's law, and in his holy
presence, become great ones. Those who feel themselves to
be great sinners, are peculiarly invited to the arms of the
Saviour, who saves to the uttermost ALL that come unto him;
and it is thus that peculiar consolation is poured in, and
the broken heart is bound up. We are then called by name,
as Bunyan forcibly describes it, as men called by name
before a court. 'Who first cry out, "Here,
Sir"; and then shoulder and crowd, and say, "Pray
give way, I am called into the court." This is thy
case, wherefore say, "Stand away, devil, Christ calls
me; stand away, unbelief, Christ calls me; stand away, all
ye my discouraging apprehensions, for my Saviour calls me
to him to receive of his mercy."' 'Wherefore,
since Christ says come, let the angels make a lane, and let
all men give place, that the Jerusalem sinner may come to
Jesus Christ for mercy.' How characteristic is this of
the peculiarly striking style of Bunyan! How solemn his
warnings! 'The invitations of the gospel will be, to
those who refuse them, the hottest coals in hell.' His
reasonings against despair are equally forcible:
''Tis a sin to begin to despair before one sets his
foot over the threshold of hell gate. What! despair of
bread in a land that is full of corn! despair of mercy,
when our God is full of mercy! when he goes about by his
ministers, beseeching of sinners to be reconciled unto him!
Thou scrupulous fool, where canst thou find that God was
ever false to his promise, or that he ever deceived the
soul that ventured itself upon him?' This whole
treatise abounds with strong consolation to those who are
beset with fears, and who, because of these, are ready to
give way to despair; it ought to be put into the hands of
all such, let them belong to what party they may; for, like
our author's other books, nothing of a sectarian nature
can be traced in it, except we so call the distinguishing
truths of evangelical religion. There are some very
interesting references to Bunyan's experience and life,
and one rather singular idea, in which I heartily concur;
it is, that the glorified saints will become part of the
heavenly hierarchy of angels, and take the places of those
who fell from that exalted state (Rev 22:8,9).
To those whose souls are invaded by despair,
or who fear that they have committed the sin against the
Holy Ghost—to all who pant to have their faith
strengthened, and hopes brightened, this little work is
most earnestly and affectionately commended.
GEORGE OFFOR.
TO THE READER.
COURTEOUS READER,
ONE reason which moved me to write and print
this little book was, because, though there are many
excellent heart-affecting discourses in the world that tend
to convert the sinner, yet I had a desire to try this
simple method of mine; wherefore I make bold thus to invite
and encourage the worst to come to Christ for
life.
I have been vile myself, but have obtained
mercy; and I would have my companions in sin partake of
mercy too: and, therefore, I have writ this little
book.
The nation doth swarm with vile ones
now, as ever it did since it was a nation. My little
book, in some places, can scarce go from house to house,
but it will find a suitable subject to spend itself upon.
Now, since Christ Jesus is willing to save the vilest, why
should they not, by name, be somewhat acquainted with it,
and bid come to him under that name?
A great sinner, when converted, seems a
booty to Jesus Christ; he gets by saving such an
one; why then should both Jesus lose his glory and the
sinner lose his soul at once, and that for want of an
invitation?
I have found, through God's grace, good
success in preaching upon this subject, and perhaps, so I
may by my writing upon it too.1 I have, as you
see, let down this net for a draught. The Lord catch some
great fishes by it, for the magnifying of his truth. There
are some most vile in all men's eyes, and some are so
in their own eyes too; but some have their paintings, to
shroud their vileness under; yet they are naked and open
unto the eyes of him with whom we have to do; and for all
these, God hath sent a Saviour, Jesus; and to all these the
door is opened.
Wherefore, prithee, profane man, give this
little book the reading. Come; pardon, and a part in heaven
and glory, cannot be hurtful to thee. Let not thy lusts and
folly drive thee beyond the door of mercy, since it is not
locked nor bolted up against thee. Manasseh was a bad man,
and Magdalene a bad woman, to say nothing of the thief upon
the cross, or of the murderers of Christ; yet they obtained
mercy; Christ willingly received them.
And dost thou think that those, once so bad,
now they are in heaven, repent them there because they left
their sins for Christ when they were in the world? I cannot
believe, but that thou thinkest they have verily got the
best on't. Why, sinner, do thou likewise. Christ, at
heaven gates, says to thee, Come hither; and the devil, at
the gates of hell, does call thee to come to him. Sinner,
what sayest thou? Whither wilt thou go? Don't go into
the fire; there thou wilt be burned! Don't let Jesus
lose his longing, since it is for thy salvation, but come
to him and live.
One word more, and so I have done. Sinner,
here thou dost hear of love; prithee, do not provoke it, by
turning it into wantonness. He that dies for slighting
love, sinks deepest into hell, and will there be tormented
by the remembrance of that evil, more than by the deepest
cogitation of all his other sins. Take heed, therefore; do
not make love thy tormentor, sinner. Farewell.
GOOD NEWS FOR THE VILEST OF MEN;
OR,
A HELP FOR DESPAIRING SOULS.
'BEGINNING AT JERUSALEM.'—LUKE
24:47.
THE whole verse runs thus: 'And that
repentance and remission of sins should be preached in his
name among all nations, 'beginning at
Jerusalem.'
The words were spoken by Christ, after he
rose from the dead, and they are here rehearsed after an
historical manner, but do contain in them a formal
commission, with a special clause therein. The commission
is, as you see, for the preaching of the gospel, and is
very distinctly inserted in the holy record by Matthew and
Mark. 'Go - teach all nations,' &c. (Matt
28:19) 'Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel
to every creature' (Mark 16:15). Only this clause is in
special mentioned by Luke, who saith, that as Christ would
have the doctrine of repentance and remission of sins
preached in his name among all nations, so he would have
the people of Jerusalem to have the first proffer thereof.
Preach it, saith Christ, in all nations, but begin at
Jerusalem.
The apostles, then, though they had a
commission so large as to give them warrant to go and
preach the gospel in all the world, yet by this clause they
were limited as to the beginning of their ministry; they
were to begin this work at Jerusalem. "Beginning at
Jerusalem.'
Before I proceed to an observation upon the
words, I must, but briefly, touch upon two things: namely,
FIRST, Show you what Jerusalem now was. SECOND, Show you
what it was to preach the gospel to them.
FIRST, Jerusalem is to be considered either,
First, With respect to the descent of her people;
or, Second, With respect to her preference and
exaltation; or, Third, With respect to her present
state, as to her decays.
First, As to her descent, she was
from Abraham, [by] the sons of Jacob, a people that God
singled out from the rest of the nations, to set his love
upon them.
Secondly, As to her preference or
exaltation, she was the place of God's worship, and
that which had in and with her the special tokens and signs
of God's favour and presence, above any other people in
the world. Hence, the tribes went up to Jerusalem to
worship; there was God's house, God's high-priest,
God's sacrifices accepted, and God's eye, and
God's heart perpetually (Psa 76:1,2, 122; 1 Kings 9:3).
But,
Thirdly, We are to consider Jerusalem
also in her decays; for, as she is so considered, she is
the proper object of our text, as will be further showed by
and by.
Jerusalem, as I told you, was the place and
seat of God's worship, but now decayed, degenerated,
and apostatized.2 The Word, the rule of worship,
was rejected of them, and in its place they had put and set
up their own traditions: they had rejected, also, the most
weighty ordinances, and put in the room thereof their own
little things (Matt 15; Mark 7). Jerusalem was therefore
now greatly backslidden, and become the place where the
truth and true religion were much defaced.
It was also now become the very sink of sin
and seat of hypocrisy, and gulf where true religion was
drowned. Here also now reigned presumption, and groundless
confidence in God, which is the bane of souls. Amongst its
rulers, doctors, and leaders, envy, malice, and blasphemy
vented itself against the power of godliness, in all places
where it was espied; as also against the promoters of it;
yea, their Lord and Maker could not escape them.
In a word, Jerusalem was now become the
shambles, the very slaughter- shop for saints. This was the
place wherein the prophets, Christ, and his people, were
most horribly persecuted and murdered. Yea, so hardened at
this time was this Jerusalem in her sins, that she feared
not to commit the biggest, and to bind herself, by wish,
under the guilt and damning evil of it; saying, when she
had murdered the Son of God, 'His blood be on us, and
on our children.' And though Jesus Christ did, both by
doctrine, miracles, and holiness of life, seek to put a
stop to their villanies, yet they shut their eyes, stopped
their ears, and rested not, till, as was hinted before,
they had driven him out of the world. Yea, that they might,
if possible, have extinguished his name, and exploded his
doctrine out of the world, they, against all argument, and
in despite of heaven, its mighty hand, and undeniable proof
of his resurrection, did hire soldiers to invent a lie,
saying, his disciples stole him away from the grave; on
purpose that men might not count him the Saviour of the
world, nor trust in him for the remission of
sins.
They were, saith Paul, contrary to all men:
for they did not only shut up the door of life against
themselves, but forbade that it should be opened to any
else. 'Forbidding us,' saith he, 'to speak to
the Gentiles, that they might be saved, to fill up their
sins alway' (1 Thess 2:14-16; Matt 23:35; 15:7-9; Mark
7:6-8; Matt 3:7-9; John 8:33,41; Matt 27:18; Mark 3:30;
Matt 23:37; Luke 13:33,34; Matt 27:25;
20:11-16).
This is the city, and these are the people;
this is their character, and these are their sins: nor can
there be produced their parallel in all this world. Nay,
what world, what people, what nation, for sin and
transgression, could or can be compared to Jerusalem?
especially if you join to the matter of fact the light they
sinned against, and the patience which they abused.
Infinite was the wickedness upon this account which they
committed.
After all their abusings of wise men, and
prophets, God sent unto them John Baptist, to reduce them,
and then his Son, to redeem them; but they would be neither
reduced nor redeemed, but persecuted both to the death. Nor
did they, as I said, stop here; the holy apostles they
afterwards persecuted also to death, even so many as they
could; the rest they drove from them unto the utmost
corners.
SECOND, I come not to show you what it was
to preach the gospel to them. It was, saith Luke, to preach
to them 'repentance and remission of sins' in
Christ's name; or, as Mark has it, to bid them
'repent and believe the gospel' (Mark 1:15). Not
that repentance is a cause of remission, but a sign of our
hearty reception thereof. Repentance is therefore here put
to intimate, that no pretended faith of the gospel is good
that is not accompanied with it; and this he doth on
purpose, because he would not have them deceive themselves:
for with what faith can he expect remission of sins in the
name of Christ, that is not heartily sorry for them? Or how
shall a man be able to give to others a satisfactory
account of his unfeigned subjection to the gospel, that yet
abides in his impenitency?
