DISCOURSE IX.
THE EXPULSIVE POWER OF A NEW
AFFECTION.
" Love not the world, neither the things that are
in the world. If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him."
- 1 John ii. 15.
THERE are two ways in which a practical moralist may
attempt to displace from the human heart its love of the world - either by a
demonstration of the world's vanity, so as that the heart shall be prevailed
upon simply to withdraw its regards from an object that is not worthy of it;
or, by setting forth another object, even God, as more worthy of its
attachment, so as that the heart shall be prevailed upon not to resign an old
affection, which shall have nothing to succeed it, but to exchange an old
affection for a new one.
My purpose is to show, that from the constitution
of our nature, the former method is altogether incompetent and ineffectual and
that the latter method will alone suffice for the rescue and recovery of the
heart from the wrong affection that domineers over it. After having
accomplished this purpose, I shall attempt a few practical observations.
Love may be regarded in two different conditions.
The first is,
when its object is at a distance, and then it becomes love in a state of
desire.
The second is, when its object is in possession, and then it
becomes love in a state of indulgence. Under the impulse of desire, man feels
himself urged onward in some path or pursuit of activity for its gratification.
The faculties of his mind are put into busy exercise. In the steady direction
of one great and engrossing interest, his attention is recalled from the many
reveries into which it might otherwise have wandered; and the powers of his
body are forced away from an indolence in which it else might have languished;
and that time is crowded with occupation, which but for some object of keen and
devoted ambition, might have drivelled along in successive hours of weariness
and distaste - and though hope does not always enliven, and success does not
always crown this career of exertion, yet in the midst of this very variety,
and with the alternations of occasional disappointment, is the machinery of the
whole man kept in a sort of congenial play, and upholden in that tone and
temper which are most agreeable to it.
Insomuch, that if, through the
extirpation of that desire which forms the originating principle of all this
movement, the machinery were to stop, and to receive no impulse from another
desire substituted in its place, the man would be left with all his
propensities to action in a state of most painful and unnatural abandonment. A
sensitive being suffers, and is in violence, if, after having thoroughly rested
from his fatigue, or been relieved from his pain, he continue in possession of
powers without any excitement to these powers; if he possess a capacity of
desire without having an object of desire; or if he have a spare energy upon
his person, without a counterpart, and without a stimulus to call it into
operation.
The misery of such a condition is often realized by him who is
retired from business, or who is retired from law, or who is even retired from
the occupations of the chase, and of the gaming table. Such is the demand of
our nature for an object in pursuit, that no accumulation of previous success
can extinguish it - and thus it is, that the most prosperous merchant, and the
most victorious general, and the most fortunate gamester, when the labour of
their respective vocations has come to a close, are often found to languish in
the midst of all their acquisitions, as if out of their kindred and rejoicing
element. It is quite in vain with such a constitutional appetite for employment
in man, to attempt cutting away from him the spring or the principle of one
employment, without providing him with another. Thu whole heart and habit will
rise in resistance against such an undertaking. The else unoccupied female who
spends the hours of every evening at some play of hazard, knows as well as you,
that the pecuniary gain, or the honourable triumph of a successful contest, are
altogether paltry. It is not such a demonstration of vanity as this that will
force her away from her dear and delightful occupatiou. The habit cannot so be
displaced, as to leave nothing but a negative and cheerless vacancy behind it -
though it may so be supplanted as to be followed up by another habit of
employment, to which the power of some new affection has constrained her. It is
willingly suspended, for example, on any single evening, should the time that
wont to be allotted to gaining, require to be spent on the preparations of an
approaching assembly. The ascendant power of a second affection will do, what
no exposition however forcible, of the folly and worthlessness of the first,
ever could effectuate.
