Biblical Illustrator Be ye therefore followers of God, as dear children. The apostle urges us to give and forgive. If ye be imitators of God, give, for He is always giving.I. CONSIDER THE PRECEPT here laid down — "Be ye imitators of God, as clear children." 1. I note upon this precept, first, that it calls us to practical duty. In this instance there can be no cavil at the too spiritual, sentimental, or speculative character of the text; there can be no question as to the eminently practical character of the exhortation — "Be ye imitators of God, as dear children," for it points to action. "Be ye imitators" — that is, do not only meditate upon God, and think that you have done enough, but go on to copy what you study. 2. Next, this precept treats us as children, treats us as what we are; and if we are lowly in heart we shall be thankful that it is worded as it is. If you are not His children you cannot imitate Him, and you will not even desire to do so. 3. Observe next, that while it thus humbles us, this precept ennobles us; for what a grand thing it is to be imitators of God! It is an honour to be the lowliest follower of such a Leader. Time has been when men gloried in studying Homer, and their lives were trained to heroism by his martial verse. Alexander carried the Iliad about with him in a casket studded with jewels, and his military life greatly sprung out of his imitation of the warriors of Greece and Troy. Ours is a nobler ambition by far than that which delights in battles; we desire to imitate the God of peace, whose name is love. In after ages, when men began to be a less savage race, and contests of thought were carried on by the more educated class of minds, thousands of men gloried in being disciples of the mighty Stagyrite, the renowned Aristotle. He reigned supreme over the thought of men for centuries, and students slavishly followed him till a greater arose, and set free the human mind by a more true philosophy. To this day, however, our cultured men remain copyists, and you can see a fashion in philosophy as well as in clothes. Some of these imitations are so childish as to be deplorable. It is no honour to imitate a poor example. But, oh, beloved, he who seeks to imitate his God has a noble enterprize before him: he shall rise as on eagle's wings. O angels, what happier task could be laid before you? 4. While it ennobles us, this precept tests us.(1) It tests our knowledge. He who does not know God, cannot possibly imitate Him.(2) It tests our love. If we love God, love will constrain us to imitate Him. We readily grow somewhat like that which we love.(3) It tests our sincerity. If a man is not really a Christian he will take no care about his life; but in the matter of close copying a man must be careful; a watchful care is implied in the idea of imitation.(4) It tests us as to our spirit, whether it be of the law or of the gospel. "Be ye imitators of God, as dear children": not as slaves might imitate their master, unwillingly, dreading the crack of his whip; but loving, willing imitators, such as children are. You do not urge your children to imitate you; they do this even in their games. See how the boy rides his wooden horse, and the girl imitates her nurse. You see the minister's little boy trying to preach like his father; and you all remember the picture of the tiny girl with a Bible in front of her and an ancient pair of spectacles upon her nose, saying, "Now I'm grandmamma." They copy us by force of nature: they cannot help it. Such will be the holiness of the genuine Christian. Holiness must be spontaneous, or it is spurious. 5. While it tests us, this precept greatly aids us. It is a fine thing for a man to know what he has to do, for then he is led in a plain path because of his enemies. What a help it is to have a clear chart, and a true compass! Creatures cannot imitate their Creator in His Divine attributes, but children may copy their Father in His moral attributes. By the aid of His Divine Spirit we can copy our God in His justice, righteousness, holiness, purity, truth, and faithfulness. 6. Another blessing is that it backs us up in our position; for if we do a thing because we are imitating God, if any raise an objection it does not trouble us, much less are we confounded. He who follows God minds not what the godless think of his way of life. 7. This precept is greatly for our usefulness. I do not know of anything which would make us so useful to our fellow men as this would do. I have heard of an atheist who said he could get over every argument except the example of his godly mother: he could never answer that. A genuinely holy Christian is a beam of God's glory, and a testimony to the being and the goodness of God. 8. A close imitation of God would make our religion honourable. The ungodly might still hate it, but they could not sneer at it. II. Secondly, I invite you, dear friends, as we are helped of God's Spirit, to WEIGH THE ARGUMENT. The argument is this, "Be ye imitators of God, as dear children." First, as children. It is the natural tendency of children to imitate their parents: yet there are exceptions, for some children are the opposite of their fathers, perhaps displaying the vices of a remoter ancestor. Absalom did not imitate David, nor was Rehoboam a repetition of Solomon. In the case of God's children it is a necessity that they should be like their Father; for it is a rule in spirituals that like begets its like. I say to any man here who bears the name of Christian and professes to be a child of God, either be like your Father or give up your name. You remember the old classic story of a soldier in Alexander's army whose name was Alexander, but when the battle was raging he trembled. Then Alexander said to him, "How canst thou bear the name of Alexander? Drop thy cowardice or drop thy name." Be like Christ, or be not called a Christian. The argument, then, is that if we are children we should imitate our Father; but it is also said "as dear children." Read it as "children beloved." Is not this a tender but mighty argument? How greatly has God loved us in that He permits us to be His children at all. III. Next, I desire to SUGGEST ENCOURAGEMENTS. 1. God has already made you His children. The greater work He has Himself done for you; that which remains is but your reasonable service. 2. God has given you His nature already. It only remains for you to let the new nature act after its own manner. 3. The Lord has given you His blessed Spirit to help you. 4. The Lord allows you to commune with Himself. If we had to imitate a man, and yet could not see him, we should find it hard work; but in this case we can draw nigh unto God. You know the Persian story of the scented clay. One said to it, "Clay, whence hast thou thy delicious perfume?" It answered: "I was aforetime nothing but a piece of common clay, but I lay long in the sweet society of a rose till I drank in its fragrance and became perfumed myself." IV. CERTAIN INFERENCES. 1. God is ready to forgive those who have offended Him. 2. God is an example to us, therefore He will surely keep His word. He must be faithful and true, for you are bidden to copy Him. 3. Another inference — only a hint at it — is, if you are told to be "imitators of God, as dear children," then you may depend upon it the Lord is a dear Father. 4. Lastly, when the text says, "Be ye imitators of God," it bids us keep on imitating Him as long as we live: therefore I conclude that God will always be to us what He is. (C. H. Spurgeon.) 1. We were originally created in the Divine image and likeness; and it is God's design to restore us to it. 2. Several things must precede this. (1) (2) (3) 3. There are some great and important points in which we never shall resemble God — in which it would be impiety even to attempt it. (1) (2) (3) 4. Still there are several points in which we may, and must, resemble God. (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) II. THE MANNER IN WHICH THIS IS TO BE ACCOMPLISHED. 1. There is God's part in this matter. He must give us grace; and He has promised to do so. 2. Our part. (1) (2) (3) (4) (James Stratten.)
(H. J. Wilmot-Buxton, M. A.)
1. In character. So far as revealed to us, we may imitate the character of God. 2. In desire. We may be actuated by the same desires as actuate the Almighty. 3. In feeling. God hates sin. To follow is more than to profess. It is carrying into action the principles of Christian life. It must be — (1) (2) (3) (4) II. THE PLEA BY WHICH IT IS URGED — "as dear children." 1. Children will follow their parents from love and respect. 2. Children will follow their parents from a desire to gain their approval. 3. Children follow their parents in order that they may fit and prepare themselves, when grown up, for the same sphere and position of life. So with the Christian. He is looking forward to the period of his maturity when he shall be like his. Father in heaven. (Preacher's Analyst.)
1. The spirit, therefore, in which such men ought to comply with the exhortation is, in the first place, the spirit of reverence and humble subjection to the Divine law. 2. But, I observe, that the spirit expressed in the text — the spirit in which we should comply with the exhortation, is the spirit of grateful, cheerful compliance with the will of God, as dear and beloved children. The love of children to an earthly father is always conjoined with admiration of the virtues of the father, and a desire to imitate him. 3. In the last place, the spirit in which the exhortation ought to be obeyed is the spirit of humble dependence for grace from God to help us. The spirit or disposition of children is the spirit of conscious weakness and dependence. (P. McFarlan, D. D.)
1. Negatively. This following and resembling of God standeth not in His natural, but moral perfections. God doth not say, Be ye strong, as I am strong, or, Be ye happy, as I am happy; but, Be ye holy, as I am holy; merciful, as I am merciful. Our loss by sin is more in point of goodness than of power and knowledge. 2. Positively. The chiefest excellencies are — (1) (2) 2. He hath given us the example of Christ, or God in our nature, who came for this end and purpose, that we, who cannot fathom the unsearchable depth of the Godhead, might see the Divine perfections shining forth in the human nature of Christ, who was the character and express image of His Divine glory (Hebrews 1:3): Christ was "holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners" (Hebrews 7:26). They that cannot directly look on the sun may see the motion of it in a basin of water. To express an image, there must be similitude or likeness, and a means of deduction or conveying the likeness. II. WHAT PROVISION GOD HATH MADE THAT WE MAY BE FOLLOWERS OF HIM. 1. He hath given us His Word to stamp His image upon our souls. 2. He hath given us the example of Christ, or God in our nature. 3. He hath given us His spirit to change us into the likeness of Christ (2 Corinthians 3:18). None else is able to renew us to the image of God, there being such an averseness in man's heart, which cannot be cured by our bare thoughts. III. I PROVE THE POINT BY THESE REASONS. 1. This image of God was our primitive glory and excellency. "Let us make man in Our image, after Our likeness." (Genesis 1:26). 2. This is the effect, of our new creation and regeneration; for it is said (2 Peter 1:4), that to us are given exceeding great and precious promises, that by these you might be partakers of the Divine nature, Nothing so like Him as the new creature. 3. This is that which we hope shall be completed in heaven, and therefore it must be endeavoured here. "We shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is" (1 John 3:2; Psalm 17:15). The heaven that we look fro' is such a vision as maketh way for assimilation, and such an assimilation to God as maketh way for complete satisfaction and blessedness in Him. 4. We must not omit the argument of the text — "as dear children"; wherein two things are considerable. (1) (2) 1. The relation. Ye are children. Children usually resemble their parents, either by nature, in the lineaments of their face, or by institution and education, in the quality of their minds. It may fail there, but it always holdeth good here; for none are God's children but those that are like Him. 2. The love that accompanieth and goeth along with this relation — "as dear children."(1) There was a great deal of love showed in giving us our new nature in regeneration, and taking us into so near a relation to Himself as that of children (1 John 3:1).(2) There is a great love and tenderness exercised towards those that are in this relation. They are His "dear children," and they shall know it by His fatherly dealing with them.(3) The more like to God we are, the more dear we are to Him, and the more amiable in His sight; so that you are not only loved, but lovely.(4) Our chief worship of God consists in imitation; not in contemplation or admiration only, or in bare praise and adoration, but in imitation, when we study to be like Him. Now to this end — 1. Get a due conception of God. 2. Esteem these things as amiable. We can neither praise, nor love, nor imitate, what we do net esteem. Is holiness the glory of God? and will you either scorn it in others, or neglect to get it yourselves? 3. Desire God to change your natures, that you may bear the image of the heavenly One (1 Corinthians 15:49). 4. Bewail your imperfections, and come nearer to your Pattern every day. (T. Manton, D. D.)
II. THE IMITATION OF GOD IN POWER. This would seem, like the other, to be almost an unintelligible precept till we begin to ponder it more thoughtfully. Then we must be struck with several passages of Scripture which represent power as one of the characteristic Christian endowments, as when St. Paul says, "Ye received not a spirit of fear, but ye received, when ye became Christians, a spirit of power"; or our Lord, "that ye receive power, in that the Holy Ghost is come upon you"; or St. Paul again, "I can do all things," or, more literally, "I have strength for all things, through Christ which enableth me"; or St. John in the opening verses of the Apocalypse, "He hath made us kings"; "I appoint unto you a kingdom as My Father hath appointed unto Me." We must dismiss altogether the first idea of power as a selfish or personal ascendency over a multitude of subjects or inferiors. If we examine it we shall find that the power in which we are to be imitators of God consists in two things — the one a power over ourselves, and the other an influence over others, both alike due to the same cause — the ever-present help and strength of the Holy Spirit. We are forever misreading and miscalling power. We look for it, we seem to see it, in some form or other of the self-strength. We call a man powerful who by the force of intellect, or of eloquence, or of station, can overbear his opponents, enthral his hearers, or make a nation bow down to him. In all these workings of power it would be ridiculous, it would be irreverent, to see any approach, however infinitely distant, to the imitation of God. But it is otherwise when we come into successful conflict, however insignificant may seem to be the form of it, with God's one foe, which is the power of evil. And yet once more, and finally, the imitation of God's power in conquering a sin passes on into the imitation of God's power in the exercise of influence. That marvellous word influence, which is the flowing in into one soul of a mysterious something out of another soul; is it not the very highest of God's operations and power? Is it not that which quickens dead men out of the sleep of death? Is it not that which changed Saul of Tarsus into the blessed apostle and evangelist St. Paul? Is it not that which even in these late days of the earth is every day bringing some new wicked rebel into the gracious obedience of Jesus Christ? Is it not just that flowing in of the Holy Spirit into the spirit that is in man? And is there any exercise of God's power quite so wonderful as that? (Dean Vaughan.)
(H. W. Beecher.)
(S. T. S. Nonich.)
(W. H. Aitken, M. A.)
1. There are many of our fellow creatures who have found but little love from man. To them this would have been a cold, cheerless place. To them the love of God, revealed in the gospel, comes as a strange and startling thing. It transforms life when thoroughly realized and embraced. 2. There are others who have known the value of human affection, and have lost it. A dark cloud has settled down upon their once happy homes and hearts. The gospel announces that all they have lost, and far more, they may find again in Christ. When anyone shall not only hear it, but grasp it — not only understand it, but try it — then life will wear a new aspect, and under the influence of Christ the whole soul expands. II. I find here something to SATISFY THE CONSCIENCE. What should we do in the presence of our sins, if we had no such truth as this to trust to? III. I find here something to REGULATE LIFE. 1. Walk in love as in an atmosphere of bright sunshine, bathing your soul in a consciousness of God's love for you. It is your privilege, let it be your joy. 2. Walk in love as an apparel. It is a beautiful sight to see a man clothed with humility. It is a cheering sight when you look at a servant of Jesus in the armour of light, and a worshipper of God in the garments of salvation. It is a glorious sight when you see a holy man putting on zeal for a cloak. But above all these things put on charity or love, for it is the bond of perfectness. In this world of sorrow the Christian should be conspicuous for love. It was the prominent feature in Christ; it should be prominent in Christ's followers. 3. Walk in love, as the appointed path in which God would have His children found. The walk of love will lead you into ways which you never once thought to find. It often turns aside from the more crowded thoroughfares of life, and runs through scenes where sorrow and shame have crept out of sight to weep and endeavour to forget. But there are some of the keenest experiences of human joy to be found in this lowly path. To stand, e.g., in the presence of despair, and watch how hope begins again to brighten a brother's eye; to whisper some holy truth in the ear of grief, and then receive the rich reward of a smile of thankfulness; to put the cup of cold water to the parched lip, and then listen to the gurgle of a new joy as some poor sufferer drinks down what refreshes soul and body both — oh, this comes only in the lanes and the by walks of the path of love. Sometimes the path descends into the darker regions of trial and temptation, when the believer himself needs sympathy; and I know nothing more sweet, nothing more soothing, than in such an hour of one's own sorrow to experience the sympathy which Christ shows in the tenderness of His insight into all our need, and to feel that the world is better than we thought it to be when some brother man comes in the warmth of his own regenerated heart and testifies that all is not cold, all is not barren. But sometimes the walk of love rises among the upland scenery of grace and godliness, and then, when we climb from height to height of God's great mystery of redemption, as we look down and back upon all the way in which goodness and mercy have followed us all the days of our life, as we look around on the vastness and variety and beauty and blessedness for which our Father has given us an eye and a heart, and as we look above into that cloudland overhead and up to those greater worlds of glory which enable us to think what the universe must be and what the great Governor of that universe can do, why then the walk of love rises into a sublimity which a man can feel but cannot describe, and the climax upon earth is reached, and beyond it nothing further can go till this winged soul of ours shall have broken the silver cord that tied it to the body, and found the expansion of her wing feathers causing her to sear away into the presence of God, where are fulness of joy and pleasures for evermore. It is a great bright world that is yet known to few. Some have landed upon its shore — a great continent of joy. They know but the fringe of flower and fruit which the search of a few short days has found. But go through the length and breadth of the land, wander among its hills and valleys, drink of the deep fountains of love, swim over its inner seas, and you will never again return to the haunts of sin and the ways of shame, for the love of the higher and the purer and the more perfect will swallow up every meaner passion, and absorb every fainter light, and the passion, the privilege, the prerogative, the pleasure of the sinner saved by grace, is to walk in love. (John Richardson.)
I. LET ME OPEN THE EXAMPLE AND PATTERN HERE SET BEFORE US. And there I begin — 1. With the principle — "Christ also loved us." That was it which moved and inclined Him to so strange an undertaking as to die for our sins. 2. The act — "He gave Himself for us." Where you have the giver, the gift, and the parties interested.(1) The Giver, Christ. He voluntarily first assumed a body. and then parted with His life for this use.(2) The Gift was Himself. And both put together show that Christ was both Priest and Sacrifice; as God the Priest, as man the sacrifice: "He offered up Himself to God through the eternal Spirit " (Hebrews 9:14).(3) The parties interested — "for us." II. THE NATURE OF THE DUTY THENCE INFERRED, or what it is to "walk in love." To walk in love signifieth not one act or two, but the perpetual tenor of our lives; our whole life should be an exercise of love. But what love doth He mean? Either love to God and Christ, or love to men? I answer — I cannot exclude the former totally, for these reasons. 1. Love to men is of little worth unless it flow from love to God. 2. Because it is a genuine product of this great love of Christ to us: "We love Him because He loved us first" (1 John 4:19). To God Himself; we beat back His own beam and flame upon Himself first, and then to all that belong to Him. 3. Because not only the direct improvement of the love of Christ, but so much of the Christian life dependeth on the love of God, that it should not be excluded when we are discoursing of it (2 Corinthians 5:14, 15). The sense of this love should work in us certainly a great fervour of love to God, that may level and direct all our actions to His glory, and make us study to please Him. Well, then, if we take it in this sense, how are we to walk in love?I answer — 1. That love is to be at the bottom of all our actions and duties, that our whole religion may be but an acting of love, "Let all your things be done with charity" (1 Corinthians 16:14). If we pray, let us act the seeking love; if we praise God, let us act the delighting love; if we obey God, let us act the pleasing love. 2. Let us walk in love, all will be nothing else; but let us continue constant to the death in the profession of the Christian faith; for vehement pure Christian love casteth out all fear in danger. If we love Christ, we will run all hazards for His sake. III. I come now to show you how WE ARE BOUND TO DO SO BY THE EXAMPLE OF CHRIST'S LOVE. And here I shall show you that it is both a motive and a pattern. 1. It is a motive to excite us to love Him, because the great thing that is remarkable in Christ's giving Himself as a sacrifice for us is love. You may conceive it by these considerations.(1) To suffer for another is more than to do or act for him, for therein is more self-denial.(2) To suffer death for another is the greatest obligation that we can put upon him (John 15:13).(3) This is the highest expression of love to friends, but Christ did it for enemies, for the ungodly sinful world (Romans 5:7, 8).(4) To suffer for the faults of another is the greatest condescension.(5) Because this is not fit to be done among mankind, that the innocent should suffer capital punishment for the guilty. This was the wonderful act of God's grace to find such a strange and unusual sacrifice for us.(6) That He should suffer to such ends, or that the consequent benefits should be so great, as the remission of sins and eternal life.(7) That, with respect to the end, God and Christ took such pleasure in it (Isaiah 53:10). 2. It is a pattern which we should imitate.(1) In the reality of it (1 John 3:18).(2) In the freeness of it. He was not induced to it by any overture from us, but by His own love only (Ephesians 5:25).(3) In the constancy of it. He was not discouraged when it came to push of pike (John 13:1).(4) In the self-denial and condescension of it (Matthew 20:28). But because we cannot pursue all, two things I shall commend to you from this love of Christ. (a) (b) 1. This love of Christ must be firmly believed. 2. It must be closely applied for our good and benefit, till we are duly affected with it, so as to make suitable returns to God; partly by devoting ourselves to Him (Romans 12:1), and partly by rendering our thank offerings of charity towards others (Hebrews 13:17). (T. Manton, D. D.)
II. Loving our neighbour doth imply a sincere and earnest desire of his welfare, and good of all kinds, in due proportion: for it is a property of love, that it would have its object most worthy of itself, and consequently that it should attain the best state whereof it is capable, and persist firm therein; to be fair and plump, to flourish and thrive without diminution or decay; this is plain to experience in respect to any other thing (a horse, a flower, a building, or any such thing) which we pretend to love: wherefore charity should dispose us to be thus affected to our neighbour. We should wish him prosperous success in all his designs, and a comfortable satisfaction of his desires; we should wish him with alacrity of mind to reap the fruits of his industry; and to enjoy the best accommodation of his life. III. Charity doth imply a complacence or delightful satisfaction in the good of our neighbour; this is consequent on the former property, for that joy naturally doth result from events agreeable to our desire. Charity hath a good eye, which is not offended or dazzled with the lustre of its neighbour's virtue, or with the splendour of his fortune, but vieweth either of them steadily with pleasure, as a very delightful spectacle. IV. Correspondently, love of our neighbour doth imply condolency and commiseration of the evils befalling him: for what we love, we cannot without displeasure behold lying in a bad condition, sinking into decay, or in danger to perish; so, to a charitable mind, the bad state of any man is a most unpleasant and painful sight. Is any man fallen into disgrace? charity doth hold down its head, is abashed and out of countenance, partaking of his shame; is any man disappointed of his hopes or endeavours? charity crieth out alas, as if it were itself defeated; is any man afflicted with pain or sickness? charity looketh sadly, it sigheth and groaneth, it fainteth and languisheth with him; is any man pinched with hard want? charity, if it cannot succour, it will condole; doth ill news arrive? charity doth hear it with an unwilling ear and a sad heart, although not particularly concerned in it. The sight of a wreck at sea, of a field spread with carcasses, of a country desolated, of houses burnt and cities ruined, and of the like calamities incident to mankind, would touch the bowels of any man; but the very report of them would affect the heart of charity. It doth not suffer a man with comfort or ease to enjoy the accommodations of his own state, while others before him are in distress; it cannot be merry while any man in presence is sorrowful; it cannot seem happy while its neighbour doth appear miserable: it hath a share in all the afflictions which it doth behold or hear of, according to that instance in St. Paul of the Philippians: "Ye have done well, that ye did communicate with (or partake in) my afflictions"; and according to that precept, "Remember those which are in bonds, as bound with them." V. It is generally a property of love to appropriate its object; in apprehension and affection embracing it, possessing it, enjoying it as its own; so charity doth make our neighbour to be ours, engaging us to tender his case and his concerns as our own; so that we shall exercise about them the same affections of soul (the same desires, the same hopes and fears, the same joys and sorrows), as about our own nearest and most peculiar interest. So charity doth enlarge our minds beyond private considerations, conferring on them an universal interest, and reducing all the world within the verge of their affectionate care; so that a man's self is a very small and inconsiderable portion of his regard. VI. It is a property of love to affect union, or the greatest approximation that can be to its object. VII. It is a property of love to desire a reciprocal affection; for that is the surest possession and firmest union which is grounded on voluntarily conspiring in affection; and if we do value any person, we cannot but prize his goodwill and esteem. Charity is the mother of friendship, not only as inclining us to love others, but as attracting others to love us; disposing us to affect their amity, and by obliging means to procure it. VIII. Hence also charity disposeth to please our neighbour, not only by inoffensive but by obliging demeanour; by a ready complacence and compliance with his fashion, with his humour, with his desire in matters lawful, or in a way consistent with duty and discretion. IX. Love of our neighbour doth imply readiness on all occasions to do him good, to promote and advance his benefit in all kinds. X. This indeed is a property of charity, to make a man deny himself, to neglect his own interest, yea to despise all selfish regards for the benefit of his neighbour. To him that is inspired with charity, his own good is not good, when it standeth in competition with the more considerable good of another; nothing is so dear to him, which he gladly will not part with on such considerations. XI. It is a property of love not to stand on distinctions and nice respects; but to be condescensive, and willing to perform the meanest offices, needful or useful for the good of its friend. He that truly loveth is a voluntary servant, and gladly will stoop to any employment for which the need or considerable benefit of him whom he loveth doth call. So the greatest souls, and the most glorious beings, the which are most endued with charity, by it are disposed with greatest readiness to serve their inferiors. XII. Charity doth regulate our dealing, our deportment, our conversation toward our neighbour, implying good usage and fair treatment of him on all occasions; for no man doth handle that which he loveth rudely or roughly, so as to endanger the loss, the detriment, the hurt or offence thereof. Wherefore the language of charity is soft and sweet, not wounding the heart, nor grating on the ear of any with whom a man converseth; like the language of which the wise man saith, "The words of the pure are pleasant words"; such as are "sweet to the soul, and health to the bones"; and, "The words of a wise man are gracious." Such are the properties of charity. There be also farther many particular acts, which have a very close alliance to it. 1. It is a proper act of charity to forbear anger on provocation, or to repress its motions; to resent injuries and discourtesies either not at all, or very calmly and mildly. 2. It is a proper act of charity to remit offences, suppressing all designs of revenge, and not retaining any grudge. 3. It is a duty coherent with charity, to maintain concord and peace; to abstain from contention and strife, together with the sources of them, pride, envy, emulation, malice. 4. Another charitable practice is, being candid in opinion, and mild in censure, about our neighbour and his actions. 5. Another charitable practice is, to comport with the infirmities of our neighbour; according to that rule of St. Paul, "We that are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weak, and not to please ourselves"; and that precept, "Bear one another's burdens, and so fulfil the law of Christ." 6. It is an act of charity to abstain from offending, or scandalizing our brethren. (I. Barrow, D. D.)
