Paul’s Departure and
Crown;
or,
An Exposition Upon 2 Timothy
4:6-8
by John Bunyan
[ADVERTISEMENT BY THE EDITOR]
How great and glorious is the
Christian’s ultimate destiny—a kingdom and a
crown! Surely it hath not entered into the heart of man to
conceive what ear never heard, nor mortal eye ever saw? the
mansions of the blest—the realms of glory—
‘a far more exceeding and eternal weight of
glory.’ For whom can so precious an inheritance be
intended? How are those treated in this world who are
entitled to so glorious, so exalted, so eternal, and
unchangeable an inheritance in the world to come? How do
the heirs to immortality conduct themselves in such a
prospect? An inheritance sure and certain—an absolute
reversion which no contingency can possibly affect. All
these are inquiries of the deepest interest—the most
solemn importance. Above all, when we inquire as to our
personal title to the heavenly mansions—Am I one of
the heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ?—most
intensely should this question agitate the soul, when we
reflect that, unless we are entitled to this inestimable
reversion, we must be plunged into the most awful, the most
irretrievable and external torments! There is no middle
way—no escape from hell, but by going to heaven. Is
heaven reserved only for the noble and the learned, like
Paul? God forbid! but, on the contrary, we hear the voice
of the divinity proclaiming, ‘Not many wise men after
the flesh—not many mighty—not many
noble.’ ‘Thus saith the Lord, Heaven is my
throne, the earth my footstool.’ He looketh upon the
high and low—the learned and the noble—the
mighty princes and the unlettered labourer; and then makes
this wondrous declaration— ‘To this man
will I look, even to him that is poor and of
a contrite spirit, and trembleth at my word.’ The
world will treat such humble ones as it treated the Lord of
life and glory, with scorn, contempt, insult,
robbery—death. They bear all with
patience—return good for evil—are the followers
of him who went about doing good—are known as living
epistles, because they have been with Christ; they daily
enjoy his guidance and protection, and in their desires
after conformity to his image, they breathe the atmosphere
of heaven. This is what the heir of glory strives after;
but, alas! he has to encounter an evil heart, an ensnaring
world, and the reproaches and revilings of his fellow-men,
aided by satanic influence. Can we wonder, then, that he
who is thus besieged, and believes that his work is
finished, should, with Paul, be ready to depart and receive
his rich inheritance? The lapse of time affects not the
strong consolations of hope; as it was with Paul, so Bunyan
felt. His longings after the heavenly manna abounded when
the cold hand of death pressed upon his brow; his desire
was ‘to be dissolved, and to be with Christ’;
when his course of temple and relative duty was run, he
waited for the messenger from the celestial city to conduct
him home. Christian, are you actively engaged in fulfilling
the duties of your course? or, in the humble hope that your
course is accomplished, are you patiently waiting the
heavenly messenger? If the Christian’s state is one
of trial now, it was much more so in former times. We can
have very little idea of the feelings of a dissenter from
the religion of the State, like Paul, under the cruel Nero,
or like Bunyan, under the debauched Charles the
Second—both of them liable, without a moment’s
warning, to be carried away to prison, or to be murdered,
privately or publicly, for refusing submission to civil
governors in matters of faith or worship. Although they
possessed every loyal and patriotic feeling, they dared not
obey those human laws which usurped the prerogatives of
God, by interfering with divine worship. Their lives were
in their hands; in the midst of imminent danger they boldly
avowed the truth, and set us a noble example. Their
intercourse with heaven was doubly sweet from the
uncertainty of liberty and life. For them to live was
Christ, and therefore they well knew the gain of dying. In
proportion as temporal blessings were eminently doubtful,
so spiritual and eternal benefits were precious.
This treatise was one of those ten excellent
manuscripts found already prepared for the press, after the
unexpected decease of its pious author. It bears the marks
of having been composed, and perhaps preached, towards the
end of his pilgrimage. Had his valuable life been spared a
few months longer, this work would, very probably, have
been enlarged, and the sub-divisions somewhat improved. The
principal heads are now inserted as separate lines, to
assist the reader in referring to its several parts; and
notes are added to explain old words and customs, and, in
some cases, to point out a few of the beautiful and
striking passages with which it abounds. Many of these
ought to be indelibly impressed upon our minds. ‘The
words of the Lord are pure words; as silver
tried in a furnace of earth, purified seven times’
(Psa 12:6). The question naturally arises—What is
this ‘furnace of earth’ in which the
Lord’s words are purified? Seven being the number of
perfection, conveys the idea that it will be in the furnace
until it appears perfectly refined. Bunyan considers that
these earthen furnaces are the bodies of the saints. In the
trials, troubles, and persecutions to which they are
subjected, the Word bears them up triumphantly, so that the
purity and excellency of the holy oracles conspicuously
appears, like the trial of faith mentioned by Peter (1
Peter 1:7). Dr. Gill considers that these crucibles mean
Christ and his ministers; while Bunyan, with his enlarged
mind, identifies them with the whole of Christ’s
followers. Some of these crucibles prove not to be genuine,
and perish in the using, not being able to abide the fire.
Such was the case with one of Mr. Bunyan’s friends.
John Childs, who, for fear of persecution, conformed,
became horror-stricken for the denial of his Master, and
notorious for having destroyed himself.
In this treatise it is most affectionately
impressed upon us to heap up treasures that will go with us
into the unseen world, as of greater importance than those
things which perish with the using. ‘A Christian, and
spend thy time, thy strength, and parts,’ for that
which maketh to itself wings and fleeth away!
‘Remember thou art a man of another world, a subject
of a more noble kingdom—that of God, and of heaven.
Make not heavenly things stoop to the world; but hoist up
thy mind to the things that are above, and practically hold
forth before all the world the blessed word of life.’
If death is the king of terrors to fallen humanity, still
there are truths abounding with consolation, that when the
Christian departs, the angels are ready, as in the case of
Lazarus, to convey the happy spirit to Abraham’s
bosom; the struggle is short, and then comes the reward. In
this world we must have tribulation; but in heaven white
robes, the palm of victory, and the conqueror’s
crown, await the saints. Paul heard a voice which raised
his soul above the fears of death, and gave him a desire to
depart; its melodious sound invited him home—it was
the voice of eternal truth, saying, ‘Blessed
are the dead which die in the Lord; yea, saith the
Spirit, that they may rest from their labours; and their
works do follow them.’
George Offor
Paul’s Departure and
Crown
‘For I am now ready to be offered,
and the time of my departure is at hand. I have fought a
good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the
faith: Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of
righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, shall
give me at that day: and not to me only, but unto all them
also that love his appearing.’
—2 Timothy 4:6-8
These words were, by the apostle Paul,
written to Timothy, whom he had begot to the faith, by the
preaching of the gospel of Christ; in which are many things
of great concernment both for instruction and consolation;
something of which I shall open unto you for your profit
and edification. But before I come to the words themselves,
as they are a relation of Paul’s case, I shall take
notice of something from them as they depend upon the words
going before, being a vehement exhortation to Timothy to be
constant and faithful in his work; which, in brief, may be
summed up in these particulars: 1st, A solemn binding
charge before God and Jesus Christ our Lord, that he be
constant in preaching the Word, whether in or out of
season, reproving, rebuking, and exhorting with all
long-suffering and doctrine; and that because of that
ungodly spirit that would possess professors after he was
dead; for the time will come, saith he, that they will not
endure sound doctrine, neither sound reproof, nor sound
trial of their state and condition by the Word, but after
their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers,
having itching ears,—the plague that once God
threatened to rebellious Israel (Deut 28:27)—and be
turned unto fables. Much like this is that in the Acts of
the Apostles, ‘For I know this, that after my
departing shall grievous wolves enter in among you, not
sparing the flock. Also of your own selves shall men arise,
speaking perverse things, to draw away disciples after
them. Therefore watch, and remember, that by the space of
three years, I ceased not to warn every one night and day
with tears’ (Acts 20:29-31)
This evil then is to be prevented:—by
a diligent watchfulness in ministers;—By a diligent
preaching the word of the Lord;—and, By sound and
close rebukes, reproofs, and exhortations to those in
whosoever the least there appears any swerving or turning
aside from the gospel. The ministers of the gospel have
each of them all that authority that belongs to their
calling and office, and need not to stay for power from men
to put the laws of Christ in his church into due and full
execution (Titus 2:15). This ‘remnant of Jacob shall
be in the midst of many people as a dew from the Lord, -
that tarrieth not for man, nor waiteth for the sons of
men’ (Micah 5:7). Therefore he adds, ‘Watch
thou in all things, endure afflictions,’ if thou
shouldst be opposed in thy work, ‘do the work of an
evangelist, make full proof of thy ministry’ (2 Tim
4:5).[1] How our time-serving and self-saving
ministers will salve their conscience from the stroke that
God’s Word will one day give them, and how they will
stand before the judgment-seat to render an account of this
their doings, let them see to it; surely God will require
it of their hand!
But, O Timothy, do thou be diligent, do thou
watch in all things, do thou endure affliction, do thou the
work of an evangelist, make thou full proof of thy
ministry, ‘for I am not ready to be offered,’
&c. The words, then, of my text are a reason of this
exhortation to Timothy, that he should continue watchful,
and abide faithful in his calling. ‘For I am now
ready to be offered’; that is, to be put to death for
the gospel.
Hence then learn two things,
First, That the murders and outrage
that our brethren suffer at the hands of wicked men should
not discourage those that live, from a full and faithful
performance of their duty to God and man, whatever may be
the consequence thereof. Or thus, when we see our brethren
before us fall to the earth by death, through the violence
of the enemies of God, for their holy and Christian
profession, we should covet to make good their ground
against them, though our turn should be the next. We should
valiantly do in this matter, as is the custom of soldiers
in war; take great care that the ground be maintained, and
the front kept full and complete. ‘Thou,
therefore,’ saith Paul, ‘endure hardness as a
good soldier of Jesus Christ’ (2 Tim 2:3). And in
another place, We should not be moved by these afflictions,
but endure by resisting even unto blood (1 Thess 3:3).
Wherefore Paul saith again, ‘Be not thou therefore
ashamed of the testimony of our Lord, nor of me, his
prisoner; but be thou partaker of the afflictions of the
gospel, according to the power of God’ (2 Tim 1:8).
Thus let the spirit of Moses rest upon Joshua (Num 27:20),
and the spirit of Elijah rest upon Elisha (2 Kings 2:15).
Stand up, therefore, like valiant worthies, as the
ministers of my God, and fly not every man to his own,
while the cause, and ways, and brethren of our Lord are
buffeted and condemned by the world. And remember, that
those that keep the charge of the Lord when most go
a-whoring from under their God, they, when he turns the
captivity of his people, shall be counted worthy to come
nigh unto him, ‘to offer the fat and the blood, saith
the Lord God.’ But for the rest, though they may yet
stand before the people, because they stood before them in
a way of idolatry, yet it shall not be to their honour, nor
to their comfort; but to their shame, as the same scripture
saith (Eze 44:10-16).
1. Let this therefore smite with conviction
those that, in this day of Jacob’s trouble, have been
false with God, his cause, and people: I say, those first
and especially as the chief ringleaders of this
cowardliness, who have done it against light, profession,
and resolutions. Behold, thou hast sinned against the Lord,
and be sure thy sins will find thee out; and though thou
mayest now have as a judgment of God upon thee, thy right
eye darkened that thou mayest not see, yet awakening time
will overtake thee, and that too between the straits, when
he will show thee, to the great confusion of thy face, and
the amazement of them that behold thee, how great an
affront he counts it to be left by thee, in a day when his
truth is cast down to the ground (Rom 11:10). I have often
thought of that prophet that went down from Judah to
Bethel, to prophesy against the idolatry that was there set
up by the King; who, because he kept not the commandment of
God, but did eat and drink in that place, at the persuasion
of a lying prophet, was met at last by a lion, who slew him
there in the way, where his carcase was made a spectacle of
God to passengers (1 Kings 13). If thou be spiritual, judge
what I say; and think not to be one of that number that
shall have the harps of God, when God appears for Zion, and
that shall sing that song of Moses, and also the song of
the Lamb; for that is only for those who have fought the
godly fight, and gotten the victory over the beast, his
image, mark, number, and name.
