That There Are Very Many in the World That Are Almost, and Yet but Almost Christians
Scripture referenced in this chapter 128
- Exodus 9
- Leviticus 10
- Numbers 14
- Numbers 22
- Numbers 23
- Numbers 24
- Deuteronomy 5
- Deuteronomy 19
- 1 Samuel 10
- 1 Samuel 15
- 2 Samuel 13
- 2 Samuel 21
- 2 Kings 10
- 2 Kings 17
- 2 Chronicles 29
- Job 8
- Job 21
- Job 27
- Psalms 1
- Psalms 15
- Psalms 17
- Psalms 24
- Psalms 27
- Psalms 51
- Psalms 66
- Psalms 78
- Psalms 107
- Psalms 119
- Psalms 130
- Psalms 144
- Proverbs 1
- Proverbs 7
- Proverbs 21
- Proverbs 23
- Proverbs 28
- Ecclesiastes 8
- Song of Solomon 1
- Isaiah 26
- Isaiah 29
- Isaiah 48
- Isaiah 56
- Isaiah 58
- Isaiah 63
- Isaiah 66
- Jeremiah 50
- Ezekiel 33
- Daniel 5
- Hosea 1
- Hosea 6
- Hosea 10
- Jonah 1
- Jonah 4
- Matthew 1
- Matthew 3
- Matthew 5
- Matthew 6
- Matthew 7
- Matthew 8
- Matthew 10
- Matthew 11
- Matthew 13
- Matthew 15
- Matthew 19
- Matthew 20
- Matthew 21
- Matthew 22
- Matthew 23
- Matthew 25
- Matthew 26
- Matthew 27
- Mark 6
- Mark 10
- Mark 15
- Mark 16
- Luke 9
- Luke 11
- Luke 12
- John 2
- John 3
- John 4
- John 6
- John 14
- John 15
- John 16
- John 17
- Acts 7
- Acts 8
- Acts 19
- Acts 22
- Acts 24
- Acts 26
- Acts 27
- Romans 1
- Romans 2
- Romans 5
- Romans 7
- Romans 8
- Romans 9
- Romans 10
- Romans 13
- Romans 15
- 1 Corinthians 10
- 1 Corinthians 12
- 1 Corinthians 13
- 2 Corinthians 2
- 2 Corinthians 5
- 2 Corinthians 7
- Galatians 1
- Galatians 4
- Galatians 5
- Ephesians 4
- Philippians 3
- Colossians 1
- 1 Thessalonians 5
- 1 Timothy 1
- 2 Timothy 3
- 2 Timothy 4
- Hebrews 2
- Hebrews 6
- Hebrews 10
- Hebrews 12
- James 1
- James 2
- 1 Peter 4
- 1 John 3
- 1 John 5
- Revelation 12
- Revelation 14
I shall demonstrate the truth of the proposition, and then proceed to a more distinct prosecution.
1. I shall demonstrate the truth of the proposition, and I shall do it by Scripture evidence, which speaks plain and fully to the case.
1. The young man in the Gospel is an eminent proof of this truth, in Matthew 19:16-23. There you read of one that came to Christ to learn of him the way to Heaven. Good Master, what good thing shall I do that I may have eternal life?
Our Lord Christ tells him, if you will enter into life, keep the commandments; and when Christ tells him which; he answers, Lord, all these have I kept from my youth up: what lack I yet?
Now do but see how far this man went.
1. He obeyed] he did not only hear the Commands of God, but he kept them, now the Scripture says blessed is he that hears the Word of God, and keeps it (Luke 11:8).
2. He obeyed universally] not this or that command, but both this and that, he did not halve it with God, or pick and choose which were easiest to be done, and leave the rest, no, but he obeys all, all these things have I kept.
3. He obeyed constantly] not in a fit of zeal only, but in a continued series of duty, his goodness was not (as Ephraim's) like the morning dew, that passes away, no, all these things have I kept from my youth up (Hosea 6:4).
4. He professes his desire to know and do more] to perfect that which was lacking of his obedience, and therefore he goes to Christ, to instruct him in his duty; Master, what lack I yet? Now would you not think this a good man? Alas, how few go thus far!
And yet as far as he went, he went not far enough; he was almost, and yet but almost a Christian, for he was an unsound hypocrite, he forsakes Christ at last and cleaves to his lust.
This then is a full proof of the truth of the doctrine.
A second proof of it is that of the Parable of the Virgins (Matthew 25:1) and so on.
See what a progress they make, how far they go, in a profession of Christ.
1. They are called Virgins] now this is a name given in the Scripture, both in the Old Testament, and New, to the saints of Christ (Song of Solomon 1:3). The virgins love you, so (Revelation 14:4) the one hundred forty and four thousand that stood with the Lamb on Mount Zion, are called Virgins. They are called Virgins because they are not defiled with the corruptions that are in the world through lust.
Now these here seem to be of that sort, for they are called Virgins (Matthew 25:1).
v. 3 2. They take their Lamps] that is, they made a profession of Christ.
3. They had some kind of oil in their Lamps] as appears v. 8. they had some convictions, and some faith (though not the faith of God's elect) to keep their profession alive, to keep the Lamp burning.
4. They went] their profession was not an idle profession, they did perform duties, frequent ordinances, and do many things commanded, they made a progress, they went.
5. They went forth] they went, and out went, they left many behind them, this speaks out their separation from the world.
6. They went with the wise Virgins] they joined themselves to those who had joined themselves to the Lord, and were the companions of them that were the companions of Christ.
7. They go forth to meet the Bridegroom] this speaks out their owning and seeking after Christ.
8. When they heard the cry of the bridegroom coming, they arose, and trimmed their Lamps, they profess Christ more highly, hoping now to go in with the Bridegroom.
9. They sought for true grace] now, don't we say the desires of grace, are grace? And so they are, if true and timely, if sound and seasonable.
Why lo here a desire of grace in these Virgins, give us of your oil.
It was a desire of true grace, but it was not a true desire of grace, it was not true because not timely, unsound as being unseasonable; it was too late.
Their folly was in not taking oil when they took their lamps, their time of seeking grace was when they came to Christ, it was too late to seek it when Christ came to them. They should have sought for that, when they took up their profession; it was too late to seek it at the coming of the Bridegroom.
And therefore they were shut out, and though they cry for entrance, Lord, Lord, open to us, yet the Lord Christ tells them, I know you not.
You see how far these Virgins go in a profession of Jesus Christ, and how long they continue in it, even till the Bridegroom came; they go to the very doors of Heaven, and there (like the Sodomites) perish with their hands upon the very thresholds of glory.
They were almost Christians, and yet but almost: almost saved and yet perish.
You that are professors of the Gospel of Christ, stand and tremble, if they that have gone beyond us fall short of Heaven, what shall become of us that fall short of them?
If they that are Virgins, that profess Christ, that have some faith in their profession (such as it is) that have some fruit in their faith, that outstrip others, that seek Christ, that improve their profession, and suit themselves to their profession, indeed, that seek grace; if such as these be but almost Christians, Lord, what then are we?
If these two witnesses be not sufficient to prove the truth, and confirm the credit of the proposition;
Take a third, and that shall be from the Old Testament. (Isaiah 58:2) see what God says of that people; he gives them a very high character for a choice people one would think.
They seek me daily, they delight to know my way, as a nation that did righteousness, and forsook not the ordinance of their God, they ask of me the ordinances of justice; they take delight in approaching to God.
See how far these went; if God had not said they were rotten and unsound, we should have took them for the he-goats before the flock, and ranked them among the worthies; pray observe (Jeremiah 50:8).
1. They seek God] Now this is the proper character of a true saint, to seek God. True saints are called seekers of God. This is the generation of them that seek him, that seek your face O Jacob, or O God of Jacob (Psalm 24:6).
Lo here a generation of them that seek God, and are not these the saints of God? Indeed farther,
2. They seek him daily] here's diligence backed with continuance [illegible] day, by day, that is every day from day to day. They did not seek him by fits and girds, nor in a time of trouble and affliction only as many do.
Lord, in trouble have they visited you, they poured out a prayer when your chastening was upon them (Isaiah 26:16). Many when God visits them, then they visit him, but not till then; when God pours out his afflictions, then they pour out their supplications. This is Seamen's devotion, when the storms have brought them to their wits' end, then they cry to the Lord in their trouble (Psalm 107:27-28). Many never cry to God till they are at their wits' end, they never come to God for help, so long as they can help themselves.
But now these here, whom God speaks of are more zealous in their devotion, the others make a virtue of necessity, but these seem to make conscience of duty, for says God, they seek me daily.
Sure this is (one would think) a note of sincerity.
Job says of the hypocrite, will he always call upon God? Surely no, but now this people call upon God always, they seek him daily, certainly these are no hypocrites.
3. Says God, They delight to know my ways — sure this frees them from the suspicion of hypocrisy, for (Job 21:14) they say to God depart from us, we desire not the knowledge of your ways.
4. They are as a nation that did righteousness — not only as a nation that spoke righteousness, or knew righteousness, or professed righteousness, but as a nation that did righteousness, that practiced nothing but what was just and right. They appeared to the judgment of the world as good as the best.
5. They forsook not the ordinances of their God — they seem true to their principles, constant to their profession, better than many among us, that cast off duties, and forsake the ordinances of God; but these hold out in their profession, they forsook not the ordinances of God.
6. They ask of me (says God) the ordinances of justice — they will not make their own wills the rule of right and wrong, but the law and will of God, and therefore in all their dealings with men, they desire to be guided and counselled by God. They ask of me the ordinances of justice.
7. They take delight in approaching to God — sure this can't be the guise of a hypocrite, will he delight himself in the Almighty? Says Job: no, he will not.
Though God is the chief delight of man, (having everything in him to render him lovely, as was said of Titus Vespasian) yet the hypocrite will not delight in God.
Till the affections are made spiritual, there is no affection to things that are spiritual, God is a spiritual good, and therefore hypocrites can't delight in God. But these are a people that delight in approaching to God.
8. They were a people that were much in fasting, as you may see verse 3. Why have we fasted (say they) and you see it not? Now this is a duty that does not suppose and require truth of grace only in the heart, but strength of grace.
No man (says our Lord Christ) puts new wine into old bottles, lest the bottles break, and the wine runs out.
New wine is strong, and old bottles weak, and the strong wine breaks the weak vessel, this is a reason Christ gives, why his disciples who were newly converted (and but weak as yet) were not exercised with this austere discipline.
But this people here mentioned were a people that fasted often, afflicted their souls much, wore themselves out by frequent practices of humiliation.
Sure therefore this was new wine, in new bottles, this must needs be a people strong in grace; here seems to be grace not only in truth, but also in growth.
And yet for all this, they were no better than a generation of hypocrites, they made a goodly progress, and went far, but yet they went not far enough, they were cast off by God after all. I hope by this time the truth of the point is sufficiently avouched, and confirmed, that a man may be (indeed very many are) almost, and yet (no more than) but almost Christians.
Now for the more distinct prosecution of the point.
- 1. I shall show you step by step, how far a man may go, what attainments he may reach to, how specious and singular a progress he may make in religion, and yet be but almost a Christian, when all is done. - 2. I will show you, from where it is, that many men go so far as that they are almost Christians. - 3. Why they are but almost Christians, when they have gone thus far. - 4. What the reason is, why men that go thus far as to be almost Christians, yet go no farther than to be almost Christians.
1. How far may a man go in the way to Heaven, and yet be but almost a Christian?
This I shall show you in twenty several steps.
1. A man may have much knowledge, much light, he may know much of God, and his will, much of Christ, and his ways, and yet be but almost a Christian.
For though there can be no grace without knowledge, yet there may be much knowledge where there is no grace; illumination often goes before, when conversion never follows after. The subject of knowledge is the understanding, the subject of holiness is the will.
Now a man may have his understanding enlightened, and yet his will not at all sanctified.
He may have an understanding to know God, and yet want a will to obey God. The Apostle tells us of some that when they knew God, yet they glorified him not as God (Romans 1:21).
To make a man altogether a Christian, there must be light in the head, and heat in the heart, knowledge in the understanding, and zeal in the affections.
Some have zeal and no knowledge, that is blind devotion, some have knowledge and no zeal, that is fruitless speculation. But where knowledge is joined with zeal, that makes a true Christian.
But is it not said? This is life eternal to know the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent (John 17:3).
It is not every knowledge of God and Christ that interests the soul in life eternal. For why then do the Devils perish? They have more knowledge of God than all the men in the world; for though by their fall they lost their holiness, yet they lost not their knowledge.
They are called 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 from their knowledge, and yet they are 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 for their malice, Devils still.
Knowledge may fill the head, but it will never better the heart, if there be not somewhat else. The Pharisees had much knowledge. Behold you are called a Jew, and rest in the law, and make your boast of God, and know his will, etc. (Romans 2:17-18), and yet they were a generation of hypocrites.
Alas, how many have gone loaded with knowledge to hell?
Though it is true, that it is life eternal to know God and Jesus Christ, yet it is as true that many do know God and Jesus Christ, that shall never see life eternal.
There is, you must know, a twofold knowledge, one is common but not saving, the other is not common but saving; common knowledge is that which floats in the head, but does not influence nor affect the heart.
This knowledge reprobates may have, Balaam saw Christ from the top of the rocks, and from the hills.
Naturalists say, that there is a pearl in the toad's head, and yet her belly is full of poison. The French have a berry which they call uve de spine, the grape of a thorn.
The common knowledge of Christ is the pearl in the toad's head, the grape that grows upon thorns, it may be found in men unsanctified.
