Mr. Bunyan’s Last Sermon:
Preached August 19TH, 1688
[ADVERTISEMENT BY THE
EDITOR]
This sermon, although very short, is
peculiarly interesting: how it was preserved we are not
told; but it bears strong marks of having been published
from notes taken by one of the hearers. There is no proof
that any memorandum or notes of this sermon was found in
the autograph of the preacher.
In the list of Bunyan's works published
by Chas. Doe, at the end of the 'Heavenly Footman,'
March 1690, it stands No. 44. He professes to give the
title-page, word for word, as it was first printed, It is,
'Mr. John Bunyan's last sermon, at London, preached
at Mr. Gamman's meeting-house, near Whitechapel, August
19th, 1688, upon John 1:13: showing a resemblance between a
natural and a spiritual birth; and how every man and woman
may try themselves, and know whether they are born again or
not.' Published 1689, in about one sheet in 12mo. From
this it appears to have been preached only two days before
his fatal illness, and twelve days before his decease,
which took place August 31st, 1688. The disease which
terminated his invaluable life, was brought on by a journey
to Reading on horseback, undertaken with the benevolent
design of reconciling an offended father to his son. Having
accomplished his object, he rode to London; on his way
home, through a heavy rain, the effects of which appeared
soon after this, his last sermon was preached. He bore,
with most exemplary patience and resignation, the fever
which invaded his body; and, at a distance from his wife
and family, in the house of his friend Mr. Strudwick, at
Snow Hill, his pilgrimage was ended, and he fell asleep in
perfect peace, to awake amidst the harmonies and glory of
the celestial city.
GEO. OFFOR.
Mr. Bunyan’s Last
Sermon
'Which were born, not of blood, nor
of the will of the flesh,
nor of the will of man, but of
God.'-- John 1:13
The words have a dependance on what goes
before, and therefore I must direct you to them for the
right understanding of it. You have it thus: 'He came
unto his own, and his own received him not; but as many as
received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of
God, even to them that believe on his name: which
were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh - but
of God.'
In the words before, you have two things.
First, Some of his own rejecting him, when he
offered himself to them. Second, Others of his own
receiving him, and making him welcome; those that reject
him, he also passes by; but those that receive him, he
gives them power to become the sons of God.
Now, lest any one should look upon it as
good luck or fortune, says he, they 'were born, not of
blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of
man, but of God.' They that did not receive him, they
were only born of flesh and blood; but those that receive
him, they have God to their Father; they receive the
doctrine of Christ with a vehement desire.
[TO EXPLAIN THE TEXT.]
FIRST, I will show you what he means by
blood. They that believe are born to it, as an heir is to
an inheritance--they are born of God, not of flesh, nor of
the will of man, but of God; not of blood, that is, not by
generation, not born to the kingdom of heaven by the flesh,
not because I am the son of a godly man or woman--that is
meant by blood (Acts 17:26); He 'hath made of one blood
all nations.' But when he says here, 'not of
blood,' he rejects all carnal privileges they did boast
of: they boasted they were Abraham's seed; no, no says
he, it is not of blood; think not to say you have Abraham
to your father; you must be born of God, if you go to the
kingdom of heaven.
SECOND, 'Nor of the will of the
flesh.' What must we understand by that?
It is taken for those vehement inclinations
that are in man, to all manner of looseness, fulfilling the
desires of the flesh: that must not be understood here; men
are not made the children of God by fulfilling their
lustful desires. It must be understood here in the best
sense: there is not only in carnal men a will to be vile,
but there is in them a will to be saved also; a will to go
to heaven also. But this it will not do; it will not
privilege a man in the things of the kingdom of God:
natural desires after the things of another world, they are
not an argument to prove a man shall go to heaven whenever
he dies. I am not a free-willer, I do abhor it; yet there
is not the wickedest man but he desires, some time or
other, to be saved; he will read some time or other, or, it
may be, pray, but this will not do: 'It is not
of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God
that sheweth mercy.' There is willing and running, and
yet to no purpose (Rom 9:16). Israel, which followed after
the law of righteousness, have not obtained it (v 30).