1. By amorous expressions. Read His love songs and see how affectionately He sets out the beauty of His beloved (Song of Solomon 4:1, 3, etc.). 2. By His thoughts. Thoughts and affections are mutual causes one of another. Thoughts give life to affection, and affection begets thoughts. Christ's thoughts of us are many and high. He had thoughts of love to us from eternity, and we were never one moment out of His mind since then (Isaiah 49:15). 3. But this flame, where it is, cannot be confined to the breast and thoughts, but will break forth into action. And so does the love of Christ appear to us, by what He has done for us. He has made us rich, fair, honourable, potent, yea, one with Himself. 4. The love of Christ appears by what He has given us; His love tokens. Whatever we have, for being or well-being, spring from His love. Take a survey of heaven and earth, and all things therein; and whatever upon sure grounds appears good, ask it confidently of Christ; His love will not deny it. But we are not yet come to the height of Christ's love. These unspeakable, inconceivable, unsearchable favours are but streams or drops of love; Christ has given us the fountain, the ocean: these are but sparks and beams; He has given us the sun, the element of love. The love of Christ gives us interest in the glorious Trinity. And now, what is there in heaven and earth that the love of Christ has not made ours? 5. Take an estimate of the love of Christ from His sufferings. Consider how and what He suffers by us, with us, for us. (1) (2) (3) 1. Christ loves us freely. He loved us when we had neither love nor beauty to attract His affections. 2. It is unchangeable (John 13:1). No act of unkindness or disloyalty of ours can nonplus it. 3. It is an incomprehensible love (Ephesians 3:19). 1. Consider whom he loves. How unfit, unworthy, unlovely.(1) How impotent! Man can do nothing to engage or deserve love, nothing to please or honour such a lover; and was so considered when Christ had intentions of love, therefore it is admirable.(2) How poor! No such poverty as man's.(3) How deformed! Poverty alone cannot hinder love, especially if there be beauty; but who can love deformity?(4) How hated! Not only hateful, but hated; hated of all. Who would love him whom none loves, who has no friends, who can meet with none in the world but enemies? The whole creation is at enmity with man. He cannot meet any creature, but harbours a secret hatred, and would be ready to manifest it at God's command. What a wonder that Christ will love that which all hate!(5) What enmity! Man is not only hateful and hated, but a hater of Christ, with such a hatred as would exclude all love from the breast of any creature; a hatred so extensive, that he hates Christ and all that is His, all that is like Him; all His offices, especially that which is most glorious, His royal office; keeps Christ out of His throne as to himself, and would do it in others.(6) How pre-engaged to his deadly enemies, sin and Satan. Who will love one for a wife who is contracted to another, given her heart and self into his possession, and has long continued so? Such is a man's state, married to sin, in league with Satan, and brings forth fruit, not unto God, but unto them. Here is the wonder of Christ's love, that it does fix upon the worst of creatures, man, yea, and upon the worst of men in some respects.(7) How powerful. "All power is given to Him in heaven and earth" (Matthew 28:18), that as Mediator; but as God, He is coequal with His Father, and so omnipotent.(8) How absolute. The sovereignty of Christ makes His love a wonder. 2. How Christ loves man.(1) Christ loves men more than the best of men love one another.(2) Christ loves man more than man loves himself. The love of Christ is more than self-love in man; therefore it is wonderful.(3) Christ loves man more than He loves the angels, in divers respects. It is evident in that distinction His love has made betwixt both fallen by sin. Not one of the fallen angels have, or ever shall taste of His love; but innumerable companies of men are restored to His favour.(4) Christ loves man more than heaven and earth, more than the kingdom of heaven, more than all the kingdoms of the earth and the glory of both, more than the whole world.(5) Christ loves man as Himself, in some respects more. Christ loves man more than Himself, as man. I do not say Christ as God, or absolutely; but as man, and in some respects. He advances them to the like state with himself, so far as man is capable. He bestows upon them all things that Himself hath, so far as they are communicable. The same natures. He consists of Divine and human, and so does man in some sense. That Christ might be like them, He took human nature; that they might be like Him, He communicates the Divine nature (2 Peter 1:4). Not that it is altogether the same, but that it most resembles it. Did not Christ get much glory by the work of redemption? Was not this the most glorious administration that ever the world was witness of? Yes. Yet the glory the Son of God got hereby was an inconsiderable advantage to Him, compared with the benefits thereby purchased for man. The Son of God had lost nothing if He had wanted this; this did not add any degree of glory to that which He enjoyed from eternity. He was infinitely glorious before the foundation of the world, and nothing can be added to that which is infinite. (D. Clarkson, B. D.)
2. He gave Himself, nothing less than Himself; and that is more, incomparably more, than if He had given all the angels in heaven, all the treasures on earth for us; more than if He had given all the works of His hands. The small dust of the balance is as nothing to the universe, and the universe is as nothing compared with the Son of God. 3. How did He give Himself? He did not give Himself as we are wont to give, nor did He give Himself as He gives other things. He gave Himself, not in the common way of giving; but, as the text shows, His giving was an offering of Himself. "He gave Himself an offering for us." But then — 4. How did He give Himself as an offering for us? There are several sorts of offerings mentioned in Scripture. Offerings that were not sacrifices. Such were the persons and things which were devoted or dedicated unto God for the service of the tabernacle and of the temple. Thus the vessels and utensils given up and set apart for the service and ministration under the law are called offerings (Numbers 7:10), and those offerings are specified (ver. 13, etc.). Silver chargers, bowls, and spoons; and not only things, but persons are called offerings when set apart; for thus the legal ministry (Numbers 10:10, 11, 13). The other sort of offerings were sacrifices, such as were offered so as to be consumed and destroyed, and to be deprived of life, if they were things that had life. So that there is a great difference betwixt these offerings: the former were offered so as to be preserved, the latter were offered so as to be killed or consumed. For that is the true notion of a sacrifice; it is an offering daily consumed. And such an offering was Christ, such an offering as was a sacrifice, as the text shows. He gave Himself to be sacrificed for us. "He was led as a lamb to the slaughter." Christ offered Himself a sacrifice of expiation for His people.To give you distinctly the evidence which the Scripture affords for this great and fundamental truth, take it in these severals. 1. "He offered Himself" (Hebrews 7:27); "He offered up Himself" (Hebrews 9:14, 28). 2. "He offered Himself a sacrifice" (1 Corinthians 5:7; Hebrews 9:26).(1) The person offering was to be a priest; it was the peculiar office of the priest under the law (Hebrews 5:1). So Christ, that He might offer this sacrifice, was called to that office, and made a high priest (vers. 5, 6, 10).(2) The things offered were to beef God's appointment, otherwise it had been not a true and acceptable sacrifice, but will-worship.(3) That which was offered for a sacrifice was to be destroyed. This is essential to a sacrifice; it is an offering daily consumed. Those things that had life, that they might be offered as sacrifices, they were killed, and their blood poured out; and the other parts of them, besides the blood, were burned, either wholly or in part. Thus was Christ sacrificed; His dying and bleeding on the cross answered the killing and bloodshed of the Levitical sacrifices, and His sufferings were correspondent to the burnings of the sacrifices (Hebrews 13:12, 13); His sufferings without the gate are held forth here as answering the burning of the sacrifices without the camp.(4) The person to whom they were offered was God, and Him only. 3. He offered Himself a sacrifice of expiation.(1) He suffered. He was a man of sorrows and sufferings; His whole life was a state of humiliation, and His humiliation was a continued suffering. But near and in His death He was made perfect through sufferings; there was the extremity of His sufferings, there He became a perfect sacrifice (Hebrews 2:9, 10; Hebrews 5:9).(2) What He suffered was penal; it was that which sin deserved, and the law threatened.(3) Thirdly, He suffered this in our stead.(4) The sacrifice pacified, appeased, the Lord, made atonement, turned away His anger. (D. Clarkson, B. D.)
II. Christ's sacrifice was VICARIOUS. It was in the room and place of others — of us all. His sufferings, though voluntary, were, in this sense, necessary to accomplish the end He had in view. III. Christ's sacrifice was of INFINITE VALVE AND SUFFICIENCY. He gave Himself. IV. The sacrificial dedication of Christ for man was PERFECTLY PLEASING TO THE FATHER. (Dr. Drummond.)
I. THE INTERPOSITION OF CHRIST ON BEHALF OF HIS PEOPLE: "He hath given Himself for us, an offering and a sacrifice to God." 1. He is represented as our Priest. The offering of sacrifices, unquestionably had its origin in the earliest ages of the world. This mode of worship may be traced back, not only to the era of giving the law from Sinai, but to the days of the ancient patriarchs. Its Divine origin is not less evident than its antiquity. We read, indeed, of the practice, before we read of the precept enjoining it; but from the former, we may fairly infer the latter. Since, then, the offering of sacrifices was enjoined by the Supreme Lawgiver, and was practised in the Church from the beginning, for what end was it appointed? What could move. the eternal Majesty to require that sacrificial oblation should, for so many ages, form an essential part of His worship? My brethren, ye know the sublime explanation! Ye know that it was to prefigure the offering up, in the fulness of time, by Jesus Christ. 2. Christ is also represented as the sacrifice of His people. Let us, then, contemplate this stupendous sacrifice. In it we behold a sacrifice at once perfectly suitable, and infinitely valuable. Christ, I say, in giving Himself, gave a sacrifice that was perfectly suitable. Being independent, His life was entirely at His own disposal; being a partaker of flesh and blood, He was allied to His people, and was thus qualified to make satisfaction in the same nature that had offended; and, being at the same time supernaturally conceived and born of the Virgin, He was exempt from the penalty which Divine justice had attached to the violation of the first covenant, and immaculately pure — and was thus altogether fitted for being a true and proper sacrifice in the room of His people. But the sacrifice which Christ gave was not only perfectly suitable, it was also infinitely valuable; for, mark the force of that wonderful expression, "He gave Himself." It was not simply His blood, or His life, or abstractly His human nature, but Himself that He gave an offering and a sacrifice for us. We now proceed to consider — II. THE SATISFACTION AND DELIGHT WITH WHICH THIS INTERPOSITION OF CHRIST ON BEHALF OF HIS PEOPLE IS REGARDED BY GOD. His sacrifice is to Him "for a sweet-smelling savour." In this expression the allusion is clearly to the wine and oil, or rather, to the precious perfumes that were wont to be sprinkled on the sacrifices under the law, in order to counteract the offensive savour of that bloody service. The apostle represents the fragrance of such sweet perfumes as arising to God from the propitiatory sacrifice of His beloved Son, to intimate the supreme satisfaction and pleasure which He has in that sacrifice. When the magnificent work of creation was finished, Jehovah is represented as resting from all His work which He had made, and surveying it with delight. But from no part of creation, even although retaining its original purity and loveliness, does there arise so sweet and grateful a fragrance to Him as from the altar of the Saviour's sacrifice. If you inquire on what grounds that sacrifice is so peculiarly and supremely delightful to God, the following considerations may serve to illustrate the subject: It is a sacrifice of God's own appointment; it is in itself a sacrifice of transcendent worth and efficacy; and it is in consequence of these things the means of eternal salvation and happiness to countless thousands of His immortal creatures, and the source of glory to Himself in the highest. (W. Duncan.)
II. THE SACRIFICE OF CHRIST, AS THE MEANS BY WHICH OUR REDEMPTION WAS ACCOMPLISHED. 1. It is evident from these words that we had incurred some penalty which we must have endured personally, had not the love of Christ induced Him to interpose on our behalf. 2. But the text intimates that Jesus Christ did interpose on our behalf, and "hath given Himself for us." 3. Our text intimates that it was the person of Christ which rendered His sacrifice efficacious, and that because "He gave Himself for us." His substitution was acceptable to God, and available to the salvation of man. 4. The text intimates that this offering and sacrifice was acceptable to the Father to whom it was presented, for it is said to be "a sweet smelling savour" to Him. III. WALKING IN LOVE, AS THE EFFECT WHICH THIS REDEMPTION IS INTENDED TO PRODUCE. 1. Let us walk in love to Christ. 2. Let us walk in love to Christians. 3. Let us walk in love to all mankind. (J. Alexander.)
1. Consider the dignity of His Person. 2. Look at the purity of His sacrifice. Look at the faith that never gave way; look at the patience that never was exhausted; look at the courage that never flinched; look at the love that never wasted; look at the zeal for God that was always on fire; look at the tenderness for poor, perishing, lost and ruined sinners. 3. Look we at the work itself — look we at those for whom He was all this. II. But observe THE MANY PROOFS THAT HAVE BEEN GIVEN AND ARE STILL GIVEN, THAT THIS SACRIFICE IS "A SWEET-SMELLING SAVOUR " BEFORE GOD. Four thousand years before that sacrifice was offered, there came forth the first promise in all its fragrancy. Whence that cry of victory — "It is finished"? Why was it the stone was rolled away? why did the body ascend? why did the Conqueror go up? why did the Spirit descend? why was it, on the Day of Pentecost, that the timid became brave, that blasphemers stood forth as real penitents before God? Why was all this? Because the sacrifice went up as a "sweet-smelling savour," and a descending Spirit was the mark of God's infinite and eternal approval of it. But, beloved, perhaps now the savour of it has passed away. More than 1,800 years have passed away since it was offered. Kingdoms have risen and fallen since then. But the fragrancy of that offering has in no sense passed away. It has not lost one iota of its acceptance before a holy God. But, beloved, there is one point more in reference to this sweet savour — it will cast its fragrancy throughout eternity. It fills heaven with its odour. III. And now let us consider A FEW PRACTICAL BEARINGS OF OUR SUBJECT. 1. In the first place, if all this be true, then how awful is that man's state, that can hear of this atonement and find fragrancy in everything else except that one thing that is fragrant before God! The things that God hates he can delight in. 2. Let me give one word of tender caution to those whose conscience has been awakened by the blessed Spirit to feel a real concern for salvation. If they go to other sacrifices, they have still to seek sweetness elsewhere. (J. H. Evans, M. A.)
II. THE ACCEPTABLENESS OF THE SACRIFICE. "An offering and sacrifice to God, for a sweet-smelling savour." Go back to the time of the flood. Here we are informed that "Noah builded an altar unto the Lord," and offered sacrifices; "and the Lord smelled a sweet savour: and the Lord said, I will not again curse the ground any more for man's sake." So God delighted in the sacrifice of His Son, and said, "This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased." You may be reconciled to a servant, and you may admit him to a place in your house; still it may not be easy to admit him to a place in your affections. But we never can be so dear to God as when clothed with the righteousness of Christ, and sprinkled with His precious blood. III. THE PRINCIPLES THAT ACTUATED HIM. "He loved us, and gave Himself for us." That which cannot be known perfectly may be known preeminently. 1. His love is magnified in His gift. 2. It is magnified in the greatness of His sufferings. 3. It is magnified because He was acquainted with every part of His sufferings before He engaged to suffer. 4. It magnifies His love because we were unworthy of its exercise. 5. It magnifies His love because He did not wait to be asked. He did this not only without our desert, but without our desire. 6. It magnifies His love by the number of blessings to be derived from it. IV. We have now to DRAW SOME INFERENCES FROM THIS SUBJECT. 1. What is enjoined? "Walk in love." Strive to excel in it. We read of men walking in pride. He is lofty; he swaggers as he walks; he answers those beneath him roughly. Pride is his region; it is the air in which he breathes. So is it with love: you are not only to walk in love, but to live in it. 2. For whom is this enjoined? It is to be exercised towards Himself. 3. To whom is this enjoined? "Walk in love." It was to the Ephesians. But are you blameless here? 4. How is it enjoined? "Walk in love, as Christ also hath loved us."(1) As the model of our love. Thus our love must resemble His. And are you to exercise no self-denial? His love was a constant love; is yours to be changeable and varying?(2) But the apostle means that we should make the love of Christ the motive as well as the model of ours. "We love Him, because He first loved us." By this motive be led to present your bodies "a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God, which is your reasonable service." (W. Jay.)
1. The first thing which strikes us as wonderful in this love of God is, that it should have sinners as its objects. 2. Another thing which is incomprehensible in the love of Christ to sinners is, that among men, all of whom were equally lost and helpless, it should select a certain number as its objects and leave all the rest under condemnation and depravity, as they were before. 3. A third characteristic of the love of Christ is its degree of intensity, which is unparalleled. 4. As this love did not originate in time, but, from eternity, the delights of the Son were with the children of men; so it will never have an end. 5. The love of Christ to His people is manifested by the revelation which He has made for their instruction; by all the institutions of His Church for their edification; and by all the dispensations of His providence, whether afflictive or prosperous. But, especially, the love of Christ toward His chosen people is evinced by the gift of His Spirit, the Comforter, to abide with them forever. 6. Finally, the love of Christ to His disciples is tender, condescending love. He deals with them as a mother with a child; carries tern in His bosom, and gently leads them in the right way. (A. Alexander, D. D.)
I. PROPOSITIONS FOR EXPLAINING IT. 1. The Father's appointing Him to be a sacrifice, doth not impair His own willingness in undertaking. The Father is said to send Him and deliver Him (John 3:34; Romans 8:32). The Father is said to deliver Him, because the first motion of redemption is supposed to arise from the will and motion of the Father; yet the love of Christ was the spring of all mediatory actions, and His taking our nature on Him; and therefore He is no less said to give Himself, than the Father is said to give Him to us and for us. His engagement was an act of choice, liberty, and affection. 2. The necessity of His death impeacheth not the voluntariness of it. Many things are voluntary which yet are necessary; there are voluntary necessities. God is necessarily yet voluntarily holy. II. WHEREIN THIS VOLUNTARINESS OF CHRIST'S DEATH APPEARS. 1. He willingly offered Himself in the first counsel about redemption to stand in our stead. 2. The whole course of His life manifests this willingness. His will stood right to this point of the compass all His life. Many enter the lists with difficulties out of ignorance, but the willingness of our Saviour cannot be ascribed either to ignorance or forgetfulness. III. WHY THIS VOLUNTARINESS WAS NECESSARY. 1. On the part of the sacrifice itself. He was above any obligation to that work He so freely undertook for us. Nor could He be overruled to anything against His own consent. 2. Necessary on the part of justice. 3. Necessary in regard of acceptation. Christ's consent was as necessary as God's order. In vain had we hoped for the benefit of a forced redemption. IV. USE. 1. The way of redemption by a sacrifice was necessary. 2. The death of Christ for us was most just on the part of God. Christ did willingly submit to, God might justly charge upon Him as a due debt. 3. How wonderful was the love of Christ! 4. How willingly then should we part with our sins for Christ, and do our duty to Him! (S. Charnock, B. D.)
II. But, brethren, He gave Himself FOR A SPECIAL PURPOSE — "an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet-smelling savour." He gave Himself for us — what to be? If we only wanted teaching, He would have given Himself as a teacher. If we only wanted leading, He would have given Himself to us as a leader. But a starving man wants something more than instruction about food, or information about digestion, or instruction as to the laws of life and death; and a criminal who is under a capital sentence wants something more than discussions about rewards and punishments, or about human governments and human laws; and if anything is to be done for sinning man, you must do something more than present to him a teacher. If you are sick, you do not send for your medical attendant to give you, at the side of your sick bed, a lecture on anatomy or physiology. You want the medical man to do something for you as well as to say something to you. And Christ gave Himself, not to be my teacher, or nay leader chiefly, but, in the first instance, He offered Himself to be a sacrifice. III. Now, "herein is love"; not self-love, BUT OUTLOVING LOVE; not the love that is shut up within a man, as wafer in a sealed fountain, but the love that flows forth from a being as water from an open spring. "Herein is love"; not complacent love, the love of delight in another because that being is delightsome, but benevolent love. "Herein is love"; not merited love; but undeserved love. "Herein is love"; not expected love, but surprising love. "Herein is love"; not love of friendship, but mercy, and compassion, and pity. "Herein is love"; not ordinary love, but unequalled love, love to which there is no parallel, and to which there never can be. Brethren, there are just two things more I want to say to you. 1. This love of Christ is our refuge. The heart of Christ is the refuge we need. 2. The love of Christ is our refuge, but this love is also our pattern. We are to love as Jesus loved. I do not wonder at people saying this is impossible. It does seem impossible, and it would be utterly impossible, if we were required to attain to such love at once, but we are to grow into it. If you were unacquainted with the oak, and a full-grown tree were pointed out to you, and if you were then shown an acorn, and were told that out of that little thing would spring forth the monarch of the forest, you would not believe the statement, or you would say, if this happen it certainly will be a miracle, (S. Martin, D. D.)
II. THAT THIS SELF-SACRIFICING LOVE OF CHRIST WAS NOT INTENDED TO PRODUCE ANY CHANGE IN GOD, BUT RATHER TO AFFECT THE RELATIONS AND THE DESTINIES OF OUR HUMANITY. III. THAT IN THIS SELF-SACRIFICING LOVE OF CHRIST THERE WAS SOMETHING PECULIARLY ACCEPTABLE AND WELL-PLEASING TO GOD. IV. THAT IT IS ONLY AS MAN IS BROUGHT TO REPLACE HIS DEPENDENCE ON GOD THROUGH THE MEDIATION OF JESUS CHRIST AS THE HELPER AND REDEEMER OF OUR RACE, THAT HE CAN RISE INTO THE ENJOYMENT OF THE GREAT SALVATION. (R. Ferguson, LL. D.)
I. I SHALL PREMISE TWO THINGS FOR THE EXPLICATION OF IT. 1. God was not absolutely bound to accept it for us. He might have rejected every sacrifice but that of the offender. 2. As the acceptation of it depended upon the will of the Lawgiver and Rector, so the acceptableness of it depended upon the will of the Redeemer. The merit of His death depended not upon His mere dying, or upon the penal part in that death, but upon His willing obedience in it, in conjunction with the dignity of His person; without this, He might have breathed out His soul without being a victim. II. THAT THIS SACRIFICE IS ACCEPTABLE TO GOD AND EFFICACIOUS FOR US WILL APPEAR IN SEVERAL PROPOSITIONS. 1. God took pleasure in the designment and expectation of it. 2. The highest perfections of God's nature had a peculiar glory from this sacrifice. All His perfections, not discovered before to the sons of men, are glorified punctually according to His intentions and resolves for their discovery. Not a tittle of His nature which was to be made known to the sons of men, but is unveiled in this sacrifice to their view in a greater glory than the creatures were able to exhibit Him. 3. Compare this sacrifice with the evil for which He was sacrificed, and which had invaded the rights of God, and the sweet savour of it will appear, as also the efficacy of it. 4. It is so acceptable to God, that it is sufficient sacrifice for all, if all would accept of it, and by a fixed faith plead it. 5. The effects of this sacrifice show the acceptableness of it to God. As the effect of Adam's disobedience demonstrates the blackness and strength of his sin, so the fruit of this sacrifice evidenceth the efficacy of it.What was it that rendered this sacrifice acceptable to God, and efficacious for us? 1. The dignity of His person. 2. As the dignity of the person, so the purity of the sacrifice renders it fragrant to God, and efficacious for us. 3. The graces exercised in this sacrifice rendered it fragrant in the account of God.(1) His obedience.(2) His humility (Philippians 2:8).(3) His faith. This resolution of trust He brought with Him, and this resolution He kept — "I will put my trust in Him" (Hebrews 2:13), cited out of Psalm 18:2.(4) In regard of the full compensation made to God by this sacrifice, and the equivalency of it to all the demands of God. His obedience was fully answerable to the law: His active answered the perceptive part, and His passive the penalty.(5) In regard of the glory Christ by His sacrifice brought to God. The glory of God was that which He aimed at, and that which He perfected. Needs must that be fragrant to God that accomplished the triumph of all His attributes. III. USE. 1. If this sacrifice be acceptable to God, it is then a perfect oblation. 2. All popish doctrines of satisfaction, and all resting upon our own righteousness and inherent graces, are to be abandoned. 3. It is a desperate thing to refuse this sacrifice, which is so sweet to God.(1) It is a great sin.(2) It will end into a great misery. 4. It administers matter of comfort to the believer. It is a comfort to a diseased hospital that a physician is chosen and accepted by the governors that is able to cure every disease; it is no less a comfort to a guilty soul that there is a sacrifice sufficient to expiate every sin.(1) If once acceptable to God, then it is forever acceptable; if once sweet, it is always sweet. God cannot be deceived in His estimations, nor change His value of it, nor can the sacrifice ever become noisome.(2) From this ariseth pardon of sin.(3) Hence, then, there can be no condemnation to them that are in Christ.(4) Here is a sufficient ground for peace of conscience. This only can give a repose to our spirits, turn our fears into hopes, and our sorrows into songs.(5) Here is a full ground of expectation of all necessary blessings. Let those that believe, continually apply and plead it. (S. Charnock, B. D.)
I. BY ITS INNER NATURE. 1. This sin, however loathsome in the sight of God and of human nature transformed by His grace, is nevertheless most seductive to the lower fallen nature of man. As a check to it, God has implanted in us the noble sense of shame, so that the Christian, who has not returned like a dog to his vomit, abhors whatever is unchaste.(1) Thoughts. How deeply ashamed you would be if your fellow men could perceive your impure thoughts and desires, though they be involuntary! Happy is he who, when merely thoughts cross his mind, listens to the warning voice of nature.(2) Words. St. Stanislaus fainted at hearing, by chance, an expression of ambiguous meaning. Even ordinary virtue will blush in confusion at the gibes of immodesty; only habitual shamelessness will laugh at them.(3) Deeds. Is not the whole nature set in an uproar? Who is so base as to commit impure actions before witnesses? Yet, when you are alone, the All-knowing God, and the holy angels, witness your deeds. 2. It is repugnant to the higher nature of man. Man — the image and likeness of the Triune God — by his impurity reviles (1) (2) (3) 3. It is an abomination before God. II. ITS CONSEQUENCES. 1. Ruin of earthly happiness. Lewdness works destruction (1) (2) 2. Ruin of the soul. (1) (2) (3) 3. Eternal damnation. (1) (2) (Le Jeune.)
1. The apostle speaketh thus to express the height of detestation; for things that we utterly detest we will not name. "Never let these foul practices get the least admission among you." 2. Some sins are more catching than others; the very mention of them may revive and stir the motions of them in an unmortified heart. And uncleanness and fornication are of this nature, because they tend immediately to please the flesh; other sins more remotely. 3. There is a naming of these things which is very sinful, and that two ways.(1) When it is done in such a brood and coarse way, or nasty language, as doth invite rather than rebuke sin.(2) When we seek to palliate foul deeds with handsome and plausible names, and so speak of these things with allowance and extenuation, and not with extreme detestation.Secondly, the reason — "As it becometh saints"; that is, Christians or believers; all of them are saints, or should be saints. 1. Some are so only by external dedication and profession; as by baptism they are set apart for God as a clean and holy people. 2. Others are saints by internal regeneration, as sanctified and renewed by the Holy Ghost (Titus 3:5). Now these things are contrary to the disposition and spirit of saints, or to the holy, new, and Divine nature which is put into them. II. What purity and cleanness of heart belongeth to Christians. In the Scripture they are everywhere described by it, "With the pure thou wilt show thyself pure '" (Psalm 18:18); "Ye are clean through the word which I have spoken to you" (John 15:3); "Surely God is good to Israel, even to such as are of a clean heart" (Psalm 73:1); "Separate yourselves from the unclean thing, and I will receive you" (2 Corinthians 6:17); and in other places. Let us see what obligations lie upon us to be clean and pure. 1. We are consecrated to the service of a holy God. 2. We profess the most holy faith; this obligeth us also, whether we took to the laws of God, which are the rule of our duty, or the promises of God, which are the charter of our hopes. 3. Because of our present communion with God and service of God. III. The special impurity that is in such sins, so that holiness must be forsaken, or else these vices so opposite to holiness. What special impurity is there in those sins? 1. They defile the body, and are contrary to the dignity of the body, as it is a member of Christ, a temple of the Holy Ghost, or an instrument to be used for the glory of God (1 Corinthians 6:18). 2. Uncleanness corrupts and defileth the mind; for it turneth it from the true pleasure to the false, and that procured on the basest terms of downright sin against God.What need we have to work in Christians a greater abhorrence of fornication and uncleanness, because it is a common sin and a grievous sin. 1. It is a common sin; and then it is time to cry aloud and spare not, when persons, both single and married, make so little conscience of this duty. 2. It is a grievous sin. We will endeavour to touch them in the tenderest part that is left, viz., fear. "Whoremongers and adulterers God will judge" (Hebrews 13:4). Men think it a small matter to satisfy nature, but God will find them out both here and hereafter. There fell in one day twenty-three thousand for this sin (1 Corinthians 10:8). It unfitteth for every holy duty. Holy and sacred things never can be seriously received by sensual minds and hearts. Caution to young men that are not yet taken in the snare. Keep yourselves at a great distance from and great abhorrence of this sin. Therefore, first, avoid occasions (Proverbs 5:8). Advice to all Christians. Upon all occasions, think what will become saints. Let the consciousness of your dedication to God be ever upon your heart. (T. Manton, D. D.)
(C. H. Spurgeon.)
(C. H. Spurgeon.)
(Harris.)
(R. W. Dale, LL. D.)