And then there is a saving knowledge of God and Christ, which does include the assent of the mind, and the consent of the will, this is a knowledge that implies faith, by his knowledge shall my righteous servant justify many.
And this is that knowledge, which leads to life eternal: now whatever that measure of knowledge is, which a man may have of God, and of Jesus Christ, yet if it be not this saving knowledge, knowledge joined with affection and application, he is but almost a Christian.
He only knows God aright, who knows how to obey him, and obeys according to his knowledge of him, a good understanding have all they that do his commandments.
All knowledge without this, makes a man but like Nebuchadnezzar's image, with a head of gold, and feet of clay.
- Some know, but to know, - Some know, to be known, - Some know, to practice what they know. - Now to know, but to know, that's curiosity. - To know, to be known, that's vainglory. - But to know, to practice what we know, that is gospel duty.
This makes a man a complete Christian, the other without this makes a man almost, and yet but almost a Christian.
2. A man may have great and eminent gifts, indeed spiritual gifts, and yet be but almost a Christian. The gift of prayer is a spiritual gift, now this a man may have, and yet be but almost a Christian, for the gift of prayer is one thing, the grace of prayer is another.
The gift of preaching and prophesying is a spiritual gift, now this a man may have, and yet be but almost a Christian. Judas was a great preacher, so were they that came to Christ and said, Lord, Lord, we have prophesied in your name, and in your name cast out devils, etc.
You must know that it is not gifts, but grace which makes a Christian. For,
1. Gifts are from a common work of the spirit, now a man may partake of all the common gifts of the spirit, and yet be a reprobate; for therefore they are called common, because they are indifferently dispensed by the spirit to good and bad, to them that are believers, and to them that are not.
They that have grace, have gifts, and they that have no grace may have the same gifts, for the spirit works in both; in fact in this sense, he that has no grace may be under a greater work of the spirit (quoad hoc) as to this thing, than he that has most grace; a graceless professor may have greater gifts, than the most holy believer. He may out-pray, and out-preach, and out-do them, that in sincerity and integrity out-go him.
2. Gifts are for the use and good of others, they are given in ordine ad alium, as the schoolmen speak, for the profiting and edifying of others, so says the Apostle (1 Corinthians 12:7). They are given to profit with it.
Now a man may edify another by his gifts, and yet be unedified himself. He may be profitable to another, and yet unprofitable to himself.
A lame man may with his crutch point to you the right way, and yet not be able to walk in it himself. A crooked tailor may make a suit to fit a straight body, though it fit not him that made it, because of his crookedness.
The Church (Christ's garden enclosed) may be watered through a wooden gutter: the sun may give light through a slovenly window; and the field may be well sown with a dirty hand.
The efficacy of the Word does not depend upon the authority of him that speaks it, but upon the authority of the God that blesses it. So that another may be converted by my preaching, and yet I may be a castaway notwithstanding. Balaam makes a clear and rare prophecy of Christ, and yet has he no benefit by Christ, There shall come a star out of Jacob, and a scepter shall rise out of Israel. But yet Balaam shall have no benefit by it, I shall see him but not now, I shall behold him but not nigh (Numbers 24:17).
God may use a man's gifts to bring another to Christ, when he himself whose gifts God uses, may be a stranger to Christ, one man may confirm another in the faith and yet himself may be a stranger to the faith. Pendleton strengthens and confirms Saunders, in Queen Mary's days, to stand in the truth he had preached, and to seal it with his blood, and yet afterwards plays the apostate himself.
Scultetus tells us of one Joannes Speiserus a famous preacher at Ausborough in Germany, in the year 1523, who preached the Gospel so powerfully that various common harlots were converted, and became good Christians, and yet himself afterwards turned Papist, and came to a miserable end.
Thus the candle may burn bright to light others in their work, and yet afterwards go out in a stink.
3. It is beyond the power of the greatest gifts to change the heart, a man may preach like an apostle, pray like an angel, and yet may have the heart of a devil. It is grace only that can change the heart, the greatest gifts can't change it, but the least grace can, gifts may make a man a scholar, but grace makes a man a believer.
Now if gifts can't change the heart, then a man may have the greatest gifts, and yet be but almost a Christian.
4. Many have gone laden with gifts to hell, no doubt Judas had great gifts, for he was a preacher of the Gospel, and our Lord Jesus Christ would not set him in the work, and not fit him for the work, yet Judas is gone to his own place. The scribes and Pharisees were men of great gifts, and yet where is the wise? Where is the scribe.
The preaching of the Cross is to them that perish foolishness.
Them that perish, who are they? Who? The wise and the learned, both among Jews and Greeks, these are called them that perish. Surgunt indocti & rapiunt caelum, dum nos cum doctrina nostra in Gehennam detrudimur, said a great Bishop, when he saw a poor Shepherd weeping over a Toad. The poor illiterate world attain to Heaven, while we with all our learning fall into Hell.
There are three things must be done for us if ever we would avoid perishing.
- We must be thoroughly convinced of sin. - We must be really united to Christ. - We must be instated in the covenant of grace.
Now the greatest gifts cannot stead us in any one of these.
- They cannot work through convictions. - They cannot effect our union. - They cannot bring us into covenant relation.
And consequently they cannot preserve from eternal perishing, and if so, then a man may have the greatest gifts, and yet be but almost a Christian.
5. Gifts may decay and perish, they do not lie beyond the reach of corruption, indeed grace shall never perish; but gifts will, grace is incorruptible, though gifts are not; grace is a spring whose waters fail not, but the stream of gifts may be dried up (John 4:14; Isaiah 58:11). If grace be corruptible in its own nature, as being but a creature, yet it is incorruptible in regard of its conserver, as being the new creature; he who created it in us, will conserve it for us, he who began it will also finish it.
Gifts have their root in nature, but grace has its root in Christ (Hebrews 12:2), and therefore though gifts may die and wither, yet grace shall abide for ever.
Now if gifts are perishing, then (though he that has the least grace is a Christian, yet) he that has the greatest gifts, may be but almost a Christian.
But does not the Apostle bid us covet earnestly the best gifts (1 Corinthians 12:31)? Why must we covet them, and covet them earnestly, if they avail not to salvation?
Gifts are good, though they are not the best good; they are excellent, but there is somewhat more excellent, so it follows in the same verse, yet I show to you a more excellent way, and that is the way of grace; one dram of grace is more worth than a talent of gifts; gifts may make us rich towards men, but it is grace that makes us rich towards God (Luke 12:21).
Our gifts profit others, but grace profits ourselves; that whereby I profit another is good, but that whereby I am profited myself is better.
Now because gifts are good, therefore we ought to covet them, but because they are not the best good, therefore we ought not to rest in them; we must covet gifts for the good of others, that they may be edified, and we must covet grace for the good of our own souls, that they may be saved; for whoever be bettered by our gifts, yet we shall miscarry without grace.
3. A man may have a high profession of Religion, be much in external duties of godliness, and yet be but almost a Christian. Mark what our Lord Christ tells them in (Matthew 7:21): Not every one that says to me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven, that is, not every one that makes a profession of Christ, shall therefore be owned for a true disciple of Christ.
All are not Israel that are of Israel (Romans 9:6), nor are all Christians that make a profession of Religion.
What a goodly profession had Judas — he followed Christ, left all for Christ, he preached the Gospel of Christ, he cast out devils in the name of Christ, he ate and drank at the Table of Christ, and yet Judas was but a hypocrite.
Most professors are like lilies, fair in show, but foul in scent; or like pepper, hot in the mouth, but cold in the stomach. The finest lace may be upon the coarsest cloth.
It is a great deceit to measure the substance of our Religion by the bulk of our profession; and to judge of the strength of our graces by the length of our duties. The Scriptures speak of some who having a form of godliness yet deny the power thereof (2 Timothy 3:5). Deny the power — that is, they don't live in the practice of those graces, which they pretend to in their duties; he that pretends to godliness by a specious profession, and yet does not practice godliness by a holy conversation, he has a form but denies the power.
Hugo compares such to the ostrich, qui alas habet sed non volat, which has great wings, but yet flies not; many have the wings of a fair profession, but yet use them not to mount upward in spiritual affections, and a heavenly conversation.
But to clear the truth of this, that a man may make a high profession of Religion, and yet be but almost a Christian, take a fourfold evidence.
1. If a man may profess Religion, and yet never have his heart changed, nor his state bettered, then he may be a great professor, and yet be but almost a Christian.
But a man may profess Religion, and yet never have his heart changed, nor his state renewed.
He may be a constant hearer of the word, and yet be a sinner still; he may come often to the Lord's Table, and yet go away a sinner as he came; we must not think that duties, ex opere operato can confer grace.
Many a soul has been converted by Christ in an ordinance, but never was any soul converted by an ordinance without Christ.
And does Christ convert all that sit under the ordinances? Surely no, for to some the word is a savour of death to death ([reconstructed: 2 Corinthians 2:16]).
And if so then it is plain, that a man may profess Religion, and yet be but almost a Christian.
2. A man may profess Religion and live in a form of godliness in hypocrisy. (Isaiah 48:1) Hear you this, O House of Jacob, which are called by the name of Israel, and are come forth out of the waters of Judah, which swore by the name of the Lord, and make mention of the God of Israel, but not in truth, nor in righteousness. What do you think of these? They make mention of the name of the Lord — there is their profession; but not in truth, nor in righteousness — there is their dissimulation; and indeed there could be no hypocrisy in a religious sense, were it not for a profession of Religion; for he that is wicked, and carnal, and vile, inwardly, and appears to be so outwardly, he is no hypocrite, but is what he appears, and appears what he is.
But he that is one thing really, and another thing seemingly — is carnal and unholy, and yet seems to be good and holy — he is a hypocrite.
Thus the Casuists define hypocrisy to be simulatio sanctitatis, a counterfeiting of holiness, and this fits exactly with the Greek word [in non-Latin alphabet], which is from [in non-Latin alphabet], to counterfeit.
And to this purpose the Hebrews have two words for Hypocrites, panim which signifies facies, and Chanephim, which signifies counterfeits, from chanaph to dissemble; so that he is a hypocrite that dissembles religion, and wears the face of holiness, and yet is without the grace of holiness, he appears to be in semblance, what he is not in substance, he wears a form of godliness without, only as a cover of a profane heart within.
He has a profession that he may not be thought wicked, but it is but a profession, and therefore he is wicked.
He is the religious hypocrite, religious, because he pretends to it, and yet a hypocrite, because he does but pretend to it; he is like many men in a consumption, that have fresh looks, and yet rotten lungs: or like an apple that has a skin fair, but a rotten core, many appear righteous, who are only righteous in appearance.
And if so, then a man may profess religion, and yet be but almost a Christian.
3. Custom and fashion may create a man a professor, as you have many that wear this or that garb, not because it keeps them warmer, or has any excellency in it, more than another, but merely for fashion.
Many must have powdered hair, spotted faces, feathers in their caps, etc. for no other end but because they would be fools in fashion.
So many profess Christianity, not because the means of grace warms the heart, or that they see any excellency in the ways of God above the world, but merely to follow the fashion; I wish I might not say it has been true of our days, because religion has been uppermost, therefore many have professed it, it has been the gaining trade, and then most would be of that trade.
Religion in credit makes many professors but few proselytes, but when religion suffers then its confessors are no more than its converts; for custom makes the former, but conscience the latter.
He that is a professor of religion, merely for custom's sake, when it prospers, will never be a martyr for Christ's sake, when religion suffers.
He that owns the truth to live upon that, will disown it, when it comes to live upon him.
They say that when a house is decaying and falling, all the rats and mice will forsake it, while the house is firm and they may shelter in the roof, they'll stay, but no longer, lest in the decay the fall should be upon them, and they that lived at top, should lie at bottom.
My brethren may I not say we have many that are the vermin, the rats and mice of religion, that would live under the roof of it, while they might have shelter in it, but when it suffers forsake it, lest it should fall, and the fall should be upon them, I am persuaded this is not the least reason why God has brought the wheel upon the profession of religion, namely, to rid it of the vermin.
He shakes the foundation of the house, that these rats and mice may quit the roof, not to overturn it, but to rid them out of it, as the husbandman fans the wheat, that he may get rid of the chaff. The Halcyon days of the Gospel provoke hypocrisy, but the sufferings of religion prove sincerity.
Now then if custom and fashion make many men professors, then a man may profess religion, and yet be but almost a Christian.
4. If many may perish under a profession of godliness, then a man may profess religion, and yet be but almost a Christian.
Now the Scripture is clear, that a man may perish under the highest profession of religion, Christ cursed the fig tree that had leaves and no fruit, it is said (Matthew 8:12) that the children of the Kingdom shall be cast out into outer darkness. Who were these? But they that were then the only people of God in the world, by profession, that had made a covenant with him by sacrifice, and yet these cast out.
In Matthew 7:22 you read of some that came and made boast of their profession to Christ, hoping that might save them. Lord (say they) have we not prophesied in your name, cast out devils in your name, done many wonderful works in your name.
Now what says our Lord Christ to this? Then I will profess to them I never knew you, depart from me.
Mark, here are those that prophesy in his name, and yet perish in his wrath, in his name cast out devils, and then are cast out themselves; in his name do many wonderful works, and yet perish for wicked workers.
The profession of religion will no more keep a man from perishing, than calling a ship the Safeguard, or the Good-speed will keep her from drowning.
As many go to heaven with the fear of hell in their hearts, so many go to hell with the name of Christ in their mouths.
Now then if many may perish under a profession of godliness, then may a man be a high professor of religion, and yet be but almost a Christian.
