The double-minded I despise, but Your law I love. Sermons
I. HOLY SOULS HATE THEM. (Ver. 113.) They constitute and create that lukewarmness which is so nauseous in the esteem of Christ (Revelation 3:16). He would prefer that men were cold altogether rather than this (cf. also Elijah, 1 Kings 18:21). This double-mindedness, ever seeking to serve God and mammon, compromising and tampering with truth, well may it excite the hate of holy souls. For: 1. It dishonors God. The man makes profession of religion, and men judge by what they see in him, and, instead of God being glorified, he is dishonored day by day. 2. The Church of God is weakened. Such men spread an awful contagion in a Church; they chili the ardor of fervent souls, they encourage those who are like themselves. 3. The man himself is in fearful peril. He is forever saying, "Peace, peace," when there is no peace. The publicans and harlots go into the kingdom of heaven before him. And who is to arouse and waken him? 4. He enjoys none of the great blessedness which ever accompanies real religion and single-minded service of God. Such as peace of conscience: the Spirit never beareth witness to such that they are saved, and there is often a terrible misgiving, especially at the hour of death. Purity of heart: that cannot be theirs. Calm amid trouble. Power to bless others, etc. For all these and other reasons such double-mindedness cannot but be hateful to all holy souls. II. BUT IT IS A CONDITION VERY PREVALENT, NEVERTHELESS. Men like it: it avoids extremes; they would not be altogether without religion - that would be very sad; but yet they do not want to be considered as enthusiastic or fanatical; it enables them to get on very well with the world, and to maintain a pleasant religious reputation at the same time. No wonder, therefore, that it is common. III. WE ARE SHOWS HERE HOW TO GAIN DELIVERANCE FROM IT. 1. Let God be our Hiding-place and our Shield. When such thoughts assail us, as they often will, let us turn to God. It is not enough to drive away the wrong; we must bring in the right. Therefore "with thoughts of God and things Divine" let us occupy our minds, and so will deliverance come. And we should habitually cherish such thoughts, for so they will serve as a shield to ward off thoughts of an opposite nature. 2. Keep away from evildoers. (Ver. 115.) For they are ever tempting us to such deceitful serving of God: they will inevitably, if we make companions of them, lower the tone and sap the fidelity of our thoughts. 3. Commit yourselves to the Lord for safety, so that you may not be ashamed. Ask him day by day and hour by hour to uphold you and keep you true (vers. 116, 117). 4. Call to mind the dreadful end of such double-mindedness. (Vers. 118, 119.) They are trampled down, they are rejected like dross. 5. Cherish a holy fear lest you should incur a like doom. (Ver. 120.) Therefore bare your heart before him, and pray him to help you always and everywhere to hate all such deceitful and double-minded thoughts. - S.C.