I. 1. Such facetiousness is not absolutely unreasonable or unlawful, which ministereth harmless divertisement and delight to conversation. For Christianity is not so harsh, so envious, as to bar us continually from innocent, much less from wholesome and useful pleasure, such as human life doth need or require. 2. Facetiousness is allowable when it is the most proper instrument of exposing things apparently base and vile to due contempt. When sarcastical twitches are needful to pierce the thick skins of men, to correct their lethargic stupidity, to rouse them out of their drowsy negligence; then may they well be applied. 3. Facetious discourse particularly may be commodious for reproving some vices and reclaiming some persons (as salt for cleansing and curing some sores). It commonly procureth a more easy access to the ears of men, and worketh a stronger impression on their hearts, than other discourse could do. Many whose foreheads are brazed and hearts are steeled against all blame, are yet not proof against derision. 4. Some errors likewise in this way may be most properly and most successfully confuted; such as deserve not, and hardly can bear a serious and solid confutation. 5. This way is also commonly the best way of defence against unjust reproach and obloquy. To yield to a slanderous reviler a serious reply, or to make a formal plea against his charge, doth seem to imply that we much consider or deeply resent it; whereas by pleasant reflection On it we signify the matter only deserves contempt, and that we take ourselves unconcerned therein. 6. So easily without care or trouble may the brunts of malice be declined or repelled. This way may be allowed in way of counterbalancing and in compliance to the fashion of others. It would be a disadvantage unto truth and virtue if their defenders were barred from the use of this weapon; since it is that especially whereby the patrons of error and vice do maintain and propagate them. 7. Furthermore, the warrantableness of this practice in some cases may be inferred from a parity of reason, in this manner: if it be lawful (as by the best authorities it plainly doth appear to be), in using rhetorical schemes, poetical strains, involutions of sense in allegories, fables, parables, and riddles, to discoast from the plain and simple way of speech; why may not facetiousness, issuing from the same principles, directed to the same ends, serving to like purposes, be likewise used blamelessly? 8. I shall only add, that of old even the sagest and gravest persons (persons of most rigid and severe virtue) did much affect this kind of discourse, and did apply it to noble purposes. 9. In fine, since it cannot be shown that such a sportfulness of wit and fancy doth contain an intrinsic and inseparable turpitude; since it may be so cleanly, handsomely, and innocently used, as not to defile or discompose the mind of the speaker, not to wrong or harm the hearer, not to derogate from any worthy subject of discourse, it cannot well absolutely and universally be condemned; and when not used on improper matter, in an unfit manner, with excessive measure, at undue season, to evil purpose, it may be allowed. It is bad objects, or bad adjuncts, which do spoil its indifference and innocence. II. 1. All profane jesting, all speaking loosely and wantonly about holy things (things nearly related to God and religion), making such things the matters of sport and mockery, playing and trifling with them, is certainly prohibited, as an intolerably vain and wicked practice. All injurious, abusive, scurrilous jesting, which causelessly or needlessly tendeth to the disgrace, damage, vexation, or prejudice in any kind of our neighbour (provoking his displeasure, grating on his modesty, stirring passion in him), is also prohibited. 3. I pass by that it is very culpable to be facetious in obscene and smutty matters. 4. All unseasonable jesting is blamable. 5. To affect, admire, or highly to value this way of speaking, either absolutely in itself, or in comparison to the serious and plain way of speech, and thence to be drawn into an immoderate use thereof, is blamable. 6. Vain-glorious ostentation this way is very blamable. 7. Lastly, it is our duty never so far to engage ourselves in this way, as thereby to lose or to impair that habitual seriousness, modesty, and sobriety of mind, that steady composedness, gravity and constancy of demeanour, which become Christians. We should continually keep our minds intent on our "high calling," and grand interest; ever well tuned, and ready for the performance of holy devotions. (I. Barrow, D. D.)
1. We are not absolute proprietors and possessors of our own selves; our tongues are not our own to speak what we please. Exempt any one faculty or member from the jurisdiction of God, and you disown His authority and interest in you, and open a floodgate to let in sin and wickedness into the world. We are not left to run at random in our ordinary discourse, to say and utter what we think good. 2. As we had our tongues from God, so we are accountable to Him for the use of them; and therefore will our actions not only be brought into the judgment, but our words and speeches also (Matthew 12:36, 37). 3. Words do much discover the temper of a man's heart. 4. Because our tongue is our glory: "Awake, my glory; awake, psaltery and harp" (Psalm 57:8), "My heart is glad, and my glory rejoiceth" (Psalm 16:9). Compare Acts 2:26: "My heart is glad, and my tongue rejoiceth." So Psalm 30:12: "That my glory may sing praise to Thee, and not be silent"; that is, my tongue. But why is our tongue called our glory? For a double reason, both which are pertinent to the case in hand.(1) Because thereby we can express the conceptions of our minds for the good of mankind. It was not given to us for that use for which the tongues of the brute beasts serve them, to taste meats and drinks only, or to taste our food. No; but to converse with each other. Speech is the excellency of man above the beasts.(2) The other reason why it is called our glory is because thereby we may express the conceptions of our minds, to the glory of God as well as the good of others, "Therewith we bless God, even the Father" (James 3:9). 5. Because our speeches are regarded by God, and therefore you must consider, not only what is fit for you to utter and others to hear, but what is fit for God to hear. 6. Because the well ordering of our words is a great point of Christianity, and argueth a good degree of grace (James 3:2). II. In making conscience of our words, we should specially take heed of filthiness, foolish talking, and jesting. 1. Filthiness is when we speak of obscene things in an obscene manner without any respect to modesty and Christian gravity or sobriety.(1) It is a sin most inconsistent with any reverence and fear of God: "The fear of the Lord is clean" (Psalm 19:9).(2) It is a grief to the Holy Spirit, as it obstructs that purity and cleanness of heart which He would work in us (Ephesians 4:29, 30).(3) You infect others, and corrupt them by filthy discourse. 2. The next word is "foolish speaking." This hath so many branches, that it is hard to reckon them up; as —(1) when they speak of foolish things;(2) when men speak of serious things in a ludicrous and vain manner, and design it for jest;(3) lavish, superfluous speech to no end;(4) rash speech;(5) personal boasting. Now, I shall prove that it is a sin that should be made conscience of. (a) (b) (c) (d) 3. We come now to the third sin enumerated, "and jesting." Here we must state this matter. Is all jesting unlawful and misbecoming Christians?In the use of it all due circumstances must be observed; as — 1. In the matter. It is a dunghill mirth that must have somewhat unclean to feed it. 2. For the manner. It must be harmless to others, not making sport with their sins or miseries (1 Corinthians 13:6). 3. For the measure. Not excessive wasting the time in vain, especially not habituating the mind to levity; that is scurrility when men accustom themselves so to vain jesting that they cannot possibly be serious; they can as well be immortal as serious. 4. For the time. Not when God calleth us to mourning or more serious employments should it be taken in hand. 5. The end and use must not be forgotten. Our great end is to serve and glorify God, and everything that we do must have respect to it, and be proportioned by it. III. One special means of checking such sins is to consider how much they misbecome Christians; for the apostle saith no more but "they are not convenient," or do not agree with that state of grace into which we profess to be called. For three reasons this will hold good. 1. Because there are four affections which serve to draw us from and guard us against sin — fear, shame, grief, and indignation. The guilt of sin causeth fear; the stain, shame; the unkindness, sorrow; unsuitableness, indignation. Awaken this, and sin cannot have long entertainment in the heart. Therefore it is enough to a serious Christian: It is not convenient. 2. The unsuitableness mindeth us of our dignity, as being admitted to communion with God. Therefore to talk of filthiness with that tongue which is to be employed in speaking of God, and to God, is a most indecorous thing. 3. This striketh at the root of the temptation. Many think filthiness, foolish speaking, and jesting to be a great grace to them, and affect the reputation of wit at such a rate that they forget honesty. No; these are not an honour and a grace, but a blemish and a blot. IV. That a Christian cannot want mirth as long as he hath such abundant cause to give thanks. (T. Manton, D. D.)
(J. Pulsford.)
(J. Beaumont.)
(J. Beaumont.)
(J. Beaumont.)
(Owen Felltham.)
(Plutarch.)
(Scott.)
1. Esteem. That which we most highly value. we make our god; for estimation is an act of soul worship. 2. Mindfulness. That which we are most mindful of we make our god. 3. Intention. That which we most intend we make our god; for to be most intended is an act of worship due only to the true God; for He being the chief good, must be the last end. 4. Resolution. What we are most resolved for we worship as God. 5. Love. That, which we most love we worship as our god; for love is an act of soul worship. To love and to adore are sometimes both one. Love, whenever it is inordinate, is an idolatrous affection. 6. Trust. That which we most trust we make our god; for confidence and dependence is an act of worship which the Lord calls for as due only to Himself. 7. Fear. If you fear others more than Him, you give that worship to them which is due only to God. 8. Hope. That which we make our hope we worship as God; for hope is an act of worship. Those that make their own righteousness the foundation of their hope, they exalt it into the place of Christ, and honour it as God; and to honour anything as God is evident idolatry. 9. Desire. That which we most desire we worship as our god; for that which is chiefly desired is the chief good in his account who so desires it; and what he counts his chief good, that he makes his god. 10. Delight. That which we most delight and rejoice in, that we worship as God; for transcendent delight is an act of worship due only to God; and this affection, in its height and elevation, is called glorying. 11. Zeal. That for which we are more zealous we worship as our god; for such a zeal is an act of worship due only to God; therefore it is idolatrous to be more zealous for our own things than for the things of God. 12. Gratitude. That to which we are most grateful, that we worship as God; for gratitude is an act of worship. 13. When our care and industry is more for other things than for God. No man can serve two masters.Argument 1. Such idolaters are not in covenant with God. It is the covenant of grace alone which gives right and title to the kingdom. Those that are not in covenant have no title to heaven; and those that have no right nor title to it, shall have no inheritance in it. 2. Such idolaters are not yet born again, are not yet converted; and without the new birth, no inheritance in the kingdom; those only are heirs of this kingdom who are born of God, who are born again. Try whether you be guilty of this soul idolatry or no.And to stir you up to this examination, let me premise these two things, the danger and secrecy of this. 1. The danger. It is a sin will endanger your loss of heaven, make it exceeding difficult, or altogether impossible. If one should tell you of some mischievous person lurking in your house, with an intent to murder you, or set your house on fire, etc. The apostle tells you of something more mischievous; that which is more dangerous, and nearer to you; that which will endanger the loss of an inheritance, of a kingdom. 2. The secrecy of it calls for diligent search. Nothing more common or more concealed. (D. Clarkson, B. D.)
2. There is no entrance into this kingdom but by coming into the kingdom of Christ. 3. The title or right to the privileges of Christ's kingdom is by way of inheritance. "If a son, then an heir of God through Christ" (Galatians 4:7; and Romans 8:17), "If sons, then heirs, joint heirs. with Christ." 4. By the tenor of the Christian doctrine it plainly appeareth that whoredom and all uncleanness excludeth men from this inheritance.It appeareth plainly by these particulars — 1. Because it is contrary to that covenant by which all enter into Christ's kingdom. 2. Because of God's express exclusion. Surely. they are excluded from this inheritance whom God excludes and Christ excludes (1 Corinthians 6:9, 10). 3. From the heinous nature of the sin. It is a sin of great atheism and great infidelity. 4. It is idolatry. Primary idolatry is when Divine honours are given to any creature. But howls whoredom and uncleanness idolatry? Because by it men are addicted to some base thing which they prefer before God. "Lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God" (2 Timothy 3:4, 5). Because they have not that spirit that should fit them and make them meet for heaven. 6. This exclusion is so absolute and peremptory that it admits no exception but that of sincere repentance, which is both a change of heart and life. No other repentance is true but a quitting and leaving these sins before they leave us.Three things are apt to deceive you. 1. Some trouble for these sins while you go on still to commit them. 2. The next thing that will deceive you is some faint resistance or striving against sin, but it groweth upon you. 3. That which will deceive you is a hope to cry God mercy upon your death beds; and so, after an impure life, men hope still to go to heaven. (T. Manton, D. D.)
1. That we may not deceive ourselves. Frequent warnings are given against this self-flattery (1 Corinthians 6:9; I John 3:7; 1 Corinthians 15:33; Galatians 6:7). Men do what they can to live securely and undisturbedly in their sins, and to guard their hearts against the apprehension of all danger and punishment. 2. That we may not be deceived by others. There were false teachers in those early days, that countenanced profane and licentious Christians; some that taught fornication was an indifferent thing, or at least no such great matter, or not so dangerous. II. A DENUNCIATION OF GOD'S WRATH 1. The evil denounced, "The wrath of God cometh"; meaning by "wrath," punishment from God, who is angry and displeased with these sins. 2. The meritorious procuring cause, "For these things," fornication, uncleanness, and such like gross sins. God is not severe upon ordinary failings and frailties, but these sins are of another nature. 3. The persons upon whom this vengeance cometh; it shall light upon "the children of disobedience." I. What are the vain words or pretences by which they usually harden their hearts? 1. That God will not call them to an account, or punish them for their sins. If you think He will not, it is because He hath no right, or no power, or no will to do it. You cannot say no right, because man is His creature, and therefore His subject. You cannot say no power, for our life is in His hands. 2. That God will be merciful to them; though they sin against Him, they shall notwithstanding escape well enough; that He will not be severe against His creatures. But you reflect but upon one part of God's nature, His mercy, without His holiness and justice, and so fancy an unreasonable indulgence in God. 3. That they are Christians, and by external profession have received the faith of Christ. But the name will not save you without the power (2 Timothy 2:19). 4. That none is perfect, and the rarest saints have fallen into as great faults, and so are persuaded that these gross sins are but frailties and human infirmities. If David fell, why may not I? was an old excuse in Salvian's time. Did not they smart grievously for these sins? and was not their repentance as remarkable as their fall? 5. Others say they are justified, and depend on the righteousness of Christ. You may, if you have a right to it; but "He that doeth righteousness is righteous" (1 John 3:7). Where Christ is made righteousness, He is also made sanctification (1 Corinthians 1:30). 6. That if they be in an unjustified state for the present, they hope they shall repent at last, and then they will leave off their sins, and cry to God for mercy. But you live in fiat disobedience to God for the present, whereas the Holy Ghost saith, "Today," etc. (Hebrews 3:7). 7. That they do make amends for a course of sin in one kind by abounding in other duties. But God will be obeyed in all things. These are some of the sorry fig leaves by which men hope to cover their nakedness, those sandy foundations upon which they build their hopes. II. The reasons how it cometh to pass that such gross self-flattery can possess their minds. Though it be as plain as noonday that they that live in gross sins shall be damned, yet the most profane have good thoughts of their condition. 1. The causes lie in themselves; as —(1) Self-love, which is very partial, and loath to think of the evil of our condition (Proverbs 16:2).(2) Unbelief el God's Word and Divine promises and threatenings. Unbelief and obstinate impenitency always go together.(3) Non-attendance to God's warnings, if they are not guilty of express unbelief (Matthew 22:5).(4) Non-application: "Lo! this, we have searched it; hear it, and know it for thy good" (Job 5:27), "What nor consider, nor apply, no wonder if self-love carrieth it; and in the greatest soul dangers they flatter themselves into a fool's paradise, that they shall do well enough though they live in their sins. 2. The devil joineth with our self-love, and lulleth us asleep in our carnal security and abuse of grace (Genesis 3:4, 5). 3. He stirreth up instruments, that, with the charms of false doctrine, he may hinder the sight of sin and fears of judgment, and strengthen the hands of the wicked (Jeremiah 23:17).Let no man deceive you. 1. It is sure you are not justified while you are yet in your sins. 2. How much God is concerned to right Himself, the honour of His providence, and the truth of His Word, against such as flatter themselves in their sins (Deuteronomy 29:19, 20). It should doter us from wilful and heinous sins to think of the wrath of God that shall come upon those that live in them. First: It is a powerful motive; for God's wrath is very terrible.Consider — 1. The intension of this wrath. It is compared to a "consuming fire" (Hebrews 12:29). It is a fire that burneth, not only to the ground or the surface of the earth, but to the lowest hell (Deuteronomy 32:22). 2. As to extension; the wrath of God compriseth all those evils which are the fruit of sin, be they bodily or spiritual, in life or death, or after death.Secondly: It is a kindly motive. That is a question whether it be so or no; therefore let us state the matter. 1. We are principally to avoid sin as sin, and as displeasing to God (Genesis 39:9). 2. We must abstain from it, as it will bring down wrath and judgment upon us. So God urgeth this argument (Ezekiel 18:30). 3. The poena damni, to fear the punishment of loss, is out of question. A man cannot love God and not fear the loss of His favour. 4. The poena sensus, the punishment of sense, is necessary also to quicken men to their duty, and to guard their love, and to show that God doth not make little reckoning of sin (2 Corinthians 5:11). 5. The effect which it must produce is not such a fear as driveth us from God, but bringeth us to Him; not torment, and perplexity, and despairing anguish (1 John 4:18), but flight and caution. 6. Punishments on others are for our warning. When God's judgments are upon others for sin, His hand is to be observed with great reverence; as David (Psalm 119:119, 120). To teach us in what rank to place principles of obedience.There are several principles by which men are acted and influenced. 1. Some are false and rotten; as custom: "As I have done these so many years" (Zechariah 7:3). Vainglory: "To be seen of men" (Matthew 6:1). Rapine: "To devour widows' houses" (Matthew 23:14). Envy (Philippians 1:15, 16). 2. Some are more tolerable; as the hope of temporal mercies (Hosea 7:14). 3. Some are very good and sound; as when duties are done out of obedience to God, upon the urgings of an enlightened conscience, without the bent of a renewed heart; for a regenerate man obeyeth, not only as enjoined, but inclined. The principle is sound in the other, but the heart is not fitted. 4. Some are rare and excellent; as when we love God, not only for His benignity, but holiness, and eye our reward for His sake, and love the glory of God above our own happiness, and can subordinate the happy part of our eternal estate to His glory (Romans 9:3). That their condition is of all most miserable who are not only sinners, but stubborn and obstinate in their sin.The wrath of God cometh on the children of disobedience. 1. Who are the disobedient? It may be said of two sorts — First of all, men in their natural condition with respect to the law: "The carnal mind is enmity against God; for it is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be." (Romans 8:7). And, secondly, of those that refuse the gospel: "In flaming fire, taking vengeance on them that know not God, and obey not the gospel" (2 Thessalonians 1:8). "What shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel?" (1 Peter 4:17), viz., those that will not submit themselves to God, or be persuaded to forsake their sins. Now, as to the disobedient sinners. 1. They are slaves to sin (Titus 3:3). 2. They are of the devil's party (Ephesians 2:2). 3. They are rebels to God (Job 24:13). (T. Manton, D. D.)
1. Those who are not only sinners, but stubborn, obstinate, and ignorant sinners; such as are prone to all evil, and are not only indisposed, but averse from all good. 2. This good is either to be determined by the light of nature or the light of the gospel.(1) Wicked men are called "children of disobedience" because they rebel against the light of nature (Job 24:13).(2) Those that have heard the gospel, and will not suffer themselves to be persuaded to embrace the blessed offers made therein, nor will they give up themselves to the obedience of Christ. Their condition is more terrible, for these are desperately sick, and refuse their remedy (1 Peter 4:17). 3. This obstinacy and disobedience is aggravated.(1) From the person who is disobeyed. It is not our counsel, but God's.(2) From the manner of the persuasion, which is by the Word and Spirit. In the Word there are the highest motives to allure, the strongest arguments to persuade, the greatest terrors to scare men out of their sins.(3) From the plenty of offers. God hath called often and long: "He that, being often reproved, hardeneth his neck, shall suddenly be destroyed, and that without remedy" (Proverbs 29:1). It is dangerous to slight frequent warnings; these are obdurate in their sins.(4) From the concomitant dispensations of providence. When our obstinacy and resolved continuance in sin is not broken by afflictions; as Pharaoh was Pharaoh still from first to last. 4. This disobedience, the longer it is continued, the more it is increased. II. The misery of their condition. It is either matter of sense or matter of faith; of sight, because of present judgments, or foresight, because of the threatenings of the Word. 1. It is matter of sight, as God doth inflict remarkable judgments on obstinate sinners in this life, to teach His children to beware of their sins. These judgments are either spiritual or temporal. 2. It is matter of faith and foresight. And so by this wrath of God is meant eternal destruction, which cometh upon them for their disobedience, which is a sin of the highest nature, and a chief cause of their damnation. At death they feel the sad effects of it (1 Peter 3:19, 20). III. Why this should deter God's people from being partakers with them. Here I shall inquire(1) What it is to be partakers with them.(2) Why God's wrath should deter us from this? 1. What it is to be partakers with them.(1) There is a principal sense, and chiefly intended here, that we should not follow their example.(2) There is a limited sense of the phrase, "Neither be partakers of other men's sins" (1 Timothy 5:22). There it signifieth not committing the same sins, but being accessory to the sins of others. (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) 2. Why the wrath of God should deter us from this. (1) (2) 1. To show us that we are not to be idle spectators of God's judgments on others, but judicious observers and improvers of them. .Observe here — (1) (2) 1. To cure atheism (Psalm 58:11). 2. To make us more cautious of sin, that we meddle not with it. 3. To humble us, and make us more earnest in deprecating the wrath of God, and suing out our pardon in Christ. We see sin goeth not unpunished. Alas! if God should enter into judgment with us, who could stand? (Psalm 143:2). 4. To make us thankful for our mercies and deliverances by Christ, that, when others are spectacles of His wrath, we should be monuments of His mercy and grace. Were it not for the Lord's pardoning and healing grace, we had been in as bad a condition as the worst (Romans 11:22). Secondly, the manner of making these observations. This is needful to be stated, because men are apt to misapply providence, and to sit as a coroner's inquest on the souls of their neighbours, and so rather observe things to censure others than for their own caution.Rules concerning the observation of God's providences towards others. 1. Certain it is that judgments on others must be observed. Providence is a comment on the Word, and therefore it is stupidness not to take notice of it. They that will not observe God's hand shall feel it. If we will not take the warning at a distance, and by others' smart and rebuke, there is no way left but we ourselves must be taught by experience. He that will plunge himself into a bog or quagmire, where others have miscarried before him, is doubly guilty of folly, because he neither feareth the threatening, nor will take warning by their example and punishment. Observe we must (Amos 6:2). 2. This observation must be to a good end; not to censure others, that is malice; or justify ourselves above them, that is pride and self-conceit, condemned by our Lord Christ (Luke 13:2-5). 3. In making the observation we must have a care that we do not make providence speak the language of our fancies. (T. Manton, D. D.)
(John Bate.)
(K. Arvine.)
1. Not to oppose, in many cases, is to embolden transgressors, and to be partakers with them. 2. We have more direct fellowship with the wicked when we encourage them by our example. 3. They who provoke and incite others to evil works have fellowship with them.(1) This may be done by the propagation of licentious opinions, which confound the difference between virtue and vice.(2) This may also be effected by direct persuasions and enticements. 4. They who explicitly consent to, and actually join with sinners in their evil works, have fellowship with them. 5. To comfort and uphold sinners in their wickedness is to have fellowship with them. 6. There are some who rejoice in iniquity when they have lent no hand to accomplish it. II. APPLY THE APOSTLE'S ARGUMENTS. 1. One argument is taken from the superior light which Christians enjoy. 2. Another argument is taken from the grace of the Holy Spirit, of which believers are the subjects. 3. The apostle teaches us that the works of darkness are unfruitful. 4. This is a shameful fellowship. 5. If we have fellowship with sinners in their works we must share with them in their punishment. (J. Lathrop, D. D.)
1. By practising the like evils. The apostle seems especially to intend this. Commit not the like sins; act not like the children of disobedience. If ye be imitators of them, you are in some sense partakers with them; and so the Lord may justly punish you for them. 2. By concurring. And this in divers ways.(1) By contriving. When sin is contrived, there is concurrence of the head, though not of the hand. Thus David was guilty of Uriah's death, though Joab was the actor, and the Ammonites the executioners (2 Samuel 11:15). Thus Rebekah of Jacob's dissembling. She contrived it, to defeat Esau, though he was the actor. And if he smarted for it in so many hardships after, she had her share in his chastisement. Whoever effect what thou plottest, though thy hand be not in it, though theft be not seen therein, the Lord, who is the searcher of hearts, will charge the sin upon thy soul.(2) By consenting. Where there is consent to sin, there is a concurrence of the will, though not of the outward man. This consent is always guilty, whether it be free, so Saul was guilty of Stephen's death (Acts 8:1); or whether it be extorted, so Pilate was guilty of Christ's death, though the Jews seemed to overrule him thereto; or whether it be tacit,, and showed no way but by silence.(3) By inclination. Where there is an inclination to an unlawful act, there is a concurrence of the heart, though the outward man act not.(4) By rejoicing. When a man is glad that an unlawful act is done by others, he concurs in affection, though not in action. Thus was Ahab guilty of Naboth's blood.(5) By sentence and vote. Thus Saul was guilty of Christians' death (Acts 26:10).(6) By assisting. He that contributes anything to the promoting of sin, though he be not the principal actor of it, brings the guilt thereof upon his soul. Thus was Saul also guilty of Stephen's death (Acts 7:58). He did not cast stones at Stephen; so far as the relation acquaints us, he only kept the clothes of those that stoned him. Yet, promoting this sin but thus far, he made himself guilty of it.(7) By communicating in the pleasures or profits of sin. Thus panders are guilty of whoredom, and receivers are guilty of theft. 3. By occasioning the sins of others. When we give others occasion to sin, and that may be done many ways.(1) By evil example. One sin of an exemplary person may occasion many. When magistrates, or ministers, or parents, or masters of families, or anyone eminent in the account of others, makes bold with that which is evil, it is a pregnant sin, has many in the bowels of it. One sin may this way bring along with it the guilt of many thousands.(2) By the offensive use of things indifferent. Is it not better not to go so high, than to endanger the ruin of others by following thee?(3) By scandalous sins, either in judgment or practice; for these are not only abominable in themselves, and the occasions of sin in others by example, but also in a more dangerous and dreadful way, by strengthening the hands of sinners, and opening their mouths to blaspheme.(4) By provoking. He that says or does that which provokes another to sin is at least the occasion of it. Hence the apostle advises so often to beware of this (Galatians 5:26; Ephesians 6:4).(5) By ensnaring. Those whose garb, gestures, words, are as snares, may justly be accounted occasions of sin, and so guilty of those iniquities wherein they ensnare others.(6) By leading others into temptations. Thus was Eve guilty, not only of her own, but of her husband's sin (Genesis 3:6).(7) By showing opportunities to sin. Thus Judas was guilty of crucifying Christ by showing the Jews an opportunity to apprehend and crucify Him.(8) By affording matter of sin to others, that which they know or suspect will be sinfully abused, hereby occasion their sin, and partake in their guilt:(9) By not removing the occasions of sin. When costly apparel becomes an occasion of pride, or delicate fare an occasion of intemperance, etc. Those that have power, magistrates, parents, should reduce them to necessaries, who abuse superfluities, else they are in danger of a participation in others' guilt. I might exemplify this in many particulars.(10) By authorising. When those are put into such place and office, as they are not fit, not qualified for, those that are instrumental in calling them thereto are accessory to their sinful miscarriages in the managing thereof. 4. By causing. He that is the cause of another's sin, partakes thereof, not only as an accessory, but many times as a principal. Now, one may be the cause of another's sin many ways. (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) 6. By not hindering sin. He that hinders not others from sinning is in danger thereby to partake of their sins. He that hinders not others from doing evil, does the evil himself; is guilty of, accessory to it.(1) By not punishing, censuring, correcting, in State, Church, families.(2) By not complaining of sin. He that has not power to punish sin may complain of it to those that have power; and he that complains not is in danger to be accessory to the sin which he conceals. I confess there are many temptations to keep men from the practice of this duty. It is counted odious to be an accuser; and so it is, when it proceeds from spite, malice, and revenge, and not from tenderness to the glory of God and thy brother's soul; but against the temptations which may hinder thee from complaining of other's sins, set the danger of sin to him, to thee, and the command of God; see how strictly and punctually He enjoins it without respect of persons and relations, how near and dear soever (Deuteronomy 13:6, 8).(3) By not reproving or admonishing sinners. He that rebukes not, nor does not admonish, according to the quality of those who are guilty, makes himself guilty with them (Leviticus 19:17). To reprove another is a thankless office, and carnal men take it as an expression of hatred; but see how the Lord judges of it: "He that rebukes not his brother does hate him in his heart."(4) By not mourning for it. He that mourns not for the sins of others is in danger to partake of them. Mourning is a means to hinder the increase of sin; he that bewails not the sins of others does not what he can to hinder them, and so may be accessory to them.(5) By not praying against the sins of others. Prayer is a sovereign means to hinder sin. He that prays not against it is accessory to it, by not endeavouring to hinder it.(6) By not affording means whereby sin may be hindered. He that denies others the means requisite to the avoiding of sin, when it is his duty to afford them, is accessory to the sins of others by not hindering them; e.g., as we say, he that denies a man food, without which death cannot be prevented, is accessory to his death.(7) By not applying severe providences for the hindering of sin. The Lord sometimes speaks from heaven against sin by remarkable acts of providence. (D. Clarkson, B. D.)