Wherefore repentance is here joined with
faith, in the way of receiving the gospel. Faith is that
without which it cannot be received at all; and repentance
that without which it cannot be received unfeignedly. When,
therefore, Christ says, he would have a repentance and
remission of sins preached in his name among all nations,
it is as much as to say, I will that all men everywhere be
sorry for their sins, and accept of mercy at God's hand
through me, lest they fall under his wrath in the judgment;
for, as I have said, without repentance, what pretence
soever men have of faith, they cannot escape the wrath to
come. Wherefore Paul said, God commands 'all men
everywhere to repent,' (in order to their salvation):
'because he hath appointed a day, in the which he shall
judge the world in righteousness by that man whom he
hath ordained' (Acts 17:31).
And now, to come to this clause,
'Beginning at Jerusalem'; that is, that Christ
would have Jerusalem have the first offer of the gospel. 1.
This cannot be so commanded because they had now any more
right, of themselves, thereto, than had any of the nations
of the world; for their sins had divested them of all
self-deservings. 2. Nor yet because they stood upon the
advance-ground with the worst of the sinners of the
nations; nay, rather, the sinners of the nations had the
advance-ground of them: for Jerusalem was, long before she
had added this iniquity to her sin, worse than the very
nations that God cast out before the children of Israel (2
Chron 33). 3. It must, therefore, follow, that this cause,
'Beginning at Jerusalem,' was put into this
commission of mere grace and compassion, even from the
overflowings of the bowels of mercy; for indeed they were
the worst, and so in the most deplorable condition of any
people under the heavens.3
Whatever, therefore, their relation was to
Abraham, Isaac, or Jacob—however they formerly had
been the people among whom God had placed his name and
worship, they were now degenerated from God, more than the
nations were from their idols, and were become guilty of
the highest sins which the people of the world were capable
of committing. Nay, none can be capable of committing of
such pardonable sins as they committed against their
God, when they slew his Son, and persecuted his name and
Word.
[DOCTRINE.]
From these words, therefore, thus explained,
we gain this observation:— That Jesus Christ.
would have mercy offered, in the first place, to the
biggest sinners
That these Jerusalem sinners were the
biggest sinners that ever were in the world, I think none
will deny, that believes that Christ was the best man that
ever was in the world, and also was their Lord God. And
that they were to have the first offer of his grace, the
text is as clear as the sun; for it saith, 'Beginning
at Jerusalem.' 'Preach,' saith he,
'repentance and remission of sins' to the Jerusalem
sinners: to the Jerusalem sinners in the first
place. One would a-thought, since the Jerusalem sinners
were the worst and greatest sinners, Christ's greatest
enemies, and those that not only despised his person,
doctrine, and miracles, but that, a little before, had had
their hands up to the elbows in his heart's blood, that
he should rather have said, Go into all the world, and
preach repentance and remission of sins among all nations;
and, after that, offer the same to Jerusalem; yea,
it had been infinite grace if he had said so. But what
grace is this, or what name shall we give it, when he
commands that this repentance and remission of sins, which
is designed to be preached in all nations, should first be
offered to Jerusalem; in the first place to the worst of
sinners!
Nor was this the first time that the grace,
which was in the heart of Christ, thus showed itself to the
world. For while he was yet alive, even while he was yet in
Jerusalem, and perceived, even among these Jerusalem
sinners, which was the most vile among them, he still, in
his preaching, did signify that he had a desire that the
worst of these worst should, in the first place, come unto
him. The which he showeth, where he saith to the better
sort of them, 'The publicans and the harlots go into
the kingdom of God before you' (Matt 21:31). Also when
he compared Jerusalem with the sinners of the nations, then
he commands that the Jerusalem sinners should have the
gospel at present confined to them. 'Go not,' saith
he, 'into the way of the Gentiles, and into any
of the cities of the Samaritans enter ye not; but go rather
to the lost sheep of the house of Israel' (Matt 10:5,6;
23:37). But go rather to them, for they were in the most
fearful plight. These, therefore, must have the cream of
the gospel, namely, the first offer thereof, in his
lifetime; yea, when he departed out of the world, he left
this as part of his last will with his preachers, that they
also should offer it first to Jerusalem. He had a mind, a
careful mind, as it seems, to privilege the worst of
sinners with the fist offer of mercy, and to take from
among them a people, to be the first fruits unto God and to
the Lamb.
The 15th of Luke also is famous for this,
where the Lord Jesus takes more care, as appears there by
three parables, for the lost sheep, lost groat, and the
prodigal son, than for the other sheep, the other pence, or
for the son that said he had never transgressed; yea, he
shows that there is joy in heaven, among the angels of God,
at the repentance of one sinner, more than over ninety and
nine just persons which need no repentance. After this
manner, therefore, the mind of Christ was set on the
salvation of the biggest sinners in his lifetime. But join
to this, this clause, which he carefully put into the
apostles' commission to preach, when he departed hence
to the Father, and then you shall see that his heart was
vehemently set upon it; for these were part of his last
words with them, Preach my gospel to all nations, but that
you begin at Jerusalem.
Nor did the apostles overlook this clause
when their Lord was gone into heaven; they went first to
them of Jerusalem, and preached Christ's gospel to
them; they abode also there for a season and time, and
preached it to nobody else, for they had regard to the
commandment of their Lord. And it is to be observed,
namely, that the first sermon which they preached after the
ascension of Christ, it was preached to the very worst of
these Jerusalem sinners, even to those that were the
murderers of Jesus Christ (Acts 2:23), for these are part
of the sermon: 'Ye took him, and by wicked hands have
crucified and slain him.' Yea, the next sermon, and the
next, and also the next to that, was preached to the
self-same murderers, to the end they might be saved (Acts
3:14-16; 4:10,11; 5:30; 7:52).
But we will return to the first sermon that
was preached to these Jerusalem sinners, by which will be
manifest more than great grace, if it be duly considered.
For after that Peter, and the rest of the apostles, had, in
their exhortation, persuaded these wretches to believe that
they had killed the Prince of life; and after they had duly
fallen under the guilt of their murder, saying, 'Men
and brethren, what shall we do?' he replies, by
an universal tender to them all in general, considering
them as Christ's killers, that if they were sorry for
what they had done, and would be baptized for the remission
of their sins in his name, they should receive the gift of
the Holy Ghost (Acts 2:37,38).
This he said to them all, though he knew
that they were such sinners. Yea, he said it without the
least stick or stop, or pause of spirit, as to whether he
had best to say so or no. Nay, so far off was Peter from
making an objection against one of them, that, by a
particular clause in his exhortation, he endeavours, that
not one of them may escape the salvation offered.
'Repent,' saith he, 'and be baptized every one
of you.' I shut out never an one of you; for I am
commanded by my Lord to deal with you, as it were, one by
one, by the word of his salvation. But why speaks he so
particularly? Oh! there were reasons for it. The people
with whom the apostles were now to deal, as they were
murderers of our Lord, and to be charged in the general
with his blood, so they had their various and particular
acts of villany in the guilt thereof, now lying upon their
consciences. And the guilt of these, their various and
particular acts of wickedness, could not, perhaps, be
reached to a removal thereof but by this particular
application. Repent, every one of you; be baptized, every
one of you, in his name, for the remission of sins, and you
shall, every one of you, receive the gift of the Holy
Ghost.
Objector. 'But I was one of them
that plotted to take away his life. May I be saved by
him?'
Peter. Every one of you.
Objector. 'But I was one of them
that bare false witness against him. Is there grace for
me?'
Peter. For every one of
you.
Objector. 'But I was one of them
that cried out, Crucify him, crucify him; and desired that
Barabbas, the murderer, might live, rather than him. What
will become of me, think you?'
Peter. I am to preach repentance and
remission of sins to every one of you, says
Peter.
Objector. 'But I was one of them
that did spit in his face when he stood before his
accusers. I also was one that mocked him, when in anguish
he hanged bleeding on the tree. Is there room for
me?'
Peter. For every one of you, says
Peter.
Objector. 'But I was one of them
that, in his extremity, said, Give him gall and vinegar to
drink. Why may not I expect the same when anguish and guilt
is upon me?'4
Peter. Repent of these your
wickednesses, and here is remission of sins for every one
of you.
Objector. 'But I railed on him, I
reviled him, I hated him, I rejoiced to see him mocked at
by others. Can there be hope for me?'
Peter. There is, for every one of
you. 'Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the
name of Jesus Christ, for the remission of sins, and ye
shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.' Oh! what a
blessed 'Every one of you,' is here! How willing
was Peter, and the Lord Jesus, by his ministry, to catch
these murderers with the word of the gospel, that they
might be made monuments of the grace of God! How unwilling,
I say, was he, that any of these should escape the hand of
mercy! Yea, what an amazing wonder is it to think, that
above all the world, and above everybody in it, these
should have the first offer of mercy! 'Beginning at
Jerusalem.'
But was there not something of moment in
this clause of the commission? Did not Peter, think you,
see a great deal in it, that he should thus begin with
these men, and thus offer, so particularly, this grace to
each particular man of them?
But, as I told you, this is not all; these
Jerusalem sinners must have this offer again and again;
every one of them must be offered it over and over. Christ
would not take their first rejection for a denial, nor
their second repulse for a denial; but he will have grace
offered once, and twice, and thrice, to these Jerusalem
sinners. Is not this amazing grace? Christ will not be put
off. These are the sinners that are sinners indeed. They
are sinners of the biggest sort; consequently, such as
Christ can, if they convert and be saved, best serve his
ends and designs upon. Of which more anon.
But what a pitch of grace is this! Christ is
minded to amaze the world, and to show that he acteth not
like the children of men. This is that which he said of
old, 'I will not execute the fierceness of my wrath, I
will not return to destroy Ephraim; for I am God and not
man' (Hosea 11:9).5 This is not the manner
of men; men are shorter winded; men are soon moved to take
vengeance, and to right themselves in a way of wrath and
indignation. But God is full of grace, full of patience,
ready to forgive, and one that delights in mercy. All this
is seen in our text. The biggest sinners must first be
offered mercy; they must, I say, have the cream of the
gospel offered unto them.
But we will a little proceed. In the third
chapter we find, that they who escaped converting by the
first sermon, are called upon again to accept of grace and
forgiveness, for their murder committed upon the Son of
God. You have killed, yea, 'ye denied the Holy One and
the Just, and desired a murderer to be granted unto you;
and killed the Prince of life.' Mark, he falls again
upon the very men that actually were, as you have it in the
chapters following, his very betrayers and murderers (Acts
3:14,15), as being loath that they should escape the mercy
of forgiveness: and exhorts them again to repent, that
their sins might 'be blotted out' (verse
19,20).
Again, in the fourth chapter, he charges
them afresh with this murder (verse 10), but withal tells
them salvation is in no other. Then, like a heavenly decoy,
he puts himself also among them, to draw them the better
under the net of the gospel; saying, 'There is none
other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be
saved' (verse 12).
In the fifth chapter, you find them railing
at him, because he continued preaching among them salvation
in the name of Jesus. But he tells them, that that very
Jesus whom they had slain and hanged on a tree, him God had
raised up, and exalted 'to be a Prince and a
Saviour, to give repentance to Israel, and forgiveness of
sins' (verse 29-31). Still insinuating, that though
they had killed him, and to this day rejected him, yet his
business was to bestow upon them repentance and forgiveness
of sins.