I hate vain thoughts: but Thy law do I love. Homilist. I. THE HATED. "I hate vain thoughts." The number of these is legion, the variety all but endless. Vain thoughts may include worthless thoughts on true subjects as well as on false. Vain thoughts are —1. Always worthless. They are empty, vapid, unsatisfactory, and unenduring. 2. Always criminal. Man is endowed with the thinking faculty in order to think accurately, righteously, and devoutly. 3. Always pernicious. Vain thoughts are the weeds, the fungi, the parasites, the mildew of the soul. II. THE LOVED. "Thy law do I love." Why should the Divine law be loved? 1. It is a revelation of the morally beautiful. It is the transcript of the mind, that which is the "beauty of holiness." 2. It is a guide to the truly happy. It is a map to guide to the heavenly inheritance, a compass directing to the celestial shore. (Homilist.) Homilist. I. A just HATE. "Vain thoughts" are of two classes.1. Thoughts on vain subjects. 2. Vain thoughts on true subjects. All such thoughts are evil in themselves and powerful for evil. Thought is the mightiest power in the world. Bad thoughts should be hated as devils; good ones cherished as angels. II. A just LOVE. The law should be loved — 1. Because it is the expression of the highest moral beauty. It is the transcript of the Divine heart. 2. Because it is a means to the participation in the highest moral beauty. By obedience to the Divine law men come to share in the beauty of God, the beauty of holiness. Love and hate are really one in principle. We must always hate the opposite of what we love. (Homilist.) 1. The time: when engaged in the duties of religion. 2. What draws our thoughts aside. (1) (2) II. THEIR CAUSES OR OCCASIONS. 1. The depravity of our nature. 2. Allowance of sin. 3. Being over-careful and troubled about many things. 4. Slight thoughts of God and His service. III. THEIR BAD EFFECTS. 1. They render our duties vain and burdensome. 2. They hinder communion with God. 3. They induce us to think hardly of ourselves. 4. They bring guilt upon the soul, and lead to a curse instead of a blessing. IV. DIRECTIONS FOR THEIR PREVENTION OR CURE. 1. Wash your hearts from wickedness. 2. Endeavour to maintain an habitual spirituality of mind. 3. Attend to religious duties with earnest desires of the presence of God. 4. Depend not upon your own strength. 5. Use means to bring your heart into a suitable temper. 6. Set the Lord always before you. (S. Lavington.) II. HOW MAY THEY BE AVOIDED OR CONTROLLED? 1. The mind must have its attention directed, and its interest awakened to instructive and important subjects, 2. We must acquire a habit of confining our attention to the subjects and employments which we think deserving of our choice. 3. We should make a diligent use of all our opportunities for storing our minds with sound and practical knowledge. 4. We must avoid the sources of all impure or immoral fancies, whether we have reason to apprehend their existence in our usual books or our usual companions. 5. We should acquaint ourselves with the writings, and seek the society of those whom we may consider either as masters, or, at least, as anxious and successful learners, of the same art. 6. "The words of the pure," and "the lips of knowledge," if it be that knowledge which "maketh wise unto salvation," will second with powerful persuasion another direction that may be given for guarding against the influence of "vain thoughts." It is this — to rest on firm and deep foundations, and to build up for ourselves, with good and durable materials, a real conviction of religious truths. 7. A well-grounded and hearty belief in Christian truths, beside the awful consideration which it opposes to the encouragement of "vain thoughts," disposes the mind to an employment, the recommendation of which is another direction of the right government of the thoughts. That employment is, frequent meditation on the duties and interests which owe a principal part of their sanctions and importance to the doctrines and principles of religion. 8. Frequent, humble, and earnest prayer for deliverance from the evils which we wish to avoid, and assistance to persevere in the pursuit of those things which are "pure, lovely, and of good report" — prayer for that spirit of wisdom and godly fear, which will keep both our hate and our love directed to their proper objects. (A. R. Beard.) 1. All thoughts, the indulgence of which is positively sinful.(1) Some have reference to God. Fretful, discontented, and distrustful thoughts.(2) Others refer to our fellow-creatures. Suspicious, slanderous, and calumnious thoughts.(3) Others have reference to ourselves. Proud, ambitious, impure and lascivious thoughts. 2. All thoughts, the cultivation of which is likely to lead to no practical benefit. 3. All thoughts inappropriate to the seasons on which they are cherished. II. THE EFFORT WHICH SHOULD BE MADE FOR SUPPRESSING VAIN THOUGHTS. 1. Such thoughts are the natural and spontaneous choice of the human mind. 2. The powerful influence of the thoughts in regulating the dispositions and conduct. 3. Our responsibility to God for the right exercise of thought. III. SOME MEANS WHICH MAY TEND TO COUNTERACT VAIN THOUGHTS. 1. Seek the attainment of a renewed and sanctified heart. 2. Cultivate an habitual remembrance of the divine inspection of the thoughts. 3. Let the mind be occupied as fully as possible with thoughts of an appropriate and useful character. 4. Earnestly implore the assistance of the Holy Spirit to guide and control the thoughts. 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