II. THE NOBILITY TO WHICH BELIEVERS HAVE BEEN ADVANCED. The light of truth has shone into their hearts, and exposed to view all the abominations, all the depravity, that lay concealed in the dark chambers of imagery within. They have learned to know not only themselves, but also God and Jesus Christ, "whom to know is life eternal." They are now united to the Lord, and are of one spirit. Christ dwells in them, and they in Him. III. THE DUTIES devolving on those who are "light in the Lord." 1. They are required to walk as children of light; to prove their descent, to show what family they belong to; to act according to the light bestowed, the knowledge attained; to keep themselves unspotted from the world, undefiled by the surrounding contagion. 2. They are bound to "prove what is acceptable unto the Lord" — to test what is well pleasing unto Him. This can only be known by the revelation of His will, oral or written. 3. They are forbidden all fellowship with the fruitless works of darkness. (J. D'Arcy Sirr, D. D.)
II. THEIR PRESENT CONDITION. "Light." A very strong expression. It is not said, "ye have some light"; it is not said, "there is some light in you"; but it is positively declared, "ye are light." Of course, this can only be taken in a modified sense; because how little is the light that any of the saints of God have! We see only through the "unveiled face." "We see as in a glass darkly"; "we know in part." Alas! how little do we know of the glory of the Saviour in His person! how little do we know of the perfection of the Saviour! how little do we enter into the glory of the atoning blood! how little do our souls enter into the "sweet savour" of that sacrifice! and how little we realize the perfection of that Perfect righteousness, which is "unto all and upon all them that believe"! How little do our spirits enter into the deep and unutterable fulness that there is in Jesus! And yet, though our light be so feeble, still it is "light." He never despises that light that comes from the work of the Holy Ghost in the soul of man; however feeble, however faint, He never despises it. Oh! for a word of tender caution; do you never despise it either. III. THE EXHORTATION. "Walk as children of light." If you ask for a simple view of their "walking as children of light" — I would say first of all it is to walk in the brightness of that light: to walk in the light of God's precious gospel, to walk in the light of God's perfections, to walk in the realizing view of His pardoning mercy, to walk in the light of His adoption, to walk as righteous ones, righteous in the righteousness of the Lord Jesus Christ. "Surely the light is sweet, and a pleasant thing it is to behold the sun." 2. He "walks as a child of light," beloved, as he walks in the purity of that light. Observe, this is an essential part of the subject — it is the very subject for which the apostle introduced it; "ye were sometimes darkness, but now are ye light in the Lord: walk as children of light (for the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodness and righteousness and truth): proving what is acceptable unto the Lord." My dear hearers, we are to "walk as children of light" — only be you thankful and grateful for being thus brought into the light. To be brought into the light, to one that once was blind, would be one of the first things that would fill his heart with joy. What were ye once? I am persuaded too, beloved, that if we are "children of light," we shall rejoice that others be made to "walk in the light" of that same gospel; we shall rejoice to diffuse, as far as in us lies, that gospel around us. (J. H. Evans, M. A.)
(1) (2) (3) (4) 1. Darkness is uncomfortable. So is the state of an unconverted sinner. Who would not be weary of his life upon earth, if the sentence of continual darkness should pass upon it? Alas! more miserable is thy condition if unconverted, because the want of spiritual light is a greater misery than the want of sensible light. 2. Darkness is dangerous. He whose way lies near snares and pits, who is to pass over precipices, rocks, the brink of dangerous gulfs, and has no light to direct him, every step is the hazard of his life. No less dangerous is the way of man ever since sin entered into the world. So many snares has Satan laid, so many pits has he digged, so near we walk to the brink of the bottomless pit, as without light we cannot make one step in safety. 3. Darkness is fearful. We read of the "horrors of darkness" (Genesis 15:12). What more apt to engender fears than darkness, when dangers are on every side, and nothing visible that may afford confidence! So the state of nature. The condition of a sinner unconverted is a fearful condition. He is encompassed with terrors on every side; such as, if he were sensible of them, would dash all his mirth and carnal jollity. Those whom the Lord has enlightened to see the dreadfulness of that state, they wonder that such can sleep quietly, or take comfort in any enjoyment, while they are not converted.But who are those that are in darkness? How shall we know whether we be in this unconverted state? 1. Who walk in the ways of darkness? The children of light do not walk in the paths of darkness. You may know your state by your way; ways of wickedness are ways of darkness: so Solomon: "The way of the wicked is darkness" (Proverbs 4:19). He that walks in any way of known wickedness, be it drunkenness, etc., neglect of ordinances, etc., he is in darkness. "By their fruits ye may know them." 2. Those that want spiritual discerning. He that has eyes and sees not, it is plain he is in darkness; what else should hinder his sight? So they that have the same understanding, the same faculty of inward sight with others, and yet perceive not that in spiritual things, that those discern who are savingly enlightened, it is evident that spiritual darkness overshadows their souls. 3. Those that act not for God. The things of God are at a distance from every unconverted man; he sees not, he knows not how to go about it. 4. Exhortation, to those that are converted, brought out of the woeful state of darkness; let this stir you up to joy and thankfulness for your deliverance. (D. Clarkson, B. D.)
1. An antecedent. 2. A consequent, or an argument and an inference.First: The antecedent, or argument, is taken from their present compared with their past estate, what they are with what they were. 1. The grace received — "Ye are light"; that is, filled with the light of wisdom and holiness. But can it be used of any mere man liable to such imperfections?(1) It noteth not their perfection so much as the perfection of the dispensation they are under. Not their perfection, as if there were no darkness in them at all, but the clearness of the gospel which then shined brightly to them. There is a difference between the gospel and believers; the gospel is a perfect light, but we do but imperfectly receive it.(2) It noteth some good measure and degree of participation, but not complete fruition. Participation it noteth, for otherwise it could not be said that we are not only enlightened, but light itself; not complete fruition, for those that are said to he "light in the Lord" are presently called "children of the light"; which doth somewhat abate of the expression.(3) It noteth that we have received grace, not only for ourselves, but for the good of others. 2. The author of this grace — "In the Lord"; that is, Christ; for there is but "one Lord," as well as "one God and Father of all" (Ephesians 4:5, 6); and whatever good we have, we have it from Christ and in Christ. I. Let me speak of the two opposite states, "darkness" and "light," and there show you that the carnal estate is an estate of darkness, and the renewed state is a state of light. 1. The carnal estate is an estate of darkness. So the apostle telleth the Ephesians, Ye were not only darksome, but darkness itself, for the greater vehemency of the expression.(1) The darkness of the understanding is ignorance; they are incapable of discerning between good and evil, know nothing of the nature and will of the true God.(2) There is downright and apparent wandering from God.(3) Eternal misery is the issue and close of it (Matthew 25:30; 2 Peter 2:17). 2. The renewed estate is an estate of light. Light is a quality pure and unmixed, and implieth both knowledge, holiness, and happiness. Knowledge, as it discovereth all things; holiness, as it is pure, and can shine on the filthiest dunghill without any stain; felicity, as it is the smile of heaven upon the earth. II. That there is a mighty change wrought in them who are called out of one estate into the other. 1. They have a different principle. All things work according to their nature; as fire ascendeth and water descendeth; fishes go to the water, and beasts keep on dry land; it is according to their nature, and that principle of life which they have. The saints have a Divine nature: "Whereby ye are made partakers of the Divine nature" (2 Peter 1:4). 2. As the internal principle of our operation is unlike, so the external rule of our conversations are quite different, viz., the will of God revealed in the word, which they study to know and obey: "Proving what is acceptable unto the Lord" (Ephesians 5:10); "Be not unwise, but understanding what the will of the Lord is" (ver. 17); "That ye may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God" (Romans 12:2). III. That it is good often to compare those two estates, and to consider what we are by nature and what we are by grace. First: That we ought frequently to reflect on our former woeful estate. Reasons there are for this. 1. To magnify the riches of God's mercy in our deliverance from that woeful estate. We wonder at it more when we compare both together (1 Peter 2:9). 2. That we may admire His power in the change (1 Corinthians 6:11). 3. To keep us humble (1 Corinthians 15:9; 2 Corinthians 12:7. 4. It makes us more compassionate to others, we having once had as blind a mind and hard a heart as they (Titus 3:2, 3). 5. It makes us more watchful. A man who has escaped a dangerous disease or surfeit is very careful not to lapse into it again. 6. It quickens us to greater fruitfulness for time to come. Was I so zealous for sin, and shall I not do so much for God (Romans 6:19)? Since we set out so late, let us mend our pace. 7. It maketh our conversion more evident and sensible, and so quickeneth us to thankfulness and praise. 8. It increases our confidence and hopes of eternal life. He that could take us with all our faults, and love us, and pardon us, and heal our natures, and reconcile us to Himself, will He not give us eternal life after we begin to obey, love, and serve Him in our measure? (Romans 5:9, 10). 9. It puts an argument in our hands against sin (Romans 6:20, 21). Secondly: We ought to remember what we were by nature, so as not to deny what we are by grace (Romans 6:17). IV. This change must be manifested by a suitable conversation: "Walk," etc. Children of the light may refer to the dispensation we are under, or the grace we have received by it. 1. The dispensation we are under, as those that live in the clearness of gospel light are children of the day. Ye are not of the night; walk as children of light, that have the light of the gospel, or becoming that most holy religion which Christ hath taught us.(1) In the light all blemishes are soon discovered, and so our sins are without excuse; whereas people that have not the gospel, or not so fully preached, are more excusable. Men might plead this, that they knew no better; but now they "have no cloak for their sin" (John 15:22).(2) As they are without sin, so without shame, when they sin in the open light: "Every morning doth He bring His judgment to light; He faileth not, but the unjust knoweth no shame" (Zephaniah 3:5).(3) Sins are more dangerous and deadly: "And this is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds are evil" (John 3:19). 2. The grace received by it. (T. Manton, D. D.)
II. THE WORDS ARE USED AS SYMBOLS. 1. Light a good thing; needful for our bodily health; needful for our sustenance by the fruits of the earth; without light we could not live. 2. Without light we could not work. We may put forth strength, but cannot direct it. 3. Darkness a bad thing — hurtful if continued, and destructive to animal and vegetable life. In the night crimes of violence are committed; it is their congenial home. III. LIGHT THEREFORE MEANS GOODNESS AND DARKNESS SIN. 1. Light to the soul is when all its powers are directed consciously to right ends, i.e., to holy living, to the worship and the glory of God. Darkness, when either it knows not that right end, or, knowing it, deliberately chooses something else as its purpose. 2. Contrast in these respects between the Christian and the pagan world. IV. EARNEST AND PRACTICAL. The personal question, the great question for us all. 1. Are you in the darkness or in the light? 2. With all your Christian privileges you should be in the light. Do you prove that you are so by love to God, watchfulness over yourself, tenderness of conscience? No mere words will be acceptable as a proof. "If ye love Me, keep My commandments." On the other hand — 3. Whatever your profession of religion, and whatever your privileges, if you are contented with sin — willingly enduring it, not anxious to overcome it in your own soul and in the souls of others — then you are still in the darkness. 4. Be not satisfied to remain so. Make an effort to break your chain by the help of Jesus. (S. J. Eales, M. A.)
1. Then, keep to the right. You will often see these words printed up in the crowded streets of great cities. Your own conscience will tell you what is right, and whenever there are two ways for you to go in, the right or the wrong, be sure to keep to the right. 2. The next rule I give you is, keep your eyes open. If you were to walk along a road with your eyes shut, you would soon stumble or fall, or wander out of the right path; but if you keep your eyes open, you see the rough places over which you might stumble, and the muddy places where you might splash your clothes with dirt, and you can see the finger post showing you the right way. Well, in walking along the path of life you will need to keep your eyes open. There are dangerous places, over which you will stumble and fall, unless you watch for them carefully; there are temptations, like muddy pools, which will stain your white robe, and make it foul, unless you avoid them. If you keep your eyes open, you will see God's hand directing you, and you will find that He has placed many finger posts to show you the right way. The Church is one finger post, the Bible is another, your teachers are all pointing out to you the right road. 3. My next piece of advice to you is, push your way. There are sure to be difficulties in your path. You can do one of two things, you can wait for the difficulty to be removed, or you can push your way through it. In large towns, where there are great public buildings, such as banks and offices, you often see a heavy door leading into the building, and on it is written the one word, "push." Now, suppose you wished to enter that building; you might pull at that door for hours and not open it; you might ring the bell, or call to someone to open, but everybody would be too busy to listen. There would be only one thing for you to do, you must push, then the door would open. So it is with all difficulties: "where there's a will there's a way"; if you push against the door which is blocking your way, it will open. 4. Take another word of advice, when you meet with your enemy, fight. I don't mean an earthly enemy, and I don't mean fighting with your fists. As you walk along the roads of life, your enemy, the devil, will often stand in the path to injure you, to turn you out of the way, "Whom resist, steadfast in the faith." The ancient Greeks, who were the most famous soldiers of old times, carried a shield in battle. To lose this shield and leave it behind, was the greatest disgrace which could happen to them. When a soldier was killed, or badly wounded, his companions laid him on his shield, and carried him out of the fight. I have read of a Greek mother, who said to her son as he was going to the battle, "Either return with your shield or upon it." That meant, "Either conquer or die." My children, it would be very sad for us to have to say, after we have met with temptations to sin — "I have returned again, but I have left my shield behind." 5. Last of all, take this rule if you would walk rightly, mind the crossings. In London streets it is very difficult and dangerous to cross the road sometimes. If you are not very careful, and quite accustomed to it, you may be knocked down, and run over: or you may take the wrong turning, and lose yourself. So it is with life, we have to cross over a difficult crossing very often, and there is a great crowd of temptations and sins all around us, and if we are not very watchful, we shall be knocked down and run over by some of those temptations. (H. J. Wilmot-Buxton, M. A.)
1. On account of their celestial extraction. 2. It denotes their spiritual illumination. 3. It signifies the purity of their hearts. 4. It refers (o the sanctity of their conduct. 5. It means that they have an inheritance of this description in heaven. II. THE APOSTLE'S EXHORTATION — "Walk as children of light." 1. Shine in your conduct towards your minister. Hold him in high reputation. Submit to him, Pray for him. Receive his advice. Provide for him. 2. Shine one towards another. Cultivate unanimity. A spirit of forbearance. Help each other. Preserve a high esteem one for another, and seek to have your affection increased. Conduct yourselves towards each other with the strictest fidelity. 3. Shine in your conduct towards all around you in the world. III. IMPROVEMENT. 1. Be circumspect. 2. Be humble. 3. Take care of an implacable spirit. 4. Be steady in your profession. 5. Take the Word of God for your guide. 6. Pray that your minister may be faithful. (The Pulpit.)
1. Spiritual knowledge. Light and knowledge are terms of the same import (2 Corinthians 4:6). Light to discover God in Christ savingly, and to discern the things of God spiritually. 2. Purity and holiness. Sin and corruption is expressed by darkness, holiness and purity by light. In this sense the most holy God is called Light (1 John 1:5), spotless and perfect holiness, in whom there is not the least impurity. And in reference to us (ver. 7), such a light as this is life, spiritual life, which consists in the principles of holiness and purity. 3. The favour of God, and the consequent of it, joy and comfort. The favour of God, the manifesting of His loving kindness, is frequently expressed by the light of His countenance (Psalm 4:6), the issue of which is joy and gladness (ver. 7). Light and joy explain one another (Psalm 97:11). That which is light in the first clause is joy in the latter. 4. Glory and happiness. Heaven, the seat of it, is described by light (1 Timothy 6:16). It is called the inheritance (Colossians 1:12).Use 1. If those that are converted be light, etc., then those that are not converted are not light in the Lord. This necessarily follows by the rule of contraries. They may be light in appearance, or in respect of natural endowments, or moral accomplishments, or in the account of others, or in their own conceit and apprehensions, but they are not light in the Lord; and this shows the misery of an unconverted state, and it is useful to take notice of it more particularly. If they are not light in the Lord —(1) they are not in the Lord. The phrase implies union; but such are without union to, without communion with, without participation of, without special relation to Him; without His special protection, without His special favour, without His gracious covenant. It may be propounded to them that they have no actual interest in, or right to, the blessings, the mercies of the covenant.(2) They want the saving knowledge of God in Christ, they are not light in this respect. The darkness of ignorance and misapprehensions is upon the face of their souls; the prince of darkness, the god of this world, has blinded their minds (2 Corinthians 4:3, 4). Though they may be knowing men in other respects, yet as to spiritual, saving, experimental, effectual knowledge of Christ, and the things of Christ, they are in darkness.(3) They want the favour of God. They are not under the beams of Divine love, the light of God's countenance does not shine on them, and so they are not light in the Lord. Those that are unconverted, want that which is the life and joy to the converted soul; that which sweetens all his afflictions and makes all his enjoyments comfortable.(4) They want the lustre of holiness. This is one thing which concurs to make converts light in the Lord. This light shines nowhere on earth but in the hearts and lives of such; those that are unconverted show themselves either strangers or enemies to it. They are carnal, sold under sin, know not what belongs to an holy frame of heart; think heaven may be attained without strictness, holiness, as the Scripture requires, and the lives of the saints there recorded hold forth; jeer, deride, abuse it, under odious names; place all their holiness in some outward performances or observances; holy discourse and employments are wearisomeness to them.(5) They want discoveries of future glory, they are not light in the Lord; they have not so much light as will discover it at a distance; there are no dawnings, no approaches, no appearances of that blessed light. It is midnight with a sinner while unconverted. But how shall we know, who are in this state, whether or no we be light in the Lord? To direct you herein, let us come to —Use 2. by way of examination. Hereby ye may know whether ye be converted. Every convert is light in the Lord; those, therefore, that are not light in the Lord are not converted; these are so conjoined, as he that knows the one may conclude the other. Examine, then, whether ye be light in the Lord, if ye would know whether ye be converted. In order hereto observe these particulars: (1) (2) (D. Clarkson, B. D.)
1. Descent. They are called children of light who are of the Father of lights. Christ, the light of the world, is formed in them. 2. Propriety. 3. Destination. 1 Samuel 20:31, one who is near to, worthy of, destined to, death; so children of light, because ordained to it. 4. Residence. They abide in the light. 5. Constitution. Their minds, hearts, affections, are of a lightsome, i.e., a spiritual and heavenly temper; spiritual light in their minds, holiness in their wills, joy, delight, hopes of glory in their hearts. 6. Obligation. Those that are converted are in this sense children of light, because they are obliged to walk as those that are enlightened from above; to walk holily, to be followers of God as dear children. There are strong engagements laid upon them, they are bound by covenant thus to walk. II. WHAT IS IT TO WALK AS CHILDREN OF LIGHT? 1. To walk at a distance from darkness (ver. 11); from sin, which is the work, which is the cause of all those woeful things which the Holy Ghost expresses by darkness. "What communion has fight with darkness?" (2 Corinthians 6:14). He speaks of it as a most absurd, incongruous thing, that those that are light should mingle with darkness. Every degree of darkness is contrary to fight; so every sin, small or great, open or secret, is opposite, contrary, altogether unbeseeming the blessed relation of a child of fight. 2. To walk boldly; to be herein followers of God as dear children. How followers of God? The apostle tells us (1 Peter 1:15, 16), the light of holiness should shine in the fives of those that are Christ's; holiness both exercised and diffused. Walking denotes motion and activeness. 3. Exemplarily. Children of fight must walk so as to be fight unto others, and this in divers particulars.(1) Unblameably. So as to give no cause of offence to the weak, nor no cause of reproach to the wicked.(2) Their walking should be convictive. It should discover and manifest the sinfulness of those who walk in the ways of darkness.(3) Their walking should be imitable, i.e., worthy of imitation; so order their ways as they may be a pattern unto others; so shine, as others may follow the light, not in affectation of preeminence, or singularity, in unwarranted opinions or practices; but in close following of Christ, and walking exactly according to the rule of holiness.(4) Their walking should be an ornament to their profession. 4. Cheerfully. Being children of light, they are children of joy. That is their portion, they are all Barnabases, sons of consolation, and should walk accordingly.If it be inquired how we may walk as children of light? 1. Walk not according to opinion. This can have no better ground than vain opinion, which Moses followed not, when he "chose rather to suffer," etc., and "accounted the reproach of Christ," etc. (Hebrews 11:25, 26). He had not respect to common opinion, but to something else; nor did the apostle regard it, but something of another nature (2 Corinthians 4:16-18). 2. Follow the light of the Word fully. Make use of it to discover the whole will of God concerning the duty of His children, that you may comply with it, and order heart and life by it. Decline no part of it, whatever it be. 3. Walk above the world and earthly things. Children of light are clothed with the sun; the moon, the world is under their feet (Revelation 12:1). It has no high place in their minds or hearts; riches, pleasures, honours, and respect are thrown down in their thoughts, and cast out of their affections, they are not the design of their lives; the world is their footstool everywhere, and serves, does not command them. 4. Walk in the sight of heaven. Children of the fight are the "children of the kingdom," heirs of heaven and glory, begotten again to an inheritance, etc. And that is one reason why they are called children of light, because they are heirs of the inheritance of the saints in light. (D. Clarkson, B. D.)
(Henry Varley.)
2. The fruits of His sanctifying operations enumerated, "All goodness, and righteousness, and truth."This is the conversation that may be called "Walking as children of the light." 1. The apostle, for example's sake, mentioneth some parts of the holy life, not to exclude, but imply the rest; for there is a secret "and such like" understood. When he saith, "This is the fruit of the Spirit," you must not think it is all. When we bring a sample of a commodity we bring a little to show the quality of the rest, not as if that were all we had to sell: so these graces are mentioned, but not to exclude the rest. 2. He instanceth in such cases as concern the second table, kindness, justice, and fidelity, as is usual in such cases. The world is most capable of knowing and approving these things, but they suppose higher graces; for all our goodness, justice, and truth must come from love and obedience to God, and faith in Christ, as their true and proper principle, or else they are but moral virtues, not Christian graces (Job 1:1; Luke 23:50). 3. These are spoken of as in combination. We must not so follow after one as to neglect the other. 4. I observe that there is a note of universality joined to the word goodness. "All goodness," to show this is of chief regard, and that we must not be good in one sort or kind only, but "fruitful in every good work (Colossians 1:10). A Christian should he made up of goodness; his very constitution and trade must be goodness. 5. I observe that these are called fruit, not only by a Hebraism, who are wont to express the works of a man by the term "fruit"; for man is, or should be, a tree of righteousness; but there is a distinction: Galatians 5:19, 22, now the "works of the flesh" are manifest, but "the fruit of the Spirit"; so also here compare the text with ver. 11, "Unfruitful works of darkness." But why is it called "fruit"? Partly to show it is the native and genuine product of the Spirit in our hearts, as fruit groweth on a tree; and partly to show that sin is an unprofitable drudgery, but holiness is fruit. 6. All these graces, and duties consequent, are fruits of the Spirit. 7. He speaks of habits, not of acts. When the soul is thus constituted it is hard to do otherwise. 8. These are ascribed to the Spirit for two reasons.(1) Partly because of man's incapacity to produce these things of himself.(2) And partly because all the effects carry such a resemblance with the Spirit.(9) This Spirit God has sent us by the preaching of the gospel. We receive the Spirit more plentifully by the gospel than by the law, and we receive it by faith in Christ.Having made this way, I come now to propound a particular point. 1. That the Spirit which we receive by the gospel worketh all goodness in the hearts of believers. I. What is goodness? I answer — Goodness is either moral or beneficial. 1. Moral goodness is our whole duty required by the law of God, whatever is just and equal for us to perform (Deuteronomy 30:15). 2. There is beneficial goodness, which is a branch of the former, and implieth a readiness to do good to others to the utmost of our capacity; for all good is communicative of itself (Hebrews 13:16). II. That this is the fruit and product of the Spirit by the gospel.First: What the gospel doth to promote this goodness in the world. 1. By the laws and precepts of it, or the duties it requireth; it requireth us to be good and to do good.(1) To be good; for we are first made good before we can do good (Luke 6:45).(2) To do good, both as to God and men.(a) As to God, the great duty is love; that we should love Him, and obey Him as our rightful Lord and chief good and happiness.(b) To do good to men (Galatians 6:10). We cannot take delight in all, for some are an offence to the new nature which is in us; but we must do good to all, and seek their happiness. We cannot take pleasure in sinners, but yet must do them good. Suppose they have disobliged us, yet enemies are not excepted (Matthew 5:44). 2. By the discoveries it maketh. The greatest, truest, and fullest prospect of God's goodness to mankind we have in the gospel. There "the kindness and love of God our Saviour towards man appeared" (Titus 3:4). 3. The examples it propoundeth to our imitation, not mean and blemished ones, such as we may find among our fellow creatures, but the high and glorious examples of God and Christ Himself. 4. The arguments by which it enforceth this goodness, or the rewards and encouragements which it offereth, which is the supreme blessedness or the chief good.Secondly: Upon what grounds we may expect the Spirit to cooperate herewith. 1. Because God worketh congruously, as with respect to the subject upon which He worketh, so with respect to the object by which He worketh. The subject is the heart of man, and therefore He "draweth us with the cords of a man" (Hosea 11:4). The object is the gospel, a good word, or the good knowledge of God, and therefore a suitable means to work goodness in us. There we have good precepts and good promises, and an account of God's wonderful goodness and love in Christ; and "therefore the fruit of His Spirit is in all goodness." 2. The Spirit produceth this effect as a witness of the truth of the gospel, which being a supernatural doctrine, needed to be attested from heaven, that the truth of it might be known by the mighty power of God which doth accompany it, working in our hearts effects suitable to the tenor of the word. Whatever doctrine can change the soul of man, and convert it to God, is of God, and owned by God. 3. That thereby God may signify His peculiar and elective love to His people. When He worketh all goodness in their hearts by His Spirit, they come to discern that He loveth them by a special love. 4. God maketh an offer of His grace to invite us to seriousness in attending on this gospel. He excludeth none in the offer, and therefore we must not exclude ourselves. That one choice fruit of the Spirit wrought in the children of light is righteousness. I. What is righteousness? Sometimes it is taken as largely as holiness, for that grace which doth incline us to perform our duty to God and man; for there is a righteousness even in godliness, or giving God His due honour and worship (Matthew 22:21). More strictly it is taken for that grace which doth dispose and incline us to give everyone his due, and is a branch of that love and charity which is the sum of the whole second table (Romans 13:7, 8). To evidence which — First: What is the office and part of justice and righteousness? To seek the peace and welfare of the several communities and societies in which we live, or in preferring the public good before our own. 2. To give to every man his due; to use faithful dealing in all the duties we owe to others, or in all actions wherein we are employed and entrusted by others. 3. Fidelity in our relations is another part of justice; for all these relations imply a right which is due to others. So we must be just to superiors and inferiors.Secondly: To what a height Christianity advanceth these things. 1. Because it deduceth things from a higher principle, the fixed principle of a nature renewed by Christ. There are in it three things — (1) (2) (3) 2. Because it measureth and directeth things by a more perfect rule than the law of nature. Our rule is God's Word, which is a more pure and perfect rule than so much of the law as remaineth written upon man's heart after the Fall. 3. Because it referreth them to a more noble end, which is the glory of God (1 Corinthians 10:31). II. That this is one of the fruits of the Spirit. It must needs be so, because it suiteth with His office and personal operations. The Spirit is to be our guide, sanctifier, and comforter. As our guide, He doth direct and enlighten our minds; as our sanctifier, He doth change our hearts; and as our comforter, He doth pacify and clear and quiet our consciences. Now this fruit of righteousness is conducible to all these ends, or agreeable with these offices. III. It is a choice fruit of the Spirit. 1. Because it conduceth so much to the good of human society. 2. Because of the many promises of God, both as to the world to come and the present life. 3. That to make a Christian complete in his carriage towards men, to goodness and righteousness there must be added truth. Let me inquire here — (1) (2) (3) I. What is meant by truth? Sincerity or uprightness in all our speeches and dealings with men. But because integrity of life, and uprightness in our commerce and dealings with others, is a great branch of righteousness, therefore here we must consider it as an opposite to falsehood or a lie in speech; yet not excluding either godly sincerity, which is the root of it: "Behold, Thou desirest truth in the inward parts" (Psalm 2:6); or internal integrity and righteousness (Jeremiah 5:1). The matter of a lie is falsehood, the formality of it is an intention to deceive; the outward sign is speech. Gestures are a sign by which we discover our mind, but an imperfect sign; the special instrument of human commerce is speech. Now there is a two-fold lying — a lying to God, and a lying to men. II. Why must it be made conscience of by the children of light, or those who are "light in the Lord"? I answer For these reasons: 1. Because it is a sin most contrary to the nature of God, who is truth itself; it is not only contrary to His will but to His nature: Titus 1:2, "In hope of eternal life, which God, that cannot lie, promised before the world began." He can do all things, but He cannot lie. 2. Because when God was incarnate, and came not only to represent the goodness of the Divine nature, but also the holiness of it as a pattern for our imitation, Jesus Christ, this God incarnate, was eminent for this part of holiness, for sincerity and truth (1 Peter 2:22). 3. Nothing maketh us more like the devil, who is a liar from the beginning, and the father of lies (John 8:44). 4. It is a sin most contrary to the new nature wrought in the saints, and seemeth to offer more violence to it than other sins. 5. It is a sin most contrary to human society. 6. Lying is a sin very hateful to God, and against which He hath expressed much of His displeasure. A lying tongue is reckoned among those six things which God hateth (Proverbs 6:17). 7. It is a sin shameful and odious in the eyes of men. The more common honesty any man hath, the further he is from it, especially the more he hath of the spirit of grace (Proverbs 13:5). III. Why this must be added to goodness and righteousness. 1. Because they cannot be preserved without it. 2. The life of goodness and righteousness lieth in truth, and so they cannot be thoroughly exercised unless truth be added. Sincerity runs through all the graces. (T. Manton, D. D.)
