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"Blessed are
the people that know the joyful Sound! They shall walk, O Lord, in
the Light of thy Countenance: In thy Name shall they rejoice all
the Day, and in thy Righteousness shall they be exalted."
Psalm 89:15,16
I have often
wondered at the hardiness of those writers, who have presumed to
affirm, that the gospel, or message of free and full salvation by
the blood and righteousness of God's co-eternal Son, was unknown
to those who lived under the legal dispensation.
Nothing can be more
untrue. We may as reasonably affirm, that the sun did not shine
during the legal dispensation. And as it was the same sun, which
now shines, that then illuminated the world; so it was the self
same sun of righteousness, who now rises upon the souls of his
people with healing in his beams (Mal. 4:2), that then shone upon
God's elect, visited them with the irradiations of his love, and
saved them by faith in his own future righteousness and atonement.
Unto us, saith the apostle, is the gospel preached, as well as
unto them (Heb. 4:2) And again, These all did in faith, having
seen the promises afar off; and were persuaded of them (were
assured of interest in them), and embraced them (Heb. 11:13). So
that we may confidently affirm, concerning all God's enlightened
people who lived before the Messiah's incarnation, that like
Abraham (John 8:56), they saw the day of Christ in perspective,
and rejoiced in the believing anticipation of that blessed sight.
As the depravation
of human nature is intrinsically the same, in all ages; and as
men, in and of themselves, were neither better nor worse, during
the Mosaic economy, than they have been ever since, and are at
this day; it follows, that, the disorder must be the self same,
the remedy likewise must be the same; and, of course, that there
are not two ways of salvation, one for the believing Jews, and
another for the believing Gentiles; but that our Lord's
declaration ever did, and ever must, stand good, I am the way, the
truth, and the life: no man cometh to the Father, but by me (John
14:6). Suppose we carry our appeal to this psalm, for the truth of
the observation here made? What do you think David sings of, in
the text? Certainly he sings of those supernatural comforts
imparted by the Holy Ghost, and which, the psalmist knew, would be
procured, for all the elect, by the blood of Christ. Hence, he
likewise celebrates the praises of that righteousness, in which,
and in which alone, the redeemed of the Lord are exalted to a
state of communion with God, and to the inheritance of the saints
in light.
No wonder,
therefore, that a psalm, so richly fraught with evangelical truth,
should open in a strain of praise and thanksgiving to that God of
all grace, whose love to his people embraced them without
beginning, and shall follow him without end. I will sing of the
mercies of the Lord for ever: with my mouth will I make known thy
faithfulness, to all generations (Ps. 89:1). Now, do you think
that David did not enjoy, what has since been called, the full
assurance of faith? O can you imagine, that David was unacquainted
with what has since been termed, the doctrine of final
perseverance? Certainly, he was led into the clear perception of
both these truths; else, he could not have said, I will sing of
the mercies of the Lord forever; not only today, and tomorrow, if
I live; not only this year, and the next, if I live; nor only
through life, but when I come to die; and not only when I pass
through the streams of death, but when I am landed safe on the
other side; the high praises, of his mercy and faithfulness, shall
be ever in my mouth. David was egregiously mistaken in his views,
if what some blasphemously affirm to be true, that "he, who
is a child of God today, may be a child of the devil
tomorrow." You must either deny that the psalmist wrote under
the unerring guidance of God's Spirit; or you must admit, that the
final preservation of God's renewed people is a doctrine of God's
book.
But it is not enough
for true believers to be sensible of the mercy of the Lord, and of
the perpetuity of his grace: they wish to diffuse the savour of
his name far and wide, and to realize David's resolution, with my
mouth will I make known thy faithfulness to all generations. Some,
who know the truth, shun to declare it, and are afraid to speak
out; they hide Christ's mark in the palm of their hands, instead
of wearing it on their foreheads; and wrap up their Christianity
in a cloke of secrecy; as if they deemed it their highest
dishonor, to be seen with Christ's livery on their backs. On the
contrary, such believers as are strong in faith, giving glory to
God, instead of sneaking to heaven through bye-ways and private
roads, concealed in a covered litter, with the curtains drawn
close about them; rather wish to go thither over the public road
of a declared profession, in an open chariot so as to be seen and
known of all men. But ministers of the gospel, above all mankind
beside, should, with their mouths, make known God's faithfulness;
and, instead of desiring to slink into heaven at the back-door,
(if any such door there be), march publicly, with colors flying,
and with sound of trumpet, to the great gate of the celestial
city, and labor to carry thither as many souls with them as they
possibly can. Hence, they must be urgent and importunate, in
season and out of season; reproving, rebuking, and exhorting, with
all long-suffering and doctrine (2 Tim. 4:2): the ministry of the
word being the principle reaping-hook, which God's Spirit makes
use of, to cut off the poisonous excrescences of self
righteousness, to cut down the baneful weeds of practical
licentiousness, and to gather elect sinners to the sanctifying and
saving knowledge of himself. Let it, however, be observed, that
the ministerial calls and exhortations of God's ambassadors, urged
and addressed, as well to the awakened as the unawakened; do by no
means imply, that, in the divine intention, grace is universal, as
the Arminians talk: nor that man, by a proper use own salvation.
No. Quite the contrary. A fisher, who stands upon the shore, and
plunges his net into the sea at large, is not so frantic as to
think of catching all the fishes in the sea, though he offers the
net indefinitely, and without exception. So when a Christian
minister spreads the gospel-net, he preaches to all that come
within the sphere of his address; not with an expectation of
catching all, but of catching as many as God shall please; knowing
that it is the Holy Spirit alone, who can drive souls into the
net, and effectually catch them for Jesus Christ.
What was it, which
made David so desirous to sing of the mercies of the Lord? What
was it that warmed and emboldened him, at all events, to make
known Jehovah's faithfulness, from one generation to another? It
was the glorious gospel of the blessed God, seen in the light of
the Spirit, and experienced through the influence of grace. Here
is the reason of David's zeal: for I have said, mercy shall be
built up for ever, thy faithfulness shalt thou establish in the
very heavens. What is this mercy, that is built up for ever; but
the glorious and the gracious scheme, the glorious and the
gracious fabric of our salvation, founded in the eternal purpose
of God, carried into execution by the labors and the death of
Jesus Christ, and then applied and brought home to the heart by
the illuminating and converting power of the Holy Ghost? This is
that mercy, which is built up for ever. It was planned, from
everlasting: and will know no ruin or decay, through the
illimitable line of eternity itself. Who is the builder of this
fabric? Not man's free-will. Not man's own righteousness, nor
wisdom. Not human power, nor human skill. Every true believer will
here join issue with David, that it is God, and God alone, who
builds up the temple of his Church; and who, as the builder of it,
is alone entitled to all glory.