And it is the same in the great world. We shall
never be able to arrest any of its leading pursuits, by a naked demonstration
of their vanity. It is quite in vain to think of stopping one of these pursuits
in any way else, but by stimulating to another. In attempting to bring a
worldly man intent and busied with the prosecution of his objects to a dead
stand, we have not merely to encounter the charm which he annexes to these
objects - but we have to encounter the pleasure which he feels in the very
prosecution of them. It is not enough, then, that we dissipate the charm, by a
moral, and eloquent, and affecting exposure of its illusiveness. We must
address to the eye of his mind another object, with a charm powerful enough to
dispossess the first of its influences, and to engage him in some other
prosecution as full of interest, and hope, and congenial activity, as the
former.
It is this which stamps an impotency on all moral and pathetic
declamation about the insignificance of the world. A man will no more consent
to the misery of being without an object, because that object is a trifle, or
of being without a pursuit, because that pursuit terminates in some frivolous
or fugitive acquirement, than he will voluntarily submit himself to the
torture, because that torture is to be of short duration. If to be without
desire and without exertion altogether, is a state of violence and discomfort,
then the present desire, with its correspondent train of exertion, is not to be
got rid of simply by destroying it. It must be by substituting another desire,
and another line or habit of exertion in its place - and the most effectual way
of withdrawing the mind from one object, is not by turning it away upon
desolate and unpeopled vacancy - but by presenting to its regards another
object still more alluring.
These remarks apply not merely to love
considered in its state of desire for an object not yet obtained. They apply
also to love considered in its state of indulgence, or placid gratification,
with an object already in possession. It is seldom that any of our tastes are
made to disappear by a mere process of natural extinction. At least, it is very
seldom, that this is done through the instrumentality of reasoning. It may be
done by excessive pampering - but it is almost never done by the mere force of
mental determination. But what cannot be destroyed, may be dispossessed and one
taste may be made to give way to another, and to lose its, power entirely as
the reigning affection of the mind.
It is thus, that the boy ceases, at
length, to be the slave of his appetite, but it is because a manlier taste has
now brought it into subordination - and that the youth ceases to idolize
pleasure, but it is because the idol of wealth has become the stronger and
gotten the aseendancy and that even the love of money ceases to have the
mastery over the heart of many a thriving citizen, but it is because drawn
into, the whirl of city polities, another affection has been wrought into his
moral system, and he is now lorded over by the love of power. There is not one
of these transformations in which the heart is left without an object. Its
desire for one particular object may be conquered; but as to its desire for
having some one object or other, this is unconquerable. Its adhesion to that on
which it has fastened the preference of its regards, cannot willingly be
overcome by the rending away of a simple separation. It can be done only by the
application of something else, to which it may feel the adhesion of a still
stronger and more powerful preference. Such is the grasping tendency of the
human heart, that it must have a something to lay hold of - and which, if
wrested away without the substitution of another something in its place, would
leave a void and a vacancy as painful to the mind, as hunger is to the natural
system. It may be dispossessed of one object, or of any, but it cannot be
desolated of all. Let there be a breathing and a sensitive heart, but without a
liking and without affinity to any of the things that are around it; and, in a
state of cheerless abandonment, it would be alive to nothing but the burden of
its own consciousness, and feel it to be intolerable. It would make no
difference to its owner, whether he dwelt in the midst of a gay and goodly
world; or, placed afar beyond the outskirts of creation, he dwelt a solitary
unit in dark and unpeopled nothingness. The heart must have something to cling
to - and never, by its own voluntary consent, will it so denude itself of its
attachments, that there shall not be one remaining object that can draw or
solicit it.
