And, indeed, there are not wanting passages, in the Psalm itself, which seem to countenance
this conjecture. As where we read, at the fourth verse (speaking of the idols of the heathens, and,
perhaps, with particular reference to that golden image which Nebuchadnezzar commanded to be
worshipped), their idols are silver and gold, the work of men's hands: they have mouths, but they
speak not; eyes have they but they see not.
Very different is the idea which Scripture gives us, of the ever-blessed God, from that of
those false gods worshipped by the heathens; and from that degrading representation of the true
God, which Arminianism would palm upon mankind. "Our God [says this Psalm,
verse the third] is in the heavens: He hath done whatsoever He hath pleased." This is not
the Arminian idea of God: for our free-willers and our chance-mongers tell us, that God does not
do whatsoever He pleases; that there are a great number of things, which God wishes to do, and
tugs and strives to do, and yet cannot bring to pass: they tell us, as one ingeniously expresses
it:
That all mankind He fain would save, But longs for what He cannot have. Industrious, thus, to
sound abroad, A disappointed, changing God.
How does this comport with that majestic description, "Our God is in the heavens"!
He sits upon the throne, weighing out, and dispensing, the fates of men; holding all events in
His own hand; and guiding every link of every chain of second causes, from the beginning to the
end of time. Our God is in heaven, possessed of all power; and (which is the natural consequence
of that) He hath done whatsoever He pleased: or as the Apostle expresses it, (the words are
different, but the sense is the same) "He worketh all things after the counsel of His own
will" (Ephesians 1:11).
Therefore it is, that we both labour, and suffer reproach: even because we say (and the utmost
we can say upon the subject, amounts to no more than this: to wit, that) our God is in heaven, and
has done whatsoever pleased Him. And do according to His own sovereign pleasure He will, to
the end of the chapter; though all the Arminians upon earth were to endeavor to defeat the divine
intention, and to clog the wheels of divine government. He, that sits in heaven, laughs them to
scorn: and brings His own purposes to pass, sometimes, even through the means of those very
incidents, which evil men endeavor to throw in His way, with a mad view to disappoint Him of
His purposes. 'All things," saith the Psalmist, "serve Thee" (Psalm 119:91). They
have, all, a direct tendency, either effectively or permissively, to carry on His unalterable designs
of providence and grace. Observe: effectively, or permissively. For we never say, nor mean to say,
that God is the worker of evil: we only maintain, that for reasons unknown to us, but well known
to God, He is the efficacious permitter (not the agent, but the permitter) of whatsoever comes to
pass. But when we talk of good, we then enlarge the term; and affirm, with the Psalmist, that all
the help that is done upon earth, God does it Himself.
I remember a saying of the great Monsieur Du Moulin, in his admirable book, entitled
Anatome Arminianismi. His observation is, that the wicked, no less than the elect,
accomplish the wise and holy and just decrees of God: but, says he, with this difference; God's
own people, after they are converted, endeavor to His will from a principle of love: whereas they
who are left to the perverseness of their own hearts (which is all the reprobation we contend for),
who care not for God, nor is God in all their thoughts; these persons resemble men rowing in a
boat, who make toward the very place on which they turn their backs. They turn their backs on
the decree of God; and yet make to that very point, without knowing it.
One great contest, between the religion of Arminius, and the religion of Jesus Christ, is, who
shall stand entitled to the praise and glory of a sinner's salvation? Conversion decides this point at
once; for I think, that, without any imputation of uncharitableness, I may venture to say, that
every truly awakened person, at least when he is under the shine of God's countenance upon his
soul, will fall down upon his knees, with this hymn of praise ascending from his heart, "Not unto
me, O Lord, not unto me, but to Thy Name, give the glory: I am saved not for my righteousness,
but for Thy mercy and Thy truth's sake.."
And this holds true even as to the blessings of the life that now is. It is God that sets up one,
and puts down another (see Psalm 75:7). Victory, for instance, when contending princes wage
war, is all of God. "The race is not to the swift, as swift; nor the battle to the strong"
(Ecclesiastes 9:11), as such. It is the decree, the will, the power, the providence of God,
which effectually, though sometimes invisibly, order and dispose of every event.
At the famous battle of Azincourt, in France, where, if I mistake not, 80,000 French were
totally defeated by about 9,000 English, under the command of our immortal King Henry V., after
the great business of the day was over, and God had given that renowned prince the victory, he
ordered the foregoing Psalm (that is, the 114th), and part of this Psalm from whence I have read
you the passage now under consideration, to be sung in the field of battle: by way of
acknowledging, that all success, and all blessings, of what kind soever, come down from the
Father of lights. Some of our historians acquaint us, that, when the triumphant English came to
those words which I have taken for my text, the whole victorious army fell down upon their
knees, as one man, in the field of conquest; and shouted, with one heart, and with one voice, "Not
unto us, O Lord, not unto us, but to Thy Name, give the glory, for Thy mercy and for Thy truth's
sake."