'Tis true, after they began to kill
again, and when nothing but killing would serve their turn,
then they that were scattered abroad went everywhere
preaching the word. Yet even some of them so hankered after
the conversion of the Jews, that they preached the gospel
only to them. Also the apostles still made their abode at
Jerusalem, in hopes that they might let down their net for
another draught of these Jerusalem sinners. Neither did
Paul and Barnabas, who were the ministers of God to the
Gentiles, but offer the gospel, in the first place, to
those of them that, for their wickedness, were scattered,
like vagabonds, among the nations; yea, and when they
rendered rebellion and blasphemy for their service and
love, they replied it was necessary that the word of God
should first have been spoken to them (Acts 1:8;
13:46,47).
Nor was this their preaching unsuccessful
among these people: but the Lord Jesus so wrought with the
word thus spoken, that thousands of them came flocking to
him for mercy. Three thousand of them closed with him at
the first; and, afterwards, two thousand more; for now they
were in number about five thousand; whereas, before sermons
were preached to these murderers, the number of the
disciples was not above 'a hundred and twenty'
(Acts 1:15; 2:41; 4:4).
Also among these people that thus flocked to
him for mercy, there was a 'great company of the
priests' (Acts 6:7). Now, the priests were they that
were the greatest of these biggest sinners; they were the
ringleaders, they were the inventors and ringleaders in the
mischief. It was they that set the people against the Lord
Jesus, and that were the cause why the uproar increased,
until Pilate had given sentence upon him. 'The chief
priests and elders,' says the text, 'persuaded (the
people) the multitude, that they should ask Barabbas, and
destroy Jesus' (Matt 27:20). And yet, behold the
priests, yea, a great company of the priests, became
obedient to the faith.6
Oh, the greatness of the grace of Christ,
that he should be thus in love with the souls of Jerusalem
sinners! that he should be thus delighted with the
salvation of the Jerusalem sinners! that he should not only
will that his gospel should be offered them, but that it
should be offered unto them first, and before other sinners
were admitted to a hearing of it. 'Begin at
Jerusalem.'
Was this doctrine well believed, where would
there be a place for a doubt, or a fear of the damnation of
the soul, if the sinner be penitent, how bad a life soever
he has lived, how many soever in number are his sins? But
this grace is hid from the eyes of men; the devil hides it
from them; for he knows it is alluring, he knows it has an
attracting virtue in it; for this is it that, above all
arguments, can draw the soul to God. I cannot help it, but
must let drop another word. The first church, the Jerusalem
church, from whence the gospel was to be sent into all the
world, was a church made up of Jerusalem sinners. These
great sinners were here the most shining monuments of the
exceeding grace of God.
Thus, you see, I have proved the doctrine;
and that not only by showing you that this was the practice
of the Lord Jesus Christ in his lifetime, but his last will
when he went up to God; saying, Begin to preach at
Jerusalem. Yea, it is yet further manifested, in that when
his ministers first began to preach there, he joined his
power to the word, to the converting of thousands of his
betrayers and murderers, and also many of the ringleading
priests, to the faith.
I shall now proceed, and shall show you,
FIRST, The reasons of the point. SECOND, And then make some
application of the whole.
[THE REASONS OF THE POINT.]
The observation, you know, is this: Jesus
Christ would have mercy offered, in the first place, to the
biggest sinners, to the Jerusalem sinners: 'Preach
repentance, and remission of sins, in my name, among all
nations, beginning at Jerusalem.'
The reasons of the point
are:—
First, Because the biggest sinners
have most need thereof.
He that has most need, reason says, should
be helped first. I mean, when a helping hand is offered,
and now it is; for the gospel of the grace of God is sent
to help the world (Act 16:9). But the biggest sinner has
most need. Therefore, in reason, when mercy is sent down
from heaven to men, the worst of men should have the first
offer of it. 'Begin at Jerusalem.' This is the
reason which the Lord Christ himself renders, why, in his
lifetime, he left the best, and turned him to the worst;
why he sat so loose from the righteous, and stuck so close
to the wicked. 'The whole,' saith he, 'have no
need of the physician, but the sick. I came not to call the
righteous, but the sinners to repentance' (Mark
2:15-17).7
Above, you read that the scribes and
Pharisees said to his disciples, 'How is it that he
eateth and drinketh with publicans and sinners?' Alas!
they did not know the reason; but the Lord renders them
one, and such an one as is both natural and cogent, saying,
These have need, most need. Their great necessity requires
that I should be most friendly, and show my grace first to
them.
Not that the other were sinless, and so had
no need of a Saviour; but the publicans and their
companions were the biggest sinners; they were, as to view,
worse than the scribes; and, therefore, in reason, should
be helped first, because they had most need of a
Saviour.
Men that are at the point to die, have more
need of the physician than they that are but now and then
troubled with a heart-fainting qualm. The publicans and
sinners were, as it were, in the mouth of death; death was
swallowing of them down:8 and, therefore, the
Lord Jesus receives them first; offers them mercy first.
'The whole have no need of the physician, but the sick.
I came not to call the righteous, but the sinners to
repentance.' The sick, as I said, is the biggest
sinner, whether he sees his disease or not. He is stained
from head to foot, from heart to life and conversation.
This man, in every man's judgment, has the most need of
mercy. There is nothing attends him from bed to board, and
from board to bed again, but the visible characters, and
obvious symptoms, of eternal damnation. This, therefore, is
the man that has need, most need; and, therefore, in
reason, should be helped in the first place. Thus it was
with the people concerned in the text; they were the worst
of sinners, Jerusalem sinners, sinners of the biggest size;
and, therefore, such as had the greatest need; wherefore
they must have mercy offered to them, before it be offered
to anywhere else in the world. 'Begin at
Jerusalem,' offer mercy first to a Jerusalem sinner.
This man has most need, he is furthest from God, nearest to
hell, and so one that has most need. This man's sins
are in number the most, in cry the loudest, in weight the
heaviest, and, consequently, will sink him soonest;
wherefore he has most need of mercy. This man is shut up in
Satan's hand, fastest bound in the cords of his sins:
one that justice is whetting his sword to cut off; and,
therefore, has most need, not only of mercy, but that it
should be extended to him in the first place.
But a little further to show you the true
nature of this reason, to wit, That Jesus Christ would have
mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest
sinners.
First, Mercy ariseth from the bowels and
compassion, from pity, and from a feeling of the condition
of those in misery. 'In his love, and in his pity, he
redeemed them.' And again, 'The Lord is pitiful,
very pitiful, and of tender mercy' (Isa 63:9; James
5:11).
Now, where pity and compassion is, there is
yearning of bowels; and where there is that, there is a
readiness to help. And, I say again, the more deplorable
and dreadful the condition is, the more directly doth
bowels and compassion turn themselves to such, and offer
help and deliverance. All this flows from our first
scripture proof, I came to call them that have need; to
call them first, while the rest look on and
murmur.
'How shall I give thee up, Ephraim?'
Ephraim was a revolter from God, a man that had given
himself up to devilism; a company of men, the ten tribes
that worshipped devils, while Judah kept with his God. But
'how shall I give thee up, Ephraim? How shall I
deliver thee, Israel? How shall I make thee as Admah?
How shall I set thee as Zeboim? [and yet thou art worse
than they, nor has Samaria committed half thy sins (Eze
16:46-51)] Mine heart is turned within me, my repentings
are kindled together' (Hosea 11:8).
But where do you find that ever the Lord did
thus rowl9 in his bowels for and after any
self-righteous man? No, no; they are the publicans and
harlots, idolaters and Jerusalem sinners, for whom his
bowels thus yearn and tumble about within him: for, alas!
poor worms, they have most need of mercy.
Had not the good Samaritan more compassion
for that man that fell among thieves (though that fall was
occasioned by his going from the place where they
worshipped God, to Jericho, the cursed city), than we read
he had for any other besides? His wine was for him, his oil
was for him, his beast for him; his penny, his care, and
his swaddling bands for him; for, alas! wretch, he had most
need (Luke 10:30-35).
Zaccheus the publican, the chief of the
publicans, one that had made himself the richer by wronging
of others; the Lord at that time singled him out from all
the rest of his brother publicans, and that in the face of
many Pharisees, and proclaimed in the audience of them all,
that that day salvation was come to his house (Luke
19:1-8).
The woman, also, that had been bound down by
Satan for eighteen years together, his compassions putting
him upon it, he loosed her, though those that stood by
snarled at him for so doing (Luke 13:11-13).
And why the woman of Sarepta, and why Naaman
the Syrian, rather than widows and lepers of Israel, but
because their conditions were more deplorable; for that
they were most forlorn, and furthest from help (Luke
4:25,27).
But I say, why all these, thus named? Why
have we not a catalogue of some holy men that were so in
their own eyes, and in the judgment of the world? Alas! if,
at any time, any of them are mentioned, how seemingly
coldly doth the record of scripture present them to us?
Nicodemus, a night professor, and Simon the Pharisee, with
his fifty pence, and their great ignorance of the methods
of grace, we have now and then touched upon.
Mercy seems to be out of its proper channel
when it deals with self- righteous men; but then it runs
with a full stream when it extends itself to the biggest
sinners. As God's mercy is not regulated by man's
goodness, nor obtained by man's worthiness, so not much
set out by saving of any such. But more of this
anon.
And here let me ask my reader a question:
Suppose that, as thou art walking by some pond side, thou
shouldst espy in it four or five children, all in danger of
drowning, and one in more danger than all the rest; judge
which has most need to be helped out first? I know thou
wilt say, he that is nearest drowning. Why, this is the
case; the bigger sinner, the nearer drowning; therefore,
the bigger sinner, the more need of mercy; yea, of help, by
mercy, in the first place. And to this our text agrees,
when it saith, 'Beginning at Jerusalem.' Let the
Jerusalem sinner, says Christ, have the first offer, the
first invitation, the first tender of my grace and mercy;
for he is the biggest sinner, and so has most need
thereof.
Second, Christ Jesus would have mercy
offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners,
because when they, any of them, receive it, it redounds
most to the fame of his name.
Christ Jesus, as you may perceive, has put
himself under the term of a physician, a doctor for curing
of diseases; and you know that applause and fame are things
that physicians much desire. That is it that helps them to
patients; and that, also, that will help their patients to
commit themselves to their skill, for cure, with the more
confidence and repose of spirit. And the best way for a
doctor or physician to get himself a name, is, in the first
place, to take in hand, and cure, some such as all others
have given up for lost and dead. Physicians get neither
name nor fame by pricking of wheals,10 or
picking out thistles, or by laying of plasters to the
scratch of a pin; every old woman can do this. But if they
would have a name and a fame, if they will have it quickly,
they must, as I said, do some great and desperate cures.
Let them fetch one to life that was dead; let them recover
one to his wits that was mad; let them make one that was
born blind to see; or let them give ripe wits to a fool:
these are notable cures, and he that can do thus, and if he
doth thus first, he shall have the name and fame he
desires; he may lie a-bed till noon.