But is it not said by the Lord Christ himself, he that confesses me before men, him will I confess before my Father in heaven (Matthew 10:32).
Now for Christ to say he will confess us before the Father, is equivalent to a promise of eternal life, for if Jesus Christ confess us, God the Father will never disown us.
True, they that confess Christ, shall be confessed by him, and it is as true, that this confession is equivalent to a promise of salvation.
But now you must know, that professing Christ, is not confessing him, for to profess Christ is one thing, to confess Christ is another, confession is a living testimony for Christ, in a time when religion suffers, profession may be only a lifeless formality in a time when religion prospers.
To confess Christ is to choose his ways and own them, to profess Christ is to plead for his ways, and yet live besides them.
Profession may be from a feigned love to the ways of Christ, but confession is from a rooted love to the Person of Christ.
To profess Christ, is to own him when none deny him, to confess Christ is to plead for him and suffer for him when others oppose him, hypocrites may be professors, but the martyrs are the true confessors, profession is a swimming down the stream, confession is a swimming against the stream.
Now many may swim with the stream (like the dead fish) that cannot swim against the stream with the living fish, many may profess Christ, that can't confess Christ, and so notwithstanding their profession yet are but almost Christians.
4. To come yet nearer, A man may go far in opposing his sin, and yet be but almost a Christian. How far a man may go in this work, I shall show you in seven gradual instances.
First, A man may be convinced of sin, and yet be but almost a Christian, For,
1. Conviction may be rational as well as spiritual, it may be from a natural conscience enlightened by the word, without the effectual work of the Spirit applying sin to the heart.
2. Convictions may be worn out; they many times go off, and end not in sound conversion, says the Church, we have been with child, we have been in pain, we have brought forth wind.
This is the complaint of the Church in reference to the unprofitableness of their afflictions, and it may be the complaint of most in reference to the unprofitableness of their convictions.
3. Many take convictions of sin, to be conversion from sin, and so sit down and rest in their conviction. That is a sad complaint God makes of Ephraim, Ephraim is an unwise son, for he should not stay long in the place of the breaking forth of children. Now then, if convictions may be only from natural conscience, if they may be worn out, or may be mistaken, and rested in for conversion, then a man may have convictions, and be but almost a Christian.
Secondly, A man may mourn for sin, and yet be but almost a Christian, so did Saul, so did Esau, for the loss of his birthright, which was his sin, and therefore he is called by the spirit of God profane Esau, yet he sought it again carefully with tears.
But does not Christ pronounce them blessed that mourn, (Matthew 5:4) Blessed are they that mourn?
Sure then if a man mourn for sin, he is in a good condition; you see, says Nazianzen, [〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉] that salvation is joined with [reconstructed: sorrow].
I answer, it is true, that they who mourn for sin in the sense Christ there speaks of are blessed; but all mourning for sin, does not therefore render us blessed.
1. True mourning for sin, must flow from spiritual conviction of the evil, and vileness, and damnable nature of sin.
Now all that mourn for sin don't do it from a thorough work of spiritual conviction upon the soul, they have not a right sense of the evil and vileness of sin.
2. True mourning for sin, is more for the evil that is in sin, than the evil that comes by sin; more because it dishonors God, and wounds Christ, and grieves the Spirit, and makes the soul unlike God, than because it damns the soul.
Now there are many that mourn for sin, not so much for the evil that is in it, as for the evil that it brings with it; there is mourning for sin in Hell, you read of weeping and wailing there.
The damned are weeping and mourning to eternity, there is all sorrow, and no comfort, as in Heaven there is peace without trouble, joy without mourning, so in Hell there is trouble without peace, mourning without joy, weeping and wailing incessantly, but it is for the evil they feel by sin, and not for the evil that is in [reconstructed: sin].
So that a man may mourn for sin, and yet be but almost a Christian, it may grieve him to think of perishing for sin, when it does not grieve him that he is defiled and polluted by sin.
Thirdly, A man may make large confession of sin, to God, to others, and yet be but almost a Christian.
How ingeniously does Saul confess his sin to David, I have sinned (says he) you are more righteous than I. Behold I have played the fool, and have erred exceedingly.
So Judas makes a full confession, I have sinned in betraying innocent blood.
Yet Saul and Judas were both rejected of God; so that a man may confess sin, and yet be but almost a Christian.
But is not confession of sin, a character of a child of God? Does not the Apostle say, if we confess our sins, God is just and faithful to forgive them? No man was ever kept out of Heaven for his confessed badness, though many are kept out of Heaven for their supposed goodness.
Judah in Hebrews, signifies confession, now Judah got the kingdom from Reuben; confession of sin is the way to the kingdom of Heaven.
There are some that confess sin and are saved, there are others that confess sin and perish.
1. Many confess sin merely out of custom, and not out of conscience, you shall have many that will never pray but they will make a long confession of sin, and yet never feel the weight or burden of it upon their consciences.
Many will confess lesser sins, and yet conceal greater, like the patient in Plutarch, that complained to his physician of his finger, when his liver was rotten.
3. Many will confess sin in the general, or confess themselves sinners, and yet see little, and say less, of their particular sins; an implicit confession (as one says) is almost as bad as an implicit faith.
Where confession is right, it will be distinct, especially of those sins that were our chief sins.
So David [reconstructed: confesses] his blood guiltiness, and adultery; so Paul, his blasphemy persecution, and injury against the Saints. It is bad to hear men confess they are great sinners, and yet can't confess their sins.
Though the least sin be too bad to be committed, yet there is no sin too bad to be confessed.
4. Many will confess sin, but it is only under extremity, that is not free and voluntary, Pharaoh confesses his sin, but it was when judgment compelled him.
I have sinned against the Lord, says he, but it was when he had had eight plagues upon him.
Many do by their sins, as Mariners do by their goods, cast them out in a storm, wishing for them again in a calm; confession should come like water out of a spring, which runs freely, not like water out of a still, which is forced by fire.
5. Many confess their sins, but with no intent to forsake sin, they confess the sins they have committed, but don't leave the sins they have confessed.
Many men use confession as Louis the 11th of France did his Crucifix, he would swear an oath, and then kiss it, and swear again, and then kiss it again.
So many sin, and then confess they do not well, but yet never strive to do better.
Mr. Torshel tells a story of a Minister he knew, that would be often drunk, and when he came into the pulpit, would confess it very lamentingly, and yet no sooner was he out of the pulpit, but he would be drunk again, and this would he do as constantly as men follow their trades.
Now then if a man may confess sin, merely out of custom, if he may confess lesser sins, and yet conceal greater, if he may confess sin only in the general, or only under extremity, or if he may confess sin, without any intent to forsake sin, then surely a man may confess sin, and yet be but almost a Christian.
Fourthly, A man may forsake sin, and yet be but almost a Christian, he may leave his lust and his wicked ways which he sometimes lived in, and in the judgment of the world become a new man, and yet not be a new creature. Simon Magus when he hears Philip preaching concerning the Kingdom of God, leaves his sorcery and witchcraft, and believes (Acts 8:13).
But you'll say, this seems contrary to Scripture, for that says, He that confesses and forsakes sin shall have mercy (Proverbs 28:13): But I confess sin, indeed, not only so, but I also forsake sin, sure therefore this mercy is my portion, it belongs to me.
It is true, that where the soul forsakes sin from a right principle, after a right manner, to a right end; where he forsakes sin as sin, as being contrary to God, and the purity of his nature.
This declares that soul to be right with God, and the promise shall be made good to it, he shall find mercy.
But now pray mind, there is a forsaking sin that is not right but unsound.
1. Open sins may be deserted, and yet secret sins may be retained; now this is not a right forsaking, such a soul shall never find mercy: A man may be cured of a wound in his flesh, and yet may die of an abscess in his bowels.
2. A man may forsake sin but not as sin; for he that forsakes sin as sin, forsakes all sin; à quatenus ad omne valet consequentia: It is impossible for a man to forsake sin as sin, unless he forsakes all that he knows to be sin.
3. A man may let one sin go to hold another the faster; as a man that goes to sea, would willingly save all his goods, but if the storm arises that he cannot, then he throws some overboard to lighten the vessel, and save the rest. So did they (Acts 27:38).
So the sinner chooses to keep all his sins, but if a storm arises in his conscience, why then he will heave one lust overboard to save the life of another.
4. A man may let all sin go, and yet be a sinner still; for there is the root of all sin in the heart though the fruit be not seen in the life; the tree lives, though the boughs be lopped off
As a man is a sinner before ever he acts sin, so (till grace renew him) he is a sinner though he leaves sin, for there is original sin in him enough to damn and destroy him (Psalm 51:5).
5. Sin may be left and yet be loved, a man may forsake the life of sin and yet retain the love of sin; now though leaving sin makes him almost a Christian, yet loving sin shows he is but almost a Christian.
It is a less evil to do sin and not love it, than to love sin and not do it; for to do sin may argue only weakness of grace, but to love sin argues strength of lust; What I hate that do I (Romans 7:15).
Sin is bad in any part of man, but sin in the affection is worse than sin in the conversation; for sin in the conversation may be only from infirmity, but sin in the affection is the fruit of choice and unregeneracy.
6. All sin may be chained and yet the heart not changed, and so the nature of the sinner is the same as ever. A dog chained up is a dog still, as much as if he was let loose to devour.
There may be a cessation of arms between enemies, and yet the quarrel may remain on foot still; there may be a making truce where there is no making peace.
A sinner may lay the weapons of sin out of his hand, and yet the enmity against God still remain in his heart.
There may be a truce, he may not sin against him; but there can be no peace till he be united to him.
Restraining grace holds in the sinner, but it is renewing grace that changes the nature; Now many are held in by grace from being open sinners, that are not renewed by grace, and made true believers.
Now then if a man may forsake open sins, and retain secret sins; if he may forsake sin, but not as sin; if he may let one sin go to hold another the faster; if a man may let all sin go and yet be a sinner still; if sin may be left and yet be loved; Finally, if all sin may be chained, and yet the heart not changed, then a man may forsake sin, and yet be but almost a Christian.
Fifthly, A man may hate sin, and yet be but almost a Christian, Absalom hated Amnon's uncleanness, with his sister Thamar, indeed, his hatred was so great, as that he slew him for it, and yet Absalom was but a wicked man (2 Samuel 13:22, 28).
But the Scripture makes it a sign of a gracious heart to hate sin, indeed though a man do, through infirmity, fall into sin, yet if he hates it, this is a proof of grace. Paul proves the sincerity of his heart, and the truth of his grace by this hatred of sin, though he committed it (Romans 7:15): what I hate, that do I.
In fact, what is grace but conformitas cum archetypo, a conformity of the soul to God, to love as God loves, to hate as God hates, now God hates sin, it is one part of his holiness, to hate all sin.
And if I hate sin, then am I conformed to God, and if I am conformed to God, then am I altogether a Christian.
It is true, that there is a hatred of sin which is a sign of grace, and which flows from a principle of grace, and is grace, as for instance.
To hate sin, as it is an offense to God, a wrong to his Majesty; to hate sin, as it is a breach of the command, and so a wicked controlling God's will, which is the only rule of goodness, to hate sin, as being a disingenuous transgression of that law of love established in the blood and death of Christ, and so in a degree a crucifying of Christ afresh.
To hate sin as being a grieving and quenching the Spirit of God, as all sin in its nature is.
Thus to hate sin is grace, and thus every true Christian hates sin.
But though every man that has grace, hates sin, yet every man that hates sin has not grace. For,
A man may hate sin from other principles, not as it is a wrong to God, or a wounding Christ, or a grieving the Spirit, for then he would hate all sin, for there is no sin but has this in the nature of it. But,
1. A man may hate sin for the shame that attends it, more than for the evil that is in it.
Some sinners there are who declare their sin as Sodom, and hide it not. They are set down in the seat of the scornful, they glory in their shame (Philippians 3:19).
But now others there are who are ashamed of sin, and therefore hate it, not for the sin's sake, but the shame's sake. This made Absalom hate Amnon's uncleanness, because it brought shame upon him and his sister.
2. A man may hate sin more in others than in himself, so does the drunkard, he hates drunkenness in another, and yet practices it himself; the liar hates falsehood in another, but likes it in himself.
Now he that hates sin from a principle of grace, hates sin most in himself, he hates sin in others, but he loathes most the sins of his own heart.
3. A man may hate one sin, as being contrary to another; there is a great contrariety between sin and sin, between lust and lust: It is the excellency of the life of grace, that it is a uniform life, there is no one grace contrary to another, the graces of God's Spirit are different, but not differing; faith, and love, and holiness are all one, they consist together at the same time, in the same subject, or rather they can't be parted, there can be no faith without love, no love without holiness, and so on the other hand, no holiness without love, no love without faith.
So that this makes the life of grace an easy and excellent life, but now the life of sin is a distracting, contradictious life, wherein a man is a servant to contrary lusts, the lust of pride and prodigality is contrary to the lust of covetousness, etc.
Now when one lust gets to be the master lust in the soul, then that works a hatred of its contrary, where covetousness gets the heart, there the heart hates pride, and where pride gets uppermost in the heart, there the heart hates covetousness.
Thus a man may hate sin not from a principle of grace, but from the contrariety of lust.
He doesn't hate any sin as it is sin, but he hates it as being contrary to his beloved sin.
Now then if a man may hate sin for the shame that attends it, if he may hate sin more in others than in himself, and if he may hate one sin as being contrary to another, then he may hate sin, and yet be but almost a Christian.
Sixthly, a man may make great vows and promises, he may have strong purposes, and resolutions against sin, and yet be but almost a Christian.