And thus it will be when God has accomplished the number of His elect, and completely
gathered in the fulness of His redeemed kingdom. What, do you think, your song will be, when
you come to heaven? "Blessed be God, that He gave me free-will; and blessed be my own dear
self, that made a good use of it"? O no, no. Such a song as that was never heard in heaven yet,
nor ever will, while God is God, and heaven is heaven. Look into the Book of Revelation, and
there you will find the employ of the blessed, and the strains which they sing. They cast their
crowns before the throne, saying:
Thou art worthy, for Thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God, by Thy Blood, out of
every kindred and tongue and people and nation (Revelation 9:10).
There is discriminating grace for you! "Thou hast redeemed us... out of every kindred,"
etc, that is, from among the rest of mankind. Is not this particular election and limited
redemption?
The Church below may be liable to err: and if any visible church upon earth pretends to be
infallible, the very pretension itself demonstrates that she is not so. But there is a Church, which I
will venture to pronounce infallible. And what Church is that? The Church of the glorified, who
shine as stars at God's right hand. And, upon the infallible testimony of that infallible Church; a
testimony recorded in the infallible pages of inspiration; I will venture to assert, that not one grain
of Arminianism ever attended a saint to heaven. If those of God's people, who are in the bonds of
that iniquity, are not explicitly converted from it, while they live and converse among men; yet do
they leave it all behind them, in Jordon (i.e. in the river of death) when they go through. They may
be compared to Paul, when he went from Jerusalem to Damascus, and the grace of God struck
him down: he fell, a free-willer; but he rose, a free-gracer. So, however, the rust of self-righteous
pride (and a cursed rust it is: may God's Spirit file it off from all our souls) however that rust may
adhere to us at present; yet, when we come to stand before the throne, and before the Lamb, it
will be all done away, and we shall sing, in one, full, everlasting chorus, with elect angels and elect
men, "Not unto us, O Lord, not unto us."
And why should we not sing that song now? Why should not we endeavor, under the
influence of the Spirit, to anticipate the language of the skies, and be as heavenly as we can,
before we get to heaven? Why should we condemn that song, upon earth; which we hope for ever
to sing, before the throne of God above? It is, to me,
really astonishing, that Protestants, and Church of England men, considered merely as rational
creatures, and as people of common sense, who profess to be acquainted with the Scriptures, and
to acknowledge the power of God, should have any objections to singing this song, "Not unto us,
O Lord, not unto us, but unto Thy Name, give glory, for Thy mercy and for Thy truth's
sake."
Still more wonderful and deplorable it is, that some, who even make profession of spiritual
religion, and talk of an inward work of God upon their hearts, should so far lose sight of humility
and of truth, as to dream, either that their own arm helped the Almighty to save them, or at least
that their own arm was able to have hindered Him from saving them. What can reflect deeper
dishonour upon God, than such an idea? And what can have a directer tendency to engender and
to nourish the pride of heart which deceiveth men?
It pleased God to deliver me from the Arminian snare, before I was quite eighteen.
Antecedently to that period there was not (with the lowest self-abasement I confess it) a more
haughty and violent free-willer within the compass of the four seas. One instance of my warm and
bitter zeal, occurs just now to my memory. About a twelvemonth before the divine goodness gave
me eyes to discern, and an heart to embrace the truth, I was haranguing one day, in company, (for
I deemed myself able to cope with all the predestinarians in the world), on the universality of
grace, and the powers of human free agency. A good old gentleman (now with God) rose from his
chair, and coming to mine, held me by one of my coat buttons, while he mildly addressed me to
this effect: "My dear Sir, there are some marks of spirituality in your conversation; though tinged
with an unhappy mixture of pride and self-righteousness. You have been speaking, largely, in
favour of free-will: but, from your arguments, let us come to experience. Do let me ask you one
question. How was it with you, when the Lord laid hold on you, in effectual calling? Had you any
hand in obtaining that grace? Nay, would you not have resisted and baffled it, if God's Spirit had
left you in the hand of your own counsel?"
I felt the conclusiveness of these simple, but forcible interrogations, more strongly than I was
then willing to acknowledge. But, blessed be God, I have since been enabled to acknowledge the
freeness and omnipotence of His grace, times without number; and to sing (what I trust will be my
everlasting song when time shall be no more), "Not unto me, O Lord, not unto me, but unto Thy
Name give all the glory."
We never know so much of heaven in our own souls, nor stand so high upon the mount of
communion with God, as when His Spirit, breathing on our heart, makes us lie low at the
footstool of sovereign grace, and inspires us with this cry, "O God, be mine the comfort of
salvation, but Thine be the entire praise of it."