2. Let this also be an awe to thee, who hast
hankerings to do as the other: Beware, and remember Judas,
and the end God brought upon him; he will not always bear
such things; these times have showed us already that he
beholds them with great dislike; why should thou hang up in
chains as a terror to all that know thee? And never object
that some have done it, and yet are at peace in their
souls; for peace in a sinful course is one of the greatest
of curses. And ‘the man that wandereth out of the way
of understanding shall remain in the congregation of the
dead’ (Prov 21:6).
[Second.] The Second thing to be
learned from these words, as they have a relation to them
going before, is encouragement to those that are yet in the
storm; and that from three great arguments.
1. Paul’s peace and comfort now at the
time of his death, which he signifieth to Timothy by these
three expressions, ‘I have fought a good
fight—I have finished my course—I have
kept the faith.’
2. By the blessed reward he should have for
his labour from Christ in another world, together with all
those that love the appearing of the Lord, at ‘that
great and notable day.’
3. That now his last act should not be
inferior to any act he did for God, while he was alive and
preached in the world; for his body should now be an
offering, a sacrifice well-pleasing to God. To all which I
shall speak something in my discourse upon these words;
and, therefore, to come to them:
‘I AM NOW READY TO BE
OFFERED.’
In these words we have to inquire into two
things. FIRST. What it is to be ‘offered.’
SECOND. What it is to be ‘ready to be offered
up.’ ‘I am now ready to be
offered.’
[WHAT IT IS TO BE
OFFERED.]
FIRST. For the first of these. Paul, by
saying he was ‘to be offered,’ alludeth to some
of the sacrifices that of old were under the law; and
thereby signifieth to Timothy that his death and martyrdom
for the gospel should be both sweet in the nostrils of God,
and of great profit to his church in this world; for so
were the sacrifices of old. Paul, therefore, lifts his eyes
up higher than simply to look upon death, as it is the
common fate of men; and he had good reason to do it, for
his death was violent; it was also for Christ, and for his
church and truth; and it is usual with Paul thus to set out
the suffering of the saints, which they undergo for the
name and testimony of Jesus. Yea, he will have our prayers
a sacrifice; our praises, thanksgiving, and mortification,
sacrifices; almsdeed, and the offering up of the Gentiles,
sacrifices, being sanctified by the Holy Ghost; and here
his death also must be for a sacrifice, and an acceptable
offering to God (Heb 13:15,16; Rom 12:1,2,
15:16).
Peter also saith, We are priests ‘to
offer up spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God by Jesus
Christ’ (1 Peter 2:5). Of which sacrifices, it seems
by Paul, the death of a Christian for Jesus’ sake
must needs be counted one. Besides, Paul further insinuates
this by some other sentences in his epistles; as by that in
the epistle to the Colossians, where he saith, ‘I now
rejoice in my sufferings for you, and fill up that which is
behind of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh, for his
body’s sake, which is the church’ (Col 1:24).
Not by way of merit, for so Christ alone, and that by once
being offered himself, hath perfected for ever them that
are sanctified (Heb 10:10-14). But his meaning is, that as
Christ was offered in sacrifice for his church as a
Saviour, so Paul would offer himself as a sacrifice for
Christ’s church, as a saint, as a minister, and one
that was counted faithful. ‘Yea,’ saith he,
‘and if I be offered upon the sacrifice and service
of your faith, I joy and rejoice with you all’ (Phil
2:17). This, then, teacheth us several things worthy our
consideration.
First. That the blood of the saints,
that they lose for his name, is a sweet savour to God. And
so saith the Holy Ghost, ‘Precious in the sight of
the Lord is the death of his saints’ (Psa
116:15). And again, ‘He shall redeem their soul from
deceit and violence, and precious shall their blood be in
his sight’ (Psa 72:14).
Second. Those that suffer for Christ
are of great benefit to his church, as the sacrifices of
old were confirming and strengthening to Israel; wherefore
Paul saith, his bonds encouraged his brethren, and made
them much more bold in the way of God to speak his word
without fear (Phil 1:14).
Third. The sufferings, or offering of
the saints in sacrifice, it is of great use and advantage
to the gospel; of use, I say, many ways. (1.) The blood of
the saints defends it; (2.) confirmeth it; and (3.)
redeemeth that thereof that hath been lost in antichristian
darkness.
1. They do thereby defend and preserve it
from those that would take it from us, or from those that
would impose another upon us. ‘I am set,’ saith
Paul, ‘for the defence of the gospel,’ and my
sufferings have fallen out for the furtherance of it (Phil
1:17). That is, it hath not only continued to hold its
ground, but hath also got more by my contentions,
sufferings, and hazards for it.
2. It confirms it; and this is part of the
meaning of Paul in those large relations of his sufferings
for Christ, saying, ‘Are they ministers of Christ? I
speak as a fool, I am more - in prisons more
frequent,’ &c.; as he saith again, and these
things ‘I do for the gospel’s sake.’ And
again, That the truth of the ‘gospel might be
continued with you.’ So again, ‘I
suffer,’ saith he, in the gospel ‘as an
evil-doer even unto bonds, but the word of God is
not bound; yea,’ saith he, ‘therefore I endure
all things for the elect’s sake’ (2 Tim
2:9,10). That is, that the gospel may be preserved entire,
that the souls that are yet unborn may have the benefit of
it, with eternal glory.
3. The sufferings of the saints are of a
redeeming virtue; for, by their patient enduring and losing
their blood for the word, they recover the truths of God
that have been buried in Antichristian rubbish, from that
soil and slur that thereby hath for a long time cleaved
unto them; wherefore it is said, They overcame him, the
beast, ‘by the blood of the Lamb, and by the word of
their testimony, and they loved not their lives unto the
death’ (Rev 12:11). They overcame him; that is, they
recovered the truth from under his aspersions, and
delivered it from all its enemies. David saith, ‘The
words of the Lord are - as silver tried in a furnace
of earth, purified seven times’ (Psa 12:6). What is
this furnace of earth but the body of the saints of God, in
which the Word is tried, as by fire in persecution, yea,
‘purified seven times’; that is, brought forth
at last by the death of the Christians in its purity before
the world. How hath the headship and lordship of Christ,
with many other doctrines of God, been taken away from the
Pope by the sufferings of our brethren before us? While
their flesh did fry in the flames, the Word of God was
cleansed, and by such means purified in these their earthen
furnaces, and so delivered to us. The lamps of Gideon were
then discovered when his soldiers’ pitchers were
broken; if our pitchers were broke for the Lord and his
gospel’s sake, those lamps will then be discovered
that before lay hid and unseen (Judg 7:15-22). Much use
might be made of this good doctrine.
Learn thus much:—
1. [Learn] The judgment that is made
of our sufferings by carnal men is nothing at all to be
heeded; they see not the glory that is wrapped up in our
cause, nor the innocence and goodness of our conscience in
our enduring of these afflictions; they judge according to
the flesh, according to outward appearance. For so, indeed,
we seem to lie under contempt, and to be in a disgraceful
condition; but all things here are converted to another use
and end. That which is contemptible when persons are
guilty, is honourable when persons are clear; and that
which brings shame when persons are buffeted for their
faults, is thankworthy in those that endure grief,
suffering wrongfully (1 Peter 2:19-22). Though to suffer
for sin be the token of God’s displeasure, yet to
those that suffer for righteousness, it is a token of
greatest favour; wherefore matter not how the world doth
esteem of thee and thy present distress, that thou bearest
with patience for God and his Word; but believe that those
things that are both shame and dishonour to others, are
glory and honour to thee (2 Thess 1:4-10). O for a man to
be able to say, ‘For the hope of Israel I am bound
with this chain’ (Acts 28:20). It makes his face to
shine like the face of an angel, and his lips to drop like
the honey-comb (Cant 4:11).
2. We learn also from hence, the
reason why some in days before us have made light of the
rage of the world; but they have laughed at destruction
when it cometh (Job 5:21,22). And have gone forth to meet
the armed men; and with Job’s war-horse,
‘mocketh at fear, and is not affrighted, neither
turneth he back from the sword; the quiver rattleth against
him, the glittering spear and the shield, he said among the
trumpets, Ha, ha’ (Job 39:22,25). It hath been their
[God’s fearers] glory to suffer for Christ; as it is
said of the saints of old, ‘they departed from the
presence of the counsel, rejoicing that they were counted
worthy to suffer shame for his name’ (Acts 5:41). As
Paul also saith, ‘most gladly I will,’ mark,
‘most gladly, rather glory in mine infirmities, that
the power of Christ may rest upon me’ (2 Cor
12:9,10). Therefore I take pleasure in infirmities, in
reproaches, in necessities, in persecutions, in distresses,
for Christ’s sake, &c. Let those that suffer for
theft and murder hang down their heads like a bulrush, and
carry it like those that are going to hanging; but let
those whose trials are for the Word of God know, by these
very things they are dignified.
3. Learn also in this to be
confident, that thy sufferings have their sound and a voice
before God and men. First, Before God, to provoke him to
vengeance, ‘when he maketh inquisition for
blood’ (Psa 9:12; Gen 4:9-11). The blood of Abel
cried until it brought down wrath upon Cain; and so did the
blood of Christ and his apostles, till it had laid
Jerusalem upon heaps. Secondly, Thy blood will also have a
voice before men, and that possibly for their good. The
faithful Christian, in his patient suffering, knows not
what work he may do for God; who knows but thy blood may be
so remembered by thy children, neighbours, and enemies, as
to convince them thou wert for the truth? Yea, who knows
but their thoughts of thy resolution for Christ, in thy
resisting unto blood, may have so good an effect upon some,
as to persuade them to close with his ways? The three
children in the fiery furnace made Nebuchadnezzar cry out
there was no God like theirs! Indeed, this is hard labour,
but be content, the dearer thou payest for it to win the
souls of others, the greater will be thy crown, when the
Lord, the righteous Judge, shall appear; and in the
meanwhile, thy death shall be as a sacrifice pleasing to
God and his saints.
[WHAT IT IS TO BE NOW READY TO BE
OFFERED.]
SECOND. The second thing that I would
inquire into is this: What it is to be ‘ready to be
offered up’? Or how we should understand this word
‘ready’: ‘I am now ready to be offered
up.’ Which I think may be understood three manner of
ways.
First. With respect to that readiness
that was continually in the heart of those that hated him,
to destroy him with his doctrines; Second. Or it may
be understood with respect to the readiness of this blessed
apostle’s mind, his being ready and willing always to
embrace the cross for the word’s sake; or,
Third. We may very well understand it that he had done
his work for God in this world, and therefore was ready to
be gone.
[Readiness of enemies to destroy the
apostle and his doctrine.]
First. For the first of these: The
enemies of God and his truth, they never want will and
malice to oppose the Word of God; they are also always so
far forth in readiness to murder and slaughter the saints,
as the prophet cries to Jerusalem, ‘Behold the
princes of Israel, every one were in thee to their power to
shed blood’ (Eze 22:6), that is, they had will and
malice always at hand to oppose the upright in heart. And
therefore our Lord Jesus saith, ‘they are they that
kill the body’; he doth not say they can do it as
relating to their will, and their custom, if let loose; and
we may understand thereby that it is no more to them to
kill the people of God, than it is to butchers to kill
sheep and oxen. For though it be indeed a truth that
God’s hand is always safe upon the hilt of their
sword, yet by them we are killed all the day long, and
accounted as sheep for the slaughter (Psa 44:22; Rom 8:36).