Thus did Saul, he promises and resolves against his sin, Return my son David, says he, for I will no more do you harm. What promises and resolves did Pharaoh make against that sin of detaining God's people? Says he, I will let the people go, that they may do sacrifice to the Lord; and again, I will let you go, and you shall stay no longer (Exodus 9:28).
And yet Saul and Pharaoh both perished in their sins, the greatest purposes and promises against sin will not make a man a Christian. For,
1. Purposes and promises against sin, never hurt sin; we say, threatened folk live long, and truly so do threatened sins. It is not new purposes but a new nature that must help us against sin; purposes may bring to the birth, but without a new nature, there is no strength to bring forth.
The new nature is the best soil for holy purposes to grow in, otherwise they wither and die, like plants in an improper soil.
2. Trouble and afflictions may provoke us to large purposes and promises against sin for the future; what more common than to vow and not to pay, to make vows in the day of trouble, which we make no conscience to pay, in the day of peace?
Many covenant against sin, when trouble is upon them, and then sin against their covenant when it is removed from them.
It was a brave rule that Pliny in one of his epistles gave his friend to live by.
Ut tales esse perseveremus sani, quales nos futuros esse profitemur infirmi.
— That we should continue to be such when we are well, as we promise to be when we are sick.
Many are our sick-bed promises, but we are no sooner well, but we grow sick of our promises.
3. Purposes and resolves against sin for the future may be only a temptation to put off repentance for the present; Satan may put a man on to good purposes, to keep him from present attempts.
He knows whatever we purpose, yet the strength of performance is not in ourselves.
He knows that purposes for the future, are a putting God off for the present, they are a secret will-not to a present opportunity. That is a notable passage, (Luke 9:59). Follow me, says Christ to the two men; now see what answers they give to Christ, Suffer me first to go bury my father, says one; this man purposes to follow Christ, only he would stay to bury his father: says the other, Lord, I will follow you but let me first go and bid them farewell which are at my house, verse 61. I will follow you, but only I would first go and take my leave of my friends, or set my house in order.
And yet we do not find that ever they followed Christ, notwithstanding their fair purposes.
4. Nature unsanctified may be so far wrought on as to make great promises and purposes against sin.
- 1. A natural man may have great convictions of sin, from the workings of an enlightened conscience. - 2. He may approve of the law of God. - 3. He may have a desire to be saved.
Now these three together, the workings of conscience, the sight of the goodness of the law, a desire to be saved, may bring forth in a man great purposes against sin, and yet he may have no heart to perform his own purposes. This was much-what the case of them, (Deuteronomy 5), verse 27. Go near and hear all that the Lord our God shall say, and tell it to us, and we will hear it and do it, say they to Moses.
This is a fair promise, and so God takes it (verse 28): I have heard the words of this people, they have well said all that they have spoken. So said, and so done, had been well, but it was better said than done; for though they had a tongue to promise, yet they had no heart to perform; and this God saw, therefore said he (verse 29): O that there were such a heart in them, that they would fear me and keep my commandments always, that it might be well with them.
They promise to fear God and keep his commandments, but they wanted a new heart to perform what an unsanctified heart had promised.
It fares with men in this case, as it did with that son in the Gospel, that said he would go into the vineyard, but went not (Matthew 21:30).
Now then, if purposes and promises against sin never hurt sin, if present afflictions may draw out large promises, if they may be the fruit of a temptation, or if from nature unsanctified, surely then a man may promise and purpose much against sin, and yet be but almost a Christian.
Seventhly, a man may maintain a strife and combat against sin in himself and yet be but almost a Christian. So did Balaam, when he went to curse the people of God, he had a great strife within himself: How shall I curse (says he) where God has not cursed? Or how shall I defy, whom the Lord has not defied (Numbers 23:8)?
And did not Pilate strive against his sin, when he said to the Jews, shall I crucify your King? What evil has he done? I am innocent of the blood of this just man (Matthew 27:24; Mark 15:12, 14).
But you will say, is not this an argument of grace, when there is a striving in the soul against sin? For what should oppose sin in the heart but grace? The Apostle makes the lusting of the flesh against the spirit, and the spirit against the flesh, to be an argument of grace in the heart (Galatians 5:17). Now I find this strife in my heart; though the remainders of corruption sometimes break out into actual sins, yet I find a striving in my soul against sin.
It is true, there is a striving against sin which is only from grace, and is proper to believers, and there is a striving against sin which is not from grace, and therefore may be in them that are not believers.
There is a strife against sin in one and the same faculty, the will against the will, the affection against the affection, and this is that which the Apostle calls the lusting of the flesh against the spirit, that is, the striving of the unregenerate part against the regenerate, and this is ever in the same faculty, and is proper to believers only.
An unbeliever never finds this strife in himself, this strife cannot be in him, it is impossible (as such) that is, while he is on this side a state of grace.
But then there is a striving against sin in diverse faculties, and this is the strife that is in them that are not believers, there the strife is between the will and the conscience; conscience enlightened and terrified with the fear of hell and damnation, that is against sin; the will and affection (not being renewed) they are for sin.
And this causes great tuggings and strong combats many times in the sinner's heart.
Thus it was with the Scribes and Pharisees, conscience convinced them of the divinity of Christ, and of the truth of his being the Son of God, and yet a perverse will and carnal affections cry out, crucify him, crucify him.
Conscience pleaded for him, he had a witness in their bosoms; and yet their wills were bent against him, and therefore they are said to have resisted the Spirit, namely, the workings and convictions of the Spirit in their consciences (Acts 7:51).
And this is the case of many sinners; when will and affections are for sin, and plead for it, conscience is against it, and many times frightens the soul from the doing of it.
And hence men take that which opposes sin in them to be grace, when it is only the work of a natural conscience; they conclude the strife is between grace and sin, the regenerate and unregenerate part, when alas it is no other than the contention of a natural conscience against a corrupt will and affections.
And if so, then a man may have great strifes and combats against sin in him, and yet be but almost a Christian.
5. A man may desire grace, and yet be but almost a Christian; so did the five foolish virgins (Matthew 25:8): Give us of your oil, what was that but true grace? It was that oil that lighted the wise virgins into the Bridegroom's chamber.
They do not only desire to enter in, but they desire oil to light them in, wicked men may desire heaven, desire a Christ to save them, there is none so wicked upon earth but desires to be happy in heaven.
But now here are them that desire grace as well as glory, and yet these are but almost Christians.
But is it not commonly taught, that desires of grace are grace? Indeed, does not our Lord Christ himself make it so? Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they shall be filled.
It is true, that there are some desires of grace which are grace. As, 1. When a man desires grace [reconstructed: with] a right sense of his natural [reconstructed: condition], he sees the vileness of sin, and the woeful defiled and loathsome condition he is in by reason of sin, and therefore desires the grace of Christ to renew and change him, this is grace. This some make to be the lowest degree of saving faith. 2. When a man joins proportionable endeavors to his desires, does not only wish for grace, but work for grace, such desires are grace. 3. When a man's desires are constant and unceasing, that cease not but in the attainment of their object, such desires are true grace.
They are a part of the special work of the Spirit.
They do really partake of the nature of grace; now it is a known maxim, Quicquid participat de natura totius est pars totius, that which partakes of the nature of the whole is a part of the whole, the filings of gold are gold. The sea is not more really water than the least drop; the flame is not more really fire than the least spark, for these do participare de natura totius.
But though all true desires of grace are grace, yet all desires of grace are not true. For:
1. A man may desire grace but not for itself, but for something else; not grace for grace's sake, but for heaven's sake; he doesn't desire grace that his nature may be changed, his heart renewed, the image of God stamped upon him, and his lusts subdued in him.
These are blessed desires found only in true believers.
The true Christian only can desire grace for grace's sake, but the almost Christian may desire grace for Heaven's sake.
2. A man may desire grace without proportionable endeavors after grace; many are good at wishing, bad at working, like him that lay in the grass on a Summer's day, crying out, O si hoc esset laborare! Oh that this were to work.
Solomon says, the desires of the slothful kills him; How so? For his bands refuse to labor (Proverbs 21:25). He perishes in his desires.
The believer joins desires and endeavors together, one thing have I desired of the Lord, and that I will seek after (Psalm 27:4).
3. A man's desires of grace may be unseasonable; thus the foolish virgins desired oil when it was too late.
The believer's desires are seasonable, he desires grace in the season of grace, and seeks in a time when it may be found. The wise man's heart knows both time and judgment (Ecclesiastes 8:5). He knows his season, and has wisdom to improve it.
The silly sinner does all his works out of season, he sins away the seasons of grace, and then desires grace when the season is over; the sinner does all too late, as Esau desired the blessing when it was too late, and therefore he lost it, whereas had he come sooner he had obtained it.
Most men are like Epimetheus, wise too late; they come when the market is done, when God has shut in shop then they have their oil to get.
When they lie upon their deathbeds, then they desire holy hearts.
4. Desires of grace in many are very inconstant, and fleeting like the morning dew that quickly passes away. Or like Jonah's gourd, that springs up in a night and withers in a night, they have no root in the heart, and therefore quickly perish; now then if a man may desire grace but not for grace's sake, if desires may be without endeavors; if a man may desire grace when it is too late, if these desires may be but fleeting and inconstant, then may a man desire grace, and yet be but almost a Christian (Hosea 6:4; Jonah 4:6-7).
6. A man may tremble at the word of God, and yet be but almost a Christian, as Belshazzar did at the handwriting upon the wall (Daniel 5:6).
But is not that a note of sincerity and truth of grace to tremble at the word? Does not God say, to him will I look, that is of a poor and contrite spirit, and trembles at my word (Isaiah 66:2);
There is a twofold trembling.
- First, One is when the word discovers the guilt of sin and the wrath of God that belongs to that guilt, this, where conscience is awake causes trembling and amazement; thus when Paul preached of righteousness and judgment, it is said Felix trembled (Acts 24:25). - Secondly, There is a trembling which arises from a holy dread, and reverence of the Majesty of God, speaking in his word; this is only found in true believers, and is that which keeps the soul low in its own eyes. Therefore mark how the words run in Isaiah 66:2. To him will I look that is of a poor and contrite spirit, and trembles at my Word.
God doesn't make the promise to him that trembles at the word, for the devils believe and tremble (James 2:19), the word of God can make the proudest stoutest sinner in the world to shake and tremble, but it is to the poor and contrite spirit that trembles; where trembling is the fruit of a spirit broken for sin, and low in its own eyes there will God look.
Now many tremble at the Word, but not from poverty of spirit, not from a heart broken for sin, and low in its own eyes, not from a sense of the Majesty and holiness of God; and therefore notwithstanding they tremble at the word, yet are they but almost Christians.
7. A man may delight in the Word, and ordinances of God, and yet be but almost a Christian (Isaiah 58:2). They take delight in approaching to God.
And it is said of that ground (Matthew 13:20) that it received the word with joy, and yet it was but stony ground.
But is it not made a character of a godly man to delight in the Word of God? Does not David say, he is a blessed man that delights in the Law of the Lord (Psalm 1:2)?
There is a delighting in the word, which flows from grace, and is a proof of blessedness.
- 1. He that delights in the Word, because of its spirituality, he is a Christian indeed; the more spiritual the ordinances are, the more does a gracious heart delight in them. - 2. When the word comes close to the conscience, rips up the heart, and discovers sin, and yet the soul delights in it notwithstanding, this is a sign of grace. - 3. When delight arises from that communion that is to be had with God there, this is from a principle of grace in the soul.
But there may be a delight in the word, where there is no grace.
1. There are many delight in the word, because of the eloquence of the Preacher; they delight not so much in the truths delivered, as in the dress that they are delivered in.
Thus it is said of the Prophet Ezekiel, that he was to them as a very lovely song of one that has a pleasant voice [reconstructed: (Ezekiel 33:32)].
2. There are very many delight to hear the word, that yet take no delight to do it, so says God of them in Ezekiel 33:2, they delight to hear my words, but they do them not.
Now then, if a man may delight in the word more because of the eloquence of the Preacher, then because of the spiritualness of the matter; if he may delight to hear the Word, and yet not delight to do it, then he may delight in the Word, and yet be but almost a Christian.
8. A man may be a member of the Church of Christ, he may join himself to the people of God, partake with them in all ordinances, and share of all Church privileges, and yet be but almost a Christian.
So the five foolish virgins joined themselves to the wise, and walked together.
Many may be members of the Church of Christ, and yet not members of Christ the head of the Church.
There was a mixed multitude came up with the Church of Israel out of Egypt, they joined themselves to the Israelites, owned their God, left their own country, and yet in heart Egyptians notwithstanding.
All are not Israel that are of Israel (Romans 9:6).
The Church in all ages has had unsound members; Cain had communion with Abel, Ishmael dwelt in the same house with Isaac; Judas was in fellowship with the Apostles, and so was Demas with the rest of the Disciples.
There will be some bran in the finest meal; the draw-net of the gospel catches bad fish as well as good; the tares and the wheat grow together, and it will be so till the harvest.
God has a church where there are no members but such as are true members of Christ, but it is in heaven — it is the Church of the Firstborn (Hebrews 12:23); there are no hypocrites, no rotten, unsound professors, none but the spirits of just men made perfect; all is pure wheat that God lays up in that garner, there the chaff is separated to unquenchable fire (Matthew 3:12).
But in the church on earth, the wheat and the chaff lie in the same heap together; the Samaritans will be near of kin to the Jews when they are in prosperity; so while the church of God flourishes in the world, many will join to it, they will seem Jews though they are Samaritans, and seem saints though yet they are no better than almost Christians.