Let us briefly apply the rule and compass of God's Word, to the several parts, of which
salvation is composed; and we shall soon perceive, that the whole building is made up of grace,
and of grace alone. Do you ask, in what sense I here take the word grace? I mean, by that
important term, the voluntary, sovereign, and gratuitous bounty of God; quite unconditionated by,
and quite irrespective of, all and every shadow of human worthiness, whether antecedaneous,
concomitant, or subsequent. This is, precisely, the scriptural idea of grace: to wit, that it (i.e.
salvation in all its branches) is "not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth; but of God,
Who sheweth mercy" (Romans 9:16). And thus it is, that grace reigneth, unto the eternal life
of sinners, through the righteousness of Jesus Christ our Lord (see Romans 5:21).
1. In canvassing this momentous truth, let us begin where God Himself began: namely, with
election. To whom are we indebted, for that first of all spiritual blessings? Pride says, "To me."
Self-righteousness says, "To me." Man's uncoverted will says, "To me." But faith joins with God's
Word in saying, "Not unto us, O Lord, not unto us, but to Thy Name, be the whole glory of thy
electing love ascribed: Thou didst not choose us, on supposition of our first choosing Thee; but,
through the victorious operation of Thy mighty Spirit, we choose Thee for our portion and our
God, in consequence of Thy having first and freely chosen us to be Thy people."
Hear the testimony of that Apostle, who received the finishings of his spiritual education in
the third heaven:
There is a remnant according to the election of grace. And, if by grace, then is it no more of
works: otherwise, grace is no more grace. But if it [i.e. if election] be of works, then it is
no more grace: otherwise, work is no more work (Romans 11:5-6).
Let us sift this reasoning; and we shall find it invincible. There is "a remnant," i.e.
some of fallen mankind, who shall be everlastingly saved through Christ. This remnant is
"according to election". God's own will and choice are the determinate rule, by which the
saved remnant is measured and numbered. This election is an "election of grace,"
or a free, sovereign and unmerited act of God. The Apostle would not leave out the word
grace, lest people should imagine that God elected them on account of something He saw in them
above others.
"Well, but" (may some say) "admitting election to be by grace, might not our foreseen good
works have a little hand in the matter? Might not God have some small regard to our future good
behavior?" No, answers the Apostle, none at all. If election be by "grace," i.e. of mere
mercy, and sovereign love; then it is no more of "works," whether directly or indirectly, in
whole or in part; "otherwise, grace is no more grace." Could any thing human, though
ever so little, be mixed with grace, as a motive with God for showing favour to Peter (for
instance) above Judas; grace would all evaporate, and be annihilated, from that moment. For, as
Augustine observes:
Grace ceases to be grace, unless it be totally and absolutely irrespective of any thing and of every
thing, whether good or bad, in the object of it.
So that, as the Apostle adds, was it possible for election to be "of works," then would
it be "no more" an act of "grace"; but a payment, instead of a gift: "otherwise
work were no more work." On one hand, "work" ceases to be considered as
influential on election, if election is the daughter of "grace"; on the other hand, "grace"
has nothing at all to do in election, if "works" have any concern in it. Grace, and
conditionality, are two incompatible opposites; the one totally destroys the other; and they can no
more subsist together, than two particles of matter can occupy the same individual portion of
space at the same point of time.
Which, therefore, of these contrary songs, do you sing (for all the art and labour of mankind,
united, can never throw the two songs into one)? Are you for burning incense to yourselves,
saying, "Our righteousness, and the might of our own arm, have gotten us this spiritual wealth"?
Or, with the angels and saints in light, do you lay down your brightest honours at the footstool of
God's throne with; "Not unto us, O Lord, not unto us, but to Thy Name give glory, for Thy loving
mercy, and for Thy truth's sake."
Certainly, election is the act, not of man, but of God: founded, merely, upon the sovereign
and gracious pleasure of His own will. It is "not of works lest any man should boast
(Ephesians 2:9); but solely of Him, Who has said, "I will be merciful to whom I will be
merciful, and I will have compassion on whom I will have compassion" (Romans 9:15). God
merits of us, not we of Him: and it was His free-will, not ours, which drew the impassable line
between the elect and the pretermitted.
2. God's covenant love to us in Christ is another stream, flowing from the fountain of
unmingled grace. And here,- as in the preceeding instance, every truly awakened person disclaims
all title to praise; shoves it away from himself, with both hands; and not only with his hands, but
with his heart also; while his lips acknowledge, "Not unto us, O Thou divine and coeternal Three,
not unto us, but to Thy Name, give glory!"
How is it possible, that either God's purposes, or that His covenant concerning us, can be, in
any respect whatever, suspended on the will or the works of men; seeing, both His purposes and
His covenant were framed, and fixed, and agreed upon, by the Persons of the Trinity, not only
before men existed, but before angels themselves were created, or time itself was born? All was
vast eternity, when grace was federally given us in Christ ere the world began (see II Timothy
1:9). Well therefore might the Apostle, in the very text where he makes the above assertion,
observe, that the holy calling, with which God effectually converts and sanctifies His people, in
time, is bestowed upon us, "not according to our works," but according to God's own free
purpose and eternal destination.