The elect constitute
and form one grand house of mercy: and house, erected to display
and to perpetuate the riches of the Father's free grace, of the
Son's atoning merit, and of the Holy Ghost's efficacious agency.
This house, contrary to the fate of all sublunary buildings, will
never fall down, nor ever be taken down. As nothing can be added
to it (Eccl. 3:14), so nothing can be diminished from it. Fire
cannot injure it: storms cannot overthrow it: age cannot impair
it. It stands on a rock (Matt. 7:25; 16:18), and is immovable as
the rock on which it stands: the three-fold rock of God's
inviolable decree, of Christ's finished redemption, and of the
Spirit's never-failing faithfulness. God is neither an unwise, a
feeble, nor a capricious architect. He does not form a wretched
scheme, liable to be frustrated, and which will hardly hang
together at best: but all is well ordered; all is everlasting; all
is sure; and nothing consigned to after-thought or peradventure.
God having irreversibly drawn his plan, and Christ having
completely accomplished the redeeming work assigned him; the
sacred Spirit has only to breathe upon the hearts of his people in
effectual calling, give them faith, imbue them with inward
holiness, preserve and increase the holiness he communicates, lead
them forth in the paths of outward duty and obedience, exercise
them with desertions, visit them with his comforts, keep them from
falling, or restore them when fallen, seal them to the day of
Christ, and carry them safely through death to heaven.
Thus, mercy shall be
built up for ever. And as surely as this book is the book of God;
as surely as the Spirit of God inspired it, and inclined David to
write these words; so surely is that a truth, which the words
themselves convey. No part of salvation is left at sixes and
sevens; but the whole is a plan, which does honor to infinite
wisdom; a plan, conceived and hid (Eph. 3:9) in the all wise mind
of God from eternal ages, but afterwards externally made known in
the written word, or gospel of grace; and savingly unfolded in the
souls of men, when the blessed Spirit begins to turn us from
darkness to light, and from the power of satan unto God (Acts
26:18).
I was, yesterday, at
some little distance from town; and received a very refined
entertainment, in going over a most superb and elegant mansion,
which, both within and without, exhibited such a combination of
magnificence, beauty, and perfection of taste, that I could not
help feeling a curiosity to know, how long that masterly edifice
was in building? And, on being informed, that it was both founded
and finished within the compass of ten months only; I could not
help observing, to some friends who were with me, that if human
art and human hands could rear so transcendent a fabric as this,
in so short a space; why should we think it strange, that Jesus
Christ was able to finish, and that he actually did finish, the
fabric of man's salvation in a course of three and thirty years?
Blessed be God, our
salvation is a finished work. It neither needs, nor will admit of,
supplement. And here, let us remember, that, when we talk of a
finished salvation, we mean, that completer and infallibly
effectual redemption, accomplished by the propitiatory merit of
Christ's own personal obedience and of Christ's own personal
sufferings; both one and the other of which have that infinite
perfection of atoning and of justifying efficacy, that it is
utterly out of our power to add anything to the merit or validity
of either. Every individual of mankind, for whom Christ obeyed,
and for whom he bled, shall most certainly be saved by his
righteousness and death, not one of the redeemed excepted; seeing
Christ has paid completely paid, the debt of perfect obedience and
of penal suffering: so that divine justice must become unjust, ere
it be possible for a single soul to perish for all or any of those
debts which Christ took upon himself to discharge, and which he
has absolutely discharged accordingly.
Arminianism cannot
digest this grand Bible truth. Hence, that poor, dull, blind
creature, bishop Taylor, tells us, somewhere, if I mistake not,
that "We are to atone for our great sins, by weeping; and for
our little sins, by sighing." If our sins have no other
atonement than this, we shall go on weeping, and wailing, and
gnashing our teeth, to all eternity. But thanks to divine grace,
the work of atonement is not now to do. Christ has already put
away our sins, by the sacrifice of himself (Heb. 9:26). We are
acquitted from guilt, and reconciled to God, not by our own tears,
but by the precious blood of Jesus Christ, as of a lamb without
spot or blemish (1 Peter 1:19): not our own sighs, and tears, and
sorrows; but the humiliation, the agony, the bloody sweat, and the
bitter death, of him who did no sin, of him who was found in
fashion as a man, and became obedient unto death, even the death
of the cross (Phil. 2:8); these, and these alone, are the
propitiation for our sins (1 John 2:2). And as surely as Christ
obeyed, as surely as Christ expired, as surely as he rose again,
as surely as he intercedes for all the people of his love; so
certainly will they all, first and last, be enabled to sing of his
faithfulness, to all generations; and of that mercy which shall be
built up for ever in their full, free, and final glorification.
This is farther
confirmed, by those words of the psalmist, thy faithfulness shalt
thou establish in the very heavens. As much as to say, "When
all thy chosen, redeemed, and converted people are assembled round
thy throne; then thou wilt, in the very heavens, give an
everlasting proof of thy everlasting faithfulness." So far
will God be, from leaving his people to perish in their passage
through the wilderness of life, or through the river of death;
that he will present them, all, faultless before the presence of
his glory with exceeding joy (Jude 24). God loves his jewels too
well, and Christ bought them with too much attention, either to
throw them away, or to lose them at last. No: they shall be made
up (Mal. 3:17); their number shall be accomplished; and in their
glorification will the whole Trinity be glorified.
Now, after surveying
some of the branches, let us look at the grand root from whence
they spring. Having taken a cursory view of these streams, by
which the Church of God is enriched unto salvation; let us
endeavor to contemplate them in their great source and head. That
you will find, in verse the third; where God the Father says, I
have made a covenant with my chosen, I have sworn unto David my
servant, thy seed will I establish forever, and build up thy
throne to all generations. Do you suppose, that this was spoken to
David, in his own person only? No, indeed: but to David as the
anti-type, figure, and forerunner of Jesus Christ. Hence the
Septuagint version renders it, I have covenanted with my elect
people, or with my chosen ones: with them in Christ, and with
Christ in their name. I have sworn unto David my servant, unto the
Messiah, who was typified by David; unto my co-eternal Son, who
stipulated to take on himself the form of a servant; thy seed, all
those whom I given to thee in the decree of election, all those
whom thou shalt live and die to redeem, these will I establish
forever, so as to render their salvation irreversible and
inadmissible; and build up thy throne, thy mediatorial throne, as
king of saints, and covenant head of the elect, to all
generations: there shall always be a succession of favored sinners
to be called and sanctified, in consequence of thy federal
obedience unto death; and every period of time shall recompense
thy covenant sufferings, with an increasing revenue of converted
souls, until as many as are ordained to eternal life (Acts 13:48)
are gathered in.