That is, in their desires always, as well as by their
deeds, when they are let loose, as Paul’s kinsman
said to the captain, ‘There lie in wait for him of
them more than forty men, which have bound themselves with
a curse,[2] that they will neither eat nor drink
till they have killed him; and now are they ready, looking
for a promise from thee’ (Acts 23:12,13,21). And
hence it is, that by the Word they are called dragons,
lions, bears, wolves, leopards, dogs, and the like; all
which are beasts of prey, and delight to live by the death
of others.[3] Paul therefore seeing and knowing
that this readiness was in his enemies to pour out his
bowels to the earth, he cried out to Timothy, saying,
‘make thou full proof of thy ministry, for’ I
am now ready to be slain; ‘I am now ready to be
offered’ (2 Tim 4:5,6). These words thus understood
may be useful many ways.
1. To show us we live, not because of any
good nature or inclination that is in our enemies towards
us; for they, as to their wills, are ready to destroy us;
but they are in the hand of God, in whose hand is also our
times (Psa 31:15). Wherefore, though by the will of our
enemies, we are always delivered to death, yet
‘behold we live’ (2 Cor 6:9). Therefore in this
sense it may be said, ‘Where is the fury of
the oppressor?’ It is not in his power to dispose of,
therefore here it may be said again, he is not ‘ready
to destroy’ (Isa 51:13). The cup that God’s
people in all ages have drank of, even the cup of
affliction and persecution, it is not in the hand of the
enemy, but in the hand of God; and he, not they, poureth
out of the same (Psa 75:8). So that they, with all their
raging waves, have banks and bounds set to them, by which
they are limited within their range, as the bear is by his
chain. ‘Surely the wrath of men shall praise thee,
the remainder of wrath thou shalt restrain’ (Psa
76:10; Job 38:10,11).
2. This should encourage us not to forsake
the way of our Lord Jesus, when threatened by our
adversaries, because they are in his chain: indeed they are
ready in their wills to destroy us; but as to power and
liberty to do it, that is not at all with them; who would
fear to go, even by the very nose of a lion, if his chain
would not suffer him to hurt us.[4] It is too
much below the spirit of a Christian to fear a man that
shall die (Isa 51:12,13). And they that have so done, have
forgotten the Lord their Maker, who preserveth the hairs of
our head (Luke 12:7). Yea, let me tell you he that so doth,
he feareth to trust the Lord with his life, estate, and
concernments, and chooseth rather to trust to himself, and
that too out of God’s way; and though such persons
may lick themselves whole now, while they are fallen and
senseless, they must count for these things again, and then
they shall see that fear of men, and to be ashamed of
Christ, will load them with no light burden. Also, it is an
uncomely thing for any man in his profession to be in and
out with the times; and to do this when winked at by men,
that they would not do if they frowned. Do such fear God?
nay, they fear the fear of men, when they should sanctify
the Lord himself, and let him be their dread, and let him
be their fear (Isa 8:12,13).
3. Let the readiness that is in the enemies
of God to destroy, provoke thee to make ready also, as I
said a little before; go out to meet the armed men;
‘David ran to meet Goliath’; rub up
man,[5] put on thy harness, ‘put on the
whole armour of God, that thou mayest be ready,’ as
well as thy adversaries, as blessed Paul was here, ‘I
am now ready to be offered, and the time of my departure is
at hand’ (1 Sam 17:46-48). But because this will fall
in fittest under the second head, I shall, therefore,
discourse of it there.
[The readiness IN MIND of the blessed
apostle to suffer.]
Second. The second thing considered
in the words is this, that to be ready might be
understood with respect to the blessed apostle’s
mind, that was graciously brought over into a willingness
to embrace the cross for the Word’s sake; and thus in
other places he himself expounds it. ‘I am
ready,’ saith he, ‘not to be bound only, but
also to die at Jerusalem for the name of the Lord
Jesus’ (Acts 21:13). That also implies as much where
he saith, ‘Neither count I my life dear unto myself,
so that I might finish my course with joy, and the ministry
which I have received of the Lord Jesus, to testify the
gospel of the grace of God’ (Acts 20:24). As the
enemies, then, were ready and willing in their hearts, so
he was ready and willing in his. This man was like to those
mighty men of Solomon, that were ready prepared for the
war, and waited on the king, fit to be sent at any time
upon the most sharp and pinching service (2 Chron
17:12-19). A thing fitly becoming all the saints, but
chiefly those that minister in the word and doctrine.
Understand the words thus, and they also teach us many
things, both for conviction and for edification.
1. Here we see that a Christian’s
heart should be unclenched from this world; for he that is
ready to be made a sacrifice for Christ and his blessed
Word, he must be one that is not entangled with the affairs
of this life: how else can he please him who hath chosen
him to be a soldier? Thus was it with this blessed man; he
was brought to God’s foot with Abraham, and crucified
to this world with Christ; he had passed a sentence of
death upon all earthly pleasures and profits beforehand,
that they might not deaden his spirit when he came to
suffer for his profession (2 Tim 2:4; 2 Cor 1:8,9; Gal
2:20, 6:14).
2. This shows us the true effects of
unfeigned faith and love, for they were the rise of this
most blessed frame of heart; read 2 Corinthians 4:8-13, and
compare it with 2 Corinthians 12:9,10; and men may talk
what they will of their faith and love to the Lord Jesus,
and to his holy gospel. But if they throw up their open
profession of his name for fear of those that hate him, it
is evident their mouths go before their hearts, and that
their words are bigger than their graces. ‘If
thou faint in the day of adversity, thy strength is
small,’ and so thy faith and love (Prov 24:10).
Herein is love, ‘that a man lay down his life for his
friends’ (John 15:13).
3. This shows us the true effects of a right
sight and sense of the sufferings that attend the gospel;
that they shall become truly profitable to those that shall
bear them aright. What made he ready for? it was for
sufferings; and why made he ready for them but because he
saw they wrought out for him a ‘far more exceeding
and eternal weight of glory?’ (2 Cor 4:17).
This made Moses also spurn at a crown and a kingdom; to
look with a disdainful eye upon all the glory of Egypt. He
saw the reward that was laid up in heaven for those that
suffered for Christ. Therefore, ‘he refused to be
called the son of Pharaoh’s daughter; choosing rather
to suffer affliction with the people of God than to enjoy
the pleasures of sin for a season; esteeming the reproach
of Christ grater riches than the treasures in Egypt: for he
had respect unto the recompense of reward. By faith he
forsook Egypt, not fearing the wrath of the king, for he
endured, as seeing him who is invisible’ (Heb
11:21-27). Every one cannot thus look upon the afflictions
and temptations that attend the gospel; no, not every one
that professeth it, as appears by their shrinking and
shirking at the noise of the trumpet, and alarum to war.
They can be content, as cowards in a garrison, to lie still
under some smaller pieces of service, as hearing the Word,
entering in, to follow with loving in word and in tongue,
and the like; but to ‘go forth unto him without the
camp, bearing his reproach,’ and to be in jeopardy
every hour for the truth of the glorious gospel, that they
dare not do (Heb 13:13; 1 Cor 15:30). Nay, instead of
making ready with Paul to engage the dragon and his angels,
they study how to evade and shun the cross of Christ;
secretly rejoicing if they can but delude their conscience,
and make it still and quiet, while they do yet unworthily
(Rev 12:7-9).
4. By this readiness we may discern who are
unfeignedly willing to find out that they may do the whole
will of God; even those that are already made willing to
suffer for his sake; they are still inquiring, ‘Lord,
what wouldst thou have me to do?’ not mattering nor
regarding the cross and distress that attends it.
‘The Holy Ghost witnesseth’ to me, saith Paul,
that ‘in every city, saying that bonds and
afflictions abide me; but none of these things move me,
neither count I my life dear unto myself, so that I may
finish my course with joy,’ &c. (Acts 20:23,24).
Counting that to see and be doing of heavenly things, will
countervail all the trouble and sorrow that attends them;
this therefore sharply rebuketh those that can be glad to
be ignorant of the knowledge of some truths, especially of
them that are persecuted; still answering those that charge
them with walking irregularly, that they do but according
to their light. Whereas the hearts that be full of love to
the name and glory of Christ, will in quiet return and
come; yea, and be glad, if they find the words of God, and
will eat them with savour and sweet delight, how bitter
soever they are to the belly: because of that testimony
they bind us up to maintain before peoples, and nations,
and kings (Rev 10:10,11). ‘I am now ready to be
offered.’
[Paul ready to depart, having done his
work for God in this world.]
Third. The third thing to be
considered in the words is this, That the apostle, by
saying, ‘I am now ready,’ doth signify that now
he had done that work that God had appointed him to do in
the world. ‘I am now ready,’ because I have
done my work; this is further manifest by the following
words of the text; ‘I am now ready to be offered, and
the time of my departure is at hand’; namely, my time
to depart this world. The words also that follow are much
to the purpose, ‘I have fought a good fight, I have
finished my course,’ &c., much like that of our
Lord Jesus. ‘I have finished the work which thou
gavest me to do’ (John 17:4). Now then, put all these
things together, namely, that I am to be offered a
sacrifice, and for this my enemies are ready, my heart is
also ready; and because I have done my work, I am therefore
every way ready. This is a frame and condition that
deserveth not only to stand in the Word of God for
Paul’s everlasting praise, but to be a provoking
argument to all that read or hear thereof, to follow the
same steps. I shall therefore, to help it forward,
according to grace received, draw one conclusion from the
words, and speak a few words to it. The conclusion is this:
That it is the duty and wisdom of those that fear God so to
manage their time and work that he hath allotted unto them,
that they may not have part of their work to do when they
should be departing the world.
[THE CHRISTIAN’S DUTY AND WISDOM TO
BE THUS READY.]
This truth I might further urge from the
very words of the text, they being written on purpose by
Paul to stir up Timothy and all the godly to press hard
after this very thing. But to pass that, and to mind you of
some other scriptures that press it hard as a duty, and
then to proceed to some few examples of the wise and most
eminent saints. Which when I have done I shall, 1. Show you
reason for it. 2. Give you encouragement to it. 3. Press it
with several motives. 4. Make some use and application of
the whole, and so conclude.
That this is the duty and wisdom of those
that fear God, you may see by Christ’s exhortation to
watchfulness, and to prepare for his second coming;
‘Therefore be ye also ready; for in an hour as ye
think not, the Son of man cometh’ (Matt 24:44). These
words, as they are spoken to stir up the godly to be ready
to meet their Lord at his coming, so because the godly must
meet him as well in his judgments and providences here, as
at his personal appearing at the last day; therefore they
should be diligent to be fitting themselves to meet him in
all such dispensations. ‘And because,’ saith
God, ‘I will do this unto thee; prepare to meet thy
God, O Israel’ (Amos 4:12). Now death is one of the
most certain of those dispensations; yea, and such, that it
leaveth to those no help at all, or means to perform for
ever, that which, shouldst thou want it, that is lacking to
thy work. Wherefore Solomon also doth press us to this very
work, and that from this consideration, ‘whatsoever
thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might, for
there is no work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor
wisdom, in the grave, whither thou goest’ (Eccl
9:10). Baulk nothing of thy duty, neither defer to do it;
for thou art in thy way to thy grave, and there thou canst
not finish ought that by neglect thou leavest undone;
therefore be diligent while life
lasts.[6]
Another scripture is that in Peter’s
epistle to those that were scattered abroad.