Repentance and faith, new obedience and perseverance, are not conditions of interest in the
covenant of grace (for then it would be a covenant of works); but consequences, and tokens, of
covenant interest:
For, the children being not yet born, neither having done any good or evil, that the purpose of
God, according to election [which is the standard of covenant mercy] might remain
unshaken, it was said unto her, "The elder shall serve the younger"; as it is written, "Jacob have I
loved, but Esau have I hated" (Romans 9:11-13).
Now, whether you consider this passage as referring to the posterity of Jacob and Esau, or to
Jacob and Esau themselves, or (which is evidently the Apostle's meaning) as referring to both; the
argument will still come to the same point at last; namely, that the divine counsels and
determinations, in whatever view you take them, are absolutely irrespective of works, because
God's immanent decrees and covenant-transactions took place, before the objects of them had
done either good or evil. Of course, all the good, that is wrought in men, comes from God, as the
gracious effect, not as the cause, of His favour; and all the evil, which God permits (such are His
wisdom and His power) is subservient to promote, instead of interfering to obstruct, the
accomplishment of His most holy will. I mention God's permission of evil, only incidentally in this
place: for, properly, it belongs to another argument. My present business is, to show, that the
good, and the graces, which God works (not permissively, but effectively) in the hearts of His
covenant people, are the fruit, not the root, of the love He bears to them.
3. To whom are we indebted, for the Atonement of Christ, and for redemption through His
Blood, even the forgiveness of sins? Here likewise, "Not unto us, O Lord, not unto us!" It was
God, Who "found a ransom" (Job 33:24). It was God, Who provided His own justice with
a lamb for a burnt offering. It was God Who accepted the Atonement at our Surety's hand, instead
of ours. It was God Who freely imparts the blessings of that completely finished redemption, to
the comfort and everlasting restoration of all those who are enabled to trust and to glory in the
cross of Christ. Against such persons divine justice has nothing to allege: and on them, it has no
penalty to inflict. The sword of vengeance, having been already sheathed in the sinless human
nature of Jehovah's equal, becomes, to them that believe, a curtana, a sword of mercy, a sword
without a point. Thanks to the reconciling mercy of God the Father, and to the bleeding grace of
our Lord Jesus Christ! Human freewill and merit had nothing to do with the matter, from first to
last.
4. As pardon exempts us from punishment, so justification (i.e. God's acceptance of us as
perfect fulfillers of the whole Law) entitles us to the kingdom of heaven. The former is God's
papesis, or passing by of our transgressions, so as not to take notice of them; and God's
aqeats, or letting us go finally unpunished. But justification (which is the inseparable
concomitant of forgiveness) is not merely negative, but carries in it more of positivity, and exalts
us to an higher state of felicity, than mere pardon (was it possible to be conferred without
justification) would do. It is God's okatoats, or pronouncing of us positively and actually
just: not only innocent, but righteous also. St. Bernard, somewhere, preserves this obvious and
just distinction. His words, I remember, are, that God is: "No less might to justify, than rich in
mercy to forgive."
Now, the great enquiry is, whether God be indeed entitled to the whole praise of this
unspeakable gift? Whether we should, as justified persons, sing to the praise and glory of
ourselves; or to the praise and glory of God alone?
The Bible will determine this question, in a moment; and shew us, that Father, Son, and Spirit,
are the sole authors, and, consequently, should receive the entire glory of our justification: "It
is God [the Father] Who justifieth" (Romans 8:33): i.e. Who accepts us unto eternal
life; and that "freely, by His grace... through the redemption that is in Christ, and through the
imputation of Christ's righteousness, without works" (Romans 3:24, 4:6): i.e. without being
moved to it by any consideration of the good works, and without being restrained from it by any
consideration of the evil works, wrought by the person or persons to whom Christ's righteousness
is imputed, and who are pronounced just in consequence of that imputed righteousness.
Justification is also the act of God the Son, in concurrence with His Father. St. Paul expressly
declares, that he sought to be justified by Christ (see Galatians 2:7). The second Person in the
divinity joins, as such, in accepting of His people through that transferred merit, which, as Man,
He wrought for this very end. Now, let me ask you, did you assist Christ in paying the price of
your redemption, and in accomplishing a series of perfect obedience for your justification? If you
did, you are entitled to a proportionable part of the praise. But, if Christ both obeyed, and died,
and rose again, without your assistance, it invincibly follows, that you have no manner of claim to
the least particle of that praise, which results from the benefits acquired and secured by His
obedience, death, and resurrection. The benefits themselves are all your own, if He gives you faith
to embrace them; but the honour, the glory, and the thanks, you cannot arrogate to yourself,
without the utmost impiety and sacrilege.
God the Holy Ghost unites in justifying the redeemed of the Lord. We are, declaratively and
evidentially, justified "by the Spirit of our God" (I Corinthians 6:11): Whose
condescending and endearing office it is, to reveal a broken Saviour in the broken heart of a
self-emptied sinner, and to shed abroad the justifying love of God in the human soul (see Romans
5:5). Herein the adorable Spirit neither needs, nor receives, any assistance from the sinners He
visits. His gracious influence is sovereign, free, and independent. We can no more command, or
prohibit, His agency, than we can command, or forbid, the shining of the sun.