Why, Christ Jesus forgiveth sins for a name,
and so begets for himself a good report in the hearts of
the children of men. And, therefore, in reason he must be
willing, as, also, he did command, that his mercy should be
offered first to the biggest sinners. I will forgive their
sins, iniquities, and transgressions, says he, 'And it
shall be to me a name of joy, a praise and an honour,
before all the nations of the earth' (Jer
33:8,9).
And hence it is, that, at his first
appearing, he took upon him to do such mighty works; he got
a fame thereby, he got a name thereby (Matt
4:23,24).
When Christ had cast the legion of devils
out of the man of whom you read (Mark 5), he bid him go
home to his friends, and tell it. 'Go home,' saith
he, 'to thy friends, and tell them how great things God
hath done for thee, and hath had compassion on thee'
(Mark 5:19). Christ Jesus seeks a name, and desireth a fame
in the world; and, therefore, or the better to obtain that,
he commands that mercy should first be proffered to the
biggest sinners; because, by the saving of one of them, he
makes all men marvel. As it is said of the man last
mentioned, whom Christ cured towards the beginning of his
ministry. 'And he departed,' says the text,
'and began to publish in Decapolis how great things
Jesus had done for him; and all men did marvel'
(Mark 5:20).
When John told Christ, that they saw one
casting out devils in his name, and they forbade him,
because he followed not with them, what is the answer of
Christ? 'Forbid him not; for there is no man which
shall do a miracle in my name, that can lightly speak evil
of me' (Mark 9:39). No; they will rather cause his
praise to be heard, and his name to be magnified, and so
put glory on the head of Christ.
But we will follow, a little, our metaphor.
Christ, as I said, has put himself under the term of a
physician; consequently, he desireth that his fame, as to
the salvation of sinners, may spread abroad, that the world
may see what he can do. And to this end, has not only
commanded that the biggest sinners should have the first
offer of his mercy, but has, as physicians do,11
put out his bills, and published his doings, that things
may be read and talked of. Yea, he has, moreover, in these,
his blessed bills, the holy scriptures I mean, inserted the
very names of persons, the places of their abode, and the
great cures that, by the means of his salvation, he has
wrought upon them to this very end. Here is, Item,
such an one, by my grace and redeeming blood, was made a
monument of everlasting life; and such an one, by my
perfect obedience, became an heir of glory. And then he
produceth their names. Item, I saved Lot from the
guilt and damnation that he had procured for himself by his
incest. Item, I saved David from the vengeance that
belonged to him for committing of adultery and murder. Here
is, also, Solomon, Manasseh, Peter, Magdalene, and many
others, made mention of in this book. Yea, here are their
names, their sins, and their salvations recorded together,
that you may read and know what a Saviour he is, and do him
honour in the world. For why are these things thus
recorded, but to show to sinners what he can do, to the
praise and glory of his grace? And it is observable, as I
said before, we have but very little of the salvation of
little sinners mentioned in God's book, because that
would not have answered the design, to wit, to bring glory
and fame to the name of the Son of God.
What should be the reason, think you, why
Christ should so easily take a denial of the great ones
that were the grandeur of the world, and struggle so hard
for hedge-creepers12 and highwaymen, as that
parable seems to import he doth, but to show forth the
riches of the glory of his grace, to his praise? (Luke 14).
This, I say, is one reason, to be sure. They that had their
grounds, their yoke of oxen, and their marriage joys, were
invited to come; but they made the excuse, and that served
the turn. But when he comes to deal with the worst, he
saith to his servants, Go ye out and bring them in hither.
'Go out quickly - and bring in hither the poor, the
maimed, the halt, and the blind.' And they did so. And
he said again, 'Go out into the highways and hedges,
and compel them to come in, that my house may be
filled' (Luke 14:18,19,23). These poor, lame, maimed,
blind, hedge-creepers, and highwaymen, must come in, must
be forced in. These, if saved, will make his merit
shine.
When Christ was crucified, and hanged up
between the earth and heavens, there were two thieves
crucified with him; and, behold, he lays hold of one of
them, and will have him away with him to glory. Was not
this a strange act, and a display of unthought-of grace?
Were there none but thieves there, or were the rest of that
company out of his reach? Could he not, think you, have
stooped from the cross to the ground, and have laid hold on
some honester man, if he would? Yes, doubtless. Oh! but
then he would not have displayed his grace, nor so have
pursued his own designs, namely, to get to himself a praise
and a name; but now he has done it to purpose. For who that
shall read this story, but must confess, that the Son of
God is full of grace; for a proof of the riches thereof, he
left behind him, when, upon the cross, he took the thief
away with him to glory. Nor can this one act of his be
buried; it will be talked of, to the end of the world, to
his praise. 'Men shall speak of the might of thy
terrible acts; and I will declare thy greatness. They shall
abundantly utter the memory of thy great goodness, and
shall sing of thy righteousness - They shall speak of the
glory of thy kingdom, and talk of thy power; to make known
to the sons of men his mighty acts, and the glorious
majesty of his kingdom' (Psa 145:6-12).
When the Word of God came among the
conjurors and those soothsayers, that you read of (Acts
19), and had prevailed with some of them to accept of the
grace of Christ, the Holy Ghost records it with a boast,
for that it would redound to his praise, saying, 'Many
of them also which used curious arts brought their books
together, and burned them before all men; and they
counted the price of them, and found it fifty thousand
pieces of silver. So mightily grew the Word of God, and
prevailed' (Acts 19:19,20). It wrenched out of the
clutches of Satan some of those of whom he thought himself
most sure. 'So mightily grew the Word of God.' It
grew mightily, it encroached upon the kingdom of the devil.
It pursued him, and took the prey; it forced him to let go
his hold! It brought away captive, as prisoners taken by
force of arms, some of the most valiant of his army. It
fetched back from, as it were, the confines of hell, some
of those that were his most trusty, and that, with hell,
had been at an agreement. It made them come and confess
their deeds, and burn their books before all men. 'So
mightily grew the Word of God, and prevailed.' Thus,
therefore, you see why Christ will have offered mercy, in
the first place, to the biggest sinners; they have most
need thereof; and this is the most ready way to extol his
name 'that rideth upon the heavens' to our help.
But,
Third, Christ Jesus would have mercy
offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners,
because, by their forgiveness and salvation, others,
hearing of it, will be encouraged the more to come
to him for life.
For the physician, by curing the most
desperate at the first, doth not only get himself a name,
but begets encouragement in the minds of other diseased
folk to come to him for help. Hence you read of our Lord,
that after, through his tender mercy, he had cured many of
great diseases, his fame was spread abroad: 'They
brought unto him all sick people that were taken with
divers diseases and torments, and those which were
possessed with devils, and those which were lunatic, and
those that had the palsy, and he healed them. And there
followed him great multitudes of people from Galilee, and
Decapolis, and Jerusalem, and Judea, and from beyond
Jordan' (Matt 4:24,25). See here, he first, by working,
gets himself a fame, a name, and renown; and now men take
encouragement, and bring, from all quarters, their diseased
to him, being helped, by what they had heard, to believe
that their diseased should be healed.
Now, as he did with those outward cures, so
he does in the proffers of his grace and mercy; he proffers
that, in the first place, to the biggest sinners, that
others may take heart to come to him to be saved. I will
give you a scripture or two. I mean to show you that
Christ, by commanding that his mercy should, in the first
place, be offered to the biggest of sinners, has a design
thereby to encourage and provoke others to come also to him
for mercy. 'God,' said Paul, 'who is rich in
mercy, for his great love wherewith he loved us, even when
we were dead in sins, hath quickened us together with
Christ (by grace ye are saved); and hath raised us
up together, and made us sit together in heavenly
places in Christ Jesus.' But why did he do all
this? 'That in the ages to come he might show the
exceeding riches of his grace in his kindness
towards us through Christ Jesus' (Eph 2:4- 7). See,
here is a design; God lets out his mercy to Ephesus of
design, even to show to the ages to come the exceeding
riches of his grace, in his kindness to them through Christ
Jesus. And why, to show, by these, the exceeding riches of
his grace to the ages to come, through Christ Jesus? But to
allure them, and their children also to come to him, and to
partake the same grace through Christ
Jesus?13
But what was Paul, and the Ephesian sinners?
(of Paul we will speak anon.) These Ephesian sinners, they
were men dead in sins; men that walked according to the
dictates and motions of the devil; worshippers of Diana,
that effeminate goddess; men far off from God, aliens and
strangers to all good things; such as were far off from
that, as I said, and, consequently, in a most deplorable
condition. As the Jerusalem sinners were of the highest
sort among the Jews, so these Ephesian sinners were of the
highest sort among the Gentiles (Eph 2:1-3,11,12; Acts
19:35). Wherefore, as by the Jerusalem sinners, in saving
them first, he had a design to provoke others to come to
him for mercy, so the same design is here set on foot
again, in his calling and converting the Ephesian sinners,
'That in the ages to come he might show the exceeding
riches of his grace,' says he, 'in his
kindness towards us through Christ Jesus.' There is yet
one hint behind. It is said that God saved these 'for
his great love'; that is, as I think, for the setting
forth, for the commendation of his love, for the advance of
his love, in the hearts and minds of them that should come
after. As who should say, God has had mercy upon, and been
gracious to you, that he might show to others, for their
encouragement, that they have ground to come to him to be
saved. When God saves one great sinner, it is to encourage
another great sinner to come to him for mercy.
He saved the thief, to encourage thieves to
come to him for mercy; he saved Magdalene, to encourage
other Magdalenes to come to him for mercy; he saved Saul,
to encourage Sauls to come to him for mercy; and this Paul
himself doth say, 'For this cause,' saith he,
'I obtained mercy, that in me first Jesus Christ might
show forth all long- suffering, for a pattern to them which
should hereafter believe on him to life everlasting' (1
Tim 1:16). How plain are the words! Christ, in saving of
me, has given to the world a pattern of his grace, that
they might see, and believe, and come, and be saved; that
they that are to be born hereafter might believe on Jesus
Christ to life everlasting.
But what was Paul? Why, he tells you
himself; I am, says he, the chief of sinners. I was, says
he, a blasphemer, a persecutor, an injurious person; but I
obtained mercy (1 Tim 1:13,14). Ay, that is well for you,
Paul; but what advantage have we thereby? Oh, very much,
saith he; for, 'for this cause I obtained mercy, that
in me first Jesus Christ might show forth all
long-suffering, for a pattern to them which should
hereafter believe on him to life everlasting' (verse
16). Thus, therefore, you see that this third reason is of
strength; namely, that Jesus Christ would have mercy
offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners,
because, by their forgiveness and salvation, others,
hearing of it, will be encouraged the more to come to him
for mercy. It may well, therefore, be said to God, Thou
delightest in mercy, and mercy pleases thee (Micah
7:18).