‘Seeing,’ saith he, ‘that ye look for
such things, be diligent, that ye may be found of him in
peace,’ &c. (2 Peter 3:14). He is there
discoursing of the coming of Christ to judgment, as Christ
also was in the other; and from the certainty and dread of
that day he doth press them on to a continual diligence,
and is to be understood as that of Paul to Timothy, a
diligent watching in all things, that as he saith again,
they may stand complete in all the will of God, not lacking
this or that of that work which was given them to do of God
and this world (2 Tim 4:5). Much might be said for the
further proof of this duty; but to give you some examples
of the godly men of old, whereby it will appear, that as it
is our duty to do it so it is also our wisdom. And
hence,
It is said of Enoch, that he ‘walked
with God’ (Gen 5:22), and of Noah, that he was
faithful in his generation, and also ‘walked with
God’ (Gen 6:9). That is, they kept
touch[7] with him, still keeping up to the work
and duty that every day required; not doing their duty by
fits and by starts, but in a fervent spirit they served the
Lord. So again it is said of Abraham, that his work was to
walk before God in a way of faith and self-denial, which he
with diligence performed. And therefore the Holy Ghost
saith, he ‘died in a good old age’ (Gen 25:8);
thereby insinuating that he made both ends
meet[8] together, the end of his work with the
end of his days, and so came to his grave, ‘in a full
age, as a shock of corn cometh in in his season’ (Job
5:26). Jacob also, when he blessed his sons, as he lay upon
his death-bed before them, doth sweetly comfort himself
with this, after all his toil and travel, saying, ‘I
have waited for thy salvation, O Lord,’[9]
as if he had said, Lord, I have faithfully walked before
thee in the days of my pilgrimage, through the help and
power of thy grace; and now having nothing to do but to
die, I lie waiting for thy coming to gather me up to
thyself and my father: so, when he ‘had made an end
of commanding his sons,’ now his bottom was
wound,[10] ‘he gathered up his feet into
the bed, and yielded up the ghost, and was gathered unto
his people’ (Gen 49:18-33). Caleb and Joshua are said
to be men of excellent spirit, because they were faithful
in this their work (Num 14:24). David was eminent this way,
and had done his work before his death-day came:
‘After he had served his own generation by the will
of God,’ then he ‘fell on sleep’ (Acts
13:36). Which in the Old Testament is signified by three
passages, 1. By his losing his heat before his death,
thereby showing his work for God was done, he now only
waited to die. 2. By that passage, ‘these are
the last words of David,’ even the wind up of all the
doctrines of that sweet psalmist of Israel (2 Sam 23:1,2).
3. That in the Psalms is very significant, ‘The
prayers of David the son of Jesse are ended’ (Psa
72:20). In the whole, they all do doubtless speak forth
this in the main, that David made great conscience of
walking with God, by labouring to drive his work before
him, that his work and life might meet together: for that
indeed is a good man’s wisdom. Job had great
conscience also as to this very thing, as witness both
God’s testimony and his own conscience for him (Job
1:8, 31). Elijah had brought his work to that issue that he
had but to anoint Hazael to be king of Assyria, Jehu to be
king of Israel, and Elisha prophet in his room, and then to
be caught up into heaven (1 Kings 19:15,16). What shall I
say? I might come to Hezekiah, Jehoshaphat, Josias; with
old Simeon also, whose days were lengthened chiefly, not
because he was behind with God and his conscience as to his
work for God in the world, but to see with his eyes now at
last the Lord’s Christ: a sweet forefitting for
death! Zacharias, with Elizabeth his wife, that good old
couple also, how tender and doubtful were they in this
matter, to walk ‘in all the commandments and
ordinances of the Lord,’ in a blessed blameless way!
(Luke 1:6, 2:25). Their son also is not to be left out, who
rather than he would be put out of his way, and hindered
from fulfilling his course, would venture the loss of the
love of a king, and the loss of his head for a word (Mark
6:17,18). All these, with many more, are as so many mighty
arguments for the praise of that I asserted before, to wit,
that it is the duty and wisdom of those that fear God, so
to manage their time and work, that he hath here allotted
unto them, that they may not have part of their work to do
when they should be departing this world. I might urge also
many reasons to enforce this truth upon you, as,
[Reasons to enforce this
duty.]
First. Otherwise, the great and chief
design of God in sending us into the world, especially in
converting us and possessing our souls with gifts and
graces, and many other benefits, that we might here be to
the glory of his grace, is as much as in us lies, frustrate
and disappointed. ‘This people have I formed for
myself,’ saith he, ‘they shall show forth my
praise’ (Isa 43:21): and so again, ‘ye have not
chosen me, but I have chosen you, and ordained you that ye
should go and bring forth fruit, and that your fruit
should remain’ (John 15:16). God never intended, when
he covered thy nakedness with the righteousness of his dear
Son, and delivered thee from the condemning power of sin
and the law, that thou shouldst still live as do those who
know not God. ‘This I say therefore,’ saith
Paul, ‘and testify in the Lord; that ye henceforth
walk not as other Gentiles, in the vanity of their
mind’ (Eph 4:17). What, a Christian, and live as does
the world? (John 17:16). A Christian, and spend thy time,
thy strength, and parts, for things that perish in the
using? Remember, man, if the grace of God hath taken hold
of thy soul, thou art a man of another world, and indeed a
subject of another and more noble kingdom, the kingdom of
God, which is the kingdom of the gospel, of grace, of faith
and righteousness, and the kingdom of heaven hereafter (Rom
14:16-18). In these things thou shouldst exercise thyself;
not making heavenly things which God hath bestowed upon
thee to stoop to things that are of the world, but rather
here beat down thy body, mortify thy members; hoist up thy
mind to the things that are above, and practically hold
forth before all the world that blessed word of life (1 Cor
9:26,27). This, I say, is God’s design; this is the
tendency, the natural tendency of every grace of God
bestowed upon thee: and herein is our Father glorified,
that we bring forth much fruit (Col 3:1-4; John
15:8).
Second. A second reason why
Christians should so manage their time and the work that
God hath appointed them to do for his name in this world,
that they may not have part thereof to do when they should
be departing this world, it is because, if they do not,
dying will be a hard work with them especially if God
awakeneth them about their neglect of their duty (1 Cor
11:30-32). The way of God with his people is to visit their
sins in this life; and the worst time for thee to be
visited for them, is when thy life is smitten down, as it
were to the dust of death, even when all natural
infirmities break in like a flood upon thee, sickness,
fainting, pains, wearisomeness, and the like; now I say, to
be charged also with the neglect of duty, when in no
capacity to do it; yea, perhaps so feeble, as scarce able
to abide to hear thy dearest friend in this life speak to
thee; will not this make dying hard. Yea, when thou shalt
seem both in thine own eyes, as also in the eyes of others,
to fall short of the kingdom of heaven for this and the
other transgression, will not this make dying hard? (Heb
4:1,2). David found it hard, when he cried, ‘O spare
me’ a little, ‘that I may recover strength
before I go hence, and be no more’ (Psa 39:13). David
at this time was chastened for some iniquity; yea, brought
for his folly to the doors of the shadow of death. But here
he could not enter without great distress of mind;
wherefore he cries out for respite and time to do the will
of God, and the work allotted to him. So again, ‘The
sorrows of death compassed me, and the pains of hell gat
hold upon me; I found trouble and sorrow: then called I
upon the name of the Lord.’ Ay, this will make thee
cry, though thou be as good as David! Wherefore learn by
his sorrow, as he himself also learned, at last, to serve
his own generation by the will of God, before he fell
asleep. God can tell how to pardon thy sins, and yet make
them such a bitter thing, and so heavy a burden to thee,
that thou wouldst not, if thou wast but once distressed
with it, come there again for all this world, Ah! it is
easy with him to have this pardon in his bosom, when yet he
is breaking all thy bones, and pouring out thy gall upon
the ground; yea, to show himself then unto thee in so
dreadful a majesty, that heaven and earth shall seem to
thee to tremble at his presence! Let then the thoughts of
this prevail with thee, as a reason of great weight to
provoke thee to study to manage thy time and work in wisdom
while thou art well.[11]
Third. Another reason, why those that
fear God should so manage their time and work for God in
this world, that they may not have part to do when they
should be departing this life, it is, because loitering in
thy work doth, as much as in it lieth, defer and hold back
the second coming of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. One
thing, amongst many, that letteth[12] the
appearing of Christ in the clouds of heaven, is, that his
body, with the several members thereof, are not yet
complete and full; they are not all yet come to the
knowledge of the Son of God, ‘to the measure of the
stature of the fulness of Christ’ (Eph 4:8-13); that
is, to the complete making up of his body; for as Peter
saith, ‘The Lord is not slack concerning his promise,
as some men count slackness, but is long-suffering to
us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all
should come to repentance’ (2 Peter 3:9). And so also
to the complete performance of all their duty and work they
have for God in this world. And I say, the faster the work
of conversion, repentance, faith, self-denial, and the rest
of the Christian duties, are performed by the saints in
their day, the more they make way for the coming of the
Lord from heaven. Wherefore Peter saith again,
‘Seeing then that’ we look for
such things, ‘what manner of persons ought we
to be in all holy conversation and godliness,
looking for, and hasting unto,’ or, as it is in the
margin, ‘hasting the coming of the day of God,
wherein the heavens being on fire shall be dissolved, and
the elements shall melt with fervent heat’ (2 Peter
3:11,12). When the bride hath made herself ready,
‘the marriage of the Lamb is come’ (Rev 19:7).
That is, the Lord will then wait upon the world no longer,
when his saints are fit to receive him. As he said to Lot
when he came to burn down Sodom, ‘Haste thee’
to Zoar, ‘for I cannot do anything till thou be come
thither’ (Gen 19:20-22). So concerning the great day
of judgment to the world, which shall be also the day of
blessedness and rest to the people of God, it cannot come
until the Lamb’s wife hath made herself ready; until
all the saints that belong to glory are ready. And before I
go further, what might I yet say to fasten this reason upon
the truly gracious soul? What! wilt thou yet loiter in the
work of thy day? wilt thou still be unwilling to hasten
righteousness? dost thou not know that thou by so doing
deferrest the coming of thy dearest Lord? Besides, that is
the day of his glory, the day when he shall come in the
glory of his Father and of the holy angels; and wilt not
thou by thy diligence help it forwards? Must also the
general assembly and church of the first-born wait upon
thee for their full portions of glory? Wilt thou by thus
doing endeavour to keep them wrapt up still in the dust of
the earth, there to dwell with the worm and corruption? The
Lord awaken thee, that thou mayst see thy loitering doth do
this, and doth also hinder thy own soul of the inheritance
prepared for thee.[13]
4. Another reason why saints should press
hard after a complete performing their work that God hath
allotted unto them is, because, so far forth as they fall
short, in that they impair their own glory. For as the Lord
hath commanded his people to work for him in this world, so
also he of grace hath promised to reward whatever they
Christianly do. For whatsoever good thing any man doth, the
same shall he receive of the Lord, whether he be bound or
free. Yea, he counts it unrighteousness to forget their
work of faith and labour of love, but a righteous thing to
recompense them for it in the day of our Lord Jesus (Heb
6:10; 2 Thess 1:6,7). This, well considered, is of great
force to prevail with those that are covetous of glory,
such as Moses and Paul, with the rest of that spirit. As
the apostle saith also to the saints at Corinth, ‘Be
stedfast, unmoveable, always abounding in the work of the
Lord, forasmuch as ye know that your labour is not in vain
in the Lord’ (1 Cor 15:50).
Having thus given you the reasons why
God’s people should be diligent in that work that God
hath allotted for them to be doing for him in this world, I
shall, in the next place, give you some directions, as
helps to further you in this work. And they are such as
tend to take away those hindrances that come upon thee,
either by discouragement, or by reason of hardness and
benumbedness of spirit; for great hindrances overtake
God’s people from both these impediments.