9. A man may have great hopes of heaven, great hopes of being saved, and yet be but almost a Christian.
Indeed there is a hope of heaven which is the anchor of the soul, sure and steadfast (Hebrews 6:19); it never miscarries, and it is known by four properties.
First, it is a hope which purifies the heart, purges out sin (1 John 3:3). He that has this hope purifies himself, even as God is pure.
That soul that truly hopes to enjoy God truly endeavors to be like God.
Secondly, it is a hope which fills the heart with gladness; we rejoice in hope of the glory of God (Romans 5:2).
Thirdly, it is a hope that is founded upon the promise; as there can be no true faith without a promise, so nor any true hope — faith applies the promise, and hope expects the fulfilling of the promise; faith relies upon the truth of it, and hope waits for the good of it; faith gives interest, hope expects livery and seisin (Psalm 130:5).
Fourthly, it is a hope that is wrought by God himself in the soul, who is therefore called the God of hope, as being the author as well as the object of hope (Romans 15:13).
Now he that has this hope shall never miscarry; this is a right hope, the hope of the true believer: Christ in you the hope of glory (Colossians 1:27).
But then, as there is a true and sound hope, so there is a false and rotten hope, and this is much more common, as bastard pearls are more frequently worn than true pearls.
There is nothing more common than to see men big with groundless hopes of heaven.
1. A man may have great hope that has no grace; you read of the hope of hypocrites (Job 8:13-14).
The performance of duties is a proof of their hope; the foolish virgins would never have done what they did, had they thought they should have been shut out after all.
Many professors would not be at such pains in duties as they are, if they did not hope for heaven.
Hope is the great motive to action; despair cuts the sinews of all endeavors — that is one reason why the damned in hell cease acting toward an alteration of their state, because despair has taken hold of them; if there were any hope in hell, they would up and be doing there.
So that there may be great hope where there is no grace, experience proves this; formal professors are men of no grace, but yet men of great hopes; in fact many times you shall find that none fear more about their eternal condition than they that have most cause of hope, and none hope more than they that have most cause of fear.
As interest in God may sometimes be without hope, so hope in God may be without interest.
2. A man may hope in the mercy and goodness and power of God without eying the promise, and this is the hope of most: God is full of mercy and goodness and therefore willing to save; and he is infinite in power and therefore able to save — why therefore should I not rest on him?
Now it is presumption and therefore sin to hope in the mercy of God, otherwise than by eying the promise; for the promise is the channel of mercy, the pipe through which it is conveyed — all the blessedness the saints enjoy in heaven is no other than what is the fruit of the promise relied on and hoped for here on earth.
A man has no warrant to hope in God but by virtue of the promise.
3. A man may hope for heaven and yet not cleanse his heart, not depart from his secret sins — that hope of salvation that is not accompanied with heart-purification is a vain hope.
4. A man may hope for heaven and yet be doing the work of hell; he may hope for salvation and yet be working out his own damnation, and so perish in his confidences.
This is the case of many — male agendo sperant, and sperando pereunt — like the waterman that looks one way and rows another; many have their eyes on heaven whose hearts are in the earth; they hope in God but choose him not for a portion; they hope in God but do not love him as the best good, and therefore are like to have no portion in him nor good by him, but are like to perish without him, notwithstanding all their hopes. What is the hope of the hypocrite, though he has gained, when God takes away his soul? (Job 27:8)
Now then if a man may have great hope of heaven that has no grace, if he may hope in mercy without eying the promise, if he may hope without heart purifying, if he may hope for heaven and yet do the work of hell — surely then a man may have great hopes of heaven and yet be but almost a Christian.
10. A man may be under great and visible changes, and these wrought by the ministry of the Word, and yet be but almost a Christian. Herod, it is said, when he heard John the Baptist, did many things and heard him gladly (Mark 6:20). Saul was under a great change when he met the Lord's prophets — he turned prophet too (1 Samuel 10:10).
Indeed it is said in verse 9 of that 1 Samuel 10 that God gave him another heart.
Now was not this a work of grace? And was not Saul here truly converted? One would think he was, but yet indeed he was not.
For though it is said God gave him another heart, yet it is not said that God gave him a new heart.
There is a great difference between 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉(lebh acher) another heart, and 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉(lebh chadash) a new heart: God gave him another heart to fit him for a ruler, but gave him not a new heart to make him a believer; another heart may make another man, but it is a new heart, that makes a new man.
Again Simon Magus is a great proof of this truth, he was under a great and visible change, of a sorcerer he was turned to be a believer, he left his witchcrafts and sorceries, and embraced the Gospel, was not this a great change?
If the drunkard does but leave his drunkenness, the swearer his oaths, the profane person his profaneness, they think this is a gracious change, and their state is now good; alas, Simon Magus did not only leave his sins, but had a kind of a conversion, for he believed and was baptized (Acts 8:13).
But is not that man that is changed a true Christian?
Not every change makes a man a Christian, indeed there is a change that whoever is under it, he is a true Christian.
When a man's heart is so changed as that it is renewed, when old things are done away, and all is become new when the 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, the new creature is wrought in the soul, when a man is turned from darkness to light, from the power of Satan to God (Acts 26:18), when the mind is enlightened, the will renewed, the affections made heavenly, then a man is a Christian indeed (2 Corinthians 5:17).
But now you must know that every change is not this change.
1. There is a civil change, a moral change, as well as a spiritual and supernatural change.
Many men are changed in a moral sense, and one may say, they are become new men, but they are in heart and nature the same men still; they are not changed in a spiritual, and supernatural sense, and therefore it cannot be said of them, they are become new creatures.
Restraining grace may cause a moral change, but it is renewing grace that must cause a saving change.
Now many are under restraining grace, and so changed morally, that are not under the power of renewing grace, and so changed savingly.
2. There is an outward change, as well as an inward change; the outward change is often without the inward, though the inward change is never without the outward.
A man's heart cannot be sanctified, but it will influence the life; but a man's life may be reformed, and yet never affect or influence the heart.
3. A man may be converted from a course of profaneness, to a form of godliness, from a filthy conversation, to a fair profession, and yet the heart the same, in one and the other.
A rotten post may be gilded without, and yet unsound within. Hypocrita in verbis sanctus, in corde vanus; intus Nero, foris Calo. Audi, nemo melius; specta, nemo pejus.
It is common to have the outside of the cup and platter made clean, and yet the inside foul and filthy (Matthew 23:25).
Now then if a man may be changed morally, and yet not spiritually, outwardly, and yet not inwardly, from a course of profaneness, to a lifeless form of godliness, then a man may be under great and visible changes, and yet be no more than almost a Christian.
I do not speak this to discountenance any change, short of that that is spiritual, but to awaken you to seek after that change, which is more than moral.
It is good to be outwardly reformed, but it is better to be savingly renewed.
I know how natural it is for men to take up with anything like a work of conversion, though it be not conversion, and resting in that, they perish eternally.
Beloved, let me tell you, there is no change, no conversion can avail your souls in the day of judgment, on this side that saving work, which is wrought on the soul by the Spirit of God, renewing you throughout; the sober man without this change, shall as surely go to Hell as the beastly drunkard (1 Thessalonians 5:23).
Morality and civility may commend us to men, but not to God. They are of no value in the procurement of an eternal salvation.
A man may go far in an outward change, and yet not be one step nearer Heaven, than he that never was under any change, nay he may be (in some sense) farther off, as Christ says, the scribes and Pharisees were farther from Heaven, with all their show of godliness, than [reconstructed: Publicans] and harlots, in all their sin and uncleanness ([reconstructed: Matthew 21:31]).
Because resting in a false work, a partial change; we neglect to seek after a true and saving change.
There is nothing more common than to mistake our state, and by overweening thoughts misjudge our condition, and so perish in our own delusions.
The world is full of these foolish builders, that lay the foundation of their hopes of eternal salvation, upon the sand (Matthew 7:26).
Now my brethren, would you not mistake the way to Heaven, and perish in a delusion, would you not be found fools at last, for none are such fools as the spiritual fool, who is a fool in the great business of salvation?
Would you not be fools for your souls and for eternity? Oh then labor after, and pray for a thorough work of conversion, beg of God that he would make a saving change in your souls, that you may be altogether Christians, all other changes below this saving change, this heart-change, make us but almost Christians.
11. A man may be very zealous in the matters of religion, and yet be but almost a Christian: Jehu did not only serve God and do what he commanded him, but was very zealous in his service (2 Kings 10:16), come with me, and see my zeal for the Lord of Hosts, and yet in all this Jehu was a very hypocrite, Joash was a great reformer in Jehoiada's time, it is said he did that which was right in the eyes of the Lord, all the days of Jehoiada the priest (2 Chronicles 29:2), but when Jehoiada died, Joash his zeal for God died with him, and he becomes a very wretch (verses 17-18).
But the Apostle makes zeal to be a note of sound Christianity (Galatians 4:18). It is good to be zealously affected in a good thing, nay it seems to be the incomparable qualification for obtaining eternal life, the kingdom of Heaven suffers violence, and the violent take it by force (Matthew 11:12).
It is true there is a zeal, which is good, and which renders the soul highly acceptable to God, a zeal that never misses of Heaven and salvation.
Now this is a zeal which is a celestial fire, the true temper and heat of all the affections to God and Christ, qui non zelat non amat.
It is a zeal wrought and kindled in the soul by the spirit of God, who first works it, and then sets it on work.
It is a zeal that has the Word of God for its guide, directing it in working both in regard of its object and end, manner and measure.
It is a zeal that checks sin, and forwards the heavenly life.
It is a zeal that makes the glory of God its chief end, which swallows up all by-ends, The zeal of your house, has eaten me up (John 2:17).
But now all zeal is not this kind of zeal, there is a false zeal, as well as a true, every grace has its counterfeit, as there is fire, which is true heavenly fire on the altar, so there is strange fire, Nadab and Abihu offered strange fire upon God's altar (Leviticus 10:1).
There are several kinds of zeal, none of which are true and sound, but false and counterfeit.
I'll instance in eight particulars.
First, There is a blind zeal, a zeal without knowledge (Romans 10:2). They have a zeal (says the Apostle) but not according to knowledge, now as knowledge without zeal is fruitless, so zeal without knowledge is dangerous, it is like wild-fire in the hand of a fool, or like the Devil in the man possessed, that threw him sometimes into the fire, sometimes into the water, zelus absque scientia, quo vehementius irruit, eo [reconstructed: gravius] corruit.
The eye is the light of the body, and the understanding is the light of the soul, now as the body without the light of the eye, cannot go without stumbling, [reconstructed: so] the soul without the light of the mind, cannot act without erring.
Zeal without knowledge, is like an ignis fatuus in a dark night, that leads a traveler out of his way, into the bogs and mire. This was the zeal of Paul, while he was a Pharisee, I was zealous towards God, as you all are this day, and I persecuted this way to the death (Acts 22:3-4).
And so [reconstructed: Acts] 26:9 I verily thought with myself, I ought to do many things contrary to the name of Jesus of Nazareth; So (Philippians 3:6) concerning zeal, persecuting the Church.
Such a zeal was that in (John 16:2). They shall put you out of the Synagogue, (silence you, you shall not be suffered to Preach,) indeed the time comes that whoever kills you, will think that he does God service. This is great zeal, but yet it is a blind zeal, and that God abhors.
Secondly, There is a partial zeal, in one thing fire hot, in another key cold, zealous in this thing, and yet careless in another, many are first-Table Christians, zealous in the duties of the first Table, and yet neglect the second; thus the Pharisees were zealous in their corban, and yet unnatural to their parents, suffering them to starve and perish.
Others are second-Table Christians, zealous in the duties of the second Table, but neglect the first, more for righteousness among men, than for holiness towards God.
But now he whose religion ends with the first Table, or begins with the second, he is a fool in his profession, for he is but almost a Christian.
The woman that was for the dividing the child was not the true mother, and he that is for dividing the commands, is not a true believer.
Jehu was zealous against Ahab's house, but not so against Jeroboam's calves, many are zealous against sins of opinion, that yet use no zeal against the sins of their conversation (2 Kings 10:16).
Now as we know that the sweat of the whole body is a sign of health, but the sweat of some one part only, shows a distemper, and therefore physicians do reckon such a heat to be symptomatic:
So where zeal reaches to every command of God alike, that is a sign of a sound constitution of soul; but where it is partial, where a man is hot in one part, and cold in another, that is symptomatic of some inward spiritual distemper.
Thirdly, There is a misplaced zeal, fixed upon unsuitable and disproportionable objects. Many are very zealous in trifling things that are not worth it, and trifle in the things that most require it, like the Pharisees that were diligent tithers of mint, anise, and cumin, but neglected the [illegible], the weightier matters of the law, judgment, mercy, and faith. They had no zeal for these, though very hot for the other; many are more zealous for a ceremony, than for the substance of religion; more zealous for bowing at the name of Jesus, than for conformity to the life of Jesus; more zealous for a holy vestment, than for a holy life; more zealous for the inventions of men, than for the institutions of Christ (Matthew 23:23).
This is a superstitious zeal, and usually found in men unconverted, whom grace never was wrought in. When was it that Paul was so exceedingly zealous of the traditions of his fathers, as he says (Galatians 1:14), but only when he was in his wretched and unconverted state; as you may see in the next verses, But when it pleased God to call me by his grace, then I conferred not with flesh and blood. Paul had another kind of zeal then, acted by other kind of principles.