Observe, here, that,
when Christ received this promise from the Father, concerning the
establishment of his (i.e. of Christ's) throne to all generations;
the plain meaning is, that his people shall be thus established:
for, consider Christ in his divine capacity as the Son of God, and
his throne was already established, and had been from everlasting;
and would have continued to be established without end, even if he
had never been incarnate at all. Therefore, the promise imports,
that, Christ shall reign, not simply as a person in the Godhead
(which he ever did, and ever will, and ever must); but relatively,
mediatorially, and in his office character, as the deliverer and
king of Zion. Hence it follows, that his people cannot be lost:
for he would be a poor sort of king, who had, or might have, no
subjects to reign over. Consequently, that throne of glory, on
which Christ sits, is already encircled in part, and will at last
be completely surrounded, and made still more glorious, by that
innumerable company, that general assembly, and Church of the
firstborn, who are written in heaven (Heb. 12:23): for the
remission of whose sins, his blood was shed; for the justification
of whose persons, his righteousness was wrought; for the
preservation of whom, in a state of grace, his intercession is
still carried on in heaven; and to recover and retrieve whom from
the personal dishonors of sin, the Holy Spirit comes down, and
takes up his abode in their hearts, nor will ever cease from his
gracious guardianship, until he has sanctified them into the
kingdom of God.
Well may the
Psalmist add, and the heavens shall praise thy wonders, O Lord;
thy faithfulness also in the congregation of saints. What are we
here, to understand, by the heavens? I should suppose, the primary
inhabitants of heaven; namely, the angels of light. Electing
goodness, redeeming mercy, sanctifying grace, and preserving
power, so beneficently exhibited in the salvation of fallen man,
are wonders even to the very angels themselves. But are angels the
only beings, who shall wonder at this display of love? No: thy
faithfulness also in the congregation of the saints. In the
congregation of believing saints below, and of glorified saints
above. For saints and angels, in the great result of things, when
the transactions of grace and providence shall be unfolded and
clearly laid open to the delighted view; at that august period
saints and angels, the redeemed and the unredeemed (but both
elected, the one as well as the other) spirits that were always
unembodied, and saints whose souls were for a time dislodged from
the body in consequence of original sin, but who shall receive
their bodies again in the resurrection of the just; all these,
when they stand and shine above, shall join in casting their
crowns, and in striking their golden lyres to the praises of him
who has loved his people, and redeemed them unto God by his blood
(Rev. 5:9).
Time will not allow
me to consider, as I designed, all the preliminary verses which
lead to the text. Enough, I hope, has been observed, to justify
the declaration with which the text begins: Blessed are the people
that know the joyful sound! Awfully intimating, that there are
some, who sit within the sphere of this joyful sound, but who know
it, feel it, and enjoy it not. It is, to them, a sound, and no
more than a sound. But the blessedness results, to those who know
the joyful sound: and whose believing souls can say the free
blessings of the gospel are all our salvation, and all our desire.
It is a very common
thing, when we talk of knowing the things that belong to our
spiritual and eternal peace, for unconverted people to cry out,
Oh, how presumptuous, to take God at his word, and to believe and
be sure that there shall be a performance of the things which are
spoken and promised by the Lord (Luke 1:45). Thus when God avers
to the penitent sinner, I even I am he that blotteth out thy
transgressions, for my own sake, and will not remember thy sins (Isa.
43:25); it is not humility, but presumption itself, and the very
quintessence of unbelief, that bids us put a negative on God's
solemn asseveration, and induces us to question whether he will
indeed make good his promise. I am firmly of opinion, that the man
who reads and professes to believe the Bible, must have a large
stock of assurance, in the worst sense of the word (i.e. of
audaciousness and effrontery), if he ventures to deny, that
assurance, in the best sense of the word, or a clear perception
and conviction of interest in God's pardoning love, is the
possible privilege of Christ's converted people. These will
certainly concur with David, in pronouncing them blessed who know
the joyful sound: who know it when they hear it, and who know it
for themselves: whose hearts have been ploughed up by the Spirit
of God, to receive the gospel seed; and in whom it springs into
righteousness, and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost (Rom. 14:17).
This, and this alone, comes up to the full idea of knowing the
joyful sound. Hence we may learn who the persons are, that know it
indeed. Not Church of England people, in exclusion of others; not
members of the Church of Scotland; nor, in short, the partizans of
any one denomination in particular. But the many individuals, who,
through grace, are enabled to know the joyful sound, are those
whom God takes out of all these and other denominations, to be a
people for his name (Acts 15:14): to wit, the elect of every age,
place and party. All God's converted, all his repenting, all his
believing, all his obeying people, through the whole extent of the
earth, from under one end of the heavens to the other; all whose
hearts, are touched by the attractive power of his divine Spirit;
are the people that know the joyful sound.
The joyful sound of
what? Of that free grace, which it is the business of God's
ministers to proclaim, saying, Peace, peace, to him that is far
off, and to him that is near (Is. 57:19). That joyful sound, which
says, Ho, every one (without exception of time, or place, or
person) Ho, every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters (Isa.
55:1) of life, joy, and salvation. But observe, that even this is
not an universal call. God forbid that I should be misunderstood,
by any who hear me this day. Do not imagine that I am hoisting the
Arminian colors, and hanging out the false Arminian flag. No, by
no means. I suppose, there is hardly a more indefinite call, in
all God's word, than that which I quoted last. But then, take
notice, it is addressed only to those, that thirst: i.e. to those,
who so far know the joyful sound, as to wish for an experimental
participation of the blessings it proclaims. It would be
frivolous, to call them to the waters who do not thirst. It would
be ridiculous mockery, would we invite the dead to sit down at
table, and lay a plate and knife and fork before them, and ask
them why they will not eat? The plain fact is, they cannot eat, or
drink. They must be made alive, ere they can have so much as an
appetite to either.
There is a passage,
very frequently, but very idly, insisted upon by the Arminians; as
if it were an hammer, which would, at one stroke, crush the whole
fabric of free grace to powder. The passage is, Why will ye die. O
house of Israel? (Ezek. 18:31). But is so happens, that the death,
here alluded to, is neither spiritual death, nor eternal death: as
abundantly appears from the whole tenor of the chapter. The death,
intended by the prophet, is a political death; a death of national
prosperity, tranquillity, and security. And the sense of the
question is, fairly and precisely, this: What is it, that makes
you in love with captivity, banishment, and civil ruin? Abstinence
from the worship of images might, as a people, exempt you from
those calamities, and once more render you a respectable nation.