The misery of a heart thus bereft of all relish for that which
wont to minister enjoyment, is strikingly exemplified in those, who, satiated
with indulgence, have been so belaboured, as it were, with the variety and the
poignancy of the pleasurable sensations they have experienced, that they are at
length fatigued out of all capacity for sensation whatever. The disease of
ennui is more frequent in the French metropolis, where amusement is more
exclusively the occupation of the higher classes, than it is in the British
metropolis, where the longings of the heart are more diversified by the
resources of business and politics. There are the votaries of fashion,who, in
this way, have at length become the victims of fashion.able excess - in whom
the very multitude of their enjoyments, has at last extinguished their power of
enjoyment - who, with the gratifications of art and nature at command, now look
upon all that is around them with an eye of tastelessness - who, plied with the
delights of sense and of splendour even to weariness, and incapable of higher
delights, have come to the end of all their perfection, and like Solomon of
old, found it to be vanity and vexation. The man whose heart has thus been
turned into a desert, can vouch for the insupportable languor which must ensue,
when one affection is thus plucked away from the bosom, without another to
replace it. It is not necessary that a man receive pain from anything, in order
to become miserable. It is barely enough that he looks with distaste to every
thing - and in that asylum which is the repository of minds out of joint, and
where the organ of feeling as well as the organ of intellect, has been
impaired, it is not in the cell of loud and frantic outcries, where we shall
meet with the acme of mental suffering. But that is the individual who outpeers
in wretchedness all his fellows, who, throughout the whole expanse of nature
and society, meets not an object that has at all the power to detain or to
interest him; who, neither in earth beneath nor in heaven above, knows of a
single charm to which his heart can send forth one desirous or responding
movement; to whom the world, in his eye a vast and empty desolation, has left
him nothing but his own consciousness to feed upon dead to all that is without
him, and alive to nothing but to the load of his own torpid and useless
existence.
It will now be seen, perhaps, why it is that the heart keeps by
its present affections with so much tenacity - when the attempt is, to do them
away by a mere process of extirpation. It will not consent tobe so desolated.
The strong man, whose dwelling-place is there, may be compelled to give way to
another occupier - but unless another stronger than he, has power to dispossess
and to succeed him, he will keep his present lodgment unviolable. The heart
would revolt against its own emptiness. It could not bear to be so left in a
state of waste and cheerless insipidity. The moralist who tries such a process
of dispossession as this upon the heart, is thwarted at every step by the
recoil of its own mechanism. You have all heard that Nature abhors a vacuum.
Such at least is the nature of the heart, that though the room which is in it
may change one inmate for another, it cannot be left void without the pain of
most intolerable suffering. It is not enough then to argue the folly of an
existing affection. It is not enough, in the terms of a forcible or an
affecting demonstration, to make good the evanescence of its object. It may not
even be enough to associate the threats and the terrors of some coming
vengeance, with the indulgence of it. The heart may still resist the every
application, by obedience to which, it would finally be conducted to a state so
much at war with all its appetites as that of downright inanition. So to tear
away an affection from the heart, as to leave it bare of all its regards and of
all its preferences, were a hard and hopeless undertaking - and it would
appear, as if the alone powerful engine of dispossession were to bring the
mastery of another affection to bear upon it.
We know not a more sweeping
interdict upon the affections of Nature, than that which is delivered by the
Apostle in the verse before us. To bid a man into whom there has not yet
entered the great and ascendant influence of the principle of regeneration, to
bid him withdraw his love from all the things that are in the world, is to bid
him give up all the affections that are in his heart. The world is the all of a
natural man. He has not a taste nor a desire, that points not to a something
placed within the confines of its visible horizon. He loves nothing above it,
and he cares for nothing beyond it; and to bid him love not the world, is to
pass a sentence of expulsion on all the inmates of his bosom. To estimate the
magnitude and the difficulty of such a surrender, let us only think that it
were just as arduous to prevail on him not to love wealth, which is but one of
the things in the world, as to prevail on him to set wilful fire to his own
property. This he might do with sore and painful reluctance, if he saw that the
salvation of his life hung upon it. But this he would do willingly, if he saw
that a new property of tenfold value was instantly to emerge from the wreck of
the old one.