But who believes that this was God's
design in showing mercy of old—namely, that we that
come after might take courage to come to him for mercy; or
that Jesus Christ would have mercy offered, in the first
place, to the biggest sinners, to stir up others to come to
him for life? This is not the manner of men, O God! But
David saw this betimes; therefore he makes this one
argument with God, that he would blot out his
transgressions, that he would forgive his adultery, his
murders, and horrible hypocrisy. Do it, O Lord, saith he,
do it, and 'then will I teach transgressors thy
ways, and sinners shall be converted unto thee' (Psa
2:7-13). He knew that the conversion of sinners would be a
work highly pleasing to God, as being that which he had
designed before he made mountain or hill: wherefore he
comes, and he saith, Save me, O Lord; if thou wilt but save
me, I will fall in with thy design; I will help to bring
what sinners to thee I can. And, Lord, I am willing to be
made a preacher myself, for that I have been a horrible
sinner; wherefore, if thou shalt forgive my great
transgressions, I shall be a fit man to tell of thy
wondrous grace to others. Yea, Lord, I dare promise, that
if thou wilt have mercy upon me, it shall tend to the glory
of thy grace, and also to the increase of thy kingdom; for
I will tell it, and sinners will hear on't. And there
is nothing so suiteth with the hearing sinner as mercy; and
to be informed that God is willing to bestow it upon him.
'I will teach transgressors thy ways; and sinners shall
be converted unto thee.'
Nor will Christ Jesus miss of his design in
proffering of mercy, in the first place, to the biggest
sinners. You know what work the Lord, by laying hold of the
woman of Samaria, made among the people there. They knew
that she was a town sinner, an adulteress; yea, one that,
after the most audacious manner, lived in uncleanness with
a man that was not her husband. But when she, from a turn
upon her heart, went into the city, and said to her
neighbours, 'Come,' Oh, how they came! how they
flocked out of the city to Jesus Christ! 'Then they
went out of the city, and came to him.' 'And many
of the Samaritans of that city (people, perhaps, as bad as
herself) believed on him for the saying of the woman, which
testified, He told me all that ever I did' (John 4:39).
That word, 'He told me all that ever I did,' was a
great argument with them; for by that they gathered, that
though he knew her to be vile, yet he did not despise her,
nor refuse to show how willing he was to communicate his
grace unto her; and this fetched over, first her, then
them.
This woman, as I said, was a Samaritan
sinner, a sinner of the worst complexion; for the Jews
abhorred to have ought to do with them (verse 9), wherefore
none more fit than she to be made one of the decoys of
heaven, to bring others of these Samaritan wild-fowls under
the net of the grace of Christ; and she did the work to
purpose. Many, and many more of the Samaritans believed on
him (verse 40-42). The heart of man, though set on sin,
will, when it comes once to a persuasion that God is
willing to have mercy upon us, incline to come to Jesus
Christ for life. Witness those turn-aways from God that you
also read of in Jeremiah; for after they had heard, three
or four times over, that God had mercy for backsliders,
they broke out, and said, 'Behold, we come unto thee;
for thou art the Lord our God.' (Jer 3:22); or,
as those in Hosea did, 'For in thee the fatherless
findeth mercy' (Hosea 14:1-3).
Mercy, and the revelation thereof, is the
only antidote against sin. 'Tis of a thawing nature;
'twill loose the heart that is frozen up in sin; yea,
'twill make the unwilling willing to come to Jesus
Christ for life. Wherefore, do you think, was it that Jesus
Christ told the adulterous woman, and that before so many
sinners, that he had not condemned her, but to allure her,
with them there present, to hope to find favour at his
hands? As he also saith, in another place, 'I came not
to judge, but to save the world.' For might they not
thence most rationally conclude, that if Jesus Christ had
rather save than damn an harlot, there was encouragement
for them [although great sinners] to come to him for
mercy.
I heard once a story from a soldier, who,
with his company, had laid siege against a fort, that so
long as the besieged were persuaded their foes would show
them no favour, they fought like madmen; but when they saw
one of their fellows taken, and received to favour, they
all came tumbling down from their fortress, and delivered
themselves into their enemies' hands. I am persuaded,
did men believe that there is that grace and willingness in
the heart of Christ to save sinners, as the Word imports
there is, they would come tumbling into his arms: but Satan
has blinded their minds that they cannot see this thing.
Howbeit, the Lord Jesus has, as I said, that others might
take heart and come to him, given out a commandment, that
mercy should, in the first place, be offered to the biggest
sinners. 'Begin,' saith he, 'at Jerusalem';
and thus I end the third reason.
Fourth, Jesus Christ would have mercy
offered, in the first place, to biggest sinners, because
that is the way, if they receive it, most to weaken the
kingdom of Satan, and to keep it lowest in every age of the
world.
The biggest sinners, they are Satan's
colonels and captains, the leaders of his people, and they
that most stoutly make head against the Son of God.
Wherefore, let these first be conquered, and his kingdom
will be weak. When Ishbosheth had lost his Abner, the
kingdom was made weak, nor did he sit but tottering then
upon his throne. So, when Satan loseth his strong men, them
that are mighty to work iniquity, and dexterous to manage
others in the same, then is his kingdom weak (2 Sam 3).
Therefore, I say, Christ, and doth offer mercy, in the
first place, to such, the more to weaken his kingdom.
Christ Jesus was glad to see Satan fall like lightning from
heaven; that is, suddenly, or head-long; and it was,
surely, by casting of him out of strong possession, and by
recovering of some notorious sinners out of his clutches
(Luke 10:17-19).
Samson, when he would pull down the
Philistines' temple, took hold of the two main pillars
of it, and, breaking them, down came the house. Christ came
to destroy the works of the devil, and to destroy by
converting grace, as well as by redeeming blood. Now, sin
swarms, and lieth by legions, and whole armies, in the
souls of the biggest sinners, as in garrisons;14
wherefore, the way, the most direct way, to destroy it, is
first to deal with such sinners by the word of his gospel,
and by the merits of his passion.
For example, though I shall give you but a
homely one; suppose a family to be very lousy, and one or
two of the family to be in chief the breeders, the way, the
quickest way, to clean that family, or at least to weaken
the so swarming of those vermin, is, in the first place, to
sweeten the skin, head, and clothes of the chief breeders;
and then, though all the family should be apt to breed
them, the number of them, and so the greatness of that
plague there, will be the more impaired. Why, there are
some people that are in chief the devil's sin-breeders
in the towns and places where they live. The place, town,
or family where they live, must needs be horribly lousy,
and, as it were, eaten up with vermin. Now, let the Lord
Jesus, in the first place, cleanse these great breeders,
and there will be given a nip to those swarms of sins that
used to be committed in such places throughout the town,
house, or family, where such sin-breeding persons used to
be.
I speak by experience. I was one of these
lousy ones, one of these great sin-breeders; I infected all
the youth of the town where I was born, with all manner of
youthful vanities. The neighbours counted me so; my
practice proved me so: wherefore Christ Jesus took me
first; and taking me first, the contagion was much allayed
all the town over. When God made me sigh, they would
hearken, and inquiringly say, What's the matter with
John? They also gave their various opinions of me; but, as
I said, sin cooled, and failed, as to his full career. When
I went out to seek the bread of life, some of them would
follow, and the rest be put into a muse 15 at
home. Yea, almost the town, at first, at times would go out
to hear at the place where I found good; yea, young and old
for a while had some reformation on them; also some of
them, perceiving that God had mercy upon me, came crying to
him for mercy too.
But what need I give you an instance of poor
I; I will come to Manasseh the king. So long as he was a
ringleading sinner, the great idolater, and chief for
devilism, the whole land flowed with wickedness; for he
made them to sin (2 Chron 33), and do worse than the
heathen that dwelt round about them, or that was cast out
from before them: but when God converted him, the whole
land was reformed. Down went the groves, the idols, and
altars of Baal, and up went true religion in much of the
power and purity of it. You will say, The king reformed by
power. I answer, doubtless, and by example too; for people
observe their leaders; as their fathers did, so did they (2
Kings 17:41). This, therefore, is another reason why Jesus
would have mercy offered, in the first place, to the
biggest sinners, because that is the best way, if they
receive it, most to weaken the kingdom of Satan, and to
keep it poor and low.
And do you not think now, that if God would
but take hold of the hearts of some of the most notorious
in your town, in your family, or country, that this thing
would be verified before your faces? It would, it would, to
the joy of you that are godly, to the making of hell to
sigh, to the great suppressing of sin, the glory of Christ,
and the joy of the angels of God.16 And
ministers, should, therefore, that this work might go on,
take advantages to persuade with the biggest sinners to
come into Christ, according to my text, and their
commission, 'Beginning at Jerusalem.'
Fifth, Jesus Christ would have mercy
offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners,
because such, when converted, are usually the best helps
in the church against temptations, and fittest for the
support of the feeble-minded there.
Hence, usually, you have some such in the
first plantation of churches, or quickly upon it. Churches
would do but sorrily, if Christ Jesus did not put such
converts among them; they are the monuments and mirrors of
mercy. The very sight of such a sinner in God's house,
yea, the very thought of him, where the sight of him cannot
be had, is ofttimes greatly for the help of the faith of
the feeble.
When the churches, saith Paul, that were in
Judea, heard this concerning me, that he which persecuted
them in time past, now preached the faith which once he
destroyed, 'they glorified God in me' (Gal
1:20-24). 'Glorified God.' How is that? Why, they
praised him, and took courage to believe the more in the
mercy of God; for that he had had mercy on such a great
sinner as he. They glorified God 'in me'; they
wondered that grace should be so rich, as to take hold of
such a wretch as I was; and for my sake believed in Christ
the more.
There are two things that great sinners are
acquainted with, when they come to divulge them to the
saints, that are a great relief to their faith. 1. The
contests that they usually have with the devil at their
parting with him. 2. Their knowledge of his secrets in his
workings.
1. For first, The biggest
sinners17 have usually great contests with the
devil at their partings; and this is an help to saints: for
ordinary saints find afterwards what the vile ones find at
first, but when, at the opening of hearts, the one finds
himself to be as the other—the one is a comfort to
the other. The lesser sort of sinners find but little of
this, till after they have been some time in profession;
but the vile man meets with his at the beginning. Wherefore
he, when the other is down, is ready to tell that he has
met with the same before; for, I say, he has had it before.
Satan is loath to part with a great sinner. 'What, my
true servant,' quoth he, 'my old servant, wilt thou
forsake me now? Having so often sold thyself to me to work
wickedness, wilt thou forsake me now? Thou horrible wretch,
dost not know, that thou has sinned thyself beyond the
reach of grace, and dost thou think to find mercy now? Art
not thou a murderer, a thief, a harlot, a witch, a sinner
of the greatest size, and dost thou look for mercy now?
Dost thou think that Christ will foul his fingers with
thee? It is enough to make angels blush, saith
Satan, to see so vile an one knock at heaven-gates for
mercy, and wilt thou be so abominably bold to do it?'