Are the miseries of public devastion so very alluring, as to
attract your determined pursuit? Why will ye die? Die as the house
of Israel; and considered as a political body? Thus reasonably did
the prophet argue the case. Adding, at the same time, this no less
reasonable declaration: As I live, saith the Lord God, I have no
pleasure in the death of him that dieth. Wherefore, turn
yourselves, and live ye. Which imports these two things: 1. That
the national captivity of the Jews added nothing to the happiness
of God. It brought him no accession, either of profit or pleasure.
And I should wonder much, if (philosophically speaking) anything
whatever could add to the divine felicity, which is already
infinite; and consequently insusceptible of augmentation. 2. That,
if the Jews turned from idolatry, and flung away their images;
they should not die in a foreign hostile country, but live
peaceably in their own land, and enjoy their liberties as an
independent people.
And now what has all
this to do with the blessings of grace and glory! No more than it
has to do with Gog and Magog. Would it not be very absurd, if I
was to stand in a church-yard, and say to the dead bodies there
interred, Why will ye die? Nor, in my idea, would it be less so,
were I to ask a spiritually dead sinner, why wilt thou die? Alas,
he is dead already: and to put such a question to one in such a
state, would be, in reality, to ask a man, who is already fallen
in Adam (as every man is), why wilt thou fall in Adam? Let
Arminians rant in this manner, if they think fit. They shall, for
me, have all the ranting, unenvied and unrivalled, to themselves.
I think, it will not bear water.
Quite a different
thing is the joyful sound of gospel grace. It imparts life to the
dead, and health to the living. You hath he quickened, who were
dead in trespasses and sins (Eph. 2:1). And, says God, concerning
his quickened Church, I will [not, tantalize her with an empty
offer; but actually] bring it health and cure (Jer. 33:6).
Regeneration gives spiritual life, and sanctification gives
spiritual health to the soul. How is spiritual health evidenced to
ourselves and others? Not by lolling in the elbow chair of sloth:
but by abounding in the work of the Lord. For, however some people
may call us Antinomians (as Christ himself and the apostles were
so (Matt. 11:19; Rom. 3:8) called before us, by the unblushing
Pharisees of that age), and falsely accuse our good conversation
(1 Pet. 3:16) as though we were enemies to the moral law; we are
so far from it, that (I aver it boldly, and let any contradict me
if they can). We, who believe salvation to be the absolute gift of
grace, are the only people that asset the due honors of the law,
and establish its authority on an unshaken basis.
1. We assert its
honors, by considering it as a transcript of God's own holiness;
as absolutely perfect, in all its requisitions; as the invariable
standard of moral excellency; as the sublime rule, by which Christ
himself adjusted his own matchless obedience; and as the
school-master, which, in subserviency to the Holy Spirit's
influence, prepares us (by the severity of its discipline) for the
reception of Christ, and for hearing, to good purpose, that sound
of gospel grace, which is joyful to those only, whom the law, thus
viewed, has (Gal. 3:24; Rom. 3:20) instrumentally convinced of
sin.
2. We establish its
(Rom. 3:31) authority, by grafting our obedience to it upon the
never-dying principle of (1 Cor. 13:8; Matt. 27:40) love to
Christ; by aiming at practical conformity to its precepts, as the
grand visible evidence of our part in God's election and in the
Messiah's (1 Pet. 1:2) redemption; by believing and asserting,
that it still remains in full force, and will so remain while the
sun and moon endure, as the rule of our moral walk; and by
beseeching God the Holy Ghost to (Heb. 8:10) write it upon our
hearts accordingly. For, whatever is absolutely, of moral
obligation, is and must be, in its very nature, irrepealable.
Thus does the joyful
sound proclaim the majesty, and even add to the sanctions, of the
moral law. To fulfill the whole righteousness of that law, and to
endure its awful penalty, as a covenant of works, the Son of God
Most High bowed the heavens and came down. To make his ransomed
people love that law, as a directory of conduct; and to make them
actually transcribe its maxims into their lives, as a medium of
their conformity to God; the uncreated Spirit descends upon their
souls as a dove, and works in them both to will and to do.
But still we must
consider the law as in the hand of (1 Cor. 9:21) Christ: and
remember, that the love of God, graciously shed (Rom. 5:5) abroad
in the heart, is that only acceptable principle, from which
believers act.
Now, that joyful
sound, which the people are pronounced blessed who know, consists,
greatly, in what the word of God brings to light, concerning (Eph.
3:11) that eternal purpose in Christ Jesus our Lord. For,
notwithstanding the endeavors of some, to misrepresent that great
and precious truth, as a gloomy uncomfortable doctrine; they,
whose eyes God has enlightened, and they whose hearts God has
touched, know that it is not a gloomy, but a joyful sound: and all
their hearts desire is, O that I might with more unclouded faith,
behold my name shining in the Lamb's Book of Life! Christ himself,
that great preacher of predestination, and who certainly was a
competent judge of the question in hand, considered election as an
heart reviving doctrine: or he would have never commanded his
disciples to rejoice because their names are written in heaven
(Luke 10:20). Whoever professes to preach the gospel, without
taking absolute election into the account, that minister turns his
back upon the tree of life, quenches one of the capital lights
which he ought to elevate on a candlestick, and withholds from his
people the very root and essence of the joyful sound.
What is free
remission of sin, through the precious blood and atonement of
Jesus Christ; what is unconditional and irreversible
justification, through Christ's righteousness imputed; what is
that truth, which tells us, that the Spirit of Christ is the
renewer, the inhabitant, the illuminator, and the everlasting
comforter of God's children; what is that word which assures us,
that the Lord will not turn away from the people of his love, nor
suffer them finally to turn away from him, but that he will seal
them his forever, and preserve them through life and death to
glory, through every step they take upon earth is paved with
snares, and, if left to themselves a moment, down they must fall
into the nethermost hell; what is the continued advocacy of
Christ, whereby he wears his priesthood upon his throne, and
intercedes for his militant people, so that, while they are
travelling, or fighting, or fainting, he is praying, by the
perpetual presentation of himself before God, as a Lamb newly
slain; what are the promises which relate to the succor, support,
and deliverance of the soul, in death; which ensure a bodily
resurrection to glory, honor, and immortality; and which ascertain
the endless beatification of soul and body together, in the
kingdom of God; what, I say, are all these, but so many parts and
branches of the joyful sound? And a joyful sound it is. God make
it such to us.
Was the matter left
in the hand of our free-will, the joyful sound would soon darken
into a dismal one. We should never come into a state of grace, at
all. And, if God was to put us into it, and then resign us to our
own management, we should quickly make shipwreck of everything.