2. To consider what is said of this fruit of the Spirit. "It is in all goodness," etc. There is an ellipsis here of the copulating. Our translators supply the word, "is." Some versions supply the word, "consists." Whatever be supplied, that seems to be the sense, namely, that the fruit of the Spirit consists in all goodness, etc. Thus we read (Colossians 1:10) of being fruitful in every good work. The fruit of the Spirit is not only in some goodness, righteousness, and truth — though many deceive themselves with. parcels and shreds of these things — but it is in all goodness in one's self and to his neighbour; in all righteousness towards man; in all truth with respect to God, our neighbour, and ourselves. And these things are interwoven one with another, in the fruit of the Spirit. The goodness is true, and jostles out no sort of righteousness or justice, communicative nor distributive, remunerative nor punitive. The righteousness is true and good; from right principles, motives, and ends. So is the truth, as it is here distinguished, proceeding from a good principle. Meanwhile, this extent of the fruit of the Spirit is to be understood not in a legal, but an evangelical sense; of a perfection of parts, not of degrees.Lastly. Let us show how these are the fruit of the Holy Ghost in the children of light. They are so in three respects. 1. He implants them in the soul, giving it a good, righteous, and true inclination and propensity, agreeable to the holy law, according to that, "I will," saith the Lord, "put My law into their minds, and write them in their hearts; and I will be to them a God, and they shall be to Me a people." 2. He preserves these graces when implanted (1 Peter 1:5), without which they would die out. And — 3. He excites, quickens, and brings them forth to action, in the heart and life of the children of light (Song of Solomon 4:16). (T. Boston, D. D.)
I. Goodness. And what that is, the apostle takes it for granted that everybody knows; he does not go about to define it or explain it, but appeals to every man's mind and conscience to tell him what it is. It is not anything that is disputed and controverted among men, which some call good, and others evil; but that which mankind is agreed in, and which is universally approved by the light of nature, by heathens as well as Christians; it is that which is substantially good, and that which is unquestionably so. It consists in the following particulars, viz., obedience to our superiors and governors, and a conscientious care of the duties of our several relations; sincere love and charity, compassion, humility, peace and unity, abstaining from wrath and revenge, and rendering good for evil; these are unquestionable instances of goodness, and pass for current among all mankind, are on all hands agreed to be good, and have an universal approbation among all parties and professions, how wide soever their differences may be in other matters. The other two fruits of the Spirit which are added in the text, "righteousness and truth," which respect likewise our conversation with men, more especially in the way of commerce, are rather parts or branches of goodness, than really distinct from it. I now proceed to make some observations. 1. That the "fruits of the Spirit" are real and sensible effects, appearing in the dispositions and lives of men. The apostle here speaks of what is visible in the lives and conversations of men; for he exhorts Christians to "walk as children of the light"; now walking is a metaphor which signifies the outward conversation and actions of men. For religion is not an invisible thing, consisting in mere belief, in height of speculation, and niceties of opinion, or in abstruseness of mystery. The Scripture does not place it in things remote from the sight and observation of men, but in real and visible effects; such as may be plainly discerned, and even felt, in the conversation of men; not in abstracted notions, but in substantial virtues, and in a sensible power and efficacy upon the lives of men, in all the instances of piety and virtue, of holy and excellent actions. 2. That these "fruits of the Spirit," here mentioned, "goodness, and righteousness, and truth," are of an eternal and immutable nature, and of perpetual and indispensable obligation. 3. That moral virtues are the graces and "fruits of the Spirit." So that grace and virtue are but two names that signify the same thing. Virtue signifies the absolute nature and goodness of these things; grace denotes the cause and principle by which these virtues are wrought and produced, and are preserved and increased in us; namely, by the free gift of God's Holy Spirit to us. 4. That since these very things which are called moral virtues, are in their nature the very same with the graces and "fruits of the Spirit," therefore they are by no means to be slighted as low and mean attainments in religion, but to be looked upon and esteemed as a main and substantial part of Christianity. They are called "the fruits of the Spirit"; that is, the natural and genuine effects of that Divine power and influence upon the hearts and lives of men, which accompanies the Christian religion; or the happy effects of the Christian religion wrought in men by the immediate operation and assistance of the Holy Spirit of God, which is conferred upon all Christians in their baptism, and does continually dwell and reside in them, if by wilful sins they do not grieve Him, and drive Him away, and provoke Him to withdraw Himself from them. (Archbishop Tillotson.)
(A. Maclaren, D. D.)
I. I ask your attention to THE PRINCIPLE INVOLVED. It is that the law of a Christian life is to be found in that which is acceptable to God. In other words, our characters and conduct are not to be regulated by the bare outward letter of the law, but by something further. The result of the lesson is no doubt to raise greatly the standard of our Christian life; and who will deny that we need to raise it; who will not be conscious of the abyss of difference between ourselves and the apostles, between what we are, and that model of what we ought to be, contained in the Word of God? II. But from the principle we must pass on to THE PRACTICAL APPLICATION. How are we to prove what is acceptable to God? What, then, is the test? It is at least three fold. 1. There is the test of the Word of God, that sure rule by which everything else must be measured. But I do not mean the letter of the Word only, its direct, positive precepts. It is unnecessary to speak to you of these; whatever they command is of course right, whatever they forbid of course wrong. But I mean the indirect test of the Word. Does any given pleasure, or pursuit, or habit bring us into closer harmony with the Spirit and the mind of God? Then it is acceptable to God. Does it put us out of tune with it, and make it more difficult to keep the plain command? Then it cannot be acceptable to God. 2. The test may be found in the effect which any given course or habit has on our habits of devotion, and the soul's loving communion, through the Word and through praise and prayer, with its Father in heaven. 3. Beyond this, I believe there is in a soul in a state of spiritual health, where the reason follows God's teaching, where the affections find supreme delight in Him, and where the conscience is sensitive to inconsistency, an instinctive sense of what is right and wrong, a feeling on which aught dishonourable to God jars and is at variance, just as a harsh discord in the midst of a sweet harmony may offend the ear which is not skilled enough to detect its nature. (E. Garbett, M. A.)
II. THE OBJECT: "that which is pleasing, or acceptable, to the Lord." There is a difference between things. 1. Some things utterly displease God, as sin (2 Samuel 11:27). 2. Some things are not displeasing unto God, as all natural and indifferent actions, which are not forbidden, but allowed by Him (Ecclesiastes 9:7). 3. Other things are commanded by Him as a positive law, but have no natural goodness in themselves, setting aside God's command. 4. There are some things which do most please God, as things eminently good are acceptable to Him in the highest degree; as, for instance, faith in Christ is pleasing to God, but a strong faith is more acceptable than a weak, which needeth props and crutches (John 20:29). That proving what is acceptable to God is one great duty which belongeth to the children of light.I shall explain this point by these considerations — 1. Our great end and scope should be to please God, and be accepted with Him. 2. We please God by doing what He hath required of us in His Word. There are certain things evident by the light of nature which belong to our duty; these must not be overlooked (Micah 6:8). The things there mentioned are evident by the light of nature. That we should carry ourselves justly towards men, and with reverence and obedience to the Divine majesty, is evident by the light of nature, as well as Scripture. But the revelation that He hath made of our duty to us by the Word is more clear, full, and certain. 3. If we would know God's mind revealed in His Word, we must use search and trial. Δοκιμάζοντες, "proving," noteth great diligence and care that we may know the mind of God; for it greatly importeth us, and we are often pressed to it: "Prove all things, hold fast that which is good" (1 Thessalonians 6:21). If we see but a piece of money that hath the king's image stamped upon it, we bring it to the touchstone to see if it be right: do so with doctrines and practices, bring them to the law and to the testimony, see how they agree with God's Word (1 John 4:1). 4. We must search and try, that we may walk as children of the light. The night was made for rest; the light is not given us for rest and idleness, but for work. (T. Manton, D. D.)
(C. H. Spurgeon.)
(C. H. Spurgeon.)
(a) (b) (c) (d) (e) (f) (g) (h) 2. The ways of sin bring no good to those that walk in them. 3. Those who walk in light must reprove and convince those who walk in evil. (Paul Bayne.)
II. But, observe now, secondly, they are PLACED IN THE MIDST OF THESE UNFRUITFUL WORKS OF DARKNESS. Ah! dear hearers, we have but poor notions of sin. Every sin is that which deserves God's wrath; it has death for its wages, and eternal misery, if unrepented of, for its consummation. Therefore, confine not your minds to gross sins merely, since all sins are the works of darkness. Why are they called unfruitful? I have no doubt that it has especial reference to this darkness, as the very cause of barrenness. Yet, beloved, the saints of God are placed in the midst of these "unfruitful works of darkness"; why is it? Could not the Lord God have delivered them and translated them at once to their eternal home? Could He not in the case of Israel of old have taken them to Canaan at once without taking them through the waste howling desert? Who denies it? But should you ask wherefore He does it not, we see it typically unfolded in the eighth of Deuteronomy, at the fifteenth and sixteenth verses — "Who hath led thee through a great and terrible wilderness, wherein were fiery serpents, and scorpions, and drought, where there was no water; who brought thee forth water out of the rock of flint; who fed thee in the wilderness with manna, which thy fathers knew not, that He might humble thee, and that He might prove thee, to do thee good at thy latter end." See, then, wherefore they are placed in the midst of a dying world; see wherefore they are surrounded by these "unfruitful works of darkness"; see the great end and object, it is not the result of chance, it is the appointment of infinite wisdom, tenderness, goodness, and love. III. But, beloved, observe now "THE EXHORTATION that is given — "have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove them." Now, observe, it is not said, "have no fellowship with the unfruitful workers of darkness," never will you meet with a precept of that kind in God's Word, we must needs go out of the world if we try. But there is more than this in the precept — "but rather reprove them." Here we come to one of the most difficult paths in the believer's walk. There are many ways in which the believer is called upon from time to time to reprove the "works of darkness." By diffusing the truth. (J. H. Evans, M. A.)
I. For the object. We have a general and unlimited expression, "The unfruitful works of darkness." But what they are we may collect from the context, "Uncleanness, fornication, evil concupiscence," etc.; and (Romans 13:12, 13) the apostle reckoneth up other things. These and such like heathen practices are such as the apostle intendeth. 1. They are called "works of darkness" for these reasons —(1) Because they are done by men in their carnal estate, who are destitute of the Spirit of God, and all saving knowledge of His will.(2) Because they are suggested by the temptations of the devil, who is the prince of darkness, and the ruler of the darkness of this world; and therefore called "his lusts" (John 8:44); "his works" (1 John 3:8).(3) Because they cannot endure the light, but seek the veil and covert of secrecy.There is a three-fold light.(1) Natural. They rebel against this light (Job 24:13).(2) Light spiritual, the light of God's Word: "For everyone that doeth evil hateth the light, neither cometh to the light, lest his deeds should be reproved" (John 3:20).(3) There is another light, and that may be called practical, or the light of a holy conversation: "Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorify your Father which is in heaven" (Matthew 5:16).(4) Because these men are condemned to everlasting darkness; for if they live and die in these sins without repentance, they are unavoidably cast into utter darkness, where is weeping and gnashing of teeth. 2. These are said to be unfruitful by a μείωσις, that is, damnable; as Hebrews 13:17, "That is unprofitable for you." The meaning is, hurtful and pernicious; however, the expression is emphatical. These works produce not only no good fruit, but certainly bring forth evil fruit, and prove bitterness in the end. Mere evil, as evil, cannot be the object of choice; there is some fruit or benefit expected in all that we do, but sin will never make good its word to us.(1) It doth not answer expectation; the sinner looketh for more contentment and satisfaction than he doth enjoy: "And what profit hath he that hath laboured for the wind?" (Ecclesiastes 5:16). It is a fruitless enterprise; so that very experience is enough to confute it; and that is one reason why objects of sin are loathed when we have our fill of them (2 Samuel 13:15).(2) It is not valuable; the profit will not counterbalance the loss, nor the pleasure the pain (Matthew 16:25). II. The acts of our duty about it; and they are two. 1. That we must have no fellowship with them in evil. To understand that, we must consider how many ways we have fellowship with them.(1) If we do the same things that others do.(2) If we be accessory to the sins of others, which we may be many ways.(a) If we counsel, persuade, allure, or entice others to sins. These are Satan's decoys, who being ensnared themselves, draw others into the net.(b) By commanding that which is evil. This is the sin of those that have power over others; as David commanded Joab to set Uriah in the forefront of the hottest battle, and retire from him, that he may be smitten and die (2 Samuel 11:15).(c) By consenting, though we be not the principal actors; as Ahab (1 Kings 21:19).(d) By abetting, aiding, and assisting in the conveyance of the sin; as Jonadab assisted Amnon in getting an occasion to satisfy his lust on his sister Tamar (2 Samuel 13:5).(e) By applauding, approving, or praising the sin, which is the guise of flatterers (Romans 1:32).(f) By carelessness to prevent the sin: "I will judge his house forever, for the iniquity which he knoweth; because his sons made themselves vile, and he restrained them not" (1 Samuel 3:13). So that a culpable omission may make us accessory to their sin. 2. The other duty is, "But rather reprove them." Now reprove we may by deed or word.(1) By deed, or the example of a holy life; as "Noah condemned the world" (Hebrews 11:7).(2) By word, when it may be done with profit; as the apostle saith of the infidel, when he cometh into Christian assemblies, "he is condemned of all, and judged of all" (1 Corinthians 14:24); namely, as he heareth doctrines there contrary to his practice. III. The reasons of the point. 1. Because there should be a broad and sensible difference between the children of light and the children of darkness. 2. This difference is discovered by those actions that are proper to either state; for actions are agreeable to their principle, and in actions must this difference be expressed, or how is it visible? Both show forth the influence of an unseen power, both the children of God and the children of the devil, the children of light and children of darkness. 3. This distinction is to be kept up on the part of the godly, and so conspicuously held forth, that they may either convince or convert the wicked. 4. The children of God are fitted and prepared for this, to abstain from sin (1 John 3:9). 5. The inconveniencies are great that will follow if God's children should have any fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness; our pretended communion with God will be interrupted (1 John 1:6, 7).To press the two duties in the text. 1. "Have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness"; that is, do not join or partake in the sins of the carnal world, though they seem to be authorized by vulgar and common practice. To this end remember —(1) You must not do as others do, but do as God requireth.(2) Love God, and love His law, and love His people, and the infection is prevented. Love God (Psalm 97:10).(3) We must eschew all unnecessary and voluntary friendship and familiarity with wicked men (Psalm 26:4; Proverbs 12:11).(4) Your happiness lieth in communion with God, and this we cannot have if we have fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness (1 John 1:6, 7). 2. "But rather reprove them," by deed and word.(1) By deed, spoken of before; as David convinced Saul (1 Samuel 24:17).(2) By word. It is a duty the world cannot bear, but we must perform it (Proverbs 15:12) (T. Manton, D. D.)
(S. Jones.)
(H. W. Beecher.)
(R. J. McGhee, M. A.)
(C. H. Spurgeon.)
(J. Pulsford.)
1. All and every kind of intercourse with evil-doers is not included; for we are commanded to rebuke, and this implies some intercourse. Besides, we are exhorted to do good unto all men, as we have opportunity. 2. All friendly intercourse with even gross sinners is not prohibited. Our Saviour sat at meat with publicans, and sinners, and Pharisees; and Paul instructs Christians how to conduct themselves when invited to a feast by an unbeliever. 3. All business intercourse is not interdicted. In 1 Corinthians 10:25, permission, and even advice is given. 4. The discharge of the relative duties which arise out of the family relation is not included in the prohibition. 5. Civil connection with wicked governments is not forbidden. Subjection to rulers is permitted and directed by the precept of Paul, in Romans 13:1. Joseph held office under the despot of Egypt. Daniel did likewise under the kings of Babylon and Persia, and while so doing was greeted by the angel with the title, "well-beloved." 6. Not all ecclesiastical connection with wrong-doers is forbidden. II. HAVING SEEN THAT THERE ARE SOME THINGS WHICH ARE NOT TO BE UNDERSTOOD AS THE FELLOWSHIP FORBIDDEN, LET US INQUIRE IN WHAT IT DOES CONSIST. 1. It plainly includes the direct commission of sin. 2. It occurs in the support of others in the commission of wrong, when we employ them or supply them with the means of some iniquitous purpose. 3. Iniquity is fellowshipped when wrong is justified as right; when sweet as called bitter, and bitter sweet; when darkness is called light, and light darkness. 4. The same thing takes place when men support wrong on the whole. This is done by endeavouring to produce an underestimate of the wrong itself; or by urging its necessity or expediency, as if Providence compelled us to sin. III. LET US NOW CONSIDER OUR POSITIVE DUTY AS ENJOINED IN THE TEXT. A proper understanding of the word "reprove" will furnish us with a clue to guide us to this end. The term implies an appeal to the understanding of the evil-doer — to convince him by proving that his course is one of wickedness and folly — to arouse his sense of right, and not to irritate his sensibility to obloquy and scorn. (E. C. Pritchett.)
(J. B. Gough.)
(St. Augustine.)
1. By personally committing the sins described, or by joining with others in bringing them about. 2. By teaching wrong-doing, either by plain word or by just inference. 3. By constraining, commanding, or tempting; by threat, request, persuasion, inducement, compulsion, bribery, or influence. 4. By provoking, through exciting anger, emulation, or discouragement. 5. By neglecting to rebuke, especially by parents and masters misusing their office, and allowing known evils in the family. 6. By counselling, and advising, or by guiding by example. 7. By consenting, agreeing, and cooperating. 8. By conniving at sin: tolerating, concealing, and making light of it. 9. By commending, countenancing, defending, and excusing the wrong already done; and contending against those who would expose, denounce, and punish it. II. WHAT IS COMMANDED. "Reprove." 1. Rebuke. 2. Convict. 3. Convert. III. WHY IT IS COMMANDED TO ME? It is especially my duty to be clear of other men's sins. 1. As an imitator of God and a dear child (ver. 1). 2. As one who is an inheritor of the kingdom of God (vers. 5, 6). 3. As one who has come out of darkness into marvellous light in the Lord (ver 8). 4. As one who bears fruit, even the fruit of the Spirit, which is in all goodness, righteousness and truth (ver. 9). 5. As one who would not be associated with that which is either shameful or foolish (vers. 12, 15).If our fellowship is with God, we must quit the ways of darkness. IV. WHAT MAY COME OF OBEDIENCE TO THE COMMAND. Even if we could see no good result, yet our duty would be plain enough; but much benefit may result. 1. We shall be clear of complicity with deeds of darkness. 2. We shall be honoured in the consciences of the ungodly. 3. We may thus win them to repentance and eternal life. 4. We shall glorify God by our separated walk and by the godly perseverance with which we adhere to it. 5. We may thus establish others in holy nonconformity to the world.Let us use the text as a warning to worldly professors. Let us take it as a directory in our conversation with the ungodly. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
(Charlesworth's "Life of Rowland Hill.)
(Memoir of Andrew Fuller.)
1. They are done of them in secret. 2. It is a shame to speak of them, there is such a turpitude and filthiness in them. So that in these words may be observed — (1) (2) 1. Naturally we apprehend a difference between virtue and vice, good and evil; for we apprehend the one as culpable and evil, and the other as honest and commendable. 2. This apprehension is most sensibly betrayed by our affections of shame and fear. 3. This apprehension produceth different effects in the godly and wicked. We have an instance in the text. In the unconverted it produceth hypocrisy, in the converted shyness and abhorrence of sin. In the unconverted pagan Ephesians it produced hypocrisy; they did seek to hide what they would not avoid. Though the things were abominable, and had the marks of nature's dislike and improbation upon them, yet they committed them in secret; as many a man's heart reproacheth him, yet he goeth on still in his sins, and if he may commit them secretly, without being seen by others, they think themselves safe and secure, and for the present out of gunshot. But here is another sort of men intimated in the text; the apostle, and those like-minded with himself, all children of light, that abhor these deeds of darkness, are ashamed to mention what others are not ashamed to practise. Unbelievers have but a spark of conscience left; they know their practices are abominable, but they do them in secret. These are so far from committing these things, that they count it a shame to speak of them, or to hear them spoken of by others, it cannot be done without blushing. 1. To show us the evil of sin. Two things in the text discover that. (1) (2) 2. It shows how impudent and desperate in sin they are, and how much they have outgrown the heart of a man, and lost all feelings of conscience, that "declare their sins as Sodom, and hide them not" (Isaiah 3:9).Men grow not to this impudence at first, but by several degrees they lose the apprehension of evil of sin. 1. Satan suggests to us some sin, to which he finds us by nature prone, and which he seeks plausibly to insinuate as profitable and pleasant (James 1:14). 2. This suggestion, if it be not presently resisted, breedeth in our minds a certain delectation. It is sweet in his mouth, and he hideth it under his tongue. 3. Delight moveth the lust or concupiscence, and draweth out and engageth our consent (Joshua 7:21). 4. This impelleth and urgeth the will to action: "And lust, when it hath conceived, bringeth forth sin" (James 1:15). 5. The act being finished, unless the sinner be corrected by God, or awakened by His Spirit, breedeth security: "Sin when it is finished bringeth forth death" (James 1:15). 6. Security inviteth us to continue in the sin, as also to make no conscience of other sins (Deuteronomy 29:19, 20). 7. This continuance and living in sin taketh away the sight and odiousness of it, and produceth hardness of heart and blindness of mind (Hebrews 3:13). 8. This induration and excecation, this blindness and hardness of heart, is at first partial, concerning this or that sin; but at length general, concerning all sin; and this begetteth that horrid impudence that men are past all shame. 9. That it is the folly and madness of sinners that know the filthiness of sin to commit it secretly, and think themselves secure if they may escape the eye of man.I shall prove it — 1. From the evil of secret sins; although to be a bold and open sinner is in some respects more heinous than to be a secret and private sinner, because of the dishonour to God, the scandal of others, and impudence in the sinner himself.(1) Because they are more against knowledge and conviction.(2) This secret sinning, and with security, hath Atheism annexed to it. Atheism is either a denial of God or a contempt of God.(3) The more secret any wickedness is, the more studious and premeditated; the more of deliberation there is in a sin, the greater is the sin.(4) Many times it involveth us the more in sin; and so by seeking to cover one sin, we run into many.(5) Secret sins indulged often bring great mischiefs and inconveniences upon the actors of them. I shall instance only in those two mentioned in Job 24:14, 15. 2. It is folly and madness, because God loveth to discover it. Our Lord telleth us (Luke 12:2).(1) Here God discovereth secret sins, and bringeth them to light, as He found out Achan in his sacrilege.(2) At the great day of account and last judgment — ''I will set thy sins in order before thee" (Psalm 50:21; and 1 Corinthians 4:5). It teacheth us to make conscience of secret sins, whether they be sins of omission or sins of commission, or of a mixed nature, when a thing is done which for the matter is good, but a defect in the manner or end.Exhortation, to press you to three duties. 1. Take more care to get your sins pardoned than hidden: "He that hideth his sin shall not prosper; but he that confesseth and forsaketh his sin shall have mercy" (Proverbs 28:13). We seek to hide our sins from the world, from ourselves, and from God. 2. Study more to approve yourselves to God than to be concealed from men. Godly simplicity and sincerity will be our comfort (2 Corinthians 1:12). 3. Humble yourselves, not only for open, but secret, sins (Psalm 19:12). (T. Manton, D. D.)
(S. Baring-Gould, M. A.)
(C. H. Spurgeon.)