18 Thus Satan dealt with me, says the great
sinner, when at first I came to Jesus Christ. And what did
you reply? saith the tempted. Why, I granted the while
charge to be true, says the other. And what, did you
despair, or how? No, saith he, I said, I am Magdalene, I am
Zaccheus, I am the thief, I am the harlot, I am the
publican, I am the prodigal, and one of Christ's
murderers; yea, worse than any of these; and yet God was so
far off from rejecting of me, as I found afterwards, that
there was music and dancing in his house for me, and for
joy that I was come home unto him. O blessed be God for
grace (says the other), for then, I hope, there is favour
for me. Yea, as I told you, such an one is a continual
spectacle in the church, for every one by to behold
God's grace and wonder by.
2. And as for the secrets of Satan, such as
are suggestions to question the being of God, the truth of
his Word, and to be annoyed with devilish blasphemies; none
more acquainted with these than the biggest sinners at
their conversion; wherefore thus also they are prepared to
be helps in the church to relieve and comfort the
other.
I might also here tell you of the contests
and battles that such are engaged in, wherein they find the
buffetings of Satan, above any other of the saints. At
which time Satan assaults the soul with darkness, fears,
frightful thoughts of apparitions; now they sweat, pant,
cry out, and struggle for life. The angels now come down to
behold the sight, and rejoice to see a bit of dust and
ashes to overcome principalities and powers, and might, and
dominions. But, as I said, when these come a little to be
settled, they are prepared for helps for others, and are
great comforts unto them. Their great sins give
encouragement to the devil to assault them; and by these
temptations Christ takes advantage to make them the more
helpful to the churches.
The biggest sinner, when he is converted,
and comes into the church, says to them all, by his very
coming in, Behold me, all you that are men and women of a
low and timorous spirit, you whose hearts are narrow, for
that you never had the advantage to know, because your sins
are few, the largeness of the grace of God. Behold, I say,
in me, the exceeding riches of his grace! I am a pattern
set forth before your faces, on whom you may look and take
heart. This, I say, the great sinner can say, to the
exceeding comfort of all the rest. Wherefore, as I have
hinted before, when God intends to stock a place with
saints, and to make that place excellently to flourish with
the riches of his grace, he usually begins with the
conversion of some of the most notorious thereabouts, and
lays them, as an example, to allure others, and to build up
when they are converted. It was Paul that must go to the
Gentiles, because Paul was the most outrageous of all the
apostles, in the time of his unregeneracy. Yea, Peter must
be he, that after his horrible fall, was thought fittest,
when recovered again, to comfort and strengthen his
brethren (See Luke 22:31,32).
Some must be pillars in God's house; and
if they be pillars of cedar, they must stand while they are
stout and sturdy sticks in the forest, before they are cut
down, and planted or placed there. No man, when he buildeth
his house, makes the principal parts thereof of weak or
feeble timber; for how could such bear up the rest? but of
great and able wood. Christ Jesus also goeth this way to
work; he makes of the biggest sinners bearers and
supporters to the rest. This, then, may serve for another
reason, why Jesus Christ gives out in commandment, that
mercy should, in the first place, be offered to the biggest
sinners, because such, when converted, are usually the best
helps in the church against temptations, and fittest for
the support of the feeble-minded there.
Sixth, Another reason why Jesus
Christ would have mercy offered, in the first place, to the
biggest sinners, is, because they, when converted, are
apt to love him most.
This agrees both with scripture and reason.
Scripture says so. To whom much is forgiven, the same
loveth much. 'To whom little is forgiven, the
same loveth little' (Luke 7:47). Reason says so:
for as it would be the unreasonablest thing in the world to
render hatred for love, and contempt for forgiveness; so it
would be as ridiculous to think, that the reception of a
little kindness should lay the same obligations upon the
heart to love as the reception of a great deal. I would not
disparage the love of Christ; I know the least drachm of
it, when it reaches to forgiveness, is great above all the
world; but comparatively, there are greater extensions of
the love of Christ to one than to another. He that has most
sin, if. forgiven, is partaker of the greatest love, of the
greatest forgiveness.
I know also, that there are some, that from
this very doctrine say, 'Let us do evil that good may
come'; and that turn the grace of our God into
lasciviousness. But I speak not of these; these will
neither be ruled by grace nor reason. Grace would teach
them, if they knew it, to deny ungodly courses; and so
would reason too, if it could truly sense the love of God
(Titus 2:11,12; Rom 12:1).
Doth it look like what hath any coherence
with reason or mercy, for a man to abuse his friend?
Because Christ died for me, shall I therefore spit in his
face? The bread and water that was given by Elisha to his
enemies, that came into the land of Israel to take him, had
so much influence upon their minds, though heathens, that
they returned to their homes without hurting him; yea, it
kept them from coming again in a hostile manner into the
coasts of Israel (2 Kings 6:19-23).
But to forbear to illustrate, till anon. One
reason why Christ Jesus shows mercy to sinners, is, that he
might obtain their love, that he may remove their base
affections from base objects to himself. Now, if he loves
to be loved a little, he loves to be loved much; but there
is not any that are capable of loving much, save those that
have much forgiven them. Hence it is said of Paul, that he
laboured more than them all; to wit, with a labour of love,
because he had been by sin more vile against Christ than
they all (1 Cor 15). He it was that 'persecuted the
church of God, and wasted it' (Gal 1:13). He of them
all was the only raving bedlam against the saints. 'And
being exceeding mad,' says he, 'against them, I
persecuted them even unto strange cities' (Acts
26:11). This raving bedlam, that once was so, is he that
now says, I laboured more than them all, more for Christ
than them all. But Paul, what moved thee thus to do? The
love of Christ, says he. It was not I, but the grace of God
that was with me. As who should say, O grace! It was such
grace to save me! It was such marvellous grace for God to
look down from heaven upon me, and that secured me from the
wrath to come, that I am captivated with the sense of the
riches of it. Hence I act, hence I labour; for how can I
otherwise do, since God not only separated me from my sins
and companions, but separated all the powers of my soul and
body to his service? I am, therefore, prompted on by this
exceeding love to labour as I have done; yet not I, but the
grace of God with me. Oh! I shall never forget his love,
nor the circumstances under which I was, when his love laid
hold upon me. I was going to Damascus with letters from the
high-priest, to make havoc of God's people there, as I
had made havoc of them in other places. These bloody
letters were not imposed upon me. I went to the high-priest
and desired them of him, and yet he saved me! (Acts 9:1,2).
I was one of the men, of the chief men, that had a hand in
the blood of his martyr Stephen; yet he had mercy upon me!
When I was at Damascus, I stunk19 so horribly
like a blood-sucker, that I became a terror to all
thereabout. Yea, Ananias, good man, made intercession to my
Lord against me; yet he would have mercy upon me, yea,
joined mercy to mercy, until he had made me a monument of
grace. He made a saint of me, and persuaded me that my
transgressions were forgiven me.
When I began to preach, those that heard me
were amazed, and said, 'Is not this he that destroyed
them that called on this name in Jerusalem, and came hither
for that intent, that he might bring them bound to the
high-priest?' Hell doth know that I was a sinner;
heaven doth know that I was a sinner; the world also knows
that I was a sinner, a sinner of the greatest size; but I
obtained mercy (Acts 9:20,21). Shall not this lay
obligation upon me? Is not love of the greatest force to
oblige? Is it not strong as death, cruel as the grave, and
hotter than the coals of juniper? Hath it not a most
vehement flame? Can the waters quench it? can the floods
drown it? I am under the force of it, and this is my
continual cry, What shall I render to the Lord for all the
benefits which he has bestowed upon me?
Aye, Paul! this is something; thou speakest
like a man, like a man affected, and carried away with the
love and grace of God. Now, this sense, and this affection,
and this labour, giveth to Christ the love that he looks
for. But he might have converted twenty little sinners, and
yet not found, for grace bestowed, so much love in them
all. I wonder how far a man might go among the converted
sinners of the smaller size, before he could find one that
so much as looked anything this way ward. Where is he that
is thus under pangs of love for the grace bestowed upon him
by Jesus Christ? Excepting only some few, you may walk to
the world's end, and find none. But, as I said, some
there are, and so there have been in every age of the
church, great sinners, that have had much forgiven them;
and they love much upon this account. Jesus Christ,
therefore, knows what he doth, when he lays hold on the
hearts of sinners of the biggest size. He knows that such
an one will love more than many that have not sinned half
their sins.
I will tell you a story that I have read of
Martha and Mary; the name of the book I have forgot; I mean
of the book in which I found the relation; but the thing
was thus:—
Martha, saith my author, was a very holy
woman, much like Lazarus, her brother; but Mary was a loose
and wanton creature; Martha did seldom miss good sermons
and lectures, when she could come at them in Jerusalem; but
Mary would frequent the house of sports, and the company of
the vilest of men for lust. And though Martha had often
desired that her sister would go with her to hear her
preachers, yea, had often entreated her with tears to do
it, yet could she never prevail; for still Mary would make
her excuse, or reject her with disdain, for her zeal and
preciseness in religion.
After Martha had waited long, tried many
ways to bring her sister to good, and all proved
ineffectual, at last she comes upon her thus:
'Sister,' quoth she, 'I pray thee go with me to
the temple today, to hear one preach a sermon.'
'What kind of preacher is he?' said she. Martha
replied, 'It is one Jesus of Nazareth; he is the
handsomest man that ever you saw with your eyes. Oh! he
shines in beauty, and is a most excellent
preacher.'
Now, what does Mary, after a little pause,
but goes up into her chamber, and, with her pins and her
clouts,20 decks up herself as fine as her
fingers could make her. This done, away she goes, not with
her sister Martha, but as much unobserved as she could, to
the sermon, or rather to see the preacher.
The hour and preacher being come, and she
having observed whereabout the preacher would stand, goes
and sets herself so in the temple, that she might be sure
to have the full view of this excellent person. So he comes
in, and she looks, and the first glimpse of his person
pleased her. Well, Jesus addresseth himself to his sermon,
and she looks earnestly on him.
Now, at that time, saith my author, Jesus
preached about the lost sheep, the lost groat, and the
prodigal child. And when he came to show what care the
shepherd took for one lost sheep, and how the woman swept
to find her piece which was lost, and what joy there was at
their finding, she began to be taken by the ears, and
forgot what she came about, musing what the preacher would
make of it. But when he came to the application, and
showed, that by the lost sheep, was meant a great sinner;
by the shepherd's care, was meant God's love for
great sinners; and that by the joy of the neighbours, was
showed what joy there was among the angels in heaven over
one great sinner that repenteth; she began to be taken by
the heart. And as he spake these last words, she thought he
pitched his innocent eyes just upon her, and looked as if
he spake what was now said to her: wherefore her heart
began to tremble, being shaken with affection and fear;
then her eyes ran down with tears apace; wherefore she was
forced to hide her face with her handkerchief, and so sat
sobbing and crying all the rest of the sermon.