In this case there is something more than the mere
displacement of an affection. There is the overbearing of one affection by
another. But to desolate his heart of all love for the things of the world,
without the substitution of any love in its place, were to him a process of as
unnatural violence, as to destroy all the things that he has in the world, and
give him nothing in their room. So that, if to love not the world be
indispensable to one's Christianity, then the crucifixion of the old man is not
too strong a term to mark that transition in his history, when all old things
are done away and all things become new. We hope that by this time, you
understand the impotency of a mere demonstration of this world's
insignificance. Its sole practical effect, if it had any, would be. to leave
the heart in a state which to even heart is insupportable, and that is a mere
state of nakedness and negation. You may remember the fond and unbroken
tenacity with which your heart has often recurred to pursuits, over the utter
frivolity of which it sighed and wept but yesterday. The arithmetic of your
short-lived days, may on Sabbath make the clearest impression upon your
understanding - and from his fancied bed of death, may the preacher cause a
voice to descend in rebuke and mockery on all the pursuits of earthliness - and
as he pictures before you the fleeting generations of men, with the absorbing
grave, whither all the joys and interests of the world hasten to their sure and
speedy oblivion, may you, touched and solemnized by his argument, feel for a
moment as if on the eve of a practical and permanent emancipation from a scene
of so much vanity.
But the morrow comes, and the business of the world, and
the objects of the world, and the moving forces of the world come along with it
- and the machinery of the heart, in virtue of which it must have something to
grasp, or something to adhere to, brings it under a kind of moral necessity to
be actuated just as before - and in utter repulsion to wards a state so
unkindly as that of being frozen out both of delight and of desire, does it
feel all the warmth and the urgency of its wonted solicitations - nor in the
habit and history of the whole man, can we detect so much as one symptom of the
new creature - so that the church, instead of being to him a school of
obedience, has been a mere sauntering place for the luxury of a passing and
theatrical emotion; and the preaching which is mighty to compel the attendance
of multitudes, which is mighty to still and to solemnize the hearers into a
kind of tragic sensibility, which is mighty in the play of variety and vigour
that it can keep up around the imagination, is not mighty to the pulling down
of strong holds.
The love of the world cannot be expunged by a mere
demonstration of the world's worthlessness. But may it not be supplanted by the
love of that which is more worthy than itself? The heart cannot be prevailed
upon to part with the world, by a simple act of resignation. But may not the
heart be prevailed upon to admit into its preference another, who shall
subordinate the world, and bring it down from its wonted ascendancy? If the
throne which is placed there must have an occupier, and the tyrant that now
reigns has occupied it wrongfully, he may not leave a bosom which would rather
detain him than be left in desolation. But may he not give way to the lawful
sovereign, appearing with every charm that can secure His willing admittance,
and taking unto himself His great power to subdue the moral nature of man, and
to reign over it? In a word, if the way to disengage the heart from the
positive love of one great and ascendant object, is to fasten it in positive
love to another, then it is not by exposing the worthlessness of the former,
but by addressing to the mental eye the worth and excellence of the latter,
that all old things are to be done away and all things are to become new. To
obliterate all our present affections by simply expunging them, and so as to
leave the seat of them unoccupied, would be to destroy the old character, and
to substitute no new character in its place. But when they take their departure
upon the ingress of other visitors; when they resign their sway to the power
and the predominance of new affections; when, abandoning the heart to solitude,
they merely give place to a successor who turns it into as busy a residence of
desire and interest and expectation as before - there is nothing in all this to
thwart or to overbear any of the laws of our sentient nature - and we see how,
in fullest accordance with the mechanism of the heart, a great moral revolution
may be made to take place upon it.
This, we trust, will explain the
operation of that charm which accompanies the effectual preaching of the
gospel. The love of God and the love of the world, are two affections, not
merely in a state of rivalship, but in a state of enmity - and that so
irreconcilable, that they cannot dwell together in the same bosom. We have
already affirmed how impossible it were for the heart, by any innate elasticity
of its own, to cast the world away from it; and thus reduce itself to a
wilderness. The heart is not so constituted; and the only way to dispossess it
of an old affection, is by the expulsive power of a new one. Nothing can exceed
the magnitude of the required change in a man's character - when bidden as he
is in the New Testament, to love not the world; no, nor any of the things that
are in the world for this so comprehends all that is dear to him in existence,
as to be equivalent to a command of self-annihilation.