1. An assertion — "But all things that are reproved are made manifest by the light." 2. The proof of it — "For whatsoever doth make manifest is light." 1. An assertion or proposition, where two things are to be considered.(1) Something supposed; that the doctrine of Christianity is the true light or test by which things are to be judged. The way of heathenism being compared with it showeth this is light — "Thy word is a lamp to my feet, and a light to my path" (Psalm 119:105; so Proverbs 6:23; Proverbs 15:31).(2) That which is asserted is, that all things which are reproved and disallowed are made manifest by the light. The light discovereth itself, and all things that differ from it; that which discovereth truth doth also discover error and falsehood; that which manifests what is right doth also manifest what is wrong. 2. The proof is taken from the common nature of all light, natural and sensible, or spiritual and intellectual — "Whatever doth make manifest is light." Natural light maketh manifest things proper to it; so doth spiritual light things that belong to its sphere, things morally good or evil. That the light of Christianity, shining forth in the Word of God and the lives and actions of Christians, is a great means of reproving and convincing the world. That this light shineth forth both in their words and deeds.(1) The doctrine which they profess, hold fast, and adhere to. There is a light in God's Word which doth not only show the right way to everlasting life and true happiness, but disproves any contrary course.(2) Holiness of life. Light hath its power as it is held forth in our words, but much more as it shineth in our lives for the illumination and conviction of the world (Matthew 5:16). 3. This then is that which we are to make conscience of, that our light may be a reproving light to the wicked and carnal world; and that for these reasons — (1) (2) 1. That though by the light of nature we have some sense of the turpitude of sin, yet we have not a perfect knowledge of it; the light of Christianity giveth us that. 2. It informeth us that some general sense of the shamefulness of sin will not break the power and force of it. To persuade us to get light. It is a shame to be ignorant of our necessary duty. If a man be asked whether he can paint or carve, he may answer without shame, I am ignorant; that skill is not necessary; but if he be ignorant how to love and please and serve God, then he is brutish, like the horse or mule, that hath no understanding. (T. Manton, D. D.)
(W. C. Church.)
1. If you allow yourself in the practice of known wickedness, your conscience is asleep. 2. If you live in the customary neglect of self-examination, you are in a state of slumber. 3. If you have never been in any degree affected with a sense of your guilt, and of your dependence on the mercy of God in Christ, you are among those who are asleep. 4. If you have no conflicts with sin and temptation, you are in a state of slumber. 5. The prevalence of a sensual and carnal disposition is a sign of spiritual death. 6. Stupidity under the warnings of God's word and providence, indicates such a state of soul as the Scripture compares to sleep. II. APPLY THE CALL. 1. This awakening must suppose and imply a conviction of your sin, and a sense of your danger. 2. This awakening from sleep, and arising" from the dead, implies a repentance of sin and turning to God. 3. They who have awoke from their sleep and risen from the dead will experience the properties, and maintain the exercises of a holy and spiritual life. III. THE ENCOURAGEMENT — "Christ shall give thee light," shall shine upon and enlighten thee. 1. This may be understood as a promise of pardon and eternal life on your repentance. 2. The words farther import God's gracious attention to awakened souls, when they frame their doings to turn to Him. The call is, Awake, arise from the dead, repair to the Saviour. Say not, "We are unable to discern the way." Christ will shine upon you and give you light. Say not, "We are unable to rise and walk." He will meet you with His grace. Arise, He calleth you. He will guide your steps. (J. Lathrop, D. D.)
1. Sleep. This state, though usually benign and refreshing, is sometimes one of great danger. The traveller who sleeps when exposed to excessive frost, the sailor who sleeps upon the mast, are examples. 2. Darkness. This is emblematical of ignorance, error, and iniquity, and especially of the want of any certain prospect for the future. 3. Death. The insensibility, powerlessness, and immovableness of the corpse are an awful representation of the sinner's state. II. REPRESENTATIONS OF THE SINNER'S NEED. 1. Awakening. 2. Enlightening. 3. Raising to life.The ministry of our Lord Jesus affords us many and striking instances of the exercise of a Divine power in these ways. III. A REVELATION OF THE SINNER'S HOPE. 1. A Divine command: Awake! arise! There is something for man to do in order that he may enjoy the blessings of the gospel. 2. A Divine promise: Christ will enlighten thee. (Clerical World.)
1. The insidious character of it,(1) A Christian may be asleep and not know it. Indeed, if he did know it, he would not be asleep.(2) A man who is asleep may be kept in very good countenance by his neighbours. They may be in the same state, and sleeping people are not likely to be very active in rebuking one another.(3) One who is asleep may have taken care before he went to sleep to prevent anybody coming in to wake him. There is a way of bolting the door of your heart against anybody.(4) A man can do a great deal while asleep that will make him look as if he were quite awake. For instance, some people talk in their sleep, and many professors will talk just as if they were the most active, the most earnest, the most gracious, the most warm-hearted people anywhere. 2. What is the evil itself? It is an unconsciousness of one's own state, and a carelessness of such a kind as not to want to be conscious of it. The man takes everything for granted in religion. He seems, too, to be perfectly immovable to all appeals. The best argument is lost on a sleeping man, and then this slumbering spirit spreads itself over everything else. There is a heartlessness in the manner in which everything is gone about. 3. Now, two or three words upon what makes this evil of Christians being asleep a great deal worse.(1) It is this: they are Christ's servants, and they ought not to be asleep. If a servant is set to do a certain duty, you do not continue him in your service if he drops off asleep.(2) It is so bad for us to be asleep, too, because it is quite certain that the enemy is awake. You recollect old Hugh Latimer's sermon, in which he says that the devil is the busiest bishop in the kingdom.(3) And meanwhile souls are being lost. 4. What is it that sends us to sleep?(1) We are inclined to slumber from the evil of our nature.(2) It is easy to send a man to sleep if you give him the chloroform of bad doctrine.(3) The sultry sum of prosperity sends many to sleep. Fulness of bread is a strong temptation.(4) In some people it is the intoxication of pride.(5) In others it is the want of heart which is at the bottom of everything they do. They never were intense, they never were earnest, and consequently they have such little zeal that that zeal soon goes to sleep. This is the age of the Enchanted Ground. He that can go through this age and not sleep must have something more than mortal about him. God must be with him, keeping him awake. You cannot be long in the soporific air of this particular period of time without feeling that in spiritual things you grow lax, for it is a lax age — lax in doctrine, lax in principle, lax in morals, lax in everything — and only God can come in and help the Pilgrim to keep awake in this Enchanted Ground. II. CHRIST'S MESSAGE TO THOSE OF HIS PEOPLE WHO ARE ASLEEP. 1. Jesus speaks this in love. He would not say "awake," were it not the kindest thing He could say to you. Sometimes a mother's love lulls her child to sleep, but if there is a house on fire the mother's love would take another expression and startle it from its slumbers; and Christ's love takes that turn when He says to you, "Awake! Awake! awake!" 2. It is His wisdom as well as His love that makes Him say it. He knows that you are losing much by sleeping. 3. It is a voice, too, which you ought to own, for it is backed up by the authority of the person from whom it comes. 4. It is a voice which has been very often repeated. Christ has been saying, "Awake! Awake!" to some of us many hundreds of times. You were sick, were you, a few months ago? That was Christ, as it were, shaking you in your sleep, and saying, "Awake, My beloved, awake out of thine unhealthy slumbers!" 5. A personal cry — "Thou." Not, "Awake all of you"; but, "Awake thou!" Shall I pick you out one by one? 6. He puts it very pressingly in the present tense. "Awake! awake now." Not a few years hence, but now. This moment. III. THE PROMISE WITH WHICH CHRIST ENCOURAGES US TO AWAKE — "Christ shall give thee light." What means this? 1. Instruction. 2. The light of joy. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
II. But to such THE GRACIOUS INVITATION is given — "Awake thou that sleepest, and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light." This invitation or command, very naturally divides itself into two branches — the external call of the gospel, and the internal call of the Holy Spirit. III. THE PROMISE that is made — "And Christ shall give thee light." We have already observed, that sin has darkened the understanding, depraved the affections, and rendered us insensible to every form of moral worth. It is altogether the result of Divine power, therefore, to enlighten the understanding, to purify the heart, and to bring us into subjection to the obedience of Christ. In closing our discourse, we observe — 1. That none will be able to urge, at the last clay, that they were compelled to sin, or prevented from forsaking it, by the providential arrangements of God. 2. Nor can you say that you have not sufficient means and opportunities for obtaining the blessings of redemption. 3. None will be able to say that they humbly, earnestly, and perseveringly sought the assistance of the Holy Spirit, without obtaining it. 4. Neither can you plead your inability to obey God, as an excuse for continuing in sin. (A. Gilmour.)
2. The text plainly intimates to us that the sinner, or man of the world, to whom it addresses itself as to one sleeping, is in a state of insensibility. For no sooner has sleep taken possession of anyone, but forthwith all the senses are locked up, and he neither seeth, heareth, smelleth, tasteth, or feeleth anything. Present the most finished and beautiful picture before the eyes of a person asleep; he sees no more of it than if it was not there. 3. It appears from the text before us, that the world is in a state of delusion; for such is the state of them that sleep. And to what can the life of many a man be so fitly compared, as to a dream? "Awake, thou that sleepest, and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light." And first, the sincere penitent, who really and truly turns from sin to righteousness, and from the world to Christ, passes from darkness to light. Secondly, the sinner, by repentance, is brought out of a state of insensibility into one of sensibility. Thirdly, the penitent is translated from a state of delusion to a sound judgment and right apprehension of things, from shadows to realities: even as one awaketh from the romantic scenery of a dream, to behold all things as they really are, and to do his duty in that station in which God has placed him. (Bishop Home.)
1. The causes of spiritual life have not wrought upon them. 2. The effects and signs of spiritual life do not appear in them; and therefore they are in the state and under the power of spiritual death. 1. If all Christless and unregenerate souls be dead souls, then how little pleasure can Christians take in the society of the unregenerate! Certainly 'tis no pleasures for the living to converse among the dead. It was a cruel torment, invented by Mezentius the tyrant, to tie a dead and living man together. The pleasure of society arises from the harmony of spirits, and the hopes of mutual enjoyment in the world to come; neither of which can sweeten the society of the godly with the wicked in this world. 2. How great and wholly supernatural, marvellous, and wonderful is that change which regeneration makes upon the souls of men! It is a change from death to life: "This My Son was dead and is alive again." Regeneration is life from the dead (Luke 15:24). (J. Flavel.)
I. CONVICTION IS PRODUCED BY THE POWER OF THE TRUTH. II. CONVICTION AWAKENS THE GUILTY CONSCIENCE. III. SOMETIMES CONVICTION IS TRANSIENT. A mere play on the feelings cannot produce a permanent change. IV. THERE ARE INSTANCES OF SPECIAL MEANS USED TO PRODUCE CONVICTION. St. Paul's conversion. V. CONVICTION IS GENUINE WHEN SALVATION IS SOUGHT. The gaoler at Philippi. VI. CONVICTION SOMETIMES COMES TOO LATE TO SAVE. Belshazzar. Dives. (The Weekly Pulpit.)
1. A state of sleep. This implies — (1) (2) (3) (4) II. THE EXHORTATION GIVEN TO SUCH. God calls thee by His Word; by His ministers, whom He raises up, qualifies, and sends forth, chiefly for this end; by His providence, affliction, health, adversity, prosperity, the sickness or death of friends and relations; by His Spirit, which enlightens thy mind, awakens and informs thy conscience. III. THE GRACIOUS PROMISE MADE TO THOSE WHO TAKE THE EXHORTATION. "Christ shall give thee" — 1. The light of knowledge as to Divine things. 2. The light of comfort and happiness. 3. The light of life. (I. Barrow, D. D.)
1. That our natural state is a state of darkness. Light in the external world is the element or medium by which we see other objects. Darkness precludes light, not by extinguishing the sense, but by rendering it useless. Three gradations may be stated, three degrees of darkness, as it affects the soul and its perceptions.(1) That in which the soul has no perception at all of spiritual objects or "the things of God," which are, to it, as though they were not.(2) That in which it sees the objects as existing, but is blind to their distinguishing qualities and relative proportions.(3) That in which the qualities are seen, but not appreciated; they are seen to exist, but not seen to be excellent or the reverse. Not so much a darkness of the mind as of the heart — a blindness of the affections as to spiritual objects. 2. A state of sleep. This is more than darkness. The man who is asleep has his senses sealed; not his sight merely, but his other senses. External objects are to him as though they were not. All that lies beyond this life and its interests is veiled from his view, and might as well not be. But while his senses are suspended, his imagination is awake and active. The more insensible he is of that which really surrounds him, the more prolific is his fancy in ideal objects. His life is but a dream. His illusions may be of a pleasing and agreeable nature; that will only make the awakening more dreadful. It is related by one of those who witnessed and experienced a late explosion, that when it occurred he was asleep, and that his first sensation was a pleasant one, as though he had been flying through the air. He opened his eyes, and he was in the sea! May there not be something analogous to this in the sensations of the sinner who dies with his soul asleep, and soars, as he imagines, towards the skies, but instantaneously awakes amidst the roar of tempests and the lash of waves upon the ocean of God's wrath? 3. A state of death. (1) (2) (3) 4. A state of guilt. Alienation from the love of God. 5. A state of danger. Exposed to the wrath of God. II. WHAT THE TEXT CALLS US TO DO. The real ground of men's indifference to this matter is their unbelief. They do not really believe what they are told as to their state by nature. Where this faith really exists, it shows itself in anxious fears, if not in active efforts. The soul's first impulse is to break the spell which binds it. But this it cannot do; in itself it is helpless. Hence the exhortation has added to it the necessary promise — "Christ shall give thee light." Repentance and faith are conditions of salvation; but the Author of our salvation is the Giver of repentance, the Author and Finisher of our faith. God forgives us freely if we repent and believe, but we can just as well make expiation for our sins, as repent and believe without Divine assistance. But (it may be asked) will not this doctrine tend to paralyze the efforts of the sinner for salvation? And what then? The more completely his self-righteous strength is paralyzed, the better. No man can trust God and himself at once. Your self-reliance must be destroyed, or it will destroy you. But if, by a paralysis of effort, be intended a stagnation of feeling, and indifference to danger, I reply that this doctrine has no tendency to breed it. Suppose it should be suddenly announced to this assembly that a deadly malady had just appeared, and had begun to sweep off thousands in its course; and that the only possibility of safety depended on the use of a specific remedy, simple and easy in its application, and already within the reach of every individual, who had nothing to do at any moment but to use it, and infallibly secure himself against infection. And suppose that while your minds were resting on this last assurance, it should be authoritatively contradicted, and the fact announced, with evidence not to be gainsaid, that this specific, simple and infallibly successful, was beyond the reach of every person present, and could only be applied by a superior power. I put it to yourselves, which of these statements would produce serenity, and which alarm? Which would lead you to fold your hands in indolent indifference, and which would rouse you to an agonizing struggle for the means of safety? I speak as unto wise men; judge ye what I say. Oh, my friends, if there is any cure for spiritual sloth and false security, it is a heartfelt faith in the necessity of superhuman help. The man who makes his helplessness a pretext for continuance in sin, whatever he may say, does not really believe that he is helpless. No man believes it till he knows it by experience. 1. Light dispels that blindness of the heart and affections which disables us from seeing the true qualities of spiritual objects. That which before seemed repulsive becomes lovely; that which was mean is glorious. That which was pleasing or indifferent is now seen to be loathsome. The beauty of holiness and the ugliness of sin are now revealed in their true colours. Nor is this all. The light which beams upon us not only rectifies our views of what we law before, but shows us what we never saw. 2. Light, then, is the remedy; but how shall we obtain it? It must be given to us. If it comes at all, it comes as a free gift. 3. Christ alone can give it. This world, to the believer, is a dark, perplexing labyrinth, and in its mazes he would lose himself for over were it not that ever and anon, at certain turnings in the crooked path, he gets a glimpse of Calvary. These glimpses may be transitory, but they feed his hopes, and often unexpectedly return to cheer his drooping spirits. Sometimes he is ready to despair of his escape, and to lie down in the darkness of the labyrinth and die. But as he forms the resolution an unlooked for turn presents a distant prospect, and beyond all other objects, and above them, he discerns the cross and Christ upon it. Look to Christ then! look to Him for light to dissipate your darkness, to arouse you from sleep, and to raise you from the dead. (J. A. Alexander, D. D.)
I. Observe how woeful and dangerous the present case of carnal unregenerate men is. It is represented to us under the notions of spiritual sleep and spiritual death; which I shall speak of both generally and apart, and then conjointly and together. First: To speak of them generally, and apart. 1. They are asleep in sin, whereas the regenerate are awakened (1 Thessalonians 5:5, 6). Here, then, is their misery upon the first account, they sleep in sin; and a great misery it is.(1) Because their insensibility and security make their other sins more dangerous.(2) Though they sleep, their damnation sleepeth not (2 Peter 2:3).(3) The sun is up, and shines into their windows (Romans 13:11). 2. The next notion is spiritual death; for we are bidden to "Arise from the dead," which showeth this sleep is deadly (Ephesians 2:1). How are we dead? Two ways — (1) (2) 1. We have reason. Thou art a man, and hast reason, and therefore art to be dealt with by way of exhortations. God influenceth all things according to their natural inclination, as He enlighteneth the world by the sun, burneth with fire, so he reasoneth with man. 2. We have conscience (which is reason applying things to our case), and can judge of our actions morally considered with respect to reward and punishment, and accuse or excuse as the nature of the action deserveth (Romans 2:14, 15). 3. That we have a natural self-love and desire of happiness (Psalm 4:6), "There be many that say, Who will show us any good?" (Matthew 13:45, 46). So that, though we are dead, so as to do nothing savingly and acceptably, yet we must remember that we are also asleep, ignorant, slight, careless, do not improve our natural reason, conscience, and desires of happiness to any saving purpose, and will not mind things. Both together giveth us a right apprehension of our woeful condition by nature, that we are corrupt, and so are said to be dead; and senseless and secure, so we are said to be asleep, mindless of our danger and remedy. II. The manner of our recovery out of this wretched estate. 1. In the general, it is by calling of us. "Awake, arise" (see 1 Peter 2:9; 2 Thessalonians 2:14). 2. More particularly, the order of this calling is set down in the text, in these two injunctions, "Awake," and "Arise from the dead." We are reduced and brought home to God two ways — either (1) (2) III. The next thing is, what a blessed estate Christ calleth them into; He doth not only rescue them out of the power of darkness, but "He will give them light." Many things are intended hereby. 1. By light is meant the lively light of the Spirit, or a clear affective knowledge both of our misery and remedy. 2. Light is put for God's favour, and the solid consolation which floweth from thence (Psalm 4:6, 7). 3. It implies eternal glory and happiness, to which we have a right now, and for which we are prepared and fitted by grace. A tender waking conscience is a great mercy, whereas a dead and stupid conscience is a heavy judgment; for then neither reason nor grace is of any use to us; we can neither do the functions of a man or a Christian while we are asleep. First: "Awake thou that sleepest."Consider these motives — 1. Doth it become any to sleep in your ease, while you know not God to be a friend or an enemy? yea, when you have so much reason to think that He is an enemy to you, for you are enemies to Him by your minds in evil works (Colossians 1:21). 2. You sleep in that ship that is swiftly carried to eternity, and are just upon the entrance into another world: "Lest coming suddenly He find you sleeping" (Mark 13:36). 3. Yon have slept out too much precious time already: "The time past of our life may suffice us" (1 Peter 4:3). 4. Thou hast been long and often called upon. If God had not sought to awaken you, you had the better excuse: "How long wilt thou sleep, O sluggard? when wilt thou arise out of sleep? yet a little sleep, a little slumber, a little folding of the hands to sleep." (Proverbs 6:9, 10). 5. Now is your time and season: "He that gathereth in summer is a wise son; but he that sleepeth in harvest is a son that causeth shame" (Proverbs 10:5). To lose time is sad, but to lose the season worst of all, and a season that bringeth profit as well as labour, as harvest doth. 6. Others care for their souls, and are hard at work for God; their diligence should awaken us (Acts 26:7). 7. The devil is awake, and will you sleep? (1 Peter 5:8). 8. If nature were well awake, it would disprove your courses as much as religion. Secondly: "Arise from the dead"; that is, be converted to God; for the voice of Christ doth not only conduce to awaken us, but to raise us from the dead (John 5:25). Look about you, then; entertain serious thoughts of getting out of a state of sin into a state of grace.Take two motives to quicken you to this — 1. Better never be awakened if still we continue in our sins, for this aggravateth them (John 3:19). 2. Better never rise in the last day if we be not raised from the death of sin.(1) Do not say, It is too soon; for we can never soon enough get out of so great a danger.(2) Do not say, It is too late; for the work is yet possible, as short as your time is like to be in the world; and it will be your fault if it be not done. (T. Manton, D. D.)
(Caryl.)
(Bishop Ryle.)
1. Light was the first creation of God. His first recorded word is, "Let there be light." Proceeding out of this creation of light comes all other creation until the end is reached and man is made in the image of God. In like manner light is the first creation of the gospel, which is the re-creation of the world. 2. Light needs no evidence of its presence. It proves itself. To the blind, indeed, it has no existence, and no explanation of it can make them understand it. But to such as have eyes to see, the presence of light makes itself known at once. The gospel light commends itself by its own light to those who are possessed of a clear spiritual eyesight. 3. Light is given in order that we may see where we are and amidst what surroundings we are placed. Apart from the gospel of Christ we can possess no, true view of life; we are overwhelmed by unsolved mysteries. 4. Light exists not merely that we may rejoice in the revelation of which it is the author, but that we may walk in it. 5. "God called the light, day," and the day is given for work. "Man goeth forth to his work and to his labour until the evening." "I must work the works of Him that sent Me while it is day, the night cometh when no man can work." 6. Darkness is always fruitless (ver. 11) while light is fruit-producing. The fruit of the light (for such is the true reading of ver. 9, which is recognized in the Revised Version) is in goodness, righteousness, truth. Light is a necessary element in the formation of the fruit of a tree or a plant. Such if deprived of light becomes barren. How true a picture of the human soul upon which the Light of Life is not shining! (Canon Vernon Hutton.)
(J. Pulsford.)
(P. Robertson.)
(Dr. Talmage.)
1. Walk circumspectly, that you may keep within the line of your duty. Religion is not an extended plain, in which you may walk at large, and turn to any point without passing its limits; but a strait and narrow path, in which you must pursue one steady course without diverting to either side. (1) (2) 2. Walk circumspectly, that you may escape the snares in your way. Your greatest security lies in watchfulness and prayer, lest you enter into temptations. If they meet you, resist them; but your first care must be to avoid them. 3. Walk circumspectly, that you may wisely comport with the aspects of Providence. The beauty of religion, yea, religion itself, greatly consists in the correspondence of your temper and behaviour with your existing circumstances. In the day of prosperity be joyful, and in the day of adversity consider. 4. Be circumspect, that you may do every duty in its time and place. 5. Walk circumspectly, that your good may not be evil spoken of. II. THE REASON — "The days are evil." The Christian, while he dwells on earth, may say, "The days are evil" — 1. Because he finds in himself much disorder and corruption. 2. Because he is exposed to various afflictions. 3. Because there are many adversaries. 4. Because iniquity abounds. Much need there is that he should "walk circumspectly." (J. Lathrop, D. D.)
1. As they have no rule of conduct. 2. As they have no direct or distinct object in view. 3. As they walk often presumptuously and without fear of danger. 4. As they act without regard to their real welfare. II. THE COURSE WHICH IS RECOMMENDED FOR OUR ADOPTION. — "To walk circumspectly, as wise." Now this is just the opposite of the walk of fools. In doing this — 1. We must walk by a wise rule. 2. We must possess the spirit of wisdom. Now this must come from above (see James 3:17). 3. We must imitate the divinely recorded examples of wisdom. 4. We must walk and keep company with the wise. (J. Burns, D. D.)
II. But now observe, THESE ARE EXHORTED TO WALK WISELY. As I said before, the wise man may oftentimes walk unwisely. We see it in the histories in the Bible; we see it in the biography of God's saints. "See that ye walk circumspectly": accurately. The worldly man lives at random. Sometimes his will leads him, his caprice, his fancy, his passion; sometimes he guides himself, sometimes others guide him. The apostle exhorts the wise to walk accurately; according to the rule of God's Word, according to the rule of an enlightened conscience, and according to the rule of a filial, Joying heart. (J. H. Evans, M. A.)
1. Christians should walk judiciously; impelled by principle rather than by feeling. 2. Christians should walk correctly or accurately according to the prescribed rule. 3. Christians should walk prudently, mindful of consequences. 4. Christians should advance cautiously, apprehensive of danger, and guarding against it. 5. Christians should walk diligently, improving every favourable opportunity. II. THE ARGUMENTS WHICH ENFORCE IT. 1. We plead the obligations of a religious profession. Many, indeed, are called Christians, but we refer to those who profess themselves not merely nominal but real Christians. 2. The solemn and express engagements into which many have voluntarily entered, present a second argument. Surely, Christians, your own acts must be binding. 3. The anxiety Christians must feel for the credit of religion, and for the honour of the Saviour, is a most powerful motive urging them to greater circumspection. 4. A regard to his relative usefulness is another consideration urging the Christian to greater watchfulness. 5. The positive injury to others, which invariably results from a flagrantly inconsistent profession of religion. 6. We urge upon the Christian, as a final motive to greater circumspection, a due regard to his own personal interests. His peace, his comfort, and even his safety are alike involved in it. (Essex Congregational Remembrancer.)
1. Surely there should be a great and broad difference between them and the children of darkness. 2. Because the more light and knowledge a man hath, the more he is bound to take heed to his ways, that his practice may be according to his light. 3. They are the light of the world (Matthew 5:14; Philippians 3:15). They should be a copy and pattern to others to invite them to the heavenly life by the strictness and seriousness of their conversations. The same honour is put upon you that was put upon the star at Bethlehem, to be guides to Christ. Therefore you are to be more exemplary, which cannot be without circumspection. 4. Because there are many snares and dangers; as in a chessboard, we can hardly move back or forth but we are ready to be attacked. In all the businesses, affairs, and comforts of this life, we are apt to miscarry. Yea, sometimes there may be a snare in our duties (1 Timothy 3:6). Now they that are not circumspect are sure to miscarry. He that hath his eyes in his head, and looketh about him, may escape (Proverbs 1:17). 5. blest Christians have but a weak heart, that is apt to lead them aside into some unbecoming practice. Our heart is most in danger, and therefore we have need to look to ourselves (1 Corinthians 10:12). 6. Consider how many guards God hath set upon man, who is apt to fly out upon all occasions. There is an external guard, the magistrate, who is to watch for thy good (Romans 13:4). 7. Because there are so many spies upon us, who may make an ill use of our failings. I shall instance in three — Satan, wicked men, and weak brethren.Of reproof. 1. Of those that scoff at strictness and accurate walking. These scoff at that which is the glory of that religion which they do profess, that which God aimed at, that which Christ purchased, that which the Spirit worketh. Can a man keep at too great a distance from sin? But it is preciseness and fond scrupulosity. So did the conversations of Christians seem to the old pagans (1 Peter 4:3, 4). 2. It reproveth them that think men are more nice than wise, that we make more ado than needeth when we press men to a constant watchfulness and serious diligence in the heavenly life. Oh, consider, we have slippery hearts, and live in the midst of temptations, and are to approve ourselves in the sight of a holy God, who expecteth to be glorified by us. 3. Some slight strictness as a thing out of date, since they know their liberty by Christ. Alas! all the doctrines of grace do enforce it, not lessen it (Titus 2:11, 12). There are some grazes necessary, and some practices.First: For graces which are necessary, such as these — 1. Watchfulness, and heed that nothing unseemly pass from us. Those that are rash and indeliberate, and live at haphazard, can never walk accurately: "He that hasteth with his feet, sinneth" (Proverbs 19:2). 2. The fear of God: "They walked in the fear of the Lord, and in the comfort of the Holy Ghost" (Acts 9:31). This is a grace never out of season (Proverbs 23:17). 3. Diligence, that we may both remove impediments of good and avoid occasions of evil, that you may take an accurate inspection of your whole life and conversation. Frequently examine your ways, whither they tend (Proverbs 4:26, 27). 4. A tender conscience. Make conscience not only of gross sins, but lesser escapes. Do not wittingly tread one hair's breadth out of the way, nor run into any sin, much less live in it, be it never so small and profitable in the esteem of the world (Proverbs 7:2). The eye is offended with the least dust.Secondly: Helps by way of practice. 1. Fix your end; for when the end is fixed, the means may be the better suited; it shineth to us all the way along: "If thine eye be single, thy whole body is full of light" (Matthew 6:22); "Let thine eyes look right on, and let thine eyelids look straight before thee" (Proverbs 4:25). We should mind all things with respect to our end. 2. Take an account of the way you walk in: "I thought on my ways, and turned my feet unto Thy testimonies" (Psalm 119:59; Lamentations 3:40). 3. Seek a good guide. Use much prayer to God, that He may direct you (Proverbs 3:5, 6). 4. Renew your covenant, and often engage yourselves afresh to this strict and holy walking, because the strength of former resolutions is soon spent: "I have sworn, and I will perform it, that I will keep Thy righteous judgments" (Psalm 119:106). 5. Season the heart with strict principles. (T. Manton, D. D.)