Adam, in the state of innocence, did not probably, stand
twenty-four hours. And how should the believer, who is in a mixed
state of sin and grace, and in whom are (Songs 6:13) the company
of two armies, flesh and spirit, at perpetual war with each other;
how could such a person possibly continue, even for
four-and-twenty minutes, if the same Almighty love, which put him
into the covenant, did not keep him in it?
A good man, of the
last century, says, and with great truth, "the strongest
believer of us all is like a glass without a foot, which cannot
stand one moment longer than it is held." And our Lord had a
similar view of the matter, when he declared, that he holds all
his sheep (John 10:28; Deut. 33:3) in his hand: as much as to say,
was I to leave you for an instant, down you would fall: therefore
I hold you fast, and none shall pluck thee out of my hand.
O, how comfortable
is it, when the Lord makes these truths known, by his Spirit, to
the heart! How blessed are the people, that thus know the joyful
sound! Who can see that God has loved them in his Son; who can
feel that Christ died for them, to be their everlasting peace; who
are satisfied, that their peace is not now to make, but was
completely made and sealed, by the precious blood of his cross,
sweetly assured, that the Holy Spirit, who has begun to show them
the great things of Christ, will go on more clearly to show them
that he will never leave them nor forsake them, in life, in death,
nor even at their journey's end! This is that joyful sound, which
God enables his people to know. And what is the consequence of
knowing it?
Blessed are the
people that know the joyful sound. Wherefore are they blessed or
happy? And in what does their blessedness consist? They shall
walk, O Lord, in the light of thy countenance. As much as to say,
we need but know this joyful sound to be happy. We need but know
what it is to be loved, chosen, redeemed, and sanctified from
among men; and then that knowledge will cause us to (Hab. 3:19)
walk upon our high places, and to triumph in the name of the Lord
our God. We shall bask in the smile, we shall enjoy the sunshine
of God's countenance upon our souls.
What is the meaning
of that phrase, they shall walk in the light of thy countenance?
Suppose any great personage was to patronize some obscure man, and
favor him with his peculiar intimacy and friendship. It would, in
that case, be natural for us to say, "such a person is
greatly countenanced by this or that nobleman." So, here:
They shall walk in the light of thy countenance: i.e. they shall
be, sensibly, in the favor of God. They shall enjoy comfortable
communion and fellowship with God. They shall have a satisfactory
persuasion, that the Lord is at peace with them, through the blood
of Christ; and at (Rom. 5:1) being justified by faith, they also
are, on their part, at peace with the Lord. They (Rom. 5:11)
receive the atonement (for the true business of faith is, not to
make atonement, but simply to receive and rest upon Christ's
atonement, already made, and which faith itself does not render
more efficacious than it intrinsically is). Sometimes the tide of
assurance rolls in so richly upon the soul, as to rise quite (if I
may so speak) to high-water mark, and not to leave so much as the
shadow of a doubt upon the mind. When it is thus with the
believer, he may be eminently said to walk in the light of God's
countenance. Faith looks (Heb. 6:19) within the veil. The
interposing scene opens. We almost hear the angels sing. We almost
see the souls of the glorified do homage to grace, and throw their
crowns at the divine footstool. We almost behold the King of
saints (Isa. 33:17) in his beauty, shining as (Rev. 5:6) the Lamb
in the midst of the throne. Precious moments these! But soon, the
scene closes. We descend from the mountain top, and find ourselves
again in the valley.
If God, however, has
not yet given you any assurance of his love, do not imagine, that
you are, therefore, an alien and an outcast. For, I imagine, that
God's countenance, or favor, and the light of his countenance or
the clear and comfortable knowledge of his favors are two
distinguishable things. God may bear a favor to us, he may love
us, and be resolved to save us; and yet not indulge us with the
immediate light of his countenance. But of one thing, I am as
clearly positive, as that I am now preaching in the Lock Chapel:
namely, that none, whose hearts are at all wrought upon by the
finger of God's Spirit, can sit down, quite easily and
contentedly, without wishing to experience what the light of God's
countenance, means. Their desire is to know it, to walk in it, and
to walk worthy of it.
Have you never
observed, after the sun has been shining, perhaps for hours
together, a diffusing mist has arisen from the earth, or a
floating cloud has interposed in the sky, and shaded the grand
luminary from your view? Yet, in reality, the sun still shone as
before, though your sensation of its lustre was suspended. Thus in
the darkest seasons of spiritual distress, God's countenance, or
favor, is still toward you for good; and shines, not only with
inextinguishable, but also with undiminishable intenseness. Is it
not, however, a most desirable felicity, to see and to feel the
light of his face, beaming full upon us, as the sun when it goeth
forth in its might? (Judges 5:31). This is what the apostle means,
where he says: God who commanded light to shine out of darkness,
hath shined in our hearts, to give us the of the knowledge of the
glory of God [i.e. to enlighten us into the knowledge of the
Father's glorious grace, as exhibited], in the person [and as
displayed in the finished salvation] of Jesus Christ (2 Cor. 4:6).
And this is, likewise, what the psalmist means in the text: They
shall walk, O Lord, in the light of thy countenance.
Do you ask,
"How is this happy communion with God to be attained?" I
answer: that it is not of human attainment, but of the Holy
Spirit's vouchsafement. Whence David, elsewhere, prays; Lord lift
thou up the light of thy countenance upon us (Ps. 4:6).
Do you further ask;
"How this sweet illumination and fellowship are to be sought,
and cultivated, and cherished?" I answer: that the wisdom,
and the will of God, and that orderly linking of one blessing with
another, which he has established in his covenant of grace, all
concur to assure us, that if we wish to enjoy the unintercepted
rays of his presence within, we must cultivate holiness, abound in
good works, be much in God's company, by prayer and supplication
with thanksgiving, drink continually at the fountain of his
written word, and converse frequently, and compare experiences,
with others of God's children; more especially, with such of them
as are either eminently lively, or remarkably exercised with
desertions: such conversations are always profitable, and often
make (Luke 24:32) our hearts burn within us, while we mutually
unfold the Scriptures, and (Mal. 3:16) speak one to another,
concerning (Acts 1:3) the things which pertain to the kingdom of
God. The sick and the dying beds of Christ's people are, in a very
eminent degree, schools of instruction and consolation. I have
often gone to them, as cold, (spiritually speaking) as a stone:
and returned from them, half as warm as an angel.