Fourthly, There is a selfish zeal, that has a man's own ends for its motive; Jehu was very zealous, but it was not so much for God as for the kingdom, not so much in obedience to the command, as in design to step into the throne, and therefore God threatens to punish him for that very thing he commands him to do (Hosea 1:4). I will avenge the blood of Jezreel upon the house of Jehu. Because he shed that blood to gratify his lust, not to obey God. So Simeon and Levi pretend great zeal for circumcision, seem very zealous for the honor of God's ordinance, when in truth their zeal was for covetousness and revenge upon the Shechemites.
It is storied of Doctor Aylmer that in his young days, he was very high against the pride and covetousness of the bishops, and in a book of his, he thus speaks to them; come off you bishops, away with your superfluities, yield up your thousands, be content with a little.
But afterwards when he himself came to be Bishop of London, then his profits and preferment had eaten up his zeal, and he would confess to his friends, that he had been of another strain in his youth, abusing those words of Paul, when I was a child, I spoke as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child (1 Corinthians 13:11).
Fifthly, There is an outside zeal, such was that of the Scribes and Pharisees; they would not eat with unwashed hands, but yet would live in unseen sins, they would wash the cup often, but the heart seldom, paint the outside, but neglect the inside. Jehu was a mighty outside reformer (2 Kings 10:16), but he reformed nothing within, for he had a base heart under all, verse 31. Jehu took no heed, to walk in the law of the Lord with all his heart. Though his fleece was fair, his liver was rotten.
Our Lord Christ observes of the Pharisees, they pray to be seen of men, and fast so that they may appear to men to fast (Matthew 6:5, 16).
Sixthly, there is a forensic zeal, that runs out upon others, like the candle in the lantern that sends all the heat out at top, or as the lewd woman Solomon mentions, whose feet abide not in her own house (Proverbs 7:11).
Many are hot and high against the sins of others, and yet cannot see the same in themselves, like the Lamiae, that put on their spectacles when they went abroad, but pulled them off within doors.
It is easy to see fault in others, and as hard to see them in ourselves. Jehu was zealous against Baal and his priests, because that was Ahab's sin, but not against the calves of Bethel, because that was his own sin.
This zeal is the true character of a hypocrite, his own garden is over-run with weeds, while he is busy in looking over his neighbor's pale.
Seventhly, there is a sinful zeal, all the former may be called sinful from some defect, but this I call sinful in a more special notion, because against the life and chief of religion, it is a zeal against zeal, that flies not at profaneness, but at the very power of godliness, not at error, but at truth, and is most hot against the most spiritual and important truths of the times.
From where else are the sufferings of men for the truth, but from this spirit of zeal against the truth?
This may be called a devilish zeal, for as there is the faith of devils, so there is the zeal of devils, therefore his rage is great, because he knows his time is short (James 1:19; Revelation 12:12).
Eighthly, there is a Scriptureless zeal, that is not bounded by the Word, but by some base and low end, such was Saul's zeal, when God bids him destroy Amalek, and spare neither man nor beast, then contrary to God's command he spared the best of the sheep and oxen, under pretense of zeal for God's sacrifice (1 Samuel 15:3).
Another time when he had no such command, then he slays the Gibeonites, in his zeal to the children of Israel and Judah (2 Samuel 21:2).
Many a man's zeal is greatest then and there, when and where he has the least warrant from God.
It is worth the while, to observe how zealous men are for ceremonies and pompousness in the worship of God, when as there is not one word in all the Scripture for them.
I will tell you (and the Scripture adjusts me in it) that it is one of the surest signs of an Antichristian spirit to be zealous for unwritten and ungrounded traditions in the worship of God.
The true spirit of zeal is bounded by Scripture, for it is for God, and the concerns of his glory: God has no glory from that zeal that has no Scripture warrant.
Now then if the zeal of a man in the things of God, may be only a blind zeal, or a partial zeal, or a misplaced zeal, or a selfish zeal, or an outside zeal, or a forensic zeal, or a sinful zeal, or a Scriptureless zeal, then it is evident that a man may be very zealous in the matters of religion, and yet be but almost a Christian.
12. A man may be much in prayer, he may pray often, and pray much, and yet be but almost a Christian, so did the Pharisees, whom yet our Lord Christ rejects for hypocrites (Matthew 23:14).
But is not a praying frame an argument of a sincere heart? Are not the saints of God called the generation of them that seek the face of God (Psalms 24:6)?
A man is not therefore a Christian because he is much in prayer. I grant
That those prayers that are from the workings and sighings of God's Spirit in us.
From a sincere heart lifted to God.
From sense of our own emptiness, and God's infinite fullness.
That are suited to God's will, the great rule of prayer.
That are for spiritual things more than temporal.
That are accompanied with faith and dependence: such prayers speak a man altogether a Christian.
But now a man may be much in prayer, and yet be a stranger to such prayer. As,
1. Nature may put a man upon prayer, for it is a part of natural worship; it may put a child of God upon prayer; so it did Christ (Matthew 26:39, 42). He went and fell on his face and prayed, saying, O my Father, if it be possible let this cup pass from me. This was a prayer of Christ, which flowed from the sinless strugglings of nature, seeking its own preservation.
2. A man may pray in pretense for a covering to some sin, so did those devout Pharisees (Matthew 23:14). Woe to you scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites, for you devour widows' houses, and for a pretense make long prayers, therefore you shall receive the greater damnation.
So the Papists seem very devout to pray a rich man's soul out of Purgatory, but it is to cheat the heir of much of his estate, under pretense of praying for his father's soul.
3. A man may pray and yet love sin, as Austin, before conversion, prayed against his sin, but was afraid God should hear him, and take him at his word.
Now God hears not such prayers (Psalms 66:18). If I regard iniquity in my heart God will not hear my prayer.
4. A man may pray much for temporal things, and little for spiritual things, and such are the prayers of most men, crying out most for temporal things; more for who will show us any good? than for Lord lift upon us the light of your countenance. David copies out the prayer of such (Psalms 144:12, etc.). That our sons may be as plants, that our daughters may be as corner-stones, polished after the similitude of a palace. That our garners may be full, etc. Happy is the people that is in such a case: this is the carnal heart's prayer, and this David calls vanity (verse 11). They are strange children, whose mouth speaks vanity.
5. A man may pray and yet be far from God in prayer; this people draw near to me with their mouth, and honor me with their lips, but their heart is far from me (Matthew 15:8; Isaiah 29:13). A man may pray, and yet have no heart in prayer and that God chiefly looks at: my son give me your heart (Proverbs 23:26).
The Jews have this sentence written upon the walls of their synagogues, prayer without the intention of the mind, is but a body without a soul.
It is not enough to be conscientious to use prayer, but we must be conscientious to the use of prayer.
Many are so conscientious, that they dare not but pray; and yet so irreligious, that they have no heart in prayer, a common work of God may make a man conscientious to do duties, but nothing less than saving grace in the heart will make a man conscientious in the doing of them.
6. A man's prayer may be a lie; as a profession without sanctity is a lie to the world, so prayer without sincerity is a lie to God. It is said of Israel that they sought God, and inquired early after him; they were much in prayer, and yet God calls all but a lie. Nevertheless they did flatter him with their mouth, and they lied to him with their tongues, for their heart was not right with him (Psalm 78:34, verses 36-37).
Hearken to my prayer that goes not out of feigned lips, says David (Psalm 17:1).
7. Afflictions and the pressures of outward evils will make a man pray, and pray much (Psalm 78:34). When he slew them then they sought him, and returned and inquired early after God. The heathen mariners call every man upon his God when in a storm; when they fear drowning, then they fall to praying (Jonah 1:5). Mariners are for the most part none of the devoutest, not much addicted to prayer; they will swear twice, where they pray once; and yet it is said they cry to the Lord in their trouble (Psalm 107:23, 28). And hence you have a proverb, He that cannot pray let him go to sea.
They poured out a prayer when your chastening was upon them (Isaiah 26:16).
Now then if nature may put a man upon prayer; if a man may pray in pretense and design; if a man may pray and yet love sin; if a man may pray mostly for temporal things; if a man may pray and yet be far from God in prayer; if prayer may be a lie; or if it may be only the cry of the soul under affliction, sure then a man may be much in prayer, and yet be but almost a Christian.
But suppose a man pray, and prevail with God in prayer, surely that is a witness from heaven of a man's sincerity in prayer? Now I pray and prevail, I ask and am answered.
A man may pray and be answered, for God many times answers prayers in judgment; as God is sometimes silent in mercy, so he speaks in wrath; and as he sometimes denies prayer in mercy, so he sometimes answers in judgment. When men are over importunate in some things their lusts are upon, and will take no nay, then God answers in judgment (Psalm 78:29). He gave them their own desire; they had desired quails, and God sends them, but now mark the judgment (verses 30-31). While the meat was in their mouths, the wrath of God came upon them and slew them.
Yes, but suppose a man's affections are much stirred in prayers, how then? Is not that a true note of Christianity? Now my affections are much stirred in prayers.
So was Esau's when he sought the blessing — he sought it carefully with tears (Hebrews 12:17). A man may be affected with his own parts in a duty; while good notions pass through his head, and good words through his lips, some good motions also may stir in his heart; but they are but sparks which fly out at the funnel of the chimney, which suddenly vanish.
So that it is possible a man may pray and prevail in prayer, pray and be affected in prayer, and yet be but almost a Christian.
13. A man may suffer for Christ, in his goods, in his name, in his person, and yet be but almost a Christian.
Every man that bears Christ's cross on his shoulders does not therefore bear Christ's image in his soul.
But does not our Lord Christ make great promises to them that suffer or lose anything for him? Does he not say (Matthew 19:29), every one that has forsaken houses, or brethren, or sisters, or father, or mother, or wife, or children, or lands, for my name's sake, shall receive a hundredfold, and shall inherit everlasting life?
Sure they are true Christians whom Christ makes this promise to.
There is a suffering for Christ, that is a note of sincerity, and shall have its reward.
That is, when a man suffers for a good cause, upon a good call, and with a good conscience, for Christ's sake, and in Christ's strength, when his sufferings are a filling up that which is behind of the sufferings of Christ, when a man suffers as a Christian, as the Apostle has it (1 Peter 4:16), if any man suffer as a Christian, let him not be ashamed, when a man thrusts not himself into suffering, but stays God's call, such suffering is a proof of integrity.
But now every suffering for Christ, is not suffering as a Christian. For 1. A man may suffer for Christ, for that profession of religion that is upon him, the world hates the show of religion, times may come, that it may cost a man as dear to wear the livery of Christ, as to wear Christ himself. Alexander had like to have lost his life for the gospel's sake (Acts 19:33), yet he was that Alexander (as is generally judged) that afterward made shipwreck of faith, and greatly opposed Paul's ministry (1 Timothy 1:19-20; 2 Timothy 4:14). 2. A man may suffer for Christ, and yet have no true love to Christ. This is supposed in 1 Corinthians 13:3: Though I give my body to be burned, and have not charity, it profits nothing.
Love to Christ is the only noble ground of suffering, but a man may suffer much upon other ends.
- 1. Out of opinion of meriting by our sufferings, as the Papists. - 2. Out of vain-glory, or for applause among professors, some have died that their names might live. - 3. Out of a Roman resolution or stoutness of spirit. - 4. Out of a design of profit, as Judas forsook all for Christ, hoping to mend his market by closing with him. - 5. Rather to maintain an opinion, than for truth's propagation, Socrates died for maintaining that there was but one God, but whether he died rather for his own opinion, than for God's sake, I think it is no hard matter to determine. Thus a man may suffer for professing Christ, and yet suffer upon wrong principles.
Now then if a man may suffer for Christ, from the profession that is upon him, or suffer for Christ, and yet not truly love him, then a man may suffer for Christ, and yet be but almost a Christian.
14. A man may be called of God, and embrace this call, and yet be but almost a Christian.
Judas is a famous instance of this truth, he was called by Christ himself, and came at the call of Christ, and yet Judas was but almost a Christian.
But is not the being under the call of God a proof of our interest in the predestinating love of God? Does not the Apostle say, whom he predestinated them he called (Romans 8:30)? Indeed, does he not say in the same verse, whom he called them he justified? Indeed, does not God call all whom he intends to save?
Though God calls all those that shall be saved, yet all shall not be saved whom God calls; every man under the Gospel is called of God in one sense or other, but yet every man under the Gospel shall not therefore be saved. For many are called, but few are chosen (Matthew 20:16).
- Internal, External,
1. There is an internal call of God, and this call is a special work of the Spirit by the ministry of the Word, whereby a man is brought out of a state of nature into a state of grace, out of darkness into light, from being vessels of wrath, to be made heirs of life (Acts 26:18).
I grant that whoever is under this call of God is called effectually and savingly, called to be a Christian indeed. Every man that has heard and learned of the Father comes to me (John 6:45).
2. There is a call of God which a man may have, and yet not be this call; there is an external call of God, which is by the ministry of the Word.
Now every man that lives under the preaching of the Gospel is thus called, God calls every soul of you to repent and lay a sure foundation for heaven and salvation, by the word you hear this day (Matthew 22:9).
But now every man that is thus called is not therefore a Christian. For:
1. Many under the call of God come to Christ, but are not converted to Christ, have nothing of the grace and life of Christ, such as he in Matthew 22, who when Christ sent out his servants to bid guests to the marriage, came in at the call of Christ, but yet had not on the wedding garment (verse 11), that is, had none of the grace and righteousness of Jesus Christ.
2. Many that are under the call of the Gospel come to Christ, and yet afterwards fall away from Christ, as Judas and Demas did; it is said, when Christ preached a doctrine which his disciples did not like, that from that time many of his disciples went back, and walked no more with him (2 Timothy 4:10; John 6:66).