[Directions, as helps to further in
this work.]
First. If thou wouldst be faithful to
do that work that God hath allotted thee to do in this
world for his name, labour to live much in the favour and
sense of thy freedom and liberty by Jesus Christ; that is,
keep this, if possible, ever before thee, that thou art a
redeemed one, taken out of this world, and from under the
curse of the law, out of the power of the devil, &c.,
and placed in a kingdom of grace, and forgiveness of sins
for Christ’s sake. This is of absolute use in this
matter; yea, so absolute, that it is impossible for any
Christian to do his word Christianly without some enjoyment
of it. For this, in the 1st of Luke, is made the very
ground of all good works, both as to their nature and our
continuance in them; and is also reckoned there an
essential part of that covenant that God made with our
fathers; even ‘that he would grant unto us that we,
being delivered out of the hands of our enemies, might
serve him without fear, in holiness and righteousness,
before him all the days of our life’ (Luke 1:74,75).
And indeed, take this away, and what ground can there be
laid for any man to persevere in good works? None at all.
For take away grace and remission of sins for
Christ’s sake, and you leave men nothing to help them
but the terrors of the law and judgment of God, which, at
best, can beget but a servile and slavish spirit in that
man in whom it dwells; which spirit is so far off from
being an help to us in our pursuit of good works, that it
makes us we cannot endure that which is commanded, but,
Israel-like, it flieth from God even as from the face of a
serpent (Heb 12:20; Exo 19). As Solomon saith, ‘A
servant will not be corrected by words, for, though he
understand, he will not answer’ (Prov 29:19). Get
thou then thy soul possessed with the spirit of the Son,
and believe thou art set perfectly free by him from
whatsoever thou by sin hast deserved at the hand of
revenging justice. This doctrine unlooseth thy bands, takes
off thy yoke, and lets thee go upright. This doctrine puts
spiritual and heavenly inclinations into thy soul; and the
faith of this truth doth show thee that God hath so
surprised thee, and gone beyond thee, with his blessed and
everlasting love, that thou canst not but reckon thyself
his debtor for ever. ‘Therefore, brethren, we are
debtors, not to the flesh, to live after the flesh’
(Rom 8:12). That argument of Paul to Philemon is here true
in the highest degree, thou owest to God for his grace to
thee, ‘even thine own self besides’ (Phile 19).
This Paul further testifies, both in the 6th and 7th of the
Romans. In the one he saith, we are ‘free from
sin’; in the other he saith, we are ‘dead to
the law,’ that our fruit might be unto holiness: that
we might ‘bring forth fruit unto God’ (Rom
6:22, 7:4). For, as I said, if either thy ungodly lusts, or
the power and force of the law, have dominion over thy
spirit, thou art not in a condition now to be performing
thy work to God in this world. I have heretofore marvelled
at the quarrelsome spirit that possessed the people that
Malachi speaketh of, how they found fault with, in a
manner, all things that were commanded them to do; but I
have since observed their ungodly disposition was grounded
upon this, their doubting of the love of God, ‘Yet ye
say, Wherein hast thou loved us?’ (Mal 1:2). And,
indeed, if people once say to God, by way of doubt,
‘Wherein hast thou loved us?’ no marvel though
that people be like those in Malachi’s time, a
discontented, a murmuring, backward people about everything
that is good. Read that whole book of Malachi.
Second. If thou wouldst be faithful
to do that work that God hath allotted thee to do in this
world for his name, then labour to see a beauty and glory
in holiness, and in every good work: this tends much to the
engaging of thy heart. ‘O worship the Lord in the
beauty of holiness; fear before him, all the earth’
(Psa 96:9). And for thy help in this, think much on this in
general, that ‘Thus saith the Lord’ is the
wind-up of every command; for, indeed, much of the glory
and beauty of duties doth lie in the glory and excellency
of the person that doth command them; and hence it is that
‘Be it enacted by the King’s most excellent
Majesty’ is in the head of every law, because that
law should therefore be reverenced by, and be made glorious
and beautiful to all. And we see, upon this very account,
what power and place the precepts of kings do take in the
hearts of their subjects, every one loving and reverencing
the statute, because there is the name of their king. Will
you rebel against the king? is a word that shakes the
world.[14] Well, then, turn these things about
for an argument to the matter in hand, and let the name of
God, seeing he is wiser and better, and of more glory and
beauty than kings, beget in thy heart a beauty in all
things that are commanded thee of God. And, indeed, if thou
do not in this act thus, thou wilt stumble at some of thy
duty and work thou hast to do; for some of the commands of
God are, in themselves, so mean and low, that take away the
name of God from them, and thou wilt do as Naaman the
Syrian, despise, instead of obeying. What is there in the
Lord’s supper, in baptism, yea, in preaching the
Word, and prayer, were they not the appointments of God?
His name being entailed to them, makes them every one
glorious and beautiful. Wherefore, no marvel if he that
looks upon them without their title-page goeth away in a
rage, like Naaman, preferring others before them. What is
Jordan? ‘Are not Abana and Pharpar, rivers of
Damascus, better than all the waters of Israel; may I not
wash in them and be clean?’ saith he (2 Kings
5:10-12). This was because he remembered not that the name
of God was in the command. Israel’s trumpets of
ram’s horns (Josh 6:2-4), and Isaiah’s walking
naked (Isa 20:3), and Ezekiel’s wars against a tile
(Eze 4:1-4), would, doubtless, have been ignoble acts, but
that the name of God was that which gave them reverence,
power, glory, and beauty. Set therefore the name of God,
and ‘Thus saith the Lord,’ against all
reasonings, defamings, and reproaches, that either by the
world, or thy own heart, thou findest to arise against thy
duty, and let his name and authority alone be a sufficient
argument with thee, ‘to behold the beauty’ that
he hath put upon all his ways, ‘and to inquire in his
temple’ (Psa 27:4).
Third. Wouldst thou be faithful to do
that work that God hath appointed thee to do in this world
for his name? then make much of a trembling heart and
conscience; for though the Word be the line and rule
whereby we must order and govern all our actions, yet a
trembling heart and tender conscience is of absolute
necessity for our so doing. A hard heart can do nothing
with the word of Jesus Christ. ‘Hear the word of the
Lord, ye that tremble at his word’ (Isa 66:5).
‘Serve the Lord with fear, and rejoice with
trembling’ (Psa 2:11). I spake before against a
servile and slavish frame of spirit, therefore you must not
understand me here as if I meant now to cherish such a one;
no, it is a heart that trembleth for, or at the grace of
God; and a conscience made tender by the sprinkling of the
blood of Christ. Such a conscience as is awakened both by
wrath and grace, by the terror and the mercy of God; for it
stands with the spirit of a son to fear before his father;
yea, to fear chastings, though not to fear damnation. Let,
therefore, destruction from God be a terror to thy heart,
though not that destruction that attends them that perish
by sin for ever (Job 31:23). Though this I might add
further; it may do thee no harm, but good, to cast an eye
over thy shoulder at those that now lie roaring under the
vengeance of eternal fire; it may put thee in mind of what
thou wast once, and of what thou must yet assuredly be, if
grace by Christ preventeth not (Isa 66:24). Keep, then, thy
conscience awake with wrath and grace, with heaven and
hell; but let grace and heaven bear sway. Paul made much of
a tender conscience, else he had never done as he did, nor
suffered what we read of. ‘And herein,’ saith
he, ‘do I exercise myself, to have always a
conscience void of offence toward God and toward
men’ (Acts 24:16). But this could not a stony,
benumbed, bribed, deluded, or a muzzled conscience do. Paul
was like the nightingale with his breast against the
thorn.[15] That his heart might still keep
waking, he would accustom himself to the meditation of
those things that should beget both love and fear; and
would always be very chary, lest he offended his
conscience. ‘Herein do I exercise myself,’
&c. Be diligent, then, in this matter, if thou wouldst
be faithful with God. A tender conscience, to some people,
is like Solomon’s brawling woman, a burthen to those
that have it (Prov 25:24). But let it be to thee like those
that invited David to go up to the house of the Lord (Psa
122:1). Hear it, and cherish it with pleasure and
delight.
Fourth. If thou wouldst be faithful
to do that work that God hath appointed thee to do in this
world for his name; then let religion be the only business
to take up thy thoughts and time. ‘Whatsoever thy
hand findeth to do, do it with thy might’
(Eccl 9:10). With all thy heart, with all thy mind, and
with all thy strength. Religion, to most men, is but a
by-business, with which they use to fill up spare hours; or
as a stalking-horse, which is used to catch the
game.[16] How few are there in the world that
have their conversation ‘only as becometh the
gospel’! (Phil 1:27). A heart sound in God’s
statutes, a heart united to the fear of God, a heart
moulded and fashioned by the Word of God, is a rare thing;
rare, because it is hard to be found, and rare because it
is indeed the fruit of an excellent spirit, and a token of
one saved by the Lord (Psa 119:80, 86:11). But this
indifferency in religion, this fashioning ourselves in our
language, gesture, behaviour, and carriage, to the fancies
and fopperies of this world, as it is in itself much
unbecoming a people that should bear the name of their God
in their foreheads, so it cannot be but a very great and
sore obstruction to thy faithful walking with God in this
world (Rom 6:17). Gird up, then, thy loins like a
man,[17] let God and his Christ, and his Word,
and his people, and cause, be the chief in thy soul; and as
heretofore thou hast afforded this world the most of thy
time, and travel, and study, so now convert all these to
the use of religion. ‘As ye have yielded your members
servants to uncleanness, and to iniquity unto iniquity;
even so now yield your members servants to righteousness
unto holiness’ (Rom 6:19). Holy things must be in
every heart where this is faithfully put in
practice.
1. Daily bring thy heart and the Word of God
together, that thy heart may be levelled by it, and also
filled with it. The want of performing this sincerely, is a
great cause of that unfaithfulness that is in us to God.
Bring, then, thy heart to the Word daily, to try how thou
believest the Word today, to try how it agrees with the
Word today. This is the way to make clean work daily, to
keep thy soul warm and living daily. ‘Wherewithal
shall a young man cleanse his way?’ saith David.
‘By taking heed thereto according to thy
Word’ (Psa 119:9). So again, ‘Concerning the
works of men, by the word of thy lips, I have kept me
from the paths of the destroyer’ (Psa 17:4). And
again, ‘Thy Word have I hid in mine heart, that I
might not sin against thee’ (Psa 119:11). He that
delighteth ‘in the law of the Lord, and in his law
doth meditate day and night, he shall be like a tree
planted by the rivers of water, that bringeth forth his
fruit in his season; his leaf also shall not wither, and
whatsoever he doeth shall prosper’ (Psa
1:2,3).
2. A continual remembrance that to every day
thou hast thy work allotted thee; and that sufficient for
that day are the evils that attend thee (Matt 6:34). This
remembrance set Paul upon his watch daily; made him die to
himself and this world daily, and provoked him also daily
to wind up the spirit of his mind; transforming himself by
the power of the Word, from that proneness that was in his
flesh to carnal things (1 Cor 15:30-33). This will make
thee keep the knife at thy throat in all places, and
business, and company (Prov 23:2).
3. Let thy heart be more affected with what
concerns the honour of God, and the profit and glory of the
gospel, than with what are thy concernments as a man, with
all earthly advantages. This will make thee refuse things
that are lawful, if they appear to be inexpedient. Yea,
this will make thee, like the apostles of old, prefer
another man’s peace and edification before thine own
profit, and to take more pleasure in the increase of the
power of godliness in any, than in the increase of thy corn
and wine.
4. Reckon with thy own heart every day,
before thou lie down to sleep, and cast up both what thou
hast received from God, done for him, and where thou hast
also been wanting. This will beget praise and humility, and
put thee upon redeeming the day that is past; whereby thou
wilt be able, through the continual supplies of grace, in
some good measure to drive thy work before thee, and to
shorten it as thy life doth shorten; and mayst comfortably
live in the hope of bringing both ends sweetly together.