The conclusion, from the whole, is; that not our goodness, but God's mercy; not our
obedience, but Christ's righteousness; not our towardliness, but the Holy Spirit's beneficence; are
to be thanked, for the whole of our justification.
And it is no easy lesson, to say, from the heart, "Not unto us, 0 Lord, not unto us!"
Self-righteousness, cleaves to us, as naturally, and as closely, as our skins: nor can any power, but
that of an Almighty hand, flay us of it. I remember an instance, of a clergyman, now living and
eminent, above many, for his labours and usefulness. This worthy person assured me, a year or
two since, that he once visited a criminal, who was under sentence of death, for a capital offence
(I think for murder). My friend endeavoured to set before him the evil he had done; and to
convince him, that he was lost and ruined, unless Christ saved him by His Blood, righteousness
and grace. "I am not much concerned about that," answered the self-righteous malefactor; "I have
not, certain, led so good a life as some have; but, I am certain, that many have gone to Tyburn,
who were much worse men than myself." So you see, a murderer may go to the gallows, trusting
in his own righteousness! And you and I should have gone to hell, trusting in our own
righteousness, if Christ had not stopped us by the way.
I dare believe, that the above mentioned criminal, had the subject been started, would also
have valued himself upon his free-agency. Free-agency, it is true, he had; and he was left to the
power of it, and ruined himself accordingly: Free-will has carried many a man to Tyburn, and (it is
to be feared) from Tyburn to hell: but it never yet carried a single soul to holiness and heaven.
"Oh Israel, thou hast destroyed thyself"; free-will can do that for us; "but in Me,"
says God, "is thy help" (Hosea 13:0). His free grace must be our refuge and our
shelter from our own free-will: or it were good for the best of us that we had never been
born.
In one word, all the glory of our pardon and justification belongs to the Trinity, and not to
man. It is one of God's crown jewels, unalienable from Himself; and which He will never resign
to, nor share with, any other beings. It is impossible, in the very nature of things, that He ever
should: for how can any of depraved mankind be justified by works (and without being so
justified, we can come in for no part of the praise); how, I say, can any of us be justified by our
own doings, seeing we are utterly unable even to think one good thought until God Himself
breathes it into our hearts (see II Corinthians 3:5).
Suffer me to observe one thing more, under this article: viz. that if God's Spirit has stript you
of your own righteousness, He has not stript you in order to leave you naked, but will clothe you
with "change of raiment" (Zechariah 3:4). He will give you a robe, for your rags; the
righteousness of God, for the rotten righteousness of man. Rotten indeed we shall find it, if we
make it a pillar of confidence. I will say of it, as Dr. Young says of the world, "Lean not upon it":
lean not on thy own righteousness: if leaned upon, "it will pierce thee to the heart: at best, a
broken reed; but oft a spear. On its sharpest point, peace bleeds and hope expires."
Self-reliance is the very bond of unbelief. It is essential infidelity, and one of its most deadly
branches. You are an infidel, if you trust in your own righteousness. You a Christian? You a
Churchman? No; you have, in the sight of God, neither part nor lot in the matter. You are
spiritually dead, while you pretend to live. Until you are indued with faith in Christ's
righteousness, your body, (as a great man expresses it) is no better than "the living coffin of a
dead soul." A Christian is a believer (not in himself, but) in Christ. And what is the language of a
believer? "Lord, I am, in myself, a poor, ruined, undone, sinner. Through the hand of Thy good
Spirit upon me, I throw myself at the foot of Thy cross; and look to Thee for Blood to wash me,
for righteousness to justify me, for grace to make me holy, for comfort to make me happy, and for
strength to keep me in Thy ways."
5. For holiness, the inward principle of good works; and for good works, themselves, the
outward evidences of inward holiness; we are obliged to the alone grace and power of God most
high. We do not make Him a debtor to us, by loving and performing His commandments; but we
become, additionally, debtors to Him, for crowning His other gifts of grace, by vouchsafing to
work in us that which is "well-pleasing in His sight" (Hebrews 13:21).
Say not; "Upon this plan, sanctification is kicked out of doors, and good works are turned
adrift." Nothing can be more palpable and flagrantly untrue. Newness of heart and of life is so
essential to, and constitutes so vast a part of, the evangelical scheme of salvation, that were it
possible for holiness and its moral fruits to be really struck out of the account, the chain would, at
once, dissolve, and the whole fabric become an house of sand. The Arminians, have, of late, made
a huge cry about "Antinomians! Antinomians!" From the abundance of experience, the mouth is
apt to speak. The modern Arminians see so much real Antinomianism among themselves, and in
their own tents, that Antinomianism is become the predominant idea, and the favourite
watch-word, of the party. Because they have got the plague, they think every body else has.