But the same
revelation which dictates so mighty an obedience, places within our reach as
mighty an instrument of obedience. It brings for admittance to the very door of
our heart, an affection which once seated upon its throne, will either
subordinate every previous inmate, or bid it away. Beside the world, it places
before the eye of the mind Him who made the world and with this peculiarity,
which is all its own - that in the Gospel do we so behold God, as that we may
love God. It is there, and there only, where God stands revealed as an object
of confidence to sinners and where our desire after Him is not chilled into
apathy, by that barrier of human guilt which intercepts every approach that is
not made to Him through the appointed Mediator. It is the bringing in of this
better hope, whereby we draw nigh unto God - and to live without hope, is to
live without God; and if the heart be without God, then world will then have
all the ascendancy. It is God apprehended by the believer as God in Christ, who
alone can dispost it from this ascendancy. It is when He stands dismantled of
the terrors which belong to Him as an offended lawgiver and when we are enabled
by faith, which is His own gift, to see His glory in the face of Jesus Christ,
and to hear His beseeching voice, as it protests good will to men, and entreats
the return of all who will to a full pardon and a gracious acceptance_it is
then, that a love paramount to the love of the world, and at length expulsive
of it, first arises in the regenerated bosom. It is when released from the
spirit of bondage with which love cannot dwell, and when admitted into the
number of God's children through the faith that is in Christ Jesus, the spirit
of adoption is poured upon us - it is then that the heart, brought under the
mastery of one great and predominant affection, is delivered from the tyranny
of its former desires, in the only way in which deliverance is possible. And
that faith which is revealed to us from heaven, as indispensable to a sinner's
justification in the sight of God, is also the instrument of the greatest of
all moral and spiritual achievements on a nature dead to the influence, and
beyond the reach of every other application.
Thus may we come to perceive
what it is that makes the most effective kind of preaching. Itis not enough to
hold out to the world's eye the mirror of its own imperfections. It is not
enough to come forth with a demonstration, however pathetic, of the evanescent
character of all its enjoyments. It is not enough to travel the walk of
experience along with you, and speak to your own conscience and your own
recollection, of the deceitfulness of the heart, and the deceitfulness of all
that the heart is set upon. There is many a bearer of the Gospel message, who
has not shrewdness of natural discernment enough, and who has not power of
characteristic description enough, and who has not the talent of moral
delineation enough, to present you with a vivid and faithful sketch of the
existing follies of society. But that very corruption which he has not the
faculty of representing in its visible details, he may practically be the
instrument of eradicating in its principle. Let him be but a faithful expounder
of the gospel testimony unable as he may be to apply a descriptive hand to the
character of the present world, let him but report with accuracy the matter
which revelation has brought to him from a distant world - unskilled as he is
in the work of so anatomizing the heart, as with the power of a novelist to
create a graphical or impressive exhibition of the worthlessness of its many
affections - let him only deal in those mysteries of peculiar doctrine, on
which the best of novelists have thrown the wantonness of their derision. He
may not be able, with the eye of shrewd and satirical observation, to expose to
the ready recognition of his hearers, the desires of worldliness but with the
tidings of the gospel in commission, he may wield the only engine that can
extirpate them. He cannot do what some have done, when, as if by the hand of a
magician, they have brought out to view, from the hidden recesses of our
nature, the foibles and lurking appetites which belong to it. - But he has a
truth in his possession, which into whatever heart it enters, will, like the
rod of Aaron, swallow up them all - and unqualified as he may be, to describe
the old man in all the nicer shading of his natural and constitutional
varieties, with him is deposited that ascendant influence under which the
leading tastes and tendencies of the old man are destroyed, and he becomes a
new creature in Jesus Christ our Lord.