In one word:
communion with God requires, that we be found in all the means of
grace, and in the way of universal duty: and that we shun, as we
would poison or the plague, whatever tends to cast a damp upon our
intercourse with the Holy Ghost, to tarnish our graces, or darken
our evidences. Was you to find, that even the crossing of a straw
was conducive to bring a cloud upon your soul, and to obstruct
your fellowship with God; it would be as much your duty to abstain
from crossing that straw, as if thou shalt not cross a straw was
one of the ten commandments. But, in all these respects, every man
must judge for himself in particular. God has, generally,
connected good with good, and evil with evil. If, therefore, you
are suffered to be off your guard, and off your watch; though you
cannot (if you are a true believer) so fall, as to break your
neck; yet, you may break your limbs, in such a manner, as to go
halting to the day of your death. The Lord graciously
"strengthen such as do stand," and effectually
"raise up them that fall;" by making both these and
those more ardently and more practically careful than ever, to
walk in the light of his countenance! For, surely, next to the
love of God's heart, believers value the smiles of his face: from
which, as from the agency of the sun, arise the buddings of
conscious joy; the leaves of unsullied profession; the variegated
blossom of holy tempers; and beneficent fruits of moral
righteousness.
They are totally
mistaken, who suppose, that the light of God's countenance, and
the privileges of the gospel, and the comforts of the Spirit,
conduce to make us indolent and unactive in the way of duty. The
text cuts up this surmise, by the roots. For, it does not say,
they shall sit down in the light of thy countenance; or, they
shall lie down in the light of thy countenance; but they shall
walk in the light of thy countenance. What is walking? It is a
progressive motion, from one point of space, to another.
And the self-same
light of God's countenance in which you, O believer, are enabled
to walk, and which at first gave you spiritual feet wherewith to
walk, will keep you in a walking and in a working state, to the
end of your warfare. So that your path shall, under the shinings
of his Spirit, (for we can do nothing, but as he vouchsafes his
grace from moment to moment), wax brighter and brighter, to the
perfect day (Prov. 4:18). The truly righteous shall hold on in his
course; and he that hath clean hands, shall grow stronger and
stronger (Job 17:9). Nor shall they only walk, O Lord, in the
light of thy countenance; they shall also, at times, even run, and
not be weary (Isa. 40:31): namely, when they are eminently drawn
of God. Draw us, and we will run after thee (Songs 1:4).
Though God finds all
his children stillborn, or spiritually dead, before he has
quickened them by his own effectual power and grace; yet he makes
them alive, in order that they may live, afterwards, to his honor
and glory (1 Pet. 2:9). He lifts up the light of his countenance,
upon the human mind; with a view, comparable to that, for which he
causes the light of the natural sun to rise upon the world. To
what end does the sun shine upon us in a morning? Not that we may
continue to close our eyelids, and press all day, the bed of
indolence: but that we may up and be doing. And why does the light
of God's Spirit shine inwardly upon his people? That they may
arise and walk in the light of his countenance, and work the works
of God, while it is day, (John 9:4), as Jesus Christ gave them
example: walk becomingly of him, who has called them to glory and
virtue. For, it is not holy talking, but holy walking, that proves
us to be children of God.
Yet, after we have
done as much, and have walked as far in the ways of God, as his
grace has enabled us; what is the subject matter of our confidence
and rejoicing? Not ourselves, nor our own performances; but the
free mercy of the Father, and the all-perfect merit of him that
died and rose again. As good Mr. Hervey asks, "Can our
charitable deeds expiate our innumerable offences? As soon might a
drop of fresh water correct and sweeten the unfathomable brine of
the ocean. Can our defective performances satisfy the demands of a
perfect law, or our wandering devotions screen us from the
displeasure of an injured God? As well may our unlifted hand
eclipse the sun; or intercept the lightening, when it darts
through the bursting cloud. We can be reconciled to God, only by
Jesus Christ." It is the sweet employ of faith, to do as many
good works as she can; and to renounce them, as fast as she does
them: saying, Lord, when saw we thee hungry, and fed thee?
Thus, we learn, from
the text, that the self-same people, who walk in the light of
God's countenance, and are active in the observations of moral
duty, have, when they have done all, something infinitely better
to rejoice in and to rely upon, than the sanctity of their walk,
and the various duties which they perform. In thy name, not in
their own rectitude, shall they rejoice, all the day: and in thy
righteousness, not in their own doings, shall they be exalted.
During the day of sublunary life, they shall sing, with the
apostle, God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our
Lord Jesus Christ (Gal. 6:14): and when, having breathed their
last on earth, they fly to the coast of immortality; they are then
just beginning, and shall (after the final audit) be completely,
and everlastingly, exalted to the kingdom of God, in and through
the alone imputed righteousness of their Saviour, their surety,
and their head.
By the name of
Christ, in which the elect are here said to rejoice, I understand
Christ himself: the blessed person, signified by that name. Who is
the brightness, the emanation, or forth beaming ray, of the
Father's glory (Heb. 1:4): and is, by virtue of that eternal and
incomprehensible derivation, God of God; Light of Light; very God
of very God; begotten, not made; co-equal partaker of one
substance [i.e. of the same numerical nature and essence] with the
Father: and by whom all things were made.
In his name, i.e. in
the divinity of his person, and in his offices as mediator; in his
finished atonement, in the perfect righteousness of his obedience,
and in his never failing intercession for the elect; it is the
privilege of the humble, the contrite, the feeble, the tempted,
and of the fallen (if returning) believer, to rejoice: because it
was for such men, and for their salvation, that this adorable
Being came down from heaven, and poured out his soul unto death.
Do not imagine, that
David was an Antinomian, because he makes no mention of good
works, as objects of joy and dependence. True it is, that he does
not say, "Saints shall rejoice in their faithfulness, in
their affected mortifications, or even in those works that spring
from genuine grace." No: not in these, but in his name, shall
the Gentiles trust (Matt. 12:21), and of his only righteousness
shall they make their boast. Inherent graces and personal duties
are the ornaments, but neither the foundation, nor the pillars, of
God's mystic temple.
As Christ's
righteousness is the only merit, that can exalt us to the presence
and to the kingdom of God; so that doctrine alone is to be
considered as evangelical, which depresses the righteousness of
man, and exalts the righteousness of Christ: leading us to trust,
not on what we do, but singly on what he has done and suffered for
us. The business of the law is, to knock us down from the pedestal
of self-confidence, and to grind us small; as Moses ground to
powder, as dispersed, the materials of the Israelitish Idol. The
business of grace is, to lift us from the dust, to settle us upon
Christ the rock of ages, to put a new song of free salvation into
our mouths, and to order our goings in the path of God's
commandments. This it is (even the power of the Holy Ghost, who
first breaks us in pieces by the hammer of the law, and then puts
us together anew by the grace of the gospel) that enables us to
rejoice in the name of Christ all the day. Not that a believer's
rejoicing is uninterrupted, from the time of his conversion, until
the moment of his arrival in heaven: for the elect have their
weeping, as well as their triumphant, seasons; and their
pilgrimage is wisely chequered and diversified, both with joys and
sorrows that the world knows not of. The meaning therefore, of the
text, is; that a sinner is no sooner born again, than Christ, and
Christ alone, becomes the object of that sinner's dependence: who
can thenceforth say, with Dr. Watts,
"While Jews on
their own works rely,
And Greeks of wisdom boast;
I love th' incarnate mystery,
And there I fix my trust."