Here, I do not understand, as if the apostle had denied a
virtuous course of life to be the way to heaven; but that a
man without grace, though he have natural gifts, yet he
shall not obtain privilege to go to heaven, and be the son
of God. Though a man without grace may have a will to be
saved, yet he cannot have that will God's way. Nature,
it cannot know any thing but the things of nature--the
things of God knows no man but by the Spirit of God; unless
the Spirit of God be in you, it will leave you on this side
the gates of heaven. 'Not of blood, nor of the will of
the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God.' It may
be, some may have a will, a desire that Ishmael may be
saved; know this, it will not save thy child. If it was our
will, I would have you all go to heaven. How many are there
in the world that pray for their children, and cry for
them, and are ready to die [for them]? and this will not
do. God's will is the rule of all; it is only through
Jesus Christ: 'which were born, not of flesh, nor of
the will of man, but of God.'
Now I come to the doctrine.
Men that believe in Jesus Christ, to the
effectual receiving of Jesus Christ, they are born to it.
He does not say they shall be born to it, but they
are born to it--born of God unto God and the things
of God, before he receives God to eternal salvation.
'Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom
of God.' Now, unless he be born of God, he cannot see
it: suppose the kingdom of God be what it will, he cannot
see it before he be begotten of God. Suppose it be the
gospel, he cannot see it before he be brought into a state
of regeneration. Believing is the consequence of the new
birth; 'not of blood, nor of the will of man, but of
God.'
First, I will give you a clear
description of it under one similitude or two. A child,
before it be born into the world, is in the dark dungeon of
its mother's womb: so a child of God, before he be born
again, is in the dark dungeon of sin, sees nothing of the
kingdom of God; therefore it is called a new birth: the
same soul has love one way in its carnal condition, another
way when it is born again.
Second, As it is compared to a birth,
resembling a child in his mother's womb, so it is
compared to a man being raised out of the grave; and to be
born again, is to be raised out of the grave of sin;
'Awake, thou that sleepest, and arise from the dead,
and Christ shall give thee light.' To be raised from
the grave of sin is to be begotten and born (Rev 1:5);
there is a famous instance of Christ; He is 'the first
begotten of the dead'; he is the first-born from the
dead, unto which our regeneration alludeth; that is, if you
be born again by seeking those things that are above, then
there is a similitude betwixt Christ's resurrection and
the new birth; which was born, which was restored out of
this dark world, and translated out of the kingdom of this
dark world, into the kingdom of his dear Son, and made us
live a new life--this is to be born again: and he that is
delivered from the mother's womb, it is the help of the
mother; so he that is born of God, it is by the Spirit of
God. I must give you a few consequences of a new
birth.
(1.) First of all, A child, you know, is
incident to cry as soon as it comes into the world; for if
there be no noise, they say it is dead. You that are born
of God, and Christians, if you be not criers, there is no
spiritual life in you--if you be born of God, you are
crying ones; as soon as he has raised you out of the dark
dungeon of sin, you cannot but cry to God, What must I do
to be saved? As soon as ever God had touched the jailer, he
cries out, 'Men and brethren, what must I do to be
saved?' Oh! how many prayerless professors is there in
London that never pray! Coffee-houses will not let you
pray, trades will not let you pray, looking-glasses will
not let you pray; but if you was born of God, you
would.
(2.) It is not only natural for a child to
cry, but it must crave the breast; it cannot live without
the breast--therefore Peter makes it the true trial of a
new-born babe: the new-born babe desires the sincere milk
of the Word, that he may grow thereby: if you be born of
God, make it manifest by desiring the breast of God. Do you
long for the milk of the promises? A man lives one way when
he is in the world, another way when he is brought unto
Jesus Christ (Isa 66). They shall suck and be satisfied; if
you be born again, there is no satisfaction till you get
the milk of God's Word into your souls (Isa 66:11). To
'suck and be satisfied with the breasts of her
consolation.' Oh! what is a promise to a carnal man? A
whore-house, it may be, is more sweet to him; but if you be
born again, you cannot live without the milk of God's
Word. What is a woman's breast to a horse? But what is
it to a child? there is its comfort night and day, there is
its succour night and day. O how loath are they it should
be taken from them: minding heavenly things, says a carnal
man, is but vanity; but to a child of God, there is his
comfort.