But to pass this.
Fifth. If thou wouldst be faithful to
do that work that God hath appointed thee to do in this
world for his name, then beware thou do not stop and stick
when hard work comes before thee. It is with Christians as
it is with other scholars, they sometimes meet with hard
lessons; but these thou must also learn, or thou canst not
do thy work. The Word and Spirit of God come sometimes like
chain-shot to us, as if it would cut down all; as when
Abraham was to offer up Isaac, and the Levites to slay
their brethren (Gen 22; Exo 32:26-28). Paul also must go
from place to place to preach, though he knew beforehand he
was to be afflicted there (Acts 20:23). God may sometimes
say to thee, as he said to his servant Moses, ‘Take
the serpent by the tail’; or, as the Lord Jesus said
to Peter, Walk upon the sea (Exo 4:3,4). These are hard
things, but have not been rejected when God hath called to
do them. O how willingly would our flesh and blood escape
the cross of Christ! The comforts of the gospel, the
sweetness of the promise, how pleasing is it to us! Like
Ephraim here, we love to tread out the corn (Hosea 10:11),
and to hear those pleasant songs and music that gospel
sermons make, where only grace is preached, and nothing of
our duty as to works of self-denial; but as for such, God
will tread upon their fair neck, and yoke them with
Christ’s yoke; for there they have a work to do, even
a work of self-denial.[18]
Now this work sometimes lieth in acts that
seem to be desperate, as when a man must both leave and
hate his life, and all he hath for Christ, or else he
cannot serve him nor be counted his disciple (Luke
14:26-33). Thus it seemed with Christ himself when he went
his fatal journey up to Jerusalem; he went thither, as he
knew, to die, and therefore trod every step as it were in
his own bowels;[19] but yet, no doubt, with
great temptation to shun and avoid that voyage; and
therefore it is said, ‘He set his face steadfastly to
go up,’ scorning to be invited to the contrary, and
to prevent the noise of his weak disciples, Master, save
thyself (Luke 9:51). It is said he ascended before them,
insomuch that they were amazed to see his resolution, while
they themselves were afraid of that dreadful effect that
might follow (Mark 10:32-34). Also when he came there, and
was to be apprehended, he went to the garden that Judas
knew, his old accustomed place; so when they asked him the
killing question, he answered, ‘I am he’
(John 18:1-5).
Sometimes in acts that seem to be foolish,
as when men deny themselves of those comforts, and
pleasures, and friendships, and honours, of the world that
formerly they used to have, and choose rather to associate
themselves with the very abjects of this
world[20]—I mean, such as carnal men count
so—counting their ways and manners of life, though
attended with a thousand calamities, more profitable, and
pleasing, and delightful, than all former glory. Thus
Elisha left his father’s house, though to pour water
upon the hands of Elijah (2 Kings 3:11). And thus the
disciples left their fathers’ ships and nets, to live
a beggarly life with Jesus Christ; as Paul did leave the
feet of Gamaliel for the whip, and the stocks, and the
deaths that attended the blessed gospel. One would have
thought that had been a simple way of Peter to leave all
for Christ, before he knew what Christ would give him, as
that 19th of Matthew seems to import; but Christ will have
it so (v 27). He that will save his life must lose it; and
he that will lose his life in this world for Christ, shall
keep it to life eternal (John 12:25). I might add many
things of this nature, to show you what hard chapters
sometimes God sets his best people; but thy work is, if
thou wouldst be faithful, not to stop nor stick at anything
(Matt 10:37). Some, when they come at the cross, they will
either there make a stop and go no further, or else, if
they can, they will step over it; if not, they will go
round about: do not thou do this, but take it up and kiss
it, and bear it after Jesus.[21] ‘God
forbid,’ saith Paul, ‘that I should glory, save
in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the world is
crucified unto me, and I unto the world’ (Gal
6:14).
Now, for thy better performing this piece of
service for our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ: O it is hard
work to pocket up the reproaches of all the foolish people,
as if we had found great spoil; and to suffer all their
revilings, lies, and slanders, without cursing them, as
Elisha did the children; to answer them with prayers and
blessings for their cursings. It is far more easy to give
them taunt for taunt, and reviling for reviling; to give
them blow for blow; yea, to call for fire from heaven
against them. But to ‘bless them that curse you, and
to pray for them that despitefully use you, and persecute
you’—even of malice, of old grudge, and on
purpose to vex and afflict our mind, and to make us break
out into a rage—this is work above us; now our
patience should look up to unseen things; now remember
Christ’s carriage to them that spilt his blood; or
all is in danger of bursting, and thou of miscarrying in
theses things. I might here also dilate upon Job’s
case, and the lesson God set him, when, at one stroke, he
did beat down all (Job 1:15), only spared his life, but
made that also so bitter to him that his soul chose
strangling rather than it (Job 7:15). O when every
providence of God unto thee is like the messengers of Job,
and the last to bring more heavy tidings than all that went
before him (Job 1); when life, estate, wife, children,
body, and soul, and all at once, seem to be struck at by
heaven and earth; here are hard lessons; now to behave
myself even as a weaned child, now to say, ‘The Lord
gave, and the Lord hath taken away, and blessed be the name
of the Lord’ (Job 1:21). Thus, with few words, Job
ascribeth righteousness to his Maker; but though they were
but few, they proceeded from so blessed a frame of heart,
that causeth the penman of the Word to stay himself and
wonder, saying, ‘In all this Job sinned not’
with his lips, ‘nor charged God foolishly.’ In
all this—what a great deal will the Holy Ghost make
of that which seems but little when it flows from an
upright heart! and it indeed may well be so accounted of
all that know what is in man, and what he is prone
unto.
1. Labour to believe that all these things
are tokens of the love of God (Heb 12:6; Rev 3:19). 2.
Remember often that thou art not the first that hath met
with these things in the world. ‘It hated me,’
saith Christ, ‘before it hated you’
(John 15:18). 3. Arm thyself with a patient and quiet mind
to bear and suffer for his sake (1 Peter 4:1-3). 4. Look
back upon thy provocations wherewith thou mayst have
provoked God (Deut 9:7; Lev 26:41,42); then wilt thou
accept of the punishment for thy sins, and confess it was
less than thine iniquities deserve (Ezra 9:13). 5. Pray
thou mayst hear the voice of the rod, and have a heart to
answer the end of God therein (Micah 6:9). 6. Remember the
promise— ‘All things work together for good to
them that love God, to them who are the called according to
his purpose’ (Rom 8:28).
Sixth. If thou wouldst be faithful to
do that work that God hath appointed thee to do in this
world for his name, then labour away to possess thy heart
with a right understanding, both of the things that this
world yieldeth, and of the things that shall be hereafter.
I am confident that most, if not all the miscarriages of
the saints and people of God, they have their rise from
deceivable thoughts here. The things of this world appear
to us more, and those that are to come less, than they are;
and hence it is that many are so hot and eager for things
that be in the world, and so cold and heartless for those
that be in heaven. Satan is here a mighty artist, and can
show us all earthly things in a multiplying glass; but when
we look up to things above, we see them as through
sackcloth of hair;[22] but take thou heed, be
not ruled by thy sensual appetite that can only savour
fleshly things, neither be thou ruled by carnal reason,
which always darkeneth the things of heaven. But go to the
Word, and as that says, so judge thou. That tells thee all
things under the sun are vanity, nay worse, vexation of
spirit (Eccl 1:2). That tells thee the world is not, even
then when it doth most appear to be; wilt thou set thine
heart upon that which is not? ‘for riches
certainly make themselves wings, they fly away as an
eagle toward heaven’ (Prov 23:5). The same may be
said for honours, pleasures, and the like; they are poor,
low, base things to be entertained by a Christian’s
heart. The man that hath most of them may ‘in the
fulness of his sufficiency be in straits’; yea,
‘when he is about to fill his belly with them,
God may cast the fury of his wrath upon him’ (Job
20:22,25); ‘so is he that layeth up treasure
for himself’ on earth, ‘and is not rich towards
God’ (Luke 12:20,21). A horse that is loaden with
gold and pearls all day, may have a foul stable and a
galled back at night. And woe be to him that increaseth
that which is not his, and that ladeth himself with thick
clay. O man of God, throw this bone to the dogs; suck not
at it, there is no marrow there (Heb 2:6). Set thine
affections on ‘things that are above, where Christ
sitteth on the right hand of God’ (Col 3:1-4). Behold
what God hath prepared for them that love him. And if God
hath blessed thee with ought, set not thine heart upon it;
honour the Lord with thy substance. Labour to ‘be
rich in good works, ready to distribute, willing to
communicate, laying up in store for themselves a good
foundation against the time to come, that they may lay hold
on eternal life’ (1 Tim 6:17-19). Further, to lighten
thine eyes a little, and,
1. Concerning the glory of the
world.
(1.) It is that which God doth mostly give
to those that are not his; for the poor receive the gospel;
not many rich, ‘not many mighty, not many noble
are called’ (1 Cor 1:26).
(2.) Much of this world and its glory is
permitted of God to be disposed of by the devil, and he is
called both the prince and god thereof (John 14:30; 2 Cor
4:4). Yea, when Satan told Christ he could give it to whom
he would, Christ did not say, Thou liest, but answered, by
the Word, ‘It is written thou shalt worship the Lord
thy God, and him only shalt thou serve’ (Luke 4:6-8).
Implying also, that commonly when men get much of the
honours and glory of this world, it is by bending the knee
too low to the prince and god thereof.
(3.) The nature of the best of worldly
things, if hankered after, is to deaden the spirit (Rom
8:6,7), to estrange the heart from God, to pierce thee
through with many sorrows, and to drown thee in perdition
and destruction (1 John 2:15). ‘O man of God, flee
those things, and follow after righteousness, godliness,
faith, love, patience, meekness’; and ‘Fight
the good fight, lay hold on eternal life, whereunto thou
art also called,’ &c. (1 Tim 6:9-12).
2. As to the things of God, what
shall I say? the things of his Word, and Spirit, and
kingdom, they so far go beyond the conceivings of the heart
of man, that none can utter them but by the Holy Spirit;
but there is no deceit in them; ‘no lie is of the
truth,’ what they promise they will perform with
additions of amazing glory (1 John 2:21). Taste them first,
and then thou shalt see them. ‘O’ come
‘taste and see that the Lord is good: blessed
is the man that trusteth in him’ (Psa
34:8). To stoop low is a good work, which is an act of
thine, if it be done in faith and love, though but by a cup
of cold water; it is really more worth in itself, and of
higher esteem with God, than all worldly and perishing
glory; there is no comparison, the one perisheth with the
using, and for the other is laid up ‘a far more
exceeding and eternal weight of glory’ (2 Cor
4:17). But again, as thou shouldst labour to possess thy
heart with a right understanding of the perishing nature of
the riches and pleasures of this world, and of the durable
riches and righteousness that is in Christ, and all
heavenly things; so thou shouldst labour to keep always in
thy eye what sin is, what hell is, what the wrath of God
and everlasting burnings are. Transfer them to thyself, as
it were on a finger,[23] that thou mayst learn
to think of nothing more highly than is meet, but to give
to what thou beholdst their own due weight; then thou wilt
fear where thou shouldst fear, love what is worthy thy
love, and slight that which is of no worth. These are just
weights, and even balances; now thou dealest not with
deceitful weights; and this is the way to be rich in good
works, and to bring thy work, that God hath appointed, to a
good issue against thy dying day.