Because the leprosy is in their walls, they imagine no house is without it. Thus: "All looks
infected, that the infected spy: as all seems yellow, to the jaundiced eye."
It is cunning, I must confess, in these people, to raise a dust, for their own defence; and like
some pick-pockets when closely pursued, to aim at slipping the stolen watch or handkerchief into
the pocket of an innocent bystander, that the real sharper may elude the rod of justice. But
unhappily for themselves, the Arminians are not complete masters of this art. The dust, they raise,
forms too thin a cloud to conceal them: and their bungling attempt to shift off the charge of
Antinomianism upon others, rivets the charge but more firmly on themselves its true proprietors.
The avowed effrontery, with which they openly trample on a certain commandment that says,
"Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor"; may stand as a sample of the little
regard they pay to the other nine. Pretty people these, to look for justification from the "merit" of
their own works, and to value themselves on their perfect love to God and man.
With regard to sanctification and obedience, truly so called; it can only flow, and cannot but
flow, from a new heart: which new heart is of God's own making, and of God's own giving:
I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you an heart of flesh [a
soft, repenting, believing heart] and I will cause ye to walk in My statutes, and ye shall keep
My judgments and do them (Ezekiel 36:26-27).
Now, God accomplishes this promise, by the effectual working of His blessed Spirit: by the
mystic fire of Whose agency having melted our hearts into penitential faith, He then applies to
them the seal of His own holiness; from which time, we begin to bear the image and
superscription of God upon our tempers, words, and actions.
This is our "licentious" doctrine: namely, a doctrine which (under the influence of the Holy
Ghost) conforms the soul, more and more, to God: carefully referring, at the same time, all the
praise of this active and passive conformity, to God Himself, Whose gift it is; singing, with the
saints of old, "Thou, Lord, hast wrought all our [good] works in us" (Isaiah
26:12); and for all the works so wrought, for the will to please Thee, for the endeavour to please
Thee, for the ability to please Thee, and for every act whereby we do please Thee- "Not unto us,
0 Lord, not unto us, but to Thy Name, give glory."
And indeed, was not this the truth of the case, i.e. if conversion and sanctification and good
works were not God's gifts and of His operation; men would have, not only somewhat, but much,
even, very much, to boast offer they would be their own converters, sanctifiers, and saviours.
Directly contrary to the plain letter of Scripture, which asks; "Who maketh thee to differ from
others, and what hast thou which thou didst not receive?" (I Corinthians 4:7)- i.e. from above.
Nor less contrary to the scriptural direction; "He that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord" (I
Corinthians 1:31).
6. Once more. Whom are we to thank for perseverance, in holiness and good works, to the
end? "Oh," says an old Pharisee, perhaps, "the thanks are due to my own watchfulness, my own
faithfulness, my own industry, and my own improvements." Your supposed watchfulness answers
a very bad purpose, if you make a merit of it. The enemy of souls cares not the turning of a straw,
whether you perish by open licentiousness, or by a delusive confidence in your own imaginary
righteousness. It is all one to him, whether you go to hell in a black coat or a white one. Nay the
whitest you can weave, will be found black, and a mere san benito to equip you for the
flames, if God does not array in the imputed righteousness of His blessed Son.
But, for the present, leaving Pharisees and legalists to the hands of Him Who alone is able,
and has a right, to save or to destroy; let me address myself to the true believer in Christ. You
were called, it may be, ten or twenty years ago, or longer, to the knowledge of God; and you still
are found, dwelling under the droppings of the sanctuary, and walking in Him your Lord;
sometimes faint, yet always wishing to pursue; tossed, but not lost, occasionally cast down, but
not destroyed. How comes all this? How is it, that many flaming professors, who blazed out, for a
while, like luminaries of the first lustre, are quenched, extinguished, vanished; while your smoking
flax, and feeble spark of grace, continue to survive, and sometimes afford both light and heat?
While more than a few, who, perhaps, once seemed to be rooted as rocks, and stable as pillars in
the house of God, are become as water that runneth apace; Why are you standing, though in
yourself, as weak, if not weaker than they9 A child of God can soon answer this question. And he
will answer it thus: "Having obtained help of God, I continue to this day" (Acts
26:22). Not by my own might and power, but by the Spirit of the Lord of hosts (see
Zechariah 4:6).
And He, that kept you until this day, will keep you all your days. His Spirit which He freely
gives to His people, is a well of water, springing up, not for a year, not for a lifetime, only; but
"into everlasting life" (John 4:14). God's faithfulness to you is the source of your
faithfulness to Him. Christ prays for you: and therefore He keeps you watching unto prayer. He
preserves you from falling; or, when fallen, He restores your soul, and leads you forth again in the
path of righteousness, for His Name's sake. He had decreed, and covenanted, and promised, and
sworn, to give you a crown of life; and, in order to that, He has no less solemnly engaged and
irrevocably bound Himself, to make you faithful unto death.