Let us not cease then to ply the
only instrument of powerful and positive operation, to do away from you the
love of the world. Let us try every legitimate method of finding access to your
hearts for the love of Him who is greater than the world. For this purpose, let
us, if possible, clear away that shroud of unbelief which so hides and darkens
the face of the Deity. Let us insist on His claims to your affection - and
whether in the shape of gratitude, or in the shape of esteem, let us never
cease to affirm, that in the whole of that wondrous economy, the purpose of
which is to reclaim a sinful world unto Himself - he, the God of love, so sets
Himself forth in characters of endearment, that nought but faith, and nought
but understanding, are wanting, on your part, to call forth the love of your
hearts back again.
And here let us advert to the incredulity of a worldly
man; when he brings his own sound and secular experience to bear upon the high
doctrines of Christianity - when he looks on regeneration as a thing impossible
- when feeling as he does, the obstinacies of his own heart on the side of
things present, and casting an intelligent eye, much exercised perhaps in the
observation of human life, on the equal obstinacies of all who are around him,
he pronounces this whole matter about the crucifixion of the old man, and the
resurrection of a new man in his place, to be in downright opposition to all
that is known and witnessed of the real nature of humanity. We think that we
have seen such men, who, firmly trenched in their own vigorous and homebred
sagacity, and shrewdly regardful of all that passes before them through the
week, and upon the scenes of ordinary business, look on that transition of the
heart by which it gradually dies unto time, and awakens in all the life of a
new-felt and ever-growing desire towards God, as a mere Sabbath speculation;
and who thus, with all their attention engrossed upon the concerns of
earthliness, continue unmoved, to the end of their days, amongst the feelings,
and the appetites, and the pursuits of earthliness. If the thought of death,
and another state of being after it, comes across them at all, it is not with a
change so radical as that of being born again, that they ever connect the idea
of preparation. They have some vague conception of its being quite enough that
they acquit themselves in some decent and tolerable way of their relative
obligations; and that, upon the strength of some such social and domestic
moralities as are often realized by him into whose heart the love of God has
never entered, they will be transplanted in safety from this world, where God
is the Being with whom it may almost be said that they have had nothing to do,
to that world where God is the Being with whom they will have mainly and
immediately to do throughout all eternity. They admit all that is said of the
utter vanity of time, when taken up with as a resting place. But they resist
every application made upon the heart of man, with the view of so shifting its
tendencies, that it shall not henceforth find in the interests of time, all its
rest and all its refreshment. They, in fact, regard such an attempt as an
enterprise that is altogether aerial - and with a tone of secular wisdom,
caught from the familiarities of every-day experience, do they see a visionary
character in all that is said of setting our affections on the things that are
above; and of walking by faith; and of keeping our hearts - in such a love of
God as shall shut out from them the love of the world; and of having no
confidence in the flesh; and of so renouncing earthly things as to have our
conversation in heaven.
Now, it is altogether worthy of being remarked of
those men who thus disrelish spiritual Christianity, and, in fact, deem it an
impracticable acquirement, how much of a piece their incredulity about the
demands of Christianity, and their incredulity about the doctrines of
Christianity, are with one another. No wonder that they feel the work of the
New Testament to be beyond their strength, so long as they hold the words of
the New Testament to be beneath their attention. Neither they nor any one else
can dispossess the heart of an old affection, but by the expulsive power of a
new one - and, if that new affection be the love of God, neither they nor any
one else can be made to entertain it, but on such a representation of the
Deity, as shall draw the heart of the sinner towards Him.
Now it is just
their unbelief which screens from the discernment of their minds this
representation. They do not see the love of God in sending His Son unto the
world. They do not see the expression of His tenderness to men, in sparing Him
not, but giving Him up unto the death for us all. They do not see the
sufficiency of the atonement, or the sufferings that were endured by Him who
bore the burden that sinners should have borne. They do not see the blended
holiness and compassion of the Godhead, in that He passed by the transgressions
of His creatures, yet could not pass them by without an expiation. It is a
mystery to them, how a man should pass to the state of godliness from a state
of nature - but had they only a believing view of God manifest in the flesh,
this would resolve for them the whole mystery of godliness. As it is, they
cannot get quit of their old affections, because they are out of sight from all
those truths which have influence to raise a new one. They are like the
children of Israel in the land of Egypt, when required to make bricks without
straw - they cannot love God, while they want the only food which can ailment
this affection in a sinner's bosom - and however great their errors may be both
in resisting the demands of the Gospel as impracticable, and in rejecting the
doctrines of the Gospel as inadmissible, yet there is not a spiritual man (and
it is the prerogative of him who is spiritual to judge all men) who will not
perceive that there is a, consistency in these errors.