Seventh. But again, if thou wouldst
be faithful to do that work that God hath appointed thee to
do in this world, for his name, then beware that thou slip
not, or let pass by, the present opportunity that
providence layeth before thee. Work while it is called
today, ‘the night cometh when no man can work’
(John 9:4). In that parable of the man that took a far
journey, it is said, as he gave to every servant his work,
so he ‘commanded the porter to watch’; that is,
for his Lord’s coming back, and in the mean time, for
all opportunities to perform the work he left in their
hand, and committed unto their trust (Mark
13:34,35).[24] Seest thou the poor? seest thou
the fatherless? seest thou thy foe in distress? draw out
thy breast, shut not up thy bowels of compassion, deal thy
bread to the hungry, bring the poor that are cast out into
thine house, hide not thyself from thine own flesh, take
the opportunity that presents itself to thee, either by the
eye or the hearing of the ear, or by some godly motion that
passeth over thy heart (Isa 58:7; Rom 12:20). ‘Say
not’ to such messengers, ‘go, and come again
tomorrow; if thou hast it by thee’; now the
opportunity is put into thy hand, delay not to do it, and
the Lord be with thee! (Prov 3:28). Good opportunities are
God’s seasons for the doing of thy work; wherefore
watch for them, and take them as they come. Paul tells us
‘he was in watchings often’ (2 Cor 11:26,27);
surely it was that he might take the season that God should
give him to do this work for him; as he also saith to
Timothy, ‘Watch thou in all things, - do the
work,’ &c. Opportunities as to some things come
but once in one’s lifetime, as in the case of Esther,
and of Nicodemus, and holy Joseph; when Esther begged the
life of the Jews, and the other the body of Jesus; which
once had they let slip or neglected, they could not have
recovered it again for ever. Watch then for the
opportunity. 1. Because it is God’s season; which,
without doubts, is the best season and time for every
purpose (Eccl 3:11). 2. Because Satan watches to spoil, by
mistiming as well as by corrupting whatever thou shalt do
for God. ‘When I would do good,’ saith Paul,
‘evil is present,’ that is, either to withdraw
me from my purpose, or else to infect my work (Rom 7:21).
3. This is the way to be profitable unto others. Thy
wickedness may hurt a man, as thou art, and
thy righteousness may profit the son of man (Job
35:8). 4. This is also the way to be doing good to thyself
(Job 22:2). ‘He that watereth shall be watered
himself’ (Prov 11:25). ‘Cast thy bread upon the
waters, for thou shalt find it after many days’ (Eccl
11:1; Deut 15:10). As God said to Coniah, ‘Did not
thy father eat and drink, and do judgment and justice,
and then it was well with him? He judged the
cause of the poor and needy, then it was well
with him’ (Jer 22:15,16).
And I say, that the opportunity may not slip
thee, either for want of care or provision, (1.) Sit always
loose from an overmuch affecting thine own concernments,
and believe that thou wast not born for thyself; ‘a
brother is born for adversity’ (Prov 17:17). (2.) Get
thy heart tenderly affected with the welfare and prosperity
of all things that bear the stamp and image of God (2 Cor
11:29). (3.) Study thy own place and capacity that God hath
put thee in, in this world; for suitable to thy place thy
work and opportunities are (1 Cor 7:24). (4.) Make
provision beforehand, that when things present themselves
thou mayst come up to a good performance; be
‘prepared to every good work’ (2 Tim 2:21).
(5.) Take heed of carnal reasonings, keep thy heart tender;
but set thy face like a flint for God (Gal 1:9). (6.) And
look well to the manner of every duty.
Eighth. Wouldst thou be faithful to
do that work that God hath appointed thee to do in this
world for his name? believe then, that whatever good thing
thou dost for him, if done according to the Word, it is not
only accepted by him now, but recorded, to be remembered
for thee, against the time to come; yea, laid up for thee
as treasure in chests and coffers, to be brought out to be
rewarded before both men and angels, to thy eternal
comfort, by Jesus Christ our Lord. ‘Lay not
up,’ saith Christ, ‘treasures upon earth, where
moth and rust doth corrupt, and where thieves break through
and steal; but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven,
where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt, and where thieves
do not break through nor steal’ (Matt 6:19,20). The
treasure that here our Lord commands we should with
diligence lay up in heaven, is found both in Luke, and
Paul, and Peter, to be meant by doing good work.
1. Luke renders it thus, ‘Sell that ye
have and give alms; provide yourselves bags which wax not
old, a treasure in the heavens that faileth not, where no
thief approacheth, neither moth corrupteth,’ the
latter part of the verse expounding the former (Luke
12:33).
2. Paul saith thus, ‘Charge them that
are rich in this world, that they be not high-minded, nor
trust in uncertain riches, but in the living God, who
giveth us richly all things to enjoy: that they do good,
that they be rich in good works, ready to distribute,
willing to communicate: laying up in store for themselves a
good foundation against the time to come, that they may lay
hold on eternal life’ (1 Tim 6:17,19).
3. Peter also acknowledgeth and asserteth
this, where, in his exhortation to elders to do their duty
faithfully, and with cheerfulness, he affirms, if they do
so, they ‘shall receive a crown of glory that fadeth
not away’ (1 Peter 5:2-4); which Paul also calleth a
reward for cheerful work (1 Cor 9:17; 2 Tim 4:2). And that
as an act of justice by the hand of a righteous judge, in
the day when the Lord shall come to give reward to his
servants the prophets, and to his saints, and to all that
fear his name, small and great; for ‘every man shall
receive his own reward, according to his own labour’
(1 Cor 3:8).
[Objections
answered.]
But before I go any further, I must answer
three objections that may be made by those that read this
book.
The First Objection. The first is
this; some godly heart may say, I dare not own that what I
do shall ever be regarded, much less rewarded by God in
another world because of the unworthiness of my person, and
because of the many infirmities and sinful weaknesses that
attend me every day.
Answer. This objection is built
partly upon a bashful modesty, partly upon ignorance, and
partly upon unbelief. My answer to it is as
followeth.
You must remind and look back to what but
now hath been proved, namely, That both Christ and his
apostles do all agree in this, that there is a reward for
the righteous, and that their good deeds are laid up as
treasures for them in heaven, and are certainly to be
bestowed upon them in the last day with abundance of
eternal glory. 2. Now then, to speak to thy case, and to
remove the bottom of thy objection, that the unworthiness
of thy person, and thy sinful infirmities, that attend thee
in every duty, do make thee think thy works shall not be
either regarded or rewarded in another world. But consider,
first, as to the unworthiness of thy person. They that are
in Christ Jesus are always complete before God, in the
righteousness that Christ hath obtained, how infirm, and
weak, and wicked soever they appear to themselves. Before
God, therefore, in this righteousness thou standest all the
day long, and that upon a double account; first, by the act
of faith, because thou hast believed in him that thou
mightest be justified by the righteousness of Christ; but
if this fail, I mean the act of believing, still thou
standest justified by God’s imputing this
righteousness to thee, which imputation standing purely
upon the grace and good pleasure of God to thee, that holds
thee still as just before God, though thou wantest at
present the comfort thereof. Thus, therefore, thy person
stands always acccepted; and, indeed, no man’s works
can at all be regarded, if his person, in the first place,
be not respected. The Lord had respect first to Abel, and
after to his offering (Gen 4:4; Heb 11:4). But he can have
respect to no man before works done, unless he find them in
the righteousness of Christ; for they must be accepted
through a righteousness, which, because they have none of
their own, therefore they have one of God’s imputing,
even that of his Son, which he wrought for us when he was
born of the Virgin, &c. As to thy sinful infirmities
that attend thee in every work, they cannot hinder thee
from laying up treasure in heaven, thy heart being upright
in the way with God; nor will he be unrighteous at all to
forget thy good deeds in the day when Christ shall come
from heaven.
1. Because by the same reason then he must
disown all the good works of all his prophets and apostles;
for they have all been attended with weaknesses and sinful
infirmities; from the beginning hitherto there is not a
man, ‘not a just man upon earth, that doeth good and
sinneth not’ (Eccl 7:20). The best of our works are
accompanied with sin: ‘When I would do good,’
saith Paul, ‘evil is present with me’ (Rom
7:21). This, therefore, must not hinder. And for thy
further satisfaction in this, consider, as Christ presents
thy person before God, acceptable without thy works, freely
and alone by his righteousness, so his office is to take
away the iniquity of thy holy things, that they also by him
may be accepted of God (Exo 28:36-38; 1 Peter 2:5).
Wherefore, it is further said, for the encouragement of the
weak and feeble, He shall not break a bruised reed, nor
quench the smoking flax, but shall bring forth judgment
unto victory (Matt 12:20). The bruised reed, you know, is
weak; and by bruises we should understand sinful
infirmities. And so also concerning the smoking flax; by
smoking you must understand sinful weakness; but none of
these shall either hinder the justification of thy person,
or the acceptation of thy performance, they being done in
faith and love, let thy temptations be never so many,
because of Jesus Christ his priestly office now at the
right hand of God. By him, therefore, let us offer
spiritual sacrifices; for they shall be acceptable to God
and our Father.
2. Because otherwise God and Christ would
prove false to their own word, which is horrible blasphemy
once to imagine; who hath promised that when the Son of God
shall come to judgment, he shall render to ‘every man
according to his work’ (Rev 22:12); and doth upon
this very account encourage his servants to a patient
enduring of the hottest persecutions: ‘for great
is your reward in heaven’ (Matt 5:12; Luke
6:23,35; Matt 6:1, 10:41,42). From this also he bindeth his
saints and servants to be sincerely liberal, and good, and
kind to all; first, because otherwise, they have no reward
of their Father which is in heaven, that is, for what they
do not; but if they do it, then, though it be but a cup of
cold water given to a prophet or righteous man, they shall
receive a prophet’s reward, a righteous man’s
reward; yea, they shall receive it in any wise, ‘they
shall in no wise lose their reward.’
3. It must be so, otherwise he should deny a
reward to the works and operations of his own good grace he
hath freely bestowed upon us; but that he will not do. He
is not unfaithful to forget your work of faith and labour
of love (Heb 6:10). And so of all other graces, ‘our
work shall not be in vain in the Lord’ (1 Cor 4:58).
And, as I said before, temptations, weaknesses, and sins,
shall not hinder the truly gracious of this their blessed
reward. Nay, they shall further it, ‘if need be, ye
are in heaviness, through manifold temptations; that the
trial of your faith being much more precious than of gold
that perisheth, might be found unto praise, and honour, and
glory, at the appearing of Jesus Christ’ (1 Peter
1:6,7). And the reason is, because the truth and sincerity
of God’s grace in us doth so much the more discover
itself, by how much it is opposed and resisted by weakness
and sin. It is recorded to the everlasting renown of three
of David’s mighties, that they would break through a
host of giant-like enemies, to fetch water for their
longing king; for it bespake their valour, their love, and
good-will to him; the same also is true concerning thy
graces, and every act of them when assaulted with an host
of weaknesses (1 Chron 11:12,15-18).
The Second Objection. And now I come
to the second objection, and that ariseth from our being
completely justified freely by the grace of God through
Christ; and by the same means alone brought to glory; and
may be framed thus:—but seeing we are freely
justified, and brought to glory by free grace, through the
redemption that is in Jesus Christ; and seeing the glory
that we shall be possessed of upon the account of the Lord
Jesus, is both full and complete, both for happiness and
continuing therein, what need will there be that our work
should be rewarded? Nay, may not the doctrine of reward for
good works be here not only needless, but indeed an
impairing and lessening the completeness of that glory to
which we are brought, and in which we shall live
inconceivably happy for ever, by free grace?