1. Be not in a hurry to judge God's providences. 2. Do not mock at sin. Fools make a mock at sin; whereas sin is the only thing to be feared. 3. Set not your affections upon worldly things. 4. Be not slow to receive the verities of faith. 5. Be not foolish in regarding mysteries. (J. Stratten.)
1. We must walk humbly. It is a narrow way, remember, and if we walk with our heads lifted up by pride, we shall miss our footing, and slip from the path. The gate, too, is strait, or narrow. It is like one of those low-pitched, narrow entrances which you may still see in old buildings, and which were common once in all our ancient towns. A traveller could not get through those gates unless he bent his head, and bowed his shoulders. 2. If we walk along the narrow way, we must not overload ourselves. There are some burdens which we must bear, but the dear Lord, who laid them upon us, will give us strength to carry them. It is the burden of the world's making which will hinder us. We see a man who wants to walk in the right way, who hopes to pass through the narrow gate, who has so loaded himself with worldly things that he goes staggering along, till he is like one escaping from a shipwreck, who tries to swim ashore with all his money bags, and is sunk to the bottom by their weight. Sometimes people, coming home from abroad, bring with them a quantity of smuggled goods, and their clothes are all padded with laces, and other ill-gotten gear. What happens? They are stopped at a narrow gate, and stripped of all their load before they are permitted to return home. So, my brothers, if you would pass the gate which leads home, to the rest which remaineth for the people of God, you must not overload yourselves with this world's gear. (H. J. Wilmot-Buxton, M. A.)
I. I begin with the first observable, THE GENERAL IMPORTANT DUTY INCUMBENT ON US, "See that ye walk circumspectly." The remark, then, upon this first clause of the text is this, that a Christian's life is a life of the greatest accuracy and exactness. A Christian is one that is not like other men, he surpasses the common condition of mankind. 1. This exact and circumspect walking is not singularity and affectation. It is no fantastic opposition to the common usages and received customs of mankind, if they be in themselves lawful and innocent. 2. This exactness in my text favours nothing of over-nice fear and superstition, in which many place a great part of their religion. St. Paul tells us, he was of the strictest sect of religion, meaning that of the Pharisees. But that strictness and exactness were afterwards undervalued by him as trifling and childish. 3. Neither doth this duty imply any pharisaical boasting and ostentation of strictness. That proud and arrogant sect before mentioned used to glory in their great severity of life, or rather in the mere appearance of it. 4. This exact living doth not import any fond rigour and austerity over the body, as some have imagined. 5. This strictness or exactness of life doth not contain in it any notion of merit and supererogation. 6. This circumspect and exact walking doth not speak complete perfection and absolute freedom from all sin. II. To further and advance you still in this great and weighty affair, I will proceed in the next place to tell you positively WHEREIN THIS EXACTNESS OR CIRCUMSPECTION, WHICH THE APOSTLE COMMENDS TO YOU, DOTH CONSIST. 1. It is opposed to idleness, neutrality, and indifferency, and consequently is an act of Christian zeal and vigour. He must shake off all coldness and indifferency, and prosecute religion with the warmest emotions of mind, with the most ardent zeal and liveliness. 2. This strict and accurate walking is opposed to partiality, and so doth denote universal obedience, and having respect unto all the Divine law. There is no exactness without a rule or square, and that is the Word of God. Now this universal respect unto God's laws (wherein the Christian circumspection is so much seen) requires of us and strictly obliges us to these three things:(1) That we refrain not only from outward and visible acts of sin, but that the inward lusts and hidden desires of vice be carefully supprest in our minds.(2) We are obliged, as we would be impartial observers of God's laws, not only to perform the visible and public offices of religion, and such as are more easy in themselves and more creditable and fashionable in the account of the world, but likewise to be mindful of the private exercises of devotion, such as praying to God in our retirements.(3) Our universal respect to God's laws obliges us not only to abstain from gross and notorious crimes, and such offences as are very heinous and enormous, but also to make conscience of lesser and smaller sins. 3. This Christian duty of exact walking is opposed to our giving of scandal and offence to our brethren, and consequently commends to us a wary and cautious deporting of ourselves before those we converse with. This is circumspection in the true and precise notion of the word. It supposes persons to look about them, and to take good notice of things, and weigh well what they do, and before whom they act. 4. This duty in my text is opposed to hypocrisy and formality, and so it engages us to be sincere and cordial in whatever we do. 5. He that would acquit himself to be an exact walker, must more mind the things that are substantial and essential in religion, than those that are merely circumstantial and accidental. Religion doth not consist in puncto, its exactness is not placed in petty and mean things. 6. This Christian exactness is opposed to apostasy and backsliding, and so it obliges us to increase every day more and more in holiness, to abound in grace, and to persevere in the ways of goodness. 7. This most accurate and strict life of a Christian, is no less than an aiming and endeavouring after perfection. III. TO EXCITE YOU TO THIS CHRISTIAN EXACTNESS AND CIRCUMSPECTION WHICH I HAVE BEEN INSISTING UPON, I PRAY LET THESE FOLLOWING CONSIDERATIONS BE ENTERTAINED BY YOU: 1. Think how strict the principles and rules of Christianity are, and accordingly what great improvements were intended by them. The institution of the gospel designed as for greater perfection than ever was attained by the ceremonious Jew, or the most accomplished Gentile. 2. Besides the doctrine of Christianity and the design and purpose of Christ in it, I may adjoin the most holy, exact, and exemplary life of our blessed Master, and on this consideration I may urge you to a wary and circumspect walking; for the life of a Christian should be no other than a conformity to the life of Christ. We are to follow His steps, and to reckon His actions to be our pattern. 3. Consider how great helps and assistances God is pleased to afford you, and you will conclude it reasonable to walk with great exactness and strictness. The cruel and unmerciful taskmasters in Egypt pressed the Israelites to make brick, but would not give them their allowance of strait. We deal with no such hard master. 4. Think with how many dangers you are every moment environed, and you will be concerned to walk circumspectly, to tread cautiously, to live orderly and regularly. This world is hung about with snares, beset with various temptations, and the spirit of darkness, that great enemy of God and our souls, is ever plotting and contriving our ruin. 5. Set before you, and often seriously represent to your thoughts, the everlasting rewards of heaven. I cannot apply the common story of the Limner better than here. That famous artist was wont to take up a great deal of time in finishing his pictures and portrays, whereas others of that profession made quick dispatch, and had soon done their work. He, being asked why he was so long at his, and why so curious and exact? gave this short answer, "I paint for eternity," i.e., I do my work so that all future ages shall applaud me, I design myself a perpetual reward of fame. Did we but consider that every line we draw in our lives, every stroke we make, every enterprize we undertake, is for eternity; if we seriously thought of this, we should be more accurate and exact, more laborious and industrious, in all that we do. We are those that draw and limn for eternity, we labour for that which endureth to everlasting life; therefore we cannot be too long and tedious about our work, we cannot be too diligent and exact about it. 6. Let me add this one consideration more, that an exact and exemplary life is the best (if not the only) way you can take to work upon others, to amend the sinful world, to reclaim men from their follies, to win them to the embracing of religion and holiness, which I doubt not you think is a design well worth your prosecuting. (John Edwards, D. D.)
1. I say, we may more eminently convince the world that we have obtained to Christian wisdom and prudence by our being of a humble and meek spirit. There is nothing looks so unbecoming in a person that professes godliness as pride. 2. Make a visible proof of your walking wisely by being of a peaceable and quiet, a loving and charitable temper, and that, first, among yourselves, secondly, towards all men. Let your first care be that you disgrace not religion by falling out among yourselves. 3. Though you ought to maintain a loving and sociable converse with the world, yet Christian wisdom directs you to abhor and avoid all intimate commerce and friendship with such as you know to be professed enemies to virtue and godliness, and are openly profane, and refuse to be reclaimed from their abominable practices. 4. Show your godly wisdom in your strict observing of the second table as well as the first. Your duty to God must never exclude that which you owe to your neighbours, for in discharging both you serve God. 5. Let your prudence be seen in your perfect vanquishing of earthly-mindedness and covetousness. 6. Walk not as fools, but as wise, by living contentedly and cheerfully in whatever state of life it pleaseth the Divine Providence to place you. Serve God and be joyful, is a Christian's motto. He hath learnt to live by faith, which is ever accompanied with rejoicing. 7. Discover your Christian prudence and wisdom by being always more strict and severe to yourselves than you are to your neighbours. 8. Show your Christian prudence (and in that your circumspection) in being cautious in the use of lawful and innocent things. 9. Let our spiritual care and wisdom be seen in our not making ourselves guilty of other men's sins.The application of all shall be in these two particulars: 1. Be deterred from all appearance of wickedness and vice. 2. Be encouraged to a holy and godly life.Think you have reason to be deterred from all manner of vicious practices on this double consideration: 1. Lest the ways of God be evil spoken of, and consequently that God himself be dishonoured thereby. 2. Lest others be drawn to imitate your ill example. (John Edwards, D. D.)
(J. Vaughan, M. A.)
(Dean Alford.)
(R. S. Candlish, D. D.)
(Archdeacon Farrar.)
1. We must redeem time by sincerely repenting of sin and devoting ourselves immediately to the great business of life. 2. We must redeem time by considering the various ways in which we have wasted it, and avoiding them for the future. 3. We must redeem time by forming a wise and judicious plan for the regulation of our conduct, and firmly and conscientiously adhering to it. The immortal Alfred, one of the best of kings that ever filled the British throne, divided his time into three portions, allotting eight hours to sleep, recreation, and meals, eight to public business, and eight to private study and devotion; and by constantly adhering to his plan, he accomplished the works and acquired the wisdom which have excited the admiration of posterity. Dr. Doddridge adopted nearly the same plan, and by that means he was enabled to educate so many young men, to preach so frequently, and to leave the world those various writings which have enlightened the minds and aided the devotion of multitudes. Colonel Gardiner always set apart two hours in the morning for devotion, and if his troops had to march at six o'clock he rose at four to commune with God, and like his Divine Master prepare for arduous duties by fervent prayer. 4. We must redeem time by forming habits of activity and diligence. It requires great labour to improve time as it comes — what then must it require to redeem it? Should a husbandman or mechanic have lost any time in his work, he redeems it by extra exertion; in like manner should we redeem the time which we ought to have spent in serving God and preparing for eternity. II. REASONS. 1. The merciful purpose for which time is granted, and the greatness of the work which we have to perform. 2. Because the period in which we can redeem time is not only very uncertain, but may be extremely short. The goldsmith gathers up every particle of gold. The very least which he can discern he deems too valuable to be lost. Can you, then, willingly suffer the loss of your precious moments, when worlds on worlds cannot buy one of them back again? Many who are now on the bed of death or passing into eternity, would part most gladly with all the wealth they have amassed, and all the fame they have acquired, for another year, or another month. While time lingers for you, improve it. Conscientiously set apart its hours as they come to the highest purposes. 3. We should redeem time because of the eternal consequences which will result from the use we make of it. As our time is given us by God, He will call us to account for the way in which we have spent it. Every day therefore brings with it an awful responsibility. (Essex Congregational Remembrancer.)
I. It is here supposed that TIME IS PRECIOUS. 1. It is precious, because we have much business on our hands; business which relates, not to our bodies only, but to our souls; not merely to this life, but to the whole duration of our existence. 2. It is precious, because it is short and uncertain; and our work must be done soon, or it never can be done at all. 3. It is precious, because part, and with many, the greater part of it is gone already. What remains is increased in value, as it is contracted in length. We had none to waste at first; we have need to be frugal now. II. WE MUST REGAIN THE TIME WHICH IS LOST. Time past, indeed, cannot be recalled. Each moment, which flies off, is gone forever, and will return no more. Like the wind, it passeth away and cometh not again. But we do the best we can toward the recovery of lost time, when we reflect with sorrow on follies past, and resolve to be wise in future. III. WE MUST USE PRUDENCE TO SAVE, AND DILIGENCE TO IMPROVE, THE TIME THAT REMAINS. In vain you pretend to lament your past folly, unless you apply your heart to wisdom. Godly sorrow will work in you carefulness. 1. Enter on your work speedily. 2. Attend to your work with diligence. 3. Guard against the things which rob you of your time.(1) An indolent habit is inconsistent with laudable actions. It creates imaginary, and magnifies real, difficulties arid dangers. It enervates the powers of the body, and stupefies the energy of the mind.(2) A versatile humour is active, but wants patience. It flies from object to object too rapidly to appropriate or retain any. Time is lost, because nothing is prosecuted to effect.(3) An excessive fondness for company and amusement is the cause of much waste of time. Diversions may be innocent: but then they must be (a) (b) (c) 1. Youth is the most promising season. Then the work is most easy, and attended with fewest obstructions; and then there is the fairest prospect of Divine concurrence. If that season is past with you, take the present; for the future is uncertain, and the difficulty of your work and the indisposition to attempt it will increase by delay. 2. The time of health is more favourable than a time of sickness; for you are now more capable of intense thought and persevering application, and better able to prove your sincerity. 3. There are some tender seasons, when the conscience is awakened, serious sentiments impressed, and good resolutions excited. Improve these seasons. 4. There are seasons friendly for particular duties. For your daily devotions, choose the hours when your mind can be most free from the occupations of the world, that you may attend on God without distraction. If you would advise or reprove a friend, take a time when you can speak to him in private; when you feel your own mind affectionate, and think his to be calm and tender; when you can address him inoffensively, and he may hear you dispassionately. Also in doing works of charity, observe opportunities. 5. Wisely divide your time among your various duties. Lawful things will become criminal in you, if they occupy your time so far as to exclude other things of greater importance. The duties of religion are consistent with each other, and may be made to harmonize in practice. If they interfere, it is because you throw them into confusion, and your time into disorder. Distribute your seasons properly, and arrange your works prudently, and you will find there is a time for everything. (J. Lathrop, D. D.)
1. The act, buying; or, as we render it, "redeeming." Well, then, what is the meaning of "redeeming the time," or buying the time? The term is proper to civil contracts, but is here applied morally.(1) In buying there is some price paid; we part with one thing to obtain another; so we must part with anything less than it rather than lose time; as Proverbs 23:23, "Buy the truth, and sell it not." As merchants stand upon no rate or price if they may get such wares into their hands as they may make benefit of, so time is such a precious commodity, and so useful to us in order to eternity, that we should not stand upon ease, carnal pleasures, and worldly conveniences, that we may purchase it.(2) That which is bought belongeth to the buyer; and so buy time to make it your own for spiritual advantages. But our translation useth the word "redeem," which implieth another metaphor — namely, the recovery of a mortgage, or the redeeming of what hath been lost or pawned out; and so it noteth our former improvident misspence of time. We have, as it were, mortgaged it to Satan, to the world, and to vanity, and now should redeem it out of the hands of these engrossers, and by future diligence recover our former neglect. 2. The object — "the time." The word properly signifieth the season and opportunity, but yet it is the usual word for time in Scripture, for to a Christian all time is season. Time in general is but short: "But this I say, brethren, the time is short" (1 Corinthians 7:29). But the season or opportunity, which is the flower of time, is shorter; therefore this must not be slipped: "As we have therefore opportunity, let us do good unto all men" (Galatians 6:10).Secondly: The reason by which this duty is enforced — "Because the days are evil." 1. For the meaning of the phrase.(1) It may be understood of the whole course or race of man's life: (Genesis 47:9). Time in itself is neither good nor evil, but in regard of the accidents of time, as it is encumbered with variety of vexations, cares, and miseries, so our days may be called evil. And in this sense we must take that of our Saviour (Matthew 6:34). Every day bringeth evil enough and sorrow enough to exercise us. Therefore you had need to lay up for a better life, for you have but sorry evil days here.(2) More properly and specially it relateth to the times the apostle wrote in, which were hard and calamitous, and full of danger, because of the wickedness of those among whom they lived. There were many enemies then, both to Christian verity and piety. 2. The force of the consequence.(1)Because others vainly misspend time, Christians should be more careful to redeem it. The worse the times are, the better should we be, as fountain water is hottest in the coldest weather, and stars shine brightest in the darkest night.(2) Adversity makes men serious.(3) With relation to the heathen among whom they lived, he advised them to redeem the time (Colossians 4:5).(4) Some are so bad and froward, that they would take away liberty, estates, yea, life itself from you, and with it all occasions of doing and receiving good. You carry your own lives in your hands, and the lives of many of God's precious instruments are in danger; and therefore, before means and opportunities be wholly lost, redeem the time. That it is the duty of Christians to look to the due improvement of the time and season. I shall draw out the force of the apostle's exhortation in this method. I. The commodity or thing to be bought. The word signifieth time and season, the general and particular opportunity. 1. Time.(1) If you have not begun already by conversion, it must not be delayed and left to uncertainties. The sooner you begin to buy time, the better bargain you will have; for every man would have as much for his money as possibly he can, therefore take the market while it is at the best (Ecclesiastes 12:1).(2) After you are once admitted into the evangelical estate, your whole time should be redeemed and spent for God (Luke 1:75; Romans 6:10). 2. The season: buy it, whatever it cost you. The season of receiving good and of doing good. II. The use we must put it to when we have gotten this commodity into our hands. It is a precious commodity; you should never let it go but for something better than itself. There are two great ends, the glorifying of God, and the saving of our own souls. Thirdly: I shall now proceed to the encouragements to the bargain to redeem time and season. First: Let me press you to redeem the time. 1. Too much time hath been spent already (1 Peter 4:3). 2. We are to be accountable to God for time. 3. That time is only yours which is spent well, in pleasing God, and doing good; for that time is bought and redeemed which otherwise is lost to you. We lose all that time which is not spent in the love and service of God. 4. Time is not ours to dispose of at pleasure. A Christian, when he giveth up himself to God, he giveth up everything that is his to God. My time is not mine, but Christ's. It is sacrilege to rob God of what is consecrated to Him. 5. Time is a precious commodity, worth the looking after. The devil values it; if he can cheat you of your time, he can cheat you of your souls; for when conviction is strong, and all your prejudices are borne down, and his outworks taken, excuses and self-flatteries vanish. The last thing that he is loath to let go is time; his game is to cheat you of today, and so of the next day. God saith, "Today" (Hebrews 3:13); and the devil saith, Not today, but at a more convenient season; as Felix put off Paul (Acts 24:25). 6. The present time is the best: "I made haste, and delayed not to keep Thy commandments" (Psalm 119:60). Ludovicus Cappellus telleth us of a Jewish rabbin, who being asked when a man should repent, answered, One day before his death; that is, presently, this day; it may be your last in the world: "Behold, now is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of salvation" (2 Corinthians 6:2). 7. You have no time bug what may be serviceable for some good use. There is no time wherein thou dost not enjoy some blessing to provoke thee to thankfulness, or hast not some sin to be mortified, or some good work to be done. We have a great deal of work to do in a short time. 8. We have much work to do, therefore let us spend it in matters that most concern us. We all complain of the shortness of time, and yet everyone hath more time than he useth well. We should rather complain of the loss of time than the want of time. In the general, use time well. If it be short, do not make it shorter by your negligence and improvident misspending of it. A thing that is hired for a while, it is a loss to us if it be not used and employed; as a horse that is bargained for if he be kept idle, or money taken up at interest. So it is with time lent us by God for a while; we pay dear for it if we use it not, and improve it not for God. It is good to see what advantage we make of time daily. One could say when he heard the clock strike, Now I have another hour to answer for. 9. The slight price we are to give for time. You part with nothing but what is better lost than kept; with a little ease of the flesh, vain pleasure which passeth away as the wind, a little worldly profit, which at death will be of no use to thee. Now these are of no worth in comparison of time. 10. The necessity should quicken us, because there are many things which are apt to steal away and engross our time, and therefore must be redeemed; as — (1) (2) (3) (4) 1. Because all things are beautiful in their season. It is said that the good man "is like a tree planted by the rivers of water, that bringeth forth his fruit in his season" (Psalm 1:3). Now, fruit in its season is a carriage answerable to all providences (Matthew 9:15). 2. Because the season may soon slip out of our hands (Galatians 6:10). Take and seek all occasions of doing good. To take the season relates to the necessities of others; to seek the season relates to our own capacity and ability; both together bind the duty stronger on us. We must not defer a benefit. Some are like hogs, good for nothing till they are dead; they will not part with anything till they are incapable of the use of it any longer. So for exhorting (Hebrews 3:13). So for serving public good (Acts 13:36). They that mind to do good in the world engage themselves in a warfare, and the loss of our season is no small part of the enemy's conquest. 3. This is wisdom. Some are wise in time, others too late; as the foolish virgins; they saw a necessity of getting oil into their vessels, but it was too late (Matthew 25:10). But the godly make much of time before it is lost. 4. The foresight and provision of the creatures may shame us. God will not only teach careless men by His prophets and messengers, but by His creatures. There is a great deal of morality lieth hid in the bosom of nature if we had the skill to find it out. In this business of redeeming the time we are sent to the pismire (Proverbs 6:6-8). 5. Most of the calamities of the world come for not observing and improving the season (Ecclesiastes 8:6). I. Reproof of several sorts of men. 1. Of them that wilfully spend their time vainly, either in doing nothing, or doing what they should not, or in doing evil. 2. It reproveth them that delay their conversion and return to God; as those invited to the marriage supper did not deny, but delay (Matthew 22). 3. Reproof to fallen believers, who do not take the next advantage of recovering themselves by repentance. The longer sin continueth unmortified or unpardoned, the more dangerous is your case. A candle, as soon as the flame is blown out, sucketh light and is re-enkindled; but when it is grown cold and stiff, it requireth more ado. 4. It reproveth those that withstand the special seasons of grace, when God's arms are most open to receive us. (T. Manton, D. D.)
(Bishop Dehon.)
(Memoirs of Bishop Morton.)As you cannot overtake Time, the best way is always to be a few minutes before him.
II. THE IMPORTANCE OF REDEEMING AND HOW TO DO IT. Time equally given to all; so all have the same responsibility. He that has a soul to be saved from eternal death need not have one idle moment. He that has a heaven to win, has enough to do to occupy all his time. They redeem their time who employ it — 1. In gaining useful knowledge. 2. In doing good to others. 3. In employing it for the purpose of gaining an honest livelihood. 4. In prayer and self-examination to make the heart better. 5. In seeking salvation, and endeavouring to do the will of God.There are several temptations to waste time which we should avoid. 1. The allurements to sinful pleasures and amusements. 2. Novel reading. 3. Temptations to ambition, spending time in self-aggrandisement. 4. Dissipation. 5. In wild and visionary plans. 6. Luxurious indulgence in dressing, eating, drinking, and overmuch sleep.Determine, then, to redeem your time by — 1. Usefully employing it. 2. Methodically employing it. 3. With an eye to God's judgment day employing it, rescuing each opportunity from the chains of sloth, ease, and listlessness. (G. T. Dunney, M. A.)
I. The MERCHANT redeems or improves the time. We behold him employ his capital wisely, and find him sedulously attentive to all his worldly interests, so arranging all his business and regulating all the affairs of traffic that he knows how he stands in the world. What a lesson may the Christian learn from him I Ought he not to know in what state he stands before God? Ought he not to examine carefully whether his spiritual concerns are safe — declining or improving? II. The FARMER redeems or improves the time. See how carefully he prepares the seed and the ground, early and late in season. His watchfulness is ever alive, his cares never cease, while he looks for the dew and air and light of heaven to bless his fields with abundance and joy. Here, again, is a lesson for the Christian. For sowing Divine truth in the mind and doing good in the world is but acting as the farmer does in his fields. Sow broadcast and constantly the seeds of holy truth. Seize upon time, and redeem it from the world to God. III. THE PHILOSOPHER, STUDENT, OR STATESMAN redeems or improves the time. No man ever rose to any eminence who did not wisely employ time. Our narrow space of days is so brief, that we must treasure well its moments. It is prime wisdom to use time as the gift of God. Behold the pale student with his books; often by the midnight lamp he ransacks tomes of the ancient or illustrious dead: see, though the sober light of thought settles on his cheek, though hectic fever fills his veins, and may flush his damp brow, yet he never tires in the pursuit of important knowledge. Thus the philosopher tests, by science and reason, the mysteries of nature, and with noble perseverance he draws forth some secret into the full daylight of knowledge; and thus the wise statesman studies the complicated webs of political or moral life, and penetrates with the keen eye of sagacity the undercurrents of human government, and the bearings of moral action. No student of books, nature, or men, is satisfied unless he adds daily to his stores of knowledge. Hence he is an economist of time. If even one day has borne no fruit of advancement to his hope, he sighs over lost opportunity, and exclaims, with the Roman Emperor, "I have lost a day!" And yet he has only tasted, not exhausted, the springs of knowledge! Other fields possess intellectual treasure; other Alps command a purer heaven! The purest philosophy, the noblest study, the highest statesmanship, are those which the Christian is invited to spend his life in mastering and acquiring! IV. The CHRISTIAN redeems or improves the time. We can behold this from the life of a consistent child of God. He lives not for himself, but for Him who died for him and rose again. All his thoughts and actions are regulated by the standard of Divine truth. The discipline of his heart and the duties of life are referred to this sacred test. (J. G. Angley, M. A.)
1. Consider its true character. 2. Consider its value. 3. Consider the brief portion which is allotted for our service. 4. Consider the right application of time. II. THE COURSE RECOMMENDED. Redeem — recover, buy back. This we may do in a certain sense — 1. By saving all the time we can. 2. By cherishing activity and diligence. 3. By regarding first the most momentous subjects. III. THE MOTIVES ASSIGNED — "Because the days are evil." 1. They are uncertain in their number. 2. They are days of temptation and sin. 3. They are liable to be interrupted by infirmity and sickness. (J. Burns, D. D.)
2. Redeem the time on account of the momentous consequences which depend on our use of it. These consequences are an eternity of woe, or an eternity of bliss. 3. Redeem the time, for the time is short. What are the longest lives? "My days," says Job, "are swifter than a post: they are passed away as the swift ships; as the eagle that hasteth to her prey." "What is your life?" says St. James; "It is but a vapour which appeareth for a time and then vanishes away." Time is short, and the work we have to do is great. How important it is to "redeem the time." 4. Redeem the time, for when it is once past it cannot be recovered. If we chance to lose a valued treasure, is may be found again though it be buried in the depths of the sea. It is not so with time. Not all the entreaties of eternity will bring back a single moment of time. It is a vessel dashed in a thousand pieces which can never be repaired; it is as water spilt upon the ground which can never be gathered up again. 5. The last reason I shall urge why we should redeem the time, is that it is not our own. Woe to that idle servant who neglects to improve and to trade with the talents given him to traffic with. (J. J. S. Bird, B. A.)