Sermon being done, up she gets, and away she
goes, and withal inquired where this Jesus the preacher
dined that day? and one told her, At the house of Simon the
Pharisee. So away goes she, first to her chamber, and there
strips herself of her wanton attire; then falls upon her
knees to ask God forgiveness for all her wicked life. This
done, in a modest dress she goes to Simon's house,
where she finds Jesus sat at dinner. So she gets behind
him, and weeps, and drops her tears upon his feet like
rain, and washes them, and wipes them with the hair of her
head. She also kissed his feet with her lips, and anointed
them with ointment. When Simon the Pharisee perceived what
the woman did, and being ignorant of what it was to be
forgiven much (for he never was forgiven more than fifty
pence), he began to think within himself, that he had been
mistaken about Jesus Christ, because he suffered such a
sinner as this woman was, to touch him. Surely, quoth he,
this man, if he were a prophet, would not let this woman
come near him, for she is a town-sinner; so ignorant are
all self-righteous men of the way of Christ with sinners.
But, lest Mary should be discouraged with some clownish
carriage of this Pharisee, and so desert her good
beginnings, and her new steps which she now had begun to
take towards eternal life, Jesus began thus with Simon:
'Simon,' saith he, 'I have somewhat to say unto
thee. And he saith, Master, say on. There was,' said
Jesus, 'a certain creditor which had two debtors; the
one owed five hundred pence, and the other fifty. And when
they had nothing to pay, he frankly forgave them both. Tell
me, therefore, which of them will love him most? Simon
answered, and said, I suppose that he, to whom he
forgave most. And he said unto him, Thou hast rightly
judged. And he turned to the woman, and said unto Simon,
Seest thou this woman? I entered into thine house, thou
gavest me no water for my feet; but she hath washed my feet
with tears, and wiped them with the hairs of her
head. Thou gavest me no kiss; but this woman, since the
time I came in, hath not ceased to kiss my feet. My head
with oil thou didst not anoint, but this woman hath
anointed my feet with ointment. Wherefore, I say unto her,
Her sins, which are many, are forgiven, for she loved much;
but to whom little is forgiven, the same loveth
little. And he said unto her, Thy sins are forgiven'
(Luke 7:36-48).
Thus you have the story. If I come short in
any circumstance, I beg pardon of those that can correct
me. It is three or four and twenty years since I saw the
book; yet I have, as far as my memory will admit, given you
the relation of the matter. However, Luke, as you see, doth
here present you with the substance of the
whole.21
Alas! Christ Jesus has but little thanks for
the saving of little sinners. 'To whom little is
forgiven, the same loveth little.' He gets not water
for his feet, by his saving of such sinners. There are
abundance of dry-eyed Christians in the world, and
abundance of dry- eyed duties too; duties that never were
wetted with the tears of contrition and repentance, nor
ever sweetened with the great sinner's box of ointment.
And the reason is, such sinners have not great sins to be
saved from; or, if they have, they look upon them in the
diminishing glass of the holy law of God.22 But,
I rather believe, that the professors of our days want a
due sense of what they are; for, verily, for the generality
of them, both before and since conversion, they have been
sinners of a lusty size. But if their eyes be holden, if
convictions are not shown, if their knowledge of their sins
is but like to the eye-sight in twilight; the heart cannot
be affected with that grace that has laid hold on the man;
and so Christ Jesus sows much, and has little coming in.
Wherefore his way is ofttimes to step out of the way, to
Jericho, to Samaria, to the country of the Gadarenes, to
the coasts of Tyre and Sidon, and also to Mount Calvary,
that he may lay hold of such kind of sinners as will love
him to his liking (Luke 19:1-11; John 4:3-11; Mark 5:1-20;
Matt 15:21-29; Luke 23:33-43).
But thus much for the sixth reason, why
Christ Jesus would have mercy offered, in the first place,
to the biggest sinners, to wit, because such sinners, when
converted, are apt to love him most. The Jerusalem sinners
were they that outstripped, when they were converted, in
some things, all the churches of the Gentiles. They
'were of one heart, and of one soul: neither said any
of them that aught of the things which he possessed
was his own.' 'Neither was there any among them
that lacked: for as many as were possessors of lands or
houses sold them, and brought the prices of the things that
were sold, and laid them down at the apostles'
feet,' &c. (Acts 4:32,35). Now, show me such
another pattern, if you can. But why did these do thus? Oh!
they were Jerusalem sinners. These were the men that, but a
little before, had killed the Prince of life; and those to
whom he did, that notwithstanding, send the first offer of
grace and mercy. And the sense of this took them up betwixt
the earth and the heaven, and carried them on in such ways
and methods as could never be trodden by any since. They
talk of the church of Rome, and set her, in her primitive
state, as a pattern and mother of churches; when the truth
is, they were the Jerusalem sinners, when converts, that
out-did all the churches that ever were.
Seventh, Christ Jesus would have
mercy offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners,
because grace, when it is received by such, finds matter
to kindle upon more freely than it finds in other
sinners.
Great sinners are like the dry wood, or like
great candles, which burn best and shine with biggest
light. I lay not this down, as I did those reasons before,
to show, that when great sinners are converted, they will
be encouragement to others, though that is true; but to
show, that Christ has a delight to see grace, the grace we
receive, to shine. We love to see things that bear a good
gloss; yea, we choose to buy such kind of matter to work
upon, as will, if wrought up to what we intend, cast that
lustre that we desire. Candles that burn not bright, we
like not; wood that is green will rather smother, and
sputter, and smoke, and crack, and flounce, than cast a
brave light and a pleasant heat; wherefore great folks care
not much, not so much, for such kind of things, as for them
that will better answer their ends.
Hence Christ desires the biggest sinner; in
him there is matter to work by, to wit, a great deal of
sin; for as by the tallow of the candle, the first takes
occasion to burn the brighter; so, by the sin of the soul,
grace takes occasion to shine the clearer. Little candles
shine but little, for there wanteth matter for the fire to
work upon; but in the great sinner, here is more matter for
grace to work by. Faith shines, when it worketh towards
Christ, through the sides of many and great transgressions,
and so does love, for that much is forgiven. And what
matter can be found in the soul for humility to work by so
well, as by a sight that I have been and am an abominable
sinner? And the same is to be said of patience, meekness,
gentleness, self-denial, or of any other grace. Grace takes
occasion, by the vileness of the man, to shine the more;
even as by the ruggedness of a very strong distemper or
disease, the virtue of the medicine is best made manifest.
'Where sin abounded, grace did much more abound'
(Rom 5:20). A black string makes the neck look whiter;
great sins make grace burn clear. Some say, when grace and
a good nature meet together, they do make shining
Christians; but I say, when grace and a great sinner meet,
and when grace shall subdue that great sinner to itself,
and shall operate after its kind in the soul of that great
sinner, then we have a shining Christian; witness all those
of whom mention was made before.
Abraham was among the idolaters when in the
land of Assyria, and served idols, with his kindred, on the
other side of the flood (Josh 24:2; Gen 11:31). But who,
when called, was there in the world, in whom grace shone so
bright as in him? The Thessalonians were idolaters before
the Word of God came to them; but when they had received
it, they became examples to all that did believe in
Macedonia and Achaia (1 Thess 1:6-10).
God the Father, and Jesus Christ his Son,
are for having things seen; for having the Word of life
held forth. They light not a candle that it might be put
under a bushel, or under a bed, but on a candlestick, that
all that come in may see the light (Matt 5:15; Mark 4:21;
Luke 8:16; 11:33). and, I say, as I said before, in whom is
it, light, like so to shine, as in the souls of great
sinners?
When the Jewish Pharisees dallied with the
gospel, Christ threatened to take it from them, and to give
it to the barbarous heathens and idolaters. Why so? For
they, saith he, will bring forth the fruits thereof in
their season. 23 'Therefore say I unto you,
The kingdom of God shall be taken from you, and given to a
nation bringing forth the fruits thereof' (Matt
21:43).
I have often marvelled at our youth, and
said in my heart, What should be the reason that they
should be so generally at this day debauched as they are?
For they are now profane to amazement; and sometimes I have
thought one thing, and sometimes another; that is, why God
should suffer it so to be? At last I have thought of this:
How if the God, whose ways are past finding out, should
suffer it so to be now, that he might make of some of them
the more glorious saints hereafter. I know sin is of the
devil, but it cannot work in the world without permission:
and if it happens to be as I have thought, it will not be
the first time that God the Lord hath caught Satan in his
own design. For my part, I believe that the time is at
hand, that we shall see better saints in the world than has
been seen in it this many a day. And this vileness, that at
present does so much swallow up our youth, is one cause of
my thinking so; for out of them, for from among them, when
God sets to his hand, as of old, you shall see what
penitent ones, what trembling ones, and what admirers of
grace, will be found to profess the gospel to the glory of
God by Christ.
Alas! we are a company of worn-out
Christians; our moon is in the wane; we are much more black
than white, more dark than light; we shine but a little;
grace in the most of us is decayed. But I say, when they of
these debauched ones that are to be saved shall be brought
in—when these that look more like devils than men
shall be converted to Christ (and I believe several of them
will), then will Christ be exalted, grace adored, the Word
prized, Zion's path better trodden, and men in the
pursuit of their own salvation, to the amazement of them
that are left behind.
Just before Christ came into the flesh, the
world was degenerated as it is now: the generality of the
men in Jerusalem were become either high and famous for
hypocrisy, or filthy, base in their lives. The devil also
was broke loose in hideous manner, and had taken possession
of many: yea, I believe, that there was never generation
before nor since, that could produce so many possessed with
devils, deformed, lame, blind, and infected with monstrous
diseases, as that generation could. But what was the reason
thereof, I mean the reason from God? Why, one—and we
may sum up more in that answer that Christ gave to his
disciples concerning him that was born blind—was,
that 'the works of God should be made manifest' in
them, and 'that the Son of God might be glorified
thereby' (John 9:2,3; 11:4).
Now, if these devils and diseases, as they
possessed men then, were to make way and work for an
approaching to Christ in person, and for the declaring of
his power, why may we not think that now, even now also, he
is ready to come, by his Spirit in the gospel, to heal many
of the debaucheries of our age? I cannot believe that grace
will take them all, for there are but few that are saved;
but yet it will take some, even some of the worst of men,
and make blessed ones of them. But, O how these ringleaders
in vice will then shine in virtue! They will be the very
pillars in churches, they will be as an ensign in the land.
'The Lord their God shall save them in that day as the
flock of his people: for they shall be as the
stones of a crown, lifted up as an ensign upon his
land' (Zech 9:16). But who are these? Even idolatrous
Ephraim, and backsliding Judah (verse 13).
I know there is ground to fear, that the
iniquity of this generation will be pursued with heavy
judgments; but that will not hinder that we have supposed.