"Well, then," says an Arminian, "if these things are so, I am safe at all events. I may fold up
my arms, and even lay me down to sleep. Or, if I choose to rise and be active, I may live just as I
list." Satan was the coiner of this reasoning: and he offered it, as current and sterling, to the
Messiah, but Christ rejected it as false money. "If Thou be the Son of God," said the
enemy; "if Thou be indeed that Messiah Whom God upholds, and His elect, in Whom His soul
delighteth; cast Thyself headlong; it is impossible Thou shouldest perish, do what Thou wilt: no
fall can hurt Thee; and Thy Father has absolutely promised that His angels shall keep Thee in all
Thy ways; jump, therefore, boldly, from the battlements, and fear no evil."
The devil's argumentation was equally insolent, and absurd, in every point of view. He
reasoned, not like a serpent in his wits, but like a serpent whose head was bruised (see Genesis
3:15), and who had no more of understanding than of modesty. Christ silenced this battery of
straw, with a single sentence: "Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God" (Matthew 4:7). So
said the Messiah. And so say we. And this is answer enough, to a cavil, whose palpable
irrationality would cut its own throat, without the help of any answer at all.
God's children would be very glad, if they could "live as they list." How so; Because it is the
will, the desire, the wish, of a renewed soul (i.e. of the new man, or the believer's regenerate part;
for old Adam never was a saint yet, nor ever will be); it is, I say, the will and the wish of a
renewed soul, to please God in all things, and never to sin, on any occasion, or in any degree. This
is the state to which our pantings aspire; and in which (would the imperfection of human nature
admit of such happiness below) we "list" to walk. For every truly regenerated person can sincerely
join the Apostle Paul, in saying, 'With my mind, I myself serve the Law of God" (Romans
7:25), and wish I could keep it better.
God's preservation is the good man's perseverance. "He will keep the feet of His
saints" (I Samuel 2:9). Arminianism represents God's Spirit as if He acted like the guard of a
stage coach, who sees the passengers safe out of town for a few miles; and then, making
his bow, turns back, and leaves them to pursue the rest of their journey themselves. But divine
grace does not thus deal by God's travellers. It accompanies them to their journey's end, and
without end. So that the meanest pilgrim to Zion may shout, with David, in full certainty of faith,
"Surely, goodness and mercy shall follow me all my days, and I shall dwell in the house of the
Lord for ever" (Psalm 23:6). Therefore, for preserving grace, "Not unto us, O Lord, not unto
us, but to Thy name give the glory, for Thy loving mercy, and for Thy truth's sake."
7. After God has led His people through the wilderness of life, and brought them to the edge
of that river which lies between them and the heavenly Canaan, will He intermit His care of them,
in that article of deepest need? No, blessed be His Name. On the contrary, He (always, safely; and
generally, comfortably) escorts them over to the other side; to that good land which is very far
off, to that goodly mountain and Lebanon.
I know, there are some flaming Arminians, who tell us, that "a man may persevere until he
comes to die, and yet perish in almost the very article of death": and they illustrate this wretched,
God-dishonouring, and soulshocking doctrine, by the simile of "a ship's floundering in the
harbour's mouth."
It is very true, that some wooden vessels have so perished. But it is no less true, that God's
chosen vessels are infallibly safe from so perishing. For, through His goodness, every one of them
is insured by Him Whom the winds and seas, both literal and metaphorical, obey. And their
insurance runs this:
When thou passest through the waters, I will be with thee; and when through the rivers, they
shall not overflow thee (Isaiah 43:2).
"The ransomed of the Lord shall return, and come to Zion, with songs, and everlasting joy
upon their heads" (Isaiah 35:10); so far from floundering within sight of land.
Even an earthly parent is particularly careful and tender of a dying child: and, surely, when
God's children are in that situation, He will (speaking after the manner of men) be doubly gracious
to His helpless offspring, who are His by election, by adoption, by covenant, by redemption, by
regeneration, and by a thousand other indissoluble ties.
There are no marks of shipwrecks, no remnants of lost vessels, floating upon that sea, which
flows between God's Jerusalem below and the Jerusalem which is above. The excellant Dr.
William Gouge has an observation full to the present point:
If a man were cast into a river, we should look upon him as safe, while he is able to keep his
head above water. The Church, Christ's mystic body, is cast into the sea of the world [and,
afterwards, into the sea of death]; and Christ, their Head, keeps Himself aloft, even in heaven. Is
there, then, any fear, or possibility, of drowning a member of this body? If any should be
drowned, then either Christ Himself must be drowned first, or else that member must be pulled
from Christ: both which are impossible. By virtue, therefore, of this union, we see that on Christ's
safety, our's depends. If he is safe, so are we. If we perish, so must He.
Well, therefore, may dying believers sing, "Not unto us, 0 Lord, but to Thy Name, give glory!
Thy loving mercy carries us, when we cannot go: and, for Thy truth's sake, Thou wilt save us to
the utmost without the loss of one."