Now then, if many are under this external call of God only, if many that come to Christ are not converted to Christ, but fall away from Christ, then a man may be called of God, and yet be but almost a Christian.
15. A man may have the Spirit of God, and yet be but almost a Christian. Balaam had the Spirit of God given him when he blessed Israel (Numbers 24:2): Balaam saw Israel abiding in tents, and the Spirit of the Lord came upon him. Judas had it, for by the Spirit he cast out devils; he was one of them that came to Christ, and said, Lord, even the devils are subject to us. Saul had it (1 Samuel 10:10): Behold a company of prophets met him, and the Spirit of God came upon him, and he prophesied among them.
But you'll say, can a man have the Spirit of God, and yet not be a Christian? Indeed the Scripture says, if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his (Romans 8:9), but surely if any man have the Spirit of Christ, he is his.
There is a having the Spirit which is a sure mark of sainthood.
Where the Spirit is as an effectual prevailing principle of grace and sanctification, renewing and regenerating the heart.
Where the Spirit is as a potent worker, helping the soul's infirmities (Romans 8:26).
Where the Spirit is so as to abide forever (John 14:16).
But now every man that has the Spirit has not the Spirit in this manner. For:
1. A man may have the Spirit only transiently, not abidingly; the Spirit may be in a man, and yet not dwell in a man. The Spirit is wherever he dwells, but he does not dwell wherever he is; he is in all, but dwells in saints only; he is in all, per divinitatis praesentiam, but dwells in saints only per inhabitationis gratiam. The hypocrite may have the Spirit for a season, but not to abide in him forever.
2. A man may have the Spirit, and yet not be born of the Spirit; every true Christian is born of the Spirit. A hypocrite may have the gifts of the Spirit, but not the graces; the Spirit may be in him by way of illumination, but not by way of sanctification; by way of conviction, but not by way of conversion: though he may have much common grace for the good of others, yet he may have no special grace for the good of himself, though his profession be spiritual, yet is his state and condition carnal (John 3:4-5).
3. A man may have the Spirit only as a spirit of bondage; thus many have the Spirit working only to bondage. The spirit of bondage is an operation of the Holy Spirit by the law, convincing the conscience of sin, and of the curse of the law, and working in the soul such an apprehension of the wrath of God, as makes the thoughts of God a terror to him.
This Spirit may be, and often is, without saving grace; this operation of the Spirit was in Cain and Judas.
Though none that receive the spirit of adoption but they first receive the spirit of bondage, yet many receive the spirit of bondage that never receive the spirit of adoption.
4. A man may have the Spirit of God working in him, and yet it may be resisted by him; it is said of the Jews, they rebelled and vexed his holy Spirit (Isaiah 63:10), and the same sin is charged upon their children (Acts 7:51): you stiff-necked and uncircumcised in heart, you have always resisted the Holy Spirit, as your fathers did, so do you.
The hypocrite retains not the Spirit so long as to come up to regeneration and adoption, but quenches the motions of it, and thereby miscarries eternally.
5. A man may have the Spirit and yet sin that unpardonable sin; he may have the Holy Spirit, and yet sin the sin against the Holy Spirit, nay, no man can sin this sin against it, but he that has some degree of it.
The true believer has so much of the spirit, such a work of it in him, that he cannot sin that sin. He that is born of God sins not, to wit, that sin to death, for that is meant (1 John 5:16-18). The carnal professed sinner he cannot sin that sin, because he is carnal and sensual having not the spirit. A man must have some measure of the spirit, that sins this sin, so has the hypocrite, he is said to be partaker of the Holy Ghost (Hebrews 6:4), and he only is capable of sinning the sin against the Holy Ghost.
Now then, if a man may have the spirit transiently only, not abidingly, if a man may have the spirit, and yet not be born of the spirit, if he may have the spirit only as a spirit of bondage, if a man may have the spirit working in him, and yet it may be resisted by him, if a man may have the spirit, and yet sin that unpardonable sin against it, then surely a man may have the spirit of God, and yet be but almost a Christian.
16. A man may have faith, and yet be but almost a Christian — the stony ground (that is, those hearers set out by the stony ground) for a while believed. It is said (John 2:23) that many believed in the name of Christ, yet Christ did not commit himself to them. Though they trusted in Christ, yet Christ would not trust them, and why? Because he knew all men (verse 24), he knew they were rotten at root, notwithstanding their faith. A man may have all faith even to the removing of mountains, and yet be nothing (1 Corinthians 13:2).
But how can this be, that a man may have faith and yet be but almost a Christian? Does not our Lord Christ promise life eternal and salvation to all that believe? Is not this the gospel that is to be preached to every creature: He that believes shall be saved? (Mark 16:16).
Though it is true what our Lord Christ says, that he that believes shall be saved, yet it is as true that many believe that shall never be saved, for Simon Magus believed, indeed James says the devils believe and tremble, now none will say these shall be saved.
As it is true, what the apostle says, all men have not faith, so it is as true, that there are some men have faith, who are no whit the better for their faith.
You must know therefore there is a twofold faith, special and saving, common and not saving.
1. There is a saving faith.
This is called faith of the operation of God.
It is a work of God's own spirit in the soul.
It is such a faith as rests and casts the soul wholly upon Christ, for grace and glory, pardon and peace, sanctification and salvation.
It is an united act of the whole soul, understanding, will, and affections, all concurring to unite the soul to an all-sufficient Redeemer.
It is such a faith as purifies the heart, and makes it clean, it influences and gives strength and life to all other graces.
Now whoever has this faith is a Christian indeed, this is the faith of God's elect. But then,
2. There is a common faith not saving, a fading and temporary faith, there is the faith of Simon Magus, as well as the faith of Simon Peter — Simon Magus believed, and yet was in the gall of bitterness, and in the bond of iniquity.
Now Simon Magus has more followers than Simon Peter, the faith of most men will at last be found to be no better than the faith of Simon Magus. For,
First, the faith of most is but a temporary faith, it lasts for a while, and then dies and perishes. True and saving faith, such as is the faith of God's elect, cannot die, it may fail in the act, but not in the habit; the sap may not be in the branch, but it is always in the root.
That faith that perishes, that faith a man may have and perish.
Secondly, there is a faith that lies only in generals, not in particulars, as there is a general and particular object of faith, so there is a general and particular faith. The general object of faith is the whole Scripture, the particular object of faith is Christ in the promise.
Now many have a general faith, to believe all the Scripture, and yet have no faith to make a particular application of Jesus Christ in the promise.
Devils and reprobates may believe the truth of the Scripture and what is written of the dying and suffering of Christ for sinners, but there are but few that can close up themselves in the wounds of Christ, and by his stripes fetch in healing to their souls.
Thirdly, there is a faith that is seated in the understanding, but not in the will, this is a very common faith, many assent to the truth.
They believe all the attributes of God, that he is just, holy, wise, faithful, good, merciful, etc. But yet they rest not on him notwithstanding.
They believe the commands are true, but yet do not obey them; they believe the promises are true, but yet do not embrace and apply them, they believe the threatenings are true, but yet do not fly from them.
Thus their faith lies in assent, but not consent; they have faith to confess a judgment, but none to take out execution; by assent they lay a foundation, but never build upon it by application.
They believe that Christ died to save them that believe, and yet they believe not in Christ that they may be saved.
Oh my brethren it is not a believing head, but a believing heart that makes a Christian: with the heart man believes to righteousness; without this our faith is vain, we are yet in our sins.
Fourthly, there is a faith without experience, many believe the word upon hearsay to be the word of God, but they never felt the power and virtue of it upon their hearts and consciences.
Now what good is it to believe the truth of the word, if a man's conscience never felt the power of the word? What is it to believe the truth of the promise, if we never tasted the sweetness of the promise?
We are in this case like a man that believes the description others make of strange countries, but never travelled them to know the truth; or as a patient that believes all the physician says, but yet tries none of his potions.
We believe the word, because we cannot gainsay it, but yet we have no experience of any saving good wrought by the word, and so are but almost Christians.
Fifthly, there is a faith that is without brokenness of heart, that does not avail to melt or soften the heart, and therefore is not true faith, for the least true faith is ever joined with a bending will, and a broken heart.
Sixthly, there is a faith that transforms not the heart; faith without fruit, that does not bring forth the new creature in the soul, but leaves it in a state of sin and death.
This is a faith that makes a man a fond professor, but not a sound believer; he believes the truth, but not as it is in Jesus (Ephesians 4:21), for then it would change and transform him into the likeness of Jesus.
He believes that a man must be changed that would be saved, but yet is not savingly changed by believing. Thus while others believe to salvation, he believes to damnation; for his web shall not become a garment, neither shall he cover himself with his works (Isaiah 56:9).
Now then if a man's faith may be but temporary, or may lie only in generals, or may be seated in the understanding only, or may be without experience, or may be without a broken heart, or without a new heart, surely then, a man may have faith, he may taste of this heavenly gift (Hebrews 6:4), and yet be but almost a Christian.
17. A man may go further yet, he may possibly have a love to the people of God, and yet be but almost a Christian; every kind of love to those who are saints, is not a proof of our saintship: Pharaoh loved Joseph, and advanced him to the second place in the kingdom, and yet Pharaoh was but a wicked man. Ahab loved Jehoshaphat, and made a league with him, and married his daughter Athaliah to Jehoram Jehoshaphat's son, and yet Ahab was a wicked wretch.
But you will say, this seems to contradict the testimony of the Scripture, for that makes love to the saints and people of God a sure proof of our regeneration and interest in life eternal, (1 John 3:14) We know that we have passed from death to life, because we love the brethren. In fact, the Spirit of God puts this as a characteristic distinction between saints and sinners, in the tenth verse, In this the children of God are manifest and the children of the Devil, whoever does not righteousness is not of God, neither he that loves not his brother.
By brethren we do not understand brethren by place, those who are of the same country or nation, such are called brethren (Romans 9:3; Acts 7:23, 25).
Nor do we understand brethren by race, those who are descended of the same parents: such are called brethren (Matthew 1:2).
But by brethren we understand brethren by grace, and supernatural regeneration, such as are the children of God (Philemon 16); and these are the brethren whom to love is a sure sign that we are the children of God.
To this I answer, that there is a love to the children of God, which is a proof of our being the children of God.
As for instance, when we love them as such, for that very reason, as being the saints of God; when we love them for the image of God which appears in them, because of that grace and holiness which shines forth in their conversations, this is truly commendable; to love the godly for godliness sake, the saints for saintship sake, this is a sure testimony of our Christianity. The love of grace in another, is a good proof of the life of grace in ourselves: there can be no better evidence of the Spirit of Christ in us, than to love the image of Christ in others. For this is a certain truth, that a sinner cannot love a saint as such; an Israelite is an abomination to an Egyptian.
There is a contrariety and natural enmity between the two seeds; between the children of the world, and those whom the Father in his eternal love has chosen out of the world.
It is likeness which is the great ground of love; now there is the highest dissimilitude and unlikeness between an unregenerate sinner and a child of God; and therefore as a child of God cannot love a sinner as a sinner, in whose eyes a vile person is contemned (Psalm 15:4), he may love him as a creature; he may love his soul, or he may love him under some relation that he stands in to him. Thus God loves the damned spirits, as they are his creatures, but as fallen angels he hates them with an infinite hatred. So to love a sinner, quatenus a sinner, this a child of God cannot do, so neither can a sinner love a child of God as a child of God.
That he may love a child of God, that I grant, but it is upon some other consideration; he may love a person that is holy, not the person for his holiness, but for some other respect. As
1. A man may love a child of God, for his loving, peaceable, courteous deportment to all with whom he converses. Religion beautifies the conversation of a man, and sets him off to the eye of the world: the grace of God is no friend to a morose, churlish, unmannerly behavior among men, it provokes in us an affable demeanor and sweetness to all, and where this is found it wins respect and love from all.
2. A man may love a saint for his outward greatness and splendor in the world, men are very apt to honor worldly greatness: and therefore the rich saint shall be loved and honored, while the poor saint is hated and despised. This is as if a man should value the goodness of his sword by the embroidery of his belt; or his horse for the beauty of his trappings, rather than for his strength and swiftness (James 2:2-3).
True love to the Children of God, reaches to all the children of God, poor as well as rich, bond as well as free, ignoble as well as noble; for the image of Christ is alike amiable and lovely in all.
3. A man may love a child of God for his fidelity and usefulness in his place. Where religion in the power of it takes hold of a man's heart, it makes him true to all his betrustments, diligent in business, faithful in all his relations; and this obliges respect. A carnal master may prize a godly apprentice or servant that makes conscience of pleasing his master, and is diligent in promoting his interest.
I might instance in many things of the like nature, as charity, beauty, wit, learning, parts, etc. which may procure love to the people of God from the men of the world: but this love is no proof of charity. For
First, it is but natural love, arising from some carnal respect, or self-ends: that love which is made by the Scripture an evidence of our regeneration, is a spiritual love, the principle load-stone and attractive of which is grace and holiness, it is a love which embraces a righteous man in the name of a righteous man.
2. A carnal man's love to saints is a limited and bounded love, it is not universal, to all the seed; now as in sin, he that does not make conscience of every sin, makes conscience of no sin as sin; so he who does not love all in whom the image of Christ is found, loves none, for that of the image of Christ, which is found in them.
Now then if the love we bear to the people of God may possibly arise from natural love only, or from some carnal respect, or if it be a limited love, not extended to all the people of God, then it is possible that a man may love the people of God, and yet be no better than almost a Christian.