(3.) A child that is newly born, if it have
not other comforts to keep it warm than it had in its
mother's womb, it dies; it must have something got for
its succour: so Christ had swaddling clothes prepared for
him; so those that are born again, they must have some
promise of Christ to keep them alive; those that are in a
carnal state, they warm themselves with other things; but
those that are born again, they cannot live without some
promise of Christ to keep them alive; as he did to the poor
infant in Ezekiel 16:8: I covered thee with embroidered
gold: and when women are with child, what fine things will
they prepare for their child! Oh, but what fine things has
Christ prepared to wrap all in that are born again! Oh what
wrappings of gold has Christ prepared for all that are born
again! Women will dress their children, that every one may
see them how fine they are; so he in Ezekiel 16:11: 'I
decked thee also with ornaments, and I put bracelets upon
thine hands, and a chain on thy neck; and I put a jewel on
thy forehead, and ear-rings in thine ears, and a beautiful
crown upon thine head.' And, says he in verse 13,
'Thou didst prosper into a kingdom.' This is to set
out nothing in the world but the righteousness of Christ
and the graces of the Spirit, without which a new-born babe
cannot live, unless they have the golden righteousness of
Christ.
(4.) A child, when it is in its mother's
lap, the mother takes great delight to have that which will
be for its comfort; so it is with God's children, they
shall be kept on his knee (Isa 66:11): 'They shall suck
and be satisfied with the breasts of her consolations';
verse 13: 'As one whom his mother comforteth, so will I
comfort you.' There is a similitude in these things
that nobody knows of, but those that are born
again.
(5.) There is usually some similitude
betwixt the father and the child. It may be the child looks
like its father; so those that are born again, they have a
new similitude--they have the image of Jesus Christ (Gal
4). Every one that is born of God has something of the
features of heaven upon him. Men love those children that
are likest them most usually; so does God his children,
therefore they are called the children of God; but others
do not look like him, therefore they are called Sodomites.
Christ describes children of the devil by their
features--the children of the devil, his works they will
do; all works of unrighteousness, they are the devil's
works: if you are earthly, you have borne the image of the
earthly; if heavenly, you have borne the image of the
heavenly.
(6.) When a man has a child, he trains him
up to his own liking--they have learned the custom of their
father's house; so are those that are born of God--they
have learned the custom of the true church of God; there
they learn to cry 'My Father' and 'My God';
they are brought up in God's house, they learn the
method and form of God's house, for regulating their
lives in this world.
(7.) Children, it is natural for them to
depend upon their father for what they want; if they want a
pair of shoes, they go and tell him; if they want bread,
they go and tell him; so should the children of God do. Do
you want spiritual bread? go tell God of it. Do you want
strength of grace? ask it of God. Do you want strength
against Satan's temptations? go and tell God of it.
When the devil tempts you, run home and tell your heavenly
Father--go, pour out your complaints to God; this is
natural to children; if any wrong them, they go and tell
their father; so do those that are born of God, when they
meet with temptations, go and tell God of them.
[THE APPLICATION.]
The first use is this, To make a strict
inquiry whether you be born of God or not; examine by those
things I laid down before, of a child of nature and a child
of grace. Are you brought out of the dark dungeon of this
world into Christ? Have you learned to cry, 'My
Father?' (Jer 3:4). 'And I said, Thou shalt call
me, My Father.' All God's children are
criers--cannot you be quiet without you have a bellyful of
the milk of God's Word? cannot you be satisfied without
you have peace with God? Pray you, consider it, and be
serious with yourselves; if you have not these marks, you
will fall short of the kingdom of God--you shall never have
an interest there; 'there' is no intruding. They
will say, 'Lord, Lord, open to us; and he will say, I
know you not.' No child of God, no heavenly
inheritance. We sometimes give something to those that are
not our children, but [we do] not [give them] our lands. O
do not flatter yourselves with a portion among the sons,
unless you live like sons. When we see a king's son
play with a beggar, this is unbecoming; so if you be the
king's children, live like the king's children; if
you be risen with Christ, set your affections on things
above, and not on things below; when you come together,
talk of what your Father promised you; you should all love
your Father's will, and be content and pleased with the
exercises you meet with in the world. If you are the
children of God, live together lovingly; if the world
quarrel with you, it is no matter; but it is sad if you
quarrel together; if this be amongst you, it is a sign of
ill-breeding; it is not according to the rules you have in
the Word of God. Dost thou see a soul that has the image of
God in him? Love him, love him; say, This man and I must go
to heaven one day; serve one another, do good for one
another; and if any wrong you, pray to God to right you,
and love the brotherhood.
Lastly, If you be the children of God, learn
that lesson--Gird up the loins of your mind, as obedient
children, not fashioning yourselves according to your
former conversation; but be ye holy in all manner of
conversation. Consider that the holy God is your Father,
and let this oblige you to live like the children of God,
that you may look your Father in the face, with comfort,
another day.