But if there be a
consistency in the errors, in like manner is there a consistency in the truths
which are opposite to them. The man who believes in the peculiar doctrines,
will readily bow to the peculiar demands of Christianity. When he is told to
love God supremely, this may startle another; but it will not startle him to
whom God has been revealed in peace, and in pardon, and in all the freeness of
an offered reconciliation. When told to shut out the world from his heart, this
may be impossible with him who has nothing to replace it - but not impossible
with him, who has found in God a sure and a satisfying portion. When told to
withdraw his affections from the things that are beneath, this were laying an
order of self extinetic* upon the man, who knows not another quarter in the
whole sphere of his contemplation, to which he could transfer them - but it
were not grievous to him whose view has been opened up to the loveliness and
glory of the things that are above, and can there find for every feeling of his
soul, a most ample and delighted occupation. When told to look not to the
things that are seen and temporal, this were blotting out the light of all that
is visible from the prospect of him in whose eye there is a wall of partition
between guilty nature and the joys of eternity - but he who believes that
Christ hath broken down this wall, finds a gathering radiance upon his soul, as
he looks onwards in faith to the things that are unseen and eternal. Tell a man
to be holy and how can he compass such a performance, when his alone fellowship
with holiness is a fellowship of despair? It is the atonement of the cross
reconciling the holiness of the lawgiver with- the safety of the offender, that
hath opened the way for a sanctifying influence into the sinner's heart; and he
can take a kindred impression from the character of God now brought nigh, and
now at peace with him. - Separate the demand from the doctrine; and you have
either a system of righteousness that is impracticable, or a barren orthodoxy.
Bring the demand and the doctrine together - and the true disciple of Christ is
able to do the one, through the other strengthening him. The motive is adequate
to the movement; and the bidden obedience of the Gospel is not beyond the
measure of his strength, just because the doctrine of the Gospel is not beyond
the measure of his ac ceptance. The shield of faith; and the hope of salvation,
and the Word of God, and the girdle of truth - these are the armour that he has
put on; and with these the battle is won, and the eminence is reached, and the
man stands on the vantage ground of a new field, and a new prospect. The effect
is great, but the cause is equal to it - and stupendous as this moral
resurrection to the precepts of Christianity undoubtedly is, there is an
element of strength enough to give it being and continuance in the principles
of Christianity. The object of the Gospel is both to pacify the sinner's
conscience, and to purify his heart; and it is of importance to observe, that
what mars the one of these objects, mars the other also. The best way of
casting out an impure affection is to admit a pure one; and by the love of what
is good, to expel the love of what is evil.
Thus it is, that the freer the
Gospel, the more sanctifying is the Gospel; and the more it is received as a
doctrine of grace, the more will it be felt as a doctrine according to
godliness. This is one of the secrets of the Christian life, that the more a
man holds of God as a pensioner, the greater is the payment of service that he
renders back again. On the tenure of "Do this and live,” a spirit of
fearfulness is sure to enter; and the jealousies of a legal bargain chase away
all confidence from the intercourse between God and man; and the creature
striving to be square and even with his Creator, is, in fact, pursuing all the
while his own selfishness, instead of God's glory; and with all the
conformities which he labours to accomplish, the soul of obedience is not
there, the mind is not subject to the law of God, nor indeed under such an
economy ever can be. It is only when, as in the Gospel, acceptance is bestowed
as a present, without money and without price, that the security which man
feels in God is placed beyond the reach of disturbance - or, that he can repose
in Him, as one friend reposes in another - or, that any liberal and generous
understanding can be established betwixt them - the one party rejoicing over
the other to do him good - the other finding that the truest gladness of his
heart lies in the impulse of a gratitude, by which it is awakened to the charms
of a new moral existence.