The converted sinner
having thus, through the good hand of God upon him, fixed all his
hopes on Jesus Christ the righteous, travels the residue of his
way, leaning on the merits of the (Songs 8:5) beloved mediator:
and is, finally, exalted to the actual participation of the
celestial inheritance above, in and by virtue of that divine
righteousness, which God the Son wrought out, which God the Father
imputes, which God the Spirit applies, and felt emptying faith
receives.
The learned and
evangelical Mr. Thomas Cole, a renowned and useful minister of
Christ in the last century, had an observation or two, in his last
illness, full to the sense of the cause with which the text
concludes; in thy righteousness shall they be exalted. "It
would be miserable dying, if we had not something, every way
adequate to the demands of the law, to ground our hopes of eternal
life upon. We have an abundant entrance into the kingdom of God,
by the way of Christ's righteousness. The devil, and the law, may
meet us: yet cannot hinder us from entering into heaven by that
righteousness. We shall be sure to meet with the devil with
conscience, with wicked men, and with the law of God, in our way
to heaven: and we can deal with none of them, but by that
righteousness which hath satisfied all. Let us bring that along
with us, and they will all flee before it. If a sinner comes in
his own righteousness; shut him out, sayeth God; so sayeth
conscience; so sayeth the law. But, when one comes, clothed with
the righteousness of Christ; let him in, sayeth God; so sayeth
conscience; so sayeth the law: and let the devil say a word to the
contrary, if he dare.
"I should not
dare to look death in the face, were it not for the comfortable
assurance, which faith gives me of eternal life in Christ Jesus;
and for the comfortable and abundant flowings in of that life. It
is not what I bring to Christ, but what I receive from him. The
beginnings of which I see springing up into life eternal.
Some persons think
to lick themselves whole, by their own moral righteousness; but it
is the ready way, to die in horror of conscience.
If you want the
manifestation of the pardon of any sins carry them to free grace;
which, having blotted them out, knows how to give you a sense of
it. The gospel of our salvation is a gospel of free grace: and
they that would have it otherwise, may gather up what they can,
and go boasting to heaven's gates; but they will be turned back
again."
And how was this
great man of God supported by Christ's righteousness, when in the
immediate view of death? Learn what that righteousness can then do
for us, by the following memorable speech, which he addressed to
one of his visitants: "You are come to hear my last dying
groans: but know, when you hear them, that they are the sweetest
breath I ever drew since I knew Christ Jesus.
O thou blessed Son
of God, exalt us in thy righteousness, and shake us out of our
own! Ye, that hear me this day, which, O which, are you for? For
being found and exalted in Christ's obedience? Or for inheriting
perdition and damnation in your own? God enable you, and cause
you, to choose the good part!
To cut off, as far
as man can do it, all the pleas of proud, self-righteous unbelief,
let me conclude with two or three pertinent remarks.
1. Why is the gospel
news of salvation called the joyful sound? Not, indefinitely, a
joyful; but peculiarly, and exclusively of all other schemes
whatever, the joyful sound?
Because it is the
vehicle of making known to us, that God is love, and that he has
(in the blood and righteousness of Christ) opened a channel for
his love to exert itself in the salvation of the unworthy. The
lost are found: the blind see, the deaf hear, the lame walk, the
leprous are cleansed, the dead are made alive, and all, without
money, and without price (Isa. 55:1).
2. Have you any part
or lot in that blessedness, of which the text speaks? Any
comfortable views, or hopes of interest in God's election, and in
Christ's propitiation, and in the Spirit's renewing grace? Ask and
it shall (not be sold to you for your works, and for your
imaginary fulfillment of pretended conditions; but a sense of
interest shall) be given you: seek, in the alone name and for the
alone righteousness sake of Christ, and ye shall find the mercies
you want: knock, but let it be with an empty hand, at the door of
divine clemency; and it shall be opened unto you. For every one,
that asks, receives; and he that seeks, finds; and to him that
knocks, it shall be opened (Matt. 7:7,8). As surely as God draws
you to Christ: so surely will Christ, at his own set time, make
you a sharer in the blessedness of them that know the joyful
sound.
3. You, who have
believed with your hearts unto righteousness (Rom. 10:10), give
God the whole glory; and pray that you may continually have more
enlivening views of that imputed righteousness, on which he has
caused you to trust. As, on one hand, nothing can warrant and
animate your joy; so, on the other (to use the expression of a
good man now with God), "Nothing can effectually kill sin;
but a clear beholding of Christ's righteousness." Cleave to
this sure and stedfast anchor, and you will finally rise superior,
both to the waves of affliction, and to the mud of your own lusts
and corruptions.
4. Make it your
predominant object of ambition, to walk in the light of God's
countenance. If you are blessed with his smile, no matter though
the whole creation were to frown.
5. But whether you
walk in light or darkness, in comfort or distress, remember that
you have nothing but the name, the covenant, the person, and the
work of Christ, to rejoice in and to depend upon. We, says the
apostle, are the circumcision, who worship God the Spirit, and
rejoice in Christ Jesus, and have no confidence in the flesh.
6. Know from whence
all your spiritual and eternal exaltation arises. Not from
yourselves, in any respect, nor in any degree. Free-will, until
sanctified by regeneration, is a broken tooth, and a foot out of
joint. And works, "done before the grace of Christ and the
inspiration of his Spirit, are," as our Church justly
pronounces them to be, "sinful and displeasing to God."
Nay, even the best works we can perform after conversion, fall
immensely short of what God's law requires; in point both of
matter and of manner, of quantity and quality, of number, extent
purity, and weight. What, then, would become of us, if it was not
for Christ's righteousness? St. Paul himself, with all his
matchless retinue of holy works and useful labors, must have sunk,
even from the scaffold of martyrdom, into the nethermost hell.
Blessed, therefore, be the free grace of God, for that precious
word of infallible promise, in thy righteousness shall thy people
be exalted!