18. A man may obey the commands of God, indeed many of the commands of God, and yet be but almost a Christian. Balaam seems very conscientious of steering his course by the compass of God's command; when Balak sent to him to come and curse the people of God, says Balaam, If Balak would give me his house full of silver and gold, I cannot go beyond the word of the Lord my God (Numbers 22:18). And so in verse 38, says he, the word that God puts in my mouth, that shall I speak. The young man went far in obedience (Mark 10:20): all these have I observed from my youth up. And yet he was but a hypocrite, for he forsook Christ after all.
But is it not said, he that has my commandments and keeps them, he it is that loves me, and he that loves me shall be loved of my Father and I will love him, and manifest myself to him (John 14:21)? And does not our Lord Christ tell us expressly, you are my friends if you do what I command you (John 15:14)? And can a man be the friend of Christ, and yet be but almost a Christian?
I answer, that there is an obedience to the commands of Christ, which is a sure proof of our Christianity and friendship to Christ.
This obedience has a three-fold property.
- Evangelical, Universal, Continual.
First, it is an evangelical obedience, and that both in matter and manner, ground and end.
In the matter of it, and that is what God requires (John 15:14): you are my friends, if you do whatever I command you.
In the manner of it, and that is according as God requires (John 4:24): God is a spirit and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth.
In the ground of it, and that is a pure heart, a good conscience, and faith unfeigned (1 Timothy 1:5).
In the end of it, and that is the honor and glory of God: whatever you do, do all to the glory of God (1 Corinthians 10:31).
Secondly, it is a universal obedience, which extends itself to all the commands of God alike, it respects the duties of both tables, such was the obedience of Caleb, who followed the Lord fully, and of David who had respect to all the commands (Numbers 14:24; Psalm 119:6).
Thirdly, it is a continual obedience, a putting the hand to God's plow without looking back: I have inclined my heart to perform your statutes always, even to the end (Psalm 119:112).
He that thus obeys the command of God is a Christian indeed, a friend of Christ indeed, but all obedience to the commands of God is not this obedience. For,
1. There is a partial obedience, a piecemeal religion, when a man obeys God in one command and not another, owns him in one duty and not another, when a man seems to make conscience of the duties of one table, and not of the duties of another. This is the religion of most.
Now this obedience is no obedience, for as he that does not love God above all, does not love God at all; so he that does not obey all the commands universally, cannot be said to obey any command truly. It is said of those in Samaria, that they feared the Lord, and served their own gods, after their own manner (2 Kings 17:33). And yet in the very next verse, it is said, they feared not the Lord, so that their fear of the Lord was no fear: in like manner that obedience to God is no obedience which is but a partial and piecemeal obedience.
2. A man may obey much, and yet be in his old nature, and if so, then all his obedience in that estate, is but Splendidum peccatum — a painted sin, he who offers an oblation is as if he offered swine's blood, and he who burns incense as if he blessed an idol (Isaiah 66:3). The nature must be renewed before the command can be rightly obeyed, for a corrupt tree cannot bring forth good fruit (Matthew 7:18).
Whatever a man's performances are, they cannot be called obedience, while the heart remains unregenerate, because the principle is false and unsound; every duty done by a believer is accepted of God as a part of his obedience to the will of God, though it be done in much weakness, because though the believer's hand is weak, yet his heart is right, the hypocrite may have the most active hand, but the believer has the most faithful and sincere heart.
3. A man may obey the law, and yet have no love to the law-giver; a carnal heart may do the command of God, but he cannot love God, and therefore cannot do it aright, for love to God is the foundation and spring of all true obedience, every command of God is to be done in love, this is the fulfilling of the law (Romans 13:10). The Apostle says, Though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor, and though I give my body to be burned; these seem to be acts of the highest obedience, yet if I have not love, it profits me nothing (1 Corinthians 13:3).
4. I might add, that a man may be much in obedience from sinister and base selfish ends, as the Pharisees, prayed much, gave much alms, fasted much, but our Lord Christ tells us that it was that they might be seen of men, and have glory of men (Matthew 6:2, 5, 16). Most of the hypocrite's piety empties itself into vain glory, and therefore he is but an empty vine in all he does, because he brings forth fruit to himself (Hosea 10:1).
It is the end that justifies the action, indeed a good end cannot make a bad action good, but yet the want of a good end, makes a good action bad.
Now then if a man may obey the commands of God, partially and by halves, if he may do it, and yet be in his natural state, if he may obey the commands of God, and yet not love God, if the ends of his obedience may be sinful and unwarrantable, then a man may be much in obeying the commands of God, and yet be but almost a Christian.
19. A man may be sanctified, and yet be but almost a Christian, every kind of sanctification does not make a man a new creature, for many are sanctified that are never renewed. You read in Chapter 10 of Hebrews and verse 29 of them that count the blood of the covenant, by which they were sanctified, an unholy thing.
But does not the Scripture tell us, that both he that sanctifies, and they who are sanctified, are all one, for which cause he is not ashamed to call them brothers (Hebrews 2:11), and can a man be one with Christ, and yet be but almost a Christian?
To this, I answer, you must know there is a twofold work of sanctification spoken of in Scripture.
The one common and ineffectual.
The other, special and effectual.
That work of sanctification which is true and effectual is a work of the Spirit of God in the soul, enabling it to the mortifying of all sin, to the obeying of every command, to walking with God in all well-pleasing.
Now whoever is thus sanctified is one with him that sanctifies, Christ will not be ashamed to call such brothers, for they are flesh of his flesh, and bone of his bone.
But then there is a more common work of sanctification, which is ineffectual as to the two great works of dying to sin, and living to God. This kind of sanctification may help to restrain sin, but not to mortify sin, it may lop off the boughs, but it does not lay the ax to the root of the tree, it sweeps and garnishes the room with common virtues, but does not adorn it with saving graces, so that a man is but almost a Christian, notwithstanding this sanctification.
Or thus, there is an inward and outward sanctification.
Inward sanctification is that which deals with the soul and its faculties: understanding, conscience, will, memory, and affections; outward sanctification is that which deals with the life and conversation, both these must concur to make a man a Christian indeed, therefore the apostle puts them together in his prayer for the Thessalonians (1 Thessalonians 5:23).
The God of peace sanctify you wholly, and I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blameless to the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ.
A man is then sanctified wholly when he is sanctified both inwardly and outwardly, both in heart and affections, and in life and conversation. Outward sanctification is not enough without inward, nor inward without outward, we must have both clean hands, and a pure heart (Psalms 24:4), the heart must be pure that we may not incur blame from within, and the hands must be clean that we may not incur shame from without, we must have hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience, and bodies washed with pure water. We must cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit (2 Corinthians 7:1); inward purity is the most excellent, but without the outward it is not sufficient, the true Christian is made up of both (Hebrews 10:22).
Now many have clean hands, but unclean hearts, they wash the outside of the cup and platter, when all is filthy within; now the former without the latter profits a man no more than it profited Pilate, who condemned Christ, to wash his hands in the presence of the people (Matthew 27:24), Manus abluit and cor polluit, he washed his hands of the blood of Christ, and yet had a hand in the death of Christ. The Egyptian temples were beautiful on the outside, but within you should find nothing but some serpent or crocodile. He is not a Jew, which is one outwardly (Romans 2:28). Judas was a saint without, but a sinner within, openly a disciple, but secretly a devil (John 6:70).
Some pretend to inward sanctity without outward; this is the pretense of the open sinner, though I sometimes drop an idle foolish word, says he, or though I sometimes swear an oath, yet I think no harm, I thank God, my heart is as good as the best, such are like the sinner Moses mentions, that blessed himself in his heart saying, I shall have peace though I walk in the imagination of my own heart, to add drunkenness to thirst (Deuteronomy 19:20).
Some pretend outward sanctity without inward; such are like the scribes and Pharisees, who outwardly appear righteous to men, but within are full of hypocrisy and iniquity (Matthew 23:28), fair professors but foul sinners.
Inward sanctity, without outward is impossible, for it will reform the life; outward sanctity without inward is unprofitable, for it will not reform the heart; a man is not a true Christian without both, the body does not make a man without the soul, nor the soul without the body, both are essential to the being of man, so the sanctification of both are essential to the being of the new man; true sanctification begins at the heart, but works out into the life, and conversation, and if so, then a man may attain to an outward sanctification, and yet for want of the inward, be no better than almost a Christian.
20. And so I shall end this long pursuit of the almost Christian in his progress heavenward, with this one general conclusion.
A man may do all (as to external duties and worship) that a true Christian can, and when he has done all, be but almost a Christian.
You must know all the commands of God have an intra and an extra, there is ([reconstructed: as one may say],) the body and the soul of the command.
And accordingly there is an internal and an external worship of God.
Now the internal acts of worshipping of God, are to love God, to fear God, to delight in God, to trust in God, etc.
The external acts of worshipping God, are by praying, teaching, hearing, etc.
Now there is a vast difference between these internal and external acts of worship, (and indeed such a difference there is, that they distinguish the altogether from the almost Christian, the sincere believer from the unsound professor; and indeed in this very thing, the main difference between them does lie.
1. Internal acts of worship are good, propter fieri, the goodness does adhere intrinsically to the thing done, a man cannot love God nor fear God, but it will be imputed to him for a gracious act, and a great part of his holiness.
But now external acts of worship are not denominated good so much from the matter done, propter fieri, as from the manner of doing them; a man cannot sin in loving and delighting in God, but he may sin in praying and hearing, etc. for want of a due manner.
Internal acts of worship put a goodness into external; it is our faith, our love, our fear of God, that makes our duties good.
They better the heart, and increase the degrees of a man's holiness; external duties do not always do this, a man may pray, and yet his heart never the holier, he may hear the word, and yet his heart never the softer; but now the more a man fears God, the wiser he is (Proverbs 1:7), the more a man loves God, the holier he is; love is the perfection of holiness; we shall never be perfect in holiness, till we come to be perfect in love.
There is such an excellency in this internal worship, that he who mixes it with his external duties is a true Christian when he does least; but without this mixture, he is but almost a Christian, that does most.
Internal acts of worship, joined with outward, sanctify them and make them accepted of God, though few; external acts of worship without inward, make them abhorred of God, though they be never so many.
So that though the almost Christian may do all those duties in hypocrisy, which a true Christian does in sincerity, indeed though in doing external duties, he may outdo the true Christian (as the comet makes a greater blaze than the true stars; if Elijah fast and mourn, Baal's priests will cut their flesh).
Yet he cannot do those internal duties that the meanest true Christian can.
The almost Christian can pray, but he cannot love God, he can teach or hear, etc. but he cannot take delight in God.
Mark Job's query concerning the hypocrite: will he delight himself in the Almighty?
He will pray to the Almighty, but will he delight himself in the Almighty; will he take pleasure in God?
Ah no! He will not, he cannot.
Delight in God arises from a suitableness between the faculty and the object, now none more unsuitable than God and a carnal heart.
Delight arises from the having what we desire, and from enjoying what we have; how then can he delight in God, that neither enjoys, nor has, nor truly desires God?
Delight in God is one of the highest exercises of grace, and therefore how can he delight in God that has no grace?
Why then should any saint of God be discouraged when he hears how far the almost Christian may go in the way to heaven, when the one who is the weakest true believer, that has the least true grace, goes farther than he, for he believes in, and loves God.
Should the almost Christian do less (as to matter of external duties) yet if he had but the least true faith, the least sincerity of love to Christ, he would surely be saved; and should the true Christian do ten times more duties than he does, yet had he not faith in Christ, and love to Christ, he would surely be rejected.
Oh therefore let not any weak believer be discouraged, though hypocrites may outdo them, and go beyond them in duty, for all their duties are done in hypocrisy, but your faith and love to God in duties is a proof of your sincerity.
I do not speak this to discourage any soul in the doing of duties, or to beat down outward performances, but to rectify the soul in the doing of them.
As the Apostle says, covet earnestly the best gifts, but yet I show to you a more excellent way; so I say, covet the best gifts, covet to be much in duties, much in prayer, much in hearing, etc. But yet I show you a more excellent way, and that is, the way of faith and love, pray much, but then believe much too. Hear much, read much, but then love God much too. Delight in the Word and ordinances of God much, but then delight in the God of ordinances more.
And when you are most in duties as to your use of them, oh then, be sure to be above duties as to your resting and dependence upon them.
Would you be Christians indeed, altogether Christians? Oh then, be much in the use and exercise of ordinances, but be much more in faith and dependence upon Christ and his righteousness: when your obedience is most to the command, then let your faith be most upon the promise.
The professor rests in his duties, and so is but almost a Christian, but you must be sure to rest upon the Lord Christ, this is the way to be altogether Christians, for if you believe then are you Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the promise.
And thus I have answered the first query, to know how far may a man go in the way to heaven, and yet be but almost a Christian?
- 1. He may have much knowledge. - 2. He may have great gifts. - 3. He may have a high profession. - 4. He may do much against sin. - 5. He may desire grace. - 6. He may tremble at the Word. - 7. He may delight in the Word. - 8. He may be a member of the Church of Christ. - 9. He may have great hopes of heaven. - 10. He may be under great and visible changes. - 11. He may be very zealous in the matters of religion. - 12. He may be much in prayer. - 13. He may suffer for Christ. - 14. He may be called of God. - 15. He may in some sense have the Spirit of God. - 16. He may have some kind of faith. - 17. He may love the people of God. - 18. He may go far in obeying the commands of God. - 19. He may be in some sense sanctified. - 20. He may do all (as to external duties) that a true Christian can, and yet be no better than almost a Christian.