Answer. That we are justified in the
sight of the Divine Majesty, from the whole lump of our
sins, both past, present, and to come, by free grace,
through that one offering of the body of Jesus Christ, once
for all, I bless God I believe it, and that we shall be
brought to glory by the same grace, through the same most
blessed Jesus, I thank God by his grace I believe that
also. Again, that the glory to which we shall be brought by
free grace, through the only merits of Jesus, is
unspeakably glorious and complete, I question no more than
I question the blessed truths but now confessed. But yet,
notwithstanding all this, there is a reward for the
righteous, a reward for their works of faith and love,
whether in a doing or a suffering way, and that not
principally to be enjoyed here, but hereafter; ‘great
is your reward in heaven,’ as I proved in the answer
to the first objection. And now I shall answer
further:—
1. If this reward had been an impairing or
derogation to the free grace of God that saveth us, he
would never have mentioned it for our encouragement unto
good works, nor have added a promise of reward for them
that do them, nor have counted himself unfaithful if he
should not do it.
2. The same may be said concerning Jesus
Christ, who doubtless loveth and tendereth the honour of
his own merits, as much as any who are saved by him can do,
whether they be in heaven or earth; yet he hath promised a
reward to a cup of cold water, or giving of any other alms;
and hath further told us, they that do these things, they
do lay up treasure in heaven, namely, a reward when their
Lord doth come, then to be received by them to their
eternal comfort.
3. Paul was as great a maintainer of the
doctrine of God’s free grace, and of justification
from sin, by the righteousness of Christ imputed by grace,
as any he that ever lived in Christ’s service, from
the world’s beginning till now: and yet he was for
this doctrine; he expected himself, and encouraged others
also to look for such a reward, for doing and suffering for
Christ, which he calls ‘a far more exceeding
and eternal weight of glory’ (2 Cor 4:17).
Surely, as Christ saith, in a case not far distant from
this in hand, ‘if it were not so, he
would have told us’ (John 14:1-3). Now could I tell
what those rewards are that Christ hath prepared, and will
one day bestow upon those that do for him in faith and love
in this world, I should therein also say more than now I
dare or ought; yet this let me say in general, they are
such as should make us leap to think on, and that we should
remember with exceeding joy, and never think that it is
contrary to the Christian faith, to rejoice and be glad for
that which yet we understand not (Matt 5:11,12; Luke 6:23).
‘Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and it doth not
yet appear what we shall be,’ &c. But
‘every man that hath this hope in him,’ namely,
that he shall be more than here he can imagine,
‘purifieth himself even as he is pure’ (1 John
3:2,3). Things promised when not revealed to be known by us
while here, are therefore not made known, because too big
and wonderful. When Paul was up in paradise, he heard
unspeakable words not possible for man to utter (2 Cor
12:3,4). Wherefore, a reward I find, and that laid up in
heaven, but what it is I know not, neither is it possible
for any here to know it any further, than by certain
general words of God, such as these, praise, honour, glory,
a crown of righteousness, a crown of glory, thrones,
judging of angels, a kingdom, with a far more exceeding and
eternal weight of glory, &c. (1 Cor 4:5; 1 Peter 1:7; 2
Tim 4:8; 1 Peter 5:4; Matt 25:34-36). Wherefore, to both
these objections, let me yet answer thus a few words.
Though thy modesty or thy opinion will not suffer thee to
look for a reward for what thou dost here for thy Lord, by
the faith and love of the gospel; yea, though in the day of
judgment thou shouldst there slight all thou didst on earth
for thy Lord, saying, When, Lord, when did we do it? he
will answer, Then, even then when ye did it to the least of
these my brethren, ye did it unto me (Matt
25:37-40).
The Third Objection. But is not the
reward that God hath promised to his saints, for their good
works to be enjoyed only here?
Answer. 1. For concerning holy
walking, according to God’s command, yieldeth even
here abundance of blessed fruits, as he saith, ‘in
keeping of them there is great reward,’ and
again, ‘this man shall be blessed in his deed,’
that is, now, even in this time, as he saith in another
place; for indeed there is so much goodness and blessedness
to be found in a holy and godly life, that were a man to
have nothing hereafter, the present comfort and glory that
lieth as the juice in the grape, in all things rightly done
for God, it were sufficient to answer all our travail and
self-denial in our work of faith and labour of love, to do
the will of God.[25]
2. Dost thou love thy friends, dost thou
love thine enemies, dost thou love thy family or relations,
or the church of God? then cry for strength from heaven,
and for wisdom, and a heart from heaven to walk wisely
before them. For if a man be remiss, negligent, and
careless in his conversation, not much mattering whom he
offends, displeases, or discourages, by doing this or that,
so he may save himself, please his foolish heart, and get
this world, or the like, this man hath lost a good report
of them that are without, and is fallen into reproach and
the snare of the devil (1 Tim 3:7). He is fallen into
reproach, and is slighted, disdained, both he, his
profession, and all he says, either by way of reproof,
rebuke, or exhortation: physician, cure thyself, say all to
such a one; this man is a sayer, but not a doer, say they;
he believeth not what he says; yea, religion itself is made
to stink by this man’s ungodly life. This is he that
hardens his children, that stumbleth the world, that
grieveth the tender and godly Christian; but I say, he that
walketh uprightly, that tenders[26] the name of
God, the credit of the gospel, and the welfare of others,
seeking with Paul, not his own profit, but the profit of
others, that they may be saved; this man holds forth the
Word of life, this man is a good savour of Christ amongst
them that are saved; yea, may prove, by so doing, the
instrument in God’s hand of the salvation of many
souls.
3. This is the way to be clear from the
blood of all men, the way not to be charged with the ruin
and everlasting misery of poor immortal souls. Great is the
danger that attends an ungodly life, or an ungodly action,
by them that profess the gospel (Jer 2:33). When wicked men
learn to be wicked of professors, when professors cause the
enemies of God to blaspheme, doubtless sad and woeful
effects must needs be the fruit of so doing (2 Sam 12:14).
How many in Israel were destroyed for that which Aaron,
Gideon, and Manasseh, unworthily did in their day? (Exo
32:25; Judg 8:24-27). A godly man, if he take not heed to
himself, may do that in his life that may send many to
everlasting burnings, when he himself is in everlasting
bliss. But on the contrary, let men walk with God, and
there they shall be excused; the blood of them that perish
shall lie at their own door, and thou shalt be clear.
‘I am pure from the blood of all
men,’ saith Paul (Acts 20:26). And again,
‘your blood be upon your own heads, I am
clean’ (Acts 18:6). Yea, he that doth thus, shall
leave in them that perish an accusing conscience, even
begotten by his good conversation, and by that they shall
be forced to justify God, his people, and way, in the day
of their visitation; in the day when they are descending
into the pit to the damned (1 Peter 2:12).
4. This is the way to maintain always the
answer, the echoing answer of a good conscience in thy own
soul. Godliness is of great use in this way; for the man
that hath a good conscience to Godward, hath a continual
feast in his own soul: while others say there is casting
down, he shall say there is lifting up; for he shall save
the humble person (Job 22:23-30). Some indeed, in the midst
of their profession, are reproached, smitten, and condemned
of their own heart, their conscience still biting and
stinging of them, because of the uncleanness of their
hands, and they cannot lift up their face unto God; they
have not the answer of a good conscience toward him, but
must walk as persons false to their God, and as traitors to
their own eternal welfare; but the godly upright man shall
have the light shine upon his ways, and he shall take his
steps in butter and honey. ‘The work of righteousness
shall be peace, and the effect of righteousness, quietness
and assurance for ever’ (Isa 32:17). ‘If our
heart condemn us, God is greater than our heart, and
knoweth all things; beloved, if our heart condemn us not,
then have we confidence toward God’ (1 John
3:20-22).
5. The godly man that walketh with God, that
chiefly careth to do the work that God hath allotted him to
do for his name in this world, he hath not only these
advantages, but further, he hath as it were a privilege of
power with God, he can sway much with him; as it is said of
Jacob, as a prince he had power with God to prevail in
times of difficulty (Gen 32:28). And so again, it is said
of Judah, being faithful with the saints, he ruled with God
(Hosea 11:12). How many times did that good man Moses turn
away the wrath of God from the many thousands of Israel;
yea, as it were, he held the hands of God, and staved off
the judgments not once nor twice; the effectual fervent
prayer of a righteous man availeth much (2 Sam 5:10). One
man that walketh much with God, may work wonders in this
very thing; he may be a means of saving whole countries and
kingdoms from those judgments their sins deserve. How many
times, when Israel provoked the Lord to anger, did he yet
defer to destroy them? and the reason of that forbearance,
he tells them it was for David’s sake; for my servant
David’s sake I will not do it. As the Lord said also
concerning Paul, ‘Lo, God hath given thee all them
that sail with thee’; that is, to save their lives
from the rage of the sea (Acts 27:24). Yea, when a judgment
is not only threatened, but the decree gone forth for its
execution, then godly upright men may sometimes cause the
very decree itself to cease without bringing forth (Zech
2:1-3). Or else may so time the judgment that is decreed,
that the church shall best be able to bear it (Matt
24:20).
6. The man that is tender of God’s
glory in this world, still ruling and governing his affairs
by the Word, and desirous to be faithful to the work and
employment that God hath appointed him to do for his name;
that man shall still be let into the secrets of God; he
shall know that which God will reserve and hide from many;
‘Shall I hide from Abraham that thing which I
do,’ saith the Lord?— ‘For I know him,
that he will command his children and his household after
him, and they shall keep the way of the Lord,’
&c. (Gen 18:17,19). So again, ‘The secret of the
Lord is with them that fear him; and he will shew
them his covenant’ (Psa 25:14). ‘And to him
that ordereth his conversation aright, will I
shew the salvation of God’ (Psa 50:23). Such a man
shall have things new as well as old. His converse with the
Father, and the Son, and the Spirit, shall be turned into a
kind of familiarity; he shall be led into the Word, and
shall still increase in knowledge: when others shall be
stinted and look with old faces, being black and dry as a
stick, he shall be like a fatted calf, like the tree that
is planted by the rivers of water, his flesh shall be fresh
as the flesh of a child, and God will renew the face of his
soul.
7. If any escape public calamities, usually
they are such as are very tender of the name of God, and
that make it their business to walk before him. They either
escape by being mercifully taken away before it, or by
being safely preserved in the midst of the judgment, until
the indignation be overpast. Therefore God saith in one
place, the ‘righteous are taken away from the evil
to come’ (Isa 57:1). But if not so, as all be
not, then they shall have their life for a prey (Jer
39:15-18). Caleb and Joshua escaped all the plagues that
befel to Israel in the wilderness, for they followed God
(Num 14:24). Somewhat of this you have also in that
scripture, ‘Seek ye the Lord all ye meek of the
earth, which have wrought his judgment; seek righteousness,
seek meekness, it may be, ye shall be hid in the day of the
Lord’s anger’ (Zeph 2:3). According to this is
that in Luke, ‘Watch ye, therefore, and pray always,
that ye may be accounted worthy to escape all these things
that shall come to pass, and to stand before the Son of
man’ (Luke 21:36). When a man’s ways please the
Lord, he will make his enemies to be at peace with him.
Marvellous is the work of God in the preservation of his
saints that are faithful with him, when dangers and
calamities come; as Joseph, David, Jeremiah, and Paul, with
many others, may appear. ‘He shall deliver thee in
six troubles; yea, in seven there shall no evil touch thee.
In famine he shall redeem thee from death; and in war from
the power of the sword. Thou shalt be hid from the scourge
of the tongue; neither shalt thou be afraid of destruction
when it cometh’ (Job 5:19-21).
8. If afflictions do overtake thee, for whom
the Lord loveth he chasteneth, and scourgeth every son whom
he receiveth, yet those afflictions shall not befal thee
for those causes for which they befal the slothful and
backsliding Christian; neither shall they have that
pinching and galling operation upon thee, as on those who
have left their first love and tenderness for God’s
glory in the world.
(1.) Upo