7. What is it, which
made, and will forever continue to make, Christ's righteousness so
infinitely meritorious and efficacious? The divinity of his
person. All the created beings in the universe, whether angelic or
human, unfallen, fallen, or restored; would never, by their utmost
endeavors united, be able to furnish out and make up a
righteousness of sufficient value to claim the favor of God upon
the footing of justice and merit, or to present any one of the
chosen seed blameless before the burning eyes of infinite
sanctity. Such power belongeth only to the righteousness of the
God-man Jehovah incarnate. Nothing but that all-perfect and
everlasting merit, which is the complex result of his obedience
and of his sacrifice, can exalt and retrieve us to the dignity and
felicity of heaven.
The divinity of
Christ can hardly receive stronger proof from Scripture, than that
which our text supplies. For the whole two verses, which have been
the subject of our meditation this morning, are a solemn address
to the Messiah; not as man with God, or as the eternally and the
only begotten of the Father. Let us give the text a short review,
and we shall immediately perceive, that it is neither more nor
less than a devotional application, explicitly directed to the
second person of the Trinity: an application, formed in the
strictest terms of worship, even of worship absolutely and
properly divine; and which cannot, without the most gross and
damnable idolatry, be offered to any being inferior to God
himself.
Blessed are the
people that know the joyful sound of salvation by thee: They shall
walk, O Jehovah, in the light of thy countenance: in thy name
shall they rejoice all the day; and in thy righteousness shall
they be exalted.
Now, what would you
think of the man that was to offer such an address, as this, to
the highest archangel in heaven? And what was David, if he could
solemnly and deliberately pen this address, to a created
intelligence; and cause it to be publicly sung by the Levites and
chief singers of Israel, and even leave it on record for the
seduction of posterity? And at a time, too, when the Jewish nation
were particularly careful to execrate and shun everything that had
the least tendency to idolatry? Either Christ is truly God, or
David was the sacrilegious worshipper of a false one.
If, therefore, any
of you should be beset by the cunning craftiness of men who lie in
wait to deceive: should you meet with such as tell you, that
Christ is not Jehovah, or very and eternal God; recollect if no
other passage of Scripture, yet these two verses and their
context: which will, alone, at anytime suffice to put to flight
the sophistry of the aliens.
Can we be exalted in
the righteousness of a creature? Would God the Father accept, and
command us to trust in, the atonement of a finite being? By the
same rule, we might (with the impudent Papists) trust in the
supposed merits of the Virgin Mary, or of St. anybody else. And by
the same rule, we might descend a step lower, and (with the still
more impudent Pelagians) trust in our own supposed merits, and
burn incense to the withered arm of our own blasted free-will. In
short, there is no end to the horrible impieties, which flow from
trampling the divinity and the righteousness of Christ under foot.
Moreover, if Christ
was not God over all, blessed forever; each individual of mankind,
who trusts in the Messiah's merits, would come within the circuit
of that tremendous malediction denounced by the lips of him who is
able to save and to destroy. Thus saith Jehovah, cursed be the
man, that trusteth in man, and maketh flesh his arm, and whose
heart departeth from Jehovah: for he shall be like the heath in
the desert, and shall not see when good cometh, etc. (Jem.
17:5,6). Faith in Christ would be the most damning sin under the
cope of heaven, and God's law would pronounce us accursed, for
relying upon him; if he were not as absolutely Jehovah as the
Father. And I must add, that this awful text concludes equally
strong against Pharisees of all sorts and sizes, who trust either
in angels, or in departed spirits, or in their own wretched
selves, for any part of salvation, whether little or much. Christ
alone is to be trusted in, for pardon, for justification, for
everlasting life, and for the whole of our safety and felicity,
from beginning to end. Whence it is immediately added, in the
above chapter of Jeremiah, Blessed is the man that trusteth in
Jehovah, and whose hope Jehovah is. For he [i.e. the man that
trusts and hopes in Jesus only] shall be as a tree planted by the
waters, and that spreadeth out her roots by the river, and shall
not see when heat cometh, but her leaf shall be green; and shall
not be careful in the year of drought, neither shall cease from
yielding fruit (Jer. 17:8).
I perceive, the
elements are upon the sacramental table. And I doubt not, many of
you mean to present yourselves at that throne of grace, which God
has mercifully erected in the righteousness and sufferings of his
co-equal Son. O, beware of coming with one sentiment on your lips,
and another in your hearts! Take heed of saying, with your mouths,
"We do not come to this thy table, O merciful Lord, trusting
in our own righteousness; while, perhaps, you have, in reality,
some secret reserves in favor of that very self-righteousness,
which you profess to renounce; and think that Christ's merit alone
will not save you, unless you had something or other to make them
effectual. O be not so deceived; for God will not thus be mocked,
nor will Christ thus be insulted, with impunity. Call your works
what you will, whether terms, causes, conditions, or supplements;
the matter comes to the same point, and Christ is equally thrust
out of his mediatorial throne, by these or any other similar views
of human obedience. If you do not wholly depend on Jesus, as the
Lord your righteousness (Jer. 23:6); if you mix your faith in him
with anything else; if the finished work of the crucified God, be
not, alone, your acknowledged anchor and foundation of acceptance
with the Father, both here and ever; come to his table, and
receive the symbols of his body and blood, at your peril. Leave
your own righteousness behind you, or you have no business there.
You are without the wedding garment; and God will say to you,
Friend, how camest thou here? If you go on, moreover, to live and
die in this state of unbelief; you will be found speechless and
excuseless, in the day of judgment: when the slighted Saviour will
say to his angels, concerning you, bind him, hand and foot, and
cast him into outer darkness; for many are called, but few chosen
(Matt. 22:12,14).
On the contrary,
you, who can sincerely say, "We do not come to thee trusting
in our own righteousness," but feel and confess ourselves to
be "unworthy of so much as gathering up the crumbs under thy
table; in thee alone do we seek to be justified, and in thee alone
do we (Isa. 45:25) glory; let such "draw near, with faith,
and take this holy sacrament to their comfort." The Lord
enable you to bring your sins, and your duties, and yourselves,
and your all, to the great propitiation! May he wash us in his own
blood, clothe us with his own righteousness, and seal us an holy
people to himself by his Spirit! Then shall we be acceptable
guests at his table below; and ripen fast, for the house of glory
above; while this is all our plea, and all our song, Lord I am not
worthy to come under thy roof, nor that thou shouldest come under
mine; but the (Rev. 5:12) Lamb that was slain is worthy; and my
every particle of hope centers in him, in his covenant, in his
obedience, cross, humiliation, and exaltation. For the sake if his
agonies, take away my iniquities. For the sake of his
righteousness, receive me graciously. And in the mantle of his
imputed merit may I be (Phil. 3:9) found; living, dying, at the
judgment bar, and to all eternity. |