God took him a glorious church out of bloody Jerusalem,
yea, out of the chief of the sinners there, and left the
rest to be taken and spoiled, and sold, thirty for a penny,
in the nations where they were captives. The gospel working
gloriously in a place, to the seizing upon many of the
ringleading sinners thereof, promiseth no security to the
rest, but rather threateneth them with the heaviest and
smartest judgments; as in the instance now given, we have a
full demonstration; but in defending, the Lord will defend
his people; and in saving, he will save his
inheritance.
Nor does this speak any great comfort to a
decayed and backsliding sort of Christian; for the next
time God rides post with his gospel, he will leave such
Christians behind him. But, I say, Christ is resolved to
set up his light in the world; yea, he is delighted to see
his graces shine; and therefore he commands that his gospel
should, to that end, be offered, in the first place, to the
biggest sinners; for by great sins it shineth most;
therefore he saith, 'Begin at
Jerusalem.'
Eighth, and lastly, Christ Jesus will
have mercy to be offered, in the first place, to the
biggest sinners, for that by that means the impenitent
that are left behind will be, at the judgment, the
more left without excuse.
God's Word has two edges; it can cut
back-stroke and fore-stroke. If it doth thee no good, it
will do thee hurt; it is 'the savour of life unto
life' to those that receive it, but of 'death unto
death' to them that refuse it (2 Cor 2:15,16). But this
is not all; the tender of grace to the biggest sinners, in
the first place, will not only leave the rest, or those
that refuse it, in a deplorable condition, but will also
stop their mouths, and cut off all pretence to excuse at
that day. 'If I had not come and spoken unto them,'
saith Christ,' saith Christ, 'they had not had sin;
but now they have no cloke for their sin'—for
their sin of persevering in impenitence (John 15:22). But
what did he speak to them? Why, even that which I have told
you; to wit, That he has in special a delight in saving the
biggest sinners. He spake this in the way of his doctrine;
he spake this in the way of his practice, even to the
pouring out of his last breath before them (Luke
23:34).
Now, since this is so, what can the
condemned at the judgment say for themselves, why sentence
of death should not be passed upon them? I say, what excuse
can they make for themselves, when they shall be asked why
they did not in the day of salvation come to Christ to be
saved? Will they have ground to say to the Lord, Thou wast
only for saving of little sinners; and, therefore, because
they were great ones, they durst not come unto him; or that
thou hadst not compassion for the biggest sinners,
therefore I died in despair? Will these be excuses for
them, as the case now standeth with them? Is there not
everywhere in God's Book a flat contradiction to this,
in multitudes of promises, of invitations, of examples, and
the like? Alas! alas! there will then be there millions of
souls to confute this plea; ready, I say, to stand up, and
say, 'O! deceived world, heaven swarms with such as
were, when they were in the world, to the full as bad as
you!' Now, this will kill all plea or excuse, why they
should not perish in their sins; yea, the text says they
shall see them there. 'There shall be weeping - when ye
shall see Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, and all the
prophets, in the kingdom of heaven, and you
yourselves thrust out. And they shall come from
the east, and from the west, and from the north, and
from the south, and shall sit down in the kingdom of
God' (Luke 13:28,29). Out of which company, it is easy
to pick such as sometimes were as bad people as any [that]
now breathe on the face of [the] earth. What think you of
the first man, by whose sins there are millions now in
hell? And so I may say, What think you of ten thousand more
besides?
But if the Word will not stifle and gag them
up—I speak now for amplification's sake—the
view of those who are saved shall. There comes an
incestuous person to the bar, and pleads, That the bigness
of his sins was a bar to his receiving the promise. But
will not his mouth be stopped as to that, when Lot, and the
incestuous Corinthians, shall be set before him (Gen
19:33-37; 1 Cor 5:1,2).
There comes a thief, and says, Lord, my sin
of thefts, I thought, was such as could not be pardoned by
thee! But when he shall see the thief that was saved on the
cross stand by, as clothed with beauteous glory, what
further can he be able to object? Yea, the Lord will
produce ten thousand of his saints at his coming, who shall
after this manner 'execute judgment upon all, and so
convince all that are ungodly among them - of all their
hard speeches which ungodly sinners have spoken
against him' (Jude 15). And these are hard speeches
against him, to say that he was not able or willing to save
men, because of the greatness of their sins, or to say that
they were discouraged by his Word from repentance, because
of the heinousness of their offences. These things, I say,
shall then be confuted. He comes with ten thousand of his
saints to confute them, and to stop their mouths from
making objections against their own eternal
damnation.
Here is Adam, the destroyer of the world;
here is Lot, that lay with both his daughters; here is
Abraham, that was sometime an idolater; and Jacob, that was
a supplanter; and Reuben, that lay with his father's
concubine; and Judah, that lay with his daughter-in-law;
and Levi and Simeon, that wickedly slew the Shechemites;
and Aaron, that made an idol to be worshipped, and that
proclaimed a religious feast unto it. Here is also Rahab
the harlot, and Bathsheba, that bare a bastard to David.
Here is Solomon, that great backslider; and Manasseh, that
man of blood and a witch. Time would fail to tell you of
the woman of Canaan's daughter, of Mary Magdalene, of
Matthew the publican, and of Gideon and Samson, and many
thousands more.
Alas! alas! I say, what will these sinners
do, that have, through their unbelief, eclipsed the
glorious largeness of the mercy of God, and gave way to
despair of salvation, because of the bigness of their sins?
For all these, though now glorious saints in light, were
sometimes sinners of the biggest size, who had sins that
were of a notorious hue; yet now, I say, they are in their
shining and heavenly robes before the throne of God and of
the Lamb, blessing for ever and ever that Son of God for
their salvation, who died for them upon the tree; admiring
that ever it should come into their hearts once to think of
coming to God by Christ; but above all, blessing God for
granting of them light to see those encouragements in his
Testament; without which, without doubt, they had been
daunted, and sunk down under guilt of sin and despair, as
their fellow-sinners have done. But now they also are
witnesses for God, and for his grace, against an
unbelieving world; for, as I said, they shall come to
convince the world of their speeches, their hard and
unbelieving words, that they have spoken concerning the
mercy of God, and the merits of the passion of his blessed
Son, Jesus Christ.
But will it not, think you, strangely put to
silence all such thoughts, and words, and reasons of the
ungodly before the bar of God? Doubtless it will; yea, and
will send them away from his presence also, with the
greatest guilt that possibly can fasten upon the
consciences of men.
For what will sting like this?—'I
have, through mine own foolish, narrow, unworthy,
undervaluing thoughts, of the love and ability of Christ to
save me, brought myself to everlasting ruin. It is true, I
was a horrible sinner; not one in a hundred did live so
vile a life as I. But this should not have kept me from
closing with Jesus Christ. I see now that there are
abundance in glory that once were as bad as I have been;
but they were saved by faith, and I am damned by unbelief.
Wretch that I am! why did not I give glory to the redeeming
blood of Jesus? Why did I not humbly cast my soul at his
blessed footstool for mercy? Why did I judge of his ability
to save me by the voice of my shallow reason, and the voice
of a guilty conscience? Why betook not I myself to the holy
Word of God? Why did I not read and pray that I might
understand, since now I perceive that God said then, He
giveth liberally to them that pray, and upbraideth not'
(James 1:5).
It is rational to think, that by such
cogitations as these, the unbelieving world will be torn in
pieces before the judgment of Christ; especially those that
have lived where they did or might have heard the gospel of
the grace of God. Oh! that saying, 'It shall be more
tolerable for Sodom at the judgment than for them,'
will be better understood (Luke 10:8-12). This reason,
therefore, standeth fast; namely, that Christ, by offering
mercy, in the first place, to the biggest sinners now, will
stop all the mouths of the impenitent at the day of
judgment, and cut off all excuse that shall be attempted to
be made, from the thoughts of the greatness of their sins,
why they came not to him.
I have often thought of the day of judgment,
and how God will deal with sinners at that day; and I
believe it will be managed with that sweetness, with that
equitableness, with that excellent righteousness, as to
every sin, and circumstance and aggravation thereof, that
men that are damned, shall, before the judgment is over,
receive such conviction of the righteous judgment of God
upon them, and of their deserts of hell-fire, that they
shall in themselves conclude, that there is all the reason
in the world that they should be shut out of heaven, and go
to hell-fire: 'These shall go away into everlasting
punishment' (Matt 25:46).24
Only this will tear [them,] that they have
missed of mercy and glory, and obtained everlasting
damnation, through their unbelief; but it will tear but
themselves, but their own souls; they will gnash upon
themselves, for that mercy was offered to the chief of them
in the first place, and yet they were damned for rejecting
of it; they were damned for forsaking what they had a
propriety in; for forsaking their own mercy.
And thus much for the reasons.
Second, I will conclude with a word of
application.
THE APPLICATION.
First, Would Jesus Christ have mercy
offered, in the first place, to the biggest sinners? Then
this shows us how to make a right judgment of the heart
of Christ to men. Indeed, we have advantage to guess at
the goodness of his heart by many things; as by his taking
our nature upon him, his dying for us, his sending his Word
and ministers to us, and all that we might be saved. But
this of beginning to offer mercy to Jerusalem, is that
which heightens all the rest; for this doth not only
confirm to us, that love was the use of his dying for us,
but it shows us yet more the depth of that love. He might
have died for us, and yet have extended the benefit of his
death to a few, as one might call them, of the
best-conditioned sinners, to those who, though they were
weak, and so could not but sin, yet made not a trade of
sinning; to those that sinned not lavishingly. There are in
the world, as one may call them, the moderate sinners; the
sinners that mix righteousness with their pollutions; the
sinners that, though they be sinners, do what on their part
lies—some that are blind would think so—that
they might be saved. I say, it had been love, great love,
if he had died for none but such, and sent his love to
such; but that he should send out conditions of peace to
the biggest of sinners; yea, that they should be offered to
them first of all; (for so he means when he says,
'Begin at Jerusalem';) this is wonderful! this
shows his heart to purpose, as also the heart of God his
Father, who sent him to do thus.
There is nothing more incident to men that
are awake in their souls, than to have wrong thoughts of
God—thoughts that are narrow, and that pinch and pen
up his mercy to scanty and beggarly conclusions, and rigid
legal conditions; supposing that it is rude, and an
intrenching upon his majesty to come ourselves, or to
invite others, until we have scraped and washed, and rubbed
off as much of our dirt from us as we think is convenient,
to make us somewhat orderly and handsome in his
sight.25 Such never knew what these words meant,
'Begin at Jerusalem.' Yea, such in their hearts
have compared the Father and his Son to niggardly rich men,
whose money comes from them like drops of blood. True, say
such, God has mercy, but he is loath to part with it; you
must please him well, if you get any from him; he is not so
free as many suppose, nor is he so willing to save as some
pretended gospellers imagine. But I ask such, if the Father
and Son be not unspeakably free to show mercy, why was this
clause put into our commission to preach the gospel? Yea,
why did he say, 'Begin at Jerusalem': for when men,
through the weakness of their wits, have attempted to show
other reasons why they would have the first proffer of
mercy; yet I can prove, by many undeniable reasons, that
they of Jerusalem, to whom the apostles made the f