(A. T. Pierson.)
2. Again, we may be exhorted to redeem time from its misapplication. It is said of a wise man that, being in company with some learned friends and philosophers, from whose society he had expected great profit, but finding that their occupation was gaming and their discourse trifling, he took out his tablets, and for an hour or two noted down their words, which he afterwards read to them, whereat they were so ashamed that they threw aside their cards and sought to pass their time more profitably. 3. But a third point for our consideration is the redeeming a larger portion of our time for the immediate concerns of the soul and the service of our God. (W. H. Lewis, D. D.)
II. MANY REASONS MIGHT BE URGED WITH FORCE FOR OUR THUS REDEEMING THE TIME. We might argue that it is scarce, dealt out to us in single moments, poured forth as it were drop by drop, like a precious gift, of which it would be too much for us to possess more than one particle at once. But the special reason given by St. Paul is that "the days are evil." Bad times are not times for indolence, extravagance, or amusement. "The days are evil." Therefore work harder in your spiritual work. "The days are evil." Therefore enjoy less of earthly pleasure, that you may enjoy more of bliss in heaven hereafter. III. You have now seen how time is in captivity, and what is meant by redeeming it. You have heard also the force of the apostle's argument why you should ever labour so to do. In what remains, I shall set forth SOME PLAIN PRACTICAL RULES FOR SO DOING. 1. One very important rule towards redeeming the time is this, that you avoid all waste of it, and so make the most of what time you have. 2. Next to a diligent frugality of time comes the right allotment of its parts, the due proportioning of its several employments. 3. And observe further, that these things, however proper in their place, must not engross, as they are apt to do, too much of our time. 4. Lastly, in all these holy offices, and in all the duties of life, be watchful. Time steals on smoothly, but swiftly. If you would stay it for good, watch. (C. Girdlestone, M. A.)
1. Its nature. It differs from eternity as space differs from infinity. 2. Its value. II. WHAT IS IMPLIED IN REDEEMING TIME AND HOW THIS MAY BE DONE. The word used alludes to the custom of merchants and traders, who buy up the articles they know to be of value, and what they know they can turn to good account. But where may we buy up time? Where is it to be met with? In the hands of sin, wickedly and madly employed. At what price may we buy it? To buy it out of the hands of sin, we must part with our sins, our lusts, and passions; out of the hands of amusements, pleasures, worldly ambition. III. FOR WHAT PURPOSE TIME SHOULD BE REDEEMED. Not to hoard it up as misers do their gold, nor to spend upon ourselves; but that we may use it for our spiritual and eternal profit, for our instruction, conversion, renovation, for the glory of God, and the good of others. IV. THE REASON OF THIS ADVICE, AND THE WISDOM OF TAKING IT. (J. Benson, D. D.)
1. Its connection with eternity. Time is the seed of eternity. 2. So much time has gone by, and cannot be recalled. A dying English queen cried, "A world of money for an inch of time!" 3. Because of the worth of the work that is given us to do in it. What would be said of a farmer idling his time while his fields lay uncultivated, or a general occupied with trifles when the enemy was in the camp? 4. The special reason given in the text — "Because the days are evil." II. MARK HOW THIS REDEMPTION OF TIME CAN BE ACCOMPLISHED. 1. Take the exercise of the responsibility to God. Begin with heartfelt prayer. Seek to know the value, and to obtain strength for performing the duty. We must begin with God if we are to prosper. Even all our strength put to the wheel will not move it; the work will break down because the power is insufficient. But God will give what we need (Deuteronomy 33:25; 2 Corinthians 12:9; Philippians 4:13-19). 2. Having begun to lead a new life in the exercise of prayer, and in the life that prayer brings out for us to live, remember another important rule, viz., to keep the great end of life before us. We are either sinners lost in sin or saved by grace. If lost in sin, the work given us to do is, "Believe," etc. We look to the Saviour as the object of our love, and we go to Him as the source of our strength. One brings the brightness and the other brings the power. 3. Another rule for us to remember as redeemed and saved sinners, is our responsibility, and the one object of our life, viz., "To me to live is Christ," etc. Let us turn our eyes on Him. If we suffer our hearts to wander from that centre we immediately become palsied creatures, living for no earthly object or value at all. In conclusion, let us remember, in the exercise of this life, that He who died for us has a claim on the best of our time and the whole of our heart. (Charles Bridges, M.A.)
(T. Watson.)
1. By idleness. 2. By excessive amusements. 3. By unprofitable talk. 4. By exclusive attachment to worldly pursuits. 5. By positive wickedness. II. HOW IS TIME TO BE REDEEMED? 1. By guarding against its loss. 2. By acting according to rule or method. 3. By specially attending to the parts of our time that are most precious. 4. By being habitually engaged in doing good. III. WHY IS TIME TO BE REDEEMED? 1. Because it is short and uncertain. 2. Because the work to be done in it is important. 3. Because the days are evil. (G. Brooks.)
1. It is the most choice and precious thing in the world. 2. When once passed, it never returns. 3. It must be one day accounted for. 4. The shortness and uncertainty of human life. 5. Because of the work we have to do, and the difficulty of doing it. 6. Because we have already lost so large a proportion of the time allowed us. II. HOW IT MAY BE REDEEMED. 1. Observe a method in the distribution of your time. 2. Be moderate in your recreations. 3. Cut off, as much as may he, unnecessary visits. 4. Examine, every evening, how you have spent the day. (Bishop Horne.)
(J. B.C. Murphy, B. A.)
1. Opportunities are only too apt to slip by unrecognized. Even the wisest of us is hardly wise enough to recognize his opportunities till they are past. As a rule our days are samely and monotonous. There is not sufficient difference between them to awaken attention and inspire hope. Our days, moreover, come to us masqued for the most part, so that even when they bring us a great opportunity, we do not recognize its greatness at the time, and therefore do not seize upon it and improve it as we should if we knew its worth. The current of our life is often turned by seeming trifles, which we assume to be quite incapable of seriously affecting it. When the crises of our life occur, when the great opportunities come to us, which come so seldom, they are hidden from us by a multitude of subsidiary accidents and occurrences. If there were no God above us, ruling even the accidents of life for our good, and working out the counsels of His will even when we let our wills drift on the tide of chance or drive before the waves of impulse, what would become of us all? 2. These opportunities, critical as they are, when once they are gone, can never be recalled. The occasion once lost, can never be recalled. Says Plato, "It is quite clear, quite clear, that if a person lets the right moment for any work go by, it never returns. For the thing to be done does not choose, I imagine, to tarry the leisure of the doer." Our past neglects should lend new force and urgency to the apostolic injunction, "Redeem the time," and make our obedience to it more prompt and vigorous. Today we may listen to the Divine voice to which yesterday we were deaf. Today we may renounce those hurtful passions and lusts which ought to have been renounced long ago. Today we may begin to grasp occasions as they rise, and to do the duty we have often thought of doing, and even talked of doing, but have not done. 3. But if we set ourselves to seize and redeem present opportunities, we shall need to remember that they are only to be redeemed at a certain cost. In St. Paul's view these opportunities were as captives which the days led by in chains; and to redeem a captive we must pay a price. We can avail ourselves of no occasion of serving God and man except as we rouse ourselves to labour and self-sacrifice. And these sacred opportunities, like the Sibylline books, both rise in price and grow fewer every time we refuse to purchase them. If it be hard to subdue passion and the cravings of irregular desire today, it will be harder tomorrow, should we leave the hours of today unimproved. If it would cost us much to do what we know to be the will of the Lord today, it will cost us more every day we neglect our duty. 4. Finally, the apostle warns us that when the times are hard, we should be the more eager to redeem the opportunities they bring us. Hard and evil times, indeed, bring opportunities of a special value, not only because they are scarce, but also because they have a great intrinsic worth. Nay, more, hard times, sorrowful times, times of temptation and difficulty, are themselves opportunities of preeminent value. Then, if ever, we have a chance of showing of what stuff we are made, of testing and proving the sincerity, the genuineness, of our religious life. Too often we forget that every provocation, wrong, loss, hardship, is an opportunity to be redeemed; that it is sent by God even though it comes from men; that He tasks our strength to test our character, to teach us what we really are, to wake us up from any delusion into which we have fallen about ourselves. (S. Cox, D. D.)
(Christian Age.)
(Christian Age.)
(Anon.)
(Richter.)
(E. P. Hood.)
(Knowles.)
(J. Flavel.)
(J. Flavel.)
(J. Flavel.)
(Carlyle.)
(Dr. Johnson.)
(Hervey.)
(Life of Rochester.)
(J. Mason.)
(J. Stoughton.)
(J. Stoughton.)
(Bishop Atterbury.)
'Tis a vessel under sail; 'Tis an eagle in its way, Darting down upon its prey; 'Tis an arrow in its flight, Mocking the pursuing sight; 'Tis a short-lived fading flower; 'Tis a rainbow on a shower; 'Tis a momentary ray Smiling in a winter's day; 'Tis a torrent's rapid stream; 'Tis a shadow; 'tis a dream; 'Tis the closing watch of night, Dying at the rising light; 'Tis a bubble; 'tis a sigh; Be prepared, O man, to die. (Quarles.)
II. TO SET BEFORE YOU THE PARTICULAR MANNER OF REDEEMING THE TIME. III. To offer you THE REASONS OF IT. And as to that particular reason or motive adjoined here by the apostle, I will treat of that by itself, when I have dispatched this part of my discourses on the words. IV. I will present you with those practical inferences which this doctrine affords. I. The first thing I undertake is, to give you a more general account of this apostolical injunction, AND TO ACQUAINT YOU WHAT IT IS TO REDEEM THE TIME. II. I am to propound to you THE PARTICULAR MANNER OF REDEEMING THE TIME; and this cannot be said in fewer and more comprehensive words than these, that we take care to spend every day well; and if you ask me how this is to be done, I answer, It may most effectually be done these three ways. 1. By beginning every day well. 2. By proceeding in it accordingly. 3. By concluding it in a like manner. 4. Remember to be cautious in respect of your recreations.No man can pretend to redeem his time who is not exceeding careful here. Wheat a great portion of time is spent by some persons in foolish sports and pastimes, as they call them. 5. I add this as another excellent way of redeeming the time; see that you retire from the world very often, abandon all company, and be alone. Company devours time excessively, and your greatest company keepers are the worst managers of time. 6. When you go abroad take care of this, that you do not mix yourselves with evil companions; be very circumspect as to the persons you converse with; never think you can redeem time, if you be careless as to this particular, for a wonderful deal of time is lost (and the person too often) in unprofitable and sinful society. 7. If you would redeem the time, busy not yourselves about mean and trifling matters, but mind those things which are great and worthy. 8. To sum up all in few words, make it your great care to employ all the time you have, and that very well. Let no opportunity of doing good be omitted. As I have showed you how you ought to begin, and to continue every day of your life; so it remains, that I let you know what it is to conclude the day well.And this must be done — 1. By serious reflection and meditation. Sit down in good earnest, and recollect the passages of the past day. Let every evening be the audit of the day's actions. 2. Conclude the day with solemn acts of repentance. 3. Endeavour, as much as in you lieth, to make your peace with the offended Majesty of heaven, by humbly begging forgiveness of your sins through the satisfaction and atonement of Christ Jesus the Redeemer. And yet now it will be requisite to tell you that the work is not yet at an end. Religion takes care of the night as well as the day. It is not to be thought that the night was made altogether for sleep. It may sometimes be improved to the same pious ends which the day is. The holy psalmist is our pattern here, he "remembered God upon his bed, and meditated on Him in the night watches" (Psalm 63:6). And he professes thus of himself, "When I awake, I am still with Thee" (Psalm 139:18). But I would give you a further view of this duty by acquainting you with this, that there are some particular seasons and opportunities of our lives, which are more especially to be improved and redeemed. Thus the days of youth are to be secured with a more than ordinary diligence, because the whole sequel of a man's life doth very often depend upon them. Also, the days of bodily health are another special season, which we are engaged to improve to the utmost. This also I commend to your thoughts, that the day of peace and prosperity and the fruition of the good things of this life is another seasonable opportunity of doing our duty with great alacrity and vigour, and of omitting nothing that may tend to our everlasting welfare. But, above all, the day of grace, and of God's offering the means in order to it, is a season which you are to attend to with the greatest care. How do you know but that this holy Dove, like that of Noah, if you let it go from you once and again, may never return back to you? Jerusalem missed her day, she let pass her opportunity, and that caused the merciful Jesus to weep over her, and to lament her destruction. III. According to my propounded method I PROCEED TO SHOW YOU HOW REASONABLE IT IS THAT WE SHOULD REDEEM THE TIME. You will find this to be a most rational performance when you have considered of these following things. 1. The inestimable value of time. 2. The brevity and uncertainty of it. 3. The impossibility of recalling it. 4. The end and design of God's intrusting us with it. 5. The account we must give for it.I read of Amasis, an Egyptian king, that he made an order, that every man should once a year give a particular account how he spent his time, and in what way he lived. My brethren, there is a day coming, when you must all give an account of your time; all your time must be reckoned for at the great and general audit of the world. IV. I PROCEED TO THE APPLICATION OF ALL THAT HATH BEEN SAID; TAKE IT IN THESE THREE PARTICULARS. 1. Those are to be rebuked who have misspent their time. 2. Let us beg of God to forgive us the misspente of our time. 3. Be exhorted for the future to redeem it. (John Edwards, D. D.)
2. In regard of those whom we live amongst, we are concerned in the worst times to look most carefully to our lives and conversations. For in such a season as this we may light on a happy opportunity of converting others, and of reforming the world by our exemplary behaviour. 3. In regard of ourselves, it is our concern in evil times to walk strictly and circumspectly, and to be very exact in our lives. Because(1) hereby we evidence to ourselves, that we have in us the truth and life of grace. Yea, true goodness and virtue are always exalted and made more vigorous by the corruption and wickedness of the times. There is a moral or religious antiperistasis as well as a physical one. There is a repulse in bodies, whereby either heat or cold are made more strong and active by the restraining of the contrary on every side. So there is something like this to be seen in those that are truly and sincerely good, when they are encompassed with contraries, when they live in the midst of vice, and are environed with evil men; their virtue grows more vigorous and strong; the true spirit of zeal and fire of love are hottest in them in the sharpest and coldest seasons; their graces are more inflamed and increased by opposition, which is as great a testimony as can be of the true vital energy of saving grace in them.(2) When the days are evil, that is perilous and calamitous, we know not how long we may be permitted to appear for religion, we know not how soon we may be cut off by its implacable adversaries, at least be deprived of the opportunity of doing that good which at present it is in our power to do. Therefore we ought to be more than ordinary stirring, and to muster up all our forces, and to make our last effort as it were, because we cannot tell but that it may really prove to be so.(3) This is the only way to provide for yourselves an ark, a refuge, a sanctuary in the days of God's indignation. When the times are not only sinful, but calamitous, when God's judgments are abroad in the earth, you must prepare yourselves to receive them by a blameless life and conversation. In this you may be encouraged by the example of the most eminent servants of God, who have striven to be signally virtuous and good in times of general impiety; and this their singular practice is taken notice of and commended by the Holy Ghost in Scripture. Lot lived in a great city, and very populous, but where there were very few righteous men to be found, and yet he was not corrupted by those wicked people amongst whom he sojourned. Job was perfect and upright in the land of Uz. The place of his habitation is remarkable. It is no wonder to be good in good company, but Job feared God and eschewed evil in a country where there were but few that had the true knowledge of God, and walked in His ways, which redounds to the eternal honour of this holy man. Elias stood firm and unshaken amongst a people that were almost overspread with idolatry; he had as great a zeal for the true God as they had for their false one, which was very great indeed. We read of Joseph and Moses in Pharaoh's Court (for all the Egyptian kings in those times were Pharaohs). We read of Obadiah in Ahab's court, of Daniel in Nebuchadnezzar's, and of believers in Herod's house, and even saints in Nero's palace. Joseph of Arimathaea, though a counsellor belonging to the high priest's consistory, would not consent to the counsel and deed of the other counsellors and chief priests that contrived our Saviour's death (Luke 23:51). (John Edwards, D. D.)
(S. Coley.)
(Smiles.)
(Sunday at Home.)
(Thain Davidson.)
I. As man was created to be eternally happy in the clear and perfect knowledge of the infinite perfections of the Divine Being, there is naturally inherent in the mind of each individual an insatiable thirst after knowledge. But, my beloved friends, if human wisdom be unquestionably a valuable and precious acquisition, certainly the knowledge of those truths to which religion invites our attention must be incomparably more estimable. Yet, inconceivable as it may appear, it is an undeniable truth that many amongst us, while they give themselves to the pursuit of inferior attainments with indefatigable application, will scarcely devote one moment, without reluctance, to the gaining of a proficiency in that sublime and noble science which the fountain of all knowledge pours out so liberally before them. What a lamentable degradation of our mental faculties! II. The value, moreover, and the excellence of any science, is generally, and very justly, estimated by its utility, by its tendency to promote our interests and advantage. On this account the arts which are calculated to add to the convenience and increase the happiness of society, the arts which tend to cultivate and embellish human life, are held in peculiar esteem, and encouraged by every mark of public approbation. Considering, therefore, the doctrines of Christianity in this point of view, we discover, at the first glance, that they stand eminently superior to every other knowledge which can possibly be acquired. The information which they impart regards whatever is dear and interesting to us in time and eternity. They furnish us with arms for our defence against every enemy that seeks our destruction, and secure us against every danger which surrounds us. (J. Archer.)
I. Before I give you the reasons, let me state the point as it lieth in the text. 1. That every man that hath a tender conscience would be accurate and exact in his obedience to God, not contenting himself with a slight tincture of Christianity, but looking into every creek and turning of it, that he may in no point be lacking and defective in his duty. Now this cannot be without much wisdom and knowledge; therefore here, when the apostle presseth them to "walk circumspectly," he presently addeth, "Not as fools, but as wise." 2. We have no sure rule to walk by but the will of God. 3. This will is revealed to us in His Word. There our duty and our happiness is clearly stated (Psalm 119:105). 4. This word we need thoroughly to understand, otherwise how shall we know our duty? (Proverbs 19:2.) 5. This understanding must not be idle, but reduced to use and practice. A readiness to serve God in God's way bringeth us soonest to a knowledge of God's will. The Word was not given us to try the acuteness of our wits in disputing, but the readiness of our obedience in practising. 6. This reducing what we know to practice is our wisdom. Knowledge is never right but when wisdom goeth along with it. II. The reasons why much wisdom and a good understanding is required of Christians. 1. That they may resemble God, and discover His perfections to the world. 2. That there may be a due impression of His word upon us, which is all wisdom; and if we understand it and improve it, it must needs make us wise also; for the impression is according to the nature of the seal; and so the new creature must needs be the wisest creature on this side heaven. 3. The great danger of ignorance, or the evils that come from the want of spiritual wisdom.(1) To ourselves. Our worship is but a fond superstition, a blind devotion to an unknown God, a mere guess directed by custom and some devout aims (John 4:22). Our zeal is but a wild fury (Romans 10:2).(2) To others. There is no preventing trouble in the Church or scandals to the world if we have not spiritual wisdom and understanding. 4. The incredible delight and peace it begets in our souls.(1) The bare knowledge of God's will is very delightful, and yieldeth much more pleasure to the mind than an epicure can find in his most exquisite sensual enjoyments.(2) The peace which accompanies it. 5. The properties of this knowledge and wisdom show the necessity of it.(1) Because it is employed about the highest things, to know God's nature and will, what He is, and how He is to be enjoyed.(2) These things are most useful and profitable (John 17:3). 1. Is of reproof to divers sorts of persons who live in ignorance, or countenance ignorance upon several pretences.(1) That it belongeth not to them that dig in the mines of knowledge; they leave that to clerks and men of learning.(2) Others have a little general and traditional knowledge of the religion commonly professed among us, and talk of it by rote after others, but generally look no further than the outside of it.(3) Some confine their knowledge to a few obvious truths, and for other things they leave it to preachers more accurately to search after the mind of God, and content themselves to see with other men's eyes.(4) Some think ignorance is the mother of devotion, and that men leave off to be good when they grow more knowing. 2. Is to press us to get this knowledge and understanding of God's will. The apostle speaketh to children of light; and none of us know so much but we may know more.(1) Labour to get a more full knowledge of heavenly mysteries, especially of those which are necessary to salvation (Hebrews 5:12, 13).(2) Get a more clear knowledge. Fulness relateth to the object, or matters known; clearness to the subject or faculty knowing.(3) Get a more certain knowledge, or more confirmed knowledge in the truth (Acts 2:36; John 4:42; John 17:8).(4) Get a more distinct knowledge. Truths are best known in their frame and dependence. A confused knowledge is always unsatisfactory; it is not till we see how one truth agreeth with another, as the curtains of the tabernacle were fastened by loops; till we are able to "compare things spiritual with spiritual" (1 Corinthians 2:13).(5) Get a more experimental knowledge. Most of Christianity is not only to be believed, but felt (1 John 5:10). 6. Get a more practical knowledge. Knowledge is for use, not an idle speculation. As a gallant and a physician cometh into a garden, one looketh upon the colour and beauty, the other upon the virtue and use of herbs and flowers: "For if, these things be in you and abound, they make you that ye shall neither be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of Christ" (2 Peter 1:8). "He that saith, I know Him, and keepeth not His commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him" (1 John 2:4). A practical Christian is more ready to serve and please God every day. (T. Manton, D. D.)
1. It brings us to that frame of mind with which God is pleased (Isaiah 66:2; Romans 7:7-11). 2. It points out a certain way of escaping the misery due to us as sinners (1 John 5:11-13; Hebrews 6:17, 18). 3. It gives that view of God which excites us to love and give ourselves to Him (1 John 4:9, 10, 19). 4. It removes the fear of death and the grave. 5. It gives the best ground of submission to the trials of life. 6. It lays the strongest restraints upon sin, which is our disgrace and misery. 7. It shows us that all our enemies are under Divine control. 8. It puts into our hands the best Weapons of defence (2 Corinthians 10:4, 5). 9. It assures us that God will soon set all matters right (2 Thessalonians 1:6-10). If so, how foolish and ungrateful are the neglecters and despisers of this will of God. Let us pray and study to know this will of God. (H. Foster.)
(J. Watson.)
1. They have all the talk, wheresoever they come, like parrots. 2. They contemn others, like the Pharisees. 3. They spurn at them which tell them of their fault, like Abner. 4. They jump with Caesar, like the Herodians. 5. They turn with the time, like Demas. 6. They seek their own credit by the discredit of others, like the enemies of Paul. 7. They love to hear their own praise, like Herod. 8. Above all things they would have their own will, like Jezebel.Whensoever these eight marks meet there is a wise man and a fool; a wise man in his own conceit, and a fool in proof: these are the wise men of the north, and the philosophers of England. (Henry Smith.)
(T. Guthrie, D. D.)
(R. W. Dale, LL. D.)
I. THE NATURE AND EXTENT OF THIS VICE. Various degrees of intemperance: the highest degree is such an indulgence as suspends the exercise of the mental and bodily powers. But there is sin in lesser degrees also. If by the indulgence of your appetite, you unfit your hefty for the service of the mind, or your mind for the service of God; so waste your substance, as to defraud your family of a maintenance, or your creditors of their dues; become enslaved to a sensual habit, and fascinated to dissolute company; are diverted from the duties of religion, or the business of your worldly calling; awaken criminal desires and excite guilty passions; stupify your conscience, extinguish the sentiments of honour and banish the thoughts of futurity; you are chargeable with a criminal excess. II. THE GUILT AND DANGER OF THIS VICE. 1. It is an ungrateful abuse of God's bounty. 2. It divests the man of his native dignity, and sinks him below the brutes. 3. It is injurious to the body, as well as the mind. 4. It consumes men's substance. 5. It destroys conscience. 6. It generates other vices — impure lustings, angry passions, profane language, insolent manners, obstinacy of heart, and contempt of reproof. 7. It has most lamentable effects on families. (1) (2) (3) (4) 8. The Scripture abounds in the most solemn warnings against this sin. 9. This sin must be renounced, or the end of it will be death. (J. Lathrop, D. D.)
II. Observe now, secondly, THE EXHORTATION, the encouraging exhortation: "be filled with the Spirit." I conceive there is in the expression that which would imply the power of the Spirit to fill the soul of man. Or rather the expression is — "Seek to be filled in your understandings, in your memories, in your consciences, in your will, in your affections, seek to be 'filled with the Spirit.'" Now let me point out some few of the blessings that result from this communication of the "fulness of the Spirit," in all His holy influences, to our souls. First of all, let us look at Him as the Spirit of wisdom and revelation. So I read in the first of Ephesians, and the seventeenth verse. Look at the Apostle Peter before the day of Pentecost. How dark his perception of the Atonement, how little did he see of what Jesus came into the world for! I talk with some men, many of whom, I doubt not, are truly converted to God; yet Christ is in the background, I see so little of Him. They talk of God; there is something about their creed that is so Jewish; they speak so much more of God, than of God in Christ. There is so little of the great work of the incarnate One, so little of realizing the strength of the covenant "ordered in all things and sure." Oh! beloved, to be filled with the Spirit of wisdom is the highest wisdom. But let us look at the subject in another point of view. I find in the eleventh chapter of the Acts of the Apostles, and the twenty-fourth verse, it is said of Barnabas, "he was a good man, and full of the Holy Ghost, and of faith." So, when we are filled with the Holy Ghost, we are filled with faith. Ah! who can describe the blessing of being filled with faith? To see everything in the light of God's countenance; to see everything in the light of a Saviour's fulness. (J. H. Evans, M. A.)
(Harry Jones, M. A.)
II. THE INJUNCTION. 1. In order to our being "filled with the Spirit," we must be aware of the magnitude of this blessing.(1) The Spirit is the great promise of the New Testament dispensation.(2) The gift of the Spirit more than compensates for the absence of the bodily presence of Christ. 2. This supposes, also, that we have a relish for the blessing. 3. In order to being "filled with the Spirit," you must make room for Him. 4. In order to be "filled with the Spirit," you must be the subject of the same ardent desire which is expressed in many parts of Scripture. 5. In order to be "filled with the Spirit," we must yield ourselves to His influence — we must give ourselves up to the guiding of His agency. (J. E. Beaumont, D. D.)
1. To check the temptation. The sensual pleasure which men find in wine enticeth them to excess. There are higher pleasures men should be taken up with, namely, the joy of faith and a delight in holiness. 2. To show the difference between the holy societies or meetings of the faithful, and the dissolute feasts of the heathens in honour of their idols. 3. Because of the analogy between wine and the Spirit; they are often proposed in Scripture as correspondent, or as having some likeness in their operations; as wine cheereth and exhilarateth the spirits: "It maketh glad the heart of man" (Psalm 104:15); so the Spirit filleth the soul, and exhilarateth it. Only in this fulness there is no excess: "Drink abundantly, O beloved" (Song of Solomon 5:1). And in this mirth there is no dissoluteness; when we are filled with the Spirit, it is no corruptive joy, but perfective, such as strengtheneth the heart: "The joy of the Lord is your strength " (Nehemiah 8:10). But what is it to be filled with the Spirit? The phrase is taken two ways — (1) (2) II. The inconsistency of the one with the other; to be drunk with wine is inconsistent with being filled with the Spirit. 1. They that are filled by the one are acted by a contrary principle. 2. This contrary principle hath such an influence on them, that the Spirit of the gospel hath no place in them. (1) |