8. When the emancipated soul is actually arrived in glory, what song will he sing then? The
purport of the text will still be the language of the skies: "Not unto us, O Lord, not unto us, but to
Thy Name give the praise."
Whilst we are upon earth, we have need of that remarkable caution, which Moses gave the
children of Israel:
Speak not thou in thine heart.. after that the Lord thy God hath cast them out from before
thee, saying, "For my righteousness, the Lord hath brought me in to possess this land." Not for
thy righteousness, or for the uprightness of thine heart, dost thou go to possess this land....
Understand, therefore, that the Lord thy God giveth thee not this good land, to possess it, for thy
righteousness; for thou are a stiff-necked people (Deuteronomy 9:4-6).
Now, if the earthly Canaan, which was only a transitory inheritance, was unattainable by
human merit; if even worldly possessions are not given us for our own righteousness sake; who
shall dare to say, that heaven itself is the purchase of our own righteousness! If our works cannot
merit even the vanishing conveniences and supplies of time: how is it possible, that we should be
able to merit the endless riches of eternity? We shall need no cautions against self-righteousness,
when we get safe to that better country. The language of our hearts, and of our voices, will be;
and angels will join the concert; and all the elect, both angels and men, will, for ever and ever,
strike their harps to this key; "Not unto us, O Lord, not unto us, but to Thy Name, give the glory,
for Thy loving mercy, and for Thy truth's sake."
O, may a sense of that loving mercy and truth be, warmly and transformingly, experienced in
our hearts! For indeed, my dear brethren, it is experience, of the felt power of God, upon the soul,
which makes the Gospel a savour of life unto life. Notwithstanding God's purpose is steadfast as
His throne; notwithstanding the whole of Christ's righteousness and redemption is finished and
complete, as a divine and almighty agent could make it; notwithstanding I am convinced, that God
will always be faithful, to every soul to whom He has called out of darkness into His marvelous
light; and notwithstanding none can pluck the people of Christ from His hands; still, I am no less
satisfied, that it must be the feeling sense of all this, i.e. a perception wrought in our hearts by the
Holy Ghost, that will give you and me the comfort of the Father's gracious decrees, and of the
Messiah's finished work.
I know it is growing very fashionable to talk against spiritual feelings. But I dare not join this
cry. On the contrary, I adopt the Apostle's prayer, that our love to God, and the manifestations of
His love to us, may abound yet more and more, "in knowledge and all feeling" (Philippians
1:9). And it is no enthusiastic wish, in behalf of you and of myself, that we may be of the number
of those "godly persons," who, as our Church justly expresses it, "feel in themselves the workings
of the Spirit of Christ, mortifying the works of the flesh, and drawing up their minds to high and
heavenly things." Indeed, the great business of God's Spirit is, to draw up and to bring down. To
draw up our affections to Christ, and to bring down the unsearchable riches of grace into our
hearts. The knowledge of which, and earnest desire for it, are all the feelings I plead for. And, for
these feelings, I wish ever to plead. Satisfied as I am, that, without some experience and
enjoyments of them, we cannot be happy, living or dying.
Let me ask you, as it were, one by one; has the Holy Spirit begun to reveal these deep things
of God in your soul? If so, give Him the glory of it. And, as you prize communion with Him; as
you value the comforts of the Holy Ghost; endeavour to be found in God's way, even the high
way of humble faith and obedient love: sitting at the feet of Christ, and desirous to imbibe those
sweet, ravishing, sanctifying, communications of grace, which are at once an earnest of, and a
preparation for, complete heaven when you come to die. God forbid, that we should ever think
lightly of religious feelings! For, if we do not in some degree feel ourselves sinners, and feel that
Christ is precious; I doubt the Spirit of God has ever been savingly at work upon our souls.
Nay, so far from being at a stand in this, our desires after the feeling of God's presence within,
ought to enlarge continually, the nearer we draw to the end of our earthly pilgrimage: and
resemble the progressive expansion of a river, which, however narrow and straitened when it first
begins to flow, never fails to widen and increase, in proportion as it approaches the ocean into
which it falls.
God give us a gracious spring-tide of His Spirit, to replenish our thirsty channels, to swell our
scanty stream, and to quicken our languid course! If this is not our cry, it is a sign, either that the
work of grace is not yet begun in us; or that it is indeed at low water, and discoloured with those
dregs, which tend to dishonour God, to eclipse the glory of the Gospel, and to spread clouds and
darkness upon our souls.
Some Christians are like decayed mile stones; which stand, it is true, in the right road, and
bear some traces of the proper impression: but so wretchedly mutilated and defaced, that they,
who go by, can hardly read or know what to make of them. May the blessed Spirit of God cause
all our hearts, this morning, to undergo a fresh impression; and indulge us with a new edition of
our evidences for heaven! 0, may showers of blessing descend upon you, from above! May you
see, that Christ, and the grace of God in Him, are all in all! Whilst you are upon earth, may you
ever ascribe the whole glory to Him! And sure I am, that, when you come to heaven, you will
never ascribe it to any other.
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