Salvation by grace - salvation by free grace -
salvation not of works, but according to the mercy of God - salvation on such a
footing is not more indispensable to the deliverance of our persons from the
hand of justice, than it is to the deliverance of our hearts from the chill and
the weight of ungodliness. Retain a single shred or fragment of legality with
the Gospel, and we raise a topic of distrust between man and God. We take away
from the power of the Gospel to melt and to conciliate. For this purpose, the
freer it is, the better it is. That very peculiarity which so many dread as the
germ of antinomianism, is, in fact, the germ of a new spirit, and a new
inclination against it. Along with the light of a free Gospel, does there enter
the love of the Gospel, which, in proportion as we impair the freeness, we are
sure to chase away. And never does the sinner find within himself so mighty a
moral transformation, as when under the belief that he is saved by grace, he
feels constrained thereby to offer his heart a devoted thing, and to deny
ungodliness. To do any work in the best manner, we should make use of the
fittest tools for it.
And we trust, that what has been said may serve in
some degree, for the practical guidance of those who would like to reach the
great moral achievement of our text - but feel that the tendencies and desires
of Nature are too strong for them. We know of no other way by which to keep the
love of the world out of our heart, than to keep in our hearts the love of God
- and no other way by which to keep our hearts in the love of God, than
building ourselves up on our most holy faith. That denial of the world which is
not possible to him that dissents from the Gospel testimony, is possible even
as all things are possible, to him that believeth. To try this without faith,
is to work without the right tool of the right instrument. But faith worketh by
love; and the way of expelling from the heart the love which transgresseth the
law, is to admit into its receptacles the love which fulfilleth the law.
Conceive a man to be standing on the margin of this green world; and that,
when he looked towards it, he saw abundance smiling upon every field, and all
the blessings which earth can afford scattered in profusion throughout every
family, and the light of the sun sweetly resting upon all the pleasant
habitations, and the joys of human companionship brightening many a happy
circle of society - conceive this to be the general character of the scene upon
one side of his contemplation; and that on the other, beyond the verge of the
godly planet on which he was situated, he could descry nothing but a dark and
fathomless unknown. Think you that he would bid a voluntary adieu to all the
brightness and all the beauty that were before him upon earth, and commit
himself to the frightful solitude away from it? Would he leave its peopled
dwelling places, and become a solitary wanderer through the fields of
nonentity? If space offered him nothing but a wilderness, would he for it
abandon the homebred scenes of life and of cheerfulness that lay so near, and
exerted such a power of urgency to detain him? Would not he cling to the
regions of sense, and of life, and of society ? - and shrinking away from the
desolation that was beyond it, would not he be glad to keep his firm footing on
the territory of this world, and to take shelter under the silver canopy that
was stretched over it? But if, during the time of his contemplation, some happy
island of the blest had floated by; and there had burst upon his senses the
light of its surpassing glories, and its sounds of sweeter melody; - and he
clearly saw, that there, a purer beauty rested upon every field, and a more
heartfelt joy spread itself among all the families; and he could discern there,
a peace, and a piety, and a benevolence, which put a moral gladness into every
bosom, and united the whole society in one rejoicing sympathy with each other,
and with the beneficent Father of them all. - Could he further see, that pain
and mortality were there unknown; and above all, that signals of welcome were
hung out, and an avenue of communication was made for him - perceive you not,
that what was before the wilderness, would become the land of invitation; and
that now the world would be the wilderness?
What unpeopled space could not
do, can be done by space teeming with beatific scenes, and beatific society.
And let the existing tendencies of the heart be what they may to the scene that
is near and visibly around us, still if another stood revealed to the prospect
of man, either through the channel of faith, or through the channel of his
senses - then, without violence done to the constitution of his moral nature,
may he die unto the present world, and live to the lovelier world that stands
in the distance away from it.
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